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WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,
*

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

YOL. 2.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 1866.
CONTENTS.

and merchants who

Congress and the Loan Bill
The Rate of Iuterest in Eagland..
The Trade of the Mississippi.. .,
The New Haven Railroad and the

Schuyler Frauds.

97 I The Fenian Movement
97 I Latest Monetary and Commercial
9S I
News from England
99 I Commercial and
Miscellaneous

100
102

News

104

100

Commercial Epitome.....

''

tional Banks, etc
Sale Prices N. Y. Stock

Ill

Exports and Imports

111-12

Cotton Trade
Breadstulfs

114
115

106

Dry Goods Trade

109

Exchange

National, State, etc., Securities...

Prices Current and Tone of the

115

Market
110.
Ill
THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL.
Epitome of Railway News
120 I Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List...
121
Railroad, Canal, and Miscellaneous
1 Insurance and Mining Journal...., 124
Bond List
122-23 Advertisements
125-2S

at

com¬

| with capital seeking temporary borrowers and the deposits
modic manner,

as

lend their funds for

a

very

the dealers

,

are

embarrassing and
able

spas¬

to withdraw to

day or two on call. These and kindred
symptoms have awakened some apprehension lest a panic
should supervene. But, really, such cautious
circumspec¬
a

tion affords the very

panic which

every
short credits which
best

CfyronuU.
The Commercial

means

Thus larger sums of money are offering in Wall
Street every day than the
very limited business now doing
can find
employment for. The money market is plethoric
j in the banks rise and fall in

THE BANKERS GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES.

Money Market, Railway Stocks, U.
S. Securities, Gold Mai *
Market, For¬
eign Exchange, New York City
Banks, Philadelphia Banks, Na¬

anxious to have their

mand.

THE CHRONICLE.
The Stagnation of Business

are

NO. 31.

best ground of confidence.
body expects never comes.

are

now

For the

And the

in vogue are
among

the

very

safeguards against such financial disasters.

Financial Chronicle is issued
every

CONGRESS AND THE LOAN BILL.
Satur¬
day morning icith the latest neios by mail and telegraph up to
It seems to be
generally agreed that Mr. Morrill’s loan
midnight of Friday, A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning
bill in its original
with all the Commercial and Financial news
shape cannot pass and that Congress
of the previous day
up to the hour of publication.
will have to make some
important modifications to render it
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
acceptable to the nation, or adapted for its purpose. It may,
Agents make no Collections. Money paid to them will be at the risk of the
therefore, be well for us in the present stage of the discus¬
person paying it.

For

and

The

Commercial and Financial Chronicle, with The Daily
Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, and mailed to all

others, (exclusive
For The Commercial

of postage).

and Financial
Chronicle, without The Daily
Bulletin, (exclusive of postage)
For The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Financial
Chronicle, (exclusive of postage)

VPostage is paid by subscribers at their

sion to
$12 00
10 00
5 00

own post-office.
It is, on the Chroni¬
cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 30 in advance.
WILLIAM B. DANA & CO.,
Publishers,

cle, 20

{Chronicle Buildings,’)
60 William

Street, New York.

THE STAGNATION OF BUSINESS.
The

\

general complaint in financial circles is that business
is dull, and that in several
important departments industrial
and commercial enterprise is for the present almost arrested.
Among the causes of this torpor a permanent place must be
given to the incertitude as to the future course of prices. If
the policy of
contracting the currency is to be carried for¬
ward, then there must inevitably be a general “ shrinkage ”
of prices and on a
falling market nobody wants to buy.
Every man in business is anxious to curtail his engagements
not knowing what
changes may be impending in prices and
in private and public confidence.
The agitation respecting
the financial policy of the
government is thus producing
wide-spread depression and probably there will be no posi¬
tive improvement until the course of the
Treasury in refer¬
ence to the
currency is definitely marked out and settled by

Congress.
As

usually happens in cases similar to the present, an un¬
unemployed funds is held by capitalists

usual amount of




keep distinctly in mind the leading objections which
public opinion against the hill.
Its faults are

influence

partly faults of omission. For instance, it prescribes no def¬
inite practical plan for
restoring the currency. And yet the
incalculable evils and dangers cf our depreciated
paper money
are so
ably expounded in Mr. McCulloch’s recent report, that
it might reasonably have
been expected that any bill intro¬
duced with his sanction would have
clear positive provision on which the
our

as

its

corner

stone

a

country might rely that
shall, under no circumstances what¬
receive any increase; but that it shall if possible be

active paper money

ever,

diminished at least 100 millions

during the current fiscal
year.
Secondly, it makes no provision for the imperative
immediate paying off of the mischievous
part of the call
loans, which exceed 100 millions, and as is well known are
to-day more in the way of contraction and more conducive
to inflation than all the rest of the short-dated
obligations of
the Government put together. Thirdly, the bill
gives no
guarantee that the compound interest notes, whose influence
on the
circulation is at present contractive and
beneficial,
shall not be converted into an
expanding and inflating ma¬
chinery by new active notes being paid out of the Treasury
in place of old inert ones which have lost their
inflating
power.
This has been done to some extent on the plea of
saving interest. Under the new bill the practice might con¬

tinue.

Such then

are some

of the sins of omission,

with which the

THE

98
framers of the

new

loan bill stand

CHRONICLE.

charged before the tribu¬

nal of

[January 27, 1866.

ditions of

funding; the law gives all needed information, and
lays down the terms and the times, leaving nothing to the
discretion of the Secretary, and thus avoiding chronic uncer¬
tainty and feverishness in the money market, and the gam¬
bling which this begets. No new loans for money would be
put on the market; this w7ould promote steadiness in the
value of government bonds. The bargain for funding the out¬
standing notes would not be made between the Secretary
and the people, through secondary agents chosen by him; but
the bargain is to be made directly between the government

public opinion. But this is far from being the whole
against them. The bill, if it does not go far enough
where its services are wanted, goes in other directions too
far.
Like some powerful solvent, it applies itself to the
crystallized debt, and reduces every part of it to a state of
flux.
Not only Seven-thirties and other Government obli¬
gations which would remain quiet and give us no trouble for
two years or more are to be at will let loose upon us, and
called in for liquidation ; but all our 20 and 40 years securi¬
ties, the entire mass of our bonded debt, may at the discre¬ and the people, through no agency but the provisions of the
tion of the Secretary of the Treasury be subjected to a simi¬ law7 itself.”
But it may be asked why, in time of peace, we should
lar mobilizing process.
Any species of Government debt
funded, semi-funded or unfunded may at will be paid off by offer to pay 6 per cent for 30 years, absolutely, w7hen in the
the issue of one or a dozen other species of bonds.
And darkest hour of the wTar we never offered to guarantee this high
these new bonds may be negotiated here or abroad at any rate of interest for more than 5 to 20 years %
We are told
price which the Secretary of the Treasury may from time to indeed, that it is necessary that more valuable bonds than
case

time choose to fix.

✓

These “

plenary powers’' have naturally elicited consider¬
able discussion.
And it has been very earnestly contended
that no financial minister in any country has ever asked for,
and none has ever been trusted with, such unlimited power
over the public and
private credit. It has also been urged
that not only is there neither precedent nor law in this coun¬
try for such powers, but there is no necessity for their exer¬
cise ; and that in this session of Congress the work really
requiring to be done is simple, and in the present and
and prospective state of our own and of foreign money mar¬
kets, a very much less ambitious and less sweeping measure
will answer every purpose.
At present it is obviously our

the Five-tw'enties should

be offered in order to induce the

exchange them. If this be so
better not exchange them.
They will give us no
for many months to come.
The first series of 300

holders of the Seven-thirties to
wre

had

trouble

millions of these notes does not fall due till the 15th

gust, 1867, and the remainder have

nearly

a year

Before that time arrives the improvement
lic credit and the growth of our national wrealth
run.

us

to “

shake dow

n

” all

our

of Au¬

longer to

of the pub¬

will enable

floating securities, and w7e shall

probably find the Seven-thirties and the Five-twenties into
which, by law7 they are fundable, w7ill be worth considerably
higher prices than the 30-year sixes would now command if,
as is proposed, 1,100 millions of them wrere,
at short inter¬
business to deal with no other parts of the public debt than vals, “ dumped ” on the market.
In finance, as well as in
those which imperiously force themselves on our care and matters of far .higher import, it holds true that “ Sufficient
require to be be provided for this year, leaving to future unto the day is the evil thereof.” Let us be content to deal
legislation, and to larger experience the task of dealing with w'ith our semi-funded debt as it comes due, and not embar
the future and larger obligations which mature in 1807, 1868 rass to-day’s work by complicating it with the work which
and later.
belongs to the distant future.
This advice which comes from men whose experience en¬
We have only to add as our last objection to this proposed
tities them to a hearing, has, in combination with other ob¬ amendment that, like the bill it professes to amend, it
vious causes, suggested a number of more or less important makes no provision for paying off the demand loans and
amendments to Mr. Morrill’s bill, ab of w hich, we doubt not disregards altogether the work of contracting the currency;
will receive due attention from the Committtee of Ways and in fact, it proposes to leave all that most wants doing, and
Means before any measure is reported to the House. One of to do nothing but w7hatean be better legislated for at a future
these suggested modifications of the bill is now' under dis¬ session of Congress.
There are, as w7e have intimated, several other distinct
cussion in the daily press of this city; and it has, on that ac¬
count, attracted a larger share of public attention than some amendments, some of which are open to but little objection.
We refrain from discussing them at present, how7ever, as it
others of superior claims.
The novel feature of it is the authorization of a new des¬ is not improbable that a new bill will be drawn in Commit¬
cription of gold-bearing six per cent bonds, to run 30 years. tee, on the basis of not attempting too much in the way of
These bonds it is proposed to negotiate at not less than par, disturbing or anticipating the payment of semi-funded obli¬
and they are not to be sold for money, but are to be exchang¬ gations, and of devoting the financial strength of the Treasu¬
ed for seven-thirties, compound notes, and certificates of in¬ ry, for the most part, to the far more important and more
debtedness.
These are to be valued at par and interest; and conservative task of currency reform.
in the

case

of the Seven-thirties the time of conversion is to

be limited to six months from the passage of the law7.
It is claimed that this amendment gets rid of some

THE RATE OF INTEREST

Ity ENGLAND.

A curious contrast is afforded by the money market re¬
of the
more obvious defects of Mr. Morrill’s bill.
No foreign loan ports which cross each other’s path between this country and
is authorized, no vague indeterminate powders are conferred England. Here, for some time past, money has been rapidly
on the Secretary of the Treasury, the bill has a definite pur¬
growing easier, while in London it is as rapidly growing
This state of things is unparalleled, and its
pose to fund certain government paper, and it prescribes the more stringent.
precise kind of bond which shall be offered in exchange, fix¬ causes will wrell repay investigation. More than one plausi¬
ing the price both of the new securities and of the old ones, ble theory has been started to explain the anomaly, and the
which they are designed to absorb and withdraw7 from the one which seems to find most favor in England is that the
hands of the public.
Hence, its promoters urge that “ the high rate of discount there is caused by the dangerous exten¬
terms of the bargain to be offered by the government would sion of the credits given by British houses to their American
be easily understood, and its advantages would be offered customers.
Now7, to us, on this side the Atlantic, this ex¬
equally to all among the people who might desire to make planation loses all its plausibility. For our most experien¬
the exchange.
The wisdom of the law itself, not the discre¬ ced financial authorities tell us that as far as the most extention of the official who is to execute the law, decides the con¬ sive patient investigation can throw light on such a question




«r

■

0
1681
January

27,1866.]

THE

99

CHRONICLE.
til within the last three months of 1865.

Allowance, of course,
merchants paid more promptly and were less embarrassed however, should be made, in examining this statement, for
by foreign claims. Moreover, if there were any such large the higher freight charges asked during our currency depre¬
*
amount of floating indebtedness as is claimed, our 5 percent ciation :
Illinois
Pit'bg, F.W. Chic. &
Michigan Michigan
C. B. &
Central
Central.
& Chic.
Alton.
Rock I.
Southern
money market would not keep the money here when 8 per Years.
$2,664,848
$5,335,354
$938,641 $1,181,003 $2,025,142 $2,068,896
cent or more was bid for it at home.
Our foreign exchanges
3,031,787 1,098,464
1,261,050
2,189,077
2,899,612
2,124,314
they know that there never was a time when our

importing

again, and other unmistakeable evidences of the course of
trade and of the balance of credit, seem to show that since
the outbreak of the war our floating British mercantile debt
has seldom been in a more satisfactory condition.
It must be admitted, indeed, that for this happy turn in
our foreign exchanges we are largely indebted to our cotton
exports, of which the amount received at the port of Liver¬
pool was no less than 196,149 bales from 6th October to 31st
December, 1865. It is quite true that last year we import¬
ed more largely than in 1864 of British manufactures, while
we sent in return less corn, flour, and provisions, less of pe¬
troleum, gold and silver, to balance the account. But it is
reported that our exports of cotton in 1865 was 462,000
bales, against 197,000 bales in 1864; and this item will ful:
ly make up for our other deficiencies in exports, the respec¬
tive values being $75,000,000 and $40,000,000 in gold. Nor
is this all: our stock of cotton is probably 1,200,000 bales,
and the prospects are that during the next six months, be¬
fore our new stock is gathered, wre shall export, on an ave¬
rage, 100,000 bales a month, giving us a credit in England,
and oftseting our current obligations to ■ the extent of
$90,000,000 for the half year, in addition to the value of all
the breadstuff's, petroleum, and other produce which we may

1862

1863.....
1864
1S65

The

3.445,827
4,571,023
6.329,447
?

6.837,586

3,745,310
5.132,934
7.120,465
8,438,394

1,225.001
1,673,706
2.643.416

3,703,118

2,650.702
3,143,945
3.966.946
4,521,046

1.423,439
1,959.267
3,095,470
3,2:3,088

2.647,833

3,302,541
4.110,154
4,951,441

of this

temporary derangement of trade and
transportation having ceased to exist, we may expect a steady
cause

of affairs to their former condition. It is of consequence
to the merchants of this city and to the great transportation
return

companies that they should comprehend just how much
traffic belongs to the Mississippi; because a very important
portion of that “reconstructed” trade will have to be taken
out

of their

own

hands.

In I860 the foreign commerce of

New Orleans-reached the

aggregate of $130,735,357. In the trade with for¬
eign ports 1,393 vessels cleared from that port, with a ton¬
nage of 894,353.
Included in the exports were 922,000,000
immense

pounds of cotton;. 890,230 lbs of hams and bacon ; $314,200
value of hides ; 11,055,000 lbs of lard ; 1,909,155 lbs of tal¬
low, and $7,434,909 of tobacco.
Ever since the opening
of the war, a large portion of the supply o? cotton has come
over the roads of the interior, at a
heavy cost for transporta¬
tion.
Since the beginning of November the receipts by rail¬
road at New York have averaged 2,680 bales per week; be¬
side which, probably, equal to one-third of that amount has
been brought over the interior lines into Pennsylvania and
export.
New England.
The augmenting supply of steamers on the
Whether we look, therefore, at our present position or at
Mississippi, and the restoration of the Southern railroads may
the probable course of trade for the next six months, we
be expected to early divert this important branch of traffic
may safely conclude that there is no foundation whatever for almost
entirely from the central trunk routes. The opening
the statement that has been made by the London Times, and
of active communication between New Orleans and the ports
that the cause of the rise in the Bank of England rate is to
of Europe, South America, and the West Indies, will also
be sought rather in the excessive flow of the precious metals
afford facilities for the export of a certain amount of West¬
to the East, than to any complications arising or likely to
ern produce
which, during the rebellion, has found its way
arise out of credits and commerce here in the West.
to the ocean only over the railroads; and the high rates of
It is, perhaps, right in this connection to mention the re¬
freight now generally charged by the roads will materially
port which is current here, that certain British firms have stimulate that diversion of traffic.
exported goods heavily to Southern ports on their own
The imports of New Orleans have always been unimportaccount, and have had to borrow money in London in con¬ ant as
compared with its exports. In 1860 the total foreign
sequence of being disappointed in their returns.
This class imports amounted to $22,922,777. Included in the receipts
of venturers is of necessity very limited in amount, and we
were the following commodities :
can find
probably half a dozen New York merchants seeking Coflee, lbs
47,687,642! Railroad do, cwt
478,572
$2,423,550'Sheet do, lbs
accommodation here from this cause, to every one in London. Cotton goods
1,116,564
Prunes, lbs
362,888! Molasses, gals
1,996,809
The presence of a few such cases in an excited state of the Raisins, lbs
1,810,098j Sugar, lbs
14,285,369
Glass, sq ft
2.401,374 Salt, bush
3,991,934
63,377 Soda ash, lbs
5,585,180
public mind might lend a coloring of plausibility to an Bar iron, cwt
3,275.084! Spirits, gals (about)
Hoop do, lbs
900,009
otherwise improbable story.
Pig do, cwt
130,0671 \\ ines, gals, do
3,500,000
A certain proportion of these articles were distributed in
the Southern States; but an important amount was also
THE TRADE OF THE MISSISSIPPI.
The events of the last four years appear to have almost sent to Memphis, St. Louis, Cincinnati and other cities for
obliterated the consciousness that we have a great natural sale in the Southwest; for as many of the commodities are
outlet for commerce in the far South.
Gradually the pro¬ bulky and were brought to New Orleans as ballast at low
ducts which have been wont to flow on the bosom of the rates of freight, and were also carried' up the Mississippi
“Father of Waters” to the ocean, have been directed to the cheaply for the same reason, they could be placed at the
railroads and canals which feed the Atlantic cities ; and almost Southwestern centres at a lower cost than if sent by way of
unconsciously New York has been transacting an enormous the Atlantic ports.
The same considerations may be ex¬
trade which geographical distribution has assigned to New pected to operate in favor of the future diversion of this
Orleans. This fact is well illustrated by the following, show¬ class of foreign trade to the Mississippi; and as the articles
ing the gross earnings of the principal railroads leading from are mostly of a bulky character, the amount of transporta¬
the Mississippi River to Chicago, and from Chicago east¬ tion thus likely to change route will constitute an important
ward, for the years 1860-65, both inclusive. The returns for deduction from the traffic of the eastern and central trunk
1860 show the trade as it was before the river was closed; roads and canals.
The suspension of the Louisiana supply
during 1861, the river being open part of the year, and all of sugar, which in 1860 was 302,205,000 pounds, and of
business paralized during the first months of the war, the full molasses, which for the same year was 14,535,000 gallons,
effect of the change is not seen. In 1863 the tide towards has necessitated a large increase in the importation of those
New York had fully set in, and has continued to increase un¬ articles; and the increased amount consequently
sent from




,

New York to the interior has caused

a

large addition to the

When it is considered that

westward traffic of the roads.
the Louisiana

product of these commodities has ordinarily
equal to half the importation of them, it will be appa¬

been
rent

that when that State

resumes

a

liberal cultivation of

the sugar cane, a

large amount of this branch of trade must
again revert to the Mississippi. Ordinarily, one half of our
large importation of salt has entered at New Orleans and
other southern ports; but during the rebellion the Western
States have^had to rely upon a supply coming over the cen¬
tral routes of transportation.
This important branch of
freight will also in due time
in

channel.
the trade of this port

revert to its former

It is desirable that all interested in
and

the

large transposition corporations of the central
anticipate the changes which must
the restoration of the normal trading relations be¬
the several sections of the Union. It would, however,

in stock in addition to the amonnt standing in his name on the books of this

Saturday, January 27th instant, by the payment to the company of
seventy-five dollars on each share so allotted.
Resolved, That notice be given to the stockholders of the action of this board,
requesting them to notify the company of their acceptance of the additional
company, on

stock, on or before the 20th day of February.
Resolved, That seventy-five dollars, in cash, be paid on each share on or be¬
fore Tuesday, the 20th day of February, when, on such payment, certificates of
full paid stock will be issued therefor. A discount at the rate of six per cent per
annum will be allowed to parties paying in advance of the above date, and that
the books be closed after January 27th until February 21st.
Resolved, that the Committee of Adjustment, raised December 26th, be request¬
ed to carry out the above resolution.
*
• •
It is believed by the board that the above plan is the best that can be adopted
for the interests of the stockholders, as it increases the stock in place of increas¬

ing the bonds, and, consequently, the mortgage upon the property. While the
board are disappointed at the result, and feel that a great injustice has been done
to the original stockholders, yet they cannot but congratulate them upon the
prospect of getting rid of litigation.
The board have no complaint, having tested the questions at issue in the high¬
est court, from whence there is no appeal.
The loss is heavy, yet we cannot bur,
hope that the stockholders will be remunerated, and enjoy in peace that which

has been threatened, day by day, to be taken from them.
The property of the
company is valuable, and, m the opinion of persons capable of judging, could
not be replaced to-day for the capital and bonds outstanding when this arrange¬
ment shall have been completed, namely, five millions of capital and two mill¬
ions of bonds.
G. B. Carhart,
Wilson G. Hunt,

and western states should

follow
tween

be unreasonable to
will be

expect that the full effect of these changes

immediately developed.

They must be worked out

gradually, the chief condition being the progress of the
cotton crop; for without an adequate supply of Southern
produce, there can be no basis for the supplying of the western
markets through Southern cities and Southern transporta¬
tion routes.
Much also must depend upon the supply of the
necessary shipping facilities on the Mississippi and its river
connections.
The following comparison shows the great
disparity between the present tonnage of the ports connec¬
ted with the Mississippi and that existing in 1800 :
Ports.
Cincinnati
Galena
Louisville

[January 27,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

100

-Reg. tonnage.

r-Regist'd tonnage.-^
1860.
33.900

6,251

Ports.
Dec, 1865.
30,497 Pittsburg
2.297 ot. Paul

1860.

James J. Roosevelt,
E. C. Scranton,
Geo. N.

Miller,

Committee of the Board of Directors of the New York and New Haven
Railroad Company.
New

York, January 22d, 1856.

The

anticipation has been generally entertained that a
heavy fall in the price of the stock would be produced if the
case terminated unfavorably to the company.
So far, how¬
ever, this anticipation has not been realized, and it is even
contested by some persons that the removal of the oppression
uncertitude which have hung threateningly over the com¬
pany will rather enhance than decrease the value of their
property. It will be observed that the stockholders who
choose to accept the new stock offered to them at 75, are re¬
quired to notify the Secretary of the Company before the 20th
February.

Dec. 18<>5.

St. Louis

64,683

Wheeling

17,006

TnE FENIAN MOVEMENT.

33,598
3,088
86,532

9,538

60,78-1
3<>8

The

organisation existing in this country, Ireland and
Canada, known as the Fenian fraternity has been occupied
New O' loans
Total
208,642
15,860
460,599
Decrease
Paducah
2,100
251,957 through its representative bodies in this city in determining
With this large decrease of tonnage, it is clear that much where the seat of power existed, and what constituted regu¬
capital must be invested in providing the means of trans¬ larity in its membership. One President had been superseded
portation, before the Mississippi can recover its former posi¬ by the Senate, and another appointed in his place. Instead,
tion as a leading artery of commerce.
however, of acquiescing gracefully in this action the deposed
President demanded the adjudication of the matter by the
THE NEW HAVEN RAILROAD AND THE SCHUYLER FRAUDS.
Fenian Congress, and appears to have met with its approval.
The long-pending legislation is this case has just been ter¬ Meanwhile the Senate has convened and voted to
support
minated by the final judgment of the New York Court of the new' President, and appealed to the Brotherhood to sus¬
Appeals, awarding some $900,000 to the holders of the cer¬ tain their proceedings. We have, therefore,.practicably two
tificates of stock fraudulently issued in 1854, by Robert associations pledged to overthrow British supremacy in Ire¬
Schuyler, the transfer agent and president of the company. land, liberate Canada from the iron thraldom of the Mother
The case is chiefly interesting from the fact that the great Country and establish “ free institutions ”
generally.
Of the merits of this controversy we do not care to speak.
principle is nowr settled by the highest court in this State
that railroad and other corporations are bound by the fraudu¬ It has accomplished a schism among our Irish
population,
lent acts of their own agents.
which is likely to result, in all our principal cities, in feuds,
This principle is of the highest
possible importance to the purchasers and holders of the violence and riot. Already in New York, men’s lives have
shares and bonds of incorporated companies, and the decision been threatened, and protection required from the police, be¬
which has been arrived at meets with general approval.
It cause of doubts expressed as to the propriety of the conduct
Memphis

Nashville

34,551

14,100

7,6<i8

9,849
1,183

4,595
228,243
2,550

....

will be remembered that the amount of the certificates issued

of

one or

the other of the Presidents.

The attempt to exe.
would result in decisive measures

by Schuyler before he absconded to Europe with his ill-got¬ cute some of these menaces
ten gains was $2,100,000.
About two years ago the holders on the part of the civil authorities.
of most of these shares wearied with the delay of a ten
We took the occasion some weeks ago to animadvert upon
years lawsuit compromised their claims by accepting one this subject, declaring that the apprehensions exhibited by
share of genuine stock for two of the spurious.
The capital the British government in relation to the fraternity were not
of the company was raised from $3,000,000 to $4,000,000 tex warranted.. There was no
good reason for suppressing newspro vide the means for this arrangement. The following cir- papers or arresting Fenians.
The tendency of the associa.
cular has just been issued showing that an additional increase tion w'as to
perish of its own imbelicity. The Irish characof capital is to be made to $5,000,000 by the issue of new ter is unstable,
oscillating, and lacks the element of circum¬
stock which is offered to registered stockholders at 75 cents
spection as a result. The Fenian organisation is too fragile
on the dollar in the
proportion of four new shares to every to elaborate suitable material for revolution. It may crown
ten held tOrday the 27th inst.
the purposes of designing men, masking their operations
To the Stockholders of the New York and New Haven Raibvad
under the pretext of securing Irish independence; but it
Company:
The Court of Appeals
having' affirmed the decision of the Supreme Court in
the matter of the New York ana New Haven Railroad
Company against Robert cannot be successful even in keeping the secrets of the order.
Schuyler and others, whereupon this company is called upon to pay judgments
to a laige amount; therefore it was, at a
The British Government like tha American press, can learn
meeting of the board this day,
Resolved, That in order to pay these judgments, the capital of this company
be increased to five million dollars, allotting to each stockholder forty per cent
their councils in ample time to ensure their defeat. The




THE CHRONICLE.

January 27, 1866.]
Order indeed

can

hardly maintain more than

an

ephemeral

and aire seis of

philosophy received accessions by initiation
The Chaldeans and Brahmins of the
East, the Essenes of Judea, and Theapentists, Pythagoreans,
Free Masons, Romanciary, and Illuminatists, and others that
may be named, are examples; omitting ail mention of the
mysteries of Icis, the Cabriri, Orpheus, Eleusis, and the

and oaths of secrecy.

existence.

the readers of The Chronicle will
was current that more than one hun¬

A few months ago,

remember, the

rumor

dred thousand Fenians had been enrolled in

several times that number in America.

Ireland, and

The exposition of

Bona

Dea of the

operations of the Order did indeed show that
generally formed
large fund had been contributed on the bonds of the New

the financial
a

101

Such seeming

Republic.

success was,

however, the signal

ous

ineffable

name.

These associations

are

upon some central idea, and their mysteri¬
character adds to their power of fascination. ^But we

doubt whether they do more than affiliate' men of similar
this boastful army is divided, each faction
convictions and keep up a general enthusiasm.
It may be
alone intent on supporting its favorite for President, while
true that in the event of actual hostilities they might aid the
the funds of the Brotherhood are being disbursed, as it is
said, not for the Fenian army and navy, but at hotels and on party with which they happened to be associated, but we do
not believe that they would be able to initiate a downright

for .schism, and now

yachts and other kindred investments.
ever,

tions

of

There

were,

how¬

those who augured danger from these early manifesta¬
of strength. Reports were current that large stacks

arms

had been accumulated and drills held at regular

revolution.
In this country we have had considerable experience with
these matters.
The Masonic lodges, in our own revolution,

incidentally and indirectly furthered its progress in many
byterians have not participated; but eloquent rumor now ways ; but beyond that, except in a few alleged instances of
declared that as the New Republic would guaranty freedom capital punishment on delinquent members, the institution
of conscience, large numbers of them had become members has been harmless.' We have also had the United Ameri¬
of the organisation. The British Cabinet seems to have been cans and the Society of the Star Spangled Banner, organiza¬
apprehensive that the Federal authorities were secretly tions which sprung up like mushrooms, ramified throughout
fomenting the conspiracy in the hope that in the general dis¬ every State of the Union, elected Mayors and Governors,
traction, Canada might, without difficulty, be absorbed by Members of Congress and of State Legislatures, and then
the United States.
Accordingly vessels of war were dis¬ broke down in the effort to make a President. Our adopted
patched to this side of the Atlantic, several prominent citizens, whose ascendency the organizations attempted to
Fenians were transported, and James Stephens, the “Head overthrow, were greatly alarmed at their formidable dimen¬
Centre” was arrested with the evident purpose of making sions;
but familiarity soon wore away their fright, and
him an example.
Stephens had the good fortune to make now Irish and Germans fraternize cordially in the same poli¬
his escape, and being at large alarms the British authorities tical parties with their famed “ Know-Nothing” adversaries.
The Lone Star Lodges on the acquisition of Cuba and Hun¬
more than he would at the head of a formidable army.
It is not many years since the subordinates of that govern¬ ter s Lodges to effect the liberation of Canada are not yet
ment had an opportunity to test the prowess of the great forgotten.

periods.

In former movements for Irish liberation the Pres

During the rebellion the different political parties formed
actually on one occasion commanded two
secret associations like the Knights of the Golden Circle,
hundred patriotic men in an attack upon a stronghold in a
remote corner of Ireland.
Five policemen held his forces Sons of Liberty, States Rights Associations, Strong Bands,
at bay all of one night, and put them to route in the morn¬ and Union Leagues. The organizations which were supposed
ing. It may be presumed that he has acquired no extraor¬ to be arrayed against the Government miscarried in all their
dinary courage or military skill since that period; and in measures for obtaining control over it or its overthrow. The
case that he has
not, it will require an immense Fenian army Union League itself exerts but an imperceptible influence
to be recruited from all the nations,' with such a
champion, upon public policy. The fly created about as much sensa¬
tion on the horn of the ox.
to endanger seriously the British rule in Ireland.
We can hardly imagine what disposition the Fenians, in
England, too, had A little experience with her Chartists
who fell to pieces of their own accord, and “Young Ireland,”
the event of success, could make of their conquest. The
king of Siam when making to his unlucky courtier the pre which perished at Slievegammon. Fenianism is but another
sent of the white elephant, could embarrass him no more outbreak, just as imposing and threatening, and just as sure
completely than the actual possession of Ireland would con¬ to miscarry and become ridiculous. Secret political socie¬
found the liberators.
It has been declared that those Irish ties are ephemeral of necessity; and however frequently in¬
peers who voted in the last century for the union of the two stituted are sure to fall speedily to pieces and become for¬
Kingdoms, were guilty of selling their, country. Those who gotten. They do not raise up statesmen and warriors for an
made this charge were generally men who had
The Golden Circle in this country failed in its
no country to emergency.
sell-, and were the more disposed accordingly to act the part conspiracy to overthrow the American Republic, and the
of demagogues.
There is as little
If the descendants of these men should Union League to terminate the rebellion,
ever
acquire possession of Ireland, they could neither keep prospect that the Fenian Association will disturb the Gov¬
ernment of the United Kingdom, much less establish an Irish
the country, nor maintain in it a stable
government. The
Celtic,-or as Napoleon calls them, the Latin nations, do not. Republic over the sea.
In a brief time the adventure will
become effete and degenerate into a public laughing-stock.
seem to affect a free commonwealth.
Rome was never any¬
thing but a tyranny ; Fiance twice leaped from democracy The appellation of Fenian will dwindle to a nickname, and
to imperialism; and Ireland would lose as little time in the organization itself will become a bugbear so ridiculous
establishing a despotism. The good sense of all reflecting that men will be ashamed to confess that it had ever alarmed
them. The Brotherhood, now severed into two factions,
men will, therefore, lead them to entertain no
sympathy for
the Fenian movement, or
deadly hostile to each other, will probably be dispersed in a
apprehension of its success.
Secret organizations have existed in all countries at differ¬ brief time, and then the Cabinet at London will discover, as
we
ent
long since asserted would be the case, theft their fears
periods of time, and while human nature remains un¬
Head Centre.

He

changed, will continue.
world




were

The socerdotal orders of the old
afflicted in this manner, and many of the schools

were

groundless and absurd.

Catest

[January 27, 1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

102

[From our own Correspondent.]
London, Wednesday, Jan. 10, 1866.
The year

which

upon

we

j

have just entered opened unsatisfac-

°

.

.

.

,

the Money

Market will allow of more certainty as regards profit to the operator.
At the same time American buyers are purchasing largely, and as great
confidence prevails throughout the mercantile
as to
future of America, and as the principal American buyers in our mar-

the

community here

torily as regards the Money Market ; the Directors of the Bank of !
England, at tbeir first weekly meeting, having been compelled to ad,
e\.
®
/ m.
,!
vauce the minimum rate
of discount to eight per cent. The public ;
were not prepared for such a step on the
part of the Bank authorities, J
but the changes exhibited in the weekly statement fully justify the al- i
,

large, and are only delayed until the state of

to btf very

Jltanetarg anil Commercial Cnglisl) News.

time, longer credit than customary, the revival of trade now has necessarily a tendency to create a more strin-

^ets reqUire, at the present

gent market for moneybusiness on have usual
than would the been
merchants transacting

the case Large American
were amounts
terms.

of produce
merchants obtain advances to
being the case, it seems tolera-

algQ()f 5_20 houds continue to be received here in payment

ao(j manufactures, on which our own

meet some of their engagements. This
during the last
Wy certain that the valtm of money the Bank will undoubtedly lower
] tinue to rule high. The Directors of in the immediate future must connight has, therefore, been augmented to the extent of two per cent. their quotations when the state of their resources will allow of such a
The leading feature in this week’s bank return is the increase of movement; but an easier rate for money will undoubtedly lead to con¬
£2,224,373 in the amount of private securities held by the establish¬ siderable animation in the various branches of trade, so that they will
eventually be compelled to again advance their terms. According to
ment, thus indicating a very active demand for money. The reserve
I resent appearances, it seems that during the current year, the changes
of notes and coin has been diminished by £1,611,519, and there is also in the rate of discount will be numerous, but that the quotation will
teration which has been made.

a

The

rate

fort-J

for money

decrease of £296,919 in the stock of bullion.

The

rate now

five per cent.

not fall below

current

its predecessor ;
in 1864, and 263 in
1863.
The total for the last three years is therefore 832, several of
which have turned out very successfully, whilst as many have under252.
The present period, therefore, as far as the Money Market is con- ; gone the process of windiug up. The authorized capital, as regards
last year’s undertakings, amounted to £106,995,000 ; the first issues be¬
cerned, compares unfavorably with last year ; but, as regards the gene¬
ing to the extent of £1*2,174,790. The deposit money paid was £12,174,ral condition of the country in a commercial point of view, the pros¬
790.
Including the new issues of old companies, shares, called up, and
pect now is certainly more encouraging then the future presented to premiums, together with the amounts call on the six foreign loans, viz:
Last year was quite as fertile in new companies
i
the number hi ought forward was 287, against 282

is two per cent higher than at the commencement of last
year, when the stock of bullion held by the bank was £13,933,592, and |
private securities amounted to £21,711,507, the reserve being £S,068-i
for money

the mercantile

body at the commencement of 1865.

the Austrian for £14,600,000, the
lian for £5,000,000, the Ottoman 5

At the opeuing of

the year, owing to the large losses experienced in 1864, great
had become imperatively necessary on the part of merchants

caution
here in
entering iuto extensive engagements ; an 1 the uncertainty which pre¬
vailed in the minds of most persons as to the probable results of the
approaching campaigii iu America, had the effect of reducing the trans¬
actions in many articles of commerce to a very narrow limit, prices at
the same time being very fluctuating and sensitive. This contraction

per cent, for £6.000,000, and
sit money demanded of the
of the following extent :
New companies—Deposits
New issues by old companies,

as

Peruvian for £9,000,000, the Brazi¬

percent. £3,636,363, the Ottoman 6

the Italian loan for £8,0 )0,000—the depo¬

public in the last twelve months has been
£12,174.790
7,919,140
20,231,663

called up, and premiums.

Foreign loans, called up

.

..£40,325,593

Total

large sum has naturally been one of the principal causes of the
Market, viz.: a fall in pri¬
great tightness in money during the last six months; the heavy amounts
ces.
During the first six months the quotations steadily declined, till continually^required to meet the coustant calls having compelled inon the
14th of June, the minimum rate of discouut at the Bank of
| vestors and speculators to enter the money market, and obtain advances
England fell to three per cent; the stock of bullion held by the estab- : at a high rate. The value of our National Debt has also suffered a
lishment increasing shortly afterwards to £16,407,666. This was the j ‘'deterioi ation to the extent of two per cent, P^r^y from the fact that
stock has been sold to meet the demands of these new companies,
lowest rate for money touched, as well as the hugest supply of bullion w}1jisp at the same time, numerous individuals have withdrawn a
porheld, during the year. At the close of July and during the months of j tiou of their capital from Government securities in order to obtain the
August and Sept&nber, the demand for money, as harvest work was augmented rate of interest offered elsewhere
Annexed are the returns of the circulation of the private and joint
in progress, during which about £3,000,000 was drawn from the metro¬
stock Banks for each of the four weeks ending November 11 and De¬
polis to meet the wants of the farming community, became more ac¬ cember 9 :—
Nov. 11.
Dec. 9.
tive, and the quotations rose about one per cent higher. The close of
Bank of England..
£21.864,805
£20,803,248
3,133,928
September and the month of October were periods of great stringency Private bonds
2,977,276
2,892,421
2,789,657
in the Money Market, prices, in the course of ten days, having advanc¬ Joint Stock Banks.
Scotland
4,696,685
4.903,980
6,887,925
6,691,240
ed to the extent of 2* percent. This important rise was caused by the Ireland
Total
£39,475,764
great activity in the cotton trade, resulting in an advance in prices of
£38,165,401
from 2d. to 6d. per pouud, as well as by the great demaud for manu¬
As compared with the four weeks ending December 10, 1864, the
factured goods, oils and metals on the part of American buyers. Indeed above figures shew an increase of £951.359 in the circulation of notes
in England, and an increase of £2,047,078 in the circulation of the
the great revival in our trade with America is undoubtedly the promi¬
United Kingdom.
nent feature iu our commercial history of 1365 ; for during the closing
Duiing the past week, owing to the continued outflow of bullion
six mouths, the various markets in which American houses were pur¬
from the bank, and the rise in the bank rate of discount, the market
chasers became extremely active, so that prices attained a high and for all our national securities ha9 beeu in a very inactive state, and an
almost general fall has taken place in prices.
Railway shares have
very remunerative point. Cotton goods, woollen goods, and all goods, also been somewhat
depressed, whilst most foreign securities have
metals, and oils participated extensively in this animation, the advance slightly declined in value. On the other hand, joint stock bank shares,
in their value being, as regards many articles, of a most important na¬ which, in consequence of the active demand for, as. well as increased
value of money, are at the present moment realizing large profits, have
ture. The changes in Bank rate last year were sixteen in number, the
ruled firm ; enhanced prices having been obtained as regards the princi¬
lowest quotation beiDg three, the highest seven per cent. The following
pal undertakings of that nature. Subjoined is a statement showing the
table shows the date of these alterations, and the position of the Bank
daily prices Jof the chief home and foreign stocks and shares for the
Consols closed to-day, Wednesday, 86$@87.
week.
at the time :
of trade had its natural effect

.

J

x

„

..

on

This

the Money

,

.

.

-

..

,

Bank

Circulation

rate.

of Notes.

5%

Date.

£21,012.778
20,614,794

5

4%
4

4%
4

3%
3

3%
4

4%

Reserve of
Amount of
Notes & Coin. Securities.
£ S,265,105
£14,097.390
£30.957,880
Stock of
Bullion.

S,821.200
9.518,082

29,173.458

6
7
6
7

Mon. Tues Wed Thur Frid.

ending January 6.

14,317,215
14,801,367
15.358,999

10,057.678

14.679,974

7,726.574

15,299,268

9,087,353

31,356,348
30vMM),717

15,838.491

9.577.896

31,400,265

16,045,669

9,966.274

30,093.662

14.503,679
14,457.648

7.082.109

32.278,160

6,641.318

32.351,027

13,960,819

7. ICS, 174

33.003.525

23,321,786

13,183,837

5,105,677

34,651,489

Union of London

21,074.103

14.465,032
13,403,102

8,531.072

28.842,665

7,591,267

32,495,414

The demaud for money was
the bank, a full enquiry has been

20,381.080
20.388,744
22.072,011
21,330.490
21.422,198

21,191.106
22,590.254

23,203.757
22,033,528

30.424.109
32,271,054

5

October 4.

For week

20.864,161

Sat.

S7%

>>

...

1

America

T.ondon and Brazilian

2
'c
a

87%

87

87%

75

Consols
Brazilian 5 per rpnta 1865
a
ppr rent
1864
Peruvian 5 per cents, 1865
Allianp.p bank
British and Californian
RriHRh Xnrtli Amprira.
London of Mpxico and South

75

74

74

22%
20%

22%

74%
22%

22%

22%

29%

29%

29%

29%

87%

20%
29%

2 dis 2 dis 2 dis 2 dis 2 dis
47
47
47
47
47
14
1 dis 1 dis 13% T-t
3%p 48 3 pr. 47% C*
54% 54% 54% 54

active during the past week.

At

experienced, whilst in the open mar¬
The advance in the Bank rate has already had the effect of contract¬ ket, great firmness prevailed, the rates current in Lombard street being
ing the operations of merchants, and the principal markets closed Satur¬ fully equal to those at the Bank of England. The following were the
quotatious for the best paper in the open market on Saturday :
day with a quiet, but by no means heavy, appearance. Several articles
30 clays' bills
8 per cent.
60days’ “ ..•
:
8
“
have slightly declined in price ; nevertheless, as a rule, holders of pro¬
8
“
3 months’bills
duce and manufacturers are indisposed to force sales, or to accept any
4
“
“
:
8
“
•

-

material reduction ; in fact, the trade of the
ment is in a very healthy state, and is now

country at the present mo¬
only reduced to a state of

inactivity by the high rates demanded for accommodation. Throughout
manufacturing districts the orders for goods to be given in, are said

the




6

The

“

“

;..

8% to 9 per cent.

a decidedly more satisfactory
advances have been obtained on the best commercial
7} ; the more general quotation however being 7£ to

present week affairs have assumed

appearance, and
paper as low as
*

.

•

103

CHRONICLE.

THE

January 27, 1866.]

an increase
stand thus :

ing

followed to some extent
Paris and Amsterdam, at
place. The Bank of

The value of money on the Continent has
the rise line. The principal changes are at
which cities a rise of one per cent has taken
France rate, however, is still three per cent
the quotation for money is

from the proceeding year of 428,410

Total.

Egypt, &c.

& China.

American.

bales. The figures
Brazil,

East India

2,034,800
281,100
1,049,600
704.100
below ours, so that unless 1865
958,740
488,920
1,605,390
1864
158,730
again raised at Paris we may anticipate
I am unable to forward you any official statement of imports and
withdrawing supplies of bullion from that quarter. The last return
exports for the twelve months, as the last returns issued by the Board
published by the Back of Fjance is unfavorable, inasmuch as it shows
decrease of about £1,000,000 in the stock of bullion, and an iucrease of Trade only extend to the close of the month of November. Unfor¬
of £2,840,000 in bills discounted. The quotations for money at the tunately, the returns for the twelve months are, from some u account¬
able cause or other, delayed to a period when they become more curi¬
leading Continental cities are as under :—
Bank Open
than useful, inasmuch as they come to the hands of the mercantile
Bank Open
rate. market.
rate, market.
5
4# 5
public not before the close of February. The figures I subjoin, how¬
Turin
per cent
5
5
Paris
per cent
5
5#
ever, may be useful as showing here in detail the extent of our im¬
Brussels
5
5Vienna
9
Madrid
7
6#
ports and exports from old as well as new countries. India, it will
Berlin
"e%
Hamburg
5
5#
be observed, has declined; we may say, naturally, considering that
Frankfort
6
ex 7
St. Petersburg
6#
ex
Amsterdam
our imports from that country ought to have been augmented consid¬
In the early part of the week the market for American Securities erably under the present very remunerative prices. But it seems that
exhibited considerable firmness, but it has since participated in thedul- India, now that America is likely to compete too freely with her, has
ness of other departments of the Stock Exchange.
The prices for each determined on withdrawing herself from the cultivation of cotton, and
embarking with more earnestness in the cultivation of iudigo, and
day during the past week are shown in the following statement. Fivetwenties closed yesterday at 64@64L
especially oilseeds, to which her soil is so well adapted, aud which re¬
turns to the grower a large share of profit for the capital embarked,
Mon ! Tues Wed Thur Fri. Sat.
For week ending January 6.
the risk incurred, and the labor employed.
China shows a large de¬
64# 64# 64#
65# 64#
crease, viz.: of rather more than 50 per cent; and as both China and
United States 5’20's, ’82
50
50
50
50
50
Virginia State 5 per cents
41
41
41
Japan are now purchasers of cotton at Bombay and Calcutta, it is pret¬
41
41
do
do 6
do
ty certain our supplies from those quarters for the future have ceased.
Atlantic & Great Western, Newport section,
78
78
78
78
78
1st mortgage, 1880
Egypt continues to increase the production of the staple in question,
do Pennsylva,lS77r
but it seems probable that with a future reduction in price, which
74
74
74
74
74
do !
do
1882
must take place in the ratio, probably, of the extension of the cultiva-,
#p #!>•
l#p. lprm lp.
Erie Scrip, 6 per cent
81
81
81
81
81
tion in the Southern States, that she will determine on devoting more
Illinois Central, 1875, 6 per cent
70
70
70
70
70
attention to the production of cereals, and less to that of cotton, Alex¬
do
do
7 percent...
*
77#
77# 77# 77
78#
do
do
$100, all paid
73
73
andria curing the last few years instead of being an important ship¬
73
73
73
Marietta & Cincinnati
102
102
102# 102#
102
ping port for wheat and beans, has been compelled to purchase largely
Railway, 2d mort, 1872
Panama
85
S5
85
85
85
a

ous

on

,

cS

O

.

Hi

•

Pennsylvania Railroad Bonds, 2d mort
do
do
$50 shares....
Philadelphia and Erie, 1st mort, 1881, guaran¬
teed by Pennsylvania Railroad

34

34#

34

75

.

34
75

75

74#

and neighboring ports in order to secure for the popu¬
the necessary supply of wheat. The following are the
Egypt
tables from ihe Board of Trade returns :
IMPORTS OF COTTON INTO THE UNITED KINGDOM IN ELEVEN MONTHS.
1865.

at

34

the Black Sea

lation of

74#

Baring Brothers & Co. have issued their prospectus of the new
Argentine Republic. The amount of the loan is £2.500,000,
From.
but in consequence of the present condition of the money market only
United States
one half will at present be offered to the public.
The price of issue is Bahamas and Burmuda....
75, the rate of interest being 6 per cent, with a sinking fund of one per Mexico
Brazil
cent per annum.
The proceeds of the loau are to be applied to warlike Turkey
purposes, viz : to meet the expenses of the war now being
on Egypt. India—
British
between the above State and Paraguay.
China
The rise in the rate of discount has had the effect of slightly depress¬
Other countries
ing the market for cotton, but not to any serious extent. The trade at
Total
the opening of the week exhibited considerable buoyancy, and long
EXPORTS OF COTTON FROM
stapled produce changed hands at £ to 4d per lb. advance. During
last few days the demand has become much less active,yet the closing
To.
Russia. Northern port
prices Saturday were without material variation from Saturday
market has been kept in a healthy state by the firmness prevailing in Prussia
Hanover
most descriptions of manufactured goods at Manchester, so that hold¬
Hanse Towns
ers are quite indisposed to force sales, or to accept any material reduc¬
Holland
Messrs.

.

.

.

.

1864.
bales.

1863.
bales.

loan for the

198,046
288,380
153,637
912,227
3.784,562
691,51)4
29 ,365

6,767,896

£

.

lk

.

.

147.722

,

carried

the
last. The

tion in values.
Since the close of the week, however, a fall of
has taken place.
But taking into
for the last four days amount to nearly 40,000
now current are high, the decline is of but little
fall of £d. to ^d per pound from the late

Other

£d. to 4d per pound

Mid.

Good
Ord.

Fair.

The
ties of

Balec6 otton.
Texas
Orleans
....

21#

20

22

20#
20#

22#

19
19
19

26#
26#
26#

Boweds..
Mobile...
Orleans..

,

:

,

Mid.

Fair.

Mid. Fair

15
15

18#
19
18#

17#
18

Comptah

17#

16

15

-

2,398,569

Pernambuco

24#
23

Egyptian

23#

America
Brazil. Egvpt,

1865.
d.

1866.
d.

27#

26#
29#

20#
20#

27#

24

28
27#

15#

CONSUMPTION, ETC., AT LIVERPOOL.
Import week ending Export

w’k end'g

bales.

7

&c

1865.

25

20#

Jan. 4,

15#
16
15#

18,832
22,944

496,260

,

10,850

deliveries of cotton into and in
week of each of the last three years, as well as

The

imports and

1865.

1866.

240

43,163
10,313
13,835
67,311

2,340
2,373
8,262
12,975

781

3,216
5,337

Consumption, Jan. 10.
' 1865.

1366

402,630

Mid.

4,368

46,144

Total

quali
20#
21#
15

16#

East India.

■>

382.464

1864.
d.

Jan. 4,
1865.
1866.

21
21

16#
16#
16#

Mid. Fair.

2,052,778

24#

t

Broast

25#
25#

17#
17#
17#

Fair.

1,934,841

“

Good
Ord.

276,013
44,074
14,688
653,7U3

1,077,617

359,844

Orleans

IMPORTS, EXPORTS,

1865.
bales.

909,438

359,770

“

20#

Broach
Dhollerah
Oomrawuttee

bales.

222,346
15,141
49,663
481,786
401,821
882,021

“

25

—LAST YEAR

ELEVEN MONTHS.
1864.

prices current for cotton at Liverpool, as regards middling
produce, in each of the last four years, are as follows :

Stock, Jan 4,

THI8 DAY

6,946,153

152,678
98,681
54,430

.

Middling Mobile

EAST INDIAN.
,

1863.
bales.

-

1863.
d.

YEAR.

LAST

THIS DAY.

Mid.

THE UNITED KINGDOM IN

countries

AMERICAN.

Fair.

159,986

Total

consideration the fact that the imports
bales, and that the sales
importance. Indeed, a
highest point, under a strong
importation and a tight money market, undoubtedly indicates a healthy
position of the staple in question. The market has, in fact, been buoy¬
ed up by the satisfactory state of the Manchester market, the demand
for grains being tolerably active at mostly full prices. Cloth, however,
is quieter, but shows only a slight depreciation in value from last week.
The following are the present prices of cotton at Liverpool:

bales.

433,773
156,607
521,213
390,798
186,573
1,328,092
3,422,830
315,836
388,431

119,095
329,990

'

Jan. 6.
1866.

35,110

India during the
the latest state¬

17#
past
15# ment of stocks, were as under :
IS
17
1864.
1866.
1865.
During the year just concluded, the market was in a most sen¬ Imports
bales.
15,769
5,763
4,703
sitive state. In the early months, and up to the close of August Deliveries
6,440
3,518
2,854
111,923
36,716
53,827
spinners, speculators and exporters operated cautiously, and prices de¬ Stock
clined materially, but the great increase in the American demand for
The quantity of East India cotton now estimated afloat is 289,765
goods, coupled with the uncertainty which prevailed as to the probable bales, against 249,625 bales last year.
extent of the supplies in the Southern States, was the cause of great ac¬
Owing, in a very great measure, to the dampness of the weather
tivity in the article, so that prices experienced a rapid rise to the extent, and the consequent poor condition in which produce is brought to mar¬
on the average
of about 4d per lb. During the concluding months ket. the wheat trade has opened with great inactivity, and a fall of
the quotations declined ; but, taking into consideration the high point
quite Is.per quarter has taken place in prices. Yesterday, however,
which had previously been attained, not to any important degree. The
large samples changed hands steadily, and holders were disposed to in¬
actual consumption in Great Britain last year was 2,034,800 bales, being sist on full terms ; but the market, as regards all descriptions of pro¬
an increase of 428,410 bales as
compared with 1864. The comparison duce, was certainly a most unsatisfactory one, and the amount of busi¬
is as follows:
ness transacted was very moderate.
Besides the cause to which I have
East India
Brazil,
alluded above, this inactivtiy may be attributed to the fact that busi¬
American.
& China.
Egypt, &c.,
Total.
1865
231,100
1,049,600
2.034,800 ness has not as yet been entirely reopened since the holidays, and to
764,100
1864
150,730
488,920
1,605,390 the far more weighty fact, that of the demand of money. Our imports
958,740
There was also an increase in the export demand by 158,400 bales, of produce continue very moderate, both from America and the
as will be seen in the subjoined statement:
nent, but it may be observed that we have recently received several
East India
Brazil,
parcels of flour from your side, an article which has, at the present
Total.
>
American. &677,700
China. Egypt, &c.
890,900 time, become quite a scarce commodity in our market. That we shall
!865
60,200
153,000
732,480 require considerable supplies of wheat is certain, because the harvest
1864.
53,880
589,930
88,670
The total quantity imported at Liverpool was 2,084,800 bales, show- this country last year was deficient both in quantity and in point of
14#

,

Conti¬

„„„




in

104
quality,

THE CHRONICLE.

[January 27, 1866.-

compared with its two immediate predecessors. There is, rates. On Wednesday the
quarterly meeting of the members of the
fair supply of old wheat in the country, and the
prolific tin plate trade was held, and as the demand for plates had been, as well
harvests of 1863 and 1864 have, to some
extent, compensated for the as customers, very
deficiency of last season. But, at the eame time, our imports of wheat I C charcoal plates active, it was resolved to advance prices 2d per box.
are now quoted at 33s per box, delivered at Liver¬
and flour have fallen off
considerably, and the range of prices does not pool.
increase them. For instance, the
imports of wheat for ten months last
The arrivals of coal into London last
year, by land and water carriage,
year were rather more than 3,500,000 cwts., and of flour 1,100,000
| reach the enormous total of 5,903,271 tons, against nearly 5,400,000
cwts. less than in
1864, and with a falling off in our home produce, it tons in 1864.
•
seems certain that a rise in
prices must occur during the next six weeks
or two
months, in order to attract the necessary supplies from foreign
countries* I cannot see, however, that there is room for a rise of
COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
anyimportant extent, but I think that the finest new English white wheat
may advance to 55s. and new red to about 60s. per quarter. These
Imports and Exports for thf. Week.—The
following, are the
prices would indicate an advance from the present rates of about 5s. imports at New York for the week
ending (for drygoods) Jan. 18,
per quarter. The average price of English wheat in
England and and for the week ending (for general merchandise) Jan. 19 :
Wales, last week, was 46s. lid.* against 37s. lOd.in 1864, and 40s. 5d.
FOREIGN IMPORTS 'AT NEW YORK FOR THE
in 1863, 46s. 7d. in
WEEK.
1862, and 61s. 4d. in 1861. The following table
shews the extent of our
1SG3.
1864.
1S65.
1866.
importations during ths first eleven months of
the last three years :
Dry goods
$1,967,200 $ 1,04 3,235
§572,608 $3,902,895
as

however,

a

:

.

IMPORTS OF WHEAT AND FLOUR

Gen’l merchandise.

1X1*0

TIIE EXITED

KINGDOM

1863.
Cwts.

1864.
Cwts.

4,156,143
3. s 98,236

FromRussia..
Prussia
Denmark

4,711,510
4.592,932
710,131

7,127.624
5,034,306
603.691

249,113
620,498
434,288
554,497

250,782

344,253

Schleswig-Holstein and Lanen-

berg
Mecklenberg

164,151
368,229
249,756

Hanse Towns
France

120,337

Turkey, Wallachia & Moldavia
387,673
Egypt
2,229,353

United States
British North America
Other countries

7,836.020
406.579

22,143.081
5.695.627

as

far

as

307,376
1,659.50-1
1.737,417
472.760
113,257

4,756,298

4,290,314

1863.

1864.

1S65.

i

29,859
166,182

40,478
126,849

47,270

104,974) Copper, w

Lead, pig..
1,416,4401,632,685 2,414,200 Tin plates.
Cotton thread 226,976
179,495 169,701 Oil seed
Earthenwar

Man of Ger¬
silver.
Linen
piece
man

254,163

7.687

14.983

38.248

231,282

140,954

627.618

805,957
53.835

401,079 Silk pc ootls
S09,sl0:
handch’fs

59,828

93,050

73,349

67,015

3,750

17,270

ribbons..

23,748
74,445

otli. art’s
mixed in
oth. ma¬
terials

86,648

312,28S|Spools, Brit..

28,183
75,459

16,011
12,163
40,654

37,567
11.079

“

1

108,518

.

$1,064,805
4,502,544

4,390,653

18(56.

$4,860,386
9,U95,150

.American silver
20—Steamer Arago, Havre—
,
Gold bars...
20—Steamer Borussia, Hamburg—
Silver bars
Gold bars
German silver
18—Steamer City of Baltimore,
Liverpool—
Gold bars

5,785
.....

..

....

248,000
154,135
137,500

1,000

v

80,374
59,100

,

Total for the week

Previously reported

41.093
14,789

,

1

“

..

$2,871,565

Specie

Wool
37,242
19,410
1,779,389 2,30s,347 3,097,534 Woolen cloth 610,722 699,528 484,618
Lmen thread. 179.560 176,661 133.3391
“
carp’s 229,186 278,001 329,597 I
Metals—
68.074
|
“ shawls
61.309
29,731
Iron, pig... 120.951 209,917 167,820 Worstedst'ffs
bar,&c 445,379 703,601 209,346! of wool only
“
railr’d. 375,420 800,067
387,8741 and of wool
“
i
cast’gs
18,227
14,073
4,811
mixed with
“
hoops. 159,139 218,170 93.979| oth. mat’ls 1,717,356 2,006,9703,221.240
The last return issued
by the Veterinary Department of the Board
of Trade in reference to the disease
amongst horned stock in Great 1
Britain is the least unfavorable that ha3 been
published. The state¬ i
ment is for the week
ending Dec. 30, and during that period 7,693 beasts
were attacked
by the disease. Since government commenced to report
cases, it appears that 73,549 head of stock have been
attacked, of which

.goods

WEEK.

1865.

$10,369,339

2.907
36,942

142,938

THE

»

“

309,19

34.506

..

239,401

“

1865.

41,896
691,403

FOR

1S64.

$7,262,218 $5,566,S49 $13,955,536
found the official detailed
the week.
exports of specie from the port of
New York, for the week ending January 20, IS6G :
Jan. 18—Schooner Charles Thompson, Ponce—

£244,813£143,663
462,947

YORK

In the commercial department will be
statement of the imports and
exports for
The following will show the

three years :

1S64.

NEW

$4,235,591
6,183,748

Since Jan. 1

236,526

4U074

Salt.

823,577 .380,413
Haberdash’ry 585,104 745,514
Hardware and cutlerv—
Knives, &c 68,083 111,097
Anvils, vi¬
ces, saws..
65,159
85.162

222.889

3,634
25.(447

e

& porcel’e.

For the week
Prev. reported.

3,139,091

goods

FROM

1863.

our

1863.
Iron, wro’t £105,274
Steel
477,171

our

EXPORTS

export trade with
principal articles of British and Irish

£326,631 £346,771 £419,299;

6,867,188

January loth.

166.663
156.070

produce, during the past eleven months of each of the last
Alkali
Beer & ale...
Coals
Cotton piece

$2,666,515
2,032,821

$6,450,683

5,431,554

$12,016,457 $7,342,394 $4,699,336 $13,317,871
report of the dry-goods trade wii’l be found the imports of
dry-goods for one week later.
The following is a statement of the
exports (exclusive of specie)
from the port, of New York to
foreign ports, for tue week ending

2,356,943

837,005
116,162

relates to the

$2,410,840

7,303,581

In

18,557,281
6,223,446

extent of

$4,712,876

931,651

2,474,195

following table shows the

2,547,788

294.316

269,262
1.059,674

Total

America,

1.164.627

22.729,209
12,528,795

Other Countries

The

445,966

451.S59

Total

2,093,907

Since Jan. 1st

603,-582
456.692
1,663,502
562,541
10,063
1.016,531

366. S70

8,318,330
2.020iS89

Indian'Corn
Flour—
From Hanse Towns
France
United States
British North America

1,367,605

Total for the week
Piev. reported

I860.
Cwts.

Wheat—

2,745,676

IX ELEVEN MONTHS.

Total since Jan. 1 ,1866

Same time in

Same time in

1865

1858

1864

1857
2

432,031

$4,688,542

1856

1862

j 1S61

...

1854

92 834

1S55

1S60

1,468,302

1853

1&59

1.837.996

.

Internal Revenue

in

529.159

1852

3.194.314

New York.—The

receipts on account
city of New York since October, 1862,
of $64,222,056, and so
rapid has been the increase
13,931 have beeu killed, 41,491 have died, and 7,045 have recovered. j show a total
that more than one half the whole, or $37,156,411 were collected in
At present the appearance of the disease has the effect of
contributing
to a
comparatively low price for butchers’ meat; but the ultimate con¬ the vear 1865. The following are the aggregates in each district
sequences of the disease must, without doubt, operate
disasterously to of the city for 1863, 1864, and 1865 :
the whole
country. Just now the grazing community is exceedingly
1863.
1864.
Increase.
alarmed, and is forwarding to market beasts which they would, under
32d dist
$4,876,907 73
other circumstances, have detained at home for one
$3,474,026 11
year, two, aud even 4th dist
4,020,762 14
three years longer.
1,756,567 57
Many of these beasts are disposed of at very low 5th dist
508,987 30
1,054,017 21
545,929 91
prices, and

as a recent

order in Council forbids the conveyance
of stock

forwarded to market back to the
grazing districts, the only alternative
is to sell them at a low
price to the butcher, who turns them into sau¬
sages.

it

was

The public—the unthinking public—congratulated itself that

enabled to

secure

its Christmas

supplies of beef

at a

Sugar...
Coffee
Rice
«£

1865.
tons

6th
7th
8th
9th

dist
dist
dist.
dist

_.

revenue

...

110.S14

1866.
84.410

11,349
45,005

22,612
34,441

Metals, oils, and tallow have also participated in the general
quiet¬
; and there is a tendency, which
certainly appears by no means

Total

in the

1,190,976 97
453,261 48
1,700,300 42
489,558 98

tolerably low

but these low rates will, without doubt, be succeeded by
very high
quotations, unless, indeed, the foreign grazer supply us not only with
large numbers, but full weight during the ensuing spring. The imports
of cattle during the
past eleven months of last year were 196,030 beasts
against 141,778 beasts; 768,084 against 412,469 sheep; 117,766 calves
against 68,777 calves; and 368,602 pigs against 300,216 pigs last year.
As regards the state of the markets for colonial and
foreign grocery
produce, there is but little to say. The high rate of money, coupled
with the holiday
appearance in most departments, has had the effect of
limiting transactions generally, whilst the tendency of prices has been
rather in favor of the
buyer. The stocks in London are as follows :
rate ;

of internal

$7,911,105 35

..

2,899,881
955,336
3,394,670
944,137

54

1,708,804 57

67
68

502,125 19
1,892,879 83
454,578 70

$18,242,773 22

$10,331,667 87

1864.

32d dist....
4th dist
5th dist
6th dist....
7th dist
8th dist.
9th dist..
....

Totals

....

25

1865.

$4,873,907 73

8,466,158 50
1.827,381 63
4,300,378 96
1,626,384 91
8,558,657 52
2,077,578 47

1,054,017 21
2,S99,S81 54
955,386 67
.

..

Increase.

$10,269,871 55

4,020,762 14

.

.

*

3,592,680 25
944,137 68

$18,242,773 22
$37,156,411 58
(three months)
1963 (calendar
year)

$5,425,963 86
„

4,445.396 36
773,364 42

1,400.497
670,998
4,965,977
1,133,440

52
24
27

79

$18,913,638 36

...

Collections in 1862
(4

44

1864

44

1S65

T.

7,911,105 85

*

ness

permanent, unless, indeed, money should become




even

dearer, to lower

Collections in three years and three mouths.

*, ♦

$64,222,056 14

1862-18634

THE

January 27,1866.]

(N. Y.) War Expenses.—The following state¬
prepared for the State Bureau of military statistics exhibits
an account of all moneys expended in the county for war purposes
to the 31st December, 1865, together with the sources from which
the moneys were received.
The amounts paid were as follows :
King’s County

1,000,000 inhabitants, and a valuation of $600,-

New York has

ment

the average, every man, woman and child has
paid last year to the General Government $37, or 6 per cent, of
the valuation. This is exclusive of the payment for stamps con*'
sumed by the people of this city.
The internal revenue collections of the whole country in the fis¬
000,000 ; hence, on

cal years since the excise law went into operation have
lows. The year begins on July 1, and ends on the
June

The

July 1, be

tained

taking the

of revenue

will have been attained.

Receipts.—The Pacific Mail Company’s
Henry Chauncy, from Aspinwall on the 12th inst., arrived
the morning of 19 th inst. The following is her treasure list:

on

Panama R. R. Co.

Atlantic M. S. Co
D. B. Allen
J. & W. Seligman
H. Cohen & Co

1,656 31 Eugene Kelly & Co

—

328,635 24
11,500 00
95,760 50

6,684 05 Lees & Waller
70.800 00 Wells,

...

Fargo & Co

.

33,700 00 To order
26,735 23
50,435 06
Total,
79,517 11

Smith, Martin & Co
Duncan, Sherman & Co...

Aug. Belmont & Co

$1,650 00
1,000 00

S. L. Isaacs & Ash.,.,
....

Total
Total

The

receipts Dy steamship from California since the
have been as follows :

ment of the year

Steamship.

Date.

New York
Henry Chauncy

January 12
January 19

$47,053

Diminution of Receipts in 1866

Ohio State Debt.—The funded debt of Ohio shews a decrease
of $1,985,258 89 during the four years ending November 15,1865.
The amounts in 1861 and 1865 compare as follows :
utx

6,198,325
1,025,000
2,183,531
1,600,000

cent.
cent.
cent.

27
00
93
00

2,400,000 00
379,866 00

J

sources

from which the moneys were ob¬
$1,396,783 85
3,033,564 30
1,248,399 66
$5,673,687 75

Total
The funded debt of the county Dec.
The floating debt, same date, was

$2,464,000 00

31,1S65, was

544,504 80

Total

$1,787,000 00

.V......

do

$3,008,504 30

>

.,........

cent interest

Amount bearing 6 per
do
7

1,221,504 30

$3,008,504 30
Mackerel Inspected in Massachusetts.—The inspection of
Mackerel the past year, says the Boston Shipping List, show3 a fall¬

04 IS

Beverly

562,268 56

1,009,500
2,183,531
1,600,000
4,095,309
2,400,000

00
93
00
47
00
379,866 00

$12,230,475 96

DOMESTIC DEBT

$1,765 00
60 36

$ 1,765 00
60 36

275,385 00

17,080%

12,635%

6,6703*

i2%

2,697

Boston
Chatham
Cohasset
Dennis
Gloucester....
Harwich

914%
1,963%
1,157%'
28,378%

514%

4%

3,4343*
1,929%
99,174%

Hingham

Rockport

300,204 32

279,213 13
400,000 00

$1,109,383 81

Total domestic debt.

$14,897,273 34

$681,5:38 49

$12,912,014 45

figures present a highly satisfactory condition of affairs.
Not only has the State furnished the means for its own defense
during the late four years war, and sustained its credit by the
prompt payment of interest on its indebtedness, but it has actually
redeemed nearly $2,000,000 of the principal of. the public debt,
and the balance to credit of the sinking fund at the end of the
last fiscal year was $328,611 11, a sum nearly sufficient to pay all
These

during the current year, without the

aid of the actual income of the fund.

Michigan State Debt.-—The State Treasurer
the Legislature makes the following exhibit of the

in his report to

State’s indebted¬

13,9953*
1,081
1,860%

240

3,912%

1,121%
4,949%
246%

7,928%

153,7233*

63,5623*

39,266%

7/8

Wellfleet

Total

%

96

2,467%
5,756%
1,587%
6%
5,222

Truro

MACKEREL REINSPECTED IN

188%

23*

4,085%
2443*

MASSACHUSETTS IN 1865.

Boston
Gloucester....

22,660%

1,235%
376%

7,523%
204%

14%

7,7273*

18,857%
401%

14%

44%

follows

inspection each year since 1852 have been as
No. 2.

1S65

153,723%

1864
1863
1862
1861
1860
1859
1858
1857
1856
1855
1854
1853
1852

103,383%

63,562%
137,746%
136,075%

58,828%
61,330
75,347

4,118%
1,992%

42,952%
47,989%
90,000%
55,133%
39,987
47,960%

91,917%
89,333%

29,187%
30.095%

49,010%
96,610%

,.

.

...

798

95% Cod
Sword Fish
44

...

...

..

.

.

Herring

511

Haddock

...

....

....

26% Blue Fish

...

....

185,388
214,392
211,952
135,349
133,340
217,540

280

562%
633%
3,440%

1,338%
3,378%
19,843%
2,164
.

inspection of other pickled Fish has been as

No. 1 Salmon
No. 2
“
No. 3
“
Alewives
Shad
Manhaden

131,602

724
178

14%

33,212%
102,601%
100,011
22,486
50,578%
22,207%
32,332%

49,795%
76,819%
91,125%
46,242%
24,583%
74,793%

70,877%

Total.

256,797
274,357
306,942
260,864
194,283
235,705
99,815

244%

39,266%

78,388%
100,2S6%
122,837
12,16'.'%
21,929

67,985%
81,902%

:

No. 4.

No. 3.

No. 1.

The

19,304

24,272%

Total

500 00

281,969 13

ceased)

916

1,671

558%
4,7553*
6,509%

4
6
28

3,726%

1,341%

3,4703*
2,169%

Nantucket....

The

250 000 00

No. 4.

No. 3.
1

No. 2.
21

No. 1.

Newburyport.

$13,787,889 53

the interest that may accrue

the

Newburyport.

Loan of 1856, (interest ceased).
Loan of 1860, 6 per cent..>.

Stock of 1849, (interest ceased)
National Road Bonds, (interest ceased)
Loan of 1863, 6 per cent
Loan of 1845, 6 per cent
'.
Loan of (Union) of 1866, 6 per cent (int’6t
Loan of (Union) of 1868, 6 per cent
Loan of (Union) of 1871, 6 per cent

wrere

Provincetown.

FOREIGN DEBT.

Loan of 1881, 6 per
Loan of 1886, 6 per
Loan of 1868, 6 per

following
:

ing off of 18,000 bbls compared with 1864, while the quantity of
No. 1 is 50,000 bbls more than last year, and the inspection of l’s
$2,650 00
largely exceed any previous year since 1852. The inspection of 2’s
$802,356 54 is less than half the quantity inspected in 1864, while the No. of
3’s have been about the same.
Notwithstanding the falling off in
commence¬
bbls, the superior quality of the Mackerel caught the past year,
will make their value quite equal to any previous year. The fol¬
Amount.
$685,610 lowing are the returns of the Inspector General:
Bbls.
Bbls.
Bbls.
Bbls.
799,706
$1,485,316
1,532,369

Total to date 1866
Total to date 1865.

1,327,781 84
$5,678,687 75

$799,706:54

FROM ASPINWALL.

Hoadley, Eno & Co

of National

From county taxes in 1861-65, inclusive
From county loans 1862-65, inclusive
From State Paymaster-General to reimburse county for expenses
incurred under call of troops Dec. 19,1864, $1,261,535, in New
York State bonds ; net proceeds of sale of same and premium
on loans
:

$8,250 00
76,000 00

$10,033 04!Eugene Kelly & Co

.

$202,074 01
597,253 68
703,322 88
2,843,256 84

.

Total

California Gold
here

For bounties, &c
r..
For bounties, &c., principal on loans and sendees
Guard
:

116.850,672 44
211,119,529 17

from internal sources

interest on loans.

&c., and sendees of National Guard

For bounties,

\. $41,003,192 93

Should the rate of increased for the current year, to
the same as that of last year over the previous one, and
New York returns as an index, the highest estimate

steamer

For relief to families of volunteers, with
For bounties, relief and interest. —

1861
1862
1863
1864
1865

been as fol¬
31st day of

:

1865-1866

105

CHRONICLE.

follows:

Fins and Napes.
Halibut heads.
177
894% Trout

254%
20

285%

510%

....

7,653%

Total

644

Tongues & Sounds 532%

630

ness :

Interest. Due
Jan 1, 1878
do 1868
do 1873
do 1876
do 1S83
do 1873
do 1886

Renewal Loan Bonds
Two million Loan Bonds.
do
do
do
do
do
do
St. Marie Canal Bonds
War Loan Bonds
War Bounty Loan Bonds.
...

Mayl, 1890

Amount.

$216,000
250,000
500, U00
500,000
750,000

1,122,000 00
345,000 00

Adjusted bonds, past due

12,000 00
400 00

Unrecognized $5,000,000 loan bonds, $140,000 a<fiustable for

LOST

80,999 80

$1,144,239 50
264,871 47

Primary school fund
University fund

39,204 23

.

Railroad deposits

2,157 82
,

BONDS.

WHOM I88UKD

NUMBERS.

AMOUNT FOR.

1,174-5-6-7-S.

TO WHOM

DATED.

$1,000 each.

ISSUED.

Refer to James L.

97,399 80

$3,880,399 80




published the last week in the Bulletin.

BY

TRUST FUND DEBT.

Total liabilities of State

give in our Bulletin from day to day lists of bonds, &c., lost, and
These tables will be continued daily, and on Saturday
morning, such as have been published through the week in the Bulletin
will be collected and published in the Chronicle. Below will be found those
We

name or party

$4,000 00

Full paid $5,000,000 loan bonds, past due
War loan bonds ($100 ana $50) called in

©alette.

dividends declared.

$3,783,000 00

Total funded debt

Normal school fund

Bankers’

00

00
00
00
00
100,000 00

!

1,450,472 52

$5,330,872 32

Illinois State (
Bonds
)

U. S.

5-203....-j

do
do
do
do
U. S. 7-30s
do
do

29,873, 29,884,
27,913, 52,931,

11,999, 52,935.
43,200.
-

15,560.
195.

.....

The following

80,757-58-59-60.

j- $100 each.
$1,000.
$500.
$1,000.
$500 each.

dividends are announced—

Berrien,

-

—

838

Broome St.

First series.

do
do
do
Second do
do
do
do

.

.

Refer to B. R.

Hudson, Auries’ville, Montgom¬
ery

.

.

r

Co., N. Y.

DIVIDENDS.
PAYABLE.

EATS

KAMI OF COMPANY.

p.

BOOKS CLOSED.

o’t.

WHERE.

WHEN.

Insurance.
Tan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

3%

Republic Fire Insur. Co

International Insurance Co
Astor Fire Insurance Co....

8%

.

^

5
5

Broadway Insurance Co....
Railroads, etc.
DeL <fc Raritan Canal and 1
Camden & Amboy Rail- v
road & Trans. Co
)

10

19.

Company’s Office

New York Central

1.

Feb. 15.

8

Feb. 20.

—

—

Company’s Office

*

j Offices in N. Y.
j and Philadel...

)

Duncan, Sher& Co.,NY

)

< man

f Albany C. B’k.
Banks.

-

>Jan. 31 to Feb. 28

Company’s Office

Feb. 1 to Feb. 17.

Feb. 1.

At Bank.

Jan. 22 to Feb. 1.

1

5

,

SuicksilverCentral
York
Erie,

div

ex

Hudson River

Friday Night. Jan. 26.

The Money Market-.—The market exhibits
action from the extreme

Mariposa
ew

1

|

Exchange Sank

overhangs financial affairs; and unless there should be an
early revival of confidence, it is quite possible that prices
may fall below the real dividend value of stocks.
The pass,
ing of the loan bill is looked to as likely to produce a more
settled market. The following are the closing quotations for
leading stocks compared with those of last Saturday:—
Canton Co..'.
Cumberland Coal..

Feb. 17.

5

Wyoming V. RR. & Coal Co

—

Company’s Office
1. Company’s Office
1.

C

Corn

[January 27,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

106

a

slight

re¬

Reading
Michigan Southern
Michigan Central
Cleveland and Pittsburgh
Northwestern
“

preferred

ow7n

Jan. 26.

Jan. 20.
45
46
14

44%
43%

13%

'

41%

86%

93%
64%

.

103%’
101%
70%

91
88%
101%
98%
67%
116
78

125

85%
31%
57%
102%
95%
105%

28%
54%
97%

1

Rock Island
prevailing during late weeks.
Fort Wayne
93%
There is a perceptible increase in the demand for mercantile
105
C. & Toledo
Both the banks and private bankers are
accommodation.
Ltnited States Securities.—Governments generally have
extending their purchases of paper; but still confine their been dull and unsettled
during the week. The uncertainty as
operations to the most approved names, disfavoring the large to the financial measures to be
adopted by Congress, the ap¬
amount of credits being issued by jobbers in new branches
prehension that Mr. McCulloch may prevail upon Congress,
of trade.
The request of some western firms for renewal
to authorize a foreign loan,' and the Hibernia's news of a deli¬
of their notes has created a degree of caution respecting
cate condition of finances at London, have combined to pro¬
merchandise paper connected with that section.
The weak¬ duce a general indisposition to buy government securities.
ness of the
Liverpool cotton market, connected with the con¬ At the same time, the heavy
decline in railroad stocks has
ease

;..

dition of affairs at

.

London, has also produced a certain
produced an idea that they may become relatively cheaper
parties in the cotton trade; but than
governments, producing an exchange of the latter for
exceptions, the loan market shows the same the former ; w hich again has tended to foster a suspension of

amount of caution toward

with these

general features of confidence that have hitherto existed.
the mar¬
dormant,
owing to prices there being nearly equal to those of Newr
York: but so soon as packers show a disposition to mee
the views of buyers here, an active westward movement of.
capital may be anticipated.
The domestic commission
merchants are employing a large amount of bills, which are
readily taken at rates ranging from 6£@9 per cent.
The growing demand for discounts has diminished the
balances available for call loans, and the rates to street bor¬
There is still very little western produce paper in
ket.
The large stock of pork in Cincinnati lies

operations.

Gold interest bonds

are

Five-twrenties of 1862 have declined

especially depressed,

J, and and close weaker

The 2d issue are J lower. Sevenfirmly until the close of the
week, wrhen the price yielded
J. The representations
made to the Committee on Ways and Means, in favor of an
early funding of all the short obligations of the government,
produces an expectation that Seven-thirties will soon be con¬
vertible into a long six per cent bond, which tends strongly
than any

other securities.

thirties have held their

to sustain

their value.

Sixes of 1881 maintain their late

price. Certificates of Indebtedness are in goood demand for
the employment of balances, and remain at 98f.
Compound
low 5 per cent, and a fair proportion of call loans are sup¬
interest notes are in active demand from the National banks,
plied at 6 per cent. Although there has been an increased for keeping up their reserve. activity in stocks, the demand from the brokers has been
The following are the closing quotations for the leading
strictly moderate. The last banks’ statement shows a mode¬
securities:
‘
rate increase in loans and a decrease in deposits and legal
Jan. 20. Jan. 26.
rowers are

a

shade firmer.

We hear of

no

transactions be¬

•

tenders; which shows the reaction from the late extreme
ease

Prime bills

above indicated.

are

current at

6^@7^

per

“good” at 8@9 per cent; and a wide range of less
known paper at 10@15 per cent.
The following are the rates for the various classes of loans;

cent;

Per cent.

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

Railroad

and

@6
@ 7

6%@ 7%

Good endorsed
4 months

do
Lower

bills, 3 & '

single names
grades

7%@ 8

8
10

@ 9
@15

Miscellaneous Stocks.—The downward

movement in railroad

-

5
6

shares commenced two weeks ago, and

temporarily checked last week, has been continued, and the
list shows an average decline of 3@4 per cent.
Speculative
holders appear to have made no effort to raise the fall, but
have readily sold out, apparently from a conviction that, in
the fear of the recent falling oft* in earnings, and the less
hopeful prospects of the roads, late values could not be lon¬
ger sustained. The street is less subject than usual to speculative combinations, and the fall in prices is less due to
clique operations than to natural causes. The tone of the
market is still wreak, and although prices now average about
8 per cent lower than at the opening of January, dealers do
not appear confident that the bottom has been reached.
There is, however, a very large outstanding “ short ” inter,
est, which may serve as the basis of an upward reaction.
The depression is fostered by the general uncertainty that




U.
U.
U.
U.
U.
U*
U.
U.
U.

S. 6’s, 1881 coup
S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons.
S. 5-20’s, 1864
“
S. 5-20’s, 1865
“
S. 10-40’s,
“
S. 7-30’s 1st series
S. 7-30’s 2d Series
S. 7-30’s 3rd series

S. 1 yr’s

certificates

The Gold Market.—The

:.......

103%
103%
101%
101%
92%
99
98%
98%

98%

103%
102%

101%
101%
92%
98%
98%
98%

98%

general course of the market
has been steady. The uncertainty as to whether Congress
will adopt the clause in the new loan bill authorizing a di¬
rect foreign loan Leeps the market somewhat in suspense,
and it is quite probable that the determining of that point
of the bill will produce a slight change in the premium.
The demand for customs duties has been large. The foreign
bankers appear to be generally disposed to keep a good sup¬
ply of specie, in view of the possibility of increasing mone¬
tary difficulties at London ; and some of them have bought
freely during the week. The low rates of exchange have
not prevented the shipment of a considerable amount of
gold. Bullion has been procurable on easy terms, so that,
with the high rate of interest at London, shippers have been
able to realise a slight percentage above shipments; while
some have probably remittee! in this form more with a view
to credit than profit.
The shipments on Saturday last
amounted to $680,109, chiefly in bullion; and on Wednesday
the Scotia took out $336,964. The following are the highest
and lowest quotations for gold for the last six days :

Highest. Lowest

Highest. Lowest.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

188*

139

20.
22.
23.

18'f
188*

139*
189*

139*
139*
189*

139*

24.

139*

25.
26

139*

.

following are the current quotations for the leading
foreign coin:
Selling.

2196503.

Buying.
$6 60

Sovereigns

Mexican Dollars
.,

England Notes.

The transactions for last week at the Custom-house

$562,844
539,272
600,391
441,189
337,829
263,840

January 15
January 16
January 17

January 18
January 19
January 20

73,138

105,478

4,872.953
2.047,934
1.816,504
2,269,901
2,360,262
1.904,667
10457,665
1,368,052

481.235

535,930
132,824
7,774

North Amer
Hanover

Balance in

Deduct

Sub-treasury

ou

Balance
Increase

2,059,756

181,18S

4.S97

2,618,654
2.700,803

125,420
30.232

8.200,000
3,596,410

182,759
5# 193

Continental

4.i 47,550

166.160

Commonwealth....

3,060,704

Oriental'....

1,197.212
1,857,369
1.111.302

85,899
23,079
97,491
49.253

4,075.864
13,745,354

92,460
875,0 .*8

1,624,027

16,412

Corn

$84,181,069 76
8,695,784 88

during the week
Total amount of gold

the

Imp. and Traders..
Park
Mec. Bk. As
Grocers
North River
East River
Man. and Mer
Fourth National...
Central
Second National...
Ninth National....
First National
Third National

Weeks

Custom

Ending

House.

Oct.
“
“

3,590,114

7....
14....

Nov.' 4....
“
11....
“
18....
Dec.

Jau

19,367,370
18,799,937
3-1,547,904
20,717,908
14,784,631
22,791,744
18,411,0:18
23,695,742
IS,865,048
24,387,645
15,660,224
IS.396,097
15.8G1.S66
12,837,971

21,211,285
10,188,786

2,535,485
1,949,999
2,231,767
1,752,256

14,616,299
25,302,305
16,150,457
17,302,808
19,817,205

2,134,363

1,841,075
1,654,875

23,868.750

2,107,341
2,334,694

8,341.643
5,398,128

2,754,368

Balances,
dec
1,073,544
“

67,713,079
64,973.528
60.157,697
55,076,645
58,376,337

“
“

incr

59,957,797
68,180,049
77,259,601

70,822,344
79,050,532
77,416.949
75,995,841
67,988,957
75.485.284

84,181,069

14.093,013

12,400,65.4

254,216
61,783

2,558-177

883,900
310.8SS
1.031,821

8,967,226
806.145
867.201

962.232

13,189

357,919
226,501
838,702

1,427.300
602,841

2,039,888
1,295,073

122,778
983.147

5,974
9.146

553,871

22,417

1,126,779
12.883,620

8,848,629
4,386,963
338,031
2,285,497
1,890,370

12,945.653
943,375

S6,714

52,009
40,316

3,305,020

1,295.000
386,300

3,485,636
J,o5i,c02
V&9.947
1,052.818
3,415,920
13,771.703
1,625.493

199.500
1,215

52,773

453 000
818.000

2 486.362

269,706
863,425
401,044
79S.673
14,706
114,848

1,211,835
5.5-9,627
2,367,920

6,611 036
8.277,603

901,876
35,000

2,495,592
190 521

1,063,514
889,320

181,162

15,265,372 20,475,707 198,816,248

72,799,S92

of the previous week are

:

1,75»,196 | LegalTenders

.Inc.

The statement, on

the whole, shows a tendency to recede
matters

from the extreme ease in monetary
vailed for

some

weeks.

previous weeks:

7,496,327
8,695,784

Loans.
Oct. 7.... 228,520,727
Oct 14....
227,541,8S4
Oct. 21.... 224,030,679
Oct. 28
219,965.639
Nov. 4
220,124,961
Nov.ll.... 224,005.572
Nov.18
224,741,853
225.345,177
Nov.25
Dec. 2
229,197,844
Dec. 9
227,889,344
227.814,356
Dec. 16
Dec. 23
228,572,1 ’34
Dec. 30
229,445,730
233.185.059
Jan 6 ’66.
Jan.13 ‘66. 234,9:38,193
Jan.20 ’66.
239,337,726

sterling exchange are

and

Excepting petroleum hills, the sup¬
ply of all other kinds of sterling exchange is very limited.
Southern ports.

The late advices from London have tended to induce remit¬

pre¬

follows with the returns ol
Deposits.

tion.

Aggregate

Legal

Circula¬

Specie.

which has

^

.

The several items compare as

1,642,583

Inc. 1,402,470
220,06’

1,312,790 1

Inc.

Circulation

1,421.107
8,006,883

Inc. 1,049 249

Inc. $1,439,533 I Deposits

Loans

8,237.188

kept low by the large supply of cotton bills drawn here
at the

follows

...

Foreign Exchange.—The rates of

999,500

18,102
105.431
22.703
19,115

1,474.606
16 618.401

Specie

6,4 '7,257

dec
incr
dec
dec
dec
inc
inc

S5.06S
476,956

report—same as last week.
The deviations from the returns

2.185,542
2,739,550
4,815,831
5,081,051
3,299,692
1,581,459
8,222,252
9,079,551

“

49U.OOO
29,947
473.130

186,766
221,8'‘0

462,459
962,238
910,904
657,666
964,000

1,998,4t9
2,193,570
1.431,126
2,388,839

57 S, 539

218,427

1,725,009

*No

Changes in

*

Balances.
24,335,221
69,898,621

843,975

$239,377,726

Totals

as

Receipts.

25,408,765
21,552,912
21,530,488
39,363,735
24,798,070
11,484,939

1.991,742
2,561,580
1,932,368
2,687,656
2,433,163

21....
28....

“

Payments.

664,072
423,834

6,149,5tt7

416,000
•

26,f.65
37,294
19,699

1,622,245

Bull’s Head
Manufacturers’

:

Sub-Treasury

,

25,834

974,489 •'

Dry Dock

the aggregate transactions at

Sub-treasury since Oct. 7th

Exchange....

Marine
Atlantic

certificates issued $2,70(3,400. In¬
cluded in the receipts of customs were $825,000 in gold, and
$1,928,641 in gold certificates.
The following table shows

197,734

1,219,017

6,398,128 24

Saturday evening

on

1,097.934

2,698.542
1,704,921

297,003

112,495

$89,577,197 99
.

1.822.814

26,916

the morning of Jan. 15.... 75,485,284 88

payments during the week.

678,831
809,963

2.123,044

95,218

$14,099,913 11

$5,398,128 23

$2,754,368 94

Total

2,527,778
800,150
1,148,218
525,197
1,848,234

1,576,759

Citizens’
Nassau
Market
St. Nicholas
Shoe and Leather..

2,793,330 49
1,724.769 82
3,119,102 46
2,981,174 93

127,811
51,289
109,918
84,992

189,900
841,461

Irving
Metropolitan

2,088,076 81

1,009,615 68
1,051,399 20
726,138 46

7.283.168

3,190,883
8,005,169
1,733,354
4,094,1%

26,139

People’s

4. ISO,682
3,026.5i»0

476,343
298,950

2.024,044

Chatham

855.984

2,439.853

814,893

3,248,283

$2,387,4*68 60

608,293 61

272.514

101,321

Republic

1,167.654

61S,755
4,603,588
6,989,9 4
7,481,410

2,486,475

3 500.407

and

803,947 33

9 920,116
19 411,933

7,122,197

10
43
40
00
85

$1,198,734 06

56
54
64
83
71
66

415.234
826 158

Ocean
Mercantile
Pacific

-Sub-Treasury. Receiuts.
Payments.

Receipts.

.„

Broadway

Sub-treasury were as follows :
Custom-house.

.

1.187,451
183,006

§5

16
1
5
11
6

10 90
6 80

Thalers

Bank

$6

16 00
1 40
5 35

Spanish Doubloons..

.

774,211
5,501,614

2.290.939

130,000
104,576
13,826

334,6-27
48,858

3,074,739

Leather Manf.
Seventh Ward
State of N. Y.
Arner. Exchange...
Commerce

The

Napoleons

107

THE CHRONICLE.

January 27, 1866.]

Tenders.

Cleanngs

13,470,1:34 10,970,397 188,504,486 58,511,752 572,703.232
15,890,775 11.722,847 182,364,156 50,459,195 699,348,495

174.192,110 46,169.855 5^9 ififi &64
173,624,711 46,427,027 575,945.5^0
173.538,674 47,778,719 563,524,873

15,586.540 12.338,441
14,910,561 12,923,735
13,724,268 13,289,381
11,995,201 13,825,209
12,449,989 14,333,163
12,343.542 15,340,528
13 431.103 15.867.400

15.622,780 16,570,613
16,981,4:35 16,724,725
16,055,037 17,629,425
15,331,769 17,990.680
15,778,741 18.588,42816.852,568 19,162.917
15,265,372 20,475,707

174,199,442 47,913,888 588,441,862
173,640,464 47,737,560 508,757,650
175.588,073 49.997,271 452,612,434
175,528,894 48,220,805 487,045,569
176,480.562 48.271,757 420,105,053
180,913,753 48,877,556 501,690,808
183,021,870 53,891,520 507,237,904
189.224.861 71.134,996 396,281,041
195,482.254 71,617.4S7 870,617.523
197,766,999 73.019,957 608,082,837
198,816.248 72,799.892 538,949,311

by to-morrow’s steamer, causing a slight differing of
rates to-day.
Prime bankers 60 days’ sterling has sold
Philadelphia Banks.—The following comparative state¬
mostly at 108f, with exceptions at 1081. The transactions ment shows the average condition of the leading items of the
in francs are nominal.
The following are the closing quota¬
Philadelphia hanks for the last and previous weeks:
Jan. 15, 1866.
Jan. 22,1866.
tions for the several classes of foreign bills, compared with
$14,642,150
tances

those of the three last weeks
Jan. 5.
London Com’l....
do do bank’s
do do do s.s.
Paris
do s.s

,

Antwerp

108#@108#
109 @109#
110#@109#
520 @5163*;
513#@51‘2#
520 @517#

Swiss

517#@510#

Hamburg
Amsterdam

36#@ 36#

Frankfort
Bremen
Berlin

40#@ 41
79 @ 79#
71#@ 71#

40#@ 40#

:—
Jan. 19.

Jau. 12.
108

@108#
108#@109
108#@109
520 @516#
515 @513#
521#@518#
520 @517#
86 #@ 36#
40#@ 41
40#@ 40#
78#@ 79#
71#@ 71#

107#@10S#
108 #@108#
108#@108#
522#@517#
516#@513#
522# @5 IS#
521 #@518#
36 @ 36#
46#@ 40#
40#@ 40:#
78#@ 79
71 @ 71#

Jan. 26.
107 #@108#
108 #@108#

Jan.

522#@518#
520#@518#
36 @ 36#
40#@ 40#
40#@ 40#
7S#@ 78

Banks.
New York
Manhattan.
Merchants
Mechanics
Uni«n
America
Phenix

Discounts.

$6,405,356
5,^92,624

71

@ 71#

tion.

Deposits.

$556,484

$8,924,790

5,01 S,227
4,467,018
4,403,844
8,449,144
7,984,964

$2>08,816
1,952,338
2,MS 6^3
1,452,*6S
1,800,628
3,787,081

8,266,593

918,697

2,925,432

1,225.701

14.032

404,234

5,722,664

278,243

817,642

4,810,278

158,820
1,343,470
240,418
259,160
82,691
289,456
1,157,681
104,743
307,281
80,447

434,283
8,865
192,833

8,983,064
4,809,861
8,075,074

City*..




Net

938,193

7,681,431

2,030,328

•

4,921,211
2,786,703
2,568,810
2 243,874
1,699,386
985,268

.Legals.

Circula¬

1,299.374

6,623,815

Tradesmen’s
Fulton
Chemical
Mercht. Exchange..
National
Butch. & Drovers..
Much's & Trad’s*...

Greenwich,

-Average amount of

Specie.
$2,810,659

78,811
14,779

Tender

271,136
23,484

2,087,875

701,708

2,234,517

801,M0

21,215
834,504

5,285,641
1,813,754
960,754
2,029,912
1,454,092

2,253,483

820,889

209,530

370,840

23,521
7,572

17,05*2,559

367,97*2

7,411,437

36,314,653

The

:

Loans and

17,267,41*2
36,947,700

Circulation

following statement shows
the Associated Banks of the City of New

20, 1866

1,107,186

1.012.980

,

522 #@517#
516 #@513#

York, for the week ending with the commencement of busi¬
ness on

Specie

47,254,622

*109#@

New York City Banks.—The
the condition of

$14,642,150
47,350,428

Loans

497,050
848.063

294,596
442.768

7

Dec
L

Dec...
Dec..
Inc....
*

following comparison shows the condition
adelphia banks at stated periods :
Loans.

Date.

Oct.

3,

49,924,281
49,742,036

......

Oct, 10,

49.682,319

Oct. 17,
Oct. 24,
Oet. 3i;
Nov. 14,'
Nov. 20,
Nov. 27,
Dee. 4
Dec. 11
Dec. 18
Dec. 26
2
Jan.
Jan.
8
Jan. 15
Jan. 22

48,959,072
48,317.622
48,043,139
46,679,961
45,415.040

45,662,762
45.596,327

9.55,924

917,372
903,181

Boston

-

891,993

-

896,141
937,333
898,565
890,822

46,774,150
47.350,428
47,254,622

......

'

1,007,186
1,012,980

45,593,293
45,650,301

983,685

$95,806
64,206
214,853

633,047
53,465

of the Phil¬

Circulation.
Specie.
7.056,984
1.092,755
7,082,197
1,037,705’
7,084.667
1,060,579
7,074,066
1,052,357
7,069,S14
1,086,774

45.941.001

......

..

ec...

7,064,766
7,059,451
7,065,275
7,084,286
7,123,240

Deposits
38,347,233
37,238,078
36,252,038
35,404,524
34,605,024
84,582,031
31,067,87*2
34,050,109
34,995,138
34,310.272

7,141.389

34,272,551

7,169,293
7,226,369
7,319.528
7,357,972
7,411337

34,117,482
35,342,306
36,618,004
36,947,700
36,214,653

Banks.—The last weekly statement of the Boston

compared with the preceding, shows a decrease in
$204.253; an increase in specie of $11,009; an in¬
crease in legal tenders of $112,684; a decrease in deposits of
$639,231; an increase in national circulation of $57,273.
The following are1 the footings as compared with the two

hanks,

as

loans of

previous reports:

Jan. 22«

Loans

Specie

...

Jan. 8.

Jan. 15.

141.900,000
92,665,111
1.040,114
20,750,693

Capital

*41,900,000
92,959,364
1,029,105
20,438,014

$41,900,000
92,245,129
1,031,327

19,914,065
Legal Tender Notes ....
20,300,639
40,939,870
41,718,182
Deposits
22,034,642
21,946,595
21,806,180
Circulation (National) ...
1,328,793
1,215,675
1,273,948
Circulation (State)
The amount due from other banks was 811,870,766, and
the amount due to other banks 814,666,197.

Bank, of New Orleans, was the

The National Louisiana

only additional bank designated by the Secretary of the
Treasury as a depository of the public moneys.
National Banks.—The following national bank were au¬
thorized under the national banking system during lastweek:
Capital.
$200,000
50,000

Location.
Richmond
Grinned, Iowa

Name.
Plantation Bank
First Bank

407,409,203

\\ hole number national
ital of
Amount of

banks

authorized is 1,628, with a cap¬

now

circulation issued to the national banks

for the week

is given at

Previously

the progress ol the
capital and circulation

The following comparison shows
national banks, in respect to number,
from Oct. 7th :
;

1,592
1,597
1,600

•••••••••••

21

41

28,

Nov

4.

1,613
1,619

16

405,809,208
406,409,203
407,409,203
407,509,203
407,509,203
407,759,203

1,625

6, 1866.

13,

20,

1 626

.'

“

1,626

M

224,953,975
229,746,085

405,059,203

1.624

30

207,212,930
214,110,815
217,384,440
221,557,150

403,916,893
404,609,493

1,623

23

203,877,355

403,741,893

1,610
1,612

2,
9,

194,182,630
197,798,380
200,925,780

402,071,130
402,573,793
403,808,793

1,605

••••••••••«

18,

41

Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Jao.
Jan.
Jan.

...

25

t(

1.623

233,760,135
237,871,155

240,094,565
252,926,620
245,866,510

It must be taken into account, in making this comparison
with last week, the returns of the Third National
Exclusive of the returns of that
for the first time included.
bank the changes are as follows:

Bank, and

$1,134,573

Loans

Inc.

Specia

Dec.

1,627,572

Legal Tenders

Foreign Banking.—The following
Bank of England for the week ending
ISSUE

the return of the

3, 1S65

an.

£11,015,100

debt
'} Other securities
I

3

Gold coin and bullion.

Proprietors*capital.
Rest

Public deposits
Other deposits
Seven day Mother

634,900

12,379,675

£27,029,675

£27,029,675 |
BANKING

7,579,437

14,727,958
bills
445,432

Government securities

Other securities
Notes

Gold and.silver

coin..

£9,890,950
24.731,687
5,253,240
726,508

£40,602,385

£20,602,385

those of the pre¬

vious week exhibit—
An increase of circulation

£1,?57,706

of

decrease of public deposits of
An increase of other deposits of
A decrease of government securities
An increase of other securities of.
A decrease of bullion of.
An increase of rest of
A decrease of reserve of

904,906

A

1,492,020

of

150
...

2,224,373
296,919
4 2,484

1,611,519

The following is the return of the Bank of France made
The return for the previous week is
up to the 4th inst.
added:
DEBTOR.

Capital of the bank
Profits, in addition to capital
Reserve of the bank and branches
New reserve
Notes in circulation and at the branches..
Drafts drawn by the bank on the branches
of the bank payable in Paris or in the

provinces
Treasury account
Accounts current at Paris
Ditto in the provinces

Dividends payable




Jan. 4. 1866.
f.
c.

182,500.000 0
7,044,776 2
22,105,750 14
4.000,000

0

943,145,275

0

8,434,215 99
69,302,700 78
146,864,853 3
34,117.872 0

11.573,343 75

1,419,877,955 55

418,677,363 77

443,860,475 24
333,948 71
323,791,776 52
330.978,670 0
11,308,670
8,202.900
13,314,700
6,836,100
30,665,000
20,434,480

Cash and bullion

484,204 73
363,227,619 39
361,517,983 0
7,711,500
9,022,200
13,427,000
7,378,700

Commcial bills overdue
Ditto discounted in Paris
Ditto in the branches
Advances on bullion in Paris
Ditto in the provinces

Ditto on public securities in Paris
Ditto in the provinces
Ditto on obligations and railway shares
Ditto in the provinces
Ditto on securities in the Credit Foncier
in Paris
Ditto in the provinces.
Ditto to the State
Government stock reserve
Ditto other securities

30,817,900

20,981,580

Hotel and property of the bank & branches
Expenses of management

0
O'
O'

456,250

60,000,000
18,980,750 14
36,449,737 91

1)0,000,000 0
8,380,667 O

0

3,000

O

10,423,347 93

11,237,100

3

5.860

1

Sundries

644,100

661,400 0
455,850 0
60,000,000 0
12,980,750 14
36,449,737 91
100,000,000 0
8,374,755 0

Securities held

1,419,877,955 55

1,462,663,751 90

The return shows a decline of 25,183,000f. in the coin
and bullion compared with the previous week.
larger
fall might have been expected, considering that on
one
hand the discounts increased 69,975,000f, and that the rate
of interest was 3 per cent lower than at London.
circulation of notes there is an augmentation of 69,975,OOOf
and in deposits of 9,146,000f.'

A

the

In the

STOCK

LIST.

(Marked thus * are
not National.)

o p

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

100

Bowery.
Broadway.
Brooklyn*

Dec.

28, 1865.
f.

c.

182,500,000 0
7,044,776 2
22.105,750 14
4,000,000 0
879,683,575 0

7,111,840
120,258,385
144,012,926
27,823,078
730,161

14
94
94
0
82

03

33 r;

25

100
100
100
50

Bull’s Head

City
City (Brooklyn).
Commerce

Commonwealth
Continental....
Corn Exchange
Croton

Currency
Dry Dock*

Nov. ’65......
Jan. ’66. .T...
Jan. ’66

..

..
..

..

300,000

..

Quarterly

25
400,000 Jan. and July...
100 1,000,000 May and Nov....
50
300,000 Jan. and July.. .*
100 10,000,000 Jan. and July. .
100
750,000 Jan. and July...
100 2,000,000 Jan. and July...
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug...
100
200,000
100
100,000 Quarterly
30
200,000 Jan. and July...
50
259,150 Jan. and July...
100
250,000 Jan. and July...
100
150,000 Jan. and July...
100
500,000 May and Nov...
Jan. and July...
5,000,000 Jan. and July.
..

East River
Fifth
First.
First (Brooklyn)
Fourth.
Fulton.
Far. & Cit.(Wm’bg)
Gallatin.

Greenwich.
Grocers’

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Nov.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Nov.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

.6
.7

’66...
’66...
’66...
’66
’66...
Nov. ’65
Jan. ’66

Manhattan

Manufacturers’
Manufac. & Merch...
Marine
Market

10 210
10

97*

600,000 May and Nov. Nov. ’65
..Jan.’66
160,000
1,500,000 April-and Oct. Oct. ’65
200,000 May and Nov. Nov. ’65
300,000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66
.;Jan. ’66
1,000,000
Jan. ’66
1,500,000
Jan. ’66
500,000
600,000 Feb. and Aug.. JAug. ’65
400,000 Feb. and Ang.. | Aug. ’65
2,050,000 Feb. and Aug.. JAug. ’65
210,000 Jan. and July.. !jan. ’66
•v
500,000 Jan. and July.. Ijan ’66
400,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66
1,000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’66
2,000,000 »Ian. and July.. Jan. ’60
500,000 Jan. and July.. elan. ’66
500,000 May afid Nov,. Nov. ’65
600,000 May and Nov.. Nov. ’65
1,000,000 May and Nov.. Nov. ’65

5*
5
6
5
6
4
5

.

5

5 130
5 100

5
6

Metropolitan*
(Brooklyn) *

National*
New York
New York County..
....

.

NewYorkExchange.
Ninth
North America
North River
Ocean

Oriental
Pacific
Park

Peoples. ’
Phoenix

Republic;

St. Nicholas’
Seventh Ward.
Second.
Shoe & Leather
Sixth
State of New York..
Tenth
Third
....

Tradesmen’b
Union

WilHamsbnrg City*.

1,000,000 »Jan. and July...
400,000 Jan. and July...
1,000,000 Feb. and Aug...
300,000 Feb. and Aug...
422,700Feb. and Aug..
2,000,000 eJan. and J uly...
412,500! Jan. and July...
1,800,000 Jan. and July...
2,000,000 Feb. and Aug...
1,000,000 Feb. and Aug...
500,000 April and Oct.,
800,000 May and Nov
1,500,000 eJan. and eTuly..
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...
1,500,000 May and Nov...
500 (XXX Jan. and July.
..

Aug. ’65
Aug. ’66

.Tan. ’66

Nov. ’65
.Jan.
Nov
Nov.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Nov.

’66
’60
’65
’66
’66
’66.
’65....

Jan. ’66

....

.

.

.

•

.

•

«...

.

.

....

....

5 99*
122
6 120

....

5
5
5
5
9
6
5 10s
5
6

....

•

•

....

.

.

....

•

112
150

.

....

....

Aug. ’65
Aug. ’65
’66
’66
’66
’66

....

5
5
5 110*

Dec. ’65
Jan. ’66
Jan. ’66
Nov. ’65
Jan. ’66
Oct. ’65
Jan. ’66
Jan* ’06
.Tan. ’66
Jan. ’66
.Tail. ’66
Jan. ’66

Feb.
.Tan.
.Tan.
.Ian.

....

6 no
5
6 106
5 100

.

1,235,000 Jan. and July.
4,000,000 Jan. and July.
1,000,000 Jan. and July ..
Jan. and July..
1,500,000 April and Oct..
3,000,000 Jan. and July..
200,000 April and Oct..

98*

5 180 “

.

Merchants’ Exch....

165

5

.

Merchants’

100

.

.

Mechanics’ (Brook.).
Mech. Bank. Asso...
Meehan. & Traders’.
Mercantile

104
102
96

15

.

..

130

.3*

.

Long Isl. (Brook.)

108

...

112*

.

Irving

110*

104
100
95

Aug. ’65
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

103

...

.6108

.

LeatherManufact’rs.

.4
.5

.12 226

’66
’66
’66
’66
’65....
’66
’66....
’66
’66
’65
’66
’66
’66
’66

.

Importers & Trad

Nassau
Nassau

Oct. ’65

1,000,000 Jan. and July...
300,000 Jan. and July...
50
200,000 Quarterly
25
•800,000 Jan. and July
100 2,000,000 May and Nov
50
200,000 Jan. and July
25
450,000 Jan. and July
100

130
100

Jan. ’66
Jan. ’66

3,000,000 Jan. and July..
100,000 Jan. and July
500,000 April and Oct...
5,000,000 May and Nov...
300,000 Jan. and July...
500,000 Jan. and July...

.

Central
Central (Brooklyn)..
Chatham
Chemical
Citizens’

Bid. Ask.

Last Paid.

Periods.

Amount.

25
50

Butchers & Drov....

Market;

Dividend.

Capital.

Companies.

Mechanics’

preceding accounts, compared with

7,933,839 8!)

1,402,603,751 90

Hanover.

DEPARTMENT.

£14,553,000
3,296,558

33

CREDITOR.

Eighth

DEPARTMENT.

£27,029,675 I Government

Notes issued

$1,046,343
1,121,941

Dec.
Dec.

Deposits

574,112

Inc.

Circulation

The

24,555^123

Sundries

B A NK

399,354,212
401,406,013

7
14.

Surplus of receipts not distributed.

Circulation.

Capital.

JlankB.

Date.

44

2,727,410
241.926,620
$245,926,510

Total

tl

$407,759,203

14,598,628 7
2,074,992 9

1,884,848 94
2,074,992 92

Various discounts
Re-discounts

$250,000

Total

Previously authorized capital

Oct.

[January 27, 1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

108

4
.

95

95

5

....

5 :50
.7
51112
4 95
5 12
5 : L04

112

.

•

.

....

....

150
•

•

.

•

•

.

•

•

112
....

—

.5
5: 03
6

f

t

•

....

51 04* 105
5
51 14

....

7*1 30
5

•

•

• •••
•

•

3* ....1

•*

•v

27,1866.]

January

1

Gold Coin
T%T

do
do

registered.
coupon.
registered. 103%! 103
coupon.
5-20s
.... registered.
; —
5-20s (2d issue]
cou])on\ 101 % \ —
registered
1 —
5.20s
do
5.20s (3d issue)
coupon!
102
Oregon War,

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

1881.

do.

do.

6s,

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

—

—
—

coupon.

.registered.

do
do

—

—

—

—1—

92%

coupon

.registered.

93%

—

93
93

93

93

93

—

—

—
—

—

R.. .(cur.).

—

—

.2d series.
..“id series.

98%
98%
93%

.

...

99%
93% 98%
98% 98%
98%

99

99

98%
98%

98%
98%
98%
98%

98%
98%
98%
—

—

98%

6s, coupon,

’79, after 1860

2|s

War Loan
Kentucky 6s, 1868-72
Louisiana 6s

Michigan 6s, 1873

6s. 1878
6s, 1883

7s, 1868
7a, 1878
7s, War Loan
Minnesota 8s
do
do

6s.

RR.)...

77

77
77

rln

fia

—

rln

95

do
do

187 A

do

5s 1876

f

_

!
•-

do
7s, State
North Carolina 6s

99%

Bounty Bonds

\

to ■o IK

99%
86

99%

6s

do

99%

I 85%

Ohio 6s, 186S...
do 6s, 1870...
do 6s, 1875...
do 6s, 18S1...
do 6s, 1886...
Rhode Island 6s.
South Carolina 6s.
TpnnoMPA

95

1Sf!S
Lon" Loans

88

SS%

88

6s, War Loan

Municipal.

TtrnnVlvn

do
do

ereey

6a
6s Water Loan

6s, Public Park

92

92

7s’

6s’

1876

do
do
do
do
do
do

6s

j

91
i
_

26

1

93%
99%

25

24%

93%
98%

93%
98%

62%: 60

i

mortgage
! S4
consolidated ....,!

1890

I 84

1st mortgage...

;

-102

;
;
*

Mortgage

73

73

94%

j
i

94%

'...

do

8s,

new,

1SS2

*

97%

i
95%
88

..;.
1st mort..

5s, 1898
5s.F. Loan, 1868

Miscellaneo us.
American Coal
Atlantic Mail Steamship
.
Canton, Baltimore
Central Coal
Central American Transit
Cumber.and Coal, preferred
Delaware & Hudson Canal
Harlem Gas
Manhattan Gas Light

Mariposa Mining
Mariposa Preferred
Metropolitan Gas
New York Steamship

Nicaragua Transit
Pacific Mail
do

Steamship
do
Scrip
Pcnnsylvan.a Coal

Telegraph
Wyoming Valley Coal

S4

Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage..
3d mortgage, conv.. i
do
do
do
do
4th mortgage
j 73
Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund
'
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort.’ 93
do
do
do
2d mort.' !

Michigan Southern, Sinking Fnnd
2d mortgage, 7s
do
do
do
• Goshen Line, 1S6S
do

5s, 1876

Telegraph

;

1st

Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72

Quicksilver Mining

94%

93%

i S8

Interest
Extension

5s;iS74

5s’
5s’
5s'

Lniied States

103%

j

%

1887
1867
1868
1870
5s' 1873

6s, 1878.

Western Union

;

;

.

Income...

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
Chicago and Rock Island,

do




j

do
2d mortgage, ,1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869
do
2d mortgage, (S. F.), 18S5
do
3d mortgage, 1875
do
convertible, 1867
niinois Central 7s, 1875
’.
Lackawanna and Western Bonds
Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage

5s

1

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72
do
Consolidated and Sinking Fund

1.875

do
do

1st mortgage

do
do

Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st

Loan

City 6s, Water Loan

Npav VnrV

do
do
V
do
do

100;
100'

;

;

!

100

2d mort.. /.

do 2d mortgage, H364
do 2d mortgage, 1879
do 3d mortgage, 1883
do 4th mortgage, 1S80
do 5th mortgage, 1SS8:
Galena and Chicago, extended
do 2d mortgage
do

Virginia 6s, coupon
Wiscnnsin

j

pref ...100i

96

j

1

100;
pref...100;

Erie, 1st mortgage, 1S68

88%

~

5s

—

!04% 102

Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... j
Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage
;
Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund

1

5s 1871

rln

!

102% 101% 101%
[| 69%; 68% 68%: 67%; 67%

Erie, 1st mort., 1S77
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund

1868

Fla

dn

—
—
—

100

do
do
Buffalo, New York and

18RR

rln

—

[—

-

Railroad Ronds :
Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort.

'fia 1877

rln

102% 100
101%
119
'117% 115%

.

1 875

fia

/In

I 83%

•

1S73

6a

j

;

100
100
guaranteed...100
1

7S
105
148

—

—
j —

1

.......100
100.
100!

preferred
preferred

—

1
50
Toledo, Wabash and Western
preferred.... 50
do
do
do

1S79.

fin

%

54%
97%

98
115
73

84%

—

50:
100!
'• 50;
100;

Cincinnati

Third avenue

78

.

5

79%
101%

100
1
100!
j
100!.93%j 92 ; 91%
100
99% 1
Norwich and Worcester.
100
Ohio and Mississippi Certificates
26% 26% 26
70
do
do
' do
preferred
'
Panama
100 240 ;240
Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago
100. 95%; 93%
50 101%;101 |
Reading
St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute
100
65
do
do
do -preferred. 100:
Second avenue
100;
Sixth avenue
;100

1 RfiS

fia

0

rln

—

79
103

23%

,

76%

77

6s 1866
6s 1867

rlo
rln

77%

(Hannibal and St. Joseph
(Pacific RR.)

6s,

110

—

29%
54%

j

•

501

.
Morris and Essex
New Jersey
New York Central
New Haven and Hartford

Iowa 7s,

do
do
do
do
do

100 j
50;

Mississippi and Missouri.

5s

do
do

98

,

do
do
Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien.
do
do
do
1st
do
do
do
2d
Milwaukee and St. Paul
do
do
preferred

Loan

Indiana Cs, War

'

100 103% 103% 103
100 125 !
j —

Michigan Central
Michigan So. and N. Indiana

Registered, 1860

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

—

!

150
50;
190;
j
100 84%: 86% 85%
160 86% S6% —
100
!
! —

:

Long Island
McGregor Western
Marietta aud Cincinnati
do
1st
do
do
do
2d

California 7s, large
Connecticut 6s, 1872
Georgia 6s
Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860

j

—

112

57%

30%
55%

31%
5?%
99%

50; S5%: 82;
50 105% 105

Joliet and Chicago

State.

57

103

—

I

32%

31%
57%

1001

Harlem
do
preferred
Hudson River;
Illinois Central

Intliauapolis and

—;ii2

100 102% 101%

dp preferred
...
Hannibal and St. Joseph
do
do
preferred..

—

—

—

106

100

1
and Western

Erie

—
—

—

—

Certificates,

Delaware, Lackawanna
Eighth Avenue

—

—

105
105
111% 112

105

106

100
100
100

Cleveland and Pittsburg.
Cleveland and Toledo

101% 101% 101% H O
—

—

do

Chicago and Rock Island
Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati

1

1

—

.registered.

5s, 10-40S
6s, Union Pacific R.
7-30s Treas. Notes.

6s,

103% 103% 101% 103%
103%
103 !l02% 102%
102
|
101%
101%
101%
i

114

100

preferred
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy
Chicago and Milwaukee
Chicago and Northwestern
do
preferred
do

—

5s, 10-40s

do
do

(i yearly).
coujx)n.

5s, 1S71
5s, 1871
5s, 1874
5s, 1874

do
do

Chicago and Alton
do

Kri.

r.

__

10
100
100

.

Central of New Jersey

—

—

coupon.

1868
1881
1881
5-20s

6s,
6s,

Brooklyn City

Thu

Wed.

Tue.

;

Railroad Stocks.

139%

j
|

133

registered.

.

1868

6s,
•6s,
^s,
6s,
6s,
6s,
6s,

do
do
do
do
do
do

!

1

1367

United States 6s,
do
'do
Nlo
'do
do
•do
'do
‘do
•do

11

JANUARY 26.)

SECURITIES.

Kri.

Thur.

Wed. |

Tue*.

Satur. I

!

SECURITIES.

EXCHANGE.

YORK STOCK

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW

.American

109

THE CHRONICLE

.

100

44

100
100
136

100
60

50
loo
100

ioo

.

50
100
100
100
,100

45%
135%

46%

100

14

14

13%

160

180
160

185
160

52

61

175

51

38%
51

New York
do
do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

0

50

6s, Real Estate.

6s, subscription.
7% 1876
7s, convertible, 1876

<

J

Mississippi. 1st mortgage
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayue aud Chicago, 1st mort.. i
do
2d mort...!
do
do
do
do
do
Sd mort... i
St. Louis, Alton and Torre Haute, 1st mort...
2d, pref.
do
do
do
do
do
do
2d, income.
Toledo aud Wabash, 1st mortgage..

Ohio and
17

40% 40%
52

44%

13%

17

SO

Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants
Central 6s, 18851
do
6s, 1887

44%

45

100

1

108

111

100
100

Milwaukee and Prairie dtt Chien,
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage
do
do
Income

51%

do
do
do
do

do

do
do
do

1st mortgage, extended.
2d mortgage
InterestBonds

Equipment

J

-100

100%
i 91

90

90

THE

CHRONICLE.

NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL
I

INTEREST.
Rate!

American Gold Coin
National Securities.
Bonds of 1847
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

‘

1848
do
1860
do
1858
do
1861:
do

j

registered. \
coupon. (
registered, j

,

[

coupon.

coupon.

Princi-i MARKET.
ral
Due.

Payable.

\
9,415,250!
8,908,3421

Jan. &

July 18

5

Jan. &

July, 1874

282,746,000'

6

I

-J

do
do
do

1864
do
1865

(10-40s)

1814

—

coupon

\

.

100,000,000
)

.registered.
..

.

Treasury Notes (1st series)
do
do

do
do

(2d series)
(3d series)

Debt Certificates
State Securities.
do
do

Tax

do

do

Exempt. B ds.

do
do

do
do
do
do
do

28.(XH)

|
}

|
\

I

1,225.500 6
200. (XX)

Alay
Jau.

7
7
7
5
6

800,000
200.000

4,800.000
800.(XX)
2.000.000
516.000

(5

5,398.000

'532,000

6
6

4,800.000

Jan.
Jan.

6

3.942,(XX)!

6

'

!

Louisiana—State Bonds (RR)

Jan.

2,058,173' 2%

J

State Bonds
War Loan

do
do

State Bonds (RR)..... j
State Bonds for B'ks.
Maine—State Bonds
do
War Loan
j
Maryland—State Bonds
do
State Bds .coupon. ) !
do
StateBds inset ibed (
j

Bonds..;

Massachusetts—State Scrip,
do

j

State Seri j)

do
do

War Loan
Michigan—$2,000,009 Loan
do
do
do
do
Renewal Loan
do
War Loan
db
War Bounty Loan

6

8,171,902 5
1.727,000: 6

|

5
6
7

6,500.000
250.000

j
j

Minnesota—State Bonds
Missouri—State Bonds

I

1,750,000 6
216,000

6
7
7
8

1,122,000
345.000
25<t.000

)
602,000 6
State Bonds for RR...
13.701,000 6
State Bonds (Pac. RR):
7,000,000' 6
State Bonds
3,000,000 6
Revenue Bonds
431,0**0 9

do
do
do
New Hampshire—State Bonds...!
do
War Fund Bds
do
War Notes....
New Jersey:—State
Scrip
do
War Loan Bonds..
New York
do
do
do
General Fund.
do.
do
do
do
do
Bounty Bonds.
do
do
do
do
do
do
Canal Bonds.
do
do
do
do
do
North Carolina—State Bonds

(II,&St.J)j

Ohio—Foreign Loan.
do

do

do
do
do
do
do

Foreign
Foreign
Foreign
Foreign

535,100

1,650,000; 6
2,500,(XXI! 8

1

,

5
5

442,961!

900.000’ 5
800.000 5

2,250.000 j 6

|




■

«

J

j Jan.

(i

,

I

j

300,000
1.200 000

605,000'

6

101% 'New Bedford.
New

.] 95
.107

:! -os'
99
95
05

94

99

93

95

76

77’
SO

91

!
j

98

New
New York
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
,

i

.

Various.

do
do

do

1

99% i 99%

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

j

|
1

var.

!

i

var.

i

Jan. & Dec.l’71 ’78
Jan. & July "83 ’93
do
:’85’93
Jan. & July ’67 ’68
do
’77’88
'.Apr. & Oct. 93-’98

San

do

375,000
122,000 6
118.000

7
7
7
6

.......10
8

911,500

4

219,000
100,000!
425,000
(50,000

6
7
5
6

3,000,200
2,147,000
900,000
100,000
483.900

1,878,.900
190*000
402,768
399.300

3,066,071; 6
275,000 6
2,083,200 6
1,966,000 6

4,996,000

1,442,1001
652,700!
739,222'

2,232,800! 6
7,898.717: 6

1,009,700 : 6

Railroad Bonds,

985,326! 6
1,500,000 6
600, (XX)! 6
500.000! 6
300,000i 5
200,000 ! 5
150.000 ! 7
260,000 6

1,496,100 j 6

County B’ds

446,800; 6
1,464.0001 6
523,000' 6

Real Estate

Sewerage

425, (XX); 6
254,000 6
484,000 6

Improaement..
Water....

Harbor
Wharves
Pacific RR

239,000!

City Bonds.
City Fire B.
City Bonds.

100
90

94
93

100
95

& Oct. I860

July 1871

6

1,352,(XX) 10
178,5(H); 10

329,000 : 6

1,133,500 6

C. feCo’tvB.

1.000.000

300,000 7

960,000! 7
338,075 i

90

Aug 1882
July i 1876

’65 ’75
do
Jan. & July ’77 ’83

Various,

90

var.

do

var.

1887

iMay &Nov.
Jan. & July
do

[June &Dec. 1894
Feb. & Aug ’70 ’83
! Jan. &
July 1873
Apr. & Oct. 65 ’84

!Jan. &

July
IApr. & Oct.
I Jan. & July
May & Nov.
do
Feb. &
do

’67 ’87

’73 ’84

’70 ’81

1870

1880

Aug 1890
1890

May & Nov. ’75 ’79
Apr. & Oct. 1875
May & Nov. ’70 ’73

do
1868
Jan. & July 1898
do
1887
do
1898
Feb. & Aug 1887

May & Nov. 1876

do
do
do
do
do
do
Jan. & July

87%

90%

1873
1883
1878
1866
’67 ’76
1873

"65’ 69
May & Nov. 1864
do

1867

do
do

18(55

'66 ’73

do
do
do
do
Jan. & July
do
do
do
Jan. & July
do
Various.

7
.

’73-’76
’80-’81
’83 ’90

do
Various.

do
Jan. & July
1 Jan. & July
do
Jan. & July
do
do
do
do

’77-’82
’65 ’82
"65 ’93
’65 ’99
var
1913
"66 ’83

-

70
96
96

"65 ’76
’88- 98
1884

"65 ’83
’65
’79
’71
’71
’65
’67
’71

’(X)
’88
’87
’as
’86

’81
’73

’74 ’77

\ 11875
1888

’77 ’78

April & Oct. 1883
Jan. & July 1884
various.

8S
92

1893
’65 ’82
‘65 ’82

May & Noy. 1871
Jan. & July'1866
do
do
do

87%
91%

1885
1876

[’72 ’74
.

92

’65 ’81

Apr. & OcL ‘68 ’71
Mar. & Sept.
Jan. & July

do
do
do
do

6
6

C.&Co’tyB.
C.&Co’tyB.
C.&Co’tyB.

Wilmington, Del.--City Bonds..

11871

00

429.900
285.-000

•

96

June&Dec. 1883
Various, ’65 ’81

6

457,000!

«

>1888

&Dec.j 89 ’79

Feb. &
Jan. &

163,000 6

O. A M. RR
Iron Alt. RR

96’

79 87

|

May & Nov. ’75-’89

949,700!

City Bonds...
Railroad....

95

65 ’72
”
Various.
Jan. & July ’75 ’77
’65 ’80
Ararioue.

6

t

1,800,000 ! 5

Francisco, Cal.
do
do
do
do
do

6
6

1,400,000:
2,000,000'

Louis, Mo.—Municipal.
do

500,000

Railroad Bonds.

do

Feb. & Aus 1871
Various.
71 ’94!
Jan. & July ‘68 "90

I

-

7

125,000 6
130,000 6

2,500,000.

City Bds,new
City Bds,old

92

JulyJ1876

& July!
do 3
! var.
1879
do
do
1890
do

Jan. &

400.000

490,000'

Sacramento, Cal.—City Bonds..
St.

| Apr.

319,457l 8

1,000,000!

Riot Dam.R. B

do
do.

var.

do
do

50.000

895,570 i

Sol.B’ntyFd.B

85
91

!!!! ■“v!j,65'82

I Jan. &

650,IKK)

154,000

L^nion Def. L.
Vol. B’nty L’n

!’81 ’97

Apr. & Oct. 1881

lJune

102.000

Pub. Edit. S’k.

110

’65 ’79

20.000

Tomp.M’ket S

,

var.

6
7

1869

do
do

256.368

Docks&SlipsS

3

lfiO
100

iApr. & Oct. 1895

1,800,000
2,748,000
150,000
500,000

Pb-B.Sk. No.

92
90

,

6

'Jan.

600,000 6

Croton W’r S
Fl.D’t. F’d. S

do
do
do

1

lb68

C.P.Imp. F. S.C.P.Imp. F. S.
Real Estate B.|

Philadelphia, Pa.—City Bds.old

’68-’71

J

W’r S’k of ’49!
W’r S’k of ’54!
Bu. S’k No. 3.
Fire Indem. S.J
Central P’k S.!
Central P’k S.!
Central P’k S.

Providence, R. I.—City Bonds...
do
Railroad B'ds
do
City Loan
Rochester, N. Y.—City Bonds...

!

....

CrotonW’rS’k
CrotonW’r S’k:

do
do

do

var.

299.000

200. (XK)

City'—Water Stock..
do
Water Stock..

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

’65 ’82!

j’67 ’77:

571,000;

150.000:

Vol.Fam.AidL
Vol.Fam.AidL
NewYorkC’nty'.—C’t House S’k
do
do
Sol.Sub.B.R.B
do
do
Sol.S.&Rf.R.B

*

| May & No\

London, Ct.—City Bonds.-*.
R. I.—City Bonds
Haven, Ct.—City Bonds

I iNewport,

101

do

& July'I860
do
18(55
do
1868
do
i 1870
do
i 1875
do
1881
do
1886

216,000

650,000

j

Mass.—City Bds.

101%

!’65 ’74
!’78 ’79;
’65 ’85' 96

5,550,600 6

...I

Portland, Me.—City Bonds

11871

j

121.540

.

Newark, N. J.—City Bonds.
do
City Bonds

100
103

!’72’73'
4%:
993,000 5
!’70’78
634,200 6
Jan. & July 65 ’71
1,281,000, 6
do
65 ’95

City Bonds...
Water Bonds

CityBds,new
Pittsburg, Pa.—City Bonds

i 1874
var.

6

12',624’,500

06

j

■

1

6

;

Railroad Bonds

Wisconsin -State Bonds
do
War Fund Bonds....
do
War Fund Certif....

l

!

5

1,650,000
18,264,642

!

Jersey City', N. J.- City Bonds.
do
do
City Bonds.
j
do
do
Water Bds

Marysville, Cal.—City Bonds ..j
do
City Bonds...
Milwaukee, Wis.—City, re-adj’d!

81

j;101

t

Park Bonds
Railroad Bonds..
Water Bonds....

do
do

i

1866
1872

1873
1874
1875
1
1877
1 1866
1868

4,500,000: 5
9,129.585! 6

....

do

i

>>

Hartford, Ct.—City Bonds

Louisville, Ky.—City Bonds...

18(58

l

c
s

1.600,000 6

Virginia—Inscribed Certificates.

60

Water Bonds...

Railroad

do
do
do

;

94
93
93

'

100

101%

M.,J.,S,&D.|1890

...

Dubuque, Io.—City Bonds.......
do

j 90

pleas, j

i

500,000* 6
900.000! 6
192,585 5
1,1(53,000 5

4.095,309: 6
2,400.000* 6
Domestic Loan Bonds
j
679,000 6Pennsylvania—State Bonds
;
6.168.000 5
do
State Stock
*
29.209.000 5
do
Military L"n Bds
3.000,000 6
Rhode Island—State
(War) Bds.i 3,889.000 6
South Carolina—State Stock...
j 2,595,516 6
Tennessee—State Bonds
j
do
_.Railroad Bonds. ...; 1.125,000 6
do
Improvement Bonds 12,799,000 6
2.871,(XK) 5
Vermont—State Certificates
175, (XX)1 6
do
War Loan Bonds
i

do

97

.1 96
.! 85
101
101
101

Water Bonds

85

96%

|J.,A.,J.&0.1890-j

554,000

Water Bonds....

do
do

■—

4

6

1,030.000

Sewerage Bonds.
Detroit, Mich.—City Bonds
do
City Bonds
do
City Bonds
J

18(58
1878

*-D

1,009,500 5

Foreign Loan

do

-j

1

Water Bonds

99

May & Nov 1875
Jan. & July 1886

5,000,000 6

360,000
913.000;

..

97%

July!

6

Cleveland, O—City Bonds,

var.

pleas.

City Bonds
Sewerage Bonds

Cincinnati, O.—Municipal

1870
tlo
; 1877
do
11879
95
do
1879
& July 1866
80
do
186(5
& Nov. 1881
& July 1887
do
11877
& Julv "76 ’78:
& July ! var. !
do
I’6S ’74
do
1871
j
dem. *
'67 .69 SO

May & Nov.

:

702.000, 6
3.050.000' 6
6.000,000! 6

379,866'

c

1872

1870

do
do
do

90

HS65

r

2.183.532

90

1885

1890

Municipal Bonds

Chicago, Ilf.—City Bonds

I860
■18(52

do
do
do
do
do

Stg.

Asked

July’70 ’74

583,205

Water Loan...

do

Payable.

|

6,580,416
1.265,610

Buffalo, N.Y.—Municipal Bonds

1S80

Jan. & July: 1875
do
!1S78
}
Jan. & Jul y! 1S77

25,566,000) 7

167.000

72 "84

1

Jan. & July var.
Jan. & July "71 ’72!

800,000! 6

562.26S

Loan
Loan
Loan
Loan

,

1,189,780| 6
500,000j 6
909,607!

■1877
1876
"78 ’80
1872

3.500,000

197,700
740,000

,

short i

95.000 6
731,000 6
700,000: 7

}

do

1
j

6

York&’Cum.R.

B.&O.R.ctu//? I
B. & O. RR.. J i
Park

Water Loan
Water Loan

6

1,500,000 6

Water Loan...

Bangor, Me.- -City Debt
do
Railroad Debt
Boston, Mass.- -City Bonds
do
City Bonds
do
City Bonds

820,000

MARKET.
Bid

Due.

do
;’65 ’69
do
’70’82
do
1879
Jan. & July; var.
do
1913
; J.,A.,J.&0. i 1870
do
1870
Jan. &
1873'

600.000;

.

N.W.Virg.RR.

do
do

11..))409,7, uj

Princi¬

pal

Jan. &

4,963,000!

Miscellaneous.

98% Bkookly'N, N.Y.—City Bonds....
98 k! 98V
do
Improve’! St'k
do
year 98V 98%
Pub. Park L’n.

1870
Jun. & Dee. *68 *74
j
do
"65 "80
Jan. & Julv "71 ’781
Mar. &Sept. 18(55
Jan. & July 18(58
do
"73 ’83
do
1878
do
1886
Mav & Nov. 1890
iJan. & Julv 18*57
do
1883
Jan. & Julv "71 "89
do
"72 "87
do
*72 "851
do
1866
Feb. & Aug. 1876

5

2,100.000

98 V 99

98%

j'70*77

Quarterly
Quarterly
Quarterly

3,192,763 6
1.200.000

i

Mar.& Sept. "6(5 ’67!
Jan. & J ulv "80 *89

6,500,000 6

Bounty F*d L*n.

cTo

do
do
do
do
do

I

93)a

July 1870

A-

6

i

Kentucky—State Bonds

State

Jan.

490.900, 6
236.000 6
2.000,000 6
5,325,500 5

Iowa—State Certificates
do
War Loan Bonds
Kansas—State Bonds

do

7
6
6
6
6

1,116,500 6

do
do
War Loan Bonds

do
do

6

525,000!
•3.747.000
3,293.274
1,700.900
803.000

Registered Bonds

do

2,000,000

2,073,750 6

do

do
do
do
do

Jan. & Juh
do
do
do
Oct. & Apr.
do
Jan. & Julv
do

6
3.926,(XX) 7
803,000 7
8,000.000' 6

I NO i

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

Jan. & Julv 1895
300.000.000 7.30 Feb. & Aug. 1867
300,000,000 7.30 Jun. & Dee.1868
230.000,000 7.30 Jan. it July 1868
55,905,000 6
Maturity
688.000

War Bonds.

do

1,258,000

2,709,000 5

do

92 V
93

Mar. & Sept. 1904

jl

Alabama—State Bonds
do

w

(172,7.0,100

Union Pacific RR. 3onds of 1865

|

....

May & Nov.i 1384
May & Nov. 1885

1 50,000.000

.coupon. )
do .registered,

do

103 V104

* i'102% ,1027$:
102

„

do
do
do
do

103%; 104

A

do

Water Loan
|
Alb. Nor. RR...

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

Rate.

$90,000
225,000
850,000.
300,000

j

Baltimore, Md.—Improvement..I

I

Jan. &

i

City Scrip.

Alleghany' City”, Pa.—City Bds.
do
do
RR. Bds.

71-j

July 1881
j July
.j!881
(\ yearly)\couP°n - j 1,016,000 6 ) Jan. &
July 1881
Bonds (5-20s) of 1862
coupon. ) \KiA nan *.v.
do
do
do .registered, f I514) *o0,oou, b
May & Nov.i 1882
do
registered.

do
do
do

124

INTEREST.

Outstanding

Municipal Securities
Albany, N. Y.—City Scrip

135

Jan. & July 1S68

7,022,000 5

124

Amount

DENOMINATIONS.

(Asked

139?* 139%!

Jan. & July 1867

Oregon War Bds {yearly)
do

Bid-

;

registered. ( j
coupon. '
! 20,000,000
registered.

,
...

|

'

;

Amount

(Outstanding

SECURITIES’ LIST.

j

(

DENOMINATIONS.

[January 27, 186d

j

110

var.

87%
87%

January

27,1866.]

The

®f)e Commercial

©imeo.

COMMERCIAL EPITOME.
Friday

Night, Jan.

as

follows:
DOMESTIC PRODUCE POR THE WEKKSI, AND
Since
This
Jan. 1.
week.
511
Spirits turpentine
148
Rosin
Tar
101,013
25.706
Pitch
37,851
7,601
....
146.500 Oil cake, pkgs ....
53,709
146,149 Oil lard
53,405

RECEIPTS OP

96,1866.

Ashes, pkgs
Breadstuff's—
Flour, bbls

a

Wheat, bush
Oats
Corn

1,

for the week, and since Jan.

receipts of domestic produce

have been

partial revival of demand for consumption in some of
the leading staples, there has been an effort to revive the specula¬
tive tone. But success has been very partial. A general improve¬
ment in prices cannot be noted, and the volume of trade is not suffi¬
cient to relieve the impression of dullness that has prevailed.
No
one will buy to day more than he thinks he can sell to morrow at a
profit. There is no disposition to add to stocks.
Cotton has been depressed by the Liverpool new3, but closes
With

111

CHRONICLE

THE

>

Malt

Barley
Grass seed

664

Flaxseed

5.152

Beans
Peas
Corn meal, bbls..
Corn meal, bags.
B. W.Flour, bags

785

737

19,151
1,540
23,515

This
week.
566

Jan. 1.

3,054

8,067

31,531

1,937

7,675
92

10
.

.

4,951

•

225

436

23,902

90,749

139

744

14,876
2,327
1,167

1,545 Oil, Petroleum ...
48,825 Peanuts, bags...
1,737 Provisions—
Butter, pkgs
14,925
1,014 Cheese...”
Cut meats
8,559
TEorpR >
2,285
Pom
L980
Beef, pkgs
43,761
3,134
Lard, pkgs
83,418 Lard, kegs
760 Rice, pkgs

1,345
29,825
1,025
5,658

Rye

1.Since

NCE AN.

40,066

8,344
3,564
3,564

1,167
7,280

13^985

782

3,622

4,019
1,305

9,317

Breadstuff's have been a shade firmer, and more active for Cotton, bales
358
Copper, plates
9,989
3,140
484 Starch
41
flour, but depressed and lower for grain.
207
94
Copper, bbls
1,078 Stearine
462
In Provisions, the speculation in Pork is based upon probable Dried fruit, pkgs...
323 Spelter, slabs
122
128
Grease, pkgs
102 Sugar, hhds & bbls
12
512
short supply, and an imperative demand from Great Britain. The Hemp, bales
244
44,175 Tallow, pkgs
37,504
Hides, No
8,570
2,709 "
1,258 Tobacco
726
684
1,473
-packing operations at Western markets are far behind previous Hops, bales
170,216 Tobacco, hhds
56,104
Leather, sides
7,233
2,368
416 Whisky, bbls
years, but for the last three weeks the receipts of hogs have been Lead, pigs
5,429
1,780
2,661 Wool, Dales
1,272
39,212
11,635
in excess of last year ; the number is not only increased, but their Molasses,hhds,bbls
Dressed Hogs, No..
428
Naval Stores—
467
3,135 iRice, rough, bush..
Crude turp bbls..
weight; and there are indications that the supply will be kept up
to a date unusually late.
There is no considerable demand for
The following table shows the exports from this port of some
hog products,” and none in prospect except at a material decline leading articles of commerce for the past week, since January 1,
1866, and for the corresponding period in 1865 :
in prices. Naturally, the market is very feverish, but in Pork
100 lbs.]
[Oil cake, bacon, butter, cheese, lard, and tallow are given in Since Same
For
only has there been any marked decline as compared with last
Since Same
For
Jan. time
the
time
Jan.
the
week. Beef has been firm Butter quiet; but in Cheese we notice
week. 1, *66. ’65.
week. 1, ’66. r65.
285
80,666
155
325
Pitch, bbls.
83
large sales on English orders by the Asia, and prices have im¬ Ashes, nots. bbls
12,310
52 Oil cake,..lbs
10
steady.

.

.

2,059

....

...

.

•

•

....

*

.

....

“

,

....

•

•

Ashes. Rearls, bbls
3,434
Beeswax, lbs.

proved.

Coffees, Teas, and Spices have been
quite active, and gold prices are better ; but in Sugar great dull¬
ness prevailed, with a steady decline ; and Molasses has been droop¬
ing.
'
•
Naval stores have declined under liberal receipts ; but at the
decline large orders for Europe have been executed, and the mar¬
Groceries

ket closes

irregular

are

Breadstuff's,

;

Hides have

heavy.
been active, especially at to-day’s

meal, bblsl,754
Wheat, bus.
Rye. bush .

•

Cora,

market, but at

EXCLUSIVE

.

26

Bark |Peruv
Blea powders

'

Brimstone, tons.

...

56

Cochineal

25

Cream Tartar...

261
530
95
56
35

Gambier

1,109

Gums, crude....
Gum, Arabic....
Indigo

364

Madder

239

79

14

51

Oills, ess
Oil, olive
Opium
Soda, bi carb
Soda, sal
Soda, ash
Fla*
Furs

2,009

55

Hair

7,418

2,252
1,075

Hides. &c.
Bristles
^...
Hides, dressed..
India rubber..,1...

1,750
329

46
190

134
803

879

1,502

o

Ivory
Jewelry, &c.
Jewelry

Metals, &c.
Cutlery

m
440

10,229

Hemp, bales

bbls

269

*52

Tea
Tobacco

=

8,494 23,829
855 2,237

90
Hardware379

274

696

1,766

>..

401| Wines, &c.

*69

Champagne,bask

Wines
Wool, bales
Articles
reported

200 Cigars
514 Corks

.

1,395 Fancy Goods......
66 Fish
243 Fruits, &c.
Lemons
351 .Oranges
Nuts
98

Logwood

Mahogany

1.965

3.664

.

OF

.792 173,049 Ag'l implts,

80,677 201,990 65,637
33,092 95,411 21,660
4.135

8,223 7,S30

4

pkgs
4,208 Jewelry, cs

......3008

1

1,647

114
7,720 11,022
4,076
1,813 12,608

6,919 17,757

9,822 8,822

$34,423

11,400
200

CORK.

Petroleum,

391

257

BRITISH WEST

44,094

20,350

.21789

INDIES.

.711 13,667
bbls..3464 32,312

Pork, bbls.
Flour,

.

1661 345,479

bales

galls.... 116036

Cora bush

61634 35,764

Fleetwood.

1,053 Cotton,

Petroleum,

390

gals

220

LONDON.

2,358

.

..

Corn meal,
bbls

4,278
3,220

882

448 22,223 Bread, pkgs.. 8620
700
Mahogany,
179 Tobacco, hhds .32 11,677 Com, bus!
crotches
41
35
I
800 Beef, bbls
5,850 Carriage
Skins, pkgs
8
115 Furs, bis
27 7,800 Lard, lbs... .21900
Sarsaparilla, bxs8
700 Butter, lbs... 9645
Apples, bbls ..100
936 Cheese, lbs... 6083
$264,229 Hardware, bxs.52
Candles, bxs..999
Clover seed,
ANTWERP.
bags
371 8.344 Grease, bbls .625
Petroleum,
30500 5,700 Tobacco, cs..... 1
galls .... 133687 86,419 Larch lbs
2
9,820 Hops, cs
Cheese, lbs..58268
LIVERPOOL.
Beef, tcs

‘

837
563

4,223
2,904
1,383

3,807
109

.

80
58

...

Cotton,
bales

Petroleum,

Bacon,

9840 2,245,813

73,256
15,500
Bacou, lbs.. .6S700 10.790
Lard, lbs....81514
Machinery, cs.. .4
Mfd tobacco,
lbs
1201
Beef, tcs
123

seed,
bags..
...1889

Clover

Sew. mach, cs.

66

Apples, bbls.. 105

9

Books, cs

18000

galls

295

Quan. Value

$2,585,940

5

cs

47,941243.416 213,013
24,371 24,371 9,051

.

FOREIGN

200

Oil

Mfd tobacco.
lbs
15956
Tobacco. hhds..l
Ind a R. Shoes,

Staves

1,100

2,000

.1160 10,200
9.6»K)
275 Pork, bbls ....300 .7,500
1
30
1,693 Books, cs

Petroleum,

12.976

3,015

Shooks

Shoe pegs,
bbls

1,070

Matches, cs....45

35,866
5,000
600
1.687

226258
Tobacco, lihd. .131
Oil cake,
lbs

352S55

lbs

24

Pork, bbls

3929

Hides

548
Beef, tcs
Bladders, pkgs. 14
.

5

133

$180,917
GIBRALTAR.

..176

20.253

Tobacco, cs.. ...2
Petroleum,

275

.500

galls

8,400

576

16,000

300
500

1.717

lbs
58200
Paints, pkgs. ...1
Rosin, bbls... ..25

Tongues,

213
248
249

bbls ..8

galls

603

.326

Corn starch,
..50
bxs
Cond milk, cs ..10
Paper, reams. .500
Onions, bbls. 50
Peas, bush... .487

234
143
251
200
831

Tobacco, hhds..8
Mfd. tobacco,
2920
lbs.

stock,

Live
400
550
124

,720

7100
400

BRITISH NORTH

AMERICAN

COLONIES.

7,093

467

74

9,415
380
250

head

.200
Shooks
Miscellaneous.

1,429

$99,406
BRITISH GUIANA.

Spts
151

3,484

Hams, lbs.....2000

$21,602

22,426
980 Molasses,
hhds

230

1,800

22,946

Ginger, cs ......50
Miscellaneous....

Oats, bush

Lard oil,

878213

hhds

27,030

...1

798
175
560

Hams, lbs.... ,.600

1,750 Tobacco,

30,833

254

Drags, pkgs.

lbs

83425 37,171

Tallow,

Rags, bis.

260

,331

2125

galls

82840

lbs

Rosin, bbls...498

538
2,400

2,757

1,116

21,433

Tobacco, hhds.30

...40
Paper, cs
1,050 Corn Starch,
.470
pkgs
4,920
4,220 Oil cake.

5,007

6,885

100 Flour, bbls

2

8,370 Mfd tobacco,
.2354
lbs..*
3,500

5,007

78,164
53,855

Quan. Value.
Effects, cs

.56952
.15991

4,815
2,098

17,225

319
20,848
18,504
291,535

593

8,541

specie) FROM THE PORT OF NEW YORK TO
THE WEEK ENDING JAN. 23, 1866.

Cheese, lbs.
Butter, lbs.

179

$24,548$57,625 $6,306

1,349

1,550

2.981

by value.
337

lbs.

1,620 75,989 32,232

142Rice

118
97

2,546
1,219

64

2,436
2,197

69 Tobacco, mf, lbs
637 Whalebone...
150

5,870

50

135,105
4,930

Tobaccs, pkgs

*

-

Corn, bush..74829
Flour, bbls. ..1967

25,225 51,175

2,162 Spices, <fcc.
35
Pepper
32 Saltpeter
47 Woods.
5,121 Fustic

1,727

1,473
8,403
18,992

2.982 26,272
2.995
50
706
431

2,709

Hides, undressed.
Cassia

996
285

3,838

410

Pork, bbls.... 100

5.139 15.099

Raisins
52

3,871

5,415 13.664
411

130 Waste

Ginger....
54
69

&

....

bags

5

180

17
25

113 2,012 2,539

Sugar, boxes and

102

287
337
7
113
753
22

:..

Rags
1,244 Sugar, hhds, tcs

2,924

1,590

Gunny cloth......

Watches
Linseed
Molasses

193
214
921
434

6.819

124

1,462

23,737
8,079
12,175
34,559
15,233

Paintings,cs.l
Lard,lbs... .67561 11‘729
Tobacco, bis. .860 30,324 Indigo, ceroons 46
2
Sugar, cs
46 20,118 Plants, cs
Sew mach, cs.253 10,568 Razor strops,
cg
i
1,050
Ess. oils, cs... .10
Ptg mat’l, pkgs.6
Clover Seed,
bgs
120 2,404 Miscellaneous,...
1,496
Corn, bush.. .1402

7,769 20,821 6,470
10,948 890,812
Steel
4,478 7.656 3,993
Tin plates, bxs.. 15,209 34.886 16,102
Tin slabs, lbs... 24,764 350.480144,562

8,310

-

142

HAMBURG,

Lead, pigs
Spelter, lbs

1,244 4,06S 10,745
1,024 1,621
141
31,580 55,305 28,925
83

Coal, tons
Cocoa, bags
igs
Coffee, bags.
Cotton, bales.
Drugs, &c.

T

842

Cotton, bis...
Whatebone,

the Jan. 1, time
week. 1866. 1865.

Iron, RR bars

9,499

9,203

....

Q,uan. Value!.

quantities of Breadstuff’s, Provisions, etc., going forward, are
very small.
The following table shows the foreign imports of certain leading
articles of commerce at this port for the past week, since January
1, 1866, and for the corresponding period in 1865 :
[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]
For Since Same
164

5,784

PORTS FOR

The

1865.

2,638
1,535

EXPORTS

goods are dull and drooping.
Freights have been without essential change. Southern staples,
Cotton, Naval Stores, Tobacco, etc., are the principal shipments.

478

1,351

Butter
Cheese
362
Lard
2,656 Staves M
Tallow

4

Tar, bbls...

East India

165

659
4

Rosin, bbls.

1,841

....

4,476
3,200

Sots Turn,

988

Beef, bbls..

....

5,295

Turp.bbls....
bbls
19

Crude

2,833

20,975

Pork, bbls..
Bacon, lbs..

18,190

393,466
1,141

13,080

bales.
Hay, bales...

Cotton,

490

21,653

162
....

Provisions.

15.419

537
1.820

Peas, bush..
Candles, bxs.

Hops, bales..
Naval Stores,

For Since Same
the Jan. 1, time

50,284

152,920
8,600

bush.

Oats

prices for dry, while slaughters have been steady. Leather
has been quiet.
Metals have been very quiet.
Wools have been fairly active, but with some irregularity, and
prices may be called unsettled.
Petroleum has materially declined under heavy receipts, and
business is not as yet active.

week. 1866.

4,496

754,951 1,729,386 362,504

'

....

easier

Buttons

72.014

Corn

quiet.

28,749 Oils.
Petrol., gals
71,449 Whale, gals
10,013 Sperm, gals
36,341 Lard, gals..

9,058

16.777

Flour, bbls.

Oils dull and




•

..

turpentine,

bbls

5

212

112

THE CHRONICLE.
Quan. Value.

Lard oil,

galls
Lard, lbs
Beef, bbls
Pork, bbls

410
5252
40
12

Quan. Value.

Hoops, bdls.. 1,400

8C0

1,095

1.013

Hardware,

cs..43
75

795
632
100

Drugs, pkgs ..155

1,514

Blocks, hhds... .2

Oars

Perfumery,
bxs

150
1100
10000

Shooks
Staves
Coal

oil, gallslOOO
Corn, bush.. .1000
Mf. Tobacco,
lbs
1772

Carriages

Corn

cs... 3
Potatoes, bbls.70
Beef, bbls.... .«25
Empty bbls.. .100

1

10

Domestics,

cs.. .2

Lamps, pkg... .13

Hay, bales
30
Paper, rms.. .1000

2
Oil meal,lbs5S.750
Pork, bbls
.100
Beef, bbls
100
Corn meal.bbls.50

Potatoes,bbls. 100

Peas, bgs.... .222
Miscellaneous....

$r

$21,403

Flour, bbls.

galls

43,503

17,381

.25

200
1.000

7,200

Bread, bbls.. ..785

Lard. lbs.. .43,237
Butter, lbs.. .3665
Cheese, lbs .9764
Candles, bxs..380
20
Soap, bxs
Beef, bbls
14
Pepper, bgs
51
Tobacco, hhds. .2

Whalebone,

lbs....... 18,425

Machinery,

cs.. S
cs.. .1

Dry goods,

.

24.305
2.000
450

2
594
Skins, cs
Seed, sacks.... 10
150
Beeswax, lbs 3484
1,783
Cotton, bales .787 181,370

Effects,
Sew

31
mach, cs. .43
cs

Whiskey,

1

cs

400

1

cs

Jewelry,

1

1
1

cs...

Miscellaneous

400
250
347

1,888
253

.

Hose, pkgs

CENTRAL

1.035

Tomb stone

Rye flour, bbls.-15
Pk codfish.bl>ls30

Preserves,

.46
Cassia, bales... .4
Potatoes. bbls559
Onions, bbls..352
Oats, bush
382
Shooks & H.5.582
cs

.

1,582
987
239
15,927
134

—

$242,442
TRENCH

WEST INDIES.

Beef, bbls
23
Lard, lbs... .2,500
Flour, bbls....400
Dried fish, bxs300
Peas, bgs
30
Corn, bgs
15
Shooks.
2,185

778
541
3.600
ISO
100
34
4.669

Woochvare, pkg35
Hoops
55,400
Oars

Shoes,

2,893

24

22

cs

128

1.939
5.624

Furniture, cs.129

Lamps, pkgs...11
Glassware, cs.. .2
Gas fixt, cs

363

■

1,135

.42
119

.120
746

.16

484

cs

.

Bottles

320
615

1000

.211
Earth'nw'e. .721
Glass
1,000
Glassware
22
Glass plate.. .213

Staves."

25,200

375
1(55

15
5
Ammonia, sal. 10

2,077 Leather, Hides, &c.-

147

Argols

10

2,012

216

Anoliue
Alum

9

2.871
3.457

Bark, Peruvi’n26

234
239

Watches

Acids
Ammonia

131

Wine, pkgs
5
galls.247
Spikes, kegs.. .10
Lard oil.

.

Bismuth

511

2

Pump

1

100
249

265
749

Miscellaneous

Chickory

2,510

Hardware, cs...l
Dry goods, cs.. .2

120
325

Rgoods, cs.... 1
Hoop skirts, cs.3

450

6

150

bxs

I

680
161
744

Nails, kegs... .20
Hoops, bdls .214
Cotton gin. cs .1
Matches, cs... .20
Oysters, cs
.10
Beans, bbls....40

108
233
123
389

Corn meal. bbl475

2,228

Apples, bbls.. .45
Machinery, cs. 12
Drugs, cs*.
23

200

2,000

Miscellaneous

1,613

.

$34,199
CUBA.

Shooks and
heads
7,700
Hoops
79.500

Lumber, ft. 126,325
Tea, pkgs
59
Empty bbls... 450
Apples, bbls.. .37
Mfd iron, pkgs.68
Nails, kegs ...159
Ice, tons, r
70
Coal

oil,gls.42,714
Hardware, cs .199
Whale oil, gls .162

Pork, bbls.. ..7SI
Tinware, cs
6
Hay, bales
529
Paint, pkgs
88
Trunks, pkgs..50
Rope, pkgs
27

Cutlery, cs
16
Drugs, pkgs...119
Liquor, bxs
25

Dental mat'l. ..14

Potatoes,bbls2470
Beans, bbl
30
50
Pitch, bbls
Clocks bxs.... 11

Corn, bush. .8,200
Stone, tons... 185
R. R.

13

cars

Plaster, bbl...150
Furniture, cs... 3
Ale, bbls
50
Flour, bbls

...

19.1-45
4.984
4.080
3.000

1,038
332

7,134
291
5,810
1,332
2.549
500
1,437
1,054
3,110
125
4'H)
6.615
114
300
645
3.305
500
S90
425

75
320

Lard, lbs.. ..3,913
Linseed oil, g«l44
Torpedos, bxs..l
Fire crackers,
pkgs
-13

678

63
115

Glassware,

cs...

1

338
1.750
i 00

Machinerv.

pkg44

8,944

Staves

1200

Iron safe
Mfd wood

1
17

Onions, bbls.. .375
Carts

V

12

Agl implts,
pkg
55
Spts turpentine,
bbls




14

Ext

logw'd.bx 700
Petrolm,gls40,132

240

567
200
S22
930
450

2,125

3.85S
25,684

$29,542

375

7.932

Woodenware,
pkgs
..174

$83,358
LEGHORN.

GENOA.

Ext
logw’d.bxlOO
Ess oils, cs
3

1.193
345

Petrol, gls 148.4l>5

49,370

$50,908

93
2.451
489
732
92

1

cs
10
Boots&shoes.csl9
Phot, mails, cs .6
Sew mach, cs. .10

Bags, bales.
Nails, kegs.

..10
.223
.305
.110
...6

toai

on,

gaii

Cutlery, bxs
Codfish.
Pk
D‘d

.US
.636
..10
...4
.936

codfish,bbl720
codfish,bx975

23,640
3.453

2,920
15.590
801
596
921
*

884
391

132
314
329

..15

Tongues, bbls..9

Linseed oil,gls220
Perfume ry, b x. 200

Woodwarc,pkg45

Sugar, bbls... 193
Lumber, ft. 115,599
Shingles ..118,750
Paint, pkgs.. .260

Banting, pcs...10
Tallow, lbs.. 1.171
CIO Segars, cs.
l

3

052
219
0.308

3,525
826
678
150
170

280

.

Matches, cs... .14
Powder, cs
Hardware, cs ..12

Hoop skirts..

.1
.12
.10
.5
.

.

a

Rosin, "bbl

.

.

Rope, pkg
Guns, cs
Stationerv,

.12
..1

cs. ..3

VENEZUELA.

Potatoes, bbl .150
Lumber, ft .10,000

1,042;

67

6,259

Hardware...

Furs

113

Bananas
Dried fruits
Lemons
Nuts/.

Oranges

Prunes.'.
Plums
Raisins

Below
.

we

'

742

Gunny cloth .753

33,092
1,732
5,279
14,436

22

5,900

Hair

Haircloth... .11
Hops
3-1
Ind rubber.. .879
Ivory
2
Marble & man..

14,720

10,654

773

Lead, pigs

36,616

.7769

.

43.132

Machinery./...34

Saddlery

17
4,478

Steel

Cassia
Cloves
Mace’

paintings..21

Paper hangi’gs2l

437

Perfumery, ...24

6,555
4,521
3,495

Potatoes

1,544

Rags

Pipes

......

,

4,99F
5,007
1,146

'..

4,534
2,2S4
35.164

1,269
5.819
480

22,520
101

3,668
16,825
1,715
6,759
10,83S

4,184

Provisions

452

.113

Rice

1,835
24,371

Rope

5.185

Salt

787j

Spelter,
lbs

Oil

12,500

3,114
4,551
56,789

2,494
80,677

7

Grain

6,374
56,838
6,695

6,693

Statuary

217

Sago flour

1,994
7,339
32,998
5,511

Seeds
Linseeds.... 8494
Soap.
2066
Sugar, hhds, tes
and bbls...1766 96,639
Sugar, boxes and

bags ....5,415 117,591

1.662
9.824
<xc.—
39

2,332 Books
5,139 Engravings
25,225 Paper
2,709 Other
6,552 Woods—
Cedar
3,871

.11

Trees & plants.
Tea
996

7,120

45,743

1,620

Flax
Fish

45,596

Metal goods . .54
Nails
30
Needles
26
Nickel
7
Old metal
Platina
1
Plated ware.... 5
Per Caps.
15

Nutmeg
Pepper
53 Stationery,

3

Fancy goods....

9,607

430

Fruits, &c.

18,826

Furniture

96,602

3,498

1,314

Feathers

100

.10,918

6,913

983
12

Matches
Molasses
835
Maccaroni... .51

tons

3,866

bags ....31,580 570,826

18,488

45
.379

Guns

761

1,916
24,584

Cocoa, bags. 1024

28,437

90

40,222

v

Coffee,

447

Chains and an¬
chors
228

Cutlery

Corks
Clocks

421

Tin, bxs... 15,209
Tin, slabs.525,24,764
2,423 Spices—

Furs, & c—
-

Whisky

254
418
5.748

Toys

.97

5.005

Tobacco
"Waste

285
414

11,201

Wool,bis ...1249

89,712

55

1,331
4,752

35

..

1,342
22,261
6,096
15,498

8,569

Other

2,821

Total....

$2,547,788

2,778
337

Cork

give the total imports at this port for the

year 1865 :

FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR 1864 AND 1865.

[The quantity is given in packages where not otherwise specified.]
Value.
Alabastar

naments...

Bags ...*

cs.. .20

350
409
945
80

Glassware, CS..17

62

Quant.

or-

Baskets

Preserves,

1,401

13

450

Sew mach, cs.. .6
Drugs, pkg
53

7,486,
803

___

$08,990

8,417
4,680

1

363

Wine, pkg.
Pig iron, pkg..
Nails, kgs
Tar, bbl
Vinegar, bbl..

.

5,711
2,433!

Sumac
1217
Vermillion
11
Yellow berries..
Other.

1,128
625
526
396
102
93
03
449
72
26
114
272
3 IS
120
156
78
137
261
240
240

.75

.1590
sal
287
ash
337
caustic.199
nitrate

Sponges

159
403

Machinery, cs.. .5
Dentl mat., cs.. .2
Candles, bxs. .136

2,992
5,465
2,130

Sugar of lead .10
SuFph zinc
20

3.548

3

801
3,1 OS

.

Senna
Sautonine

202

Mfd marble, pkg.2

Champgne, cs...5
cs..

Lamps, cs

8,135

3,820

680
169

..1
1
Cotton gin....
..9
Anchors
Glassware, cs. 1

1.009

-JH1

3

533
375
431
7.173

1.464

do
do
do
do

3,387
2,286

Iron, other,

car¬

bonate..

581
346

.

52
131
248
5

19,989

93

Potash, hyd

Soda, hi

3,888

16,562

9,166

Persian berri’soi

2.642

Tobacco, cs

Lard oil. bbl..
Tea. pkgs

Hams, lbs...5,488
Cheese, lbs. 3,988
Butter, lbs. .9,845

Matches,

43
Cutlery.es.. ..42
Butter, bx...1,213
Hams, bx... 1,025
Sugar, lbs
31
Soap, bxs
342

dye

205

132

Cigars
Coal, tons.. .1244

1.092

Iron hoop,tnsl30
Iron pig, tns.831
Iron, sheet,
tons
188

Paints

3.317
615

2,115

613

Lac

600
132

79

63
11.347
3.952

Morphine...-. .13

8,123

...

.9

196

Oils, ess......51
Oil, linseed...97
Oil olive ...2,009
Opium
55

775

Drugs, pkg

.....

Oils

4,478

Express pkgs.cs.l
Lard, lbs... 19,410
Live stock, hd .1
Pe r lu mery, b xs. 12
Tobacco, bis,. 192
Flour, bbl
Bread, pkg

Magnesia

7.000
1.121
3-500
500

..50

Cordials
Gin
Porter
Rum

1,261
41,086

156

Building stones.

47,941

4,3S9
670
263

Boxes
Buttons

’

Brandy.

237
675

Madder..... .239

4.0M0

Clothing,

Ale

65

2,111
2,984
2,784

'

Cheese

'.

.2546
17,477 Wine
4,99ii Champagne.’1727
2,237 Metals, &c.—
1
1,474 Bronzes

arabic. .79

Bags.

79,314

Liquors, Wines, &c,

751

copavi..23
Indigo.
14
Iodine, pot
2
Ipecac
3
.Jalap
5

oil.gals.3,097
22
Preserves, cs.. .82
Herring, bbl... .10
44
C'ornmeal, bbl...7
Dry good*, cs. .30 13,300
Paint, pkg

Books

HAYTI.

Flour, bbls..2,538
Lard, lbs... 19,925
Rice, bbls
202
Soap, bxs.. 10,050

do
do

GRANADA.

NEW

Bell
Coal

ed

604

Gums,crude.. 364

$31,148

-

.

280

31.504

453

...

1.519
1,137

..S50

Ovsters, bxs. .299

.

Cubebs
Cantharides

1.194

...

190

*.

Baskets
97S

Hides, undress¬

893

72

Other

37,099! Miscellaneous-

Hides, dress¬

1,758
2,549
5,330

('ream Tartar.25

1

150

Willow

10,407!

1,100
1,349
333

Rosewood

35,350!

25

ed

....281

Rattan

573

Bristles
46
Boots & shoes.4

194
844

40
Barytes
Brimstone, tn>56
102
Camphor

102
24,000

2

FOR THE

Mahogany

2,460|

Optical
4
Surgical...;. .2
1,768 Jewelry, &e.—
30,363 Jewelry
17
6.457

Drugs, &c.—

155
1,051

Boots & sli’s,csl9

$4,860,386

lbs..

20,950!

Perfumery, bxlOO
Drv goods, cs.. .1
Po'rk, bbls
5
Tea, pkgs
2
Rice, bbls
5

.

Boat

31,539

63

86

152
159
2.54

.

360

Tobacco,hhds. 321
Tobacco samples,

Mathematical. .1

Musical

.6
35

....

Gin. cs
Carts

Total

19, 1866.

JAN.

162

Lard, lbs
Alcohol-, bbls

$86,829

14,287
8,539
7,419

AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK

ENDING

750

..

Ice. tons
103
Bricks
11,808
Sew mach, cs. .12

CADIZ.

.

174
925

Boilers

Syrup, bbls

SPECIE)

AND

9,220
19,214

,

721
134

727

276

Sew 'mach, cs.127

1,120

China

$10,6S9

galls

Wax, cs
20
Ptg mat. pkg
2
Rosin, bbl... .150
* 2,070
Pitch, bbl
50
Lumber, pc.45,079
$49,742 Miscellaneous....
7,301
3,146

[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]
Quan. Value.
Quan, Valued
Quan. Value
China, Glass «& E.
Sauces and p’vs.
1,351! Fustic
1,116
ware—
Instruments—
Logwood. M.

AMERICA.

..

Glassware, cs.,19

PERU.

Machinerv,
pkg

WEEK

6
1

Petroleum,

931

3,100

...1
.83

Flour, bbls

..

IMPORTS

37

.1

Books, cs...
.1
Sand paper, cs.. 6

6,994 Blacking, pkg.. .4
Paper ware, cs. .4

Drugs, pkgs,..330

(OTHER THAN DRY GOODS

$24,112

Copper, bx

.8

Bread, pkgs.. .40

350

cs.

6,300

245
950

Cond milk,

Fluid, cs
100
Mfd iron, pkg. .37

21.900

1,492

_

361
51
262
50
150

Miscellaneous...

236
250
600
216
125

104

Woodenware,
Pkgs

60

1
Eth‘ware,cratesl3

40

12

30.000

pkgs
250
Oysters, bxs .100
Cordage, coil. .502
Pepper, bgs.. .300
Lumber, ft .69,000

313
800

Trunks

REPt’BLIC.

W oodenware,

1,294

Dry goods, cs..l3

295
220

....

gals

Muskets, cs... 25
Lamps, pkg... .51

$155,922

Lard. bx... 30.000
Starch, bx.. .2,000

38,810
431

686

463
662

bgs

55

cs.... 5
Dental mat’l, es.l

1.326

Paper, reams 1600

5,550
4,115

1,886
5,125

Blacking,

408

Machinery, cs.. .4
Ptg matl, pkgs.. 1

•

520

Hardware, cs ..48
Flour, bbl...3,709

120

2.000

Mfd tobacco,
lbs
1,157
Coal oil, galls .852

Vanilla beans.

Oil stones, cs,
Ess oils, cs...

.190

..

100
77

Hardware, cs. 37
Nails, kegs
8
Glassware, pkgs6
Linseed oil.gls. 39
Paint, pkgs... .21
Bread, pkgs, ...2

C'ornmeal, pkg.91

Petroleum,

2,205

Boards

PORTO RICO.

HAVRE.

770

Onions, bbls...40
Apples, bbls.. .12
Scantling, pcsSOo

Miscellaneous....

444

-1,238
31,*28

Apples, bbl ....10

2,417

Furniture, cs. .46
Potatoes, bbls.40

19,430

Sew machines. .38
Book*, cs
16

295

Perfum'ry.bxs20O

843

oil,gal. 35,012 25,836
Perfumery, bxs.44
165
CTSPLATINE
Drugs, pkg... .435 6,760
Machinery, C8.13S 4,618 Kerosene,

3,544

.

Bread, pkgs.. .110
Peas, bbls
50
Tobacco, hhds.. .4

Oil meal.lbs22.500

Rosin, bbls...

Butter, lbs... .650
Coal oil, gls.3,471

...

401

Coal

10.328

..

2,936
3,821
1,207
535
162
200

Cotton gins,cs.282
3
Hops, bale
Cutlerv, cs
8
Lard. lbs.. 124.687
Candles, cs
45

MEXICO.

Flour, bbls
.700
Cocoa, bgs. ..200

Quan. Value.
Quan. Value.
Lumber, ft.34,285
963 Hardware, cs.103
3,270
Rosin, bbl.... 140 1,118 Oil cloth, cs... .20 2,012
Paper, reams.. 400
320 Tacks, cs
2.883
140
Shooks, cs....987
1,095 Preserves, cs.150
1,854
20
245 Mouldings, cs..'.5
Matches, cs
1.480
Tea, pkg
42
2,521 Woodenware,
Stoves
..4,200
798
pkgs....
577
3,731
Nails, kegs...,,12
9(50 Lard, bx
810
6.000
Carriage
1
300 Rum, bbl
70
1,400
Lamp fixt, cs...58
1,735 Beef, bbl
2.300
100
Blacking, bbl.. 18
861 Pork, bbl
’..50
1,500
Ag’l implts, pkg.2
100 Petrolenm,
Gas fixt, pkg.... 2
140
galls
3,620
Cement, bbb..l50
297 Furniture, cs.. .29
30
Pitch, bbl
73 Stationery, cs.. 14
Glassware, cs..15
- 755
1
Saddlery, cs
Miscellaneous....
547 Agl implts, pkg.42

4.937

$17,338

.

1,554

...

Value

BRAZIL.

$121,706

Spars

Bread, pkgs.. .250
Pitch, bbls ....25
Tallow, lbs. .2.100
Flour, bbls....500

Staves

Miscellaneous

,

60
29
695

Rosin, bbls. ,..3

Hams. lbs.. .4.591
Bacon, lbs...2.013

Cotton gin

95
146
135
312
406
246
194
619
233

Nutmegs,

2

meal,lbs.315
Lumber, ft.20,000

53
227

Cassia, pkgs.. .11

Tar. bbls

Ilams. lbs.. .5,669
Tobacco, bales.22
Apples, bbl... 100
9
Starch, cs
Cotton gin, cs... 4,
Miscellaneous

90

2

cs

Hops, bale..;.. .1
Mf iron. pkgs.. .2
Oil cloth, pc
1
Onions, bbls...75
Hardware, cs..20
Pepper, bgs....25

Packing, pkgs. 10
Palm oil, cks... .2
Pat. leather, bx .1
Paper, reams.3500

700
1,475

2,665
5,952

Nutmeg,

Matches, cs
54
Tallow, lbs. 14,083
Tar, bbls
30

412
1290
650

Quan.
Flour, bbl.450
Kerosene, gl.4100
Lard, lbs.. .18,199

142
22,(180

Tobacco, hhds..5
Tobaeco, bals.251

2

Live stock, lid..2
Salt, sacks.. .1250
Pe r fu m e ry, pkgs33
Lard. lbs.'... 37643
Codfish, qtl...372
Mf. tobacco,
lbs
5,765

5

Quan. Value.

Linseed oil, gls97
Pork, bbls
765

Corn meal,bbls.25
Boards
1367

430

Mfd

iron,
pkgs

Pianos

[January 27, 1866.

Boxes
Bricks

Boats

Buttons,.

$6,915
116.485
179.422
22.968

4,452
415.868

$388
3,955
...

...

Value.

Value.

Build, stone.
$7,579 Burr stones.

Quant-

17,596
17.773

1.140

83,752! Candles
77,065

Clay

Value.

9,914
24.548

16,624

51.533

21,980

25,233 Cheese
59,207
2.530 113.485
5,868 China, Glass, and Earthenware2,000
Bottles....
24.856
27,930
1,234

3.947 1,018,321

'

China

348,737

6,894

353,583

THE CHRONICLE.

January 27,1866.]
1864.
Yaiue.

1864.
Value.

1865.

Q.uant. Value.
Earth’ware 1,205,473 30,668 1,130.236
382,109 148,100
Glass
339,201
Glassware..
7,391 200,989
181,540

Rhubarb..
Saffron
Safflower
Safflo w e r

531,110

834

o

104

Santonin e

955,091
860,542
123,488

Saltpetre.

788,237

693.268 323.056
130
230.159
71
837
Chronograp’s
rotton.bales.il, 157.449 43.000
14.107
336
Clocks
150.906
0,518
Cocoa, bags.

Salammo
nite

6.040

30
00
1.133

......

7,‘j93
8.077

...

Soda,
carb

3.094
5.948 i
20.404

4.279
881

Amo*a curb
Ammonia..
Am. sal...

40,045
19,697
5.127

Am. sulph.
Ann at to...

17,755

Anilil. dye.
Aniline col-

Assafcetida.

137.238
12.404
2.970
220.380
4.134

Arsenic....

2,811

ors

Arrowroot.

tic..

Asphaltum.
Algols

1,082
140
50
5.322

Aum

Bark.Pernv
Bals. Tolu.
Bal.1 copav.
Bismuth...
Bitumen...

207,52»
3,197

Blea powd.
Blue vitrol.
Borax

■133,090

Briin’e, tus

224,218

4.012
917

152,Oil
5.445

19.780

408
0.090

328
8.903
424
033

Camphor..

114,818

2.387

Camomile.

1.572
5,749
3.419
3.988
1.895

Barvtes.

..

Castor oil

.

Cauthari’s.
Card’moms
Carmine...
Chalk
Chlorodiue
Cream tar
Chrome yel

Chiccory

021
2.487

ioo

2 6,244
223.221

5,7n

198,732

8,250

61,507
85,413
4,782

970
427

4,407

2.580

....

23
50

0,545
74
205
117
52

22,OSS

Ipecac...V.

49,690

Ipecacu'ha.

....

Ins'ct pow.

2,228

.

1,183

603
94

1,273
1,542

152
M41

Manna
.

Muriate pot

Nutgalls...
Nitrate pot
Nit’te soda
Nit’te silvT

•

fects

....

4S0

72

i

40

70,911

189,772

...

15.510

.

.

100

01,508
00.078

....

....

....

....

....

•

.....

58,196

....

373,244
158,417

«...

2,440

19,086

j Rope.......

45.546
22.244
59.536

92,575
2,498
59,439
255,672
602,732
331,397

02,405
110.003

70.433

830,313
178,800
7.190

....

16.736

133

155,936

....

2,208
24,982
223,230

402

19.173

379,598

2,338
3,370

7,220
491,747

131,514

381

155.795

•

•

•

Hemp

Honey

Chemical
Mathem’cal
Musical....
Nautical.

12,839
3.803

1.810

202,851

30,025

33,923

.

2,831

101,128

500
72
1,101

Oil, palm
Oil, whale
Opium

311,087

Orch.weed

10.740

Orange p’l

4,327
435,703

.

5,740

Jewelry...

Paints
white.

1,925

Pot. bitch.

,

.

,

.

2,280
•

3,112
17,473
7,577
...

255

Leather, Hides. &c—
Boots&sh’s
25,506
Bristles..

Hides, tires 1,157,663
Hitler, und. 5,829,337
Horns
12,412
.

....

...

-

443,828
....

407,443
1,178
a

e

e

Beer
Cordials

,

732
414
15

284
1.011
•

•

•

•

«...

152
188

8,636
8,58-3

Alcohol....

10

37,300 Metals, «£c—
Brass g’ds.
Bronze met
1,552
Bronzes.
Chains and
Anchors.
..

19,939
62,430

1,880

630
1.038
100

47,824
146,849
63,542

11,557

41,471

10,407
39,133

80,205
74,510
100.949

Gas fixt...
Guns
.

Iron, hoop

080.902
315

720

34.133

119

10.093

50,754

9,934

14.079

75

58

298
251

53,388

2.012.197 97.577
380.540 4800241

8,097

48

213,830

94.209
1,895
17.840

Sago

Salt

Shells
Seeds unspec
Castor seed..

11,985

78.170

2,269

53,972

....

....

22

12,140
78,617

30
50

286,394
.‘311,090

....

50,508
22,382

18,133
97,435
149,7*1
5,383
532

3,938

488,977

345

93,747

3,021

319,469

1.500
221,778
82,572 Statuary95
85,074
66,281
S
Sugar, hluls.
50.418
bids & tcs.l2.988,007 321,45515,508,582
55,214 Sugar, bxs
1,024,755
hags
2,950,089 450,932 0,467,791
220,985 Tar
106,278
4.S14
1,323
8.818 Tapioca
405
17,821
11,211
Teazles
2,240
3,059.956 Trees & plats
20.849
24,940
1,250.007 Thistles
1,377
95,289 j Tea
8.172,072 503,990 7.089,7i4
183
8,266
103,014; Twine
24,842
2,635 Toys
0.818
427,240
334,321
234,750 Tobacco
025,472 32,040
859,534
Tomatoes....
2,820
2,080
14
iTurpentine..
2,431
1,169
99,315 Turp spirits
294,824
2.658 Waste
483,684
580,808 12,985
5,163 Whalebone
01.8-14
109
227,723
*

2.242

8
758
2.29i

....

..

1.409 Wax
3.490,790 138.554 3,299,425 Woods—
209.482

98S

120,099

202.002

82

404.398

193

23,159

Box wood.
Brazil wo'tl
Cam wood

.-...

10.107
30.455
5.342
103.750

19.855
16.064

.

Cedar
Cork
Kbonv
Fustic
Lima wood
.....

1

560
208.047
1:0,080
215.289

280.073
100.018

Logwood..

844

130,408

33.504
050

840,140

Palm leaf..
liataiu.....
Rosewood.
Sa panwood

42,137
8,'i5o
50.788
2.010

448,199
1,501

Lign* vitae.

550

Mahogany.

021,9:34
87,392

Spruce....

812
1.308

Willow....
7,854
19,302 7 Oth woods

.../

282.701 j Wool, bales .
Oth miscell..

145,457
40,817

4.373

1.S80

0,400

75,092

240

1,792

211.007
68.148
5.817

65,665

2.610

32,332
10,0:35
12,830

62.399
29.540
•

•

•

•

330.937 503,227
84.356
....

72,821
278
24,714
255.004
246.000

79,508
91,542

139,532
2,900

8,008
20,809
103,450

9,428,409

....

•

•

.

•

....

37,388
72.825
3.245
«...

29,756
264,801

52,583

59,015 4,S63,826
79,432

Total ...$133,472,704

....127,731,550

243,082
....

3

Camph w'tl

305309

591,775

Rosin

229,005

2,678

....

045,054

j Quartz rock.

12,254

_

1

London, Jan. 13.—Coffee qui t, ami previous sales bare’y supported
excepting for colory sorts, which contiuue scarce. The greater portion
of the supplies consisted of the commoner
descriptions, for which the
demand is moderate, at a decline since the closing of the market for
the Christmas Holidays of
fully Is. @ 2s per cwt. Hemp.—250 bales
of Sorsogan quality have been
placed at £10. 500 bales Sunn at auc¬
tion partly sold from £19 @ £20 15s. for common to fair
; Russian
firm, several hundred tons St. Petersburg Clean for summer delivery
sold at £36. Jute.—A moderate demand at the
public sales, and of
9,600 bales offered about one third, chiefly of the lower qualities and
damage, was realized, prices ruling in favor of buyers ; but the better
kinds were held firmly, and ranged from £13 @ £23 10s. for inferior to
fair ; 1,400 bales cuttings were
held for £3 ; 116 bales Bombay Gunny

Cloth sold at £7.
234 bales and 34 bundles China Grass held for
£100.
Indig >.—A good enquiry for the .common sorts of East India,
and about lUO chests sold in the last
day or two, chiefly low to good
Onde, at fully last sale’s rates.
Linseed.— We have a further decline of 6d@ls per qr in the value
of spot seed, Calcutta
at

having been realized
65s.
Oils.—Fish: sperm quoted firm at £116(7<)£117 ; pale Southern £49
10s; pale seal £50; cod £52 10s. Linseed has further declined to 37s
for present delivery.
Rice inactive. 1
Spices—P. pper :

Black maintains the previous quotations, and 1,700
bags have been sold at 3^d for Singapore, and 3^4 for Penang; 460
bags Tellicherry were bought in at 4d, and 22 bags Malabar at 4 |d, but
29 bags Madras sold at 3Jd.
Of 360 bags white Singapore half sold
at 5|d@6d.
Ginger: 163 bags Bengal sold at 26s.
Sugah.—The market continues very quiet at a decline of 6d@ls
per

cwt.

The tea market continues

quiet, with but little business doing. Good
Congou Is Id per lb.
Liverpool, Jan. 13.— Beef.—The demand has improved, with sales
of about 1,000 tierces for the week,
mostly new. Bacon.—The Ameri¬
can advices
encouraged holders to resist any further decline, and buyers
gaining confidence, have taken more freely at an advance of Is. per
cwt.
Lard continues to decline, and is 2s. to 3s. lower, with small sales
at 67s.
Cheese has improved 2s. to os per cwt.
Butter.— Full prices
paid for really fine. Tallow.—The demand is limited at 48s. to 49s.
common

Petroleum.—Sales refined

dency.

£9

at 2s.

7d. to 2s. 10d., with a downward ten¬

Linskfd* Cake.—Nearly 400 tons American sold

at £9 10s. to

Naval Stores.— Rosin in better demand.
Sales Common
American at 12s. 9d. to 13s. Clover Seed.—56s. offered for Ameri¬
15s.

can.

_

531,772

Copper
689,048
Copper ore. 355,553
Cutlery.... 1,157,424

Hardware
231

5,475,011

14,010
15,389
1,965
17,192
1,528
8,731
Gin
81,315 3,694
30,247
Porter
35,088
4,779
40,873
Rum
829
60,958
33,939
58,020
1,449
Whisky....
60,020
Wine
.*■ 1,615,305 118,903 1,151,635

23,292

15

39.045

...

656,965 69,387

41

8,179

449,120
7,087 2,099,677

Champagne

97.928

18.804
104.189

1,834,969
1,012 1,990,478

4,507

400

70,947

181,812

.

...

20.079

8,090
65,032
134,198

724

13,198
Leather
251,812
159,594
Leather,pat
34,347
249,050 Liquors, Wines, &c—
Ale
08.445
29,555
10,000
Brandy ....
574,878

*

Phosphor....

180
279
7

Watches... 1,450,106

9.129
....

11,034
259,723

726,949

...

....

170,830

..

37

1,005

7,575

11,536
31,402 Jewelrv. &c—

230

220

835
95,975

..

18,514
229,750

1

9,095
229,224

Optical....
Surgical

8,710

Oil, lin’d..
Oil, olive

1.948

.

Provisions ..'

! Rags
| Rice

507
*

50

1864.
1865.
Value.
Quant. Value.
914,447 117,934
603.399
150.676 19.351
65,927

Oth spices.
447.308
15,218 Stationery, &C.—
Books
193,202
327,716
48,550
Engravi n's
S9,3Q9
215.710
Paper
236,790
Oth station
IS, (17
181.040

20,709

40,425

0,356 2.794,445

41.903

387
101

96,554

2,455

170,017
i Plaster
77,943 I Pitch
2,815 1.035,448 i
Pipes
370,934
12,440
: Potatoes

Hair
Hair cloth...

12,995
6,524
1,508
14,770
12,973
7,988

paintings

j Oakum

40

3,178
24,462
199,579
037,127
437,043

Other fruits
Furniture....
Grain
Grindstones..
Gunny cloth.

85,450




2,053.780

...

2.700

740

goods...

jI Molasses
Oil

..

....

....

21,308

....

Moss

5,622 i
Perfumery
3.547,815
i Personal ef¬
8.599

9,071
120,930

1,084

mony,,,

5.074

.

Pearl shells..

4.008

4,275

Reg, anti-

502.472
115,010

...

Matches...
Macaroni....

Onions
I
285.973 : Paper hang's

51,562
47,016
7,213

nut

Quinine...

41,847

4.122

22,500
37,450 Guttapercha..
20,109 Guano

Oil, cod...
Oil, cocoa-

Quicksil’r,

12.613
28-1,601

481

808

2,285

I

15,202
1,749.028

Grapes

193,294

ash

•

245

2.880

Potash....
PrnsB. pot-

•

16.004

89,798

....

Plumbago.

•

217,939

Plums
Prunes
Raisins....
Sauces &pr

un-

ous

1,320

933

Machinery...
Marble
ami
mt'd do

494

•

2.553

plates,

Lamps

S3,007

4.041
14.034
7.455

Pine-apples

S82
947.009

3,000

dide

i.ioi)

Vinegar...
Whiting

Wormseed
Yel. ochre.
Yel. berries
Drugs, unspec

i

1,135

25
711

Vermfll'n.

Oranges
Prs’dginger

2,052

298,904
1,823

Pot. hyd..
Potash Io-

115

3.339
751.980

5,090

.

29,482
5.320
48.395

Verdigris.

Silvenv'e..

492
30.315

1,770

9,050

12,037
-8,902
1,427

Pers’n berries
Pot. chlo

6.695

4.58S

810.000

P.

55

4S.433

Magnesia..

ess

701

11.070

Spelter, lbs

Tin

147.335
124,108
392,050

Pimento...

bxs
2.904.640 024.919
Tin slab.lb.
550,778 153,024
238
Wire
49,332
0,409
12,007
Zinc
370,075 2840582
I Lith: stone.,
3,089

a

beans...
Ultram'ne.
Van.beans

Steel

123.306
13,196

12
392

.

Saddlery...

450

.

363,893

Madder....

Oil,

-

.

.

.

1.533,949 116,106 1,732,979
127,798
72,430
1,910
17.443
2,20b
Hops
95,574
India rubber. 1,196,781 20,703 1.183,421
19.284 Ivory
37,637
251,347
2,450
207,911 Instruments—

Logw'd ext

spec

Touqu

.

.

27.515
178

3
09
321
208

12,331

Lac dye...
Leeches....
Licorice r't
Lie paste..

Oils,

8.383

32.595
474,110
57.919

04,20k

....

caps

15.220
6.701

..

Morphine

115

...

70,349
254,411
2S4,571
34,820
10,303
59,935
7,459

....

706,806
23,084

Iodine
Iodine pot.

Sul. Alum.
Sul. zinc..
Velonia...

Felting

....

522
230

Gypsum...
Indigo

67,195

Sul.copper

199
Furs
34.559 Fruits—
432,768 Bananas...
Citon
1,555
Currants....
40,598
Dried fruits
18,409
Dates
7,220
512
Figs
Lemons
Nuts

1,174

Glue

1,311

15I.OS7

...

1,585

G.tra.canth

783.416

Hatter s'

231,516

.

1.283
8.011

Flor sulph.
Gentian r’t.
Gambier...
Gum arabic
Gum crude
G. copaiva
G. lowrie..
Gum copal.
Gum myra.
Gum gedda

170,816

1,290

1.409

2,150
2,4t5

19,2:34
91,180
3,300
1,533

Dye stud's.

plria
Sumac....

7,043

180

SS.740
243.430

.

Isinglass
Jalap

333
....

8

Cochineal
Cubebs....
Cudbear...
Cutch
Divi Divi..

7,873

30,203

31,040

....

ii

150,487

..

80,132

1

......

58

....

.

198,854

817
47.408

23.351
2.392
270.111
2,537
....
8.104 Emery
213.910 Fancy goods.
2,448 Fans
9,305 Feathers....
58,038 Fire crackers
1,510 Fish
2,935 Flax
Flour
5.233 Furs, tfcc....

20
01

Lead ore..
Met. goods
Nails:
Needles....
Nickel
Old metal.
Plated w're
Platina
Percussion

2,342
49,345

07.100

..

12.578

..

SuTph mor-

87.230
8.881
5.237
104,730

207

;

9,534
1,810

15,819

151.949
080.056

Sugar lead

9.517
29.138
7.374
10.797
5.795

53

....

S43

109,874

Soda, ash.
Soda, hvd.
sulph...
Sponges...

2,008

514

109,083

206,323

4.107

120
48
224
517
157
592
22

|

bi-

Soda, sal..
Soda, cans-

25,780

-

3.018

27
1.265

2,587
87.392

803,788

1865.
Value.
869
44.401 Linseed

385,078 Soap
Spices—
bars..... 3.687,970 246, 404 1,558,334
Cassia
**
Iron, sheet,
Cinnamon.
tons
Cloves
383,979
2.872
160,078
Iron tubes. 148.403 23,595 1285350
Ginger
Iron, other,
Mace
tons..... 3,427.850 21.130 1,134.393
Mustard...
2
Iron bridg.
49,889
Nutmegs
Lead, pigs. 2,682.319 222.594 1,282,939
Pepper....

3.101

7,203

Quant.

Iron, railr’d

8.864

10
381

35.929

.

....

Aluminous
cake

122,091

Seamin' nv
Senna
Shellac

61,595

131,738
Coffee. bai;s.l 4.543,955 717,07312,834,059
Drugs, &c—
1.506
172.405
^Acids
14,107
508
8,598
Alkali
7,722
..

....

tons

-

Sarsap'la

5,S25,084

.

19
3
121

3,744

1864.
Value.
228.464

Iron,pig,t'n

2.770

4,632

ext

Clears
Coal. tons...

16
5

.

.

.

3,681

Jcc

Ubttmen
Aloes
Alum

8,844
’

...

425.524

Glasplate..
Graphite,

1865.
Value.
306
58,610

Quant.

113

4,402
219,756

578,094

COTTON.

3,850

173,182
279,027
32,370
3,776 1,388,OSS
87

9

1,581

1,154
4,637

137,792

697,991

This

depression noticed at the close of our last report was follow¬
immediately by a decline of two cents per pound, with a very
dull market.
On Wednesday, however, a good general demand
opened up—steadying, without advancing prices. On Thursday
ed

further decline of one cent, a *
though some decline in the Liverpool market had been anticipated.
Quotations became very irregular and unsettled, with a strong
disposition to realize on the part of many, and lots could be picked
up at prices considerably under curreut quotations.
We hear of a
full line being offered at 4c decline from bids for the same line last
week. At to day’s market there was rather more steadiness, with
the

a

news

by the Hibernia caused a a

Sales of the week 16,000 bales.

fair business.

The following are

closing quotations:

-

N. O.

Florida.

Upland.

42

Ordinary, per lb
Good Ordinary
Low Middling
Middling
Good Middling
Middling fair

\

43
45
47
50

.

.

43

Bales.

F

New Orleans
Texas

4,109

Mobile
Savannah
South Carolina
Total for the week

3,208
3,350

Mobile, Jan

45

271,985

17,489
166,553
3,467

This year. _'

t

23,515

666,328

the past week, were as

of Cottou from this port for

on hand 1st Sept., 1865
Received at this port this week

Stock

*

9,840
1,661
792
789

To Havre

Total for the week,.

214,938

Since

228,016

July 1st, 1865

question as to the probable amount of Cotton we shall have
export the next six or eight months becomes of great interest

The
for

186,509

1860-61.

3,168
3,720

67,768

80,474

12,051
113,946

86,707

21,419
26,604
2,636

26,181
1,044
3,525
13,084
20,594
8,919

87,048

73,348

shipboard not cleared,....
26,898
Apalachicola, Fla.. Dec. 30.—Cotton statement:
Receipts from May 1st, to Sept. 1, 1865
do
Sept. 1 st, to Dec. 23, 1865

13,358

Total

• • ■

Britain

France
Other Continental ports
New Orleans
New York
Boston

do
do
do
do
do

911

• ••

;..»

32,478

13,082

Previously reported,

....
....

...

Received previously
Received at other ports

Exports to Great

.bales

....

247,645

shipboard not cleared
85,426
Mobile, Jan. 20.—Receipts for the week, 13,000 bales. Sales of the
week, 10,000 bales. Middling 75c. Stock on hand, 80,000 bales.
•Galveston, JaD. 13th.—Cotton statement -

171

July 1, 1S65

24,290

On hand and on

4,132

Since

..

15,702

231,943

Burned and lost

642,813

To Liverpool
To Fleetwood
To Hamburg

*

Exported this week
Exported previously

1,535
1,352

Previously reported

The exports
follows :

bales

on

'

211

Florida

13.175
4,928

13th.—Cotton statement:

hand 1st Sept., 1865..
Received this week
Received previously

Stock

Bales

r'

12th.

20,912
15,753
6,624

43,647
3 *,951
43,289
New Orleans, Jan. 20.—Receipts for the week, 18,000 bales. Sales
of the week, 28,000 bales.
Middlings, 50c. Stock on hand, 181,000
bales. New Yorksightl £c. die.

for the week ending this

Norfolk, Baltimore, Ac..
Per Railroad

,

39,466

Total, bales

52

rom

23,359
13,841
6,44?

19,271
16,413
3,812

Mobile
Galveston

Jan. 5.

21,848

20th.

Dec. *22d.

New Orleans

47
48

North Carolina

and

We give later dates for New Orleans

Mobile below:

evening (Friday) were as follows :
From

ending Jan. 12 th.

weeks

Mobile. &. Tex.

43
45
46
48
52

42
44
45
47*
51

receipts of cotton at this market

The

[January 27, 1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

114

On hand

and

on

Dec. 23, to Dec.

do

12,650
52,806
3,173

30,1865

being carried on in England with
respect to the American trade. We gave a statement on the first
Exported 4o New York
.36,636
of January as to the stock on hand at that time at the different
do
Liverpool
6,489
New Orleans
976—
do
ports, showing it to be about 600,000 bales. Probably the same
figures will represent the present stock. The amount which has Stock on hand and on shipboard not cleared ....... .bales
already come forward is about as follows :
Totai
Savannah, Jan. 20.—Market dull at 48@49c for middling.
Since
Before

in view of the discussion now

68,629

43,101

26,528

.

1st

75,300
198,350

19,818

93,000

89,829
176,340
823,300
563,360
112,818

87,000

159,321

Sept.

25,829

Georgia and Florida

21.340

Mobile
New Orleans
Texas

Memphis, Nashville, N.York ifc all North
Of which —Received at New York ....
Estimated at other points...
“

72,321
•

•

100,000

••

415,958
This would leave still to come

i

1,009,000

Uplands.

to date.

Sept.
64,000
152,000
248,000
365,000

1st

From

North and South Carolina

.1,524,968

forward before the next crop, ac¬

cording to the general estimate of the supply, about five or six
hundred thousand bales, and give us about eleven or twelve hund¬
red thousand bales to meet the home consumption and the export

on

Received

281

378

98,409

4,485

109,611

5,144

8,127

92,490

3,865

100,617

4,416

previously
receipts

Total

Sea Island.

3,724
7,378

hand Sept. 1......
Received this week

Stock

*

Exported this week
previously
44

Total exports
Stock on hand

551

728

8,894

'

20.—Receipts for the week, 545 bales upland and
Exports, 6,952 bales upland and 440 ba'es Sea
Island
Middling, 49c. Stock on hand, 2,732 bales upland ann 89 bales
Sea Island. New Y°rk sight, 1 p. c. dis. Freight to Liverpool ^d.
Charleston, Jan.

113 bales

Sea Island.

13th.—The stringent and uncertain state of the
has had a very prejudicial effect on cotton, and American
demand.
beiug very freely offered was in some cases forced down Id to l^d per
It is difficult to state with certainty the amount our spinners are lb. At this reduction buyers came forward, and” the market became
using. We have returns from the Massachussets cotton mills for steady at a recovery of ^d to fd. Manchester was depressed in the
the year ending last May, and their consumption, according to beginning of the week, but has shown more firmuess with the improve¬
Liverpool, Jan.

Money Market

for that year, one hundred and sixteeD thousand
hundred bales. We think that a liberal estimate for the

ment in our

market.

those returns, was,
seven

consumption of of the mills tor this year would be five hundred Upland
thousand bales ; or say, three hundred thousaud bales to the first Mobile
of August, leaving over one hundred thousand bales a month for New Orleans
Texas
export, which, at $150 in gold per bale, would amount to Sea Island..........
month.
The receipts of cotton at the different ports the past few weeks
have been fair, but not so large as was anticipated by some. The
deliveries at Mobile from the Bigbee and Warior have been liberal,
but at New Orleans there has been a falling off.
This is probab¬

$15,000,000

receipts at New Orleans, Mobile and Galveston for




21.. d

..

..

the four

18f@20 d

18R®19fd

214@..d
22 @. .d
21 f@.. d
40

a

ly owing partly to the bad condition of the roads, to the recent holidavs, and to the fact that the Red River has been insufficient to al*
low the larger boats to go up.
The following has been the course
of

QUOTATIONS.
Ordinary & ' Fair & Good
Middling.
Fair.

@50

Good &
Fine.
..

..

..

.

.

60

@. .d
@. .d
@..d
@. .d
@75d

SALES.

8peculaTrade.

Export.

tion

9,360
4,610

140

11,670

1,880

18,330

42,530

180

800

8,500
25,270
8,840

105,670

50,060

Brazilian

1,760

2,780

....

West Indian...

1,710

30
610

3,310

....

3,200

E*st Indian... 13,140

China <fc J apan.

120

Total...... 32,700

890

60

11,760

8,040
3,690

36,600

2,830

Egyptian

Same time
Total
1865.
this Year.

4,540
2,630
3,950

4,970

...

.

20,670

.12,770

American

Total

thisweek

.6,740

50,?QQ

’

720

THE

January 27, 1866.J
•IMPORTS
»

This week.

American
Brazilian
West Indian..

China A

9,311

.

Japan.

>

Total

•

•

#

•

This year.

86,587

7,390
35,640

42,250

4,060

317,880
88,180

392,200

510,290

better demand for flour the past week.

a

Last w‘k.

Flour, bbls

131,220

BREADSTUFFS.

There has been

were :

31,350
24,400
6,230

31,6(0

115

4

day, Jan. 20, since January 1st, and the corresponding time last year

1865.

182,290

14,990

•

113,109

45,798

..

STOCKS-

/

11,404
11,549
2,790
21,179
24,675

66,574
6,587
2,405
14,397 ?
23,146

1,570
1,836
9,670

Egyptian

East Indian.

*

1865.

This Tear.

CHRONICLE.

The

purchases for the Southern States are quite liberal; and, the
regular trade, and more favorable intelligence from Great Britain,

Since Jan.l. S‘e t'e 65.

3,o18

10,206

Wheat, bus

50,433

Oats, bus
Corn, bus

14,181

352,762
50,983
12,673

...

.

4.520

6,607
129,255

46,745
32,127

^

Rye, bus
3,242
6,881
2,519
Barley, bus.
2,450
11,715
10,368
Shipments of flour and grain for the week ending Saturday, January
20, since January 1st, and the corresponding time last year, were :
Last w’k.

Flour, bbls.
Wheat, bus
Oats, bus
Corn, bus...,

Since Jan. 1.

6,029
-

3,038

12,560

..

...

5,187

880
650

..

.

S'c t’e ‘65.

21,797

1,800
4,59 5

strengthen the market.
Rye, bus
milling demand, but the sales of the Barley, bus
3,123
1,272
150
Weekly Receipts at Lake Ports—The following shows the re¬
week are only about 14.000 bushels.
Prices are now twenty cents
ceipts at the following lake ports for the week ending Jan. 20 :
per bushel below the highest prices of December, without stimu¬
Flour.
Wheat.
.Corn.
Oats.
Barley.
Rye.
lating the export demand.
77,817
9,0U5
Chicago
15,8^4'
8U.243
02,897
1,674
Milwaukee...
3,018
50.433
4,508
11,131
620
2,939
Corn has further declined, with a moderate export demand.
Toledo
5,1 SO
19,788
18,829
22,025
415
616
Holders have had to contend with lower prices in Philadelphia and Detroit
6,210
1,895
1.719
1,146
have served to

Wheat has been in better

Baltimore.

Cleveland

Oats have been active for the past

three or four days, with a
recovery of two or three cents per bushel.
Rye was dull. Barley has declined. Peas continue nominal.
The following are the closing quotations :
Superfine State and Western.

Flour,

...per

do

Shipping Roundhoop Ohio
Extra Western,common to good
Double Extra Western and St. Louis

10 25 (a) 14 25

8 80 (a) 9 85
10 00 @ 15 00
8 00 @ 11 25
5 50 @ 6 20
4 40 @ 4 85
1 40 @ 1 70
1 50 @
1 75
1 80 @
2 25
2 30 @ 2 50

Southern, fancy and extra
Canada, common to choice extra
Rye Flour, fine and superfine
Corn meal, Jersey and Brandywine
Wheat, Chicago Spring.
.per bushel
do
do
do

Milwaukee Club
Red Winter....
Amber State and

Corn,

Civerfool,

@ 8 25
8 40 (a) S 75
7 80 @ 10 10

'

Michigan

Western Mixed

Oats,

Western......

do

i

State

@

90 @

Malt

Peas,

56
60
1 20

66

Barley
do

1 08

41 @

Western Yellow

85^

90 @

do

80 (a)
86 (a)

Rye,

1
l

Canada.....

The movement in breadstuff's at this market has been

30
25

as

@
@

Totals

9,163

26,320

4,187

31,480
32,920

161,346

133,184

100,222

4,056

13.000

268,197

185,835

140,559

14,043

16,342

Jan. 13—At Tuesday’s market there was more inquiry

88

1 40
1 30

Friday ; but flour and Indian corn were with¬
improvement Yesterday some sales of Wheat were made at
better prices than' were obtainable on Tuesday.
At to days maiket
there was a more general demand for wheat, and on the low qualities
of American, of which the late receipts have largely consisted, and
which had been much pressed, there was a recovery of 1 to 2d per cent¬
al.
Flour was still difficult to sell.
Indian corn was in better request
and sold readily at an advance of 6d per quarter.
out any

quotations,
s.

Flour, extra State
do
do

.per

Canadian
Sour and heated
.per

100 lbs.

per

480 lbs.

..per
...per

do Amber Iowa
do
Red and Amber winter
do
White—Western
Indian Corn, Yellow
do
White
do
Mixed

504 lbs.
240 lbs.

.

Peas, Canadian

Oatmeal, Canadian

follows:

Flour bbls
Corn

Meal, bbls..

Wheat, bush

22,600
9,840
1 2,355

79,540

32,140
9,925

16,650

126,365
27,440
4,100
87,925

58,480

....

Corn, bush

Rye. bush
Barley,<fcc., bush.
Oats, bush

32,310
126,390

40,640

125

375

775

1,180

6,325

18,355
114,250

9,965

20,240

54,875

238,710

58,420
FOREIGN

•

•

•

•

EXPORTS.

1 ftfiO

*

1

--

*

For the week.

Flour, bbls

Since Jan. 1. For the week. Since Jan. 1.

Wheat, bush
Corn, bush

.

16,830
1,775

79,570
5,195

37,775
5,970

102,950

Corn Meal, bbls

50,275
343,585
15,420

12,765

...

Rye, bush
EXPORT

OF

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

BREADSTUFFS TO G. BRITAIN AND IRELAND FROM SEPT.

Flour,

From

Wheat,

bbls.

New York, to Jan. 19, 1866
New Orleans, to Jan. 12, 1866

Philadelphia, to Jan. 16, 1866

Corn,

bush.

1,118,564

3,439,110

300
...

7,790

3,800

.<*..

154,065
••••••#

274,633

57,377

5,000

97,424 1,175,941
59,327 1,44S,008
899,180 5,978,107
502,886 13,281,896

3,880,698

•

•

•

•

7,032

'

Total
To about same
period, 1S65
do
do
1864
do
do
1863,
t

TO

1, 1865

bush.

86,292

Baltimore, to Jan. 16, 1866
Boston, to Jan. 19, 1866
Calfornia and other ports, to Jan. 16,
1866

•

71,450
10,016
36,340
18,190

TI1E

73,359
239,459

3,690,617

CONTINENT,

Flour,

From

bbls.

New York, to Jan. 19,1866...
Other ports, to latest dates.....

•

Rye,
bbls.

2,106106,091
1.090

Wheat,
bush.

67 ,»i 5 3

....

Corn,
bush.
14 592
40

Total

To about
do
do

same

period, 1865...

do
do

1864...'
1868...

M'lwaukee.—Receipts of flour




8,496106,091
12,639
26,551 13,965

57,333
68,521
185,188

62,118 90,349

782,578

14,682
2,119

15,669

and grain for the week ending Satur¬

s.

d.

t@27 0
27 0@30 0
0@25 0
10@9 10
10 0@10 4
10 0@10 4
10 0@10 6
29 9@....
31 0@31 6
29 6@29 9
8

38 0(a)....
26

0@27 0

Friday', ?. M., Jan. 26, 1866.

The

Dry Goods trade has contiuued dull throughout the week.
great efforts to dispose of their surplus stocks
at a concession of five to seven per cent, but without bringing any
demand.
Agents have few goods on hand, the manufacturers pre¬
ferring to keep them at their mills rather than press them upon the
stagnant market; Winter trade is over and Spring trade is very
backward. The only demand there is is on the part of small deal¬
ers to supply their immediate wants.
Everybody is waiting for the
break which most suppose inevitable in all classes of merchandize.
Waiting, but is still held in abeyance by the unsettled state of the
Jobbers have made

financial world,

With the dull trade and decline in cotton the

prices we give are
entirely nominal, though ageuts refuse to make any change. Should
the present condition of the market continue they will be materi¬
ally lower, and perhaps very soon may be ten or twelve per cent
below the nominal quotations of to-day.
Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are inactive in agents’ hands.
Jobbers have pressed sales to some extent rather than risk their
large stocks in an uncertain future, and have made sales of Stand¬
ards as low as 29 cents in hopes to create a demand, but for a few
pieces only at a time, fearing that speculators would buy at their
offerings. But there are no buyers at that figrtre even. We
repeat our figures of the last two weeks as those still given
by agents and the only ones to be had in the absence of
sufficient demand to determine a market. Standards are quoted at
33J~. That is the price for Appleton A, Atlantic A, Indian
Head A, Amory, Lawrence C, Amoskcag A, and Stark A,
Indian

_

d.

26

THE DRY GOODS TRADE.
-

1P65.
For the week. Since Jan. 1.

^

bbl.

23

Wheat, Chicago and Milwaukie

RECEIPTS.

-1866.
For the week.
Since Jan. 1.

650

for wheat at the decline of

7 75

Southern, supers

5,523

Pre, week....

$6 90 @ $7 35

Extra State

do

do
do
do
do
do

.

bbl.

re¬

inch

Head

32,

4-4

E

48

do D 30,

inch

sell

at

50,

Nashua

fine

C

40

Barrington 40 inch 26, Augusta Mills

32, do 7-8 26, Indian Head B 30 inch 28, Nashua extra
3iL Wauchusetts 33, Indian Orchard W 33 inch 26, do
BB 33 inch 28, do O 37 inch 30, do N 36 inch 32, do P 36 221,

A 36 inch

THE

116
Atlantic P A 37 inch 33, do A

H 37 inch 33,* heavy

28, do do A G 27, do fine sheet AL 3fi^ inch
361 inch 30, do-D 31, Massachusetts A 4-4 29, do do
30 inch

and Shirtings are firm

Bleached Sheetings

shirt A Y

30, do PL
B 4*4 31.

in prices for the

Amoskeog A 37 i
inch 39. Aquidnecks 4 4 30, Kent River 3-4 18, Uxbridge im- .
perial 4-4 40, Aquidnecks 7 8 27Canoe 27 inch 20. We- j
tumpka 4-4 374, Palace medal 37-, Goldmedal 371. Waltham X
33 inch 32$, do. W 42 inch 40, do. M 81 inch $L 05, White Rock
72 inch 87|, do K 5-4 574.

do. N 90 inch SI 15,

|42R Rockdale 4 4 40, do. 7 8 33

36 iuch

Uxbridge imperial 4-4

37.

Total
Add ent’d tor consumpt

are

have main¬

Blankets..
Shawls

,.

...

1625

$066,619

2191

*n 2626

984,012

856

$457,757
291,777

2666
4043

4251 $1,650,681

3050

$719,534

6709

18.838

264

...

less called for

Silks

Ilose

18

6,537

Hdkfs

27.492

..

102,189

1061

$351,145

90

56,675
1,491

Raw

.

Braids & bds.
Silk & worst
Silk & cotton

8,720

*

1,265

1

5,516
2,418

6

.

176

4

FLAX.

OF

MANUFACTURES

..

Thread

9,946
11,196

8
11

34
23

8,514
4,189

885

Laces
Hdkfs.....

799 $215,S78
Linens&cot. 10
3,795
Linens

$253,518

.

Hemp yarn

.

..

MISCELLANEOUS.

Kid

15

3,670
8,614

.258

81,196

Braids & Bds 1
Cot & wos’d.274

113,028

.907

395,553

3
5
3

1,266
1,323
1,945
18,072

17,811

Total

21.153

.

WAREHOUSE.

FROM

WITHDRAWN

9

Susp. &elas

980

Corsets
45
Straw goods. 118

783

2,669

Feath & flow.

11,709

$8,558 Embroideries 22
5,219 Col’s & cuffs. 2

11
gloves... 5
Matting
7
Clothing.,... 24
Leath gloves.

though there is a quiet de¬

Shawels

157 $86,632
4,077
9

Woolens
Cloths

Carpeting...

18,433

66

.•

Total

...

MANUFACTURES

239 $S3,727
392 125,217
43,420
141

Colored
Prints

14,7a3

38

.

Worsteds
263 151,460
Worsted yarn 2
599

14.809

COTTON.

OF

1

96

3
Shawls!...... 11
Laces
13

1,081
4,117

Braids
Hdkfs
Gloves.......

4,194

Hose

Emb’d mus..

541

Velvets

-

51

...

906 $304,267

Total
MANUFACTURES OF SILK.

48
1
...26

...

Velvets.

...

13

1,015

23,199

2,927
2,677

Silk & worst.
Silk <fc cott’n.

7,784

1
3

Laces
Shawls
Cravats

$90,598

80

4,649

$132,929

MANUFACTURES -OF FLAX.

accumulating.

IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF

3

1,356

4

$3,107

Embroideries 13

3

t..

4,951

NEW YORK.

goods at this port for the week ending Jan.
25,.1866, and the corresponding weeks of 1864 and 1865, have been
:

ENDING JAN.

ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK

1864.
,
Value.

/

Pkgs.
972
331
203

silk...
flax.... 1,014

$378,210
105,170

220,729
252,515

86

27,388

2630

$984,012

1865.

,

Pkgs.

v

Value.

194
129
48
46 J
25

$95,766
32,933
38,383

856

$291,777

25, 1866.
,
1860.
>
Value.
Pkgs.
1610
$775,037

118.386

1061
229
885

6,309

258

4043

351,145

201,038
253,518
81,196

$1,631,934

287

1
Handk’chiefs. 12

...418 $124,627

Laces

418
230

Thread

6,947

Hemp yarn..

10,049

Susp. «fc elas.

MISCELLANEOUS

Leath.

glove..

cloth.
Clothing

2

Oil

.....

1

Straw goods..183

13,439

2,161

305

Corsetts

230

FOR

ENTERED

—

Total

214 $34,242

WAREHOUSING.

MANUFACTURES OF WOOL.

Pkgs. Value.
$57,976

Woolens... ..114
10
Cloths
..

Carpeting..
Blankets

60
57

..

..

..

Pkgs. Value.
89
16,813

Pkgs. Value.

1

364

Worsteds....336

158,340
2,721

Total. 1,006

Gloves

5,349
17,318

Lastings

6,268

MANUFACTURES

Cottons... ..148 $55,109
69,973
Colored.... ..250
7
1,449
Prints
49
16,956
Ginghams .
Total
..

812

Braids & bds. 2
Cot. <te worst.382

Shawls

The importations of dry




.368

.229 $201,038

..

Total

16,392

Total

5,930

17,675

50

.

SILK.

5
Gloves
14
Cravats
H ’ dkerchiefs 2
1
Hose

$73.(576

Ribbons..

...

Gloves

3,900
8,176
11,180

Laces

sympathise largely with domes
nothing worthy of note in that branch of
stores buy light for local and present demand,

Miscellaneous dry goons.

$775,037

Total.. 1610

7,293
3,194

Spool

4,910
12,7(59

or

cotton..

110

336

13,837

46
to

...

Crapes....

The Manchester and Pacific each

with domestics the stock is

do
do
do

Cot. &

315.805

MANUFACTURES OF

inactive and

are

Manufactures of wool...

Braids & bdsr. 92

147

5

Lastings

Value.
53,621
worst.275 105,583
Pkgs.

Value.

57,82(5

....

674c net.

follows

CONSUMPTION.

11
Velvets
1
Ribbons
18
28,967 Laces
7.692, Braids & bds. 27

.

.

,

as

FOR

$76,388

Cottons... ..191
Colored... ..174
9»
Prints....
23
Ginghams
Emb’d mus’n 29

quiet. Dighton’s silk mixed cassimeres spring
weight sell at 82 12pa$2 374 ; Suffolk mills fancy $ do.
81 75, and 6-4 do 83 50 ;
Rochester Grey do. 81 35 ;
Fullerton & Co.’s fancy do 81 62^a82 ; Saxon Woollen Mills
diagonal do. 81 75 ; Mapleville Woollen Mills double and twist
do 81 874 ; Spring Mills fancy do. 81 08$; Ccntreville black
and white checks 8L 50 Dean & La Monte’s fancy 81 50a$L 75 ;
Baltic Woollen Co.’s do.. 81 50a81 874; plough, loom and anvil

as

movement the past

-

Pkgs.

19,732

88

.

...

Cassimeres are

and

170,245

STATEMENT.

statement of the

1
Gloves
Worsteds... .647
2
Hose
Worsted vam 26

Union blacks 82a82 50.

Retail

118,799

MANUFACTURESl OF COTTON.

$2 25 for No. 1, $2 15 for No. 2, and
82 05 for No. 3. Utica all wool beavers 83 50 for light
weight, and 84 for heavy. Glenham Co. C W tricot 81 75,

the trade.

47,953

132

64
1

Carpeting.

Cotton warps

There is little

123,170

554

30,354

Pkgs. Value.
Woolens.. ...370 $196,789
53,661
Cloths.... ...89

demand for fiue giades, though prices are

some

Foreign Goods

429

1,661,934

MANUFACTURES OF WOOL.

and 55 for 30 inch extra fine.

tics.

89,838
33,381

132,929
133,866
34,242

389
938

ENTERED

Ginghams... 53

nominal.

39,304

104,169

304,267

MANUFACTURES OF WOOL.

seasonable styles.

in

$418,993
166,023

45

1006
516
161

DETAILED

Cottons

are

$176,935

'

80,686

The following is a detailed
week ending Jan. 25, I860 :

bring 30c.
Pacific Co.’s robes de chambre sell at 374a40c, chintz
figured annures 324, printed merinoes 34; 7-4 coburgs 40n42^ ;
Atlantic' Delaine Co.’scoburgs 38c for 28 inch, 45 for 30 inch fiue,
Cloths

512
310

50,641
105,915
21,244

$311,469

and Willow Brook 36.

some

6611

71,455

723
241
126
403

Total entered at the port.

few weeks, and few goods are leaving agents’
Of course quotations have nothing to change
them.
American Stripes sell at 30 cents for 3-3. and 31 for 6 3.
Albany Ticks 27 inch 23, Pittsfield 23. Ontario A 41, Amoskeag A C A 80, do. A CO. B 55, C 50, and D 45, Amoskeag
tripcss are sold at 50.
Print Cloths have continued very dull with no sales reported.
The sales at Providence were 2.500 pieces at private terms.
Prints have been inactive in ail hands.
The display is attract¬
ive and stocks are large, but nothing will induce purchases with
the present condition of affairs
Quotations are the same as last
week.
Merrimack \\T 28, do. 1) 27, Spragues Nationals, light colors
are sold at 25, dark
24, Madder Rubies 27, Blue and White 28,
Blue and Orange 29.
Canary Y 26, Solid colors 27, Black
and Green 27. Shirting prints 32.
Ginghams have been in some demand for dark colors in the
North and West, and some light styles have been taken up by the
local trade to complete assortmeuts. Lancaster 321, Glasgow 30R

mand for

$686,322

mark’t 3998 $1,479,871

....

tained for the past
hands at any price.

Laines

2217

984,012

Manufactures of wool..;
cotton..
do
do
silk ....
do
flax
Miscellaneous drygoods.

Satteens 40 cents.

de

2508
4043

$495,859

Total th’wn upon

ly quiet and quotations nominal. Indian Orchard, Androscoggin,
are steady at 321 for colored and bleached, Newmarket
32, Whittenton’s 32£ for colored, Uncas 31, Naumkeag 36, and

Mousin

291,777

1367

forconsumpt’n 2626

Total
Add eut’d

other kinds of goods are extreme¬

the little activity they

$894,545

69,605

15,284

and Bates

Stripes and Ticks have lost

1361
856

131,142

105

*

Corset Jeans with almost all

$145,590

140,541

306
113
282

....

$395,553

907
906
102
439
214

326
208
52
420
355

$194,445
85,383

531

Manufactures of wool...
do
cotton..
do
silk
do
flax ....
Miscellaneous drygoods.

these goods at this
and Wamsutta 471 i
as fast as produced.
Bartlett steam mills .7-4 4;>, do. j
Newmarket 33 inch 33, do. C. 36 inch 37, Waltham L ■

7 8 324,

MARKET DURINp

THE 8AME PERIOD.

there is little or no trade in
New York mills are firm at 50 cents,

sold

and

INTO THE

AND THROWN

WAREHOUSE

WITHDRAWN" FROM

best makes,-but
time.

[January 27, 1866,

CHRONICLE.

5

153,032

$418,993

OF COTTON.

,

Hdkfs

Emb’d Mus.. 12

5,252

2
Velvets
13
Laces
1
Braids & Bds.

879

Spool

6,119

Hose

,..16
1
...17
...

754

4,171
449

4,922

—

MANUFACTURES OF SILK

$87,614

Silks

Crapes

.

.

Velvets....
Total

..

2
1

2.151
658

Ribbons
Plushes
Laces

61,409
1,349
10,437

67
2
13

Raw
Silk & cot.

....

...

3
9

1,301
5,326

—

161 $170,245
MANUFACTURES OF FLAX.

Linens
410
Linen & cot. 13
Total.

$116,221
5,246

2

5

828

429

Hdkfs.......

$123,170

Straw goods.533

31,223

.554

$47,953

875, Thread

.

MISCELLANEOUS.

Leather Glov,
Kid do

Total.,

7,086
4,040

lasbroiderie*.
Corset

2
8

1,501

4,103

St, Domingo

public store or bonded warehouse be¬
yond three years shall be regarded as abandoned to
the Government, and sold under such regulations as
the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Mer¬
chandise upon which duties have been paid may re¬
main in warehouse in custody of the officers of the
customs at the expense and risk of the owners of said
merchandise, and if exported directly from said cus¬
tody to a Foreign Country within three years, shall be
remaining in

entitled to return duties, proper evidence of such
merchandise having been landea abroad to be furnish¬
ed to the collector by the importer, one per centum
of said duties to be retained by tae Government.
In addition to the duties noted below, a discrim¬
inating■ duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all
imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties
with the United States.

frW" On all goods, wares, and merchandise, of the
growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of
Oood Hope, when imported from places this side of the
Cape of Oood Hope, a duty of 10 por cent, ad val. is
levied in addition to the duties imposed on any such
articles when imported directly from the place or places
of their growth o* production ; Raw Cotton and Raw
Silk excep*rd.
The tor in all cases to be 2,240 ft.
Ashes—Duty: 15 f? cent ad val.
Produce
the British North American Provinces, free.

7 75 <

100 lb

Pot, 1st sort
Pearl, 1st sort

<

..

Anchor*—Duty: 2$ cents $ lb.
$ lb
and upward

Of 209 lb

..

Beeswax—Duty, 20 $ cent ad val.
American yellow
45
..$ft

Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad

11*

@

46

@

cent. 85 00 6b

Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $
Rio Grande shin
$ ton

val.
5#
4*

@
©

$ lb

Pilot

of

Navy

10

Crackers.

15

©

special report.
Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair, 1 $ ft.
60 @ 2
American, gray and white., . f) lb
Breadstuf fs—See

Butter and Cheese,—Duty: 4 cents,
duee of British North American Provinces, free.
Butter has beeu in moderate request
for home consumption, and prices

Southern Ohio

Candles—Duty, tallow, 2*; spermaceti and wax,
‘

“

ft.

-7

©
©
40 @
33 6b
22* ©

52
42
84
25

@

2 25

..

patent,

..

city

Stearic
Adamantine

Cement—Rosendale

$ bbl

..

8* ©

ft

upward

9

Coal—Dutyjbitaininous, $1 25 $ ton of 28bushels,
other than bituminous,40 cents
$ 28 bushels of 80 ft $ bushel.
Liverpool Orrel..$ ton of 2,240.lb
.
„ 6b 16 00
Liverpool House Cannel...
22 00* 6b 23 00
Anthracite
12 00. @ 12 50
SO ft to the bushel;

Cocoa-;Duty, 3 cents ^ ft.

bond).
do

ft

6b
••

do

,•

..

©

@

27*
20

Coffee—Duty: When imported direct in Ameri¬

equalized vessels from the place of its growth.or production; also, tho growth of countries this side
the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in
American or equalized vessels,5 cents $ lb; all other
10 $ cent ad valorem In addition.
•
The market is firm and higher for prime, but quiet
or

grade si
Rio, prime, duty paid
do go3&
:

for lower

do fair
do ordinary...f
do feir to good cargoes

Java, mats and bags




54
10

.

i

ID

@

80

©
©
©

54
56
50

Brups and Byes—Duty, Alcohol, 40 cents $
gallon ; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft ; Alum, 60 cents $ 100 lb ;
Argols, 6 cents $ ft; Arsenic and Assafcetida, 20;
Antimony, Crude and Regulus, 10; Arrowroot, 30 $
cent ad val.; Balsam Cupivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30;
Balsam Peru, 50 cents $ Id ; Calisaya Bark, 80 $ cent
ad val.; Bl Carb. Soda, 11; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents
$ 1b; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100 1b ; Refined
Borax, 10 cents $ 1b; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll
Brimstone, $10 $ ton; Flor Sulphur, $20 $ ton, and
15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Cam¬
phor, 40 cents $ 1b.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad
val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents $ ft;
Castor Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlorate Potash, 6; Caustic
Soda, 11; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, 1; Cream Tartar,
10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft; Cutch, 10; Chamomile
Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent $
ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gam¬
boge, 10 $ cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $
cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrle, and Gum
Damar, 10 cents per ft; Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal,
Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Hyd. Potash and Resublimed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and
Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil
Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil
Bergamot, $1 $ ft; Oil Peppermint, 50
cent:ad
val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $ ft; Phos¬
phorus, 20 $ cent ad val.; Press. Potash, Yellow, 5;
Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents $ ft: Quicksilver, 15
$ cent ad val.; Sal A2ratus, 1* cents $ ft ; Sal Soda,
* cent $ ft; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 $ cent ad

^ ‘ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vitriol, 25 ^
cent a<l val.; Etherial Preparations and Extracts, $ I
$ 1b; all others auoted below, free. Many of the
articles under this head are now sold for cash. (All

..(gold)

$ gall.
$ ft

(gold)

gold.

©
©

65

©
@
4* ©
60 @
©
24 ©
28*

26

..

•

•

46

25
85

—

65
16

25

85

24

Bleaching Powder..
Borax, Refined
Brimstone, Crude
$ ton
Brimstone, Am. Roll
$ ft
Brimstone, Flor Sulphur
Camphor, Crude, (In bond).(gold)
Camphor, Refined
Cantharides
Carbonate Ammonia, in bulk....

20* 6b
20 6b

21
20*

17 6b

17*
20

18

<§>

13 6b

27* @

18*

28*

$ gallon
$ ft

(gold)

Cobalt, Crystals.. .in kegs. 112 fts
(gold)
Cochineal, Honduras.
Cochineal, Mexican...;
(gold)

Copperas, American..
Cream Tartar, prime
Cubebs, East India.

(gold)

<&

28
40

t80
42*

5
32
67 50

4*

24

50
50
36
9
93

©
©
©
©

60

©

38

@

08
85

91

•

oz.

60

bales

9
00

Ginifer, Jamaica, bl’d, in bbls
Ginseng, Southern and Western..
Gum Arabic, Picked
(gold)

©
©
©
@
©
©

90

Gamboge

Gum Arabic, Sorts
Gum Benkoin
Gum Copal Cow
Gum Gedda
Gum Damar

Gum

Myrrhi) East India

1 12
1 60
25
3 50
8 52*

$

©
31* ©
©
11 ©

$ ft

Gambler

81

1

32
50

12

ft

$

(gold)

6b
62* @
@

87* &
-

45

30

(gold)

Madder, Dutch

9
94

do

Madder, French, E. X. F. F.
Manna, large flake

Nutgalls Blue Aleppo...

70

Oil Anise

3 90

OiljCnssia
Oil Bergamot...

4 75
10 25

Oil Lemon
Oil Peppermint, pure
)

4 00
8 00

Opium, Turkey
Oxalic Acid

95

Phosphorus

46*

42

Quicksilver *
Rhubarb, China

1 20
8 00

.

6 50

Rose Leaves..
Salaratus
Sal Ammoniac, Refined
Sal Soda, Newcastle

Sarsaparilla, Hond
Sarsaparilla, Mex
Seed, Anise
do Canary
do Hemp .*
do Caraway
do
do
do
do

(gold)

10*
8

1

...

30

1b
^ bush.
$ ft

26

24
5 50
20

6 00

2 75

Coriander

Mustard, brown, Trieste
do
do

...

California, brown.

English, white
Benna, Alexandria..
Senna, East India

...

24
35
85

Seneca Root
8hell Lac
Soda Ash (80J&

50

cent)
Sugar Lead, White

45

Sulphate Quinine, Am
Sulphate Morphine
Tartaric Acid.....

$

(gold)

oz.

$ 1b

9 00
56

Valerian, English
do

Dutch

Verdigris, dry and extra dry
Vitriol, Blue

80

12$

Buck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
Ravens, Light
<$pce
16 00
Ravens, Heavy
22 00
Scotch, Gourock, No. 1
31 00
Cotton, No. 1
$ yard
1 20
Bye Woods—Duty free.
(gold)
$ ton
Fustic, Cuba
Fustic, Tampico
Fustic, Savanilla
(gold)
Fustic, Maracaibo
do
(gold)
Logwood, Campeachy
Logwood, Hond
Cam wood

(gold)

Logwood, Tabasco
Logwood, St. Domingo
Logwood, Jamaica

@150 00
©
@
©

• •

35 00

...

..

24
23
20
38
25
25
26

00
00 © 24 00
00
00
00
27 00
00
27 50
00
..

§ 26 00

120 00

Limawood
Barwood

(gold)

Feathers—Duty: 30

@125 00
©
6b 70 00

30 00

..

cent ad val.
80

^ 1b

Prime Western
do Tennessee

@
©

85

Fisli—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1; Salmon,
$3; other pickled, $1 50 ^ bbl.; on other Fish,
Pickled, Smoked, or Dried, in smaller pkgs. than bar¬
rels, 50 cents $ 100 1b. Produce of the British North
Americon Colonies, frkk.

The market for Cod is

dull; Mackerel is steady.
$ cwt,
7 00 6b 9 25 •
% bbl.
6 75 6b 7 50 »
Pickled Scale
f) bbl.
6b
Pickled Cod
bbl.
8 75 6b 9 00J
22 50 6b 28 00'
Mackerel, No. 1, Mass, shore ....
Mackerel, No. 1, Halifax
20 00 6b 22 00'
Mackerel, No. I, Bay..
18 00 6b 18 25
Mackerel, No. 2, Mass, .-hore
IS 00 6b
••
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay
16 25 6b 17 00*
Mackerel, N 2, Halifax
6b 16 25
Mackerel, No. 3, Mass, large
..
@
Mackerel, No. 8, Halifax
@ 14 75'>
Mackerel, No. 8, Mass
14 50 6b 14 75Salmon, Pickled, No. 1
..
6b 36 00
Dry Cod
Dry Scale

4

12
80

..

Shad,Connecticut,No.l.$ hf. bbl.
Shad, Com ect cut, No. 2
Herring, Scaled
$ box
Herring, No. 1...
Herring, pickled
$ bbl.
Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton.
.
Jersey
$ ft

do
do

©
<a

©

5S

17

2S

4 30

Bunch

15*

^ ft

46

m

Prunes, Turkish

15

Dates

Almonds, Lnnguedcc
44

do

‘do

40
20

Sardines

50

60»

50
4S 6b
5 50 6b 8 OO

$ box

Layer

Currants
Citron, Leghorn
45
10

6b
6b
6b

.

Fruit—Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs,Plums-an<f
J Prunes, 5; Shelled Almonds, 10; Almonds, 6; other
nuts, 2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filbert
and Walnuts, 3 cents $ ft? Sardines, 50; Preserved
Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25 $ cent ad val.
The market is very quiet with a downward tendency
Raisins, Seedless
igM cask

55

42

24

Solid...

.

©

80
2

Flowers, Arnica

Folfft, Bnchu

©
&*
©
33*
6b 72 50

6*
30
1 10

•

Cutch
Cuttlefish Bone

Epsbm 8alts...
Extract Logwood
FloWers, Benzoin

55

©
n ©

Bird Peppers—Zanzibar.,

Castor Oil, Cases
Chamomile Flowers
Chlorate Potash
Canstic Soda

40
95
90
50

••

Sierra
(gold)

Sicily

,29

3*

African,

Liccorice, Paste,

Licorice Paste, Spanish
Licorice Paste, Greek

Sapan Wood, Manila

25

(gold)
(gold)

....

Prussiate Potash

Cotton—See special report.

Cardamoms, Malabar

Chains—Duty, 2* cents $ 1b.

Guayaquil .(gold)

52

Mineral
Phial.

Peppers
Leon, bags

Vermont dairy

can

Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val.
Regular, quarts
$ gross
Short Tapers

Bird

Caracas1. ..(gold).(in
Maracaibo .(gold)..

..

Bark, Calisaya
Berries, Persian
Bi Carb. Soda, Newcastle
Bl Chromate Potash

English dairy

One inch and

6b

•

Rope, Russia.

Assafcetida
Balsam Capivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru

made dairies

Refined sperm,

Bolt

Arsenic, Powdered

Farm dairies
do
do
common

,

Tarred American

JuDiner Berries
Lac Dye
Lic.j ice Paste, Calabria.

.,

..

3 30
5 50

Ipecacuanna,-Brazil.

..

@

..

Argols, Crude
Argols, Refined

Cheese—

do

©

Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; untarred Manila, 21,
other untarred, 31 cents $ lb.
Manila, Amer. made
$ lb
234 6b
241
Tarred Russia
©
'

Alum

Canada, uniform and fine
do
ordinary, mixed
Mich ,IH.,Ind. A Wis., g. to f. yel.
do
do com. to med.

Sperm

Portage Lake

Annato, fair to prime
Antimony, Regulus of

.

-

3S
39
3S»

Aloes,Cape
Aloes, Socotrine

do flrkius, finer kinds, yellow .
West. Re-erve, good to fine, yel.
do
com. to medium

———

,

85
85

Jalap

55
55

©
©

,

,

Alcohol

Webern, good to choice
Pa., common to medium

w,

.

Acid, Citric

do
fair to good
Firkins, good to fine..
* fir. tubs, strictly fine

.

.

.

nominal.)

Welch tubs, strictly fine,

Factory

Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and incot, 21; old copper,
$ lb; manufactured, 30 $ cent ad val.; sheath¬
ing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long
and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 6b 34 oz. $ square
foot, 31 cents $ lb. All cash.
The market is quiet and a little easier.
55
©'
Sheathing, new
lb
35
34 ©
Sheathing, Ac., old
40.
@
Sheathing, yellow

cents

only, principally
are declining.

Senegal
Tragacanth, Sorts
Tragacanth, white flukey...
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng. .(gold)
Iodine, Resublimed

2 cents

Bolts
Braziers’
Baltimore
Detroit

50

Gum
Gum
Gum

JS

Pro-

light demand.

Cheese is in
Butter—
N. Y.,
do
do
do

25

Gum, Myrrh, Turkey

23

21

Laguayra

WHOLESALE.
py All goods deposited in public stores or bonded
warehouses must be withdrawn therefrom, or the
duties thereon paid within one year from the date of
the originnl importation, but may be withdrawn by
the owner for exportation to Foreign Countries, or
may be transhipped to any port of the Pacific, or West¬
ern Coast of the United States, at any time before the
expiration of three years from the date of the original
Importation, such goods on arrival at a Pacific or
Western port, to be subject to the same rules and
regulations as if originally imported there; any goods

23

21* ©
6b
17* 6b

Maracaibo

CURRENT.

PRICES

117

THE CHRONICLE.

January 27, 1866.]

do
do
do

32
27

Provence

Sicily, Soft Shell......

52*

Shelled

« box
<1 ht box

$

box

22

i

23

*

Brazil Nuts

Filberts, Sicily
Walnuts, French
Dried Fruit—
N. State Apples
Blackberries
Black Raspberries
Pared Peaches

9

13
15

12*

Hi ©
3n
©
©
25
©
©
©

ft

45
30

..

Unpealed do
Cherries, pitted,

20

m ©
81 ®
m ©
13 ©

$ lb

Figs, Smyrna

new

50

Product of the

Purs—Dn.y, 10 $ cent ad val.

British North American Provinces, free.
Gold Prases—Add

premium on gold for currency

prices.

Beaver, Dark
Pale

Bear, Black

ft 1 90 © 2 00
1 00 © 1 50
$ skin 5 00 @15 00

Badger
Cat, Wild

3
5
3
1

4 00 @ 7 00
5 00 @50 00
3 00 © 7 00
I 00 @ 2 00

do Cross
do Red
do Grey

75 @ I 00

1
5
1

2 00 @ 3 00

Lynx

Marten, Dark
do palj

5 00 @10 00
©

.

Mink, dark
Musk rat, dark

.

Otter

.

Opossum

..

Raccoon

..

Skunk, Black
do
Striped
White
do

..

.

.

..

,

3 HO
3 00
5
4 on
5
75
70
30
10

@ 7 00
@
00
25 @
75
10 @
15
00 @ 6 00
00 @25 00
00 @ 5 00
00 @ 1 50
50 @
75
50 @ 2 00
00 @ 8 00
50 © 2 50
00 © 8 00
20
5 ©
00 @ 4 00

15

10 ©

do House

© 4 00

.

.

30

©
© 5 00
10
©
© 1 00

@ 1 00
60
@
20
©

2

.

.

.

3

.

.

5 ©
50 @
50 @
25 ©

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

5

.

10

75
75
50
JO

@

15 @

cash.

Maracaibo
Maranham
Pernambuco

$ ft-gold.

9.
11
11
11
10
12

.

do
do

"

Tampico and Metamoras... do
do
do

Bahia
Chili

Pi©
9 ©

$ lb gold.
do
do

Western

8x11 to
11x14 to
12x19 to
18x22 to
20x31 to
24x31 to
25x36 to
80x46 to
32x50 to
Above

6
6
7
7
9

10x15
12x18
16x24
20x30
24x30
21x36
30x44.
32x18
32x56.

00

50
00

50
00

10 00
11
12
13
15

00
00
00
00

@
@
©
©
@
©
@
©
@

7 75

9 25
9 50
II 75

14
16
17
IS
20

50
00
00
00
00

@ 24 00

English and French Window— 1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th
qualities.
(Single Thick)—Discount 10 @ 30 per cent.
6x8 to SxlO
6 00 (n 7 75
$ 50 feet
8x11
11x14
12x19
20x81
21x31
24x36
30x45
32x50

to
to
to
to
to
to
to
to

6 50
7 00
7 50
12 00
13 00
15 00
16 00
18 00

10x15
12x18
16x24
24x30
24x36
30x44.
82x48
32x56

©
©
©
©
@
©
©
©

8 25
9 75
10 50
15 50
16 50
13 00
20 50
24 00

$ square yard, 3; over lo, 4 cents $ lh
Calcutta, light and heavy .. $ pee
31

81*

@

Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 10 cents or less
yard. 3; over 10,4 cents $ ft.
29* @
30
yard
Calcutta, standard
30 square

Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or less
ft, 6 cents ^ ft, and 20 $ cent ad val.; over 20
cents $ ft, 10 cents $3 lb and 20 ^ cent ad val.
Blasting (A)
@ 6 50
$ keg of 25 ft
..
Shipping and Mining

..

@

8 50

Sporting, in 1 ft canisters... $ ft

48

@

ITair—Duty free.
Rio Grande, mixed.. (cash)..

37

650

@

©
©
@

Rifle

Buenos

1 15

Hog, Western, unwashed

10

Hay—North River, in hales $
100 lbs, for shipping

85

..

83
12

225 00

Undressed

Russia, Clean

350 00

Jute
Manila
Sisal

170 00

$ $ cash.

Calcutta, city al’ter
dead green
black, dry
huflato

The market has

$ ft

fere.

been

@

13

©240 00
©
@230 00
H*
©
@
..

..

(Nominal.)

moderately active at

un¬

changed prices.
Dry Hides
B. A. & Montevideo

..

$ ft gold

Buenos Ayres
Rio Grande
Orinoco
California

do
do
do
*.
do
do
California, Mexican
do
Porto Cabello
Vera Cruz
do
do
Tampico
do
Matamoras
San Juan and Cent. Amer... do
do
Maracaibo
.

.

.

Bogota




©
@ 65 00
@ 90 00

65 00

@ 70 00

lo*

Oak and Ash

13

Maple and Birch

9

9*
9

12

12*
1>

2S
28
19

©
©
@

©
©
10 ©

do

.

do

17*@
19 ©
17 ©
16*@
174©
16 ©
14 ©
15 ©
15 ©
16 ©
©
13*@
..

15

©

18*

20*

>

-

#

17
18
,

Honey-Duty, 20 cents ^ gallon.
Cuba..(duty paid).(gold).$ gall.

©
25
20

do of 1864

1 40

1 10

$ ft

©
®

65
45

©
©
©

Guayaquil

1 05

90

Kurpah
(gold)
(gold)

/—Store Prices—>

Swedes, assorted sizes
165 00
Bar, English and American,Refined 125 00
Common 115 00
do
do
do
do
Rar

@175 00

@130 00
@120 00

155 00 @200 00

Scroll,
Ovals and Half Round
Band
...'

145 00

HorseShoe

150 00

Rods, 5-8 @ 3-16 inch
Hoop

127 50 @190 00
16U 00 @225 00

.

$ ft

Sheet, Russia

Single,Double and Treble..

$ ton

American

Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime
$ ®>
Billiard Ball
African, West Coast, Prime... ..
African,Scrivellos, West Coast..

East India,

10

@155 Oil
@155 i'0
@155 00

@

33 @
7( @
57 Oj ©

85 0J

11
37*

10J

00 ©
50 ©
00 ©
00 ©

4 00
4 50
3 25
2 50

..

cents

middle.

cash.$ ft
..

do
do

middle
bel ies

Hemlock, B.
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do

do
do

do
do

da
do

.....

Ayres, &c..l’t do
do
do

middle, do

heavy .do

.....

California,light, do
do
do

middle d

»

heavy, do
Orinoco, etc. l’t. do
do
middle do
do
heavy., do
do & B. A, dam’gd all

weights
all do
Slaughter in rough. .cash.
Oak, Slaughter in ro gh, light... do
do
do
do mid; & h’vy do
do
do

do

16

15*
16*
15*

poor

31

@
©
©
44 @
,43 ©
18 ©
35* ©
38 ©
39 @
35 ©
38 @
38 @
88 ©
37 @
34 ©
41
41

81
22

80
80
34

Lime—Duty; 10 $ cent ad val.
Rockland, common
$ bhl.
do
heavy

9 65

9 65
9 65
12

16

©
©

©
©
©

©

38
45
46
48
53
20

86*
39
40
86
89
89
34
83
85
34
24

36
82
45

1 70
2 00

Lumber* Woods* Staves* Etc.—Duty
Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.;
Rosewood and Cedar, free. Lnmber and Timber of
all kinds, unmanufactured, product of the British
North American Provinces, free.

14

Southern Pine

$ M feet

Sprnce, Eastern

15*

....

_

.

....

28 00 @.27 00
55 00

00

Rose wood—Duty

50

St.

75

©

20

Domingo, ordinary

Port-au-Platt, crotches.

..

Port-au-Platt, logs.

do
do

©

18
18

14* ©
@

23

©

25

©

12

©

12
10

Mansanilla
Mexican
Florida

©

15

Cedar, Nuevitas

20
25

17

Nuevitas
Mansanilla.
Mexican
Honduras (American

do

do
do

©

17

foot

©
@

IS
15
15
11

cubic ft.

ft

Bahia

f>
2 50

©
©

Holasses—Duty: 8 cents $ gallon.
only, and prices
buyers favor.
1 05 ©
New Orleans
$ gall.
45 ©
Porto Rico
There is a moderate demand

86
55
40

Cuba Muscovado
do Clayed

English Islands

©
©

S
5 00

in

a e

25
80
50
40
50

Nails—Duty: cut 1*; wrought 2*; horse shoe
$ ft (Cash.)
7 50 ©
Cut, 4d.@6d
$ 100 ft
cents

Clinch
Horse shoe,

9

Copper

.

Yellow metal
Zinc

©

9*

©
.

i:

30

©
©
©

forged (Sd). .....$ ft

60

41

20

spirits of turpentine 30
$ gallolp; crude turpentine, rosin, pitch, and
tar. 20 ^ cent \ad val.
Tar and turpentine, product
of the British North American Provinces, free. (AM
Naval Stores—Duty:

cents

cash.)
The market is inactive and

Pitch

Rosin,
do
da
do

prices nominal.
8 00 @
8 00 ©
©

^ 280 ft
$ bbl.

Turpentine, N. C
Tar, American
do foreign
*

common
strained and No. 2
No. 1
Pule and Extra (2S0

lbs.)
Spirits turpentine, Am....$l gall,
..

6
5
5
9
15

50
25
50
00
00
95

@
@
©

4 00

9 00
14 00

@ 20 00
@ 1 02*

H* ©

$ ft.

Oil Lake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val.

City thin oblong, in hbls...
ton
do
in bags
Western thin oblong, in bags

13*

-

52 00 @53 00
48 75
48 50

@ 49 00
© 49 00

Oils—Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 28
or flasks, $1:
burning fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa
nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish
(foreign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad valorem.
5 70
Olive, 13 bottle baskets
1 75 © .1 90
do in casks
$ gall.
13 ©
Palm
$ft
13*
1 42 © 1 43
Linseed, city
$ gall
cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles

sole 35, upper 80 $ cent ad val.
activity in the market, but prices re¬

ateady.do
8o

.

bbl., culls...

....

..

Oak, Slaughter,light

.

Oakum—Duty free

8
3
3
2

.

00
00
06
06
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00
00

©

Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 2); Old Lead, 1*
$ ft ; Pipe and Sheet, 2* cents $ ft.
Galena
$ 100 ft
©
Spanish
9 50 @
German
9 50 @
English
9 50 @
Bar
....$ft
@
Pipe and Sheet
..
©

main

.

..

logs

do
do
do

do

Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1* cents ^ 1b; Railroad,
Boiler and Plate, 1* cents $ ft;
and Scroll, 1* to If cents ^ ft;
Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents fi ft.
There is little to report during the week. Prices
are steady.
Pig, Scotch, Best,No l(cash) $ ton 48 00 @ 52 00
Pig, American, No. 1
50 00 @ 52 00
Bar, Swedes,assorted sizes (in gold)
© 97 50
..

There is little

..

.

.

bbl., extra
bbl., heavy
bbl., light.

$

do

do

70 cents $ 100 lb;
Sheet, Band, Hoop,

Rails, English.. .(gold)

hhd., culls.......

Rosewood, Rio Janeiro

1 40 © 2 10
1 00
© 1 30
nominal.
75
© 1 25
90 © 1 40
75 © 1 15
70 ©
90

^ lb

Oude

Sheet,

..

hhd., light

wood)

1 15

©
©
©

I Carthagena, etc

Nail Rod

..

@ 00
@250
@200
@120
@270
@200
@125
@100
@175
@150
@110
© 70
@110
@100
©150

free.

India Rubber—Duty, 10 ^ cent ad val.

Madras
Manila
Guatemala
Caraccas

..

..

lRaHogany* Cedar,

18 00 ® 20 00
18 00 - © 15 00

$ C

Indigo—Duty free.

..

..

do
do
do
do
do

the British North American Provinces free.

Bengal

$ M.

do

Produce of

Horns—Duty, 10 ^ cent ad val.

Para, Fine...
Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

s

STAVES—
White oak, pipe, extra
do
pipe, heavy
do
pipe, light
do
pipe, culls
do
nhd., extra
do
hh(L, heavy

Mahogany, St. Domingo, crotches,

Hops—Duty: 5 cents $ fb.
Crop of 1865
^ ft

Ox, Rio Grande
Ox, Buenos Ayres

35 00 @ 40 00
100 00 @125 00

Red oak, hhd., heavy
do
hhd., light
«
HEADING—white oak, hhd.

..

,

14*

...

.

do
gold.

heavy
do light Cropped

Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salted, and Skins,
10 $ cent ad val.
Product of the British North
American Provinces

4 25
55 00
80 00

$ M
Poplar and W. wood B'ds & Pl’k.
Cherry Boards and Plank

12*©

do
do

Sierra Leone
Gambia and Bissau
East India Stock—

do
do

Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $ ’5; Jute,
$15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 ^ ter; and
Tampico, 1 cent $ ft.
American, Dressed
^ ton 320 00 @330 00

(gold)

Laths, Eastern

12

Leatlier— Duty:

$ ft

Ayres, mixed

do

11*

26
27
17

.

do

Gunny Bag's—Duty, valued at 10 cents or less,

@ 27 00
© 83 00
@100 00

9 ©
in ©

do

East India

Glass—Duty, Cylinder or Window Polished Plato
not over 10x15 inches, 2* cents $ square foot; larger
and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents ^ square foot;
arger and not over 24x39 inches 6 cents $ square
oot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20
ents ^ square foot; all above that, 40 cents $ square
oot; on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common
Window, not exceeding 10x15 inches square, 1*; over
hat, and not over 16x24,2; over that, and not over
4X30, 21; all over that, 3 cents $ tt>.
American IVindmo—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th qualities.
(Subject to a discount of i5 @ 25 ^ cent.)
5 50
6x 8 to 8x10
@ 7 25
$ 50 iVet

10

22 00
29 00
80 00

©

..

Coutry sl’ter trim. *fc cured, do
do
city
do
do
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip
$ $ cash.

do
do
do

@
©
©
©
©
©

White Pine Box Boards
White Pine Merchant. Box Boards
Clear Pine

IS

Black Walnut

Wet Salted Hides—
Buenos Ayres
Rio Grande
California

4 00
30

50 @
70
50 © 1 00

Fisher,
Fox, Silver

Western

Dry Salted Hides—

..

1 00 @ 1 50
50 @ 1 00
5 00 @10 00

.

4 00 @ 8 00

brown....

do

Weatern.
No I.

North, and East
No. 1.

do

[January 27,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

118

© 65 00

Whale...*
do refined winter

1 50
1 60
2 50

Sperm, crude
do
winter, bleached
do
do
unbleached
Lard oil
Red oil, city distilled
do
saponified
Straits
Paraffine, 28 — 30 gr. deodorized..
Kerosene
(free)...

60
95

©

©
©
©

1 65

©

00

©
©
©

75

©
©

2 00

1 35
55
77

Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and
litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ ft; Paris
white and whiting, 1 cent $ ft; dry ochres, 56 cents
$100 ft: oxides of zinc, 1* cents $ ft ; ochre, ground
in oil, $150 $ 100 ft ; Spanish brown 25 $ cent ad val.;
China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red and vermilion,
25 $1 cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 $ ton.
Lithrage, American
$ ft
©
13
..

Lead, red, American

.

..

white, American, pure, in oil
while, American, puie, dry.
Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1.
do white, American, No. I, in oil
Oe^re, yellow,French,dry $ 100 ft
do
do

do
ground in oil
Spanish brown, dry

do
ground
Paris white, No. 1
do
do Am

Whiting, American
Vermilion, Chinese
do
do

Trieste
American

Venetian fed, (N, C.)

1# ft
$ 100 ft

in oil.$ ft

$100 fts

$ 100 fts
$ lb
gold.
$ cwt.

..

@
@

14* ©
9 @
9* @
@

2 75
8
1 50
8
.
..

©
©
©

@
@

13
16
15
9*
10
8 50
1 10

9
4 75
..

4* © !
5
16 © 175
125 @,
80 ©
85
5 00 @ 5 fin

18 00
40 00
5 09
15

# ft

Carmine, city made
China clay_
Chalk
Chrome yellow

....$ bbL

Spices—Duty : mace, 40 cents; nutmegs, 50:
20; pepper and pimento, 15; ana
ginger root, 5 cents $ ft. (All cash.)

@ 20 00
@ 45 00
© 6 00

@

cassia and cloves

Cassia, in mats
Ginger, race and
Mace

49

Petroleum—Duty: crude, 20 cents; refined, 40
cents $ gallon.
82* ©
Crude, 40 © 47 gravity .. $ gall.
74
75
©
Refined, free
r..
55
54
©
do
in bond
45

Naptha, refined

©

@

©
@

87| @
©
21* ©
29* ©

(gold)
.(gold)
(gold)
.(gold)
(geld)
.(gold)
(gold)
•

Cloves

7 50

Paris—Duty: lump, free; calcined,

20 $ cent ad val.
Blue Nova Scotia
White Nova Scotia

African

Nutmegs, No. 1
Pepper
Pimento, Jamaica

ft

Plaster

75
19
1 10

$
..3? ft

.

.

23
1 15
90

23*

23

22
-.

©

7 00

$ bbl.

Residuum.

119

THE CHRONICLE.

January 27, 1866.]

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at
or under, 2* cents; over 7 cents and not
$ ft; over 11 cents, 3* cents $ ft

3 cents

n/1 Trol

Ann*

7 cents $
above 11,

and 10 $

@ 7 00

..

■....,$ bbl.

.

23

11 ©
11* ©

American, spring,
English, spring

18
13

17

©

15

German

@ 2 40
© 2 50

..

18 ©

Sugar—Duty: on raw or brown sugar, not above
No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on white or clayed, above
No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refin¬
ed^*; above 15 and not over 20,4; on refined, 5; and
on Molado, 2* cents $ ft.
The market has continued dull and prices are *@*

Provisions—Duty: cheese and butter, 4 cents,
oeef and pork, 1 cent;

hams, bacon, and lard, 2 cr*nts

Produce of the British North An erican Pro¬

vinces. Free.
The market is

still unsettled and depressed espe¬
cially for Pork, with a very light demund. Beef has
been quiet.
@
Beef, plain mesa
$ bbl. 16 50 ©
20 00
do new do

lower.
Porto Rico

••

do extra mess
do
new
do
do India mess
Pork, mess, new
do prime mess
do mess, Western
do prime,
do

do
do
do
do
do

© 24 00
©
28 75 @
.

**

tj0

©

15

@
©

$ lb

kettle rendered
Hams, pickled

salted

11
11

...

©
©

12*
15

2* ©
13 ©
5* ©

C.ity colored

mixed

14

cents $ 100 fl>.
Turks Islands

American, prime, country
$ ft

bush.

Cadiz

,

Liverpool, ground
do
fine, Ashton’s
do
do
do

2 00
8 90
3 40

<jp sack

fine, Worthington’s....
fine, Jeffreys & Darcy’s

fine,

do
do

do
do
Solar coarse

8 40
8 40
2 40

Marshall’s

bbls.

Onondaga, com. fine
...

.

1 90
40

210 ft bgs.

$ bush.

.

Fine screened

©

8
3
2
2

©

©
©
©
©

,

50
50

00
42
,

©
©

8 25

.

do
do

.

Calcutta

do

Bombay

Shot—Duty T2* cents $

do

14 ©

14

Buenos Ayres

VeraCruz..

..

Tampico

..

Matamoras

..

45
45
50
50
to

Madras....

$ ft

Bolivar
Honduras
Sisal
Para
Vera Cruz

Chagres
Port C. and

©

42*

62* ©
37* ©
67* ©
60 ©
©
©
©
©

67*

..

40

62*
60

..

.'.

Barcelona

..

..

Havana, fillers

Manufactured (tax paid)—
10s and 12s—Best
,

do

Medium

Common

-

X fts—(dark) Best

do
do
Medium
Common
do
do
ft8 (Western.)—Ex. fine, bright...
do
do
Fine
do
do
Medium
do
do
Common
fts (Virginia)—Ex. fine, bright
do
doFine
do
Medium
do
do
do
Common...

Soap—Duty: 1 cent $ ft, and 25 $ cent ad val.
19 © 19*
Castile
$ B>.

Navy fts—Best

Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and plates, $150 $ ft
:....$ ft
Plates,foreign
10 ©
10*

Navy X

do




domestic...*

11

©

11*

90
80

Yara

do
40

90
50

©
©

do
do
do
io

Medinm

Best

Median
Common.

1..

©
@
©
@
©

©

77* @
52* ©
45 @
82* ©
70 ©
63 ©
©
90 ©
75 @
©
1 20 ©
90 @
60 @
50 ©
75 ©
70 @

15
18
20
24
50
42
85
8
15
13

1 00
95

80
60
50

85 '
75
65
1 00

SO

..

..

@
©
©

©

1 25
1 00
70
60
80

72*

67*

45
00

00

20

12 00 © 25 00

2 75 @ 30 00

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered, $2 to $3 50
38 100 ft, and 15 $} cent ad val.
No. 0 to 18
List.
No. 19 to 26
20 $ ct. off list.
No. 27 to 36
25 $3 ct. off list.

8* ©

Telegraph, No. 7 to ll PIain.$ ft

9*

Wool—Duty: costing 12 cents or less % ft, 3
$ ft; over 12 and not more than 24, 6 cents;
over 24 and not over 32,10, and 10 $ cent ad valorem;
over 32,12 cents $ ft, and 10
J8 cent ad valorem ; on
the skin, 20 $ cent ad val. Produce of the British

cents

North American Provinces, free.

There has been less
firm.
’ s

activity, but prices remain quite

American, Saxony fleece ... .^ ft
do
full blood Merino
do
* and * Merino
Extra, pulled
Superfine
:
No. 1, pulled

70 @
65

©

75

60

@

65

@
58 @
45 @
38 ©

70
62
50

70

67

California, unwashed

40

@

25

35 @
30

©

60

Peruvian, unwashed

8o

©

45

Valparaiso, unwashed

26 @

27

do

common,

32
18

unwashed..

Entre Rios, washed
do
unwashed
S. American Cordova

’.

40

@
@

37

23

nominal.
©
©

22
43

24
48

45 @
25

5J

Persian

African, unwashed

15 @

25

20 ©

25

©

45

Mexican, unwashed
Smyrna, unwashed

30

@

45

22 @
85

washed

do

@

35

washed

25

Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 tp 100 ft; sheet
2* cents $ ft.
Sheet
$ ft
13* @
14*
VreightsTo Liverpool :
Cotton
Flour
Petroleum
.

$ bbl.

d.

s.

7-16
..@28
..@58
15 0 @17 $
© 25 0
5 ©
5* @
..@80

*@

..

.^

Corn, bulk and bags
Wheat, bulk and bags

$ bush.

..

Beef
Pork
To London:

38 tee.
bbl.

Heavy goods

$ ton

Oil
Flour
Petroleum
Beef
Pork
Wheat
Corn
To Glasgow :
Flour
Wheat

Corn, bulk and bags
Petroleum

..©20
37 6

@
@25 0
..@19

..

^ bbl.

5 6

$ bbl.

2 6

bush.

bbl.

,

.

.

$
$

....38 ton

Wheat, in shipper’s bags.. $ bush.
Flour
$ bbl.
Petroleum

Lard, tallow, cut meats, etc $ ton
Ashes, pot and pearl.
*

5

6*
6

5

6
(1

©

.

..

.

6
8

0
0

8

$ c.

c.

i
1
10

©
©
@
©

© 25
© 4

.

20 0

$ bbl.
$ bbl.

...

0

.39 bbl.
$ bush.

.

^

©

5*@
5 ©

$ tee.

Beef and pork
Measurement goods

@

..©86

38 tee.

$ ton

Oil
Beef
Pork
To Havre:
Cotton
'

Hops

d.

8.

<19 ft

^ ton

Heavy goods
Oil

Heavy goods

..

..

S5 © 1
1 25 © 8
4 00 © 8
S5 © 1

(go’d)

...

51

..

65

Common

85 © 5 00
00 © 6 00
75 © 4 0J
90 © 8 50
4 00 © 4 90
2 45 @ 2 60
2 50 © 6 00
2 26 © 2 28
2 00 © 3 00

90 © 1 25
1 25 @ 1 75
1 25 © 1 50
85 00 @150 00

(gold)
(go d)
(gold)

incases

do

8*
1‘z*

5 15

(gold)
(gold)

Sherry
d>
Malaga, sweet
do
dry
Claret, in nhds
do

©

4
4
8
2

Donskoi, washed

vaL

© 14 5(1
© 15 00
© 11 00

..

5

.(gold)

5 00

5 25 ©
..
©

S. American Mestizo, unwashed..

8* ©.
10 ©
13 ©
16 ©
45 ©
40 @
25 @
©

..

(gold)

...-

5 lb @ 5 20

70
70

©
6* @

....

.

Marseilles

5 40 © 10 00
5 85 © 7 00
5 25 ©

©
©
©
©

5

10
9

do

©

20

prices unsteady.

do
do
do
do
do

Pennsylvania
do
Pennsylvania and Ohio fillers

,

Payta

Cape
Deer, San Juan
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

42* ©
©
©
©

12 50
14 50

Madeira

©

..

.

do
native
do
pulled
Texas unwaged

26 ©
15 50 © 15 75
..

Common leaf do
Medium do do
do do
Good
Fine
do do
Selections do do
Conn, selected wrappers
do prime wrappers
do fair wrappers
do fillers
New York running lots
Ohio
do

British North American Provinces, Free.

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

I. C. Coke..'
Tome Charcoal
Terne Coke

8herry

..

10
20
30
00
85

nominal.

fine.. „

Lugs (light and heavy) $ $ (gold)

Product of the

42* ©

1 00

(gold)
(gold)

Burgundy Port

6 00 © 10 50
5 75 © 10 50
5 50 ©10 50
5 85 © 10 00
5 45 © 10 50
©

©

©

Ex £ to finest

The market is moderate and

16 50 @ 21 00
23 00 © 24 50

ft

Ex fine to finest

55
85

Tobacco—Duty: leaf 38 cents $ ft; and manufactured, 50 cents $ ft.

11 00 © 13 50

©oat, Curacoa

1

@

60
80

do
do
do

15

Gold.

*

English
(gold)
Plates, charcoal I. C
$ box

10 50 © 11 50

.

1

Tin -Duty: pig, bars, and block,15 $ cent ad
Plate and sheets and tome plates, 2* cents $ ft.
*
Banca
(gold)
^ ft
28 ©
Straits
(gold)
27 ©

All thrown silk. 35 $ cent.
$ ft 12 50 © 13 00
Taysaams, superior, No. l©2...
10 50 ©J100
do
9 50 ©10 00
medium, No. 3 © 4....
Canton, re-reeled, No. 1 © 2
11 25 © 11 50

Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val

1 80

©

65
75
85

60

Ex f. to finest.

do

@

70
70
80
00
15
25
90
10
1 40

Ex f. to finest.-

Orange Pecco, Common to

SHIt—Duty: free.

China thrown
Italian thrown

1 20
1 45
1 60

nominal,

Japan, Com. to fair ...
do
Sup’rtofine..
do

do

foatlees, No. 1 © 3

Japan, superior
do
No. 1 © 8.

1 50

Sup’rtofine..

do

©

1 40 ©

Souchong & Congou, Com. to fair,
do
do
Sup’rtofine.

ft.

^P ft

Drop and Buck

do”

Oolong, Common to fair
do
Superior to fine

©
3 55 ©
8 55 ©

American,rough. $ bush

do
do

1 20

Twankay, Canton made
do
Com, to fair..

Uncolored

50

4 25 © 4 50
2 90 © 8 00
....
© 27 50

Timothy, reaped
3P bush.
Flaxseed, Arner. rough
Linseed, American, clean...^p tee

18

nominal,

,

©

12* ©

.

Ex fine to finest...
do Com. to fair
do Sup. to fine.
do Ex. f. to finest

H. Skin &
do
do
do

..
@
22
12 ©
12*
6*
6* @
Seeds—Duty: linseed, 16 cents; hemp, * cent $
ft; canary, $1 $ bushel of 60 ft; and grass seeds,

IP ft

©195 00

©
©
©

.(gold)
(gold)
(gold)
(gold)

(gold)

Wines—Port

Champagne

nominal.
90 © 1 15
1 25 © 1 40
1 50 ©
1 70

...

Superior to fine

do
do
do

50

3R ft

val.

50

Gunpow. & Imper., Canton made.

Crude
Nitrate soda

30 tfi cent ad
Clover

15*

,

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2| cents; refined and
partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft.
Refined, pure

Common to fair

do
do
do

4 00
3 50

10
80

Ex fine to finest

do

.

3 00
8 00

$ Pkg240 ft bgs.

do

©
©

.

©

12* ©

Tea—Duty: 25 cents per ft
Hyson, Common to fair
do
Superior to fine

45

48

-

F. F

#

©
©
@

19

©
©
©

Product of the

and city

Seignette
Arzac Seignette

16*

British North American Provinces, free.

6*

$ 100 ft; bulk, 18
42

15
16

..

..

(gold)
(gold)

Alex.

Whisky—Scotch and Irish .(gold)
D mestic—N. E. Rum
(cur.)
Bourbon Whisky
(< ur.)
Corn Whisky
....(cur.)

18*

©

18
18
17

.

(gold)
(gold)
..(sold)

Other brands Rochelle...
Rum—Jamaica
St. Croix ...:
Gin —Different brands

12

15* ©
15* ©
©

Tallow—Duty: 1 cent $ ft.

Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* cents IP ft.; paddy 10
ft.
cents, and uncleaned 2 cents
12 00 © 13 00
Carolina
$ 1®® ®>9 00 @10 00
East India, dressed
Salt—Duty: sack, 24 cents

14

PellevoLin freres
A. Seignette
Hivert Pellevoisen

18*
18*
7*
1H

©

11* ©
124 ©

Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
$ ton 120 00
Sicily

18*
6*
2f

12* ©
5* ©

White, city
Seconds

9
to 12
to 15
to 18
to 20
to

..

..

flags—(Domestic).

Nos. 7
do 10
do 13
do 16
do 19
white

Hennessy
(gold)
Otard,Dnpuy & Co..
(gold)
Pinet, Castillion & Co. ..(gold)
Renault & Co
.....(gold)
Jules Robin..
(gold)
Marrette & Co...
(gold)
United Vineyard Propr.. .(gold)
Vine Growers Co
(gold)
Other brands Cognac ... .(gold)

IH
12*

©
6* ©
lo* ©

Melado

do
do
do
do
do

14
11

©
©
©
©

11

do
do
Loaf
Granulated
Crushed and powdered
White coffee, A
Yellow coffee

18*
12*

©
14* ©

$ bbl.

good
good grocery
prime to choice do
centrifugal

do
do

121

©

dry salted
Shoulders, pickled
do

..

fair to
fair to

do
13

1H
» •*
1'*
IH
12*

$ ft
refining
do

common

Havana, Boxes D.

©

21 50

do

Canvas
Country

Cuba, inf to

21 00

Lard, in bbls

do
ary
Beef hams
Bacon

Brandy—J. & F. Martell ...(gold)

.

*

©

..

135

cent ftd vftl

v.

English, cast, $ ft

(§1

..

..

Wines
and Liquors—Liquors —Duty:
Brandy, first proof, $8 per gallon, other liquors, $2.50.
Wines—Duty: value set over 50 cents $ gallon 20
cents $ gallon and 25
cent ad valorem ; over 50
and not over 100, 50 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent
ad valorem; over $1 $ gallon, $1 $1 gallen and 25 ^

'

$ ton.

Calcined, eastern
Calcined, city mills

$ Jt).

Whalebone—Duty: foreign fishery, % ad vaL
1 20 ©
$ ft
© 1 85

South Sea
North west coast
Ochotak
Polar

@
©
©
@
©
©

©

.

*

•—

«

n
.

*

It

[January 27,1866,

THE CHRONICLE.

i20

operations immediately. The road will extend
Mississippi, to the Indiaua State Line, in
the direction of Wayne City: The distance to be overcome is
Railroad Earnings for December and the Year.—The I about 190 miles on a line intermediate between the Chicago and
following table compares the gross earnings of the several principal • Rock Island, and the Toledo, Peoria, and Burlington Railroads.
intend to

®l)c Hail way ill out tor.
for 1864

lines for the month of December, 1865, and

Atlantic &. Great Western..

lows

earnings, expenses, and profits of the principal railroads of the com¬
monwealth of Massachusetts during the year closing November 30r

799

1865

1,770
1,843

earnings for the

852
382

702

104,587

376,470
411,806

328,869

979

366,192

784

857
700

914,0S2

670,S26

1,953

1.219

497.402

the

year on

same

rail roads

'

:

1,045
*2,077

1,277,075

1865.

$3,709,970

Chicago <fc Alton
Chicago <fc Northwest’n.
Chicago & Rock Island.
Erie,

2,543,416
6,114,566

Illinois Central
Marietta & Cincinnati..

t

3,703,118
7,960,9Sl

13,4*29,643
6,329,447

3,223,088
15,295,913
6,837,586

1,038,165

1,222,017

3,996,946
4,110,154
1,711,281

4,521,046
4,951,441

7,120,465

8,438,394

3,095,470

Michigan Central
Michigan Southern
Milwaukie cfc P. du Chien

Pittsburg, F’t Wayne <k
ChicagoSt. Louis, Alton, <k Terre

American Central Railway

is likely to become

a

•

reality,

8,724,129

(281.7ft.)

(281 7ft.)

$109,850

1,673,706

(724 7ft.)
$845,695
839,949

[956,445

948,059
8-18,783
770,148
731,243
687,092
816,801
965,294

1,024,649
1,035,321

729,759
716,378

241,582

224,022.. ..Dec...

407,688

563,401

3,988,012

6,114,566

.

3,703,118.. Year

Railway.
1804.

(724 in.)
$984,837
9:44,1.‘33
1,114,508
1,099,507
1,072,293
1,041,975
994,317
1,105,364

1,301,005
1,222,568
1,224,909
1,334,217

..

Hudson

(285 m.)

$252,435
278,848

348.802
338,276
271,553

265.780
263,244
346.781
408,445
410.802

405,510
376,470

(468 7ft.)
<$337,350
366,598
461,965
462,987
427,094
395,845
350,753
407,077
463,509
.505,814
466,300

(468 7ft.)
$290,676
457,227
611,297
588,06(5

525,751
625,547
675,360

487,642

701,352
691,556
914,082

f,132,934

7,120,465

PRINCIPAL

RAILROADS.

1864.

1863T

$140,024
130,225
122,512

747.942. .June*.

170,937

702,692. .July .
767,508. ..Aug...
946,707. ...Sep...

139,142

923,886. ...Oct...

216,030
196,435
201,13-1

243,178
224,980
271,140
331,494
324,865
336,617
321,037

1,959,267

3,095,470

126,798

160,306

210.729

..Nov...

546,609. ...Dec..

7,960,981.. Year

..

140,952
152,662
160,569

181,935

.

190,227..

180,246
181,175

,

Illinois Central.

283,846

1863.

1864.

1865.

1863.

1864.

(708 777.)

$501,231

$525,936.

356,626
278,540
281,759
253,049
273,726
300,595

418,711.
424,870.
311,540,
351,759
310,049

(251 777.)
$38,203
53,778
60,540
64,306
35,326
40,706
58,704
52,864
77,112

(251 7ft.)
$77,010

472,240

(708 777.)
$327,900
416,588
459,762

219.561
268.100

484,550

3,726,140

4,274,556

337,240. April
401,456. ..May..
363,663. .June.

334,087
407.992

406,373
510,100

July..
•Aug
..Sep...

343,929

423,578

511 305

478,576
496,433
437,679
424,531

586,964
799,236
661,391
657,141
603,402

4,571,028

6,329,447

Year..

—

(524 7ft.)

230,508

.‘104,445
338,454
330,651

257,227
268,613
264,835

241,236

1S9.145

413,501. ..Aug..
476,661
Sep..
490,693. ..Oet..
447,669. .Nov.

238.012

.

.

Dee..

1863.

'

267,126
315.258

278,891
358,862
402,219

303,100
375,567

404,568

332,360
348,(MS

448,934
411,806

.Jan.
..Feb
413,322. ..Mar..

$395,986.
366,361.

.

(468 7ft.)

$(584,260. Jail-.
696,738. .Feb..
..

8S6,511. ..Mar..

738,107. .April.
601,238. ..May..

612,128... July...
718,016... Aug...

759,405....Sep...

807,382.,..Oct....
713,472... Nov...

570,826... Dec.

8,438,394*, Y ear..

(2:34 7ft.)
$102,749
115,135
88,221
140,418
186,747
212,209

484,173. ...Sep..

icg*;

1,711,281

St.

Louis, Alton

(210 7ft.)
$109,808
110,603

(210 7ft.)
$100,872
147,485

120,310

160,497
157,786

60.361

.April..

44,835

72,452

91,172. ..May...

..Jail...
.Feb...
..Mar...
.

.

June..

49,673

71,352

89,978^ ..July...

51,281

84,483

103,627 .Aug...
131,885, ..Sep....

123,115
113,798
123,049
118,077
130,378

■

149,855
155,730
144,942
218,236
234,194

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

—

—

-

522,555.
592,276.
491,297.
454,604.

..Feb.
..Mar..

.April.
..May

153,470
144,736
143,748
162,921

202,966
204,726

.Year,,

1,664.018

2,084,074

203,735

74,409
89,901

72,389
83,993

621,849. ...Oet...

83,059

78,697
91,809
94,375
93,078
90,576

624,957. .Nov.
497,402. .Dec.

76,764
68,863

96,908
95,453

6,837,586.. Year

710,225

1,038,165

590,061. .June.
527,888. ..July.
661,548. ..Aug..
706,739 ..Sep..
.

.

1865.

(251 ml)
$98,112
86,626
93,503
82,186
73,842
110,186

108,652
112,156
120.051
117,604
114.512

104,587

1,222,017

New York Central.

*

1863.

1864.

1865.

(234 7ft.)
$98,183 .Jan..
74,283. .Feb..

(656 7ft.)
$920,272
790,167

(656 7ft.0

(656 7ft.)

$921,831

$957,869

70,740. ..Mar..

867,590
911,395
839,126
841,165
818,512
840,450

936,587
1,059,028
1,105,664
1,004,435
1,029,736

613,381
955,659
1,346,734
1,255,521
1,132,701
1,162,024
1,495,751

1865.

.

.

106,689. .April.
146,943. ..May..
224,838. .June.
177,159. ..July.”
170,554. ..Aug..
228,025. ...Sep..

1,079,551

—

..Year..

1,227,113
1,187,505

1,157,818

.

1,055,793
1,273,117
1,450,076

1,041,522
1,045,401

310,594. ...Oct..
226,840. .Nov..,
..Dec...

1,116,829

Toledo, Wabash &

1865.

,

1863.

1864.

(210 7ft.)
$170,078... Jan...
Feb...
202.771.. .Mar...
169,299. .April..

(242 7ft.)
$86,321
91,971
103,056

(242 7ft.)
$79,735
95.843
132,896

May...

132,111

134,272

123,987
127,010

152,585

156,338

105,554

...Dec...

1^0,595
151,052
134,563
111,339

139,626
244,114
375,534
221,570
220,209
265,154

kear..

1,439,793

2,050,322

173.722.. June.. :

Aug...
269.459.. .Sep....

207,098... Nov...
—

-

1,524,434
—

-

11,069,853 13,367,714

& T. Haute.

1864.

(238 777.)

43.058

827,615

1,247,258
1863.

54,735
60,006

*84.300

117,013

1865.

31,619
3(5,912

—

149,099

112,913

.

..

139,547

113,399
168,218
178,526

205,055
138,342

521,636. ...Oct,..
'498,421. .Nov..
366,192. .Dec..

(238 7ft.)
$38,778

—

106,967
111,260
71,587
69,353
155,417

309,083 ..July..
474,706, ..Aug*.

(238 771.)
$35,047

76,136

44,925
88,177

402.122. .June.

1864.

87,515
83,946

76.132

366,245. April.
353,194. ..May..

3,302,541 4,110,154 4,931,44U.Year
Rome, Watert’n & Ogdensb.
loco7

—

$67,130

.

1863,

1865.

1864.

(234 7ft.)

(524 m.)

$256,000

$546,410. ..Jail.

Mil. and Prairie du Chien.

1865.

$248,784

423,797

.

.

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

1864.

329.105. ..July.
..

275,643
289,224

April.
May

..

(524 7ft.)
.

271,085

.June..

.

1863.
.

$299,944

.

361,600
310,900
340,73S
507,552

302,174
295,730

.

220,lj^

2,512,315

(708 777.)
Jan
..Feb..
..Mar..

243,4^

-Marietta and Cincinnati.—*

1865.
.

220,047

248.292

1,917,100

.

215,508
243,4-7

180,408

3,223,088., Year..

$180,048

264,637
242,171
220,062
201,109

.Nov...
.Dec...

.

214,533

135.211

.

261.141.

210,314

182,655
182,085

246,331. ..Feb...

198^679

144,995

I860.

(204 7ft.)

’

289,403.,..Mar...
186,172.. .April..
227,260.. ..May ..
311,180.. .June..
232,728. .July...
288,095. .Aug...
384:,290.. .Sep .
300,707 ...Oct...-

•

1864.

(204 7ft.)
$139,414
170,879
202,857
193,919
203,514

1863

(204 7ft.)
$123,808
115,394

$305,554. .Jan...

175,4S2

243,150
185,013

-,0^0

(182 77?.)

(182 7ft.)
$158,735

..Jail...

Cleveland and Pittsburg.

I860.

(150 777.)

June

506,640

OF

River

1S64.

190,364

3,966,946 4,521,046..Year..
1864.

daigua), and duriug the coming season intend laying the narrow
guage track of the road on that line, so as to enable them to send
through trains from Baltimore to Niagara Falls.

Mich. So. North and Indiana.

.

Railroads.— The Northern

270,676
244,771
202,392

(285 7ft.)

328, S69.

Erie

and

366,802

..

.Jail.
,279,137. .Feb..
344,228. ..Mar..

Central

425.047

1,339,279. .May..
1,225,528. .June..
1,152,803. ..July.
1,364,126. ..Aug..
1,345,456 ..Sep..
1,406,385. ...Oct
1,451,217. ..Nov..
1,503,993. ..Dec..

.

Erie Railroad.—A company

$458,953

1,240,626. ..Mar..
1,472,120. .April.

$306,324.

earnings.

/—Chicago and Rock Island.

749491

been 69.5

(150 777.)

1863.

.

.

and

482,164. ..Feb...
499,296. ..Mar...
468,35S. .April..
585,623. ..May...
•

2,657,9S1

(150 777.)

1805.

(724 77?,.)
$908,341. ..Jan..
886,039. ..Feb

Pittsburg, Ft. W.,& Chicago.
1863.

519,306

669,605

-Michigan Central. 1865.
1S64.

43,143,945

480,710

296,169
473,186

1863

245,858
236,432
238,495
236,453
206,221
193,328
215,449
308,168
375,488
339,794
306,186

366,100
281,334

551.122
435,945

.

£643,416

Northern

(182 7ft.)

421,363
466,830
565,145

-

355,077. .Oct....
294,804. .Nov...

10,469,481 13,429,643 15,295,913.. Year

(285 7ft.)
$242,073

280,209

307.803

•Erie
1863.

202,321

of operating to have

65,04b
216,851

Central Railroad, says the Elmira Gazette, have purchased the
Northern Division of the Erie Railway (from Elmira to Canan¬

1865.

(609 7ft.)
$273,875
317,839
390,355

221,709
240,051

..

320,879

•

6,066,148

.

to construct
Montgomery to Goshen, on the Erie Railway, was
formed on the 2d inst., with a capital of $130.000. The road will
be 1(H miles in length, and when completed, will open up the rich¬
est section of Orange County to easy access from New York.

EARNINGS

1864.

(609 in.)
$232,208

.

320,881

.

This railroad, it

MONTHLY

1S637

.

296,546

9,924

gross

railroad from

a

18,931

proposing to
grading, masonry, &c., and I

288,159. ..Mar...
263,149. •April..
312,316. ..May...
343,985. June..
315,944. July
391,574. ..Aug...
399,602. ...Sep...

154,418
195,803
162,723
178,786
206,090
224,257

•

•

15,214

•

(2S1 7ft.)
$261,903. Jan...
252,583 .Feb...

$100,991

101,355
104,372
122,084
132,301
145,542
149,137
157,948
170,044
170,910
156,869
153,294

9,657

4,889
11,743
9,451

of the

Montgomery

-Chicago & Northwestern

—

1865.

1864.

21,127

17583.69204Julty

533,108

472,142
580,373
564,572
316,757

This shows the average expenses
per cent,

366,333
483,469
314,254
241,915
172,232

854,771

,714,057
752,605
629,621

Total Gross

j

12,893
'11,724
17,709

The company

COMPARATIVE
1863.

$
$

4,144
10,304
,7,844

Illinois.

of

construct the work have advertised the

Chicago and Alton

1865.

725,549
679,439

Colony <fc Newport....
Fitchburg

Earn'gs—, j

7,313

*2,0S4;070

Haute

appears,

I 1
$11,550
9,051
10,040
17,008
18,411
8,940

$

Western

G’t

.—Gross
1864.

Earnings—

905,150

1,221,104
1,209,018
993,693

Old

fol-

were as

Profits.

$476,453
371,925

$967,895

'

Norwich <fc Worcester
Boston <fc Lowell
Cheshire
Connecticut River

.

{Expenses.

$1,393,848

Boston and Maine
Eastern
Boston <fc Providence

418

'

Earnings.

Railroads.

:

Atlantic




805

95,4 53

1S64.

.

$1,183

925
860

1,503,993

,—Gross

.

$1,110

3*21,036
1,334,217
603,402

Michigan Central
Michigan South. <ii N. Indiana
Pittsburg, Fort Wayne <fc Chicago.!
The gross

week.—.
1865.

190,227

*241,582

Erie
Illinois Central
Marietta <fc Cincinnati:'.

following table shows the

Railroads.—The

Massachusetts

1864.

$599,762
546,609
224,022

$357,556
563,401

Chicago <fc Northwestern....
Chicago & Alton
Chicago & Rock Island

from New Boston, on the

:

-Earn’gs per

Gross Earn’gs.—,
1S65.
1864.

Railroads.

commence

,

\
’

116,379

Western
1865.

(242 7ft.)

$144,084

139,171
155,753

144,001
138 738

194,524
f 271,725
r 374,534

1379,981
2375.R34
l?ei,6io

THE

January 27, 1866.]

CHRONICLE.

121

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
1

Dividend.

Stock
out-

Companies.

Market.

Stock

!

standing.1

Periods.

COiLPANIES.

p’d.l Bid. Askd

Last

!

Railroad.
Mbanv and

Allegliany Valley

50 1,947,600|

Louis
100
Atlantic & Great Western, N. Y.100
Alton and St.

800,000; Quarterly.
919,153

Jan .1%;
.

...500,
Maine
100!
Providence
100
Worcester
100;
Brooklyn Central
;.. .100
Brooklyn City..,
10
Brooklyn City and Newtown.. .100:
Buffalo, New'York, and Erie...100
100
Buffalo and State Line.
Burlington and Missouri River. 100,
Camden and Amboy
.100'
Camden and Atlantic
50j
do
do
preferred.. 50,
Cape Cod
.'. 60,
Boston and
Boston and
Boston and

| 96

.

1,000,000 Feb. and AugjAug. .3%j20o
I...
366,ooo:
!.!
850,000 Jan. and July! Jan.. .3%!...
2.200,(XX) Feb. & Aug. Aug. .5 J...
1,000,000
.1

631.665:Jau. and July1 Jan. .

,3%j...

do

preferred
Central of New Jersey

100! 6,500,000

Central Ohio
Cheshire (preferred)

59

do

Covington and Lexington
Dayton and Michigan

Delaware

.

pref.lOO, 1,255,200!Jan.and July!Jan...3
100; 1,591,100; Jau. and July Jan...4
100' 1.582,169:
100! 2,816,705
50;
406,132 Jan. and July Jan..

;

Delaware. Lacka., & Western

..

50;

...1100

.! 20
.3

,

6,832,950; Jan. and July Jan.. .3

!

Des Moines Valley
100; 1,550,000
Detroit and Milwaukee
100!
952,350'
’do
do
pref.....100! 1,500,000

Dubuque and Sioux City
10<L
do
do
pref.... .100
Eastern, (Mass)
100'
Eighth Avenue, N. Y
100;
Elmira, Jefferson,& CanaudagualOO!

150

‘

750!000!April and Oct'Oct
i
5,253,8361
j

Joseph..'.100 1,900,000!

do
do
pref. ..100
Hartford and New Haven.
100

Housatonic

1001

do
preferred
Hudson River

Steamship)

.

.5

..

2,350,000! Quarterly.

820,0001

TOO

Jan...3

83%
S3

Michig

m

] ] ]ioo

Central

Michigan Southern and N. Irrd.,100
do
do
guaran.100
Milwauke
....

,

do
„

do

and Prairie Du ChienlOO
do
1st pref.lOO

do

Milwaukee and St. Paul
do
preferred

2d pref.lOO
100

]l00

Mine II111 &

Schuylkill Haven.] 50
Mississippi and Missouri,
100

Morris and Essex
Nashua and Lowell

50
100
Naugatuck
100
New Bedford and Taunton
100
New Haven, N. Lond., & Ston .100,
New Haven and Northampton.. 100

New Jersey

,

50

New London Nortienw**..., 100




illO

20,072,323

I

05
j 60
|De.’65 10: 98% 99

7

....106
120

1,858,100;Apr. and Oct Oct. .4

....

Providence and Worcester
100, 1,700,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .4
Racine and Mississippi
100
Raritan aud Delaware Bay
100 2,360,700
j
Rensselaer &, Saratoga consol..- 50
800.000 April and Oct Oct. ..4%

.

Saratoga aud Whitehall

50' 500,000 April and Oct Oct...3
800,000 April and Oct Oct.. .3
Troy, Salem & Rutland
50
Rome, Watertown & Ogdeusb'glOO 1,774,175 Jan. and Julv Jan.. .5
Rutland aud Burlington...
100 2,233,376 j
St. Louis, Alton, &'Terre IlautelOO: 2.300,000!
j
do
do
pref.lOO!-1,700,000 Annually. May. .7
Sandusky, Dayton, and Cinciu. .100 2,989,090;
do
do
354,866 Feb. and Aug Aug. .3
pref.lOO
862.571; ..’
Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO
Schuylkill Valley
576,000 Jan. and July1 Jau...5
'
50
Second Avenue (N. Y.)
100
650,000!Apr. and Oct
Shamokin Valiev & Pottsville.. 50i
869,450:Feb. and Aug Aug. .3
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
750,000; Quarterly. •
.100
Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.100 1,200,130;
Terre Haute and Richmond
50 1,900.150 Jau. and July: Jan. .6
Third Avenue (N. Y.)
1<X) 1,170,000; Quarterly. J u.
Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw... 100 1,700,000
do
do
1st pref.lOO 1,700,000;
r.100
do
do
2d pref.lOO 1 000.000
Toledo, Wabash aud Western.. 50 2.442.350! June aud Dec June. 3
June.3
2,442,350;
do
do
984,700 June aud Dec Dec. .3%
preferred. 50;
Tioga
.100
125,000'Jan. and July Jan,..3%
Troy and Boston
l(X),
607,111!
Troy and Greenbush
.100
274,400 June and Dec j Dec ..3
Utica and Black River
100
811,560' Jan. and JulyjJan . .4
Vermont and Canada
lOOj 2,860,000 June and Dec! Dec ..4
Vermont and Massachusetts
100; 2,860,000;Jan. and July; Jan...2
Warren
50, 1,408,300'Jan. and July!Jan...3
Western (Mass). *.
•
100 5,665,000 Jan. and JulyjJan...6
....

Worcester and Nashua

33
61

t 28
;

;

j

1

i

!

!

!

-..

J35

!136

30

38

Augi Aug. .3 | 61

63

...

75j 1,141,650 Jan. and JulyjJan...51
317,050 Jan. and July Jan.. .1

i

50

!

Delaware
Delaware
Delaware
Lancaster

1,343.563

25
25

Division
and Hudson
and Raritan
and Susquehanna....

Lehigh Navigation
MonongalielaNavigation
Morris (consolidated)
do
preferred

8,228,595|

'50! 1,633,350 Feb. and

10,000,000'Feb. and AugiAug.10
100; 2,298,400 Jau. and July Feb. 10
200,000:
50;

100

j

4,282,950,May and Nov Nov. .5

50

726,800]

50j

1(X): 1,025,000 Feb. and Ang
1001 l,175,000;Feb.and Aug

North Branch

T05

!

|

joo!

pref!

50

169

20,000,000 May and NovjMay. .5
!
218,100!
5,013,054 Ja i. and July -Jan.. .3

«>'»>■
Wilmington & Baltimore 50 8,657,300; Apr. and Oct Oct

138,086'

50

7

j.......

j

—

j

Feb. .6
Feb. .5

i

110
..

—j §3
,120
j
;

il21

Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 1,908,207 Feb.aud Aug Feb..0,s\ ....! 58
do
preferred. 50 2,888,805: Feb. and Aug! eb.. 6 j
j 60
Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 2,050,070!..
!
....! 18 120

Union
50 2,750,000,
do preferred
'
50
West Branch aud Susquehanna.100: 1,000,(XX) Jan. and

...

McGregor Western

245

.

loot 1,180,000!Jan. and July! Jan.. .4
50
Wyoming Valley.
100{ 6,218,042 April and OctiOct. ..4 100) 100%
Miscellaueous.
Huntingdon and Broad Top
American Coal
617,500
1
50;
25:
do
do
American
pref. 50!
190,750 Jan. and JulyjJan.. .3%
Telegraph
100
Illinois Central
Feb. and Aug;Feb..5 ! 116
Ashburton Coal.. .x
100,22,888,900
116%
50
Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50 1,689,900 AprilancLGct Oct.. .4 \
Atlantic Mail
RKV
Jan.and
Indianapolis and Madison
100
Brunswick Citv
412,000
100
Juiy|Jau...3
do
do
Bucks County Head
pref.. 100
407,900 Jan.and July Jan...4
"... 5i
Jeffersonville
50 1,015,90
Brooklyn Gas
25!
Joliet and Chicago
100 1,500,000 Quarterly. Jan...l%
Canton Improvement
100;
Kennebec and Portland (new).. 100*
90
Cary Improvement
j
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50!
Central American Trans
835,000
100 )
do
do
500,000
Central Coal
pref. 50!
100
Lehigh Valley
50! 0,627,050
Citizens (Brooklyn) Gas..;
20!
Quarterly. J2%c-10s 123
Lexington and Frankfort
50i
Consolidation Coal, Md
516,573 FeD. and Ang Aug.. 2
100
Little Miami—
so: 2,981,267 Jan. and July Jan.. .5
118
Cumberland Coal, preferred ....1001
kittle Schuylkill
50! 2,646,100 Jan. and July Jan.. .3
65
Farmers Loan and Trust
68
25!
Long Island
]]] 50! 1,852,715 Quarterly. Nov. .2
Harlem Gas
50 j
Louisville and Frankfort
50, 1.109,594 Feb. and Aug Aug. .2
Hampshire and Baltimore Coal.100!
Louisville and Nashville
International Coal
lOOj 5,527,871 Feb. and Aug Aug..3%
50;
Louisville, New Albany & Chic. 100 2,800,000
Jersey City and Hoboken Gas.. 20!
Maine Central
] ] ] ’ loO'i
Marietta and Cincinnati..]]]]” 50!
do
do
1st
50/
do
do
2d pref.. 50
and Lawrence
Manchester
100

100

...100

Chesapeake and Delaware
Chesapeake and Ohio

1,751,577
1.982,180

3,155,000;Jan. aiul July!Jan.. .4 j
1,000,000 Quarterly. jJan
500.000;Feb. and Aug;Feb.. 2%
50
500,000, Jan. and July

Forty-sec’d St. & Grand St. F’y.100

42"
24% 24%

Canal.

Aug.!Feb..3%;

Hannibal and St.

:

Wrightsville, York & Gettysb’g 50j

Elmira and Williamsport...
do
do
500,000! Jan. and July I Jan.. .3%
pref... 50;
Erie
100 10.400,100'Feb. & Aug.jFeb..4~ 833
do preferred
100; 8,5:85.700'Feb. &
Erie and Northeast
50
400,000! Feb. & Aug. i Aug.. 5
Fitchburg
100 3,540.000'Jan.and July;Jan...4 |
...

90
60

...

...

..

do
Connecticut River

93“

....

89%

....

i
-.... I
j
j
|
100 2,085,925! Jan. and July! Jan.. .2%!
j 45
Chester Valley
50,
871,900;
|
j - . j 102
Chicago and Alton
100' 1,783,1001 Feb. & Aug. Aug..8%j 103 il04
do
100; 2,425,200'Feband Aug. Aug..3# 105
preferred
Chicago Burlington and Quincy.lOO! S,376,510 May & Nov.;N.5c«St20s:lll%!ll2%
Chicago and Great Eastern... *. 100:
i
|
!
|
Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska... .100' 1,000,0001
!
!
Chicago and Milwaukee
100' 2.250,000j
j..I —
Chicago and Northwestern
100 13,100,927;
j
; 28% 28%
do'
do
pref. .100 12,994.719 June & Dec.! June..3%i 54% 54%
Chicago and Rock Island
1()0! 6.000.000 April and Oct Oct... 5 ~1 97% 97%
Cincinnati and Chicago Air LinelOO; 1,100,1251
i
j
!
Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.l00i 3,(XX),000:Mayand Nov. Nov..5 j —i 100
and Zanesville
Cincinnati
100; 2,000,0001
i —j
Cleveland, Columbus, & Cincin.lOOj 6,000,OOOiFeb.and AugiFeb. .5 l —!
Cleveland, Painesville & AslUa. 100; 4,000,000'Jau. and JulyjJan
1
j
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50| 5,253,625!Jan. and July! Jan.’06 4! 78% j 78%
Cleveland and Toledo
50j 4,654,800: April and Oct!Oct. ..5 jl04%|r05
Columbus & Indianapolis Cent.100!
!
J
I
'125
.Columbus and Xenia
50! 1,490.800! Jan. and July j Jan. ..5 !
Concord
50, L500,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .3% I.. .;120
Concord and Portsmouth
100
350,000!Jan. and July Jan.. .8%i
j
Couey Island and Brooklyn
100! 500,000
Connecticut and Passumpsic.. 100|
892,900
....

117

•

50 1,770,414;
Pittsburg aud Connellsville
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & Chicago!00 8,181.126; Quarterly. Jan...2%
Portland, Saco, and Portsmouth!00 1.500.000 Jan. and July! Jan.. .4

'120

jJan..:2%!

Quarterly.

Panama (and
Peninsula

Phila.,

I...

i

54
50 1,150.000!
|
50 2,200,000iFeb. & Aug.'Aug. .3%; SO

Catawissa

116

!...

j

378,455;
682,600i

ii~

Jan ..7
January.
100: 8,609,600 Jan. and July Jan...4
482,400 Feb. aud Aug Aug. .4
50
100 7,000,000; Quarterly. Jau .6

Colony and Newport

Pennsylvania
50
Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentlOO
Philadelphia and Erie
50
Philadelphia aud Reading
50
Phila., Germaut'u, & Norrist’n. 50

...

1114

Old

j Oswego and Syracuse
!

i

4.174,4(X) Jan. and JulyFeb .10

90

•

....

.100 21.250,000
preferred.. 100 2,979,000

do

1

|127
130

.

!

Ohio and Mississippi.

ill6

.

,

91%
•

....

1,830,000 Jan. and July; Jan .4
4,076,974 Jan. and July Jan .4
3,160,000 Jan. and July Jan
4,500,000 Jan. and July Jan .5%j
492.150

:,Tan,..4

•

Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. .100 3,077,000;

i 13

|

91

Feb..3
1

New York and
New York Providence & BostonlOO 1,508,0001 Quarterly.
Jau...3
Ninth Avenue.100!
795,360'
Northern of New Hampshire.. .100 3.068,400 June and Dec I Dec 4
Dec
Northern Central
;
50 3,344,800! Quarterly
;Nov 2
!
North Pennsylvania
50 3,150,150:
Norwich aud Worcester
100 2,338,600 Jau. and July Jan.. .5

112
125

.!

Erie—..100 8,500,0001

iLastp'd. Bid. Askd

Canandaigua.IOOl 1,000,000! Jan. and July Jan.. .3
Jan..
New Haven
Jan..
100 2,980,839; Quarterly. IT‘~ .4

Pa...100 2,500.000;
Ohio. 100; 5,000,000'
!....
Baltimore and Ohio
...100]13,1S8,902 April and Oct Oct.
Washington Branch
100 1,650,000 April and Oct Oct.
P.ellefontaine Line
100t 4,4:34,250 Feb. and Aug Aug
Belvidere, Delaware.
100j
997,112!
600.000; Quarterly. jJan...l%!
Berkshire
100
50
Blossbura and Corning.
250,000 June & Dec. ! Dec. .2%!

Boston, Hartford and
Boston and Lowell

Market.

Niagara Bridge &

do
do

do
do

Periods.

standing.

New York and Boston Air Liue.lOOi
788,047
New York Central
100 24,3S6,000
New York and Harlem
50 5,085,050
do
preferred
50 1,500,000

100; 1,347,192

Susquehanna

Dividend.

out-

Manhattan Gas

!

j

j.-

July Jan.. .5

700,000

....

6

8

j 9

111

!

|119

Feb.. 5

1,500,000 Feb. and Ang Aug. .4
I
2,500,000!
4,000,000:

i

July.25

Quarterly.
,

,
.

10

:

200,000!
!
2,000,000 Feb. and Aug Feb

5,000.000!

i

600,000

j
1

8,214,300

2,000,000'Jan. and July'Jau...5

i 43% 44%
..

;

17

I 42

1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...4

6,000,000
5,000,000

44
120

I

.

!

44%

45

l,(XX),OOo: Jan. and July Jaa.. .4
644,000
!
500,000!
!
;
1,000,000
1,000,000;

50; 4,000,000
100 12,000,000

I

Jan. and July Jau...5
j

1,050,860
Mariposa Gold
2.022,484
Metropolitan Gas
:
i00i 2,800,000
44
.3s
Minnesota.
6,205,404 Feb. and Aug
50; 1, (XX), 000
b .8s
New Jersey Consolidated
3,819,771 Feb. and Aug
10 1,000,000
New Jersey Zinc
1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...4
106
100 1,200,000:
New York Gas
6,315,906 Jan. and July Jan. .5
101% 101%
Light
50' 1,000,000 Mav and N01 Nov
7.539.600 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3% ! 67% 67% New York Life and Trust
100’ 1,000,000’Feb. and Am Aug. .5
Feb. and Aug Aug. .5
2.183.600
Nicaragua Transit
100, 1,000,000.
96"
Pacific Mail
2,988,073
loo, 4,000,000
Quarterly. Nov .5
95
99
2,753,500 May and Nov Feb. .4
Scrip (50 paid)
;. 100: 2,<100,000; -Quarterly. Nov. .5
92
1,014,000 May and Nov, Feb.. 3%
Pennsylvania Coal
50 3,200,000'Feb. and Aui Aug. .5
40" 60
1,000,000
Quartz Hill
25! 1,000,000
2,400,000 Feb. and Ang'Aug. .3%
75
100 10,(XX),000 Jan. and July Jau. .5 g.
Quicksilver
3,700,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .4 109“ 115
Rutland Marble
1
25 1.000,000 Jau. and July
3,452,300
Saginaw Land, Suit and Mm.... 25 2,500,000
3]000.]000 Feb. and Aug! Ang. .3s. 100% ' 103
Spring Mountain Coal...
...100: 2,500,000 Jan. and July Jan...5
600,009
I
Union Trust
nion
|
116
100 1.000.000
1 000 000
i
Feb. and Aug;Aug. .5
1,100,000
United States Telegraph
100 3,000,000 Feb. and Aug! Ang. .4
500,000 June and Dec Dec.. 4
United States Trust
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...5
738,538
Western Union Telegraph
liK)!
Quarterly. ;Oct..
1,010,000
Wilkesbarre (Consond ted)Coall00 2,175,000 Apr. and OctiOct
Feb. and Ang Ang. .5.
4,395,800
145
750.000 Jan. and JulyjJan.,.6
Williamsburg Gas.
60;
602452
WyomiDg Valley Coal
6Q: 1,250,000 «v^»
>»»i> %««•••••

150
! 12%

13

....

....

180

165
150
37

167
....

37%

.

7)

51%
65

THE CHRONICLE.

122

[January 27,1866.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.
INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

Railroad:
Atlantic and Great Western

do
Jan. & July

6 Ap'l & Oct.
484,000, 6 May & Nov.

1866
1878

1,000,000

1835

1,128.500

1850
1853

700,000

Bellefontaine Line:
1st Mortgage (B. & L.) convertible, j
1st
do "
do
extended...;
do
do
do
(I. P. AC.)
2d
do
do
Belvidere heiaware:
1st Mort. (guar. C. and A.)
2d Mort.
do
3d Mort.
do
2d

let

j
!

do
do

422,000 7 1
116.000 7
650.000 7

do

96*’.
86

1st Mortgage
Dubuque and Sioux City:
1st Mortgage, 1st section

85

I

’100

100*

Feb. &

1,700,000

Aug

Sinking Fund Bonds
Williamsport:
I 1st Mortgage
ErieRailway:
1st Mortgage

2d

:::::

Mortgage

900.000

do

600,000!

Feb, A

Aug
May A Nov.

7
7

7 M’ch A Sep
950,000! 7 (Ap'l & Oct
1,365,800: 7 Jan. A July
do
1,192,2001 7 i

80o,ooo;

! 3,000,000

7

July

do

do

1888

1873

95

May A Nov. 1868

4,000,000 7 M’ch A Sepjl879
6,000,000 7 i
do
1888
3,634,600 7 April A Oct 1880
1,002,500 7 June A Bec.1888
149,000 7 ! Jan. A

-

101*
96
94* 98

Julyjl870

7 |Feb. A Augll882
7 May A Nov 1875
1ft7K

1,963,000
1,086,000

I
!

101

102*
96*

927,000, 0 |Jan. A July 1870

Great Western, (111.):
1st Mortgage West.
East.
do

98

!

Bivision
do

!

1868
1,000,00010 !April A Oct.-—
1,350,000; 7 Jan. A July|1865

633,600

April & Oct;1881
1883
Jan. A July"™

700,000

Land Grant
Mortgage
Convertible Bonds....

98 '

Jan.

3,437,750

93
New

"

Hollar Bonds.

Tartford and Ne w E

.927,000

1st Morti

fy July 1883

Aug 1883

Feb. A

rovidence and Fishkill.
1st
2d

Mortgage

1st

Mortgage.

do

sinking fund

1,037,500
1,000,000

Jan. A July 1876
1876
do

98

’

90

i

191,000

90

....

2d

1st
1st

fund.

do

55
37

1st

'75-’80

90

May A Nov 1870
Feb. A Aug 1875

7.975.500

Sterling....

2.896.500

do

1st

2d

Feb. A Aug 1870
1869
do
J’ne A Bee. 1885
May A Nov. 1875
1867
do

Mortgage, convertible.

2,086,000

Redemption bonds

1865
1885
1876
'57-’62

July 1877

110,000
2,000,000
1,840,000
1,002,000

3,890,000

1st Me
ortgage.

104*’

Jan. A

500,000
500,000

1st Mortgage
do
1st
2d
do
einking
3d
do
Convertible

mg

1870
1875

450,000 7 !Feb. A Aug11890
800,000 7 May A Nov 1890

7 ;Jan. A

Mortgage

.....

....

141,000: 7 : Feb. A Aug 1882

Mortgage

-Ap’l A Oct.

95

Grand Junction:

100

!

I

7

j 1,000,000

Chicago Union:
Mortgage, sinking fund

77

July 1872
Aug 1874

Jan. A
Feb. A

672,600

598,000

Mortgage

Jan. & Julv 1873
7 Ap'l & Oct*. 1879

493,000;

600,000!

Galena and

J'ne A Bee. 1893

490,0001

!

2d
do
convertible....
3d
do
do
4th
convertible
do
5th
do
Erie and Northeast:

May A Nov. 1889

4,269,400!

\
590,000;

j

do

1875
1864

Jan. A July 1863
1894
do

300,000!

Elmira and

1883

867.000!

i

j

j

1st

88*

34,000 7 Feb. A Aug 1876

lEast Pennsylvania :

Jan. & July '69-'72
1870
do

400,0001

Mortgage, convertible

100

do

|

2d section

do

Ap’l A Oct. 1866'

200,000!

do

May & Nov.

2,500,000
1,000,000

—

1st

,1889

J'ne A Bee. 1877
May A Nov 1872

500,0001

April A Oct
do

do

1875
1875
1890

93*

108

108

May A Nov. 1881

187,000

166*

Jan. A July 1866
1862
do
1858
do

685,000

100

Jan. A July 1866
1870
do

600,000

do

600,000
364,000
400,000
200,000

Mortgage, convertible.

98

:

600,000; 6

Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref

536,000 7 I May &
2.400,000 7 Jan. &

income

do

do

1,100,000,

inconvert..

Bonds, (dated Sept. 20, I860)
Chicago and Great Eastern :
1st Mortgage
Chicago and Milwaukee:
1st Mortgage (consolidated)
Chicago and North western :
Preferred Sinking Fund
1st Mortgage

;

7
!

2,000,000;
* 1,250.000

3,000,000
756,000!
948.000

484,000

Mortgage

1,397,000

Mortgage

1st

,

87

84

86
85

80

*

1st

Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati:

Mortgage
Cleveland and Mahoning:
1st Mortgage
1st

74

do

.

Cle eland, Painesville and Ashtabula:
Hividend Bonds

1st

102
100

Feb. A Aug 1873
M’ch & Sep 1864
1875
do

900,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1880
1874
do
500,000

Sunbury and Erie Bonds

1,157,000 7! M’ch & Sep 1873
1875
do
1.728.500 7i

1,108,740

Cleveland and Toledo:

Sinking Fund Mortgage

1,802,000

Connecticut River:

Mortgage

Mortgage Bonds

a

J’ne A Bee. 1876

Sep

do

283,000
642,000
162.500

Jan. A July
do
do
do

do
Sink.

.

Delaware:

Mortgage, guaranteed

90

73*’
96

90
73

500,000

Jan. &

Delaware, Lackawanna and Western:

1,500,000
600,000

900.006

North. Indiana:

1st Mortgage, sinking fond
2d
do
Goshen Air Line Bonds

1st
....

92

Mortgage, sinking fund

Milwaukee and St. Paul ;
1st Mortgage
:
2d
do,

Mississippi and Missouri River:
1st Mortgage, convertible
2d
do
sinking fund

*85*’

1st
do
Oskaloosa
1st Land Grant Mortgage
2d
do
do
do

Morris and Essex:
1st

Jan. A; July 1875
M’ch A Sep 1881
Jan. & Julv *371

Fund, do

Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien:

1875

July

do

” Michigan South.

97

1867
1881
18-*18—

2.655.500

Extension Bonds
Louisville and Nashville:
1st Mortgage
1st Lebanon Branch Mortgage....
1st Memphis Branch Mortgage ...
Marietta and Cincinnati:
1st Mortgage, dollar
c
Scioto and Hocking Valley mort ..

Hollar, convertible

1904
1904

Ap’l A Oct.

fund.

Michigan Central:

98
98

1878

109.500

Dayton and Michigan:
1st Mortgage

do

July 1885

M’ch &

161,000

do

Lackawanoa and Western

Jan. &

1892

800,000

Mortgage

Cumberland valley:

Mortgage, sinking fund

July

250,000

Connecticut and Passumpsic River:

Bonds

Jan. A

April A Oct

1883

800,000
230,000
250,000

Aprii A Oct 1870

903,000
1,000,000

May A Nov. 1872

May A Nov. 1873

92

May A Nov 1883

95

960,000

April A Oct 1877

500,000
225,000

Jan. A

Long Islarid :

:

2d Mortgage
2d
ao
convertible
4th
do

Mortgage

Mortgage

.

648.200

do

Little Schuylkill :
1st Mortgage, sinking

1890

July

do

Little Miami:

1893

Jan. &

600,000

1,300,000

Mortgage, Eastern Bivision...

2d

Lehigh Valley:
1st Mortgage

1867
1880

May & Nov

1861
1873

,

July 1870

1,300,000

Sept
April A Oct

1,465,000

do

Mch A

392,000

Mortgage.

1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Kennebec ana Portland:
1st Mortgage
:.
2d
do
3d
do
La Crosse and Milwaukee:

91

do

Mortgage.

2d

Feb. & Aug 1885
do
1885
May A Nov. 1863
Quarterly. 1915
Feb. & Aug 1885

850.000
244.200

Mortgage

21
ao
3d
do
Toledo Hepot

109

84

Jan. &

1st

Mortgac

effersonvule;

Jan. & July 1898

510,000

Cincinnati arid ZanesvUle:

do

93* 94*

1894

May A Nov.

379.000

Cleveland and Pittsburg

7

j M’ch A Oct
A Sep
Ap’l

1,249,000

do

.

jAp’l & Oct,

1877
1892
1882

Mortgage

2d
do
Real Estate

:

Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton:

do

7

Nov.
Jnlj

467.0001 8 ;Jau. A July 1883
1883
do
3,167,000 8j
1890
680,000; 7

_J 2,000,000

Interest Bonds
Consol. Sinking Fund Bonds
Extension Bonds

Chicago and Rock Island

| Jan. A July

-

do
do

Chicago. Burlington and Quincy:
Trust Mortgage (S. F. ) convert




|

I

Chicago and Alton:

I st
2d

oo

<*!

:

do
Detroit, Monroe and Toledo:

70-'79
”
1870
1870

do
^
do
do
do

Augil865
200,000 6 j
4865
do
250,000 7 Jan. A Julyil870
100.000 6 i
do
*11870

426,7141

Mortgage Bouds

1*

£

348,000 7 iJ’ne & Bee. 1874

iEastern (Mass.):

300.000 7 Feb. A

2,000,OOOi

1st Mortgage W. Biv
do
E. Biv
1st
2d
do
do
3d
(Sink. Fund),
4 th
do
do
Income

1st
2d

12

Aug 1887

8 !Feb. &

,$1,740,000

Mortgage, convertible

1st

2d

400,000i G Jan. A July i 1873

Central Ohio:

1st

96

Ja Ap Ju Oc.1867
Jan. & July; 1875
1880
j
do

_

j

Central of New Jersey:

lit

!

6
6
6

200,000 6

Catawissa:

2d
3d

do

Income Bonds.,
Detroit and Milwaukee

150,000 6 May A Nov. 1871

Income
Erie and Northeast
T.
Camden and Amboy:
Hollar Loaus
Hollar Loan
Consoldated ($5,000,000) Loan
Camden and Atlantic:
let Mortgage
2d
do

1st

|

i

]

Mortgage Bonds

589,500 6 Feb. A Aug! 1877

Mortgage Bonds
Buffalo. New York and Erie:
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Buffalo and State Line :
1st Mortgage

1st
2d

•

do
do
do

96

i 1,000,000 6 J’ne & Bee. 1867
500,000 6 M’ch A Sep. 1885

Sinking Fund Bonds

1st

Ap’l & Oct.

2,500,000 6 Apl & Oct.;lSS5
I
!
i
368,000 7 Jan. & July 1866

Boston and Lowell:

let
1st
2d

7
7
7
7
7
7
7

347,000 7

Blossburg and Corning:
Mortgage Bonds
Boston, Concord and Montreal:
1st Mortgage.
do "
1st

Cheshire

<5

1879
1882
1882
1879
1881
1876
1883

Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834

1st
2d

£,

cS

•C A
P*

Railroad:

Baltimore and Ohio:

1st

£

g
G

Payable.

ing.

00

Des Moines Valley:

Sterling Bonds

2d
2d

M

12

03 i—*

Amount
outstand¬

DESCRIPTION.

:

!

do
do

%'s

Payable.

1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.)
$2,500,000
2d
do
do
2,000,000
Eastern Coal Fields Branch, .do
400.000
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y.) 1 1,000,000
2d
do
do
777.500
j
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, ( Ohio)
4,000,000
2d
do
do
J 6,000,000
Atlantic and St. Lawrence:
Hollar Bonds
988,000

do
do
do

INTEREST.

MARKET.

SrZ
O os

ing.

do

as O

Amount
outstand¬

Mortgage, sinking fund

Naugatuck:
1st

102
•

.

.

.

....

Mortgage (convertible) "
Stonington :

N. Haven, N. London <Sb
1st Mortgage
3d
do
.

•

« .

1,804,000
41,000
300,560

2,691,293
300,000

do

do

Jan. A

98

1861
1862

Julyjl869

July
May A Nov.

93

1870
1890

85

Feb. A Ang 1883
1883
do
1883
do
Feb. A

Aug 1892

88

May A Nov. 1888

Ang 69-72

2.230.500

Feb. A

215,000
4,328,000

April A Oct 1882
do

4.822,000

May A Nov

2,194,000

1882

do

1885
1877
1868

682,000

Feb. A

Ang

443,000

Jan. A
Feb. A

Ang 1893

1,000,000
400,000
590,000
3,612,000
695,000

Jan. A July 1875
1876
do
1876
do
May A Nov. 1877
1883
do

3,500,000

May A Nov.

90

96

75

82

48

50

July 1891

4,600,000
1,000,000

112

April A Oct 1893

1915

300,000

Jan. A July 1876

450,000
300,060

M’ch A Sep 1861
Se
Jan. A July 1868

MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued).

Amount

outetand

Description.

|

6

ing.

Princpal payble.

Payable.

|

Amount

New

Mortgage

York Central:
Premium Sinking Fund Bonds
Real Estate

Bonds.

Bonds of August, 1859,
New York an a Harlem :
1st Mortgage

York and Cumberl’d Guar.
Balt, and Susq. S'k’g Fund

i

Bonds
Bonds.

Northern New Hampshire:
Plain Bonds
North Pennsylvania:

aa

,

(not

Champlain:

1st Mortgage
do
2d
(now stock)
Ohio and
1st Mortgage (East. Div.)
do
(West. Div.)
let
(do
do )
2d
do

Mississippi:

6

1.000,(XX) o
500.000 6
500,000 6

j 7

]

do
do

1,150,000

,

Mortgage

Erie)...

(general)
2d
(general)
Phil add., Germant. & Norristown:
do
do

Consolidated Loan
Convertible Loan

Philadelphia and Reading:

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 and Trenton:
1st Mortgage
Philadel., H timing. & Baltimore:

Mortgage Loan
Pittsburg and Conndlsville:
1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.)
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago:
1st Mortgage
.

Pittsburg and Steubenville:
1st Mortgage

575,000
1,000,000

lst

7

Jan. &

1875
1870

July ’70-’80

April & Oct
do
Feb & Aug.

7

1870
1875
1872-

Sacramento Valley:

7

July 1876

April & Oct

convertible

Mortgage,

....

....

.

.

.

Equipment bonds
Troy and Boston:
1st Mortgage

....

....

....

•

•

•

..

.

....

6

'

1st

1st

119,800
292,500

6
6

1S65
1885

nnn

K

Jan. & July
do

do
6 1 April & Oct
6 Jan. & July
do
6 !
do
976.800 6 i
do
564,000 6 I
do
60,000 7

1880
1870
1871
1880
1850
1886
1886

258,000 6 May & Nov. 1868

1

692,000

6 Jan. &

400,000

6 Feb. &

•

•

do

Haute :

Sandusky, Dayton and Cincinnati:
1st Mortgage (extended)

» c

....

....

1

1st
1st

1 nnn nnn

(;
6

#Tan

150,000

6

200,(XX)

6

Jan. &
do

Mortgage

«...

•

....

..

,,..

*

....

....

1861

•

•

*

.

••«

....

....

1867

....

....

1883

....

.....

....

•.

•

•

•

•

.

•

•

•

•

»

....

....

1875

do

& Jnlv *6(i-'7(i

June »fc Dec D'm'd
.

uly

1890
1890

....

6
6

Mav & Nov.
Jan. & Julv
do

1870
1871
1877

7

Jan. &

July

1884

2,657,343

6 ;Jan. &

July

1886

2,000,000

6
5
6

Ja

4,375.(XX)
1,699,500
800,000

6

Jan. &

July

1878

600.000

7

June & Dec

1865

175 (XX) 6

25,000
500,000

(Baltimore) Bonds

....

....

....

Canal
Cincinnati and Covington Bridge :
1st

....

»'•

6

596,000

Stockbridge Bonds

•

•

••

April & Oct '6S-'71

5

do

76

....

'

850,000

Bonds

•

;

do

Guaranteed

Jan. &

4,319.520

Mortgage

2d

...

....

jj aii. & July
July

•

....

399.300 •7 Jan. & July 1S73
564,908 i 8 April & Oct 1878

..

guaranteed
York A Cumberland (North. Cent.):
1st Mortgage

....

....

....

July 1S95

7 Mav <Sr Nov.
6

....

....

600.000 7 Feb. & Aug 1875

/

(guaranteed)

Hudson and Boston
Western Mainland;

....

|

lSS17
1885
1875
1S82

April «fc Oct

!7

90
73

....

1867

do

6
7

j

.

....

6

550,600

:

Albany and W.

Mortgage Bonds

....

...,

81

...

....

•

.

Chesaj eake and Delaware :
1st 1 tortgage Bonds

....

....

Chesapeake and Ohio:

....

Maryland Loan

....

v

Sterling Bonds, guaranteed

...

Preferred Bonds

Delaware Division:

....

....

Mortgage

|

.

i

.

1st

....

2d

.

...

•

*

Ap JuOc 1870
1890

do

...

....

1885

....

...

....

....

Erie of
1st

....

....

Aug

1889

Morris.

....

7!

8 Jan. &

July 1875

.

North Branch:

I

....

....

....

lstMortgage....

....

Mch &

Sept

1879

140,000

7 Mch & Sept
do
7
do
7 j

1888
1888
1876

400.000
340.000

7
7

!

•

«

# •

•

•

•

•

•

«

•

•

Schuylkill Navigation :
1st

....

j

....

....

j

....

1890

do

Improvement

,...

♦

18—

’usquehanna and Tide-Water:
Man land Loan

do
Sterling Loan, converted
Mortgage Bonds ?. ..'.
Interest Bonds, pref

200,000 7 1

Dec

do

123,000 7 Mch & Sept
do
800,000 7i

1874
1862
1871
1880

j

;

....I
j

....

v
Union (Pa.)

7i

do
do

....

West Branch and

Susquehanna:

Mortgage

1st

Ireb. & Aug 1900
1,000,000
201,500 7 'May & Nov 1875

6 Jan. &

July

1876

6

April & Oct

1876

6

May & Nov. 1876
Mch &
Jan. &

90

....

95

•

•

Sept 1872
July 1882

•

•

►

I

..

Mortgage...

1st

88
80
75

....

227,569

6

1864 l

do

6i May & Nov.

1S83

450,000

6

Jan. &

July

1878

750,000

6

Tan. &

July\

1878

_

*

•

•

806,000 5 Jan. & Julv 1864 |
1865 !
do
200,000 5
1878 j
do
993,000 6

»

•

,

>

r 45

_

....

•

j
|

•

20

|

...

I

90

....

!

....

Mining:
Mortgage.’—

ifan\posa
....

75

May & Nov. 1870

Miscellaneous:
....

...

1

2,200,000 7 Semian’ally 1894
do
1894
2,800,000 7
1,700,000 7 1Jay & Nov. 1894

1884

....

Wyoming Valley:
1863
1863

Sept

2,500,000

Mortgf

1st

....

1,800,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1863
937,500 7 |

Mch A;

....

J

Jnn.

K

1,764,330 6
8 980,670 6
586,500 6

Mortgage

2d

...

500,000 7 May & Nov. 18—
7

77S 341

....

....!

|

7

Mortgage Bonds

1865
1868

590,000

Mortgage Bonds

Jan. & July
do

760,(XX)

Monongahela Navigation:
....

6

182,000

o

7

161,(XX)

Unsecured Bonds.

....!

••

752,000

,

Lehigh'Navigation :

....

....

July

1881
1881

900,000 7 Mch & Sept 1870

Pennsylvania:

Mortgage Bonds

Interest Bonds

....

....

7 ! Feb. & Aug
do

Mortgage, siuking fund.
do
do
do...

....

1884

|

Delaware and Hudson:

....

....

5,200,000 7 ! Semi an’ally 1912 100 100
do
1912
92#
5,160,000 7 !
83
2,000,000 7 | April & Oct 1912

440,000

*

:

Mortgage

1st
2d
,
Western (Mass.):
Sterliu" (£899,900)
Dollar Bonds

1st

182,400 5

800,000

1,135,000

do

Mortgage

1865
90
1884
1S75
1875 I
I860 I
1874

....

^an. & July

Jan. &

...

1 QA7

2,856,600
106,000
1,521,000

1,000,900
250,000

2.000.CKX

Philadelphia:
Mortgage (convert.) Coupon
do
registered .*

75
75

1S94

do
do

7

180,000

Westchester and

....

Dec

...

....

500.000! 6 Jan. & July 1863
'

Mortgage—

Warren

....

....

1870

r*

Vermont and Massachusetts i
«...

1901

400,000 10 Jan. & July 1875
329,000-10 Feb. & Aug 1881

:

1st
2d

& July

do

600,000; 7

Laud Grant Mortgage
Vermont Central:

....

*

....

!May& Nov.

—

....

..

....

1866

300.000 7 Jan. & July
3CX).(XX): 7 Apr. & Oct.
650, OCX) | 7 Mav & Nov.
200,000 I Mar. & Sep.

do
Union Pacific:

....

.

....

Sept

;Mch &

;Feb. A Aug

152.355

do

•

•

....

1.000,000 7
1.500,0001 7

Troy Union:
Mortgage Bonds

....

•

....

1876

900.000 7
2.500.0001 7

Convertible
....

:Feb. & Aug 1872

j 1,391,OCX) 7 June &

.....'

do
do

2d
3d

....

.

7

1,180,000 7 Jan.

(Toledo & Wabash)
(extended)
(Toledo and Wabash)...
do
2d
(Wabash and Western).
Siuking Fund Bonds

....

1S67

94,000! 7

1st Mort.
1st do
2d
do

....

June &> Dec

...

Y.):

100

1877

4 000 000

Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg:
let Mortgage (Potsdam & Watert.)
do
2d
do
do
1st
(Watertown & Rome'
do
2d
do
(do
do
Rutland and Burlington:
1st Mortgage
do
2d
3d
do

7 Jan. &

ce

1

Mortgage
Toltdo. Peoria and Warsaio:
lstMortgage
Toledo and T!abash:

92

7

Richmond:

1st

i

July '72-’87 77#

6 Jan. &

<

1875

1,400,000 7 April & Oct

.

. —

103#

....

5,000.000 6 April & Oct 1881

800,000

Raritan and Delaware Bay:
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
do
2d
Convertible Bonds
Rensselaer & Saratoga consolidated :\
let Mort. Rensselaer & Saratoga .
1st Mort. Saratoga & Whit hall....
1st Mort. Troy, S & Rut. (guar.) •.

St. Louis, Alton and Terre
1st Mortgage
2d
do
preferred
2d
do
Income

Mortgage

Third Avenue (N.

94# 100

1,438,000

Mortgage




....

1.* *

4,980,000 6 Jan. & July 18S0
2,621,000 6 April & Oct 1875
1875
do
2,283,840 6

500,000

Mississippi:
1st Mortgage
Reading and Columbia:

do

j
.

70

1,000,000

2d
do
Racine and

-i

1st

1,029,000 7 Mch & Sept 1884

Philadelphia and Erie:
1st Mortgage (Sunbury &

2d

do
do

7

416,000 7
346.000 7

sterling...:

Mortgage

Mortgage

18S0

1,494,000 | 7 April & Oct

7,000,000

Mo

sterling
Philadelphia and Baltimore Central :

1st
2d

Jan. & July ! 1873
do
| 1873
do
| 1885
do
1885

100,000 i ? Jan. & July ! 1874
Feb. & Aug 1870
300,000

311,500

Pennsylvania:

1st

2,500,000 6 iJan. & Jul) 1 1885
’500,000 6 ;Ja Ap Ju Oc 1 1877
'
do
I’ 1866
150,000 6

750,000

Peninsula:

do
do

1866
1875

232,000' 6 Feb. & Aug ’73-’7S

850,000 7

let

2d
3d

.

2,050,000 1 7 Jan. & July 1872

Oswego and Syracuse:

let

Dec!

s

200,000 7 Jan. & July 1871

Terre Haute and

1 QOQ

912.00C) 7 June &

1,500,000

General Mortgage
Steamboat Mortgage

1st

..

100

1872

1,088,000 6 April & Oct

3d

i

*tx

j 92

Jul)

700,00C

Pottsville:

lstMortgage
Staten Island:
lBt Mortgage

Jan. &

!

mar. by B. & O. RR.
(gt
do
do
do

1st Mortgage
do
2d
2d
do

....

....

Shamokin Valley and

7

500,00C

....

....

1883

= 1 1868

do

Princpal payble.

1,290,000

..

Second Avenue:
1st Mortgage

....

‘

7

Newark:

1st Mortgage

i

....

..

2,500.000 6 April & Oct; 1880
do
1 1887
360,000 10 !

guaranteed)....
Norwich and Worcester:

1st

Sandusky, Mansfield and

j

.

1876

-

T3

'd

Railroad:

....

1883
1876

Payable.

£

<

1887

220,700 6 April & Oct I 1874

Mortgage Bonds
Chattel Mortgage
Rorth- Western Virginia:

Panama:
1st Mortgage,
let
do
2d
do

i

May & Nov

L000,00( ) 7

Mortgage
Northern Central:
Sinking Fund Bonds

Mortgage
Pacific:
Mortgage, guar, by

do

604,000 7
non non

1871

May & Nov 1883

2.925,(XX) 6 [June & Dec
165.000 6 May & Nov j
do
663.000 6
1,898. (XX) 7 Feb: & Augi

i

let

■

Aug 1 1873

I

New York and New Haven :
Plain Bonds
Mortga ge Bonds
New Yoi\c, Providence and Boston:

Ogdensburg and L.

6

3.000.000 7

3d Mortgage

do
do
do

Feb. &

6,917,59**

convert..

Consolidated Mortgage...

2d
3d
3d

6

1869
1873

51,(XX ) 7 ;Jan. & July r|

.•

New

Jan. & Jul)
do

485,(XX

Bonds of 1853

London Northern:

let

*

103,(XX )

7
6

$500. (XX

(Hamp. and Hamp.).

let
do
New Jersey:
Ferrv

.

<6

ing.

3d

Itailroad:

Nor thampton:

outstand

Description.

'O

5
1 m

MARKET.

INTEREST.

market.

INTERE8T.

|

RAILROAD, CANAL AND

js’ew Haven and
1st Mortgage

123

THE CHRONICLE.

January 27, 1866.]

90#
84

2d

ao

Pennsylvania Coal:
isyi
1st Mortgage.
let

2d

Mortgage.
do

1,500,000
2,000,000

7
7

600 000 7

500,000

7

0,000

7

Jan. & Julv

April & Oci
Feb. &

Aug

June & Dec
Tao. & Julf

18—
■

8

••

1871

18731

18791

*"

....

V

1

...

—A

124

THE CHRONICLE.

insurance anfc

ittining Journal.

[January 27,1866.

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST.

Dec.

COMPANIES.

Marked thus (*) are partici¬

pating, and thus (t) write Capital.
Marine Risks.

Joint Stock Fire: ;
Adriatic
25 $300,000
./Etna*
50
200,000

Agricultural, (Watert'n).

Albany

51

50,000
150.000

100
50

200,000
200,000

.100

Albany City
American*
American Exchange...
Arctic
Astor
Atlantic (Brooklyn)
Baltic
Beekman

30

200,000

50
25;

50]
251
o

Bowery

2o!

Brevoort

50!
25:

Broadway
IT!
Brooklyn (L. I.)
Capital City (Albany).. .100!
100 i
20*

Central Park
Citizens’

TO;

City

100•
100!
100!

Clinton ...**.
Columbia*
Commerce
Commerce (Albany)..

250,000
300,000

200,000
200,000
300,000
150.000
200.000
153,000

150,000

300,000
210,000
250,000
500,000

200,000

50
100
100

250,000

50

400,000

100

Corn Exchange...
Croton

200,000
300,000

100

200,000

Excelsior

50

Exchange

30
St’k(Meridian)100

200,000
150,000
50,000

Far. Joint
Firemen’s
Firemen’s Fund
Firemen's Trust
Fulton
Gallatin..
Gebhard
Germania
Glenn’s Falls
Globe.*
Goodhue*
Greenwich
Grocers’
Guardian
Hamilton
Hanover

...

17.
10

204,000

(Bklyn) 10

150.000
200.000

25
50
100
50
10
50
100
25
50

Net
Assets.

150, IKK)

150,000
200,000
500,000

293,142 Jan. and July.

159,079 Jan. and July

25

Jefferson

30

King’s County (Brook'n) 20
Knickerbocker

Lafayette (Brooklyn)

40
...

50!

Lamar

100

Lenox

167,778

2,000,000 2,929,628
200.000
214,017
300,000
433,998
200,000

200,000
150,000

1,000,000 1,079,164
200,000
228,083
200,000

261,586

150,000
280,000
150,000
300,000

113,325
328,115
157,4a3

358,142

1,000,000

Lorillard*
Manhattan
Market*
Mechanics'

1,000.000
100
500,000
100
200,000

Mercantile
Merchants’

100

Morns (and inland)

lOOj

708,874
331,793

150,000
200,000

185.624

200,000
50j 200,000
Metropolitan* t
100 1,000,000
Montauk (Brooklyn).... 50;
150,000

221,815

20

Phoenix!
Reliei.

50
50

Rutgers’

100
25

St. Nicholas!

25
25

Security*!

50i

Standard
Star

501
100

Sterling *
Stuyvcsant

100
25’

Tradesmen's,
United States

50

Jau '66

.5 102

..

44#

Aug.

102

Jan. ’66 .5
Jau '06.. 3#

July,

.

July '65
Jan. ’66

200.000
150.000

200,000

300,000
200,000
100,000
210,000

242,320
293,503
169,572

25!
20

Williamsburg City
Yonkers and New York

50j

loo!
50

.100;
!




,100!

40

45
2 05

.

Enniskillen
Everett Petroleum

Excelsior
;.
First National
Fountain Petroleum.
Fulton Oil
Germania
G’t Western Consol.
Guild Farm
HamiltonMcClintock
Hevdrick

Heydrick Brothers

75
83

18

30
45
10
2 10
15

..

Ivanhoe
Inexhaustible
Ken. Nat. Pet &Miu.
Knickerbocker Pet’m

70

Mo'nongahela & Kan.

.

.

.

.

64#

Feb.’60.3#
.

Bid.

Aztec
Boston
Caledonia
Canada
Central

47*66’
5 00
1 00

2 50

ie 00
7 00
1 50

79

’75’

85

20

10 00
35
17 70

16 00
40
17 80

35

40

Venango & Pit Hole.

Vesta

Watson Petroleu
Webster

n

00
10

W.Virg. Oil and Coal
Woods & Wright I
Oil Creek
f
Working People’s j
Petroleum

1 03
20

f

Quincy

2 50*
2 50
70
1 75
6 00

.

.

| Jan. '66

.5
.6

the
for a

Asked

40

50
15 00
1 30

1 20

25

3 50

Corydon

13 00
1 15

00

Gold Min. of Colorado
Gunnell...

Hope
Kip & Buell

25
00

Manhattan
Montana

50
80

95

Hill .'.

1 35

Si
mith & Parmelee...
Lead:
Denbo
Macomb
Wallkill
Coal:
British American

6 25

1 75
7 25

45

50

1

05*

Mahanoy
Waverly

2 00

Prosperity of
York Companies

Jan. ’66 .10
Jan. ’66 3#

Bid.

Gold:
Benton
Consolidated Gregory

Q uartz

....

Superior

Companies.

Mount Alpine
New York
N. Y. & Nova Scotia.

1 00

Rockland

'(55 .10

j July ’05

9 00

....

Flint Steel River...
Hilton
Huron
Indiana ...’
Isle Royale
Knowlton
Mendota
New Jersey Consol
Norwich

.

; July ’05

.

Copper Falls
Evergreen Bluff

.

1 25

5 00

Insurance Business—Receipts of New
year.—The Insurance Companies of this

city have done a large business during the past year, seventy-five of
them having received during the twelve months
ending last June,
$27,513,582. The receints for the period named are, according to

4

July ’65 .10
|July ’65 ..5
; July ’65
.5
;

the Intercal Revenue returns

as

follows

:

.

233,2951
219,046! Jau. and July, Jan.
do
Jan.
249,874:
do
348,467;
July
do
203,224!
July
110.905;

10 85
3 80
90
1 50

60

Union
United Pe’tl'm F’ms.
United States
United States Pe- |
troleum Candle., f

Asked.

Pewabic...

.

! July

60

Titus Oil
Titus Estate

29
40

Ontonagon

.

July

4 40

25

Terragenta

McElhenuy
McKinley

Ogima

.

.

do
Aug. ’65..5
March and Sep Sep. ’65 .6
Jan. and July, June’63.3#
do
July ’65 ..5
do
Jan. ’66 .5
do
Jan. ’66 .5
do
July '65 .4
do
I Jan, ’66 .5
Jau. and
do
do
do
do
'
do
do
do
do

4 25

Story & McClintock.

McClintockville

28

1 60

Success
Tack Petr’m of N.Y.
Talman
Tarr Farm

12
18
95
1 75

10

Liberty
Lily Run

30

1 50

Shade River
Southard
Standard Petroleum.

17
1 00
45
4 50
40
55
30
2 50
19

Copper:

.

do

*

50

85*

5 00
48

Rynd Farm

00
79
43

..

"

40

60
10 75
3 10

Pit nole Creek
Pit Hole Consol
President
Rawson Farm
Revenue

.

4 00

53
4 60

MINING STOCK LIST.

Jam '66.3#
Jan. '66 .4
Jau.'66 .5
! Jan. ’66 .5
Jan. ’GO .5
Jan. '66 .5 159#
Jan. ’65 .5
Jan. ’66 .6 150

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

Phillips

85

Emp’e City Petrol'm
Empire Pit Hole
..

'66
Jan. '66

’66
’66

.

.

Astor Fire
American Exchange

.7

.8

*65 ..5
’63 .4
.

253,079! Jau. and July. Jan. ’66 .4
262,076 Feb. and Aug. 'Aug. ’65. .6
1,000,000 1,164,291! Jan. and July, ! Jan. ’66 .6 110
do
1,000,000
93
j Jau. ’66
350,000
388,919! April and Oct. 'Oct ’65
91#
150,000
170,982; Jan. and July, j July’05
do
200,000
Jnu '66
244,289]
li5
! J uly '64
do
200,000
217,876
do
150,000
163,247
July ’65 .5 97#
150,000
135,490 Feb. and Aug. ;Feb. ’06.. 4
500,000
664,987 Jau. and July, i July ’65 .5
! July ’65 .5
do
200,000
249,750
300.000
do
i Jan.'66.3#
481,551
do
200,000
! Jan. ’66.3#
232,191
200,000
208,016 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’00..7
do
150,000
159,336
j Feb. "65.. 5
150,000
156,707 Jan. and July. ; July ’63 . .4
1,000,000 1,241,874 Feb. and Aug. ! Aug. ’65. .7
200,000
263,035 Jan. and July, !Jan *66 ..5
200,000
do
Jan. ’66 ..5
200,559
200,000
205,070
57
200,000
219,139 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’62..6
180.310 Jan. and July, July’65 .5
150,000
do
250,000
Jan. ’66 .5 iis*
343,605
400,000
000,527 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65. .4
303,213
200,000
150,000
159,226 Jau. and July, Jan. *00.. .5
do
500,000
Jau. ’66.. .5
566,543
.

200.000

.

.

.

281 m

66
1 10

Companies.

Joint Stock Marine:
Columbian*
100 3,500,000
Jau. and
Great Western*
100! 1,000,000 3,177,437
do
Mercantile Mutual*
100
e4o,ooo 1,322,469
do

V) asliington*

Commercial
Commonwealth
Consolidated of N. Y.
Devon Oil

July, Jaii.

.

Washington*
Western (Buffalo)

..

Nov. May

j Jan. and July,
do

25
12 00
3 35
18
2 25

Maple Grove

.5

.

Clinton...

Manhattan

.5

.

.

100

St. Mark’s

.

People’s Petroleum..

75

3 25
17
1 50

High Gate

.

Republic*
Resolute*

li2

.

50
25

People's

j

..

1^4,916

50;

.

234,925
July’65*..5
do
213,413
July ’65 .6
5
159,054 Feb. and Aug. Feb.*65

298,778

North American*
50
North River
25
Northwestern (Oswego). 50Pacific
25
Park
100!
Peter Cooper
20

Jau. ’66 .5
Feb. ’66..5
Jau.’66 ..5
Oct. ’65.. .5
Jan. '66 .7
Mar. '64..5

.

do
146.024 Feb. and
72,880
262,121 Jan. and
do
141,396
do
169,340
do
230,229
162,744 May and
225,241 Jan. and
do
590,147

150,000

Niagara

80#

July*04.3#

255.112

200.000

Nassau (Brooklyn)
50;
National
37#!
New Amsterdam
25
New World
50
N. Y. Cent (Union Sp.).100
N. Y. Equitable
35
N. Y. Fire and Mar
100

5

.

25

(Brooklyn).. 50
Mechanics’ and Traders’ 25

Aug4 p. ah.

i July *65

227,675 J Jan. and July, j July ’61 .5
401,922 April and Oct. Oct. ’65.7#
246,853 Jan. and July, Jan. ’66 .5

Long Island (Brooklyn). 50

Lincoln Fund

.4

.

Jau. ’66 .10

299.03S i March and Sep

403,183

..100

July ’64

474.177
do
306,652 Feb. and Aug.
289,454 Jan. and July,
495,466
do
do
229,835
239,144 ! eb. and Aug.
269,319 ! Jan. and July,

200,000

Irving

Cherry Run Petrol’m

440,OS4!Jan. and July.; Jan. '66...
203,363! Jan. and July. I Jan. ’06 3#
529,167;Jan. and July. Jan. 65.. .5
270,8271 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’66...5
347,723; March and Sep Sep. ’65..5 106
192,631 May and Nov.
233,536!Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65. .4
319,027!June and Dec. j Dec. '65.. .5
132,306'Jan. and July. I June '64. .5
264,366iFeb. aud Aug.i Feb. ’66. .5
do
249,764!
Aug. '65.10

Hoffman
Home

International

|

200,645

300.000

Importers’ and Traders’. 50
Indemnity
100

California
Central..

35
4 10
35
55
20

New York & Newark
Noble Well of N. Y.
North American
Northern Light
Oceanic
Oil City Petroleum.
Oil Creek of N. Y....
Pacific
Palmer Petroleum...

6 50
1 00

10

Asked.

3 00

N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons.

”**37*

40
75

|

187,407;..

Harmony (F. & M.)+— 50

50
100

Bradley Oil
Buchanan Farm
Bunker Hill

July ’66. ..5

159,602

200,000

15;

5

do

37
4 25

36
5 25

Bid.

Montana
Mount Vernon
N. Y. & Alleghany ..
N. Y. & Philadel....

.•

Brooklyn

224,667 Jau. and July, ;July’65 ..5
do
221,062
!July’64 ..4
261,138 Feb. and Aug. j Aug. '65. .7
214,373 jApril aud Oct. ! Apr. ’65. .5

200.000

j

3.2

Blood Farm..

Companies.

Maple Shade of N. Y.
Mingo

18 50

..

Brevoort

491,869

Howard
Humboldt

paid.

200,000

50!

50

Last

100.000

—

Hope

Periods.

211,492!
122,2481

85
00

18 25
30

Bergen Coal and Oil.
Bliven

200,000
200,000
150,000
400.000

50
100

dividend.

282,243 April and Oct.;
500,000 1,174.929 ! Jan. and July. |

40

Eagle
Empire City

Beekman
Bennehoff Reserve..
Bennehoff Run

2uo,ooo;

200,000
200,000

.100

.

Commercial
Commonwealth
Continental*

500,000

50

Asked.

Alleghany
Allen Wright

STOCK LIST.

31,1804.

Bid.

Adamantine Oil

INSURANCE

Companies.

July., Jan. ’G6.3#

1 fan. ’66.3#

Jan. *66.8#
581,669.Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66...2

85#

American Fire
Artie Fire..
./Etna Fire
Atlantic Mutual..
Adriatic Fire
Beekman Fire

$68,188
Fire

Columbian

City Fire
Clinton Fire
Continental

Citizens’ Fire.

Exchange Fire.

74,503

Excelsoir

48,057
86,964
82,210
59,507
864,155
71,437
56,545

Empire City Fire
Firemen’s
Firemen’s Fund
Fulton Fire
Goodhue Fire

Humboldt Fire

Aggregate

.

64,001
85,561
63,948
164,632
4,253,568
274,345
57,548
67,282
448,041

72,944

Eagle Fire

Hope Fire

250,798
321,663
92,523
59,183
69,650
69,705

200,309

...

Grocers’ Fire
Germania Fire...
Gebhard Fire
Gallatin Fire
Great Western
Home
Hanover Fire
Hamilton Fire

Harmony Fire and Marino....

72,973
6,358,000
92,853
77,293
30,900
103,868

Brevoort

Commercial Mutual

107.417

45,919
143,954
293,478

..

Broadway
Commercial Fire—
Commercial Fire
Central Park Fire
Croton Fire

Howard

v

188,981
46,926

20,375
1,056,580
1,926,920
120,124
42,073
55,353

199,064

International Fire
:
Irving Fire
Importers’and Traders’

;

..

Jefferson
Knickerbocker
Lorillard Fire
Lunar Fire

398,402

Liverpool and London Globe

U. S. branch
Market Fire
Mercantile Mutual

162,546
1,079,192

:

Mercantile Fire
Merchants’
Manhattan Fire
Mechanics’ and Traders’
Niagara Fire

North American Fire
National Fire
New-York Fire and Marine...
New-York Equitable
Orient Fire.

212,979
813,945
64,771
130,766
524,997
63,318
1S7,971
266,000
51,922
87,821
73.158

169,507
97,126
107,863

Royal, of Liverpool & London
Rjesolute Fire
Republic Fire
143,486
Relief Fire
170,387
Sun Mutual.
Standard Fire
St. Nicholas
St. Mark’s Fire

1,400,850
90,166
97,760

Security

1,089,585
44,991
328,122
245,109
317,586
72,782
94,706

Uuited States Fire
Union Mutual

Washington.
Washington Marine
Lennox

New Amsterdam

41,966

$27,518,582

Insurance

INSURANCE.

MARINE AND FIRE

STATEMENT OF THE BUSINESS

National Bank of Amer-

AND CONDI¬

COMPANY.

108 & 110 BROADWAY
DAY OF DECEMBER, 1865.

ON THE 3 1st

Unearned Premiums, Jan. 1, 1865

in 1865, as follows :
$537,380 55
.844,905 88

Premiums received
On Marine Risks
On Fire Risks

$319,661 96

1,382,285 93

$1,701,947 89

Total Premiums
Premiums marked off as
earned from January 1 to
Less

1,295,3-46 06

Net earned Premiums
Losses paid during the year:
On Marine Risks.$332,997
On Fire Risks.... 373,397

DIRECTORS.

C. G. Weaver of Winn & Weaver, 61 Barclay St. N.Y.
F. W. Bacon of F. W. Bacon & Co., 81 John st, N.Y.
E. H. Arnold of H. Arnold & Co., 162 Fulton st, N.Y.
Henry L. Day, Oil Merchant, Trenton, N. J. *
J. II. Carpenter, Grocer, 225 Grove st, Jersey City.
100.000

Jersey City, Dec. 12, 1865.
The books of subscription to the National Bank of
America are now open, at the Banking House, No.
11 Exchange Place, Jersey City, andatMessrs.
& Weavers, 61 Barclay St., New York, for $100,000
additional capital, payable in installments, as follows:
Ten per cent on the 1st days of January, March, May,

the

of Government

COMPANY,
NO. 135 BROADWAY.

Ninth National Bank,

275,340 53

Free of Government

was

THIS DAY

1,139,731 16

$155,614 90

Net Profit
CAFITAL.

capital of the said Company actual¬

ly paid up in cash is
the 1st day of January,

The surplus on
1866...

$1,000,000 00
644,148 48

Capital and Surplus.. $1,644,14S 48

ASSETS—JANUARY

1, 1866.

Amount of cash on hand
•
and in bank
i
$170,535 50
Amount of cash on hands
I lof agents and in course
of transmission
....
73,420 57
Amount of U. S. 6’s of

New York, January
held this day, and the

Directors return their thanks.
The

following is

explanation we will say, that during the fiscal
year, we have paid two Dividends of Five per cent
each, and the government taxes.
In

Dividends

Deposits

181,136 43
25,150 75

And

82,550 90

outstanding Certificates of Profits to the hold¬

thereof, or their legal representaties, on and after
Monday, the 5th of March next; also a dividend of
FIVE PER CENT.
the Capital Stock of the .Company,
Cash on demand; also a dividend of

on

payable in

TWENTY-FIVE PER CENT,

earned Participating Premiums
the year 1865, for which Certifi¬
on and after the 2d day of April

next.

Directors.

exhibit

an

mand, January 11,1866.

Henry Parish,
Dudley B Fuller,
John A. Graham,
Gilbert L. Beeckman,
Charles P. Kirkland,
Joseph B. Varnum, Jr.,
Watson E. Case,
Lorrain Freeman,
Edward Macomber,
J. Lorimer Graham, Jr.,
Samuel D. Bradford,
Geo. W. Hatch,

On the

earnings of the last six months we have
that is Five per cent on the Capital
Stock, and applied it to the extinguishment of the
premium account; and although the Stockholders do
not get this Five per cent in a dividend, yet it is re¬
presented in the United States Stocks held by the
From the

taken $50,000,

Bank.

During the past year, your Bank became a mem¬
Clearing House Association,
by a unanimous vote of that body.
Our Deposits have been large, at times during the
ber of the New York

INSURANCE COMPANY.
NEW YORK, Jan. 11, 1866.
A dividend of four per cent, free from government
tax, has been declared, payable on and after the 15th

instant.

W. H. DUSENBERRY,

Secretary.

DIVIDEND.

North American Fire
INSURANCE COMPANY.
No. 114 BROADWAY, y
New York, Jan. 9,1866.
The Board of Directors have this day declared an
interest dividend of Five Per Cent, free of Govern¬
ment tax, on the capital stock, payable on demand.
R. W, BLEECKER, Secretary.

Standard Fire Insurance
COMPANY.
No. 11

WALL STREET.
New

York, Jan. 9, 1866.

Twelfth Dividend.—The usual semi-annual divi¬
dend of Five Per Cent has this day been declared,

payable

on

demand, free of tax.

WM. M. ST. JOHN, Secretary.

OFFICE OF THE

year

Hoffman Fire Insurance

lars ;

COMPANY,

reaching almost Twenty-one Millions of Dol¬
but that was during the time the people were
rushing to us with patriotic zeal, to offer their money
to their Country, now we can take the deposits of
the business community; and we hold ourselves in
readiness to Discount

good business paper, payable

Such papor being based on the sale
of commodities, is in our opinion the safest business
at short dates.

a

bank

can

do.
WILLIAM A. IvOBBE,
THOMAS A. VYSE, Jr.,
GEO. A. WICKS,
BARNET L. SOLOMON.
GEO. A. FELLOWS,
SOLOMON L. HULL,
CHAS. MINZESHEIMER,

Officers :

Secretary.
Neyr York, January 23,1866.

New Amsterdam Fire

FIFTY-SIXTH

CAPITAL STOCK.

Secretary.

OFFICE OF THE

actual

NINETEEN PER CENT

JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, President. '
ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice-President.
JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, Jr., 2d Vice-Presi¬




00
56
58
00
63

of

ers

dent.
H. H. PORTER,

COMPANY,

NO. 50 WALL STREET.
A semi-annual dividend of five per cent, free of tax,
has been declared by this Company, payable on de¬

SURPLUS,
Over and above all losses, expenses, and dividends,

PERJCENT.

John C. Henderson,
Gustavus A. Conover,
Martin Bates,
Paschal W. Turney,
Franklin H. Delano,

now

Secretary.

Lamar Fire Insurance

$9,591,848 77

dividend of

Joseph B. Yarnum,
Bowes R. Mcllvaine,
Frederick H. Wolcott,
Win. K. Strong,

unpaid

Circulation

222,890 00

marine

James Lorimer Graham,
Robert M. C. Graham,
Edward A. Stanabury,

$1,000,000
192,204
53,336
894,940
7,451,367

Capital stock
Surplus profit after paying dividend.

policies issued at

in scrip, on the net
of the Company for
cates will be issued

s J. B. THOMPSON, Jr.,

LIABILITIES.

45,395 85
sued at office
........
Amount of hills receivable
for premiums on marine
risks
92,280 13
Interest due and accrued,
but not yet payable
11,288 35 $1,644,148 48
The Board of Directors have this day resolved to

the

the 15th inst.

$9,591,848 77

premiums on policies is¬

on

959,171 71
756,111 23

other banks

Due from banks and bankers

18,000 00

SIX

day declared a semi-annual dividend of five (5) per
fter
cent, free of government tax, payable on ana aft<

ISAAC R. ST. JOHN,

office...

pay a

2,382,294 66

648,700 00

securities

Amount due from

on

)

j
DIVIDEND.—The Board of Directors have thia

.

$3,596,645 63
1,884,625 54
13,000 00

Government securities

Checks and bills

Amount ol loans on bonds
and mortgages,
being
first lien of record, on

ums on

COMPANY,

SEVENTEENTH DIVIDEND.

Specie and legal tender

500 00

sury notes
•
Amount of bank stocks
and other miscellaneous

unincumbered real estate
Amount of loans on collat¬
eral, payable on demand
Amount of other miscel¬
laneous items
Amount due for fire premi¬

Lafayette Fire Insurance
No. 347 Fulton-st.,
Brooklyn. Jan. 9,1866.

STATEMENT.

Furniture and fixtures

13,300 00

bonds

Amount of U. S. compound
interest notes
Amount of U. S. 7-30 Trea¬

OFFICE

the Banks:

Loans and discounts

7,009 00

'

JOHN McGEE, Secretary.

RESOURCES.

3-

S..5-20 6 per

Statement of the condition of

a

by the Board of Directory, payable on de¬

mand.

TUESDAY MORNING, Jan. 2, 1866,

107,000 00

1881
Amount of U. S. 10-40 5 per

Declared

9,1866.

undersigned
were unanimously re-elected Directors for the ensu¬
ing year. For this renewed and flattering expression
of confidence on the part of the Stockholders, the
was

—

cent

Tax,

TO THE STOCKHOLDERS.

The Election

bonds

York, Jan. 25, 1866.

New
A dividend of

FIVE PER CENT,

(less interest received)..

cent

Insurance

Home

Commissions and Taxes

Amount of U.

'

CENT,

Capital Stock of the Company ($500,000), free
Tax, payable on and after February
10th, 1866.
Conversion and Transfer Books will be closed fro..
the 5th to the 10th day of February, inclusive.
M. n. BERGEN, Secretary.
January 17th, 1866.

on

THE ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTORS

157,995 99

Total amount of

Company have this day de¬

ONE PER

January,

OF THE

°
Reinsurance,

The

(

York. )

FIRST DIVIDEND.
The Trustees of this
clared a dividend of

Winn

$706,394 64

justed

$500,000

AUTHORIZED CAPITAL
CASH CAPITAL

07
57

Total Losses
Reserved for losses unad¬

Expenses,

Office of the Company,
78 Broadway, New

G. L. HAWKINS, Cash.

WEAVER, Pres.

July, September, and November, 1866, and
March, May, and July, 186J.

$1,398,532 24
Return Premiums...
103,186 18

December 31,1866

COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA.

11 EXCHANGE PLACE.

THE

Metropolitan Insurance

York Petroleum

New

ICA, OF JERSEY CITY,
C. G.

OFFICE,

Dividends.

Bank Reports.

Reports.

TION OF

125

THE CHRONICLE.

January 27, I860.]

J. O.

No. 161 Broadway,
New York, Jan. 9, 1863.

The Board of Directors of this Company have this
day declared a Dividend of Five (5) Per Cent, free of
Government tax, payable on the 20th instant.
JOSEPH W. WILDEY, Secretary,

Niagara Fire Insurance
COMPANY.

I

.

THIRTY-FIRST DIVIDEND.

WHITEHOUSE,

The Directors have this day declared a
nual Dividend of
SIX PER CENT,

HILL, Cashier.

President.

Semi-An¬

(reserving all unexpired premiums), payable on and
Monday, the 15th instant.
J. D. STEELE Presi
P. Notman, Secretary.

after

JOSEPH U. ORVIS,

OFFICE NO. 12 WALL STREET.

Directors.

JOSEPH U. ORVIS,
JOHN T.

|

f

126

THE

OFFICE OF

Steamship and Express Co’s.

A L I F O R N I A

NO. 84

MAIL,
LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIVER, FOOT
of Canal street, at 12 o’clock noon, on the
1st, 11th
21st of every month (except when those dates fall on

Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s
steamships from Pan¬
ama for SAN
FRANCISCO, touching at ACA¬
PULCO.

DECEMBER:
1st—HENRY

CIIAUNCEY, Captain Gray, con¬
necting with CONSTITUTION, Capt. Farns¬
worth.

11th—ATLANTIC, Capt. Maury, connecting with
CITY, Capt. " ”
~
Bradbury.

21st—NEW

YORK, Capt. Horner, connecting with
COLORADO, Capt. Watkins.
Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with
steamers for South Pacific ports.
Those of 1st touch
at Manzanillo.

Through Passage Pates, in Currency.
First Cabin.
Second Cabin.
Steerage.

$350
$250
$126
discount of one-fourth from steamers’rates allow¬
ed to second cabin and
steerage passengers with
families.
One Hundred Pounds

SHIPPERS OF FREIGHT TO THE PACIFIC
COAST will please take notice that, having been ap¬

pointed Freight Agents of the Pacific Mail Steam¬
ship Company, we are now prepared to receive
Freights for California, Oregon, Nevada, Washing¬
ton Territory, Sandwich Islands, Central America,
and Western Coast of South America.
For rates apply at onr ofiice, No. 84

Broadway,

on dock, foot of Canal street.
Steamers will sail on the 1st, 11th and 21st

Freight Office

or
«

of each

month; those dates falling on Sunday, on preceding
Saturday.

freight received on day of sailing.
Freight must be delivered on dock foot of Canal
street.
Bills of
Our usual

Lading will he issued at No. 84 Broadway.
Package Express will be sent bv each

steamer, and will close at 10

a. m., on

sailing^days.

Our Letter Bags will close at 11)6 a. m. For con¬
venience of our up-town customers, a letter bag will
be kept at the Metropolitan Hotel, and on the dock
foot of Canal street.
Our franked envelopes will be on sale at the office
of the hotel, and at our offices, No. 84 Broadwa}7 and
Canal street dock.
All letters sent through us must be in Government

envelopes.

Sight Exchange on San Francisco for sale.
Telegraphic transfers of money made to all points
reached by the wires on West Coast.
California Coupons
bought at best rates.
Exchange on Dublin and London, £1 and upwards.
On Paris, in s
to suit. For sale by
WELLS, F4 RGO & €0.

Baggage allowed each adult.

Baggage masters accompany baggage through, and
to

ladies and children without male
protec¬
tors.
Baggage received on the dock the day before
sailing from steamboats, railroads and passengers
who prefer to send down early.
An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and
attendance free.
A steamer will be placed on the line
January 1st,
1866, to run from New Orleans to Aspinwall, via Ha¬
vana.

For passage

tickets

further information, apply
on the wharf, foot of

or

Company’s ticket ofiice,

Canal street,

North River.

F. W. G.

BELLOWS, Agent.

FOR

SAVANNAH, GA.,
Every Saturday.
The

Elegant Side-Wheel Steamships

SAN

SALVADOR,

COAL

Buy

your

Stock in

AT COST !
an

Established Company.

The Consumers’
Benefit Coal Co.,

SAN

transportation, and delivery.

Commander, Winslow Loveland,
1,500 Tons Burthen each.
Have been placed on the route to Savannah by
the Atlantic Mail Steamship Company of New7 York,
and are intended to be run by them in a manner to
meet the first-class requirements of the trade.
The Cabin accommodations of these ships are not
excelled
any Steamers on the coast, ana although
their carrying capacity is large, their draught of water enables them to insure a passage without deten¬
tion iu the riverSan Jacinto, Sat. Feb. 3
San Salvador, “
“ 10
San Jacinto,
“
“ 17

Returning, Leave Savannah,

every

Saturday, at 3

o’clock. P. M.
Bills of Lading furnished and signed on
For further particulars, engagement of

Passage, apply to

SHARES, $10 EACH.
Each share of stock entitles the holder to purchase
ton per year AT ACTUAL COST of mining,

JACINTO,

San Salvador, Sat. Jan. 13
San Jacinto,
“
“
20
San Salvador, “
“ 20

Has been organized nearly six months, and has de¬
livered to the Shareholders all the Coal they are en¬
titled to up to the present time; and it ha* given
entire satisfaction.
References given on application
at the ofiice of the Company, where a list of subscri¬
bers who have been supplied can be examined.

one

Commander, Joshua Atkins, and

the Pier.
Freight or

GARRISON & ALLEN, Agents.
5 Bow ling Green, N. Y.

Agent at Savannah, B. H. Hardee.

At present prices of

<
oal, the PROFIT to shareholders is equal to a Di¬
vidend of 40 per Cent on their Stock.
A tew more subscriptions will be received at the
office of the c ompany during the present season, and
order for a portion of the Coal taken at the same
time.
Twelve shares entitle the holder to one ton
pemonth, or fifty shares one ton per week, or that
ratio.

*
Refer bv Persiission.
Jambs O. Smith, M.D., No. 81 Clinton Place.
James E. Ward, M.D., No. 16 Easttf.’ld Street.
Robert Buck, Cashier Pacific National Bank, No. 470

Broadway.
Daniel C.

Robbins, Brooklyn, of McKesson & Rob¬
bins, Druggists, No. 91 Fulton stre-t, New York.
Brooklyn, of White & Bohm, Gro¬
cers, No. *.45 Wiishin-ton stre. t, New York.
Hinry IIarmks, Hoboken, Grocer, No. 2S6 Washing¬
ton street, New York.
M. R. Case, Jersey City, of Reeve. Case & Banks,
Grocers, Nos. 67 and 69 Front street, New Y"ork.
Gf.o. Davis, office No. 1 Cortlandt street, New York.
Messrs. J. W. Bricher & uo., No. 129 West 29th
street, New Y"ork.
Hkrter Bf.os., No 547 Broadway, and No. 107 Mercer
street, New York.
Rev. J am s G. Craighead, Editor, No. 5 Beekman
John H. White,

t

American Line

street

Agricultural

WESTERN METROPOLIS,

Implements,'

CHAS. HOYER, Commander.

on

the 17th March.

PRICE OF

$105 00

SECOND CABIN
STEERAGE

37 50

Machinery, & Hardware
for

the

experienced Surgeon on board.
Company will not be responsible for specie

valuables unless bills of
are

SOUTHERN AND FOREIGN TRADE

lading, having the value

signed therefor.
steamship will

first-class

B. H. ALLEN A:

leave

freight or passage apply to
HUGER BROTHERS Agents, 45 Beaver st.




CO.,

21st

March.
or

rate of

premium

TIIE

FIRST

on gold.
YEAR’S INTEREST

ALREADY

The most desirable investment

ever

PROVIDED.

offered.

Subscriptions received and full particulars commu
by
JOHN W. CORLIES & CO.,

nicated

No. 57

-

Broadway, New York.

Subscriptions also received by Banks and Bankers
generally throughout the United States.

Union Trust
OF NEW
73

Company,
YORK,

BROADWAY, COR. OF RECTOR >T.

$1,000,009

INTEREST ALLOWED ON

DEPOSITS,

WHICH MAY BE MADE AND WITHDRAWN AT
ANY TIME.

TRUSTEES.
ISAAC II. FROTHINGHAM. President.
JOHN Y. L. PRUYN, ) v.
p
.,
ANDPEW V. STOUT,
A. A. Low, 31 Burling Slip.
Samuel G. Wheeler, Jr., 54 Wall Street.
Edward B. Wesley, 22 William Street.
William R. Travers, 19 William Street.
Andrew Carrigau, 61 Chambers Street.
Horace F. Clark, 65 Wall Street.
J. Boorman Johnson, 91 Broadway.
James K. Waterbury, Brooklyn, E.D.
Freeman Clark, Rochester, N.Y~.
Amasa J. Parker, Albany,
Allen Munroe, Syracuse,
“
Wm. F. Russell, Saugerties, “
Daniel C. Howell, Bath, “

Benj. H. Hutton, 145 Duanne Street.
Francis Skiddy, 101 Wall Street.
David Dows, 29 $outh Street.
Daniel Develin, 237 Broadway.

Henry E. Davies, 43 Wall Street.
Henry K. Bogert, 49 William Street.
George W. Culver, Palmyra, N.Y".

Peter
Albany,
“
Alfred A. Howlett, Sj-racuse,
James Forsyth, Troy,
“
Jonathan W. Freeman, Troy, “
John Mageee, Watkins,
“

Cagger,

W. F. Aldrich,

Crushers and
THE BEST AND

Secretary*

Pulverizers,

FOR WET OR RRY

WORKING,

CHEAPEST IN THE WORLD

MANUFACTURED

BY

THE

BOSTON MILLING AND MANUFACT¬
URING COMPANY,
195 STATE

STREET, BOSTON, MASS.
purchase machinery beforeseiDg, or
sending their friends to examine, the practical workin" of this series of
machinery.
JbiF” The Whirling Table, or Crusher, weighs less
than two tons, and crashes from ten to twelve^tons of
ore per hour to fine
gravel, or two hundred and fifty
tons in twenty-four hours.
The Pulverizer weighs two tons, and pulverizes to
dust infinitely finer than stamp work,
thirty-four
hundred lbs per hour, or thirty six tons per diem,
equal
to the yield of forty stamps; and the first cost and
wear, as compared to this number of stamps, is about
one-tenth—the entire yield being fit for
amalgamation
Miners should not

without further reduction.
The fine dust is not ob¬
tained by screening, but by the immediate action of the
Pulverizer.
.

linite iron.
Let miners and their friends carefully study the
prac¬
tical working of all other machines and
processes offer¬
ed, and then see ours working in East Boston, Mass.
We ask only this.
>
.
All our machines are now made in our own
shop. No
Contract Work.
Address—

Or CHARLES H.

189 & 191 Water

Street,

New

York,

STORES,

Agent and Treasurer,
1(>5 State Street, Boston.

GARDNER,

16 Courtlandt

Street, New York.

Southern Land,

The

Another

FRINOIPAL AND INTBRBST PAYABLE in Gold.
TEN MILLION DOLLARS in Bonds to be sold at
sixty cbnt8 on the dollar in U. S.
Currency. The in¬
terest thus equaling twelve pkr cent in gold, or
sEVEfTEEN per cent in U. S. Currency, at present

General

62 50

xpressed,

city of New York.

PASSAGE, PAYABLE LNT GOLD :

FIRST CABIN

An

$50, $100, $500 & $1,000.

Interest 7 per cent, payable semi-annually in the

JACOB J.

Being thoroughly refitted, for passengers, for the
ocean service, will leave for
BREMFN, calling at
COWES,

OF

Fifteen horse-power, net, is the maximum power re¬
one machine.
The cost of wear per ton is less than by
any other
machine.
All wearing parts are now made of Frank-

Steamship Co.’s First-Class Mail Steamship
2,600 Tons, 1,000 Horse-Power,

SUMS

quired tor

TO
£VGL4ND & BREMEN.
■THE NORTH AMERICAN LLOYD

IN

J^ico-Pitsidents.

Miscellaneous.

OFFICE, 71 BROADWAY, N. Y., (room 50,)

Empire Line

TWENTY-YEAR COUPON BONDS,

CASH CAPITAL^..

attend

at the

Republic of Mexico.

BROADWAY", NEW YORK.

No slow

TW’N
GOLDEN

OF TUB

,

TOUCHING AT MEXICAN PORTS,
AND
CARRYING THE U. S.

Mexico!

$30,000,000 LOAN.

NEW YORK AND CALIFORNIA EX¬
PRESS AND EXCHANGE CO.,

THROUGH LINE

C

Mexico!

Wells, Fargo & Co.,

PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S

To

[January 27, 1866.

CHRONICLE.

Emigra

TION AND PRODUCT COMPANY.
No. 71 BROADWAY, near Wall St, N. Y.,
Offers for sale 4,000,000 ®cres of the finest and most
valuable Land in the Southern States, at exceedingly
low prices.
Tracts from 1,000 to 500,000 acres.
Cotton Plantations, Farms, Mineral and Timber
Lands, etc. Iron Works and Furnaces, Coal Lands,
Silver Mines, etc.

Titles guaranteed

W, H. QUINCY,
Secretary

i

January

127

THE CHRONICLE.

27,1866.]

Banks and Bankers.

Insurance.

Dry, Goods.

Tenth National Bank,

Gardner, Brewer & Co., The Mercantile Mutual
62

York, and 57
Boston,

Federal Street,

No. 240 BROADWAY..

COMPANY.

INSURANCE

Leonard Street, New

,

OFFICE No. 35 WALL STREET,

NEW YORK.

Designated Depository of the Government.
D. L. ROSS, President.

J. H. 8TOUT, Cashier.

Langdon Manufactur

and Stark Mills.

ing Co.,

The Company has paid to its Customers, up
present time, Losses amounting to over

profits, have amounted in the

Miscellaneous.

Kroll & Co.,

Geo. Fred.

LAND AGENCY,

UNITED STATES

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

REAL ESTATE, of all des¬
criptions, in differeut sections of the country, on COM¬
MISSION. having made extensive arrangements for
reliable information in relation to the value, location,
Will

purchase and sell

and advantages

of different localities.

small Tracts of Land, Plantations, Farms
Lands, will receive particular attention.
Loans negotiated and Emigration facilitated.
Business promptly attended to.

Large and
and Mineral

NO. 60

AGRICULTURAL

Commission.
European Agencies for the sale of properties and to
encourage emigration are being establi4hed.
A. N. MEYLERT,
JOHN BRANNON,
of New York.
of West Virginia.
States, on

Insurance.

Mutual Insurance

Sun

COMPANY.

STREET.

49 WALL

ASSETS,Oct, 4, 1864

-

-

-

,

CENT.

Company insures against Marine Risks on
Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland
This

Navigation Risks.
Premiums paid in gold will be entitled to a return
premium in gold.
MOSES H. GRINNELL, Pres't.
EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres't
Isaac H. Walker, Sec'y.

Marine & Fire Insurance.
METROPOLITAN INSURANCE CO.,
NO. 108
Cash Capital
Assets Nov. 1,

$1,000,000
1,600,000

1865, over

Company insures at customary rates

mium against all Marine
on

Fire.

Lf Premiums are paid in Gold, Losses

in Gold.
'
The Assured receive

will he paid

.

twenty-five percent ofthe net
profits, without incurring any liability, or, in lieu
thereof, at their option, a liberal discount upon the
premium.

equitably adjusted and promptly paid.
Scrip Dividend declared Jan. 10, 1855,

All losses

FIFTY PER CENT.
JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, President,
ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice President,
JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, Jr., 2d V. P.
Henry H. Porter, Secretary.

REMOVAL.
THE OFFICE OF THE

including Risks

COMPANY
Has been removed to




Culver, Penn & Co.,

TRUSTEES.

BANKERS,

Aaron L. Reid,

19 & 21 NASSAU

Elhvood Walter,
D. Colden Murray,
E. Haydock White,
N. L. McCready,
Daniel T. Willetts,

Samuel Willets,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. Frost,
William Watt,

ular attention.
Special attention is given to the trans¬
action of all business connected with the Treasury

Departme lit.
A.

Attends to business of Banks A
on liberal terms.
J. W.

.Sec'y.

BUILDING,

BROADWAY.

$1,000,000
270,353

Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid.
Chartered 1850.
Cash Dividends paid in 15 years
253 per cent.

JONATHAN D. STEELE, President.

Insure

against Accidents
A TRAVEL¬

COMPANY.

BROADWAY, N. Y.
OPPOSITE CITY HALL PARK.
EDWARD A. JONES, President.

AUTHORIZED CAPITAL,
$500,000
Is now prepared to issue GENERAL ACCIDENT
INSURANCE TICKETS from one to twenty days.
These tickets insure against ACCIDENTS o every
description for $5,000 in case of DEATH, or $25 per
week COMPENSATION for disabling accidents.
TARIFF OF RATES.
“

“

2
3

day
“

25c. I Tickets for 8 days......$2
50c. I
“
3
12 “

M
75c.
“ .$1 25c.

“

20

“

I

4

30 “
5
Iusurance on above tickets commences at 6 o’clock
A. M., 12 o’clock noon, 6 o’clock P- M.
REMEMBER THAT 25 CENTS per day insures
you for $5,000.
ASHER S. MILLS, Secretary:
“

W. E.

5

RANKERS,
BOSTON.
GOLD, STOCK, AND BOND BPwOKERS.
Personal attention given to the purchase and sale of
Stocks and Bonds at the Boston Brokers’

Board.

Page, Richardson & Co,,
114 STATE STREET,

BOSTON, 1

ON LONDON

AND

243

Tickets for 1

Burnett, Drake & Co.,

BILLS OF EXCHANGE

NOTMAN, Secretary.

THE NATIONAL LlPE
LERS’ INSURANCE

A

Messrs. L. S. LAWRENCE & CO.

COMPANY.
NO. 12 WALL STREET.

P.

EXCHANGE OFFICE,
St., CHICAGO, ILL.
Collections made on all parts of the Northwest.
Stocks, Bonds, Gold, and Government Securities
bought and sold on commission, either in New York
or Chicago, and carried on margins when desired.
New York correspondent and reference,

MORRIS, Pres't.

CASH CAPITAL,
SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865

TORREY, Cashier.

36 DEARBORN

Niagara Fire Insurance
'

Bankers

Hutchings Badger,

B.

BANKING

favorable TerD»s

Wm. M. Whitney

BANK,

PHILADELPHIA.

AUTHORIZED CAPITAL - - - $5,000,000.00
CAPITAL, paid in, & Surplus, 885,040.57
Policies of Insurance against loss or damage by Fire
B. C.

$500,000

Exchange

NATIONAL

CASH

the most

"j

WHILLDIN, V. Pres’t f

The Co rn

Morris Fire and Inland

on

J Capital,

I

A. a. GATTELL, Pres’t

OFFICE OF THE

issued

STREET, NEW YORK,

Receive Deposits from Ranks, Rank¬
ers and Otliers.
Orders for the Purchase and
Sale of Government Securities receive partic¬

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. Fisn,
A. William Heye,
tteo. W. Hennings, Harold Dolner,
Francis Hathawav, Paul N. Spofford.
ELLW60D WALTER, President,
CIIAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest.
C. J Despard, Secretary.

“

JOHN MUNROE Ac
ALSO

Mutual Life Insu.

NEW YORK.

CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1865, over $13,500,000 00
FREDERICK S. WINSTON. President.
R. A. McCURDY, Vice-President,
c,
■
Secretaries, (ISAAC ABBATT,
hTHE0. W. MORRIS.
Actuary, SHEPPARD

HOMANS.

CO., PARIS.

ISSUE

Commercial Credits for ♦he purchase of Merchan¬
dise in England and the Continent.
Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers
abroad.

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,
STOCK BROKERS,
STREET, BOSTON.

No. 22 STATE
JAMES A.

DUTEE,

JAMES BECK,

First National

HENRY SAYLES

Bank,

OF PHILADELPHIA.
(The First National Bank Organized.)
CAPITAL,
$1,000,000

This Bank invites the accounts of Country Banks
and Bankers; will allow four per cent interest on

daily balances, and make collections at most favorable
rates. Government Securities of all classes dealt in.

PRINCE, Vice-President.

RANCE COMPANY OF

No. 175

Sterling,

in Liver¬

pool.

Germania Fire Insurance The

THEIR NEW

AND

STREET, NEW YORK,
Issue Circular Letters of Cred I lor Travelers in al 1
parts of Europe, etc., etc. Als^ Oi mire rcial Credits.

Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight.
Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or

Joseph Walker,
James Freeland,

DE LA PAIX, PARIS,

No. 8 WALL

on

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

of pre¬
and Inland Navigation Risks
Cargo of Freight; also against loss or damage by

This

AMERICAN

No. 5 RUE

INSURANCE COMPANY,
81 PINE STREET, N. Y.
New York, July 1st, 1865.

$2,383,487 45

DIVIDEND THIRTY" PER

will be divided to

the stockholders.
This Company continues to make Insurance on
Marine and Inland Navigation and Transportation
Risks, on the most favorable terms,

buildings,)

(insurance

John Munroe & Co.,
BANKERS,

experience

Currency, at the Office in New York, or in
at the Office of Rathbone, Bros. & Co.,

Cashier.

W. H. FOSTER,

cash abatement or discount from the current rates,
when premiums are paid, as the general
of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬

maining at the close of the year,

President.

HENRY A. 3MYTHE,

dividend to dealers, based
on the principle that all classes of risks are equally
profitable, this Company will hereafter make such

in Pennsylvania

and unimproved
LANDS in the Southern and

and Canadas.

eent.

Instead of issuing a scrip

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,

Buy and sell MINERAL LANDS
and other States, and improved
Western

half per

descriptions of Government Bonds—
City and Country accounts received on terms most
favorable to our Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United States
Has for sale all

paid to
the net

and a

Hundred and Twenty-one

One

Land Co.,

The National

aggregate toj

£3,000,000.

Capital

58 MURRAY STREET.
For the past nine years the cash dividends
Stockholders, made from ONE-THIRD of

No. 57

318 BROADWAY.

to the

DOLLARS.

EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF

Commission merchants,

56 AND

Central National Bank,

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844.

Goodrich & Foster,
Domestic

$1,366,699

Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866

-

C. II. CLARK, President.
MORTON McMlCHAEL. Jr., Cashier.
GKO. PIIELLER, Manager Loan Dept

The Tradesmens
NATIONAL
291

CAPITAL

BANK.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
$1,000,000
RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier,

128

THE CHRONICLE.

[January 27, 1866.

Banks and Bankers,

Banks and Bankers-

Fire Insurance.

John J. Cisco Sc Son,
ANKERS,

Depew & Potter,

Germania Fire Ins. Co.,

JB

-

BANKERS,

No. S3 WALL

STREET, NEW YORK.
Negotiate Loans and Business Paper, make Collec¬
tions, purchase and sell Government and other Securi¬
ties on Commission, receive money on
deposit and

-

allow interest at the rate of four
per cent per annum,
on daily balances which
may be drawn at any time;
will issue Certificates of
or
Deposit bearing interest
payable en demand.
JOHN J. CISCO, of the U. S.
Treasury in N. Y
JOHN ASHFIELD CISCO.

JU. Jr'. iVioKTON

Co.,

,V

NO. H5

NO. 11 BROAD STREET, NEW
Allow interest at the rate of

CASH

FOUR PER CENT PER ANNUM ON DEPOSITS,
which may be checked for at
sight.
of

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.
Miscellaneous stocks and bonds bought and sold
on

commission.
Collections made promptly on all points.
HENRY W. POTTER.
CHAUNCERY M. DEPEW,

Bankers,

Union Bank of London,
n

sums

suit

to

Circular

.ssue

purchasers

Letters

Bank, for Travellers*

ot

and a!s-»

;

Credit,

,

Sf.cuki

for

Lawrence

Interest allowed

*

^

the Co

to

[In’i'lpnT

of

•

Deposits, subject

nr.

Cheques at sight.
Prompt attention given
IlOU

abroad

•

t

cc'

r

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,

Co.,

$3,800,439
123,077

NEW

OF

JAMES A.

For the

use

W. GOODMAN,

Copartnership.
MILNOR,

(Of the late firm
Is admitted

Agency, and Designated

Depository of tlie United States.
Orvis, Pres’t
John T. Hill, Cash’r.

Joseph U.

THE
■

OF THK

CITY OF NEW YORK.

BROADWAY, COR. FRANKLIN.
J. U.

J. T.

ORVIS, President.

HILL, Casliier.

New York.

No. 94 BROADWAY AND No. 6 WALL ST.
Dealers In Government and other Se¬
curities.

.Interest allowed upon deposits of gold and currency,
subject to check at sight Gold loaned to merchants
and bankers upon

favorable terms.

Special attention given to consignments of Cotton.

Lands.

ship plantation machinery of
every description—steam engines, saw mills,
grist
mills, &c., <£c., of latest style and improvement.
Also, railroad equipment and supplies purchased
without delay.
36 New

AND

PLACE,
BROKERS.

Dinsmore, Jr

Ranking and Collecting Office of

T. Nelson
J
243

Luckey,

BROADWAY,

Intorest allowed on call deposits at the rate o four
per cent; on deposits of three months and over, five
per cent, and six per cent on deposits of six months
and

over.

Any deposit may

be drawn

Jeremiah M. Wardwell,
(of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell & Co.)

Importer and Dealer
Commission

on ten days’

tention.

Best of references

Merchant,

given if required.

SAM L B. CALDWELL.

B. C.

Caldwell &
Successors to

Brewer

COTTON

Bk., N. Y., James Bnell, Pres. Imp. & Trad. Nat. Bk.,
N. Y.,8. K. Green, Pres. Sd-av.
Savings Bk., N. Y.,
N. L. Buxton, Irving Savings Bk., N. Y., Hon. Geo.
Cpdyke. Ex-Mayor, N. Y., Hon. James Harper, Ex-

MOKRIS, ,TR.

Morris,

prompt attention.

For circulars address

E. H.

82

COMMISSION

Oil and Salt

Meeting of the Stockholders, held
January 16th, the following persons were elected

Trustees to

REFER TO

Mechanics’ National Bank, N. Y.
Messrs. Gilman, Son & Co., Bankers, N. Y.
Messrs. Brown & Ives, Providence, R. I,

serve

for

one rear:

MINARD

W. WILSON,

HENRY W. WILSON,
CHARLES R. BRAIN.
CHARLES W. MILLER,
J< MES D. GIBLIN,
WILLIAM S. SMEETON,
M. H. BERGEN.
Subsequently, Minard W. Wilson was elected
President; M. H. Bergen, Secretary, and Charles R.

Braine, Treasurer.

OFFICE—78 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
Subscription hooks are now open at $2 per share.
M. II. BERGEN,
Secretary.

Francis Sc

Loutrel,

STATIONERS

ANR
PRINTERS,
45 MAIDEN LANE.

All kinds of Blank
tic) n ery.

Books, Diaries, Paper and Sta¬

Bankers, Merchants,

ST., NEW YORK.

Orleans, Mobile and Galveston,

Company.

At the annual

MERCHANTS,

Cash advances made on consignments of Cotton,
Wool, Hides and Naval Stores, by our friends in New

ASHCROFT,

Sudbury St., Boston, Mass.

SMITH’S FERRY & REAVER CREEK

Caldwell,

Co.,

GUAGES,

Gauge Cocks, Steam Whistles, Brass Globe Valves
Tubes, Boiler Pumps. Stock Plates and'
Dies, Tapps, Ratchet Drills, Low Water Detectors
&c., &c.

purchase of Goods will receive

Sc

AND WATER

Scotch Glass

General Commission
merchants,
20 OLD SLIP, NEW YORK.

NO. 24 WHITEHALL

son, Pres. 1st Nat. Bk., N. Y., A. N. Stout, Pres. Nat.
Shoe & Leath B’k, N. Y., W. H. Johnson, Pres. Han.

STEAM

FACTORS

bought and sold. Possessing every facility, will ex¬
ecute all orders and commissions at the
very best
market rates. Refer by permission to S. C.

Thomp¬

&

Sudbury Street,,
BOSTON.

AND

All orders for the

II. P. STURGIS & CO.

Manufacturer of and dealer in

Hardware,,

Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, &c.,

solicited.

Hoffman




in

STREET, NEW YORK.

notice, and interest allowed the same as deposits “on
call. Collections promptly made and returned with
quick dispatch. Government and other securities

Mayor, N Y.

City.

All orders entrusted to him will receive
prompt at¬

Railway Shares, Bonds, and Govern¬
ment Securities bought and sold.
W. T. Galwey, J. L. Kirkland, W. B.

Street,

New York

83 JOHN

STURGIS,

firm from this date.

ASHCROFT,
S2

lease of Southern

Will select, examine, make contracts
with and
forward emigrant laborers to Southern
planters.
Will purchase and

Galwey, Kirkland & Co.,
BANKERS

or

H.
No.

Tobacco and Wool.

and

49 EXCHANGE

E.

Merchants,

Co.,

BANKERS,

our

AND

Commission

GOODMAN & MERRILL,

Lockwood &

partner in

Boston, Jan. 1,1SG6.

and forwarded

July 22 1S65.

a

Mllnor,)

firm, from this date.
L. r. MORTON & CO.

our

MR. HENRY HOW ARD

Merrill,

Agents for the purchase, sale,

Ninth National Bank
363

General

of Babcock &

partner in

a

York, Jan. 1,1866.

Becomes

COTTON FACTOR S
-

Government

New

New York.

Goodman &

ALEXANDER, Agent.

MR. CHARLES E.

MERRILL, Jr.,

Mississippi.

of Travelers abroad and in the United

States, available in all the principal cities of the
world; also,
COMMERCIAL CREDITS,
For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good
Hope,
West Indies, South America, and the United States.

A. P.

AGENCY,

Special Notices.

Miscellaneous.

CREDIT,

YORK

No. 62 Wall Street.

ISSUE

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS

Kenky,

Liabilities,.

NO. 16 WALL STREET, N. Y.
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,
AND OTHER STOCKS,
BONDS, &c.,
bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only.
Deposits received subject to check at
sight, as
with Banks.
DEWITT C. LAWRENCE,
Member New York Stock Exchange.
CYRUS J. LAWRENCE,
JOHN R. CECIL.
late Butler, Cecil, Rawson & Co.
WM. A. HALSTED.

BANKERS,

Walter

Chas. H. Brainard,

Roland Mather,
William F. Tuttle,
Samuel S. Ward,
George Roberts,
Austin Dunham,
Thomas K. Brace,
Gustavu^ F. Davis,
Erastus Collins,
Edwin D. Morgan, of New York.
Assets, Jan. 1,1863,

Brothers

CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS.,

1819.

Drayton Hillyer,
Taos. A. Alexander,

Bukle,

Ebenezer Flower,
Eliphalet A. Bulkeley,

BANKERS,

✓

DIRECTORS.
Robert

&

Co.-

$2,250,000

Joseph Church

use.

: n-s e.ucu fed

Insurance

THOMAS A. ALEXANDER, President.
LUCIUS J. HENDEE, Secretary.
JONATHAN GOODWIN Jn., Asst.
Sec’y.

Galwey, Casado & Teller,
Caldwell & Morris.

Government

Orders

KAHL, Secretary.

INCORPORATED

if

Securities, Stacks a:u
Bonds bought and sold on CommLsion.

TERMS,

Capital

references :

thi*

on

T

Hartford, Conn.

GOVERNMENTS, &c

B. C. Morris,
Ilarhecks & Co.,

ON FAVORABLE

tEtna

At all the Stock Boards.

prepared to draw Sterling Hills of
Exchange, at sight, or sixty days, on the

*

KINDS AGAINST LOSS OR DAMAGE BY FIRE

STREET,

PETROLEUM AND MINING STOCKS,
RAILWAY SHARES,

Arc

THIS COMPANY INSURES PROPERTY OF
ALL

MAURICE HILGER, President*.
RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, Vice-Pres.

J. C. Morris,

NEW YORK.

$500,000,

WITH A LARGE SURPLUS.

4

JOHN E.

NO. 5 WIUUIAM
Broker in

WALL STREET,

CAPITAL,

Special attention given to the purchase and sale

(Late Secretary of State.)

35

BROADWAY, N. Y.

YORK,

And others should send

by the

HARNDEN
as

EXPRESS, 65 Broadway.
they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and

safe forwarding of
GOLD .SILVER, JEWELRY, & MERCHANDISE
of every description. Also for the collection of notes

drafts and bills, bills accompanying goods, etc.

S