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infprjaj Imhm’ fcettr, $owmevcutl ®im*ss, A Railway ^Unitor, awl gwswaucr jfmmial. WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. VOL. 2. SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1866. CONTENTS. Congress and the Banks The European Congress and the War Proposed Reduction of Canal Tolls The Bearings of a European War upon American Commerce.... Trade of Great Britain with the 737 738 739 740 Literature Latest Monetary Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks, Philadelphia Banka National Banks, etc Sale Prices N. Y. Stock 746 749 750 Exchange National, State, etc., Securities. and 744 Miscellaneous 745 - 751 752 Epitome 753 755 757 . Dry Goods Exports and Imports ». ... Prices Current and Tone of the Market 758-60 THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND Railway News Railroad, Canal, and MiecellaneBond List 43 and Commercial English News Commercial Cotton Breadstuffs Money Market, Railway Stocks, ous 742 GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. THE BANKERS U. S. Securities, 741 United States Analyses of Railroad Reports.... Commercial News INSURANCE JOURNAL. 764 761 I Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. 765 Insurance and Mining Journal... 762-63 | Advertisements 766-68 ®I)C CljrcrnicU. The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, with the latest news by rnail and telegraph up to midnight of Friday, A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all the Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to the hour of publication, TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Thk Commercial and Financial Chronicle, with The Daily Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, and mailed to all For others, (exclusive of postage). Fot The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, without The Daily Bulletin, (exclusive of postage) For The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Financial • $12 00 10 00 Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage) 5 00 Canvassing Agents have no authority to collect money. Postage is paid by subscribers at their oion post-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the. Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers, 60 William Street, New York. Neat for holding the Chronicle or Bulletin can be had at Price $L 50. Files Office. out-of-the-way * locality, and its notes cannot find home for redemption^ This has long been recognised by all financial authorities of eminence as the weakest point, the most dangerous fault, in the present system. We must acknowledge then that the Committe on Banking and Finance have done good service, by providing an effectual remedy for the evil. And this has been done by obliging every bank which issues notes to redeem them in legal tenders at its own counter, and also at some bank in New York, Philadelphia, or Boston. One result of this arrangement will be that we shall give a fair trial to the principle which lies at the root of our system “that a diffused circulation, emanating from a multitude of sources and controlled by a central au¬ thority is more elastic and more safe than a currency flow¬ ing from one institution alone, as that of France, or from an irregularly controlled plurality of banks as in England.” Ac¬ cording to our system every locality should provide its own currency by its own banks and in proportion as the notes flow away from home and stagnate in the great financial cen¬ tres, the health of the system requires that the equilibrium should be restored, and plethora avoided by sending back the notes to the issuers and keeping up this return current so as to make it equal at all times to the varying exigencies The present system of redemption is virtually of business. no redemption at all, as has been - repeatedly shown in our columns, but the proposed plan will most probably work well and prove of great use in giving strength to the but¬ tresses of our financial fabric, and in helping to avert from us, as we hope, the long-prognosticated panic. a THE CHRONICLE. CONGRESS AND THE BANES. the NO. 51. remote, their way good point in the bill before us is the rigid ap¬ plication of the test of publicity to every bank in every part Another published by the Bank So much is thought of this safeguard of publicity, that, as our readers will remem¬ ber, great excitement prevailed at the London Stock Ex¬ change some few months ago because the Bank of Eng land report was not issued till two or three hours la¬ of the country. Weekly returns are of France and the Bank of England. advantages, perhaps, of our National Banking system are the strong alliance which it establishes between all the banks in the country; and the large reserve of legal tender money which it compels them to keep always on hand. That these advantages may be freed from their attendant ter than the usual time. Our city banks in each of the evils some changes are indispensable in the law; and the greater centres of financial power furnish their reports the newspapers weekly. measure introduced on Thursday, by Mr. Hooper, in spite of for Public confidence would soon be shaken in these institutions if they did not prove its defects, seems to meet the exigencies of the case much better than any of the ammendments which have heretofore that they deserved that trust by giving the fullest and been suggested! Its arrangements for the redemption of the freest publicity to their affairs. Speculative directors are notes of the banks are admirable. Under this law it will be kept very much in check by this necessity of taking the pub¬ impossible for a weak bank, under the adroit management of lic into their confidence, and what is wanted, is to give the a few unscrupulous speculators, to keep out perpetually a large banks in the country the benefit of it as well as those of New circulation, from the simple circumstance that it is situated in York. At present the returns are to be made monthly; they The greatest THE 738 [June 16,1866. CHRONICLE currency. and they will, of augment the volume of the bankThe aggregateTheto country is remain would tolerate no such increase. course, be published in one of the leading newspapers, at at 300 millions, and as some States have had allotted to them least, in the neighborhood of the bank itself. The aggregates circulation, and other States less than their fair share, for each State and for half-a-dozen of our large cities should also the excess is to be withdrawn. The taxes paid by the banks be published by the Department, such tables w^ould not only in future to be collected by the Internal Revenue Office, offer us a large valuable mass of interesting statistics, but instead of by the Treasury Department, as has from some un¬ would contribute greatly to the perfection of our banking methods, and to the making of our financial system what all explained anomaly been the case hitherto. The tax on capital This is a proper step. The only thing is to be taken off'. of us hope, and many of us believe, we shall live to see it;— which banks should pay a tax is their circulation, the stable, more elastic, and more adapted to the wants of an privilege of issuing which should be handsomely paid for ingenious, rich, enterprising population than the best Euro- when granted by the people to private individuals. We re¬ pean systems would be, if it were possible to transplant them gret to see that it is proposed to reduce the tax on circulation and to root them here. from one per cent, a year to one-half per cent. It should We have grave doubts as to the propriety of allowing have been, at least, two per cent, in lieu of all other taxes. Government funds to remain in National Banks under*any The ten per cent, tax on State bank circulation will probably such circumstances as exist at present. During the negotia¬ be changed to 2^ per cent., and will apply to all the notes tion of the heavy war loans of 1862, 1863, and 1864 the de¬ which each bank has out, whether these notes are reissued or posit system did good. It was adapted to the emergency, not. and prevented the money market from being so much dis¬ turbed as it would inevitably have been, if the volume of the TIIE EUROPEAN CONGRESS AND THE WAR. floating circulation had been day by day depleted by the lock¬ It is probable that during the present week the European ing up in the Treasury of so large an aggregate of currency, Powers assembled in Congress at Paris will have made was daily paid on account of the Five-twenty and Seventhirty bonds. The deposit arrangement, we think, is now very progress enough in their wrork to ascertain definitely the much diminished in usefulness, and is probably destined at hopefulness or hopelessness of any further attempts to pre¬ serve peace in the Old World. It must be admitted that distant day to fall awray, as a useless incumbrance, from the tenor of the latest advices from Europe is not such as to banking system. Hr. Hooper proposes some changes in encourage the belief that any settlement of the questions at regard to the deposits, the principal improvements being, issue between Austria, Prussia and Italy is to be expected that the Secretary of the Treasury shall permit no funds to the result of these deliberations at Paris. The neutral remain in any bank which are not secured by an equal amount of bonds deposited in Washington. It would, per¬ Powers—England, Russia and France—having united in an invitation to hold the said deliberations, it would have been haps, have been well to add to this clause another provision, extremely impolitic act on the part of any one of the in¬ making it a duty, guarded by penalties and obligatory on tending belligerents to put in a positive and point-blank every bank, to transfer within twenty-hours after the receipt, refusal. But Austria coupled her acceptance with a distinct all government moneys deposited with them in excess of assertion that she would entertain no propositions looking to their securities. The frauds of disbursing officers are well the cession of Venetia ; Italy acceded with an equally distinct provided against by the recent lawT passed for that specific declaration of the vital necessity of the acquisition of \r,enetia are more full and complete than formerly, more are on more as no our as an object. to her own internal peace; and Prussia, angered, almost at in the tax bill, the very moment of her acquiescence, by an Austrian decree protection ought to be afforded against similar abuses in re¬ in which the whole affair of the Danish Duchies was decided gard to Collectors of Internal Revenue. Rumor says there in contempt of the Prussian policy, gave the Powers plainly are such abuses. Perhaps the story is untrue. But, any¬ to understand that she could not consent to wait more than how, we may and we must guard the public money, and, as a fortnight upon the action of the projected Congress. far as legislation can, prevent any Internal Revenue officers It may, therefore, we think, be regarded substantially as a from depositing funds, either in their own names or other¬ wise, so as to draw interest therefrom. In England, every foregone conclusion that the dissolution of the Congress at Paris will be followed immediately by the breaking out of internal revenue collector is obliged to pay over all his' re¬ hostilities both in; Germany and on the line of the Italian ceipts every night. This is done by depositing the funds in the chief bank of the town where the money is received, and Alps; for it is to be noted that while Italy, in her response the bank places it at once to the credit of the Bank of Eng¬ accepting the call to Paris, laid down the cession of Venetia land. The business of a collector is to receive and not to by Austria as the sine qua non of any decisive settlement of her difficulties with that Power, she also put forward for the hold the public mon^y, and if large sums accumulate, we ob¬ consideration of the Congress her claims to the possession of viously increase, beyond all fit limits, the risks and tempta¬ Friuli and the Italian Tyrol. And since Austria, by her tions of the very difficult and onerous office of collecting the hold on the fortresses known as the Quadrilateral, occupies a revenue. The chief remaining provision in the bill which requires position on the Italian Peninsula from which it will be ex¬ notice is the giving summary powers to the Comptroller to tremely difficult for the Italians to dislodge her by a direct front attack from the side ot Lombardy, it is by no means appoint an examining commission to visit any bank at his discretion, and to appoint a reciever, under certain contin¬ improbable that the war will begin on the South of the gencies, to close up its affairs. If we did not deny the prop¬ Empire by the efforts of the Italian volunteers to excite a revolution in the Alpine districts of Austrian Italy, com¬ riety of placing too much power in the hands of any one bined with naval demonstrations against Upper Dalmatia and man, however judicious and incorruptible he may be, we Trieste. should approve of this arrangement as being precisely the The coming war will differ from any recent struggle in thing that wanted to be done to terrify or persuade out of which Austria has been engaged, in this very important par¬ some of their banking vices and excesses institutions which ticular, that the non-German populations subject to the Aus¬ might otherwise be lured on to the precipice from which they Nowq in the measure before us, or preferably ' yet return and escape. Of course so sound a financier as Mr. Hooper may as themselyes with extraor. refuses to dinary ardor into the defence of the Imperial throne against trian rule appear to be throwing June 16, 1866.] THE CHRONICLE. 739 • aspirations after a decisive supremacy in Ger¬ centre upon the operations and the fortunes of the war in many. The best information accessible on this point seems Italy rather than in Germany, the destinies of Italy, we think, will depend upon the issues of battle, and of diplomacy to to put it beyond a doubt; and when we consider that the non-German populations of Austria, exclusive of her Italian the north rather than to the south of the Alps. The Italian dominions, amounted in >857 to more than 24,000,000 of attack upon Austria indeed must be regarded, no matter how souls while her subjects of German origin numbered less formidable its proportions may become, nor how gallantly it than 8,000,000 of souls, it will be easy to see with what a may be conducted, as a diversion in favor of Prussia wdtKthe the Prussian tremendous additional force a real warlike enthusiasm ni the connivance, and in the ultimate interest of France. The these vastly preponderating races must arm the practical neutrality of Russia being guaranteed by the atti¬ Empire. It is a great mistake of which the English press tude of England, who will probably never again draw the is guilty when it insists upon treating the coming outbreak sword to redress any balance of power on the Continent of part of in Central Europe bitions of a as Premier the work simply of the contending on the one side and a Kaiser on am¬ Europe, but who wmuld, unquestionably, spring from her a lion to arrest any newr demonstration of the Czar towards Constantinople, France has become the prac¬ tical arbiter, in the last resort, of every serious effort at a‘:reconstruction of the map of Europe ;” and whatever maybe the changing incidents and accidents of the summer’s strife, we may be sure that the ultimate determination of its results will proceed, w ith authority, neither from Berlin nor Vienna, the slumber like other. gradual admission of the non-German populations of something like constitutional relations with the Empire has given strength to the adherents in Austria of a policy which looks, not to the consolidation of Germany un¬ der an Austrian sovereign, but to the prevention of the con solidation of Germany under a Prussian sovereign. To keep Germany disunited and thereby to rob the forty mil¬ The Austria to Florence, but from the Tuileries. nor .—— . % PROPOSED REDUCTION OF CANAL TOLLS. of the legitimate preponderance The Canal Board of the State of NewT York has just been which, if once united, they cannot fail to acquire in Central Europe, is, in the eyes of those who represent this new Aus¬ addressed by a series of resolutions adopted by the Buffalo trian poliejy to secure such a preponderance to the non- Board of Trade, affirming it to be “the true policy of the Germanic Austrian Empire.*- By her Eastern subjects Aus¬ State to reduce the rates of toll on property transported on tria has for years been made liable to grave dangers from the canals to the lowest possible point in conformity loitk the lions of the German race aspirations and intrigues of Russia. By her Western relations with Germany she is exposed to the se¬ ductions of a Teutonic imperialism. The election of a Prus¬ sian prince, Charles of Ilohen Zollern to the sovereignty of the Roumanian principalities on the Lower Danube would threaten her with Germany on the East as well as on the West wrere she to be defeated in the* impending war; and the general rallying of her heterogeneous “ peoples,” as Kos¬ suth used to call them, around the standard of the Kaiser can only be rationally interpreted as an evidence of the fact that the conception of an united Austrian Empire, powerful enough to arrest the crystallization of German unity on the one hand, and the progress of Russian domination on the other, is at last becoming popular throughout the vast realm of the Hapsburgs. If this view of the temper and purposes with which Austria will enter the war be correct, it follows, inevitably, that howrever reluctantly the Prussian people may begin the fight, their passions not of nationality only, but race, must very soon be enlisted in supporting it. Count Bismark is said to have replied to some one who endeavored to alarm him by dwelling upon the popular opposition to the war in Prussia : ‘•'Yes, yes, that is very true, but a single victory or a single defeat will change the whole current.” Those who remember the conditions of popular feeling in this country at different moments during our recent struggle, will appreciate the knowdedge of human nature displayed in this observation of the Prussian ruler. Whatever else may be said for or against Count Bismark, the credit of a cool and masterly perception of the circumstances amid which- he is guiding his Ship of State, and of an unscrupulous promptitude in availing him¬ self of these circumstances, cannot be denied him. It is upon these qualities in her Premier, even more than upon the ad¬ mirable condition of her exchequer, and the excellent organ¬ ization of her army, we opine, that Prussia will find herself compelled to rely most earnestly wdien the shock of actual conflict comes with her gigantic enemy. Austria has not as yet shown that she possesses any statesman fitted to cope wdth the astute and audacious minister of King William I. the Pansclavic Although the interest of the world in the coming strife, and particularly of England and America, will probably State Constitution.” As there is ■* clause in that document no definite rule in the case, termine the matter, ' and it is not laying down *a decision of the courts to de¬ no easv * to determine what is meant * > by the “ lowrest point.” Myers, wdien Attorney General, instituted a litigation for the purpose of recovering from the Railroad Companies of New7 York the amount of tolls, which he claimed was due from them to the Canal Fund; insisting that the law7 of 1853 releasing them from such payment was unconstitutional. The case was argued a few days ago ; but till the Court of Appeals shall have made a decision, the question will be open for a variety of opinions. If Mr. My¬ ers is right, we cannot see wThat pow'er the Canal Board Mr. Charles wmuld have to reduce the tolls on canal transporation to a they stood at when the Constitution of 1846 That Board can have no more right than the Legislature to reduce the canal revenues. It is well knowrn that in 1858 the rates of toll wrere reduced so low that the revenues of the canals did not come up to the re¬ lower rate than went into effect. quirements of the seventh article of the State Constitution. . If, however, a .decision should ever be made adverse to the position of Mr. Myers, wre do not see how7 the point could be determined, at which the Canal Board wrnuld be required to stop, in the way of reducing the rates of toll on transporta¬ tion. The almost uniform policy has been to place the tolls at a figure that would produce the greatest amount of income to the State. The Constitution of the canals shall be applied to payment of expenses of re¬ pair and superintendence ; of the debt incurred prescribes that the revenues then $1,750,000' for redemption for the construction and enlargement of and after that, a further amount for liquidation State indebtedness, and the payment of the current the canals ; of other We suppose that the Canal Board have generally felt obliged to adjust tolls so as to realise that amount. In this wTay the expenditures of government—in all, about $3,500,000. debt, which existed when the Constitution was adopted, been reduced from thirty-seven to some twenty-two mil¬ State has lions of dollars. But it is one. We 4 wmrthy of enquiry whether this policy is the true hardly believe that the great State of New can THE 740 of profit out of of forwarders that high rates of toll were the cause of the late high prices of transportation. The railway and transportation com¬ panies, which in the four years of the war raised their prices forty per cent., laid a far more oppressive tax on than any tolls ever imposed. It has generally been supposed that competition would keep down their ex¬ orbitant charges; but they are probably too near, in their keeps her canals for the mere purpose commerce. We concede little to the allegation York some commerce that. of the country, however, when every step that can possibly aid to revive commerce should be taken, it is a matter of serious doubt whether it is judi¬ nature, to a monopoly for In the present condition [June 16,1866, CHRONICLE. which, under existing circumstan¬ ces, we can buy from them more advantageously than we can produce the articles ourselves. We are also largely de¬ pendent upon European credits for the importation of this merchandise. Indeed, for all practical purposes, there is the same sort of inter-dependence between the Old World and the New World as exists between the several States of our amount own of merchandise, Union. Although it is true that the war involves no suspension of our trading relations with the Continent, as in the case of belligerents; yet it is inevitable that it must produce a very important modification of those relations. One of the first loans, par¬ tially from motives of caution and partially for the purpose cious for a State to levy taxes on transportation, either to of placing themselves in a position to respond to the require¬ pay her debts or to fill her treasury. New York should be ments of their government. We are now beginning to feel wise as a manufacturer who sinks a capital for the purpose the effects of this course. Our importers find it impossible of creating a branch of business. She has invested her to avail themselves of their customary letters of credit upon money in her canals, as she gave $3,000,000 to the New Nork the Continental cities, and a large proportion of our Fall im¬ and Erie Railroad, and $500,000 to the Albany and Susque¬ portations must consequently be paid for in cash. This fact hanna Railroad, for the sake of the permanent advantage to has not only an important bearing upon domestic monetary be derived. Liberal franchises have been bestowed to cor¬ affairs, but it must result in a large curtailment of our im¬ porations for a similar laudable purpose. The canals were portations; which means a diminution of the trade and en¬ built expressly to cheapen transportation, and to bring the trade of the country and continent into this State. It is in joyments of our people. another adverse result in the with¬ We experiencing direct contravention of this policy to tax that transportation drawal of European capital allowed to remain here for em¬ and make it dear. It would be a far more enlightened ployment. Letters by the Scotia called home a considerable statesmanship to rely for public revenue upon the increase of amount of funds thus held—one firm, we understand, having wealth which these facilities for internal commerce will make remitted a single balance of over $1,000,000. The large in the State, thus supporting the treasury from the prospershipments of specie this week have been chiefly destined to it}T which it has created, than to levy burdens upon the very the Continent, and are in response to demands of this char¬ agency by which that prosperity has been produced. The acter. To what further extent this process .may be carried Legislature of 1S53 acted on this principle when it relieved it'would be premature, at present, to estimate; but foreign the railroad companies from payment of tolls, and the Canal bankers are apprehensive that further large remittances on Board of 1858 when they lowered tolls to a low figure. results of war is to cause bankers to call in their as are this account may have to be made. ^ ^ good reason for carrying out this rule to its far¬ It yet remains to be seen whether any derangements will thest extent. The City of New York was adapted by Natme arise from the return of Five-twenties from Europe. Proba¬ for the commercial emporium of the Continent. The canals bly not less than $200,000,000 of our bonds are held in and railroads are the thoroughfares to reach this emporium. States likely to be directly implicated in the war. Thus far, No legislation should be permitted to place any obstruction the bonds returned from Europe have consisted chiefly of There is The imposition of tolls, particularly if the such an obstruction. We would prefer infinitely to see the canals of the State made a free public highway for the movement of the products of the West and the manufactured goods of the East, to the persistence in a repressive policy which would tend to stimulate the opening of rival routes to foreign ports. These suggestions may appear to be premature at this time, but it seems to us that they indicate the conclusion to which the practical good sense of our leading public men will upon them. rates are exorbitant, constitutes supply held by dealers, who have probably realised them, on account of their being less depreciated than We find no reason for modifying our securities. the upon other opin¬ previously expressed, that the mass of private holders the bonds firmly oh account of their security, and being less liable to fl actuation than other loans. A certain amount of Five-twenties, however, is held by manu¬ facturers and merchants ; and it is questionable whether this class of holders, being driven by the curtailment of bank credits to realise upon their reserve capital, will not prefer eventually lead them. selling our bonds, as the securities upon which they would lose least through realization. Private financial advices indi¬ THE BEARINGS OF A EUROPEAN WAR UPON AMERICAN COM¬ cate the commencement of a movement of this character. MERCE. Should the process be carried on to an important extent, it is The advices of European capitalists to their correspondents ion, will hold speak hopefully of the results of diplo¬ quite probable a salutory check would be imposed upon it by the New York gold market. The shipment of gold, in matic negotiation, but regard war as inevitable; while it is payment for bonds thus returned, would cause an advance in evident, from the character of their financial arrangements, the premium, which would so far reduce the gold value of that they anticipate the struggle will be one of no ordinary the bonds as to neutralise the motive for sending them here dimensions. for realization. It is, however, to be supposed that this Those who imagine that the United States will be onlv realizing movement would prove to be but temporary. The benefitted by the outbreak, must have examined very super¬ mercantile sellers would, after a brief period, find their assets ficially the bearings of the question. Our development is, coming into their hands, and having again an unemployed to an important extent, dependent on European capital. Not less than $250,000,000 of our securities are held in Eu¬ surplus, they would be likely to invest in Five-twenties, which to them would appear cheaper and safer than any other rope ; we in the meantime employing the capital advanced investment. It is, again, a question whether, in the probable upon them for the creation of wealth. The people of the event of money becoming cheap in England at an early day, Continent are large consumers of our products, and we in there is not a chance that London dealers would buy largely■: turn are dependent upon them for the supply of a vast in this city no longer June 16, 1866.J IMPORTS OF bonds thus temporarily thrown overboard by the Germans, with the hope of being able to sell them at Frank¬ fort at a profit, after the subsidence of the first panicky effects It is to be anticipated, as a natural consequence of COTTON INTO THE UNITED KINGDOM. 1865 From United States, Bahamas and Mexico Bermuda. U 53.679 360,278 775,367 3,145 267.530 55,737 402,495 6'X),693 it 1,068,380 635,510 210.118 ii Other Countries 142.S18 58,379 ii China terruption of agriculture on the Continent, that war be accompanied with an enlarged demand for our food prod¬ ucts at enhanced prices. Apparently, this would increase 2.6C2 87,056 it British India would 95,582 it Turkey Egypt the in¬ 1,816,S79 10,428 95,847 99,752 Cwts. Brazil 1866 33,^29 137,309 106,914 161,6:10 1S64 of the of war. 741 CHRONICLE THE 115,4 0 72,666 2,025,369 3,689,434 “ 1,759,423 Total m the impor¬ tant question of the future supply of cotton, Brazil must occupy a our ability to pay for our imports of merchandise ; and yet prominent place. No other country has made during the past few years only apparently; for it is not be overlooked that the war the steady and rapid progress in the cultivation of the great would cause a loss upon our exports of cotton far exceeding staple. In 1863 less than 170,000 bales of 160 lbs each were shipped any gain upon our shipments of Western produce. Europe from all ports. This year, its believed, the quantity will amount to consumes one-third of our cotton crop ; and the contraction nearly 600,000 bales. This extraordinary increase is in the face of an of this large source of demand would cause a material de¬ export duty exceeding 12 per cent., and an exhausting war, which among other evils, has deprived the cotton grower of thousands c/ preciation of the value of the entire crop, besides reducing laborers. the price of the large amount now held on American account The export demaud for cotton in April was largely in excess of that at Liverpool. for April last year—the quantity taken by exporters in April having These are some of the many considerations which go to amounted to 294,960 cwts., against 131,965 cwts.last year, and 189,418 show that Americans, in common with all. who have trading cwts. in 1864. For the four months the figures show a corresponding increase, the shipments to the leading consuming countries from the relations with the Continental States, cannot but be effected United Kingdom being as follows : 1866. 1864. 29.946 injuriously by a European war. 2,265 Russia, Northern ports 27,757 From the foregoing it becomes evident that in considering same 1865. 19.340 5.441 To Prussi-t TRADE OF GREAT COTTON, of the cotton the four months under :— 419,428 1,026,084 imports of wheat month last year. £6,398,022 £9.8-7,561 12,891,252 16,610.159 February 16,396,928 13,005,394 19,891,204 March Total £37,13 ,825 £32,295,568 £46,348,927 Respecting the exports of British and Irish produce and manufactures, the returns exteud to the end of April. In that month, as compared with March, trade declined to the extent of rather more than two mil¬ lions sterling ; but the figures show an increase over January, February, and over the corresponding months in the two preceding years. They MANUFACTURES. Total of imports The total value £10,489,339 11.376,214 13,770,154 12,071,111 Denmark Schleswig, £47,706,818 ending March 31, was as States France Turkey and davia Atlantic ports, “ Pacific ports.. Northern.... 62,323 19,288 *. £1,925,514 Total The exports during the same period stood To A tlantic “ Pacific ports, Northern thus : 1866. £5.377,477 6,i"21,197 43,097 £12,241,771 £6,699.353 £3,178.228 £9,137 644 36,839 171,835 18,718 298.312 79,643 21S, 997 Souther ports £9,654,953 find that the United States, the Brazils, and the East Indies have furnished during the present year increased supplies. On the other hand> the imports from Turkey, Egypt and minor countries have declined, whilst the import trade in cotton, so far China is concerned, is quite suspended. According, however, to the Respecting cotton, we afloat for Liverpool, but the quantity of produce they are likely to bring can¬ not have any effect on the market. The total imports in April amounted to 1,663,025 cwts., against 692,095 cwts. in 1865, and 627,452 cwts. in 1864. For the four mouths ending April 30, the ^imports were of the 1,740,207 164,3S1 169,312 ,218.788 127,924 2,294 214,S31 303,084 8,789 1,145,723 2,572,521 7,183.408 136,768 1.217815 816.607 85,392 767,622 94,238 2,011,452 China, it appears that a few cargoes are 409,222 87,425 312.633 America. Towns 78,127 Other 11.3S5 162,412 6,043 26,739 86,374 985,376 27344,408 578,276 United States British North 1,316,017 4,074,576 4,256 38,440 America. countries Total Indian Corn - 1,292,492 1,129,001 Oats 1,757,571 of our principal exports of British and Irish produce to America, during the four months ending April 30, in each of the last three years : annexed statement EXPORTS TO shows the value THE UNITRD STATES FOR 1864. Castings Hoops, sheets Wrought Steel—Unwrought Copper, wrought Lead, pig Tin plates Salt 109,736 244,141 248,044 648,509 37,404 52,349 1,117,075 715,140 48,815 1,658,093 S6,110 102,6139 396,892 21,591 48,946 38,536 1,053 15,441 58,268 94,167 9,167 5,607 229,440 127,548 79,559 ' 427,849 & boiler pla’s , 124,139 Thread &c Railroad 123.805 31,762 120,778 48,712 259,933 Metals— Bar, 1,698.969 46,9S0 40,083 silver.... Iron—Pig 441,550 511,038 Cutlery— Linen Manufactures— Piece goods 25,006 164,510 and porcelain Haberdashery and millinery Knives, forks, &c Anvils, vices, &c Manufactures of German 27,160 903,419 102,119 Thread Oilseed 1866. £352,240 26,222 £131,745 11,402 41,151 Cotton Manufactures— Piece goods now FOUR MONTHS. 1865; £155,503 22,173 Alkali Beer and ale Coals as following magnitude; 39,520 82,S27 382,113 2,213,886 France Hardwares and COTTON. latest advices from 97,195 29,309 176,907 Earthenware £3,276,594 Total 52.949 191,429 300,443 countries Flour—From Hanse The 77,263 Southern 128.384 8 Total during the three 1865. 39,520 WaUachia and Mol- Egypt United States British N<-rth 15,116,063 17,520,354 15,366,414 £1,843.898 88,234 Holstein and Lauen- Mecklenburg Hanse Towns follows 1864. 3,092,245 10,838 154,322 - 1,231,453 2,835,400 rT.'. burg/ £62,357,579 from the United 636,489 1.530,698 343,793 432,497 Russia. Prussia £14,354,748 £49,892,420 April £10,413,586 ; 7,041,307 Wheat—From 1866. 1S65. 13,225,039 .. January February March April compared • ♦ 1864. months from all quarters as compared with the corresponding France continues to furnish liberal supplies, and from Other PRODUCE AND hundred per cent, in large increase. The United States figure in for only 12,000 cwts., but that is an increase of 9,000 cwts. as with the same month last year. The leading import of flour is now from France. The statement of imports is as follows : IMPORTS OF WHEAT AND FLOUR INTO THE UNITED KINGDOM IN FOUR MONTHS 1866. 1865. 1S64. follows; BRITISH AND IRISH of more than one Russia, there is a '£7.520,356 13,214,541 EXPORTS OF show an increase The returns 1866. 1865. 1864. From 534,253 BREADSTUFFS. principal articles imported was very high, and was nearly £14,000,000 in excess of 1805. The two leading items causing this increase are cotton and breadstuff's, the augmented value of the former beiug to the extent of £7,000,000, and of the latter £3,000,000. The value of imports in each of the are as 418,684 171.346 computed real value of our cotton imports for three months was £17,903,379, against £10,819,439 last year, and £12,124,375 in 1864. official returns first issued and value of imports, the during this period January .243,464 The ending April 80th, prepared from the those of previous years. As regards the total returns embrace a period of only three months ; but in the current year, the computed real value of the months of the last three years was as 227,169 17,965 Total London correspondent furnishes us an analysis trade between Great Britain and the United States for Our first three 115,SS5 11,335 104,791 57,296 ETC; BREADSTUKF8 PROVISIONS 5,033 371,318 14S.453 Holland Other countries UNITED STATES, BRITAIN WITH THE 277' Hanover Hanse Towns 7,053 120,387 139.850 234,098 11.718 156,346 315,869 22,783 43.332 39 11,898 8,630 223,428 196.404 6,343 111,891 90,111 * 222,551 23,694 59,065 548,575 49,971 48,675 C. and P. railroad SrLK Manufactures— 75,564 5,489 19.253 41,910 Broad piece goods Handkerchiefs, &c 10,882 -999 Ribbons— 22,357 9,682 Other articles of silk only 49,988 21,206 32,328 5,846 303 250 468,881 198,376 143,641 422.456 3-4,168 46.223 7,511 287,775 16,314 1,081.240 544,321 1,606,374 Wool Woolen Manufactures— Cloths ot all kinds 28,762 Carpets and druggets Shawls, rugs. Ac Worsted stuns of wool only, and of wool mixed with other materials.. 21,549 48,522 27,973 9,970 centage fixed, such excess shall be equally divided between the contracting parties. The number of locomotives and cars owned by the company at the close of each fiscal year Baggage cars Express cars Emigrant cars we four months 21,369 81.585 68,390 292,398 177,271 107,821.440 40,228 30,281 PITTSBURG, FT. RAILROAD WAYNE AND 1864. 1865. 4/315.650 1,710,665 6.522,129 2,169,054 21,154,406 cars.. 4,114,077 26,409/318 6,026,315 27,9:38,931 34,093,899 24,533,330 30,523,395 33,965,246 41,785,082 passenger mileage, ttc by 842,032 1,284,205 1.461,195 35,068,591 54,753,077 34.504,031 67,027,789 45,311,455 89,8-21,60S 101,531,820 From which $1,116,741 $1,562,409 $3,391,221 $2,696,386 deduce the following proportional lesults— we 1S62. -Ave. journey per passenger Revenue per passenger “ per mile travelled Tons of freight-carried and tons carried Revenue from . Sideings.... Total.... 280 231 188 16 34 280 19 468 16 46 34 299 530 238 314 2S0 68 188 26 41 552 255 468 16 805,525 S58,92S 832.615 110,348,935 60,753,361 64,272,935 128,940,416 64,849,485 166,570,631 174,621,870 193,789,901 $2,401,630 $3/341,034 $4,148,504 $4,739,068 _ deducted the are following results 196.00 $3:73 0:01.90 mile.. freight (tons) included “ 41 321 576 261 335 596 : I and classified as fol The following 1864. 1S65. 57,987 47,240 1,502 156.849 70,165. 15.914 26.000 164,262 61,660 184,242 101,180 96,206 105.430 31.583 131.7S2 86,041 103,773 120,773 15,346 788,090 858,92S 32,512 150,033 75.086 13,584 129.770 20,864 832,615 specifically enumerated— 1S62. * 57 JOS 36,855 166,792 75,590 6,712 150,153 21,823 613,107 are 102,973 26,006 9,336 1863. 35,966 85/166 41,6.5-1 • U tv fci tt u OPERATING The 1363. 100,627 .,.. Total tons... of that at $85,000 per annum. * By agreement dated December 15, 1862, the P. F,’W. aud C. and the pany 0:02.44 51,100 122,231 59,971 - Miscellaneous—coal tk other This road extends from Hudson to portion of the company’s railroad between Pittsburg Rochester, 26 miles, is rented to the Cleveland and Pittsburg Com¬ 5:69 1,776 other 468 ' Manufactures 33 M erehan dire.-. 95 Iron rails.. Millersburg, Ohio, crossing • P., F. W. and C. Railway at Orrville, 124 miles from Pittsburg, 38 ! Horses Cattle from Hudson, and 23 from Sheep Millersburg. Since July ], 1865, the compauy has operated under lease the New¬ Hogs Beef Pork castle and Beaver Valley Railroad, from Homewood, (35 m. W. from Flour Pittsburg) to Newcastle, 16 miles. Liquors use 232.75 40.263 .-. the The is 93.883 “ 280 7 4S Cleveland, Zanesville, and Cincinnati Railroad, commonly called the “ Akron Branch,” 61 miles, was purchased by the company j ia 1865. 293.31 4:83 0:02.38 4:14 0:02.91 the abeve table m products of Agriculf 1 products -flour & grain. , The late 206.77 1862 Product of forest—lumber “ —other Animals —live stock 188 26 47 . 366,723 : 468 26 82 .. 371,652 126,046,905 “ E.D. W.D. Tofl. E.D. W.D. Tot. E.D. W.D Tot. E.D. W.D. Tot. 188 16 27 1865. 465,892 105,S17.270 “ Main line Sor'd track. 1864. 487.276 643,107 Revenue per ton per ton per is 468 miles long ; and in refer¬ single track at the end of each has exhibited the following changes : 0:03.34 mile, ifcc.: 451,871 353,654 Average carriage per ton... miles. lows 0:03.00 69.50 2:32 83,294,05-4 42,752,851 freight Ftom which - 2:10 1S63. 269,130 westward stock. 1865. one 1865. 1864. 69.99 0:02.54 373,977 Both directions. The 1861. 72.90 1:86 0:02.47 Tons: eastward westward The main railroad of the company ence to its total length in equivalent , 1803. 69.07 $1:70 miles. 1862. reorganized company have made four annual reports, from which compile the following statements showing their material and finan cial condition at the close of each year, and the operations of the com¬ pany fur the four years from January 1, 1862. . 61,436.266 Revenue from passengers.... RAILWAY. we -1863. 769,599' 25,893.776# 31,864,134 Both directions the f 442.857 29,571.835 Both directions , 1865. 691.596 656,885# tion, involved no business revolution, but was simply an amendment in financial airangement for the benefit of all interests. Since this period —1862. 1864. 627,058 657,147 399,175 19,517,678# Mileage: eastward ,— 7,691,183 : 1863. 312,806 344,079# Both directions made with the sanction of the stock and bondholders of the old corpora¬ year • 3,378.924 Westward. 2 4,624,999 1863. trains. run 263,481 2,855,280 1.25S,797 Passengers Eastward.. formed February 26, 1S62, to which the prop¬ finally conveyed March 1, 1862. This change having been rolling 3,9x8,438 1862. the prestnt company, railroad and 3,472,914 •120,715 cars— 1,132,696 Passengers carried and Pittsburg, Fort, Wayne, and Chicago Railway Company are a reorganization of the P. F. W. ifc C. Railroad Company, which in 1856 (August 1) had been formed by consolidating three original companies whose lines conjointly connected the cities of Pittsburg, Pa., and Chicago, Ill. The latter, having become involved in debt, was sold out under foreclosure on the 24th October, 1861, and purchased by the agents of was 2,293,560 120,334 217,386 108,289 2,216,228 Total miles 225,856 72,567 80,662 270,945 127,305 140,188,560 106,400 181,732 and freight Total in passenger cars The erty 1865. 1.403,345 2.837,458 1862. REPORTS. CHICAGO 1864. 1,287.158 2,694,467 passenger westward OF cars — 1,068,170 2,114,853 61.651 Mileage: eastward ANALYSES ROAD. THE 1863. 1,651.072 122,436 “ “ Passenger cars Baggage cars 1866 1865. 232, *24 2 ON 859,308 Freight 162,OSS 99,350,040 OPERATIONS Total 20,082 11)4.856 70,222 260.604 Lard, number BUSINESS years. Wood Ballast 244.792 1864. cwt liberal supply of wood and work¬ plows, derricks, <£c, <kc. 1862. 6,190 96.134 347,383 Eggs, number 1 92 Mileage of locomotive engines hauling 1866 42/301 1865. 40,719 6,093 4,437 Beef, salt, cwt Pork, salt, cwt Butter, cwt same Mileage of 6,262 58.318 cwts. 3 8— 655 316 l cars cars, snow for the PROVISIONS. hams, 1 t A 22 following statements show the mileage of engines, the mileage and freight cars, the number of passengers carried and the mileage thereof, the tons of freight carried and the tons carried one mile STOCK. 1S64. Bacon and ~ 8 The STOCK. !! 1 Passenger Engines. Freight 21.143 Oxen, bulls and cows, number Calves, number Sheep and lambs, number Swine and hogs, number/. 2,356 6 14 - 73 of passenger give the arrivals of live stock and provisions during the ending Apri 1 30 : LIVE 2,119 1 c tramb, » in 1864. Below 1,707 8 j j J ing The clearances of vessels, of all LIVE 19 18— 167 S83 547 759- 2,189 1 182 Besides which the company own a flags, from the United Kingdom to the United States reached a total of 130, against 66 in April last year, and 129 in 1861. The total for the year is 522, against 203 for the corresponding months last year, and 331 AND 297-1,268 8 7 18 19 18— 143 812 535 s 629- 1,976 r J^ Platt’nn & coal. comparison with previous years shows favorable re¬ sults, for duriog the corresponding months iu 1865 the total was con¬ PROVISIONS -1865. 189 93 -1804. -1S63.116 67 8 6 •IS 13 16— 128 626 433 520- 1,579 & | Total follows: as -1862.119 53 t. ; Boxcars Stock & caboose a fined to 156, and in 1864 it was 833. has been 1,360 Locomotives Firr-r class coaches.. 1 ■Second, do | I Mail cars alties, the entries into the United Kingdom from United States’ ports were 133, against 35 in April last year, and 63 iu 1S64. These figures raise the total for the present year, viz. : from Jan. 1 to April 30, to And earnings, the gross of either road shall exceed the per 242 During April 28 American vessels entered inwards at ports in the United Kingdom, against 23 last year, and 22 in April, 1864. For the four months ending April 30, the aggregate was 151 vessels, of 152,589 ton9 ; against 83 vessels, of 93,272 tons, in the corresponding period last year ; and 133 vessels, of 151,539 ton-1, in 1864. The clearances in April were 61, against 27 last year, and 45 in 1861, For the four months they reached 1S8, against 94 in 1865, and 143 in 1864. Of all nation- 646 vessels: companies consolidated their aggregate to be divided to the first named in the proportion of 73£ per cent, and to the latter of 26£ per cent. An amendment to this agree¬ ment, made Feb. 16, 1866, provides that whenever the gross €aruings 3,7:34 Manuf. mixed with other materials Spirits, British Cheese, [June 16, 1566. THE CHRONICLE. 742 115,887 426,821 13,233 28,430 3.12,444 129,573 348,721 480,687 8,759 30,147 407,504 111,057 1864. 26,198 163,395 444,383 451,654 6,304 44,723 301,809 95,326 1865. 22,011 221,717 , 331.744 463,691 5,950 41,993 437,381 36,603 ACCOUNTS—EARNINGS, EXPENSES, ETC. yearly earnings of the road for the four years ending December 31,1865, the operating expenses and the net earnings for the same have been as follows: 1 H 0681 0 93,900 00 $4,148,503 00 $4,739,067 88 2,696.387 00 149,658 52 33,053 75 68,306 22 3,391,221 46 93,900 00 93,900 00 93,900 00 85.000 00 85,000 00 3,619 73 2,835 33 $2,401,630 13 $3,341,933 65 1,116,740 62 1,562,409 05 Freight earnings Passenger 36,107 32 “ Express Second Mort’ge 1865. 1864. 1863. 1862. Mails “ Rent of road to R Company Other rents C. & P. R. Miscellaneous—v 27,023 81 \uaicu, 860,000 860,000 860,000 860,000 K T L M May & Nov. 7 ) ac., raiuc.) April& Nov. & Oct. May 7 7 860,000 H I...... 7 7 • Jan. 1, 1836 Feb. 1, 1863 Mar. 1, 1863 Oct. 1, 1862 Nov. 1, 1862 Nov. 1,1856 Jan. & July. Feb. & Aug. Mar. & Sep. 860,000 ; 7 Bonds—G (dated Mar. 1, 1862, and pnj’uble July (1,1912.) Bridge Bonds (C. & P. RR.)) (dated May 1, 1856; V.. due May 1,1876.) ) $7,120,465 76 $8,489,062 56 $3,745,310 62 $5,132,933 74 Total earnings 85,000 00 4,861 12 25,354 08 85,000 00 1,345 83 14,701 96 8.312 82 743 CHRONICLE. THE 1866.] June 16, Dec. 1, 1862 June & Dec. r 7 163,500 $12,573,500 Total......... $779,316 48 $1,036,209 41 $1,220,97S 76 Motive power 904.240 19 1,200,900 37 1,520,948 54 COST OF ROAD AND EARNINGS, ETC., SINCE CONSOLIDATION. Maintenance of way.... 893,311 96 1,113.496 91 1,344,674 94 62 5:19,103 25 169,122 72 232,078 98 334,946 The business of the consolidated road dates from August 1, 1856. 6S,980 97 217,356 95 355,850 32 587,810 09 The following shows the progress of construction, aud the result of Gen ral expenses Total expenses.... $1,878,398 72 $3,026,310 56 $4,101,398 63 £5,205,515 58 operations for the nine years and five months since that date to Decem¬ $1,860,911 90 $2,106,623 18 $3,019,067 13 $3,283,540 98 ber 31, 1865 : Net earnings Cost of Miles Gross Operating Nett Divid’ds The following abstract of the income account exhibits the total fiscal Fiscal years. road. &c. olroad. earnings, expenses, earnings, on stock. 1 56 (5 mon) $12,764,S94 3:38 $795,579 $*73,434 $522,145 operations of the company1862. the same years for 1864 1865. 1863. 1S57 1,660,425 1,036,011 62\414 349,830 14.048,759 383 (year) (year) 1858 14,631,110 383 1.567,232 905.573 001.659 (8 months) (year) $97,055 00 $1,818,070 45 1S59 15,557,779 405 1,965,9S8 - 1.291,3: 3 674,655 By balance $ $ 16,700,407 467 2,335,354 - 1,573,799 761,555 By discount on bonds 1861 18,663,595 467 3,031,787 1,732,066 1.299,721 ‘redeemed.. 000 00 7,120,465’ 76 8,489,062 ’ 56 1802........ 1,800,912 17,730,363 40S 3,745,311 1,878, .99 By gross earnings 2,599,159 34 5,132,933 74 18,191,293 408 5,182,9:34 3,020,311 2,106,623 By C. & P. R.R. Co., on 21,164,330 468 7,120,460 4,101,399 3,019,067 530,782 ‘account of joint earn¬ 39,035 33 1865 ’ 23,183,381 468 . 8,489,002 5,205,515 3,233,547 872,827 ings 90,042 33 By assets of trustees, The following, deduced from the above statement, exhibits the cost, credited to income ac¬ 116,017 58 count.., 362,782 24 earuinge, tic, per mile, the rate of expenses to earnings and of the nett By balance to debit side. 183,671 11 earnings to cost of road; also, the rate of dividends paid for the same Credit....' $2,783,430 45 $5,5S5,75S 31 $7,372,573 07 $10,307,133 01 $504,867 SO 634,000 55 501,420 68 Conducting transportat’n “ kt cars. .. To balance To operating expenses. To interest on bonds... To dividends on stock.. To C. & P. R.R. Co., on account 183,671 11 1,342,919 04 3,020.310 56 4,101,398 63 427,115 38 700,559 39 922,322 09 5,205,515 58 889,030 00 530,782 50 872,827 50 of joint earn¬ ings the company, as shown yearly, has been as follows : financial condition of Dec. 31, 1802. 1864. 1863. , rail wav, &c... Supplies on hand.... Due from other com¬ panies Miscellaneous assets. Cash in hand Balance to 17,720,353 42 18,191,293 70 462,541 08 121,429 15 306,014 72 641,667 21 debit of in¬ 536,719 22 290,436 59 674,506 29 330,840 10 1865. $19,451,676 69 $20,029,795 following statement: 90 $23,942,669 90 Akron Branch Stock account Bond script $3,830 02 $7,683 77 Telegraph Co “ Union (new) “ 1S63. 1862. , Western Bank (cost) 2,462 81 Sinking funds Crestline estate Illinois & So. Iowa account R.R. Co., bond February March June July August $286,920 50. Division. 1,510,223 08 1,149,575 87 $3,723,057 55 Aggregate funded debt of the company on constituted as follows: The Series. First Mortgage Bonds—A B. (dated Mar. 1, 1862, and pavable JAtly 1, 1912.) !- Amount. $875,000 875,000 C.... D.... E.... 875,000 875,000 875,000 F... 875,000 the Rate. 14.27 14.19 44 10 1865. 1864. 87 98 101 @1<*1 @140)* 109 110 @117 @152')* 105)*®121)* 112 @119 @90 94 87 @92)* @117 @110)* @102?8 @96 82)*@152)* @90 @102)* @ 97% 77)*@ 95)* 80% @100 90 82)*@ 89 90 90V@102 91)*@. 97 05)*@101 92 @ 98)* 97>;@100 9-”)* @107 101 )*@106)* 102 @106)* 77)*@107 The American in 1865. 9,195 17 179,829 40 26,954 80 3,'579 71 Annual Cyclopcedia, and Register of Important Civil, Military, Statistics, and Me¬ of the year lSfio. Embracing Political, and Social Affairs; Public Documents; Biography, Commerce, Finance, Literature, Science, Agriculture, chanical Industry. Volume V. New Yrork : D. Appleton Events <fc Comp\ny. frontispiece of A this valuable annual. this for the Total. photograph above all trie others which had been taken of him. The present volume embraces the final military operations of the late civil war, the disbandment of the armies, and the reduction of fleets ; events accomplished without disturbance, and illustrating strength of the people, and the stability of the Government'of the United States. The chauge of the national adminis¬ tration occasioned by the murder of Mr, Lincoln, and the accession the moral of Mr. Johnson are carefully delineated, together with the measures restore employed for re-establishing the State governments and to the Federal authority. 1,517,162 25 No year in the politieal history of any nation was ever more 2,703,741 S4 1,193,518 76 2,009,910 68 860,334 81 of incidents of so important a character. The institution of slavery $3,609,589 78 $7,333,247 33 has been blotted out by the almost unanimous concurrence of the 31st December, 1865, was States ; industry in the Southern States has been, to a great degree, rehabilitated on the new basis ; and all without resort to such coerr First con Interest (2S0 miles) $64,812 43 606,815 54 8S4,078 24 303,302 02 033,084 01 (l Cit era tiuc. $22,743 32 expenditures on account of construction and equipment, have been to the following amounts : Western Eastern 1863 1804 1865 i; 4 4* 11.61 100>4®tl0 99>*@106>* 50 Year G 10.61 79)*®87 December 6 the monthly range of prices paid for the York during the years 1163, ’64 and’65: 7S November nil. YOKE. 82)*@9l October last four years, $07,472 57 AT NEW STOCK 71 71 September Liabilities,” (188 miles' 7,010 @.69 67)*@35}* 61 @78)* 04 @,78)* May principal items under the head of “ Miscellaneous dividends uncalled for and bills payable—the latter as follows: In 1862, $2,781 ; in 1863, $198,369 26 ; in 1864, $228,050, Fiscal years. 1802 (4 months). 1802 (8 months). 4,500 6,451 57 April 8,750 00 149,801 71 Division. 3,989 60t*@76 61)*@68)* January interest and The 1,631 2,783 ...... Yards, Chicago and in 1865, OF 4.11 4.34 4.69 6 95 05.68 66.74 57.13 50.00 58.92 57.66 61.45 1,451 nil portrait of President Lincoln embellishes the It was engraved from a photograph obtained 3,452 46 104JU0 00' 208,200 00 1‘ioin Mr Lincoln in 18f»l by lion. R. C. McCormick, now Governor 8,000 00 9,538 99 of Arizona ; and was taken just before the late President left his 10,094 61 home at Springfield for the last time. Mr. Lincoln preferred The are 11,123 2.23 4.44 21.79 62.39 61.62 1S63. head of $14,815 87 account Union Stock . 10,968 following table exhibits stock of this company in New 4. $26,545,693 09 1864. . Elevator—stock Pittsburg Grain 18,139 39,990 37,000 38,800 The 849,376 12 115,331 13 3,062,130 75 $2(5,545,693 09 21.164,329 77 23,183,381 33 1,052,058 70 969,053 93 606,185 41 417,948 S4 768,519 86 903,550 14 351,576 15 1,011,758 85 principal items (other than current) included under the Miscellaneous Assets,” at the close of each fiscal year, are shown the 15,214 5,001 6,492 8,003 PR1@E 184,871 85 448,041 24 The “ 45,200 49,500 1801 4.228 Divi’s Exp. to Nett earn, in st’k earn’gs. to C03t,&C. p. c.. 1,031 1,571 2,705 2,521 2,777 3,370 3,709 4,014 6,462 8,763 183,671 11 come Total 33,400 35,500 $9,312,442 00 12,573,500 00 earnings. expenses. earn’gs. $841 $513 $2,354 4,336 4,092 38,200 1859 1800 1801 1802...;., 1803 in general account $5,709,591 61 $6,104,531 89 $8,181,120 12 Funded debt 12,935,173 00 12,935,173 00 12,650,000 00 Due to other compa¬ nies 44,623 45 G0.4S1 82 34,439 48 Miscellaneous liabili¬ ties 36,051 54 242,1S8 22 371,676 71 Current expenses on debt and principle.. 413,237 89 544,297 75 833,421 14 312,399 20 Trustees 12,110 56 20,893 60 Balance to credit of in¬ come :. 97,055 00 1,818,070 45 Total $19,451,676 69 $20,029,795 90 $23,942,609 90 Cost of 1858 .—Rates p. c.—\ » Nett Operat’g Gross , 30,700 1805 Capital stock mile. $37,800 .... 1857 ACCOUNT—LEDGER BALANCES. GENERAL The p. 1856 Per mile of road. / road, *S:c. 1,517,102 25 . . 97,055 00 1,818,070 45 3,062,1:30 75 $5,585,758 31 $7,372,573 67 $10,307,133 01 $2,783,430 45 Cost of . 277,029 18 , 970,147 50 43,247 87 To construction, &c.... To taxes and sundries.. To balance to credit side Debit years : payable. July. Feb. & Aug. Mar. & Sep. 7 7 7 7 7 Jan. & 7 June & Dec. April & Oct. May & Nov. (468 miles) $132,285 09 970.147 56 full pon paid. .Jiily 1, 1862 Aug. 1, 1862 Sep. 1, 1862 Oct. 1, 1862 Nov. 1, 1862 Dec. 1, 1862 cive measures as would have ment. All these matters are The scientific papers are been required in a despotic govern¬ treated fully, and even exhaustively.' elaborately prepared. The new dis¬ useful purposes, are put coveries, and the applications of science to forth with remarkable completness accuracy. and The discoveries recorded, as well as those ascer¬ in all parts of the globe. Among the treati-es of greatest present interest probably are those on the Asiatic cholera, the cattle plague, and the disease of swine; they are fully described, wifli the different modes of treat¬ in chemistry and astronomy are all tained by geographical exploration latest investigations. cholera describes the treatment given ment and the result of the the writer [June 16, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 744 on We notice that by the mission¬ briefly to Doctor Chap aries at Constantinople with favor ; alludes man’s remedy of ice applied to the spine to declares that during the prevalence of the control the spasm, and cholera this time in Europe the homoeopathic method “ has proved suchja failure as to be strongly reprobated by those who were formerly favorably disposed to it.” An invaluable feature of this volume is the completeness of the historical narrative. The chronology of the war is full and accu¬ [From our own Correspondent.] London, Saturday, June 2, I860. the close of last week was suddenly lost on Monday morning last, by the announce¬ ment of the Directors of the Consolidated Bank that circumstances compelled them to close their doors.. During the whole of Sunday last, the directors of the above institution deliberated as to the policy of continuing the business, and it was not until a late hour that a memor¬ andum was issued to the press to the above effect. It will be remem¬ bered that the .Consolidated Bank took over, last week, the business the Bank of London under certain conditions, viz., that on having thewhole of the assets of the Bank of London hauded to them, they should^ pay the depositors of money at call, and for short periods; and shoulch also be responsible for the sums placed by customers under currentThe confidence which was beginning to be manifested at the history of the events taking place in the countries of accounts. But the Directors did not undertake to pay acceptanc®^Europe, in Asia and Africa, as well as on this continent, is brought down the to present year; the details of the internal affairs of the hulders, and these, seeing that the Bank of London was about to be United States are presented, embracing commerce, finance, legisla¬ wound up, and was, in fact, virtually out of existence, applied to the tion, political movements, the relations of this country to the for¬ court for an injunction against,preferences, and praying that all creditors eign nations as developed in our diplomatic intercourse are fully pre¬ having claims against the Bank of London should have equal justice sented ; all important documents, such as messages, orders, de¬ It was in consequence of this injunction that the Directors met hastily, spatches, and letters from official persons having been inserted en¬ tire. The world of literature is remarkably thorough. 'The titles and were compelled to arrive at an immediate conclusion. The letter of all important books are given, with an outline of their subjects. issued by them was as follows ; Brief sketches are given of the distinguished men who died during Sir—The undersigned directors of the Consolidated Bank (limited,') not hav in" had time to communicate with.their colleagues, have taken on themselves last year. The biography of Mr. Lincoln is admirably written, and the grave responsibility of closing it as the only just and honorable course under an appropriate tribute paid to his character. the following circumstances. In their recent arrangement with the Bank of London the Directors determined There are two indexes, one of subjects of which there are 245, from the first to take no liabilities’on behalf of that Bank, except such as were and one of the contents of the volume, very complete and elaborate, fully covered by available assets placed in their hands; hut they have_ since showing that the editor is fully aware of the value of that feature found that serious errors existed in the list of assets submitted to them, in cun'sequence of which they felt compelled yesterday evening to give notice to- the; of a work. Bank of London that they no longer held themselves hound by the arrange¬ The present volume is in no manner inferior to its predecessors. ment. At the same time*a suit was commenced in Chancery to have it declared! that the involved an undue preference Appleton’s Cyclopedia has become necessary in every private li¬ creditors arrangement of London, and an interim order of certain classes of the* was made by the Court of the Bank brary, affording, as it does, a complete history of the. world, a re¬ that principle, notwithstanding that the undersigned had been advised by pertory of science, and record of the progress made in the world of two eminent counsel that the arrangement was not open to such objection. The difficulties arising out of this state of things, combined with what had already letters. been done under the arrangement, have occupied the earnest attention of the undersigned during the whole of to-day, and they have been led to the painful conclusion that it would not be possible to conduct the business of the Consoli¬ Essay on Diamonds. By an Amateur. New-York : I860. This volume is perhaps better adapted for an Encyclopedia than dated Bank in the face <>f th<»se difficulties without contracting further engage¬ ments to an exteut which would have compromised the interest of their own for circulation as a separate treatise. It is written in clear style, customers and shareholders. The undersigned have the satisfaction of stating that they have ample assets and brings together a large number of interesting facts in relation of the Bank of London to meet all obligations actually incurred by this Bank to it, which every intelligent person ought to know. Of all the under the recent arrangement. Apart from that arrangement the Consolidated precious gems the diamond has retained the most uniform valuation. Bank was financially so strong that no difficulty would have been experienced in conducting its operations, and the Directors have now in their har/dft the Their possession, as all know, have been coveted by the great and whole of the assets of this bauk in an almost immediately available form. > wealthy of all countries, in every historical period. The richest Adam S. Kennaud. John Pemberton Heywood. Joun JP. Kennard. Thomas Fairbairn. specimens are from Hindostan, where they seem to be generally ob¬ Thomas A. Han key. Augustus Henry Novelli. tained along the shores of rivers. Jameson says that they are in ' William Smith. Frederick A. Hankey. the coal formation of that country. But diamonds are found in Up to the present time nothing of very great interest has transpired all parts of the world, in Russia as well as Brazil, and under cir¬ in reference to the difficulty in which the Consolidated Bank is placed ^ cumstances indicating that they are of comparatively recent origin. It is now 410 years since Ludwin von Bergen invented the method The hasty manner in which the business of the Bank of London wasof polishing them with their own powder. It was the former taken over has caused much comment and great surprise, inasmuch a» practice to cut them according to their form in octohaedronal the directors of the Consolidated Bank were known to be cautious Janes ; but cutters now use the forms known by the terms briliants, rose diamond, table diamond and brillioette. Cardinal Maz- bankers, the institution having been formed by the amalgamation in« arin, of the reign of Louis XI Vr., is said to have been the first London of Messrs. Hankey’s and Messrs. Heywood, Kennard & Co.’s* wearer of brilliants. Cutting greatly reduces the weight of this private banks with the Bank of Manchester. The authorized capital of* gem, the Kohinoor and South Star diamonds, which lost compar¬ the Bank is £2,000,000, and the paid up capital £600,000. The shares* atively little, having been respectively reduced from 1861 to 62f are of £10, and £4 has been paid upon them, leaving holders liable for carats, and from 2544 to 1241. £6 a share. The price is now 1^. This little book furnishes much information on all those points, This stoppage has caused much inconvenience, inasmuch as many ex¬ in the history of particular diamonds, grouping together much that cellent accounts were kept at the Bank. In the Corn Market much is interesting and useful. annoyance has been feP, and it has had the effect of greatly limiting the transaction's in cereal produce, though without affecting the actual Catfst iHonetarg anti Commercial Cngtisl) state of the market, which at the present moment, so far as wheat is BATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON, concerned, shows an improving tendency. But as the negotiation in the AT LATEST DATES. first instance was considered unsound, the failure cannot exactly be at¬ EXCHANGE AT LONDON— tributed to the recent crisis, and from this fact the effect on the Stock EXCHANGE ON LONDON. JUNE 2. Exchange and the Money Market was scarcely perceptible. Consols,, LATEST RATE. TIME. RATE. TIME. ON— indeed, only declined to the extent of £ per cent., and subsequently, th# DATE. market being influenced by heavy arrivals of bullion from New York, 11.85 June 2. 3 days. short. Amsterdam 11.16X@11.47 do do 25.12% showed an important improvement. Consols, for money, have been as 3 months. 25.50 <$25.60 Antwerp 13. 3% do do do 13. 9 ($13. 9%; Hamburg 05 do do high as S7-|, but the market, owing to the announcement that Austria short. 25.10 @,25.20 | Paris 24.85 do 3 mo’s. 3 months. 25.42%@25.47%i Faris declines to discuss the Venetian question at the approaching Congress, do 13.1H) @13.20 Vienna from which it is surmised that the Congress will only meet to separate do 0.28 @, 7.00 Berlin June 1. 3 mo's. 26&@26% do St. Petersburg 24%@)25/4 immediately—closes with a heavy appearance. The highest prices do Cadiz 53%@53% 51 do @i51 H May 28. 30 days. Lisbon on the days enumerated were : do 38.20 @28.50 Milan rate ; . on . News. . . ... — . do do Genoa Naples New York...’. Jamaica Havana Rio de Janeiro Buenos Ayres. — — — — — — — Singapore — — — — Ceylon — — Hong Kong... Sydney — — Pernambuco.. Madras Calcutta @28.50 @28.50 — — Valparaiso.... Bombay 28.20 28.20 — — 60 days' is. iid.@:*.n% do do is. U. lld.@l*.ll% — — FOR — — — THE WEEK ENDING JUNE 2. — — — May 24. May 15. 00 May 4. 90 00 Ma> 9. April 27. May 1. May 16. May 3. April 2*>. April 30. May 23. 153 days. do days. days. do do do @27% 25%@25% 27 Consols.. 52 ©47%@- The 27/6@27& 6 mo’s. is. 7%d.@4s. 8%d. do do do 4s. 7%</.©— 6@8 p.c. 2s l)id. dis. 2s. 0 %d. May 21. May 1. 30 days. 1@1% P- c. piem* — Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thnr'day Friday. 2# p. c. prem. 87 % 87% imports of specie have been 87% 87% 87% Sat’day. 85%ex. d unusually large, viz.: aggregating by the 2Etna, £618,600 by the Scotia £91,000 by the Arago, £24,500 by the Borussia, .£740,000 by the City of Paris, £62,500 by the Palmyra, £166,000 by the Germania, £16,000 by the Kangaroo, and £400,000 by the China, all from New York; £67,000 in sovereigns from Alexandria, £154,000 by the Seine, from thq £2,672,000, consisting of £97,600 June 745 CHRONICLE. THE 16, 1866.] COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Rhone, from Brazil. Brom the Conti¬ nent we have received £236,000 from France, £20,650 from Russia, and Imports and Exports for the Week.—The imports show a decrease some small amounts from Hamburg and Bremen, The exports, how" this week both in general merchandise and dry goods, the total being ever, have also been large, viz.: £1,110,000, nearly the whole of which $2,730,759 against $7,769,823 last week, and $4,885,884 the previous has been forwarded to the Continent. week. The exports are $1,948,494 this week, against $1,684,555 The return of the Bank of England is unfavorable, and has caused last week, and $2,260,855 the previous week. Only 474 bales of much disappointment. The effect on the Consol market was consider' cotton were exported the past week. Included in the exports were able, but since the return was made up large amounts of bullion have also 17,334 barrels wheat flour, 130 barrels rye flour, 8,076 barrels corn have been paid in, and the Bank is now rapidly gaining strength. It is meal, 24,781 bushels oats, 16,418 bu°hels peas, 869,626 bushels corn, 892 probable that the stock of bullion cannot, to-day be less than £12,500,000^ pkgs. candles, 760 tons coal, 185 bbls. spirits turpentine, 2,878 barrels and it is expected that the next statement will show several important rosin, 5,154 barrels tar, 201 galls, whale oil, 1,084 galls, sperm oil, 462 and satisfactory changes. Respecting the last return, however, it must galls, lard oil, 474,732 galls, petroleum, 950 barrels pork, 557 barrels still be borne in mind that the changes do not show the precise state of and 186 tierces beef, 204,642 pounds cutmeats, 22,032 pounds butter, the money market. Out-of-doors the difficulty of obtaining accomoda¬ 246,896 pounds cheese, 196,614 pounds lard, 1 bbl. rice, 42,054 pounds tion is still considerable; hence, the pressure on the Bank of England is tallow, 16,400 pouuds whalebone, 1,072 hogsheads and 679 other pack¬ severe, and, during the week, the demand for discount has been decided¬ ages crude tobacco, 28,857 pounds manufactured tobacco, as may be ly active. In the open market, although there is a steady inquiry for seen in a comparative table of exports which we give in our Commercial accomodation, very little paper has been discounted. As compared Epitome. The following are the imports at New York for week end¬ with last week, however, the transactions have certainly increased, and money is obtainable on more favorable terms. The quotations are as ing (for dry-goods) June 7, and forsthe week ending (for general mer¬ chandise) June 8 : under, so far as’the best paper is concerned : FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. West Indies, and £6,164 by the PerCent. Per Cent. 9%(3i 80 days’ bills 60 do do 3 months’ bills 9%@ 10 @ — — — cent, if with seven, drawal. At Paris, owing to the strong 80,077,530 EXPORTS FROM NEW market. $ c. Berlin Frankfort Amsterdam $ c. 8 Turin Brussels “ Madrid St. Petersburg freely offered on English and German account. There have been numerous transactions on American ac¬ count, and a large business has been done. Prices have, however, given way, and close at a consideKable decline. The highest prices on the days enumerated were : 6 per cent do 67 67 50 42 67 50 44 66% 65% 50 41 50 43 70 70 70 71 76 72 67% 101 $50 shares ../ Philadelphia and Erie, 1st mortgage, 1881, (gua. by Penn. Railroad Co) do with option to be paid in Philadelphia Canada 6 per cent do 5 per cent ’. 67 43 46% 45% 70 70 70 79 70 70 48 46% 79% 70 48 67 48 46 70 70 70 S3 69 82 69 67% 67% 67% 67% 70 48 44 70 76% 69 67% 101 101 101 4J 40 40 40 40 gold June 8—SS. 73 73 73 73 73 73 73 93 77 73 73 73 93% 77% 93 73 93 76 76% 77% ' this Bank of London. Atlantic and Great of de¬ f information of holders of Certificates of Debenture I am instructed to cash in amount sufficient to meet the payment of all coupons due on the 15th of May, of all coupons due on the 15th of November next, and also part of the coupons due May, 1867, has been hands of the Consolidated Bank, who are under guarantee to meet the payment of such coupons. is tem¬ From the unfortunate position in which that For the state that of duly lodged by the trustees in the bank porarily placed some delay will probably arise in the application of the moneys, but there is not the least reason to doubt tuat the Consolidated Bank will meet all its engagements. I am, dear Sir, yours faithfully, H. W. Smithers, Secretary. Shipley & Co, have transferred their the London and W estminster Bank. 88,256,779 $37,477,535 Same time In 1858 1857 1856 $11,801,833 18,021,607 11.130,080 3,005,840 15,903,298 29,761, ..13,889,374 * 12,925.758 7,034,846 10,518,262 1854 1853... 1852 California.—The steamship New York, from Ai- mails, passengers and treasure, arrived June 9. The following is her treasure list: the 1st inst., with on port on Saturday, account from the $33,408 102,300 11,100 & Co J. W. Seligman & Co Eugene Kelly & Co... Duncan, Sherman 12,431 Bacon & Russell Dabney, Morgan & Co Amr. Belmont & Co at 82,408 .. Lees & Waller Panama Railroad Co Eureka Lake & Yuba 40,000 FROM $500 Wm. Young Trevor & Colgate.... follows P. P. February Ca Total.... v At date. $ 685,610 799,706 .; Henry Channcey 944.878 1,449,074 1,209.048 1,469,286 1,425.553 5 12 23 31 9 20 April April May May May May June New York. Arizona Henrv Chauncey 389,837 673,615 ... 729,862 809,459 1,318,271 1,072.820 1 9. 21 31 9 $952,933 1, 1866, have . : February 21 March March March .... ifornia since January 9 March 600 Walling Steamship. 12 January January 19 February 1 20,127 $949,906 400 receipts of treasure from a> . Land*o \ 1,527 The 69,411 443,000 10,236 A9PINWALL. Isaacs & Asch been 73,000 Engene Kelly & Co Wmls, Fargo & Co Total Date. Western Railway, ) London, May 29, 1866 46,507 FROM SAN FRANCISCO. of London to Bank rate, all York, on the following has been addressed to the holders of Certificates bentures of the Atlantic and Great Western Railway : 77,457 loons * 19,759,036,1855 ....... pinwall. has been firm. The 196,300 $15,514,556 25,525.170 19,675,676 1860 1859 75,000 can gold Sovereigns and Am. gold Sovereigns and doub- $4,220,756 Same time in 1865 1864 1863 1862. 1861 73 93% 77% 92% “ American gold.... $196,940 Silver coin 45,000 Gold bars 79,103 50,000 Mexican silver German silver 1,000 9—SS. London, Liverp’l— American go^d 750,400 Mexican and Ameri¬ Teutonia, Hamburg- Treasure from Arrangements have been made with the Union Bank accept, without expenses, or to pay under discount at draughts drawn by Messrs. Ballin and Sander, of New American gold 1,753,049 For Havre— American gold 140,000 For Liverpool— Silver coin 15,000 8—SS. Fulton, Bremen— American gold 545,000 40 Frankfort, the market for American securities Prices of Five-twenties have ranged from 67f to 68£. Consolidated to Liverp’l— $250,000 . Total since Jan. 1,1866 101 ' . : Total for the week Previously reported 101 At Offices of the gold 6—SS. Aleppo, 70 43% 2d mort. Messrs. Brown, “ 50 43 70 67 48 York Rail, 7 per cent, 1872, do American Foreign and American 50 41 Pennsylvania section, lstm. 1877.. cons’tedmort, b'ds, 1895. do Erie shares, 100 dollars, all paid do Convertible bonds, 6 per cent Illinois npntrfll 6 per cpnt 1875 d-n 7 ppr r.HTif. 1875 do $100 shares, all paid.. Marrietta and Cincinnati, 7 per cent... New York Central, 100 dollar shares... Panama York, for the week ending June 9, 1866 June 6—SS. City of Cork, Liverpool — Sht. 65% Virginia 5 per cent Atlanticand Great Western,New section, 1st mortgage, 1880 Fri. Thur. Mon. Tues. Wed. United States 5-20’s, 6 per cent 82.575,373 Previously reported.... “ ending June 2. $1,250,702 $1,943,494 — Hamburg American securities have been For week 1866. 1865. 1864. $2,839,180 , 69,435,853 71,100,381 98,154,413 Since January 1 $85,001,956 $72,275,033 $72,351,083 $100,097,907 8 uoin 6 bills. 5 In the commercial department will be found the official detailed 6% advances statement of the imports and exports for the week. nom’l — 7% The following will show the exports of specie from the port of New 6%-7 5% market. ^ c. rate. 4 -4 5 6 9 bills. 9 > 9% advances 7 7 6% 6% HI “ YORK FOR THE WEEK. $2,426,583 for the week.. Open Bank Open rate, 61,146,299 143,907,962 $64,736,838 $146,688,721 104,650,508 1863. Bank $ c. $3,590,539 2,119,885 $2,730,759 report of the our leading Continental cities : At Paris Vienna $5,404,281 $611,374 dry-goods trade will 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 the week ending June 12: In position of the ^ank—the 3,175,292 $83,366,458 $110,054,789 1 Since January as • $3,288,928 Previously reported supply of bullion being £22,600,000—money at one period of the week was as low 3-$- per cent. The rate has also slightly declined at Hamburg, but in other quarters the quotations rule firm. Annexed are the rates at the 4,253,060 2,686,986 Total for the week allow six per cent, for money at call ; per and 7£ per cent, if with fourteen days’ notice of with¬ The discount houses 1866. $415,247 $1,151,221 $601,942 Drygoods General merchandise 1865. 1864. 1863. 10 @ — 10 11 8 @ 9 bills oills 0&4 months’ bank paper.., 4 months’ 6 months’ * 1,276,505 324,552 949,906 To date $ 685,616 1,486,314 2,430,198 8,879,266 5,088,319 6,557,603 7,983,155 8,372,992 9,046,607 9,776,469 10,585,901 11,904,199 12,977,019 14,253,524 14,578,076 15,537,983 12—Per San Francisco.—The exports of treas¬ San Francisco from May 1 to date have been as follows : Exports of Treasure from from ure 932 33- 267.442 75 169,900 10 125,000 00 $1,028,523 51 12,697,634 03 $13,726,157 54 16,127,426 81 $2,401,269 27 indebted to Messrs. Total since May 1,1866 Previously this year 1, 1866 Corresponding period of 1S65 Decrease this year Suspensions in May.—We are England during Co., merchants, London. W. K. Cobourgh A Co., merchants, Liverpool. Liabilities of £150,000. Duff, Cadell A Co., East India merchants, Liverpool. Enthoven, H. J. A Sons, metal merchants, London and Liverpool. Lia¬ bilities £300,000. Payment in full expected. the , the Consolidated hank.) Commercial Banking Corporation of India and the East, London. bal Consolidated Bank (limited) Lond. Reserve A last Paid-up capital .... Reserve A last bal . 1,500,000 Paid up capital .... Reserve A last bal . 250,000 nil. 200,000 bal 15,180 The Old Ebbw Yale Company. Reserve and last Imperial Mercantile Credit Associa¬ capital.. Paid-up capital .... 500,000 tion, limited Subscribed 500,000 94,169 Reserve aud last bal New Zealand Banking Corporation, limited. Subscribed 600,000 60,000 capital.. Paid-up capital .... 87,259 Consolidated Discount Co., limited. Subscribed capital. . 1,000,000 limited. 500,000 capital.. Paid-up capital .... 600,000 (Stopped payment in consequence of arrangement with Bank of London) 48,872 Subscribed . Sube^ibed capital.. 644,190 English Joint Stock Bank, 1,000,000 1,000,000 capital.. Paid-up capital .... Subscribed Last bal and reserve - 4,000 Oriental Commercial Bank,limited. Subscribed capital.. 1,397,440 Paid-up capital .... La^ bal and reserve Overend, Gurney A Co., (Since resumed.) European Bank, limited. Subscribed capital.. 2,147,300 .. 350 281,444 60,627 limited. Subscribed capital.. 6,000,000 Paid-up capital .... 1,500,000 &f)e Bankers’ (Sa^ette. BOARDS. The following shows the description and number of shares sold at the Regu¬ lar and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday: THE STOCK 100 100 . , . 3,700 1,520 14,820 1,700 26,330 166 50 100 .... 900 16,100 200 .... 4,800 3,000 300 400 200 .... IOO . . 50 890 50 700 2,600 470 . .... 2,650 8,900 22,475 200 500 900 7,000 2,200 2,112 86 300 .... .... • .... .... f 200 70 200 200 0 100 100 - . 3,000 200 10 '266 .... 19,696 8 600 .... 1,200 6,900 6,167 75 100 . 2,630 . 600 50 350 900 .... 2,247 . . . 74 326 2,400 2,700 .... 100 3,386 • • • of transactions in shares at the two Boards, comparatively, for of the two last weeks, and the totaljfor the same weeks, following statement: -Open Board—xBoth BoardsReg. Board.Prev’s 13,334’ 19,546 21,378 23,252 20,947 23,262 24,418 : "... Total of week week. 63,800 31,300 243,900 328,400 272,300 301,400 239,700 227,800 234.285 228,700 The Board. Friday. State 330,763 122,563 208,200 170,934 247,400 250,118 214.650 418,334 464,768 385,606 468,968 318,449 329,597 566,549 682,461 609,170 472,930 395,501 208.650 226,230 182,500 190,450 4....135.949 11....139.127 18.. 205,609 360,940 454,3S1 228,080 439,461 May 1 418,149 June (5 days) .22S,873 380,306 8.... 204,080 278,850 419,762 June June 15....126,591 268,910 597,016 Wed. Tues. Mon $ $25,000 174,100 227.500 20,000 5,000 25,0^0 1,500 $17,000 :$22,000 169,500 112,200 $10,000 146,000 5,000 10,000 28,000 4.000 72,000 10,000 10,800 7,000 34,500 .... 12,500 16,000 bonds, viz. : 1,000 • 10,000 • • • • '.... • • 31,000 $5,000 $79,000 402,500 1,231,800 97,000 39,000 175,000 62,500 17,000 277,800 173,000 • .... .... 11,000 ... • .... 10,000 Georgia 6’s... 10.666 .... 10,000 10.000 Illinois 6’s.... Indiana 6’s... Kentuckv6’s. Louisiana 6’s. 5.000 . 5,000 . > .... ..... ..... • • . • . Minnesota 8’s. Missouri 6’s.. N. Y. State 5*9. N.Y. State 6’s, N. Y. State 7’a N. Carolina 6’s Ohio 6's Rhode Isl’d 6’s S. Carolina 6’s Tennesee 6’s.. 14,000 28,000 . . • - • 93,000 10,000 26,000 10,000 24,000 171,000 16,000 5,000 r .... ■_ 10,000 6,000 40,000 ... .. .. .. 39,000 3,000 143,000 16,000 4,000 10,000 44,000 U. S. Bonds U. S. Notes State&City bonds . ...... • Mon. Tues. f fe 4,000 2,000 . 2,000 following is a summary of the amoant of securities, and railroad bonds sold on each day: Total amount.. 5,000 10,006 . 1,000 . The Railroad Bonds. . . 9,000 30,000 74,000 .... » • • 5,000 1,000 1,000 25.000 • 10,000 Virginia 6’s... City bonds, viz.: Brooklyn 6’s. Jersey City 6's N. Y. city 6’s Governments State and City Wed. , Fri. Thnr. Week. $171,000 $296,500 $145,200 $180,600 $297,500 $509,000 $1,599,800 277.800 16.000 31,000 173,000 34,500 12,500 10,5*00 483,000 69,000 19,000 52,000 136,000 99,000 108,000 159,000 32,000 27,000 4,500 50,500 29,000 16,000 783,000 2.519,600 $305,800 496,000 307,200 275,200 352,000 The totals of each class are Both Boards &c., bonds sold at the Regular Board, daily, last the following statement: Week Fri. Thur. California 7’s, Connect’t 6’s. Michigan 7’s 86,023 106,024 82,016 90,900 63,721 Open 27....242.738 Government aud State, week, are given in IT. S. 6’s, 1881. U.S 6’s(5-20’s). U.S 0’s (old).. U.SS’s (10-403 U.S5's (old).. U.S 7-30 notes U.S Certified. 54,146 Board. 20.. ..176,956 183,200 371,113 2....217,961 221,500 9....206,849 211,1800 16... .206,312 213,450 23... .261,106 335,910 March March March March ending Regular Week Boards March 425,250 April 667,509 516,115| April 549,143; April 440,807;April May ' 436.940 May 462,985 May Board. Board. January 5....1S1,350 January 12.... 330,109 January 19.... 243,815 January 26.... 247,743 February 2 ...201,107 February 9....2U9,140 Februaryl6 week. 30,934 82,578 67,762 71,447 81,062 65,718 278,850 395,501 482,930 of the year are weekly since the commencement in shares following statement: ending Regular Open Both .Februurv23.. ..187,913 Last week. 126,591 204,080 268,910 - The transactions Friday. 34.600 62.600 50,300 46,000 56,000 39,350 50.500 shown in the Week 1 61,200 44,510 33,423 55,824 35,016 34,900 24,371 is shown in rev’s week. Last week. 17.600 Prev’s Sat. AT .’ioo . 1,710 ..... . 16,200 .... 450 .... 2,000 Telegragh—Russian . . 600 100 .... 500 .. BUSINESS ‘200 400 70 1,900 • 200 .... 900 • 2,000 200 2,900 300 Friday. COMPANIES. (Effected transfer of business to 2,000 100 , Sat. .... 100 5,000 .... Wednesday... Thursday Liabilities Reserve and la9t bal .... viz.: Lnion Telegraph Saturday Monday Liabilities £70,000 Paid-up capital 312605. 10 100 . . . .... . • .... 3,500 9,300 6,300 .... Last Liverpool. 304,4 11 4,850 wpplr uncertain. 400,000 1,150 4,110 300 200 350 - 3,050 The volume Reynolds, Mann A Co., merchants, Liverpool. rB. A J. Rankin, Union Foundry, Liverpool. Robinson, Coryton A Co., bankers and bill brokers, Manchester. En¬ gagements iuconsiderable. Seymour, Peacock A Co., shipbroker, London and Liverpool. Schemed, Brothers A Co., Mediterranean trade, Liverpool. W. Shrimpton, contractor, London. Liabilities £220,000. Wakefield, Nash A Co., merchants, Liverpool. Liabilities £1,000,000, Paid up Reserve and balance 1,S50 — • 21 each day Macindoe, £800,000 300 500 200 50 100 46 . .... 600 .... 3 500 4,700 1,440 105 11,730 .... . 300 650 672 1,750 6 . .... 2,100 2,126 Spence Hill Coal London. Liabilities India trade, Liverpool. 61 13 . 44 99,735 1,800 1,500 3,400 4,200 2,000 1,400 ..... 2,220 & T. H.. 200 10 Wilkesbarre Coal . . 3,200 30 11.250 200 200 4,230 'ioo 2'0 1,200 Quicksilver W. U. . . 5,280 ll’640 24,500 100 900 300 . Mariposa Pacilic Mail— Western 14 lttO Cary Improvement Cumberland Coal Del. & Hudson Canal Penny A Co., East India trade, Liverpool (connected with Rogers A Co., Bombay). Liabilities £104,060, assets £20,000. Peto, Betts A Co., contractors, London. Liabilities £4,000,000. capital.. capital .... 3,100 Tuesday or Subscribed 20,625 Canton Kleman, merchant, London. London. 4,320 2 i,400 & Chic. Miscellaneous shares, Liverpool. Bank of London, 500 300 ». Atlantic Mail Boston Water Power..... Brunswick City Giannacopulo A Cochilani, commission merchants, Liverpool. Frarajee A Co., Bombay merchants, London. Gellatley, Hankey A Sewell, shipowners, London (successors to Duncan Dunbar) going on as G. H. S. A Co. Old firm showing a eurpius of £70,000 or £80,000. Holderness & Chilton, shipowners, Liverpool. Hartshorn A Ward, anchor and chain manufacturers, Dudley. Hallet, Ommaney A Co., private bankers and navy agents, London. Li¬ PUBLIC 59,710 300 3,400 1,500 Alton Stonington Toledo & Wabash S. P. provision merchants, 11,400 300 Mississippi ($100) St. Louis, Liabilities upwards of £2,000,liquidation expected. assets 70 lo’ioo 505 30 .... Reading Fernie Brothers, shipowners, Liverpool. 000, and a very unfavorable Gibb3 Brothers, ironfounders, South Staffordshire. Whittle A Co., 20 6,610 200 Pitts., Ft. Wayne resumed. £80,000. Maculioch, John A Co., -East £750,000. 20 7,700 20,500 400 200 Cincinnati Michigan Central Michigan Southern Milwaukee & P. du Chien. Milwaukee & St. Paul.... New York Central New York & New Haven. Ohio & 41,280 13,145 8,480 2,510 Marietta & Churchill, Gillespie A Kynaston, Sutherland A Co., colonial brokers, £100,000, assets favorable. Luckie Brothers, West India merchants, London. 120 6,200 8,200 3,650 Long Island follow¬ dur* ’266 120 8.449 900 Hudson River Illino s Central Brothers of the British Trade Journal, London for the ing list of the most important suspensions which have taken place ing the month of May in England : Raines, James A Co., shipowners, Liverpool. Boult, English A Brandon, shipowners, Liverpool. Bedell, Prior A Co, wiue merchants, London. Liabilities £100,000 since Morgan abilities £300,000. T. A J.Higgin, salt proprietors, J. G. C. P. Kleman, trading as Pontes 4,934 175 20 320 120 1 00 5,017 Chicago & Alton Chicago, Bur. & Quincy Chicago & Northwestern. Chicago & Rock Island... Cleveland, Col. & Cine Cleveland & Pittsburg Cleveland & Toledo Del., Lack. & Western Erie Railway '.. May 12—Per Bunker Hill to Kong Kong. May 12—Per Perie to Hong Kong May 15—Per America to New York Total since January 75 20 398.441 26 107,129 86 5,000 00 To England To Panama To Punta Arenas 196 Railroad shares, viz.: Catawissa Central of New Jersey.... $285,379 07 e Fri’y. Week. 224 1,189 Thurs. 90 Wed. Tues. 131 Mon. 226 272 Bank Shares 72,739 40 1,000 00 Hong Kong to Hong Kong. Live Yankee to Honolulu.. May May 10—Per Constitution— To New York Mav [June 16, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 746 . of securities sold in shown in the statement the first four months of the year which follows: k June 16, 1866] Governments Bonds. Notes. , “ June “ “■ 4 $12,155,700 9,822,000 10,622,840 12,056,150 12,279,450 $3,035,500 1,692,100 3,006,700 2,903,600 781.240 1,679,500 1,236,600 44% 45 Quicksilver 54 55% 59 Mariposa prer 25% 92% . 838,700 781,900 New York Central Erie Hudson River.... 24% 92% 73% 109% 107% 78% 110% 107% $342,500 $194,800 $2,966,500 249,500 336.600 173,500 285,000 193,500 224.100 121.000 2,345,850 3,011,500 2,879,900 Michigan Central 397,000 4S3.000 145,500 93,700 159,000 1,8:30,000 ; 2,789,500 Northwestern.... 721,800 277,800 73% Mich. Southern.. 600.950 311,700 649,000 *■ 2,519,600 Friday, June 15, 1866—P. M. The Money dulness May 4. May 11. May 18. May 25. May 31. June 8. June 15 Canton Co 288.0'0 1,301,900 1.939,100 1,036.400 1,111,500 1,577,000 1,599.800 15 Cumberland Coal 747 Reading 3.739,650 2,258,250 ending on Friday— $2,099,800 $329,400 (5 days). 1 S amount. $952,900 ‘ 1,691,500 11 18 25 “ Total Bonds. $3,^10,100 2,591,900 5,793,300 S,002,700 and for the weeks “ Railroad Bonds. 3.931.300 April May CHRONICLE. State, &c,, * $4,827,200 3,846,500 January February March May THE Market.—During the week there has been a general in the loan market. Owing to the inactivity in stock specu¬ lation, brokers have wanted but few loans, and discounts also have been quiet, us loans remains usual at this season of the year. The rate on call steady at five per cent., although there is a good amount outstanding at six per cent., which it would not be easy; perhaps, to substitute at a lower rate.. A further addition to the floating supply of money will be made by the disbursement of over ten millions of interest on Seven thirties, falling due to-day. As this will be distributed slowly and at all poiuts throughout the country, its effect upon the money market will be almost inappre 78% 82 164% 5S% xd.94% 121% 122 99 109% 79% 108 86% 86 105 60% 113%109% 80% 107 108 29% 104% 28% 59 93% 58 93 98% 120% 61% 123% 100 .. The Gold 104% 28% 29 preferred Rock Island. Fort Wayne Illinois Central 83 % 52% 60 24% 98 68% 113% 110% 80 111% 107% 79% .... Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. “ 45% 52% 57% 23% 94% 47 54% 61 % 22 94% ' 74% 96% 118 - 46 51% 59% 24% 97% 63 .... 82 xd.104 28% 31% 58% 60% 84% .... 92% 96% ...Y 97% 118% 121 .... 60 24 98% 61% 110% 109% 79% 109 $9 106 30% 59% 94 97% 122 Market.—The political and financial intelligence: brought by the Scotia has had the effect of promoting an active speculation in gold. Although the condition of affairs at London was construed favorably, and had an assuring effect among the cor¬ respondents of London brokers, yet the German bankers received advices more discouraging than anything previous. Some impor¬ tant balances held here on account of German capitalists were or¬ dered home, and the tone of letters indicated the probability of the return of considerable farther amounts of Five-twenties. tion, there ha9 been also In addi¬ important demand for gold from im¬ porters who fiud it necessary to pay cash on some of their Conti¬ nental purchases, in lieq of availing themselves of credits. These ciable. circumstances combined have produced an unexpectedly large de¬ Discounts are a fraction lower than last week. Choice names mand for gold for shipment, the exports on-Wednesday having pass at 5@54 per cent. ; the general rate for prime names, however, amounted to $3,749,741, and on Thursday to $316,458, while the is 6@7 per ceut. The following are the current rates for loaus of shipments of to niQrrow appear likely to be about four millions various classes : more. The price has advanced steadily under this demand from Percent. Percent. Call loans 5 @ I Good endorsed bills, 3 & 139£ on Saturday last to 149f- to-day. This evening the price on Loans on bonds & mort.. @ | an < 4 months., .. Prime endorsed months bills, 2 5 6 @ 6% 7 8 10 @15 1 do single names @ 5% | Lower grades the street closed at 148. The advance in the premium has drawn partial supply from eagles having arrived steady throughout the week. Their value in gold has fluctuated during the week, besides an amount of small coin. The export of specie from this port last week amounted to through the advance in the gold premium, in sympathy with the condition of the European markets; but the currency quotations $4,220,756. The combined export from Boston and New York have remained about the same as at the close of last week. The from May 1st to June 13th, amounts to $38,925,300. German bankers are holders of a large amount of Five twenties re¬ The Aspinwall steamer brought on Saturday last $952,933 in turned for sale, of which a good proportion was brought by the treasure. Scotia ; but the advance in gold has rendered it impossible to sell The following have been the highest and lowest quotations for them, and it appears quite probable that they will have to be re¬ gold, on each of the last six days: turned to Europe. We hear of several remittances of bonds to Highest. Lowest. Highest. Lowest June 9. 140 139% June 13 145% 142% Europe by to-morrow’s steamers, on speculation ; the aggregate 11 14 139% 137% 147% 145% 12 15 143% 141% 149% 147% beiug probably not less than three-quarters of a million. The transactions for last week at the Custom House and SubTo-day there has been some enquiry for Sixes of 1881 for ship¬ ment to London. Treasury were as follows: Custom House. Suh-TrcasuryThe subjoined closing quotations for leading Government securi¬ ReceiDts. Receipts. Payments. $340,100 79 $3,4S1,955.27 $1,533,592 90 ties, will show the difference in prices as compared with previous June 4. 5, 379,615 72 1,976,631 92 2,219,385 46 United States Securities.—Government securities have been a the interior hoards, about $2,500,000 of double . “ “ “ weeks “ : “ Mav4. Mav 11. May 18. U. U. U. U. U. U* U. U. S. S. S. S. S 8 S. 8 U. S. 109% 102 102% 102% 96 102 102% 101%’ 102% 6’s, 1881 coup Ji-9% 5-20’s, 1802coupons, x.c. 102% 5-20’s, 1864 “ ..x.c.102 ..x.c.li'25-20’s, 1865 “ 10-40’s, “ 95% .. 7-30’s 1st series 7-30’s 2d Series 7-30’s 3rd aeries .. .. 102 lyr’a certificates.... Railroad and 100% 102% 95% 102% 102% 102% 101% 100 100 96% 102% 102% 102% 100 Stocks.—The Stock Market 102% 100% Miscellaneous M&v 31. June 8. June 15. 109 109% 109% 110% 101% 102% 102% 102% U 2 102% 102% 102% 102% 102% 102% 102% 96 102% '102% 96% 102% 102% 102% “ “ 6. 7 8. 9. 381,117 338,268 321,243 380,740 Total Balance in Sub 91 36 14' 60 $2,141,036 58 Treasury morning of June 4 Deduct payments * 1,091.048 34 - 4,822,102 1,595,376 3,047,416 2,199,706 2,408,561 37 1,336.893 57 711,319 36 $11,006,409 83 64 75 36 36 $15,417,530 36 35,202,321 66 -.— $100,619,852 02 11,006,409 83 during the week Balance on Saturday Increase during the evening.. week : Total amount of gold certificates • $89,613,442 19 4,411,120 53 issued, $2,626,000. Included The commencement in the receipts of customs were $278,000 iu gold, and $1,863,087 into the country ; while the unusually active speculation in gold has di¬ in gold certificates. The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the Subverted operations from the Stock Exchange to the Gold Room ; add to which the desire to close up speculations, usually apparent Treasury since April 7 : W eeks Custom Sub-Treasury Changes in in June, has had a tendency to depress speculation. There are, House. Payments. Receipts. Balances. Ending Balances. dec 1,534,856 7 however, speculative combinations upon certain stocks, especially Apr. 14.... 2,863,009 13,324,9S1 11,790,124 83,621,790 inc 5,359,749 90,325,685 2,857,703 12,068,189 6,704,395 North Western, Erie, Cleveland & Pittsburg, and Fort Wayne, inc 21.... 2,535,567 14,688,239 21,953,904 97,591,349 7,265,664 inc 28.... 2,246,307 13,937,517 97,773,823 182,478 14,119,991 which are interested in putting up prices ; and it is not improbable May 5.... dec 35,688,713 2,711,181 31,241,874 93,326,985 4,446,833 inc 2,417,391 15,034,333 20,026,038 98,318,690 4,991,704 May 12.... that so soon as the gold excitement subsides, another strong effort inc 19.... 2,542,814 23,547,689 2S,280,222 103,051,222 4,732,532 inc 26.... 56,955.238 111,021,417 2,358,454 48,958,044 7,970,394 will be made to force an advance iu prices. dec June 2.... 2,182,395 45,911,432 20,092; 337 85,202,321 25,819,095 inc 9.... At present Erie is quiet, and it appears difficult to divine what 2,141.086 11,006,409 89.613,442 15,417,530 4,411.120 will be the tactics of party manipulating it. The price has been Foreign Exchange.—The large remittances on Continental ac¬ weak during the week, but has to day shown rather more strength, count called for a large supply of sight bills on.Europe for Wednes¬ touching 6l£, at the Morning Board, but closing this evening at day’s steamer, and for tomorrow’s mail there has also been an ac¬ 60|. Fort Wayne has advanced during the week -£ ; and Rock tive demand for that class of bills, until this afternoon, when the has beeu unusually dull throughout the week. of the Summer has drawn some habitues of Wall street away , » “ “ “ “ “ Island 1 market . The Scotia brought home 3,000 shares of Illinois Central, and about 2,000 of Erie. The following are the closing quotations for leading stocks, pared with those of previous weeks ; com¬ broke, and quotations were generally lower. There has been marked falling off in the demand for sterling sight bills. To-day, the market has been largely supplied with bills borrowed by parties shortyi iu gold, which has been the chief cause of the decline on the rates of sterling. a 748 [June CHRONICLE. THE three last weeks : 8. copipared with those of the foreign bills, London CommT.. do bkrs’/OT?*? do do jhort do short 5.15 © Frankfort Bremen Berlin 42%© 42%@ 42% 80%@ 74 @ 42 41%© 41 %@ 79%© 73% © 42% SO 74 June 15. 109 © 109% 110%© 110% © 5.11%© - 5.07%@ — Banks.—The following statement shows condition of the Associated Banks of the City of New York tor week ending with close of business on June 9, 1866 : City New York — t Loans 5,705,944 America Phenix 1,910,705 2,'894,353 2,748,732 Fulton 5.667,407 Chemical 3.095,069 Merch’ts Exchange Manufact’s Seventh Ward.. State of N. York... American Exc’ge.. 167,372 37,085 662,240 693.691 5,609,650 10,931,877 23.009.841 5,315.964 Commerce Broadway Mercantile Pacific 74,843 1,689,449 Chatham Har.over Irving Metropolitan 2,558,668 Nassau Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather. Corn Exchange... 19,408 39,500 4,823.000 3,202.133 3.985,942 2,666.947 1,205,327 Continental Commonwealth. 87.632 48.763 2,695.605 2,731.900 . Oriental 16,88-1 78,413 1,119,157 Traders... 4,663,560 15,790.527 Bank'g As’n 1,131,703 Imp. & Fourth Central Second 26.314 28.S80 1,521.038 1,389,800 13,813,890 12,421.269 National... 1,319.642 National... Other Seven deposits day and other The return, 991,623 3,996,033 2,616,922 512,376 516,059 248,438 231.M3 398.102 10.821.730 701,092 - 3.48S 295 3,093.490 11.956,240 1,106.006 374,820 797,626 2,832,043 218.366 268.263 13,556 662.031 10,363 250,675 933,761 291,678 27,000 1,111.938 7,145 98,711 1,252,2(9 39,845 8,202 150,281 8,715 15,821,663 25,967,253 $249,53S,959 jThe deviations from the returns of the 74,623,674 202,503,949 previous week are as fol¬ lows: .' Dec. $ 1,420,063 Deposits Legal'fenders Loans Specie Dec. 6,03*5.430 Dec. 276,972 changes indicate a rapid recovery ..Inc. $4,376,660 [Inc. 5,449,682 These from the derangements of gold by the Sub-Treasury. deposits is the result of the consequent upon the late large sales The decrease of §6,036,430 in the specie large withdrawals for exportation. The several items compare as weeks : , Apr.28... 245,017,692 May 5..'. 253,974,134 May 12... 257 621,317 May 19... 255.*590,4(53 May26... 257.969,593 June 2... June 9... Philadelphia tion. 8.243,937 10,914,997 13,970,402 13,595,405 19,736,929 25,377.280 25.415,677 24,693,259 25,189,864 26,223,867 Clearings. Deposits. Tenders. 202,718,574 210,373,303 217,552,853 217.427,729 208,977.905 198,127.289 26,244,225 25,907,253 202,503,949 Banks.—The following shows the average condition of the Aggregate Legal Specie. 250,959.022 21,858.093 249,538,959 15,821,663 previous follows with the returns of CirculaLoans. 545,339.668 603,556,177 523,098,538 579,342,483 713,575.444 S0,589.022 81.204.447 85,040.659 85,710.107 73,829.947 69,178.902 713,575,444 74,628,674 633,656,381 comparative statement leading items of the phia Banks for the past Capital $14,642,150 Philadel¬ Specie Legal Tenders. Deposits Circulation.... The 47,564,996 690,121 21,154,909 88,189,567 9,022,553 following comparison phia Banks at stated $14,642,150 48.118.897 859,633 21,568.085 38,326,936 9,007,515 shows the periods : securities in banking department Coin and bullion in both de¬ partments Seven dav and other bills... The Rest” Other in reserve Total reserve (notes Notes in and < oin) banking department.... Increase Decrease.. Increase.. Increase.. Decrease.. .. $553,901 30,488 413,166 137,369 15,038 condition of the Philadel¬ 444,570 the 33,447,463 11,879,775 Increase 2,397,057 20,989 7.393 33,882 415,455 Increase Decrease Increase Decrease 543,730 3,419,759 415,410 528,236 859,9S0 Decrease of France, week 31. added : is 1S66. May f. c. 182,500,000 0 7,014,776 2 22.105,750 14 4,000,000 0 branches.. branches in the provinces Treasury account Accounts current at Paris Ditto in the provinces 919,872,775 0 16,714,614 S5 106,412,688 66 332,534,0S7 39 46,011,025 0 made up to May 24, 1866 f. c. 182,500,000 9 7,044,776 2 22,105,750 14 4,000,000 0 879,688,525 0 15,619,662 3 110,705,445 57 290,127,7-6 96 2,074,992 92 44,845,899 o 635,819 75 13,862,536 63 2,074,992 92 8,619,618 28 9,165,201 27 1,662,958,377 75 1,582,376,335 29 602,771 75 Dividends payable 14,458,377 74 Re-discounts not Sundries distributed .. , CREDITOR. bullion Commercial bills overdue Ditto discounted in Paris Ditto in the branches Advances on bullion in Paris Ditto in the provinces Ditto on public securities in Cash and Ditto in the provinces Ditto on obligations and Ditto in the provinces Ditto on securities in the 5.... Paris railway shares . Credit Foncier Paris Ditto in the provinces in the State Government stock reserve Ditto to securities Securities held Hotel and property Sundries 415,410 27,582 Drafts drawn by the bank on the of the bank payable in Paris or Ditto other 34,447,463 Increase i Capital of the bank Profits, in addition to capital Reserve of the bank and branches........ Surplus of receipts £10,864,638 10,864,638 DEBTOR. and at. the £26,434,205 £133,770 549,225 193,751 1,676,163 Increase.. Increase Increase Increase following is the return ol the Bank May 31. The return for the previous New reserve Notes in circulation 11,434,205 the previous week, shows The Expenses and previous June 9. : week June 2. Loans. in Government securities banking department £11,015,100 3,984,900 £45,172,081 Various discounts Circulation - Other securities. Gold coin and bullion £26,434.205 26,018.795 6,188,522 20,467,080 ... Public Deposits Other Deposits 341,018 1,136,896 of the Bank DEPARTMENT. Government debt compared with that for Circulation issue Circulation active 467,000 16,786,499 1,351,899 1,324.643 - hills following changes: 734,833 269.542 3.753.: 88 278,905,675 £45,172,0S1 1,870.706 1,068,701 3.496,747 685.796 Bull’s Head Totals 2,920.410 1,024,911 1,496,636 1,050.013 270.000 881.417 448,629 deposits....., 775,236 1,305.300 538,000 719,000 2.399.904 1,519,116 Rest. Public 277,379,660 £26,434,205 BANKING DEPARTMENT. Government securities £14,553,000 Other securities.. .• 3,419,759 6,188,512 Notes 20,467,080 Gold aud silver coin... 513,730 Proprietors’ capital 512,424 6.286.975 2,748.907 5,819,040 2.609,480 Ninth National.... First National Third National.... N. Y. Exchange... Drv Dock ISSUE £26,434,205 issued 271,262,165 276.540,510 414,921,479 1,650 1,650 1,650 Banking.—The following is the statement England for the week ending May 30, 1866 : Notes 1,971.538 1,486,807 3,404,300 2,311,164 1,221,667 1,650 556.561 1,910,7962,188,241 12.479 225.000 1.200 4,941 5,413 166,842 21,231 964.709 1,390,529 3,084 1.000,000 307,830 65,167 10,276 of Circulation. 272,878,895 274,653.195 1,650 Foreign 537,782 579,000 1,819.6*17 1.283.000 5- 416,007 1,176,441 Grocers’ North River East River Manuf. & Merch’ts 6,583,788 214,927 114,817 221,750 92,o00 65.770 10,692 50,204 1,792,696 Marine Atlantic 1,252.733 2,599,699 1,636.600 26,714 471.714 142,142 June June 640.962 278.705 790.251 4,587 604,600 725,565 659,295 105.460 5 12 19 26 2. 9. May May May May 1,387,859 135,128 68,246 24,610 1,650 1,042,433 587,752 2.068,969 $278,906,675 banks since circulation : Date. 1.120,705 v4.590.140 277,379,660 comparison shows the progress of. the Mny 5th, in respect to number, capital, and Capital. Banks. 4,359,153 5,403,832 2,087,530 189.900 88:0,017 19,000 1,489.200 Citizens’ 8,205,953 $1,256,015 week amounted to, Total to date 680,034 1.999.380 295,096 69,212 9,695,787 731,043 4.658,778 issued during the The following 1,220,929 248,025 48,596 91.831 1,317,367 2,010,794 2,369,71(6 l,39O,U00 People’s North America 556,450 131.395 7,337 634,502 316.105 456,055 2,488,237 299.470 101,210 12,774 260.756 5,211,966 Republic • national currency Previously issued 2.132,358 4,901,459 2,788.(42 3,031,595 1,57-8.917 Banks.—No ending June 9. The 878.599 1,564,050 939,874 787,581 43.013 43,856 the week 3,185,99;> 8.994,631 (National) National 470,161 179,450 900.000 $41,900,000 $41,900,000 $41,900,000 92,287,648 89,878,993 436,391 503,991 374,966 23.658,956 26,14S,678 25,470,926 41,631,746 42,992,749 42,858,986 23,722,377 23,679,025 32,916,559 644,658 609,371 480,599 National Banks were authorized during Circulation (State)... 1.114,731 2.137,567 721,474 3,508,500 658,959 156,128 3,462,810 3,033,718 1,953,904 Ocean 11.458 Deposits Circulation .3,770,000 2,970.908 1,034.716 1,922,128 156,683 Legal Tender Notes June 11. ' 91,833,402 ; ! Specie.... 751,573 2.097.585 2.4,54.948 5.262.692 105,000 6.545 143,714 Loans the 2,116,293 week end¬ make re¬ compared with capital.... 1,227,413 451,805 494,096 2*7,690 14,095 858.166 - 38,326,936 banks failing to the 3.304,5<f> 19,230 20.351 69.132 2,348,268 1,767,605 1,060,035 8,248,795 Greenwich 559.308 20.8:30 229,4:13 2.820,085 National Butch. & Drovers.. Mech’s & Traders.. 295.000 132.531 524.269 26.080 114,684 624.330 22,312 8.441,762 City Tradesmen’s 426,583 2,900 890,121 859.633 48,118,897 37.078,418 38,189,567 9,022.553 9,007,515 Banks.—The Boston bank statement for the ing June 11, is incomplete, two of the turns. The following are the footings as published the statement of the week previous; Mav 29. June 4. $3,500,776 1,903,314 4.845,860 3,174,276 8,841,170 3,020,550 440.20S 8,918,938 3,988,742 Boston Tenders. 6.299.457 659,970 162.772 3,953.432 Leather 13,464 933,286 897,444 295,665 4,567,815 8,494.358 Union $895,711 $5,031,446 5,227,491 8.128,837 $7.9.(3.593 5,420.968 48,236,256 48,336.567 48,036.9.84 47,564,996 .. Legal Net deposits. tion. Specie. $8,316,276 Merchants’ Mechanics’ Park Mech. Circula- and discounts. Banks. New York Manhattan amotint of Ave rage " 912,023 896,741 897,913 867,094 48.006,654 June 2. June 9,... —! - 8,779,166 8.794,348 8,930,420 890,244 46,832,734 Apr. 28 May 5.... May 12,... May 19.... May 26. 5.12%©5.11% 5.12%@ 5.12% @5.11% 5.12%© 37% © 37% 37% @ 37% 42%© 42% © 42%. 43% © 43 © .... 80 @ 80% 80 © 80% 75% © 75% 74 © .... 37 % @ 37 © Hamburg Amsterdam 5.0*5% ©5.04 5.12%©5.11% 5.12% @0.11% 5.15 © Swiss 5.11%@5.10 5.11%@5.11% 5.07%©5 0(5% 5.08%® Antwerp.... 108%© 109 109%© 109% 110%© 111 108%© 109%© 109% 110%© 111 ©109% 110%@ 110% 6.13%©5.12% 109 Paris, long June June 1. May 25. 10S%@ — classes for the several closing quotations following are the The Deposits. 36,032.866 36,987,007 38,414,588 37,296,645 Circulation. Specie. Loans. Date. 18,1866. .'. of the bank & branches of management 563,095,201 0 426,049 98 416.639,600 81 345,815,310 0 8,539.200 0 13,667,340 0 13,974.500 0 7,313.500 0 34,315,700 0 21,746,800 5 692,400 0 562,300 0 60,000,000 0 12,980,750 14 36,171,987 91 100.000.000 0 8,416,146 0 1,883,009 9 16,718,582 82 1,662,958,377 75 536,652,692 21 170,779 80 377.475,302 0 334,258,571 7,048,200 13,622.040 13,599,500 7,300.300 33,994,200 22,112,400 666,000 0 559,200 0 60,000,000 0 12,980,750 14 36,171,987 91 100,000,000 0 8,484.226 0 1,537,853 62 15,882,333 11 1,582,376,335 2 in all its items compared with the preceding statement. In the coin ana bullion the augmentation 26,443,OOOf. ; in the discounts, 5Q,721,OOOf. ,* in the circulation of . notes, 40,191,OOOf. ; and in the deposits, 43,572,OOOf. The total of the last item exceeds 378,500,000f.—a figure which shows depres¬ The return presents an increase sion in commerce and specu ation. is 749 THE CHRONICLE. 16,1866.] June STOCK EXCHANGE. SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK CLOSING SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH (REPRESENTED BY THE DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JUNE 15.) _ STOCKS AND do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, do do do do do do do 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, do do do do do registered. coupon. 1867 United States 6s, 6s, 7-30s Treas. Notes do do do do do do 6s, Certificates, 96% I 96% do 100 96 Loan Michigan 6s do 7s, War Minnesota 8s Missouri 6s do 6s, 79% .... Panama 96% 92% 66% * Stock Cumberland Hudson 100 50 * .100! .” 4% 54% City 100 50 49% 49% 53 50% 20 ...100 58% 72% 9S% 98% 109 28 28 28 28 — — — — — 35 preferred.... 50 61 . 100 100 100 210 100 New York Pacific Mail Pacific Mail Scrip Union Navigation 100 Nicaragua Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust New York Life and Tru-t. i Union Trust.. United States Trust 50 60 58% 58% 60 107 125 166 128% 129 »o o 56% 57 210 | 130 !30 Montana Gold New Jersey Consolidated New Jersey Zinc — consolidated 28% 22% 23% 50 Copper... 15 100 25 25 25 10 79 — 51 52 — — 100 — — 102 — — Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), do 3d mortgage, 1875 — — — — — 97 ; — — — — — — 100 — — — 1885 convertible, 1867 Illinois Central 7s, 1875 —— — Consolidated and Sinking Fund 2d mortgage, 1S68 do do — — 103 103 HM. Lackawanna and Western Bonds Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage Michigan Central 8s, do do do do do do 25 .100 86 86% do do do 1869-72 8s, new, 1882 Sinking Fund 96 96 95% QD 90 90 97 2d mortgage, 78 Goshen Line, 1868 — — 51% 51 24% 24 do do do do do do 92 6s,1887 6s, Real Estate. 7s, 1876 : 7s, convertible, 1876 7s, 1865-76 Mississippi, 1st mortgage Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort. do do do - 2d mort.. do do do 3d mort.. St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort.. do do do 2d, pref.. do do do 2d, mcomi %, Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage do do 1st mortgage, extendec do do 2d mortgage... do do Interest Bonds.... ......, Ohio and 69 KQ Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants...... New York Central 6s, 1883 5 .... 98 95 Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage do do Income — .\..100 100 — Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort... I 100 ...a.. Extension... 1st mortgage Michigan Southern, 50 5 Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred Minnesota Copper 86 — Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage do do4 3d mortgage, conv.. do do 4th mortgage Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund do 25 100 100 100 Gold 96 — do do 100 Mining.—Canada Copper 94% 97 1S77... Interest do do do do do 2d mortgage, 1864 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 = do 4th mortgage, 1880. do 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended do 2d mortgage do 1 100 Transit.—Central American mort 2d mort do do 100 100 Russian Extension 100 Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 49 59 15 — 100 100 ." Saginaw L. S. & M 63 Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage.. Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72 50 Williamsburg Smith and Parmelee 54 55 50 100 50 Improvement.—Boston Water Power Rutland Marble 4% 4% 20 Hoboken Quicksilver 59 97 97% 97% 97% 96 109% 109% 109% 109% 109% Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort. 101% do do 2d mort. Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 50 Manhattan Metropolitan New York Quartz Hill 96 do 20 (Brooklyn) Copake Iron Benton Gold ; Consolidated Gregory Gunnell Gold 100 28% — Delaware, 100 25 Wyoming Valley United Slates Western Union Western Union, 154% 154 .52% 100 Wilkesbarre Cary 45% 50 100 100 10 Spring Mountain Spruce Hill Telegraph.—American — 80 28% 50 109% preferred do do do do do 50 Pennsylvania Schuylkill Brunswick Canton 72% 97% 97% 97% 98% 109 109% 109% 109 100 Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund do do 1st mortgage do ' do Income 100 Baltimore Jersey City and 57 58 72 73% Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking-Fund ..100 100 100 Consolidation Citizens Harlem 100 100 100 100 Atlantic and Great Western, 1st 92 Central Gas.—Brooklyn 79% 100 do Ashburton International 109 79% Railroad Ronds: Miscellaneous Sliares. Hampshire and 39% 100 do do do 79% 79% 58 36’ 67% — 79% 56 i 95 95 96 95 r 85 100 Reading St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute do 108 100 100 .. do 86 94 Coal.—American 94% Water Loan Delaware and 100 108% .100 79 Sixth avenue Stonington 6s, Improvement New York 7s do 6s do 5s 102% 84 S3 .' Virginia 6s, coupon Municipal. Brooklyn 6s do 6s, Water Loan do 6s, Public Park Loan Jersey City 6s, 82 SL Tennessee 6s do 102% 82% 102) Bonds " — — Norwich and Worcester Ohio and Mississippi Certificates do do do preferred.... 79 79% RR.)... (Hannibal and St. Joseph (Pacific RR.) North Carolina 6s Ohio 68,1870-75 do 6s, 1881-86 Rhode Island 6s | 79% 80 80 60 100 Morris aud Essex New Jersey New York Central New York and New Haven..^ New Haven and Hartford Loan, 1878 do 6s, New York 7s, 1870 do 6s,1867-77 do 5s, 1868-76 do 7s, State Bounty 50 100 50 100 100 Mississippi and Missouri Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 Louisiana 6s 110 no% 120% 129% 121% 121% 122 121 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien 100 do 1st pref.. .100 do do do do do 2d pref... 100 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 do do preferred 1860-62-65-70. 59% 61% 73% guaranteed. ..100 do do do 1877 do 1879 50 100 100 Michigan Central Michigan So. and N. Indiana. 105 61% 74% — 100 50 2d preferred do 94" 147% 61% 74% 62% 76 100 100 McGregor Western Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred do 62% 100 30% 59% 117 117 82 82% 82 104% 105 104% 144 50 100 Erie. do preferred Hannibal and St. Joseph do do preferred Harlem do preferred : Hudson River Illinois Central 113 War Loan Indiana bs, War do 5s 1C2%'102% 102% 102% 102% 102% 50 .... Delaware, Lackawanna and Western 29% 80% 59% 59% 91% 91% 30% 30% 60% 60 92% 92% 92% 118% 32% 83% 83% 60 100 50 1st series. Indianapolis and Cincinnati Zd series. 102% 102% 102%: 102% 102%! 102% Joliet and Chicago. 102% 102% 102% 102% 102% 102%! 3d series. Long Island 114 ’79, after do 96%; 96% 96% | ! 96% J — 98% Connecticut 6s 6s, coupon, Cleveland and Pittsburg Cleveland and Toledo 117 30% 100 Chicago and Rock Island Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati [ 102 — 100 preferred d<t do Fii 96 96% — — 100 100 Northwestern Chicago and 99 California 7s do do do do preferred Chicago, Burlington and Quincy. Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago and Milwaukee...: do do Eighth Avenue State. Georgia 6s Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 do Registered, 1860 100 .+ .100 .100 Chicago and Alton 1868 -1128 1868 registered. 122 ! 110% ,110% 109%'109% (uo% 1881 coupon. I ' 1881 registered.; 102%!'107x (205% i - % 1102%; 102% 1( >2% 102 coupon. \ 102%! 10 2% 102% j 102% 202%' 5-20s 5-20s .registered.} 102% 102 102%: 102% 5-20s (2d issue) coupo/v 5.20s do ....registered; 102%' 102% 1025 102% 102%! 102%j 5.20s (3d issue) coupon 102%! 102% 102% j 102% ,102%i 5.20s, do .... registered Oregon War, 1S81. do. do. (i yearly). 1871 coupon. 1871 ...registered. coupon. 1874 os, 1874 registered. 5s, 10-40s coupon. 5s, 10-40s registered. 6s, Union Pacific R. R...(cwr.). do do do do do do do do do do do !128 Thur* Wed. Tuea. .'>.100 117 Central of New Jersey 127%' 6s, 6s, 5s, 5s, 5s, fcatur. Mon. SECURITIES. Railroad Stocks. j -126 125 Fri. i •143% 145% Coin National. American Gold I'liurs Tues. iWeil Satur.j Mon. SECURITIES. STUCKS AND — 104 90 85% 90 — 102 96 84% — 85% SO THE CHRONICLE. 750 [June 16,1866. NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES LIST. American Gold Coin do 1860 do 1858 do Rate coupon. 8,908,342 ) Jan. & Jan. & 7,022,000 5 5 July 1867 Jan. • Bonds (5-208) of 1862... coupon. .. 1 71,o03,50o! t \ 171,219,100 j » 4,631 OOOi Municipal Securities Albany, N/Y.— City Scrip do City Scrip do Water Loan Alb. Nor. RR... do Alleghany City, Pa.—City Bds. do RR. Bds. do S50.000 do do do do do do do -j 105% 106% | 6 May & Nov. i 102)4 J102% 02% j |1G2*ljjjSg 1102%; May & Nov. 1884 6 I -j 600,000; 4,963,000 820,000 1,500,000 3.500,000 1,000,009 Miscellaneous. Water Loan... York&Cum.R. B.&O.R.eowp \ B. & O. RR.. f do Railroad Debt 5 [Mar.&Sepf. 19046 6.580,416’ Citjr Bonds do do do do \ 1,265,610 1.949,711 City Bonds Water Loan Stg. Debt Certificates State Securities. Alabama—St*te Bonds— do do <10 (Sterling): do do do do CALIFORNIA-St tte Bonds— j do State Bonds large f Connecticut—War Bonds.. Georgia—State Bonds do do do Illinois—Canal Bonds do do do Registered 1 do Coupon Bonds do do do ; do do do do do do i War Loan Bonds do Indiana—State Bonds do do do do War Loan Bonds j Iowa—State Certificates ! do War Loan Bonds Kansas—State Bonds | Kentucky—State Bonds do State Bonds I Louisiana—State Bonds (RR). do State Bonds (RR).... | do State Bonds for B’ks,i Maine—State Bon ds. War Loan do ; Maryland—Stat e Bonds do Bds .coupon. } State do StateBds inset ibed ) do State Ronds.coupon Massachusetts—State Scrip do do do do War Loans do State Scrip, do do do ....! 1 do War Loan. . .... .... . 2,109.000 : 5 648,0'je j 5 688,000 6 8,000,000 do do do do Renewal Loan do War Loan do War Bounty Loan Minnesota—State Bonds 2,871,725 6 1,778,677 0 241,000 6 1,157.700 6 , 236.900 ; 2,058.173 2% 5 6 200,000i 300,000 3.204,000 516,000 3,942,000 5,398,000 6 532,000; 6 8,171,992j ! Quarterly 3,192,763 i 1,727,000 ! 6,429.000 1,150.004! 0 I 2,450,000! 1,088,000 ! | 345.000 250,000 602,000 do 500,00n 800,009 General Fund. 909,6071 5 442.961; 5 900.000; 5 800,000 Bounty Bonds.... 5 25,566,000 ! 7 702.000 3.050.000 do do do do do do do do do 6,000,000] 6 2,250,000 o 500,000 v 900.000 ' Canal Bonds. 192,585 1,163.000 v North Carolina—State Bonds.. Ohio—Foreign do Foreign do Foreign do Foreign do Foreign do Foreign do Foreign • Loan Loan Loan Loan do State Stock do Military L’n Bd^ Rhode Island—State (War) Bds South Carolina—State Ft >ck.. Tennessee—Improvement Bomb do Improvement Bond^ do Railroad Bonds. Vermont—State Certificates do War Loan Bonds.... .. Virginia—Registered B mds Coupon Bonds Sterling Bonds Wisconsin—State Bonds War Fund Bonds... j do do War Fond Certii 1 .... 3,000,(XX 3.889,(XX 3.691.000 2.347,34( 2,115,4(X 13,911.90) 1,650,(XX 1.200 00) 605,00(1 var. 1 rar. Jnn. & Dec. .'71 ’78 Jan. & July ’84 ’95 do ’86 '95 do 1872 Jan. & July ’67 ’68 do (Apr. * ’77 ’88 Oct. 93-96 Marysville, Cal.—City Bonds do i 1 ! 95% j 96% 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 do do do 1 do do do do do do do do do CrotonW’rS’kf CrotonW’rS’kl W'r S'k of ’49j W’r S'k of ’54 Bu. S’k No. 3.! Fire Lidem. S. Central P'k S. Central P’k S. Central P’k S. City Bds,old CityBds,new Me.—City Bonds Railroad Bonds, City Bonds... Railroad 91 90 102)4 94 95% [ 95% 67 San j Real Estate..... j Sewerage ;. Improvement.. I Water : Harbor... [ 1 Pacific RR O. & M. RR Iron Mt. RR ... 1,000'000, 2,500,000; 1,400,000' 2,000,(XX) 949,700! 4,996.000 | Francisco, Cal.—City Bonds do City Fire B. do City Bonds.] 6 5 5 5 6 6 6 (5 6 5 ~ 6 6 6 6 1,442,100, 6 552,700 5 739,222: 5 2,232.800 6 6 6 5 6 6 6 446,800, 6 6 1,464,000; 6 523,000 6 425,000 6 6 6 2:39,000 6 163,000: 6 457,000! 6 285,000 6 6 329,000 10 10 6 429,900 do do do C.&Co’tvB.! 1,133,500 do C.-*Co’tyB. C.&Co’tyB.j C.&Co’tyB. Wiuhngton, Del~€ity (5 260.000 6 County B’ds. Wharves 490.000 1,496,100! Louis, Mo.—Municipal - 102.000; 895,570 6 500,000 6 300,000 5 200,000 5 150,000. 7 [Sacramento, Cal.—City Bonds... do do do do do do do do do 600,000! 1,800,000; 2,748,000' 150,(XXI 50Q.000 154,000! 600.000 Railroad B’ds City Loan.... Rochester, N. Y.—City Bonds... .... 6 1,009,700; 1,800.000! 985,32(5! 1,500,000 Railroad Bonds. do 1,878,900| 7,898,717! Pa.—City Bonds do do 6 150.000: 5 200,(XX): 6 3,000.200 5 2,147,000 5 900.000 5 100,000 (5 483.900 5 5 190,000! 5 402,7(58 5 399,300! 5 3,066,071 6 275,000 6 6 60,000| CityBds,newj ' 8 4 6 911,500: 219,000 100,000 7 425,0001 5 City—Water Stock.. do Water Stock. do do .... ; 95 40 Providence, R. I.—City Bonds... 85 St. j 89 6 Philadelphia, Pa.—City Bds,old1 do 97 97 98 | j-6 .. do C.P.Imp. F. S.; do C.P.Imp. F. S. j do Real Estate B.! do Croton W’r S. do Fl.D't. F’d. S. do Pb.B.Sk. No. 3 do Docks&SlipsS do Pub. Edu. S'k. I do Tomp.M’ket Si do Union Def. L. do Yol. B'nty L’ni do Vol.Fam.AidLj do Vol.Fam.AidL NewYorkC'nty.—C't House S’k! do do Sol.Sub.B.R.Bi do do Sol.S.&Rf.R.BI do do Sol.B’ntyFd.Bj do do Riot Dam.R.Bi 96 96 87 87 Sl% 7 .. Bonds.,1 ion% •:::/% t :::: 4869 S9 '’81 ’97 93% 65 ’79 i’65 ’821 ... ... Apr. & Oct. '1881 ! ?4* Jan. tfe Julv 1876 ! do j’79’87j do :1S88 I j • . . . • 6 300,000' 7 960,0001 7 LOOO.dOOi 7 2S8.0J5L. Various, *• • 95 95 94% 93 Apr. & Oct. 4865 Jan. & July 1871 Various. : '65 ’ 72 Jan. & July '75 '77 Various/ j'65 ’80 Feb. & Aug 1882 Jau. & July [1876 June & Dec. 1883 Various, ’65 ’81 '65 ’75 do Jan. & July ’77 ’83 122,000' 118,000 650,000! . City Bonds... Portland, Oct! 1868 j do 11868 [ July! long Water Bonds do var. Water Bds 400,000: City Bonds.... Pittsburg, do rar. ; 89% Feb. & Aug. 1871 402 Tan. & J uly 71 ’94; 93% Jan. & Julv j'68 '90 Jan.& ] 102% 1865 1868 1870 .1875 1881 1886 '68-’71 Various. Apr. j 79% 87 95 94 95 N. J.—City Bonds, City Bonds, Milwaukee, Wis.—Citv, re-adj’d Newark, N. J.—City Bonds do City Bonds 101% New Bedford, Mass.—City Bds. 401 New London, Ct—City Bonds... Newport, R. I.—City Bonds New Haven. Ct.—City Bonds 4860 May & Nov. 175,(XX 21,888,391 12,972,00) 1,800,(XX 800,00) 100 Park Bonds Railroad Bonds., Water Bonds.... ! 86 401 t l 4874 ' 125,000. 130, (XX) 500,000 375,000 Hartford, Ct.—City Bonds 650.000 Louisville, Ky.—City Bonds.... j 95 Jan. & Julv pleas. do 1868 do 1878 do pleas. May & Nov. 1868 Jan. & Julv 1875 do 1878 Jan. & July! 1877 Ja. &Ju J AJ&O 4866 do 4872 do 4873 do 4874 do 1875 do 4877 do 4866 do 4868 do 4871 20.000! 8 256,368 7 50,000 i Railroad .... ’65 ’95' 86 do do do 7 319,457 i Water Bonds... I do do ’7S| 0 7 ! ! j 91 Julvi’65 ’71; Apr. & Oct. 1895 1 7 1. H Jan. & July do ! var. do 1879 do i 1890 do 4871 June itDec. ;-69 '79 *i 97 ;,’70 Jan. «fc ! ,. Sewerage Bonds. do Jersey City, do do do do I 80 ; J.Ap.J.&O. 1S70 do 6,168,(XX 29.209, (XX .... & Julv var. Jan. & July '71 ’72 •Tan. & July do do do do do 679, (XX i 100 78 1869 2,400,000 ... ! 90 '157 ’77; .’72 ’73; j . Water Bonds do 1 1883 ; Jan. & July ’71 '89 I do ‘72 ’87 '72 '85 ! do do I860 Jan. &Julv 1S74 4.095,300 Loan Loan Pennsylvania—State Bonds do do 9,749,500 662,268 1.009,500 379,860 2,183,532 1,600,000 Loan Domestic Loan Bonds 167,000 4.500.000 99 100 do — ^ do I 95 1894 Jan. & July!’ 1 '74 109% do * ; 5'78 108 do 1883 Jan. & July 1868 1 do 73'83 do 11873 ! do 1886 | j Jan. Water Bonds do do ’79! |'65 ’85 j *’73 6 [Cincinnati, O.—Municipal do Various." '68'74; 97 May & Nov 1880 I j 6 Dubuque, Io.—City Bonds 99 H !1S Jan. & J 6 6 6 6 9 6 6 0 6 7 j .. Detroit, Mich.—City Bonds do City Bonds do City Bonds 95 ! May & Nov. 1890 360,000 913,000 1,630,000 ; [Cleveland, O— City Bonds 99 .... (j 6 571.000 j Water Bonds do 96%; 97’ ! Quarterly 1870 672,000 220,000 City Bonds... Sewerage Bonds do do var. Quarterly ... • 86 I Mar. & Sept, 66 '67 i Jan. & July ’80 "89 4,8(hi,(XX) Municipal Bonds; do do do ... ....! do 1877 Jan. & July'76 '78 95 Jan. & July '66 '73 do j’ttS '72 i deni. \ 67 .69 200.000; 447,000! j do do do do : I860 May & Nov 1868 Jan. tfc July 1886 1,122,001' j . do 1872 i Jan. & Julv 1870 do 1870 '60 '65 do do '69 '70 do ’76 ’77 do 1879 do 1879 Jan. & July; 1866 1,758,406 ; 6 1,386,570 6 do State Bonds for RR.. 13.701.000 State Bonds (Pac. RR)j 7,000,000 do do State Bonds (H,&St.J) 3,000,000 do Revenue Bonds 431,090 New Hampshire—State Bonds.. 1 535.100 do War Fund Bds 1,650,000 New Jersey—State Scrip 95,000 I do War Loan Bonds.. j 731,000 New York' 700,(XX) do 1,189,780 do 6 216,000 Missouri—State Bonds ' 116 I do 11 |Jan. & July ’72 '92 97%’ Jan. 1fc July 1880 1 ! i 2.013,750 6 525,000 7 1,288,887 6 1,225,5001 do {Chicago, Ill.—City Bonds ,/72 '80 116% 121 do ij 2,472,000: 7 250,0001 1,750,000 Michigan—$2,000,009 Loan do do do do do May & Nov 1S77 Jan. & July 1876 do * 1816 6 7 7 6 7 216.000 299.000 Buffalo, N.Y.—Municipal Bonds 98% i'05’74! 4 5 6 634,200 6 1,281,000, 6 121,540 6 5,550,600, 6 Treasury Notes (1st series] do do (2d series] do do (3d series). j P 993,000 Water Loan jj M.J.S&&D. 1890 I’65 ’821 90% 6 6 6 107,700 740,(XX) 583,205 102)4 102% I Boston, Maes.—City Bonds 1885-J j 554.000 Bangor, Me.—Citv Debt ’70 ’74 & July J.,A,,J.&0. 1890 5,000,000 6 Park Asked .... 300,(XX): N.W.Virg.RR. Hid. do ,’65’69 95* * 166” do ’70 ’82 101 1879 do 99% 100% Jan. & July var. ; 1913 do 82 * 83** J.,A.,J.&0. 1870 do 1870 j 95 97 Jan. & July 1873 ! 96% 98 [May & Nov[1875 j 98 98% Jan. & July 4S86 98% 99 99 99 225,000 Baltimore, Md. —Improvement.. Due. Payable. ! Jan. $90,000! 110%; 110% 1881 'May & Nov. 1882 j. 100,000,0001 » July 1S81 Rate. Jan. & July 1881 I *-,14.780 500 ' 1 ’ do .registered, j 1864. coupon, 863 ..'.coupon. do do do .registered. do (10-40s) 1864 ~.cou]X>n. do .registered. do do Union Pacific RR. Bonds of 1865 128)4 13 July July \«***r\ 1'016-000 6! 148% 449 FRIDA pal Outstanding .Asked 1S68-| 124% & July 1871 -j • • \ & July 1874] m%, Jan. 20,000,000 registered, f coupon. I registered f do do do do do do Bid | Jan. & do do do Due. Payable. 9,415,250 registered, f , DENOMINATIONS. Princi¬ INTEREST. Aniount FRIDAY. pal !. National Securities. Bonds of 1847 registered. do 1848 , coupon. do do do do do do Princi¬ INTEREST. ! Amount 'Outstanding DENOMINATIONS. 96 93 var. do var. 1887 May &Nov. Jan. & July do Jhne &Dec. 1894 Feb. & Aug ’70 ’S3 Jan. & July 4S73 Apr. & Oct.: 65 '84 Jan. & July '67 ’87 *3 '84 & Oct. ,r,° ,t>4 70 ‘81 r .& July 92 92 90 1880 ao do do do do do Feb. & Aug. F.M.A.&N. 4890 4890 ; '75 '79 1875 j’70’73 90 1808 [1898 do 4887 do 4S98 do do do do do: do do do do 4887 May & Nov. do do do 1876 1873 1883 1878 18(56 '(57 '76 1873 '65' 69 1864 48(57 1865 ’66 ’73 May & Nov. ’75-’89 do ’73-’76 do do ’80-’81 '83 ’90 ’77-’82 Jan. & July ’65 ’81 '65 ’82 do ’65 ’93 do '65 ’99 do Jan. & July var. 1913 do Various. '66 ’83 Apr. & Oct. '68 ’71 Mar. & Sept. 1885 Jan. & July 1876 do 1893 Various. ’65 ’82 ’65 ’82 do Jan. & July '65 ’76 Jan. & July ’88- 98 c do 1884 Jan. & July ’65 ’83 do '65 ’90 do ’79’88 ’71 ’87 do do ’71 ’83 do ’65’86 Jo ’67 ’81 do ’71 ’73! do ’72 ’74! do ’74 ’77j May & Nov. 1871 i Jan. & July; 18(56 j do 1875 | do ; 1888 do ; ’77 ’78 do 93 95 95 95% 70* 95% 95% 96 96 85 „ 85’ 85* April* Oct. 11883 Jan, & July 4854 various 1 ‘ t I , June THE CHRONICLE. 16, 1866.] [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] ©l)e Commercial ©imcs. COMMERCIAL For the week. Coal, tons Cocoa, bags... Coffee, bags .'. Cotton, bales. Drugs, &c. Bark, Perav Blea p’wd'rs Brimst, tns. 1,896 .... Night, June 15. rapid advance in gold has called out but feeble response in the market for general merchandise, except where it was necessarily taken iDto account in the daily transactions. The effect so far has been very unsatisfactory upon foreign importations. The advance in currency prices has not been equal to the advance in the premium on gold, but such advance has been sufficient to check trade ; thus, importers find it more difficult to sell at prices which net smaller returns. This peculiar state of trade may be expected to continue, until public confidence in the present premium on gold shall become established, or until the pre¬ mium, and consequently, currency prices, shall decline to about the quo¬ tations of May. Cotton has encountered a dull, dragging market all the week. Breadstuffs have been very irregular—Flour having declined, and all The 246,667 214 7,441 6,411 389,316 .... 3,160 *. .... 140 4 2 ... 2i Gums, crude Gum, Arabic .... Indigo Madder. Oils, ess 11 • ... » • • '7 151 ... Oil. Olive... 36 81 .... . 39 25 Hemp, bales.. Hides, &c. Bristles 70 190 98 32 Hides,dres’d. Tndia rubber.. Ivory 7,296 1,892 2,617 63,068 17 Watches.... Linseed Molasses.. 32 1,209 50,704 135 2,077 6,779 106,110 77,750 236,720 78,526 5,656,837 85,312 1,930 35,179 214.076 363,862 7,671 3,797.930 1,640,365 15,861 22,454 .... hhds. 6.261 137,306 127,338 370, Sugar,bxe&bg Tea... 1,279 Tobacco 5,434 197,026 •442,943 141,978 333,463 6,965 4,075 — 2,485 21 68 915|Waste 2.724 Wines, &c. 1.848 Champ, bkts 839 Wines 9,276 Wool, bales... 11,871 7,396 1,425 60,732 14,817 8.114 208,216 38,982 24.776 1.981 27,677 391|Articles reported bv value. 24,560 Cigars *23,078 $716,995 $197,979 72,311 59,733 13,837 Fancy goods.. 51,584 1,950,442 578,047 2,089; Fish 1,649 Fruits. &c. 9.804 235, &33 1,545 Lemons 26.644 1,508 203,214 Oranges 550.366 8.241 16,944 Nuts 799,755 286,150 312 5,547 Corks . 67,935 248,123 593,619 . 458,992 211,458 3,167,249 1,647,056 673,874 261,921 15,717 Raisins 15,673 376 Hides.undrsd. 117,734 1,424 Rice 14,823 Si>ices, &c. 121 217 357 564 139.453 time 1865. tes & bbls.. 99,340 1,560 1,752 Cassia 249 285 Ginger.....'. Pepper Saltpetre .... 8,901 Woods. Fustic 78,016 1 Cutlery. The Tinslabs.lbs 849 Metals, &c. hog products. Beef is somewhat strengthened by an improved export demand, based on the rise in gold. Butter and Cheese declined to prices which called out a better demand, and there is some recovery The receipts are still below the average of former seasons. The arrival of live hogs at this market are large, but prices have steadily improved Tin, bxs.... i Jewelry Same Since Jan. 1, 1866. .... Steel j 2,519|Suirar. Jewelry, &c. of other Spelter, lbs. 10,352jRags 1,180 4,906 11,946 Iron, RRb’rs 16,647 Lead, pigs.. 8,504 1,299! 2,014 1,710 10.228 Hardware... 1,016 65,887 1,687 245,984 19,347; 6.568 21,324 Hair stronger tone. Pork and Bacon have largely advanced ; and, latterly, Beef Butter, and Cheese have done better. Pork continues to be ruled entirely by the speculators. It seems to be their policy to keep prices at the highest point at which the present stock and current supplies can be passed to consumption. Bacon advances from scarcity. Lard does not fully partake of the buoyancy - 10,789 7,082 2,395 73,866 For the week 134 1865. 678 239 Flax Furs grain advanced. 9,775 /231 1.200 Soda, bi-carb Soda, sal Soda, ash... Provisions-have been in much 9,936 406 65.279 14.776 Opium Gunny cloth 1,566 Same time . Cochineal... Cr Tartar Gambier.... * kinds of 55 Since Jan. 1, 1866. 3,236 Buttons EPITOME. Friday 751 1,021 ! 2.893 Logwood 126 300 ... Mahogany. .... 28,240 4,468 1,118 68,C4» 16,453 98,643 29,387 56.776 72,945 110,022 121,158 32,157 67,788 receipts of domestic produce for the week ending June 8, since have been as follows: Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1865, RECEIPTS OP DOMESTIC PRODUCE FOR THE WEEK, AND SINCE JAN. 1. [Of the items left blank in 1865 no record was made.] all the week. This Since' This Same Since Same Jan.1. time’65 week. Jan. 1. time’65 week. generally lower in gold and higher in currency. The Ashes, pkgs... 73 2,684 9,090 Rosin 5,114 182,087 23,449 rise in the premium on gold has been about divided between the im¬ 8,957 36,709 Breadstuffs— Tar 1,170 Flour, bhls 15 77,694 891,0581,191,570 Pitch porter aud consumer. To-day, there was a large movement in Java Wheat, bushlS?,^ 359,509 258,650 Oil cake, pkgs 3,787 47,188 2,917 3,555 Oats 313,8861,364,454 2,762,080 Oil, lard Coffee, an invoice of some ten thousand hogs, at Boston, having been 50 Com 811,7973,254,1761,598,915fOil, Petroleum. 25,013 416,022 185,835 closed out at 25^@26c., gold, duty paid. In Sugars, it has been ex. 7,008 Rye 13,824 66,139 31,140jPeanuts, bags. 55 Malt 3,375 246,070 —j Provisions— tremely difficult to realize an advance in currency prices, and quota¬ Barley 121,435 *405,650 Butter, pkgs. 11,510 176,708 250,135 5.945 57,510 Cheese. 66,498 tions are but a trifle higher than when gold was at 180. Grass seed 99,S83 Dealers have 157 90,818 89,820 Cut meats... Flaxseed.... 51 4,154 taken advantage of circumstances to reduce stocks bought at lower 94,728 258 3,150 Beans &4,45S Eggs 279 89,812 139,145 Pork Peas 3,716 94,599 currency prices, which they have found to drag very heavily on their 80 73,030 45,884 C. meal,bbls. 1,813 52,984 +176,020 Beef, pkgs. 551 77,190 76,673 hands. The eam£ is partially true of Molasses. Rice and Teas have Lard, pkgs... C. meal.bags. 3,157 205,195 79 4,686 Lard kegs... B. W. Flour, 1,460 presented much the same features. Rice, pkgs.. 6,605 bags 348 50.474 943 Cotton, bales 10,720 352,137 165,4S01 Starch Hides have been very irregular. Large sales have been made of 2S6 6,101 Stearine 3,674 Copper, bbls... 167 880 10 South American drv hides, but with each advance in gold, gold prices 2,817 Spelter, slabs.. Copper, plates. 828 5,416 Sugar, hlids & Driedfruit.pkgs declined ; while Domestic Slaughters have brought rather better cur 2.607 552 b>>ls 2,198 Grease, pkgs... 66 8.865 381 3,242 348 26,790 Tallow, pkgs.. Hemp, bales rency prices. Leather advances, though slowly. 72,091 1,847 ), Pkgs. Hides, dried... 1,711 224,917 19,287 1.479 In metals, gold prices have been supported throughout. 12,8051 Tobacco, hhds. ), 3,406 In Pig Tin Hops, bales.. 50 3S,395 Leather, sides. 44,561 972,593 966,1001Whisky, bbls.. l,6Sl we notice to-day a movement amounting to 11,000 slabs, Straits and 1.034 27,370 35,597 4.558 Wool, bales. Lead, pigs 464 Dressed Hogs, Molasses, hhds Baoca, at full prices. There has been also a good business in Lead, at 81,769 No & bbls 6,634 firm gold prices. rough, Rice, Naval Stores— Iron is firm. Copper inactive, but very firm. 15,792 ‘-977 bush. Crude trp,bbl 1,078 22,475 Fruits have been active ; but foreign fruits show very little advance, Spirits tur3,476 17,006 even in currency. pentinq.... 1,669 Fish has been irregular. Naval Stores have been dull; and, under liberal supplies. Spirits Including malt. + Including bags reduced to barrels. Turpentine has declined. Rosins have improved a little. Tallow has London, Friday June 1st—Barings' Circular reports: beeu active and buoyant. Cocoa.—Nearly 1,000 bags were sold of 1,400 offered ; Trinidad at 70s(??!.T1b for Whiskey has been dull, and closer lower common, 76s@91s for mid. to fine red, and 95s 6d©.ll2s for superior; Granada Wool*ha8 become quiet, and prices are quite unsettled. at 67s(ui6Ss 6d ; 44 bags Caraccas, 93 bags St. Domingo, 41 bags Bahia, and 132 Africa Freights have been very active in the shipment of Corn to Great bags West Coast supply were with rawn. has been large, but nearly the whole i’offee.—The brought forward quantity was sold at lower prices, making the total reduction from the recent Britain, but otherwise quiet. highest point 7s@10s per cwt. 39 casks 1,409 bags Native Ceylon were nearly Groceries are - .. .... .. , .... .. . .. * EXPORT3 LEADING OK ali withdrawn. ARTICLES. Copper firmer, and few • - sellers of Foreign. . , Tough cake £86, best Selected following table shows the exports from this port of some leading articles of commerce f**r the week ending June 12, since January 1, £89, Sheathing £91, Y. M. Sheathing Sd, Chili slab sold at £83. Lead firm. Common pig £21 @21 10s. Hemp.—There was no fair offer f>»r 400 bales ord. to mid. current 1866, and for the corresponding period in 1865 : public sale, and they were held for £40. Jute in better demand at the public sales, and 1,700 bales offered, including 630 bales without reserve, realised full rates to 10s per ton advance, viz.; from £14@23 10s for low common to good. Of 800 rolls bagging, from New York, about half sold from 2d@\.'>ad per yard. Privately, 5,000 bales Jute sold, particu¬ lars not transpired. Iron.—Welsh quiet; Rails and Bars £0@65s f. o. b. in Wales. Scotch pigs The For the week. Ashes, pts, bbls Ashes, Prls,bls Beeswax, lbs. .... • a • % Breadstuffs. Flour, bbls. C.meal,bbls Wheat, bus. Rve. bnsh Corn, bush. 17,334 2.976 .... Peas, bush.. Candles, bvs. Cotton, bales. Hay, bales Hops, bales.. 1.933 39 664 Naval Stores, C.Turp.bbls S.Turp,bbls Rosin, bhls. Tar, bbls. . The 330 11,865 4,338 2,878 117,789 5,154 18,863 • • • • Since Jan. Same time ’65. 1, ’66. 1,260 Pitch, bbls. 260 Oil cake, 109 tt> 30,000 284,518 173,667 119,453 121,277 Oils. Petrol.,gals 474,73211,768,868 3,592,191 11.151 201 9,693 450,975 669,367 Whale, gals 69,717 34,740 65,595 1,0:34 61,222 Sperm, gals 462 24,569 9,200 131,494 386,8S3 Lard, gals.. 1, ’66. 369.626 3,133,094 12,884 725,473 82,162 16,413 902 35,260 474 258,179 18,732 “i For the week. Same time '65. 4,175 • • • a Provisions. 183,837 . Oats,bush.. Since Jan. 302,837 a • • • • a • • Pork, bbls.. Butter, 100 lb Cheese, 100 Tb Lard, 100 Tb 11,517 Staves M, Tallow, 100 Tb 1 Tobacco, pkgs a • . . 17,120 ... # # , 610 950 Beei’bbls&tcs. 743 1,826 Bacon, 100 lb 47,757 37,768 67.051 226,397 282,619 58,559 101,153 143,136 220 9,387 2,474 1,966 40.607 84 421 140,629 53,92S 60,189 71,910 45,728 6,257 90,310 347,034 34 420 71,418 1,682 Tobacco,mf,lbs. 28,8571,462,4361,740.385 4,764 Whalebone, lbs 4,997 17,800 V" following table shows the foreign imports of certain leading commerce at this port for the week ending June 8, since Jan- articles of ?, 1898, and for the corresponding period ip 1889 ; \ Manila at the . mixed Nos. on Clyde. Linseed.—Prices declined in the early part of the week to 63s for Calcutta and 64s for Bombay on the spot, but the demand has since improved, and we quote 52s 0d cash for to-day Calcutta 65s(?ft65s 6d, aud Bombay 66s 6d@67s. For shipment 25,000 qis. East India sold at 61s 6d(§i02s. Linseed Cakes dull. New York in bbls. £10@10 10s. Naval Stores.—French spirits turpentine oiler at 47s. American quoted 47s Petroleum 2s2,^d Refined Pennsylvanian, and Spirits Is 4d'u'ls 3d. Molasses.—The only safe reported is one of 37 puns common dark Montserrat 6d^48s. at 10s. 6d ' , . , advanced to 3Gs., at which the mar¬ ket. is firm. Rape has receded in value, but sells freely at £40 English Brown, £42 I0s.@£13 refined, £41 foreign brown, £44 foreign refined, present delivery; some business is reported in English brown at £40, and foreign refined at £43 10s., present delivery; crude cotton £28. refined £3210s.@£33 10s.; Ni^er £42; Poppv £37(o,£38. Olive unchanged at £59@£60 Gallipoli; £56@£57 Spanish, and £51®£5110s. Mogadore. Cocoa-nut: Cochin offers at53s.@»53s. 6d., Ceylon 45s. @45s. 6d., usual prompts. Palm: fine Lagos quoted 41s. Fish: no transac¬ tions in sperm, which is quoted £124; -pale Seal in secoud hands is quoted £51; but new oil to arrive is expected to open at £40@£42; cod £46. Rice.—About 2,000 bags Bengal at auction sold at i’Ss.^lSa. 6d. for broken, ana 15s. 6d, for good new white, being 6d. lower, and 3,500 bags Bassein at 9s. 9a. ? S?KLT*$ quiet at £20@£$9 10*. ." ; • Oils.—Linseed, after declining to 34s. has . THE 752 [June 16, CHRONICLE. 1866. The exports of cotton from this port have been as follows : —Week ending Jamaica, and Is. 6d.@ls. Mav 30. June 5. June 12. Mav 23. ; refrac449 37 476 8% to 5 per cent, 3,402 23 To Liverpool bales tion. , To other British ports 2>47 393 Spices.—Ginger: 280 barrels Jamaica fonnd buyers from 60s@67s.for ord to To Havre 80 mid, being Is. per cwt. dearer; 430 bags African partly realized 44s. Pimento To other French ports... j 106 dull, and 480 bags at auction were withdrawn. To Bremen 239 Sugar is in decidedly better demand, and in some instances rather firmer rates. To Hamburg 71 '300 S4 The transactions are not extensive, as only a very moderate supply is obtainable To other German ports 550 the present low range of prices. at ports Tallow.—There has be n considerable fluctuations during the week, and the To various Continental 474 435 776 4,774 market closes steady at 42s. 6d.@42s. 9d. for St. Petersburg Y. C. on the spot Total for the week 453.851 453,416 452,640 and for this month, and 46s. 6d.©47s. for October to December. 447,S66 Previously reported Tea market dull—5,800 pkgs. China and 1,873 pkgs. Assam teas sold this week 454,325 453,851 453,416 at public sale. Good common Congou Is.©Is. >$d. per lb. 452,640 Total from N. York since July 1, *65. Tin rather firmer—Bars 80s., blocks 85s., refined 87s. Straits 75s.@76s. Liverpool, June 2d—American Produce and Provisions.—Oil Cake—With Appalachicola, June 2.—We have this week received ?eturns from the improved prospects lor green crops the demand has further slackened, and we Appalachicola to the 2nd of June. Since May 24, the date of our last quote thin oblong in bags £0 Is. <0 22 lbs. Clover Seed—The stock in first returns, the receipts have been 809 bales. The course of the daily re¬ hands is now very moderate, and holders refuse to take anything less than 3">s. for red American. Ashes—Recent arrivals being freely offered, buyers are able ceipts since the middle of January may be seen in the following table : to supply themselves on somewhat easier terms, about* 100 barrels 1st pots hav¬ From Jan. 18 to Feb. 21 the total receipts were 21,671 bales or about 690 per day ing been placed at 30s. Pearls, being very scarce, are held at 39s. Petroleum Feb. 21 to March 5 44 “ 44 6.359 44 625 325 is also cheaper. Pennsylvanian refined. Is. lOd. per "all. Bark—QuercitronMarch 5 to March 17 “ 44 “ 3,895 290 “ Philadelphia 6s. 6d., Baltimore Hs. 6d.@7s. Beef—The necessities of Judders March 17 to April 2 44 “ “ 4,734 “ 183 have compelled them to accept a further slight reduction, but the arrivals are April 2 to April 11 44 44 a 1,618 , 44 448 “ moderate. U. S. extra prime mess and prime mess new 100®l!>7s. 6d., U. 8. April 11 to April 21 44 44 4.483 44 149 “ India mess new 100©115s. per .‘304 lbs. Pork—The best brands are in good re¬ April 1 to May 24 “ *4 44 4,088 41 90 quest at our quotations: New Eastern prime mess 85@90s. per 200 lbs. Bacon May 24 to June 2 444 “ 809 The demand ha-- suddenly increased under the stimulus of a large reduction bales of which in prices : Short clear 52@54s.: do. rib in 50© 53s. ; long clear 50©52s.; do. rib Shipments since May 24 have amounted to 2,382 in 49@50s.; Cumberland cut 4G@50s. Lard—The late advance has checked busi¬ bales went to to Liverpool were ness, which is now extremely quiet: U. S. fine 70@?3s. Cheese—There is a to New Yoik f cent.Liverpool. Freightsthe latest statementfd. sail, and compared The following is steady demand at our quotations : U. S. extra 75@8Us.; good 68©74s. Butter— By the absence of American, of good and fine quality, the business is confined to with previous returns : Mav 24. June 2. Apr. 2. Apr. 'll. April 21. ord. and mid. at G5@75s. Tallow—The stock has slightly increased, and the de¬ 12,650 12,650 12.650 12.650 mand has fallen off. Early in the week there was a considerable decline, which, Rec'pts from May 1. to Sept. 1. 12,650 108,205 112,688 116,776 117,685 however, has been since recovered, and we now quote: North American 41s.© do Sept. 1st, 1365, to date.. 106,557 Rot*.—Small sales at late prices; 2s. 4d.@3a. 4d. for 6*d. proof for Demerara. Saltpetre dull.—800 bags Bengal sold at 23s. 9d. for i0* .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... * — now 44 44 “ *• j “ - : 42s. 6d. Total bales received to C0TT0JV. Friday, P. Since the 1st of Sept, glance the total receipts, exports, RECEIPTS AND EXPORTS OF COTTON AT (BALKS) SINCE SEPT. PORTS. JrECEIYED SINCE SEPT. 1. Great ; France 650,932 399, S38 Virginia, June 15... Other p’ts, June 12. Other for’gn. Total 99,508 233,639 1 TO— 162,869 133,105 146,196 NORTH. Total. 1,579 250,'MG 6,057| &7S 47,160 1,492 .... 1,739 3,214 35,417 40,751 380,128 34,703 85.552 62,393 456,296 week since • 79,844 21 61,296 ••« 4,588 1,920,5361 1,158,378 The tone of the street is not • . • 290 • 211,906 67,276 1,437,560 sanguine of any , 18,339 721,198 323,590 further advance in the Liverpool market immediately; bnt there are expectations that the advance in the premium on gold will be sufficient to permit shipments at present current prices. The sales for the week are about 10,000 bales, the market closing quiet at the following quotations : N. Orleans Upland. Florida. Mobile. & Texas $ Middling Good Middling ft 30 35 37 39 39 42 31 35 30 35 37 41 ® ' 37 39 43 31 30 3S 40 44 / Price Rec'ps. Sales. Exp. Date. 33,093 18,049 Ordinary Good Ordinary Low Middling April 7, were as follows: STOCK. 202,296 124,1.33 98,994 39,188 5,926 43,998 137,040 15,517 64,037 7,2.‘18 127,000 34.703 .... .... 4,588 June. 9.—The mail returns for the week ending receipts to be 5,258 bales, against 4,612 bales last shipments f r the week reached the large total of 21,723 Stock. April 7.... 18,133 14,300 22,456 1 76,220 14.... 12,849 18,100 22.338 167.748 21 10,SOI 11,000 19,779 160.336 44 20’864 21 7,011 Ne\v Orleans. PORTS. ■ 328,469 127,017; 214,083 40,184 61.296 6,742 ! June 8 show .the -SHIP- 476,350 40,525 84,060 57,440 130,335 125,747 to 33,093 N. Orleans, 129,426 122,415 8,186 M NTS TO Britain June 8.. Mobile, June 8 Charleston, June 8. Savannah, June 8 * Texas, June 2 New York, June 15+ Florida, June 2.... N. Carolina, June 15 SEPT. 118,596 1-)*■ ! h* 311,021 125.338 113,734 a MENTIONED. EXPORTED SINCE 120.855 119.207 week. The bales : of the close which 9.347 bales were shipped to Liverpool, 4,4 62 bales to Havre, 1,001 to Barcalona, 5,368 bales to New York, 976 to table Boston, bales569 bales to Philadelphia. By telegraph we learn balesthe and that shipments this week have also been large. Stock on hand June 9th had been reduced to 124,133 bales. The receipts, sales, and exports 1, AND STOCKS for series of weeks and the stock, price of middlmg, rates of freight Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each stocks, die.: DATES . . Stock bales. reached about receipts at all the ports the past week have 17,000 bales, and the exports about 24,000 bales. the amount of the receipts is 1,920,588 bales, and the total exports The receipts at all the ports since amount to 1,437,560 bales. of the war now amount to 2,337,028 bales. Below we give our of the movement of cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing at a The exported to date Total M., June 15. date 44 .. fc:::: 5 12.... 10.303 10.S8S 5,799 44 18.... 25.... 5,300 5,900 5,460 44 May .. June 2 44 9 .. .... Mid. —@38 39@40 40©— 9,500 8,266 9,700 3,512 5,207 13,000 15.303 4,112 8.200 13,088 5,258 5,600 21,723 ©— 35@36 154,369 —©35 157.087 36@37 147,496 39@40 139.769 41)©.— 124,133 ,3S©39 S,S62 156,497 Freights To Liver- pool. , To New Price York. gold. 9-l6@%d. X@—c. 125X@126 9-16@fi 9-16© Is 9-16© la 9-16® % X@% 125><@126 125#@126 128 @ X@— 128X© X©— 130 ©130X- VM— X©— ^©9-16 X®— 1301s @— >$'@9-16 1 ®— 142X@144X X©X X@- 139X@144X 1 @141 ©IX 137 unsettled, but dur¬ closing with middling at Sight on New York $ pre¬ mium. Mobile, June 8.—By mail we have received one week’s later dates frotu Mobile. The receipts for the week ending June 8th were 1,903 bales against 2,181 bales last week, and the shipments were 4,674 bales against 2.630 bales last week ; leaving the stock on hand and on shipboard not cleared at 39,188 bales.. Shipments during the week were—to Havre 2,866, to New York 795 bales, to Boston 744 bales, and to New Orleans 269 bales. The following are the weekly receipts, sales, and exports, for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold The market during the first half of the week was ing the latter half there was more activity, 88@o9. Exchange sterling 162^-@163. at the close of each week : , Freight Price of To To New Stock mid. L'pool. York. , Price of gbld. • Date. March 3... Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. 42 Xd 12.034 2,300 S.778 76,455 40 X 11.175 3.700 10,477 77,153 5,700 3,707 79,031 38© 39 X 8,503 7,600 6,746 80.788 37@38 X 7.270 2.200 18.628 63,430 36 V 37 X 3/ 6.811 10.400 2,243 74.223 31©— .,.. lXc@—c IX ©^- 134@136 130© 132 129@131 1 @extremely dull all the week. There has bean 17.... 126©128 1 @94 no demand from speculators; on the contrary, they have shown a 125©126X 1 31... 1 125@126X @to realize; the rise in gold has not been sufficient to bring April 7.... great desire ©X @ 1 5,159 7.500 16.263 63.124 35©— X 14... 126®127 X © 1 in export buyers ; and, since cotton goods are not paying cost of pro¬ 5.393 3.400 10,024 58,493 33@34 X 21.... 125@126X X © 1 6.500 3.835 59,342 nominal. X 28 duction, some looms are being stopped. Spinners have done but little ; 126@127X X © 1 5.000 12,674 49,782 31©32 X May 5.... 128®129X X © 1 therefore, the tendency of prices has been slightly downward, although 3,045 3,950 9,019 43.808 32© 33 X 12.... 129© 130 X @ 1 2,274 3,700 3.616 41,782 33©— X 19.... 140©152 the advance in gold during the week has been from 139 to 149. We % © 1 26.... 2,598 4,250 1,973 42,407 3G@— X 1 138@139 @2.181 2,205 2.630 41,958 —@34 X have corrected our figures as to the stock in this market—an actual June 1.... 1 140©— ©8.... 1,903 1,770 4,674 39,188 33@34 X count showing les9 thau we gave it. This stock is, however, now in¬ The market closed on the 8th inst. firm, with Middling at 38@34c., as creasing ; at the South Atlantic ports there has not been much change; given above. Exchange sterling, 14 7 ; sight on New York from but there was a large falling off at New Orleans and Mobile, which tele¬ premium. Gold ruled 13S@)41 until Tuesday, but took an upward graphic advices say is continued at New Orleans for the current week. turn the next day, and on Thursday ran up to 148, but fell off on Friday, The receipts of Cotton at this market for the week ending this even¬ closing as above at 140. ing (Friday) were as follows : Charleston, June 8.—The receipts for the week ending June 8th Bales.! From , Bales. amount to 2.110 bales against 1,810 bales last week. Shipments for From New Orleans 4,394,North Carolina 286 Texas 903,Norfolk. Baltimore, &c 1,169 this ..week amount to 2,099 bales against 4,505 bales last week. Of ..IPer Railroad Florida 856 these shipments the past week 1,263 bales were for Liverpool, 98 to Savannah 2,531! Foreign Bordeaux; 877 bales for New York, and 4 for Philadelphia. Freights South Carolina 5811 Total for the week 10,720 to Liverpool are dull at ^d. for Upland and Id. for Sea Island. To 44 , The market has been 10.... 44 “ ... .... 44 - 44 44 .... 44 ... 4* 44 44 44 .... asking $c. for Upland and lc. for Sea by sail New York, sight, £c. Total since July 1 936,129 premium. Salesthe rates are |c. Exchange on 300 bales. The mar¬ of cotton for the week about ket closed unsettled aud nominal. The following is the statement for In our last week’s table there was an evident misprint of the receipts at the last three weeks; Savannah—the total at all the ports was, however, correctly given, Previously reported * t By Railroad, Canal and River. 925,409 New York the steamers are now Island ; Week ending June 1—, Sea Is. Upl’d. 362 3,610 Week ending May 25 , 1,1865 Receipts from Sept. 1, 1865, to Stock hand Sept. on Sea Is. 362 , t ^ Upl’d. 1,610 Week ending Jline 8 , Seals. Upl’d. 362 1,610 91,374 1,810 5,274 17 5,636 5,653 S3,038 4,942 84.068 5,071 1,030 129 4,376 58 88,444 2,0-12 4,942 84,068 5,071 83.144 5,129 694 8,916 565 6,350 524 Total exports Stock 4.942 Galveston, June 2.—We have received one 14 11 18 44 44 25 1 June * pool. Rece’ts. Sales. Exp. .. ,.. .. ... .. ... .. ... Stock, mid.* 751 2,662 16,663 29,7,30 2,466 5,479 4,493 3,437 13,458 10.344 30®31 29@30 9,533 12,192 28(3,29 28®29 9-16©% 9-16®% 182 650 1,777 613 915 #d.®%d. 9-1 m % 12.474 nominal 9-16®% .. .. 2,291 191 174 155 2.319 2,806 -28 11,715 nominal 9-16®% 10,657 nominal 9-16®.% 8,357 nominal # ©9-16 9,305 nominal # @9-16 925 .. 757 100 1,176 ..,.. 219 2,992 7,238 nominal # ©9-16 506 .. .. .. Specie, ex-revenue tax. The total 16# 14 American Brazilian @— ®- West India East India........ China and Japan 1 ©- 124®.126 125® 127 125® 127 126® 128 127®129 131® — 50 1,840 37,670 540,460 1,400 13,570 136,460 30 1,420 14,300 8,860 86,160 1,346,4601,161,290 42,210 38,100 2.670 - 9,480 12,710 Stocks ,, To this To this date date This day. Total 1865. 1865. 594 124,908 205,270 411,328 40 87,877 125,871 16,268 113,328 48,248 640,688 279,187 1,095,744 50,07S , Same date Dec. 81, 1865. 46,540 63,340 459,369 399,800 334,068 126,630 256 3,410 6,420 3,710 .... 1866. • 1865. 3,690 195.140 1865. 74,440 57,960 27,490 15,730 360,940 177,400 62,650 2,210 2,539,708 975,030 440,100 since Jan. 1 has 368,490 under: amounted to 342,473 bales against * * 1864. bales. Stock for the week ending the 8th June . 1865. hales. 1866. bales. 160,332 117,016 87,814 Import from Jan 1 to May 31 Delivery do do receipts to have been 3,092 hales, against 2,232 bales last week, and the shipment of 2,816 bales against 3,469 bales last week, and 1,275 bales the previous week. The shipments for the week ending Market has shown no activity, but ex¬ June 8 were all to New York. hibited a declining tendency, closing with Middling at 33c Freights to Liverpool are dull, 4d.@£d., and to domestic ports -$c. Exchange on New York premium. Below is the usual weekly statement. We add this week 1,340 bales of Sea Island cotton not before 101,453 117,791 92,748 157,350 124,197 68,024 The above figures refer to East India, China and Japan cotton, of which de¬ scriptions the principal imports consist. Bombay, May 23.—The cotton trade is still greatly depressed, and prices con¬ tinue to decline, owing to the prevailing heaviness at at latest dates. Liverpool quotations are as follows : Broach, 270 rupees per candy, or 9.684d.; and Dhollerah, 2S0 rupees per candy, or lO.OlOd. per !b., including freight The ship¬ ments, since May 13, have amounted to 40,000 hales. Freight to Liverpool is The 40s. per ton. Madras, April 25.—In consequence there has been very little demand for market has been decidedly heavy, and of nntavorable advices from Liverpool, cotton during the past fortnight. The prices have given way. New Western the produce is not worth more than 1S5 rupees per candy. The arrivals of new crop have so far been trifling. The shipments for three months stand thus: Great Britain. France. Elsewhere. Total. : Three months, 213,180 8,777 216,059 10,233 218,082 219,783 9,064 221,806 10,606 223,946 10.641 227,003 25 - 87,374 57,537 53,915 cwts. cwts. 1,706 7,629 2,547 134 537 1,116 514 1,206 cwts. 89,214 179,017 65,703 57,578 26.—Scarcely any business is passing in cotton, and prices Fair open-ginned produce is worth about lOd.; good fair do., 22d. per lb. free on hoard. Alexandria, May 10,325 220,222 Total receipts .. 9,058 Export, this week 293 177,297 1866... 1S65...... 1864 1863 3,724 3,057 Receivedprev.... 8,698 cwts. V Week end’g. /—June 8—> Sea Isl. Upl’d 281 35 33,170 50 1866. 18,190 5,310 180,620 bales London, June 2.—Cotton has been in good demand, and prices show an im¬ provement of#d. per lb. from last week. The particulars of imports, &c. are shows the end’g Week end’g Week end’g ,—May 18—, ,—May 25—> ,—June 1—, Sealsl. Upl’d. Seals!. Upld. Seals'.Upld. 281 3,724 281 3,724 281 3,724 79 2,S79 6 2,023 92 2,140 6,190 The export last year. as Week 5,640 170,230 100,920 37,720 441,740 3,490 24,656 1,831,387 892,222 Total 129@132 #® 1 730 30 200 13.680 270 100 760,933 123,235 254,748 148,405 16,377 Egyptian 126®128 126®. 123 ©— — ®— #©— 594,010 9.161 gold. York.t lc. ®— 126@127 #@ 1 125® 128 — Average weekly sales. 119,840 131,720 83,100 Imports This week. t Per steamer. Savannah, June 8.—The statement 63,970 Price To New ... .. Broach 5,560 1,760 1,660 , receipts at Galveston since 'September 1 now amount to On the 2nd of June the market closed dull, and prices Exchange sterling nominal; sight on New York f@l Stock Sept. 1 Receiv. this week 28# Total cent prem. counted 22# .... 141,752 bales. were nominal. per ... Egyptian 13# 13# i 1 1 1 9- ’.6®% 1,252 2,274 1,379 2,626 3,277 1,197 1,532 1,261 16# 16# American.. .hales. 25.780 Brazilian 11,290 3.190 Egyptian, &c West Indian 2,370 East India. 21,340 China and Japan. last week. ..... 28# ■ following were the shipments for the week ending June 2d : To Liverpool 1,273, to New York 1,687 bales, and to New Orleans 32 bales. Below we give the receipts, sales, and shipments for a ser;es of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week : 30 April 6 13 41 20 27 May - 4 28 SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Same Total Total this period Ex- Specula- this 1865. tion. week Trade, port. year. The Date. March 23 ... 1866. Lc66 d. a. 13 27# 15 6# 17 8# 1864. d. and exports for the week and description of produce at the period at week later statement by 1,776 To Liver- ... 1863 d. 20 ...16 The following table shows the sales, imports the year, as well as the stocks of each which che last official statement was compiled: mail from Galveston. The receipts were 925 bales, against last week, and the shipments were 2,992 bales, against 228 Price of years : 1865. 1866. d. d. Middling— 21# 22# 5,402 92.984 .... Mobile.... Orleans... 1864. d. 1863. d. 90,4S5 5,636 Total Middling— Upland ... 95,887 5,274 90,066 1,308 5,264 Receipts for the week Exports since Sept. 1, 1861, to beginning of week Exports for the week give the prices at this date for a series COMPARATIVE PRICES OP COTTON. 1,093 94,794 Below we 93.184 10 beginning of week 753 CHRONICLE. THE 16, 1866.] June 2,791 must he and 74 3,395 Exported prev... 9,342 208,510 9,416 208,510 Total exports.. 9,225 207.352 9,342 208,510 9,416 211,905 9,441 211,302 Stoukon hand:.. 833 16,534 1,172 15,496 1,190 14,041 1,190 14,327 European and Indian Cotton Markets.—Our own correspondent in Lon¬ don, writing under the date of June 2, gives the following review of the Liver¬ pool, London, and other cotton markets: Liverpool, June 2.—During the present week there has been much more ac¬ tivity in the cotton market, and an important advance has taken place in the quotations. This revival has been caused, in some measure, by the falling off the receipts at ports in the Southern States, and also by an increased enquiry on the part of home spinners, who appear to have entered the market, and nave felt disposed to make extensive purchases at the recent reduction in price. The large arrival of bullion from America and other quarters, the more satisfactory position of affairs at home, aud the very strong position of the Bank of France, have not been without their iuflueiice, for had it not been for these favorable changes in the financial position, spinners would undoubtedly have operated with much more caution. The aggregate sales amount to 63,970 bales, of which speculators have taken 12,710 bales, exporters 9,-180 hales, and the trade' 63,970 hales. The advance in prices varies from #d to l#d per lb., and is distributed as followsAmerican Id. to l#d., Brazil #d. to Id., Egyptian #d., and East India #d per ib. The principal demand has been for American descriptions; hut Brazifiau and East Inman qualities have also commanded considerable at¬ tention. The present and prospective supplies are now as under : 117 1,158 9,225 207,352 8,1313 8,932 199,219 in 1S65. hales. Stock at “ 1S66. hales. , 975,030 449,100 92,748 20,000 410,700 Liverpool in London. American cotton afloat East Indian afloat 68,024 130,000 652,300 considered nominal. BREADSTUFFS. Friday, P. H., June The state of the market continues 15, 1866 unchanged; Flour drooping, or, at supported with difficulty by the advance in gold, owing to sup* plies exceeding the current demand. Wheat scarce, and relatively higher than Flour, but so much in demand as to gradually strengthen prices for sound qualities. Corn in large supply, with an active demand both for expot t and home use, prices fluctuating with the premium on gold and the rates of ocean freights. Oats have been irregular, prime qualities being very scarce. The secret of the limited supply and great strength of Wheat in this market is, first, (lie absorption of the supplies from the North¬ west (which usually come to this market) for the consumption in the Border States, well illustrating how complete was the failure of their Wheat crop last year, and demonstrating that it is a much more serious matter to furnish the whole supplies for a limited population than to make good a small deficiency to a whole people. The drain upon New York and the Upper Lake markets to supply Breadstuff's for the Ohio Valley, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, and further South, has been excessive—far surpassing any export demand from Europe that has been experienced since the Crimean War. We pointed best, 1,825,354 —showing a further increase in the supply, as compared with last year ; the ex¬ out last March the probability of considerable difficulty in supplying cess being to the extent of 862,000 bales. The probabilities appear to he, that this demand—demonstrating, at the same time, the improbability of ex¬ as the demand for yarns and goods at the present time is rather limited, and as German houses are scarcely making purchases, owing to the uncertain future traordinary foreign movement. The time approaches, however, when a on the. Continent, we may even yet see a further decline in the value of cotton. It seems probable that although the receipts from America are falling oft', the termination of the present abnormal state of the market for Flour and present week's advance can hardly be maintained, when we consider the large Wheat may be looked for. Georgia ami the other South Atlantic increase in the supply, as compared with last year. Ir is also necessary to hear in mind, as will be seen by reference to the table below, that the description of States have just completed the harvesting of a fair crop of good Wheat cotton in which the stock’exhihits the most important increase is American, whilst that in which the diminution is greatest is Brazilian. Fiom this it fol¬ —nearly equal in quantity to their own wants. We have direct intel¬ lows, that on comparing the weight in pounds this year with that at the corre¬ sponding period in 1865, it will be found that the real increase in our supply is ligence from Maryland, which says there will be a full half crop of good greater than the mere statement in bales of stocks would indicate, the weight of Wheat. Virginia promises two-thirds of a crop. Partios who are now the bales ranging from 180 lbs. to nearly 500 lbs. The quotations for American cotton are now as under: buying Wheat in this city for Pennsylvania say that she promises a full ■1866.-1865.Gc>od and average crop. From the Ohio Valley the advices are somewhat con¬ Fair and Ordinary Mid. Fair. < Good fine. good fair. and middling. 54 tradictory ; and, on the whole, not satisfactory. In the more Northern 42 34 70 52 38 27 24 Sea Island 22 21 20 latitudes the crop of Winter Wheat has been to some extent winter 18 16 Stained 17# 16# 15# 13# io# Upland killed ; but the yield, if deficient in quantity, will be superior in quality 16# 15# 11 13# Mubile is 16# 14 11 16# New Orleans The breadth of ground sown to Spring Wheat is very great, and the * 16# 17# 14 16# 963,548 ' Total.... . . . . . , . • « . . .. # *- • • . . • . , , , -* * .. Texas 11 -• .. •• [June 26,1866. CHRONICLE. THE 754 Receipts, , Shipments. , —. full average yield. So much for this year’s crop ; now Same time. Since S’e time Since 1S65. Last w’k. Jan. 1. 1865. Last W’k. Jan. 1. when will supplies of new Wheat become available ? As we have said, 308.277 54,267 • 566,346 228,707 Flour, bbls.... 39,310 654,217 the crop of Georgia is already harvested, and we may reasonably expect 2,382,779 1S4,223 1,773,286 1.826,931 2,515,475 Wheat, bush.. 215,620 4.822,877 1,477,023 8,551,100 3,679,693 Corn 1,945,436 10,453,663 some of her Wheat upon our market this month. Maryland and Vir¬ Oats 3,219,767 593,179 2,201,339 2,737,870 627.061 2,986,570 178,053 131,155 301,017 115,814 59.970 438,229 ginia are a little late, and will not complete their harvests before the Rye 257,695 11,771 191,574 80,046 Barley 13.380 123,304 10th of July. In other States the completion of harvests will extend Milwaukee.—The movement of breadstuffs at Milwaukee the past from the 20th of July to the 10th of August. It follows, therefore, that week, and since January 1st, may be seen from the following table of there is already a sufficient supply of new Wheat at the South to reduce receipts and shipments : her calls upon the North for Breadstuff's ; that by the 15th of July the RECEIPTS. > / SHIPMENTS.Week end g Since Same time Week end’g Since S’e time same will be true respecting Virginia and Maryland ; and that by the June 9. Jan. 1. 1865. Jan. 1. 1865. -June 9. 13,870 145.S57 80,447 16.751 231,774 141,330 16th of August the abnormal demand upon the Northern markets will Flour, bbls 3,983,203 1,609.602 570,578 3,456,2461,018,509 Wtmat, bush 449,812 have nearly ceased. Oats, bush 127,288 746,271 380,662 58,540 185,534 96,089 30,909 183,258 156,484 23,737 39,720 47,588 Jn the meantime, what are our prospects for supplies ? Stocks are Corn, bush 372 93,374 910 Parley, bush 51,980 .... 11,853 31.895 120.331 29,729 11,641 89,700 332 everywhere moderate ; and it is evident we shall not carry any surplus Hye. bush into the next crop year. The quantity of wheat in store at Chicago Receipts of Flour and Grain from the three last crops, commeac ng and Milwaukee, together with that afloat on the lakes, amounts to about with jthe 1 st of Sept., compare as follows : Flour, Wheat, Oats Corn, Barley, R^e. 2,600,000 bushels. The receipts at Chicago and Milwaukee till 1st bbls. bush. bush. bush. bush. bush. 457,452 11,245,409 1,0S7,061 282,018 179,181 210.39S September may be set down at 4,000,000 more. Of course, with this 1S05-6 1864-5 3,720,104 98.155 158,336 600.493 241,973 177,450 supply, we are not going to starve, especially as we are now at a sea- 1863-4 357.013 11,7S6,440 863,676 355,442 200,937 136.340 gon of year when lighter articles of food are much used. Eastward Movement of Flour and Grain.—The following wil The pending European war is looked forward to as likely to give rise show the Eastward movement pf Flour and Grain from upper lake port to an export deman b It must be remembered, however, that with all for the week ending June 9 : Oats. the belligerents fully armed and equipped, the clash of arms is not Barley. Rye Corn. Wheat. Flour. To 292,357 11,316 459,916 1,228,966 Bullalo 18,390 likely to be long continued. The export demand which attended the Other ports 186,260 12,251 1,626 29,124 240,183 Crimean War, was caused by the closing of the Russian ports, from 12,942 304,608 700,099 1,417,226 Totals 47,514 which large shipments are constantly made. 315.396 56,046 1,459,185 Previous week...... 81,942 553,017 15,334 314,745 937 632,780 569,885 Corres’ding week,‘65. 87,666 To sum up, therefore, it is more than probable that from this time The above does not include the shipmeut of flour and grain by rail forth there will be a steady increase in supplies, and as steady a de¬ road. crease in the demand upon the Northern markets; under which, some Eastward Movement by Canal.—The following will show abou circumstances, not now in view, will be necessary to support present what there was afloat on canals destined tor tide water last Saturday prices. From Buffalo, Rye. Corn. Barley. Oats. Wheat. Flour/ At to-day’s market flour was firm and more active ; wheat excited and week ending 25,897 15,600 949,121 468,671 June 11.-. 82,020 3,480 8,324 656,081 280,996 June 4 * 20,154 3@5c. higher ; corn scarce and 2c. better ; oats dull ; rye more active. The following were the closing quotations: 23,924 Total.. 102,174 1,610.202 749,667 25,897 3,480 promise is , a , .... r % bbl $6 75® 7 50 7 00® 9 50 Western Extra State per to 8 65©12 GO good fine Corn Jersey Brandywine meal, 92© Rye 98® 1 25 80 85® 1 20 1 00® 1 20 Malt 1 15® 1 25 1 50® 2 40 White beans and 70 65® Peas, Canada 4 35® 4 75 have declined, wheat aod corn Corres’ding time, 65. 860,785 77.260 Flour, bbls 150.435 meal, bbls Wheat, bush Corn, bush Rye, bush Corn 1865. , , For the w’k. S’e Jan. 1. 82,490 1,191,570 176.020 3,665 258,560 1,598,915 54.165 99,500 172.510 7,380 395,230 23,150 405,650 1,284,560 179,260 2,762,080 841,690 3,003,495 7,639 Barley, &c., bush Oats, bush FOREIGN 31.140 EXPORTS. 1 Slid For the w’k. Since Jan. 1. For the w’k. S’e Jan. 1. .... Wheat, bush Corn, bush 447.055 25,650 68,435 129.380 4.400 65,595 49.585 381.885 49,235 302,840 ...... 342,585 Rye. bush 3,104.590 181,590 677‘915 Oats, bush.* The export of breadstuffs to Great Britain and 1865, was as follows Flour, . Baltimore Boston Calif, and other C. Wheat, meal, bush. bbls. June 5, 1866. bbls. 97.409 479 4,229 1.136,979 4,900 ... .... . Ireland from Sept. 1, : To date. From New York New Orleans Philadelphia 569.370 14,320 3,275 Flour, bbls Corn meal, bblg 20 4,601 ... .... ports...June 5, 1S66. Total To about same period. 1865 do -1864 do 1863 do do ... . ... ... ... TO THE 1,179 22.795 126,769 103,S94 881,722 4,249 1,158,790 1,139 114 Corn, bush. 6,314,157 7,790 6S7,763 838,655 57,389 17,610 1,198,969 1.678,730 10,957,493 18.479,088 7,766,475 .... same period, 1865 do do 1864 1863 Rye, Wheat, Corn, bbls. 3,159 bush. bush. bush. 68,111 ~ * 19.801 48,617 115,399 13,965 297,578 .... 65,748 23,924 8,324 26,374 86,396 711.331 2,169;997 804,732 80,900 751.244 i 1,902,358 807,999 98,558 1,033,957 Totals Previous week Cor. week, 1865.... 852,393 389,215 88,187 28,791 96,864 16,584 12,459 15,821 No report. period of drought, accompanied by followed by frosty nights, a favorable change has taken place; some refreshing showers have fallen, and the temperature is more genial for the grow¬ hot sun, ing crops, which had been severely injured by the severity of the East wind and the want of moisture. The country markets have been well supplied by farmers but sales have progressed slowly, and the rates of last week have every where been barely supported. In London on Monday the trade was in a most inactive state for all descriptions, and it was only possible to effect sales by the concesof Is. per qr. Floating cargoes were in small request at late rates. Foreign wheat participated in the prevailing dulness, but holders displayed no disposition to sacrifice their property. On Wednesday there was a better ing. with a little more enquiry for both British and foreign, but this morning, the reports are less encouraging. Here on Tuesday the attendance was sion feel¬ smaller the absence of many lower, there was an unmistakable desire to realize on the part of needy holders, while buyers held aloof and refused to purchase except upon more favorable terms than those of Friday last. The business w as therefore entirely unimportant. At this day’s market there was increased dulness, and Tuesday’s prices were barely supported. The trade was purely retail, and the anxiety of sellers was met with indifference by millers who confined their operations to their immediate wants. Canada Club 10s. 2d.@10s. 5d.; Winter red 10s. 6d.@10s. lOd.; Milwaukee and Amber than usual, the pressure of financial difficulties involved well know n faces, and although prices were n»«t actually 7d.@10s. 3d. ; Chicago spring9s. 6d.@10s. Flour—Without any quotable change in value all descriptions are difficult of sale, although the scarcity of American makes it relatively firmer than other sorts. Montreal sup. 26~s.@27s. ; Montreal extra, 27s/ 6d.@28s. 6d. ; Extra State, 22s.@25s. ; Extra Western, 25s.@26s. ; do. R. H. Ohio. 25s.@27s. Indian Corn—A large quantity has changed hands at a slight concession on 9s. the Imports 25th to 31st May, 23,524 qrs. Prime prices of Friday last. mixed, 29s. 9d.@50s. per 480 lbs. farmers’ Week ending 26th Same time 1865 Western deliveries. 57,969 qrs. at 47s. 4<E May, 1866 41s. 9d. do 80,224 IMPORTS. Wheat, qrs. United States and Canada Total for week Total since 1st January. Same time 1865 . , bbls. 4*803 ..... 243,419 118,712 Flour n sack’s 2,262 58,564 57,824 234,154 144,367 I. Corn, qrs. 15,868 25,210 368,897 31,107 7,176 68,111 245,651 25,897 •'Cleveland 34,627 245,651 1,118 94.990 215.236 1,962,911 THE DRY GOODS TRADE. 41,803 11,485 12.535 58,411 following tables show the movement in breadetuffs during the week ending June 9tb, and from January 1st, to date, with Chicago.—The 30.S67 240,220 7,468,746 CONTINENT. 4,277 Total To about do do . 770,685 726,814 542,096 207.646 Flour, From New York to June 8, 1866 From other ports, to latest dates 1,770,839 1,567,318 557,440 at Lake Ports.—The following shows the receipts following lake ports for the week ending June 9 : Flour. Wheat. Barley. Rye. Corn. Oats. 215,620 13,380 Chicago 39,510 1,948,1:36 627,101 59,970 13,879 127,1S9 Milwaukee 449,812 30,909 7,380 25,664 Toledo 31,987 176,617 47.083 7,448 . 2,553 19,535 Detroit • 14,3:35 13,472 13,912 3,359 583 a 1866. 197,266 202,657 540,5:33 Liverpool, June 2.—Wheat—-After a long RECKIPT3. |For the w’k:. Since Jan. 1. 21,018 Weekly Receipts follows: as 165,637 Total afloat * been 95,092 Prev'ous week advanced. The movement in Breadstuff's at this market has 5.450 8,930 5,806 . at the 51© Jersey and State Barley T 6 00® 6 85 89 84© Oats, Western It will be observed that while flours have 00® 2 33 30® 2 60 75® 2 90 50® 3 35 Corn, Western Mixed Western Yellow Double Extra Western and' St. Louis 12 75@17 00 Southern supers 10 50@11 35 Southern, fancy and ex. 11 50@16 75 Canada, common to choice extra 9 00@13 50 Rye Flour, fine and super¬ 2 2 2 2 Milwaukee Club Red Winter Amber State and Mich. White Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 8 85® 9 60 Extra Western, com¬ mon 1 70® 2 25 bushel Oswego, 9 days. F'm Spring Chicago Wheat, Flour, Superfine State and Friday. P. The week seems This is M., June 15,1866 Dry Goods Market has been quiet but steady during the entire The advance has been established, and there under review. probability of any reduction in prices at present. supported by the high price pf the raw material, and the probft but little June 16, 1866.] THE CHRONICLE. 755 Cambrics are steady but inactive. Manville 14 for black, 15 for plain bility that it will remain high. The present stocks of goods though and 16 for pink. Clinton IS, Federal 12, Smitfield Mfg Co. 14-15, Fax quite large are in strong hands, and while manufacturers cannot produce Hill Bank 12, Naragansett 14, Wauregan 16. at any lower rates, there are. no influences to depress the market Canton Flannels are still nominal. Nashua 24, Franklin 23, Arling¬ Trade has been all that could be expected for the dull season, in Domes¬ ton 22, Eureka, 21, Newmarket 30. tic Cottons, while Woolens are a shade firmer under the* anticipated Hoop Skirt9 are steady at uniform rates, Thomp son woven Train 65c action of Congress in regard to the tarriff measures.' do Zephyr 55c, Bradly’s Duplex Elliptic, and Empress Trail prices un¬ Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are not materially altered from changed, STife A T Meyers’s IXL in fair demand, J C Kelley’s Gotham last week. There is, of course, but little activity in trade at this sea¬ No. 60, F5@52c, do do No. 70, 47 to 68c. son, but a quite steady and uniform business seems to be doing by both M-'Uslin de Laines are in steady demand for small lots to make up agents and jobbers. The advance in Standard Shirtings to 24 cents is assortment^, and prices are maintained. Pacific and Manchester 28, fully established, and probabilities are that they will remain at that Pacific armures 24, do Robes de Chamber 32$, Pacific and Manchester figure for the present. We repeat our quotations of last week with few Challies 234. exceptions. Standard sheetings are held at 24 cts. by agents. This is the Balmoral Skirts are in light demand, and with large stocks prices are price of Indian Head A, Appleton A, Stark A. Nashua X X, and Law¬ nominal. Gilberts black and white $33 per doz, do dark fancy colors rence C. Atlantic heavy A 37 inch 25, do P A 37 inch 25, do A $89, and Park Mills black and white $30. H 37 inch 25. do P H 37 inch 25, do heavy shirt A V 30 inch 20, do Linsevs are in good demand. Rob Roys sell at 26 cents for 3;4, tine sheet A L 364 inch 23, do do P L 86$ inch 23, do shirt P E 33 inch Wool filling 3-4 84, $ 37$. 22, Indian Head B 30 inch 20, do E 48 inch 35, Nashua extra A 36 inch Cloths are 21, do tine D 36 inch' 20, Waltham F 40 inch 244, Massachusetts A 4-4 $2 15 for No.quite active and prices are advancing. Cotton warps 1, $2 05 for No. 2, and $1 95 for No. 3; 6-4 ConIP; do B B 4-4 21, Medford 21, Newmarket Manuf. Co. 33 inch 19, do sbohocken do $2 2o@$2 75 ; 6-4 all wool black doeskins $3 25@f 3 75; do 36 inch 20, do do heavy D 36 inch 224, Auburn 36 inch 13, Indian Leicester ladies’cloths $1 50. \ Queen 36 inch 16, New England 36 inch 16, Pittsfield A 36 inch 17, Cassimeres and Satinets are quiet for fancy styles, while dark Rocky Point sheetings 36 inch 17, Wawawanda 36 inch 16, Appleton goods are firm and moderately active. Millville 3-4 fancy, B 40 inch 2 \ do C 16, do D 18, do W 4 8 infill 32, do shirting N 18, cassimeres $1 37$@$2, silk mixed do $1 50, Evans, Seagrave Ethan Allen D 13, Manhattan K 16$, Pocassett Canoe 39 inch 24, do A Co.’s 3-4 fancy $1 37«@?2, F. M. Ballou <fc Co.’s do $1 25 K 36 inch 19$, do family cot 36 inch 17. do II 28 inch 14$, Western @*2, S. H. Sayles, do $1 25@?l 50, Babcock <fe Moss, $1 50 States 17, Grafton 2S inch 14, do 30 inch 15 do 33 inch 16, Indian Or¬ chard W S3 inch 184, do B B 19$, N 23, do A 24, .and L 174, Bristol @$2, Campbell & Co.’s do $1 37$@$2, Mechanicsville Co.’s do $1 87$@$2, plough, loom and anvil 50c, Dighton’s silk mixtures $1 62$ 19, G. Washington heavy 19, Griswold £ 12, Warren 36 inch 18. Ex¬ @82 12$, Farmer’s A Union cassimeres 47$ cents, Carolina mills fancy celsior light 4-4 114, O. J. Iiathburn $ 18, Edward Harris 40 inch 30 do 81 00@?1 25, tan mixture $1 62$@?2, Peacedale fancy do$l 25, do | 19. do black and white check 85c, American mills fancy $1 62$ for £, and Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings have been upon the whole, $3 60@$4 for 6-4, East Windsor Woolen Co.’s £ $1 25@$1 75, Gran¬ steady and quite uiiif >nn, with a healthy business doing. Leading ville mills £ fancy $1 25. makes are scarce and somewhat aboVe the market, while a few lighter Kentucky Jeans are unchanged. Washington and Union each sell for grades are over abundant and nominal New York Mills are still held at 50 cents. Richmond 47$, Ermine Cloth 55, and E and H Babcock’s Alpine 42$ cents, Wamsu'ta 87$ and Lonsdale 82, Rockdale B 26, Uxbridge cloth 47$. imperial 4-4 25, Kent River 12, Grafton 3-4 14 and 7 S 15, AuCarpets are dull for low grades, while better makes are steady and burnville 4-4 30, Aquidnecks 4-4 20, do 7 8 18, White Rock 36 moderately active for the season Lowell Co’s Ingrain sell at $1 60 for 334 O J Rathbun 7-8 17, Social Mill Co. water twist 28, do, superfine, $1 75 for extra super, and $2 15 for three-ply, Hartford Co’s C 7-8 17, Manville R 20, do XX 25, Attawaugan XX ,23, Bedford O $1 60 for medium superfine, $1 75 for superfine, $2 07$ for Imperial 15, Indian River XX 23* Warrenton B 14, Bartlett Steam Mills 33 inch extra three-ply, Brussels $2 45 for 3 fr. $2 65 22$, do 5-4 32$, do 7-8 20, do 4-4 28, Newmarket 33 inch 21, do 36 inch three-ply and §2 25 for , 25, Waltham L 72 inch 65, do X M 81 inch Chills 33 inch 22$, do W 42 inch 30, do 87$-, do N 90 inch 97$. . in better demand both for consumption and export, but prices are steai!y. India 25, Globe Steam Mills 20, Union drill 12$, Pepperell 25, Boott 25, Stark Standard 24. Corset Jeans are improved in demand but prices are unchanged. Indian Orchard 16, Silver Lake brown are sold ahead at 21 $@22, New¬ market are colored 16, Nashua and Franklin each 15. Stripes and Checks are inactive but prices are somewhat nominal. Arkwright 6x2 22$. do 3x3 22, unchanged, though Louisana plaids 24, Ringgold fast plaids 20, Simpson's Chambravs 25, Concord 15, Madison check 18, Roanoke 20, Penobscot 224, and Uplands 22. Ticks are in fair demand and for the leading makes prices are West Branch are held at IS for No. 3, and 20 forNo.. 2 firm. Springfield 14, Pacific Extra £ 32$. do 4-4 42$ Henry Clay 3-4 19, Arnoskeag A C A 62$, A 50, B 45 C 40 and D 35. York 30 inch 41, 32 inch 51, Albany 12$, American 2<N Glen Allen 3 4 13$, Chattanooga 3-4 15, Passaic 7-8 20, Sacondale 13, Windsor 22, Chatta¬ 16, Willow Brook 47$, Farmer’s and Miner’s 50. Ontario A 3-4 13, nooga Denims and Cottonades are in better request, and tlu-re. is a fair trade demand at uniform rates. Burlington Brown Denims sell at 14$, Homestead Brown 20$, Peabody Blue 19, Arkwright Blue 26$, do Madison Brown 19, Providence Blue 20. are again lower ; with, however, nothing of moment do¬ ing in this city. The last week’s sales at Providence were 163,000 pieces, at about 14 cents for 64x61. The nominal quotation here is Brown 26$, Print Cloths 14 cents. Prints are held firmly, especially for dark styles, and as the stock is large, prices are obtained. The demand is moderate. We make no change in quotations. Arnolds are 17c American Print Works madder not 19 for 4 fr. and $2 65 for 5 fr. Flannels are steady and firm. Plain scarlet and orange 32$@60, plain white do 34@75, scarlet, blue and mixed twilled do 37$@65, 4-4 Shaker 65@95, Lucas Mills white doinets 35@45, Gilbert’s opera flannels 70, Peck and Kilburu’s fine doinets 57$, Franklin Mills colored opera flan¬ nels 65, Bay Statedo 57$. Foreign Goods are still without particular interest. The stocks are large and prices are not effected by the advance in gold. With the ex¬ ception of styles pf goods wanted for immediate consumption, there is little or demand. no Manchester Market Annexed ISprague’sNational 20, Madder Rubies 22, Indigos 22, Mournings 20, are some of the Canaries 22, solid colors 22, shirtings 23, Garners 23, Arnoskeag. pink 22, do purple 21, do shirting 20, do dark 20. do light 20, do mourning 19$, Swiss Ruby 21$, Lowell dark 19, do light 19 Spring Valley 15, Wameutta 164, Ousters 16$, Merrimac D 21, do W 22. Manchester 19 for fancy and 20 for frocks, Dunnels 19 net, Allen’s 19 net for fancy, 20 for purple, and 20$ for pinks. Pacific 20 net, Hamilton 20 for fancy, 214 for pinks and purples. Jacconets are steady. Lonsdale 20, White Rock 21$ for hi h colors and 19$ for plain. Gingams are steady at the advance noticed last week. Lancasters 27$, Glasgow 25. Lawns are in active demand for leading makes. Dunnell Manufactur¬ ing Co.’s 1,400quality sell at 20$- regular; Lodi fancy, mourning and plain solid colors, 23 nett, do 1,400 quality 25, do 1,600 do 27$, and Pacific Co ’s fancy 26$. Corset Jeans are steady and unchanged in prices. Indian Orchard, Androscoggin and Bates sell at 16 for bleached. Silver Lake brown 22$. Jacconets are inactive and nominal. White Rock 21$ and 19$ for plain. Silesias Indian are in moderate demand, and there is prehard 22$, Lonsdale 23$, Social 27$. no for high colors, change in prices ; London Wool Sales.—Our own and correspondent London, writing under the date of June 2, thns alludes to the state of the Manchester cotton yarn and cotton goods market and the London wool sales: The market for yams and goods at Manchester has exhibited more steadiness, and although there is still great caution shown by buyers in operating, an in¬ creased amount of business has been transa' ted, and prices show an advance, as compared with the late lowest point.. The want of inquiry for yarns on ac¬ count of German houses fs still an important drawback to the yarn trade, and in this department, there is certainly fewer perceptible signs of improvement. But even in this branch, the symptoms of increasing confidence are evident. For twist and pin crops there has been a fair inquiry for the home trade, lead¬ ing to a moderate amount of business, especially in the better qualities of 32’s which are comparatively scarce and in good request. Two-folds, like all the other descriptions of yarn which depend largely on the continental markets, remain flat and neglected, not even the very low level to which prices have sunk tempting any speculative demand, and they remain flat and practically unsalable at a very'low and purely nominal range of prices. Cloth of various kinds has been iu more active demand, and *he low offers of last week have been repeated much more freely. The demand appears to run mainly on shirtings, jacconets,caud some other fabrics suitable for the East, hut the prices offered are low, and do not appeal to have resulted in much posi¬ tive business. For certain kinds of domestics and other he ivy goods there is also more inquiry, and a few transactions of moderate amount have been re¬ ported, although the business done ha not been general. The steady tone of the Liverpool market, and the surprising firmness with which the stock of cotton is held,-have had a very favorable effect here ; and should the money market, as many anticipate, increase in ease, a resumption of business might at once be expected. in leading quotations : EXPORT. WATER TWIST FOR Numbers. O d. 7 Common quality........1 Second quality Best quality .. MULE TWIST .. .. .. ‘ 56 -. lb. Weights.... Prices GRAY FOR 8 oz. 4 64 lb. 9 oz. 0 13s. 9d. 15s. 3d. 66 lb. oz. 10 0 17s. 6d. 60 d. 22 22 24 21 26 26 50 d. 21 21 23 23 25 25 SHIRTINGS, , 37$ , 56 72 lb. oz. lb. 10 8 12 19s. Od. 38 to 42 d. 21 23 25 Oi EXPORT. 40 d. 16 16 18 18 20 20 S IU d. 17 19 21 16 17 19 45 Inches , Reeds END iO TO d. 9 15 6 to 12 16 to 24 30 d. d. d. 13 6 11 Common quality.. 6 11 13 12 14 8 Second quality .... 12 8 14 12 14 16 Best quality 12 14 16 GOLD 10 to Vi oz. 15s. Od. 70 d. 24 24 26 26 28 28 90 d. 28 28 30 30 32 80 d. 26 26 28 28 30 30 32 100 d. 30 82 34 YARDS. 50 Inches 64 66 lb. oz. lb. oz. 10 4 11 0 , lb. 72 oz. 11 8 17s. 9d. 19s. Od. 21s. Od. London Wool Sales.—Considering the high price of money, the demand for wool at these sales is tolerably active. Prices, however, are much lower than at last sales, the decline being of the following magnitude: On Australian washed and Australian fleece. 2d. to 3d.; on Australian greasy wool, 2d. to 2^d. on scoured fleece and handwashed Cape, 2d. to 3d.; and on greasy do., Id. to disposed of. and, in fact, to be taking and advantage of the present depressed prices. Very little is doing on Germ in ftc? count. For shipment to America, yery little produce fca# .a* yet been nken j^d. per lb. Up to the present time, about 70,000 bales have been Our own manufacturers are operating steadily, but not extensively, rather cautiously. French houses are buying largely, appear 1 daring the progress of these fifties, 87 Atlantic, A H Conestoga extra. 36 25 24 19 23 E, fine 33 21* Lll 17* fine 86 B Z.... 36 do do D... Agawam, F.... Augusta . • . . Boott, S . O H do . .. . 21 36 . . . 20 4-4 7-8 40 34 16* 24 80 r-s . . 16* 28 19 Dwight Mf.Co.R 36 Excelsior 40 Great Falls, M , 85 do 8 38 Indian Head, A. 37 20 do do Queen. ?6 Indian Orch. BB. 38 A do do do N.. 36 C.... 37 L... 30 P.... 27 W... 33 .. do do do 24 20 BROWN 25 .86 Portsmouth, F.. 32 do brown York 28 Warren brown Boston M’fg Co... 29 86 Superior, IXL... 30 Princeton, A.... Salisbury 38 Salmon Fa'Is A.. 87 do do C 36 Tacony . - Standard Stark, B do A.\ Wachusett 87 B. Uncasville .. SHEETINGS. 421 3:* S3 Mills. 36 36 New York Wamsutta. 86 Bartlett’s 38 do do 31 ....... 25 23 do .... 86 36 .... Arkwright James Mills 33 82 27* do do Pepperolls 24 33 42 5-4 .. f0 8-4 70 do 9-4 90 do 10-4 1 02* Attawaugan.W T 86 6-4 do do Attawaugan.XX 86 23 36 Hope Lonsdale Masonville 33 32* Williamsville... 36 Edward Harris .7-8 Newburyport.. .4-4 Amoskeag, A... 4-4 do Z.... 38 BateSjBB. 18 2?* 32 ... Forestdale.... 80 36 36 36 .. . • • .... Hill W aithaui XX.... Ballon do Wheaton Dwight Utica ..7-8 36 S-4 9-4 .10-4 1 .. . 86 .4-4 7-8 18 . , 70 90 00 # , . . , , , , , . .9-4 1 05 .10-4 1 20 Manville, X.X — . . 23 , . . . 28 81 • - Leath Ky. J Plow, L. & Anv.. 40 .. CO .. Everett New York 82* 52* 52* Whittenden,d.At t 81@37j Mills.. . - Lonsdale 24 . Pkgs 18 15 Sprague’s, (frocks) do purples. do do solids .. .. .. .. Merricks if Hadley Colored Prints goods. 15 4,536 Corsets Straw Common colors. Pkgs. Value. 25 Worsteds.... 144 Hose. 2 | • • . Lovell — 1 Linen & cot. Spool.'... Hose 3,237 ;. $70,148 Total... 425 32,033 2 1,555 Total 75 $87,117 Thread 2 763 $85,121 15 $4,774 Silk & cotton 943 2,720 496 MISCELLANEOUS. Matting Corsets Sus. & elast.. $1,259 1,192 2 10 Leath.gloves. 2 1 836 1,487 Total 5 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING. MANUFACTURES OF WOOL. Pkgs. Value. 10,452 6,125 281.278 Pkgs. Value. 343 $155,091 24 11.521 126 Carpeting 87*($ 6 Blankets Total Meyers IXL, l j 20 to Shawls 17 Gloves 20 Worsteds....508 Hose 10 30,195 1,026 MANUFACTURES 4s Ma 97*@ 7,508 4,327 ...23 ...11 Total...... tapes ...... 1 2 Braids & bds. 1 06 Emurcss trail.. 17* 16* 38 Ribbons Laces 3S4 $83,862 Linens Cloths 16* 882 5 475 $182,287 Total COTTON. 4,330 17 2 3,483 18,684 Cot&wos’d. 43 .387 4 Woolens 19 . MANUFACTURES OF FLAX. Bradley’s 1} in tapes D u p 1 ex Elliptic,20 to 50 hoops.... Pkgs Value. Braids & bds.- 5 338 1 OF Braids & bds 1 1,162 3,675 1 85 Allen Duchess,B 6,604 67,938 1,114 "6 Worsted yam $51,100 200 Total WAREHOUSE. FROM Shawls 27 $45,029 Silks 9S .. Richmond Arnolds 7,017 SILK. Union Skirt and Corset Mfg. Co., No. 1 narrow, 6 .. 973 $213,369 Total 877 2,394 7 Giugams..... Velvets c 21 Atiaauo Mourni’g Amoskeag do .. 3,364 52 $17,674 Emb. musli’s 22,944 Velvets 82 6,427 Laces 20 Cottons 2 20 2; 2ft 20 20 l Bon ton Garners Hemp yam Susp. & elas. 8,439 86 Blankets l :jti J. & li. Clark. 17* .. 7,323 8,323 371 9,910 Feath. &flow ri 16 inch tapes, 4o hoops fans*-*- 51 FLAX. 5,232 1,S57 14,310 Carpeting.... 65 ■ .. 21 22 21 21 19 20 $143,718 5,540 HOOP SKIRTS. Merrimao, D do W OF MANUFACTURES £ 18&19 .134 6 21 $59,570 3 19 ... 15,892 18,509 9,737 32 Value. , 130 Woolens Cloths 10* High colors American Amoskeag Braids & bds. 20 Silk & worst. 13 Silk & cotton 12 MANUFACTURES OF WOOL. DRESS BRAIDS. 22* 480 $137,540 Total Embroideries WITHDRAWN 13* . Coat’s ] G. A.Clark’s.. 1 Willirnauuo TWILLED Blt.KSIAS 54,103 Clothing 710 18* U SPOOL COTTON. . 6,683 . SILK. 14 1 34 Hdkfs Hose Thread $9,282 13,053 1,4S9 gloves. 10 gloves... 9 170 Mattting Oil cloth 13 Kid ,. Crapes Rodman’s 6,627 29 .238 Spool. Hose. 1,836 MANUFACTURES . . 52* 2,481 9,572 . 1.069 5.394 16,522 2,217 1 20,359 Sewings 865 $181,314 610 Linen&oot.. 2 6 Laces 5,519 .. .. Lonsdale .. 14,114 15,127 242 4,665 Linens PAVER OAMPRfOS . Value. MISCELLANEOUS. ft. 8. A Sons 32 English So High Colors ..... .. Wh’te Rock Slaters , OOTTONADES. Farmer’s and Meeh. Cassim Pemberton. d<fct.. 3,596 . Dunuea’s 86 ..4-4 ..5-4 Indian Riv. X.X 31 30 London Mourning ..6-4 do do do . . 27* • .. . 17 Victory E P HINTS. , .. .. . • 16 ...20 Hdkfs 1 Hose........ 4 , 9-4 Blackstone... 7(9 31 17 • • 58,403 Pkgs. Worsted y’m 54 Lastiuo's. . 6 Braids & bds. 20 Cot. & worst. 17 Total 18 . ......... Portland Manville Smiihfieid Vtctory , , Mattawamkeag .6-4 do Ribbons 24 26 20 4-4 . Bates Home do Bates. Park Mills Red. Lanark, 4x2 .... Star No. 9, 4x2.. do 6,2x2.. Gibe'' ua 1x2 Oxfot * Whitten- >n.* • J. & W. 81ater Blaterville Haymaker.... 101 Laces 33 $45,419 4 5,175 9 6,757 24 Washington Victory^. * Columbia. 35 2,612 6,077 MANUFACTURES OF Silks Pmshes Velvets .... 2'* 3,878 9 Ginghams.*... GLAZE! CAMBRICS 32* .. 28 36 Langdon 32* Manchester Co Pittsfield Thorndike nillsboro’ brown. Zouave, brown Wide World Value. Pkgs. ”8 .. past week CONSUMPTION. tl Emb'd mus’n 3 Laces 11 Braids & bds. 35 Gloves....... 13 95 $33,036 41 11.996 2,642 6 24 .... CHECKS. Androscoggin ..36 DRlLJrJ. ris, No. 1 Lin wood BLEACHED $2,009,003 817,234 620 $271,507 Cottons Colored Prints . No. 2 do White Rock Miner’s Flannels. Park Mills, No. ,65 . 8285 184,550 48,937 MANUFACTURES OF COTTON. Granlees & Nor¬ 52* 25 .. $1,191,769 196,696 132.551 , LIN3EYS. Mohawk Pearl River Chester Dock 23 86 86 . Boott Stark, H 5788 2497 Total * Stark 28* e $992,825 3336 ...... 360 2 Blankets 32 Pepperell •' * FOR Shawls Gloves Worsteds Hose 36,556 Carpeting.... 131 80 . Laconia 50 784,151 $62°,035 STATEMENT. detailed statement of the movement the Pkgs. Value. 200 $116,462 30 14,647 Woolens Cloths 17* 24 28 86 28,541 9,592 port. 2469 $1,254,349 24 60 Haymaker .. 2' Bennington Amoskeag P.. 27 do $208,674 10,759 65,647 MANUFACTURES OF WOOL. Winthnp Pocaaset $103,727 516 2820 279,120 The following is a Standards DENIMS. 1444 731 149 635 2829 319 50 33 114 62,276 267,484 80,430 3669 PERIOD. DETAILED Staterville 20 Eagle 17 $1,157,193 ENTERED .. Tremont Bro.. Manchester 22 20 3780 ending June 14, 1S66 : .... .... 817,234 $295,931 684 FLANNSUV . 29 6-3 20 American 21 . do Chester Dock Washington $430,447 2497 WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME consumpt’n .1* <lj Pemberton CL. f. Laconia Manchester Hamilton do XF... Ellerion, P Sheridan Globe Mills.... 47* 27 1172 $373,042 784,151 . $975,229 V/OimilBL 27 Everett 2i * R. 36 O, fine 33 N, fine 30 de do Haymaker 387 15 i 960 2820 Naumkeag, br’n.. 13 .. 59,472 16,264 71,148 87,117 85,121 4,774 •279.120 1785 Conestoga, No. 1. 82* 25 .. Arasupha 23 Pepperell, E fine 40 Belvidere .. Pemberton Awn 75 732 mak’t Total entered at the 26J&27* teen . .. 23* .. Laconia Amoskeag 24 .. 40.926 $16,811 $555;447 Total Add ent’d for Naumkeag, sar- .. A..8-8 B.B.. Thorndike.. .6-3 Pittsfield 3-3 .. ....... CANTON do do 24 24 H... 37 L, hne 87 E, fine 88 Pepperell 85 Whitteuton, A.A 21 Pacific A........ 37 21* 80 30 .. $182,287 475 220 48 684 .... Naumkeag .. Uncasville .. 282 4,605 Manufactures of wool... 1037 231 cotton.. do 168 silk do 274 flax do Miscellaneous drygoods. 75 22 is York .. 7,319 1 forconsumpt’n ENTERED FOR 16 16 STRIPES. i’3 24 31 ... Total th’wn upon Bates 82* Amoskeag 21 x colors i Androscoggin... 13 Hampden, CC is C... 40 Nashua, extra... 87 Newmarket, A.. 86 Hig Total Add ent’d 20 20 2<) 20 20 OORSRT Massachusetts do Atnures 4» Albany Massachus's,.... 36 37 Medford Naumkeag, A... 86 do do do i9 . DURING $210,556 45,825 493 170 37 224 36 $2,709 1,896 .... 16* 40 B do E 36 do 40 O do Lawrence C.... 86 do G... 83 DELAINES. 55 21 20* 35 Laconia, H All dark. Hamilton Co Manchester Pacific 3.’* AB.. X $817,234 " Ohalies do do ’ 8 5 3 .... 40 Ktdlyville C m 4»t ... WAREHOUSE AND THROWN FROM Manufactures of wool... do cotton.. silk do do flax .... Miscellaneous dry goods. 2* 20 IS . INTO .THE THE SAME PERIOD. AMERICAN PRINTED O do B Pittsfield 19 .. WITHDRAWN 32* 30 30 do 23* 30 0 23 ... 2497 MARKET $784,151 2820 $279,120 6S4 Total 32* , Arasapha Omega D 18 . ... . 30 , 27* Glasgow Clinton Berkshire German Roanoke • . m NOP * v s DOM ESTIO 37* • ... Lancasrer Hartford Caledonia 32* 80 80 Uncasville West Branch Pearl River.. Manchester C .. Appleton, A.... 37 do Whittenton A.A. A. do Pemberton X do red stripe Everett Franklin Hamilton do D Victory 474 42, 4-4 do 23* Amoskeag A do Amoskeag A.C.A 32 do A... 32 do B 32 do D 30 York 32 Amoskeag C 30 . . Pacific 45 60 Conestoga E G V. :... 8u 4-4 L !5* 20 Wamsutta Width. Price Width. Price. Pric^ Width. TICKS. BKOWIT SHEETINGS. 1866. CONSUMPTION TOR THE WEEK ENDING JUNE 14, -1866. -1865.-1864. Value. Pkgs. Value. Pksrs. Pkgs. Value. 620 $271,507 545 214 $205,223 $60,719 Manufactures of worn... 480 137,540 110,336 89 29,740 cotton.. do 134 143,718 200,514 126 130,370 do silk 973 213,369 238,155 226 49,391 flax .. do 290 51,100 29,918 29 8,900 Miscellaneous dry gooas. ENTERED FOB WHOLESALE JOBBERS PRICES. THE FOLLOWING ARE do do do do do do do [June 16, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 756 4 @ 60 do brr.gd, do. 60 (gi 75 Imperial Trail. 75 ..157 $55,766 124 36,306 12 2,362 Cottons Colored Prints Gmgarns ... Total 18 5,417 Pkgs. Value Worsted yarn 60 Braids &bds. 51 Cot. & worst.279 2,996 The 1444 $629,035 4.697 Gloves.... Velvets...... 17 Laces 5 7,726 Spool 1.731 Hose Braids & bds. 21 17 follows: 3,430 28,039 41,106 10,116 Emb muslin. 16 ... ....156 731 $196,696 MANUFACTURES OF SILK. 45 Silks Crapes 52,916 2 2,158 Velvets Ribbons 17 62 16,474 46,585 Braids & bds. 14 Silk & cot... 9 6,007 8,411 . 17* 149 $132 551 Total AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. importations of dry goods at this port for 14,1866, and the 22,953 89,993 OF COTTON. MANUFACTURES OF FLAX. IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS 17,405 the week ending June corresponding weeks of 1864 and 1865, have been as Linens 558 $165,691 Linen & cot.. 8....2,588 Total Laces... Thread 1 64 496 Hemp yarn.. 15,150 ..... 4 625 635 $184,560 MISCELLANEOUS. Leath. gloves Kid gloves.,. 1 1 Matting ....2664 $489 Embroideries 6 20,058 Corsets 25 11,353 Straw goods .121 7,007 2829 $48,937 4,422 Snap & elas. 11 8,443 — 15,166 Total, June ENDING JUNE 2.092 Tobacco, hbds..6 Bread, pkgs ..185 767 Butter, lbs. 12,930 4,746 Corn meal, bbl554 2,439 Pork, bbls.... 128 3,754 Flour, bbls..2.231 23,061 Pk codfish,bbllOO 463 Tobacco, bales 31 550 Tobacco, cs 139 3 21 Empty cks 150 Lara oil, galls. .42 83 D’d fish, bxs. .40 27 Corn meal, hdlOO 2,150 Codfish, qtls... 15 120 Hams, lbs ..5,OH 1,062 Bacon, lbs, ...740 148 . 115 Beans, bbls.... 14 Soap, bxs... .84 147 368 Lard, lbs... .1,451 Honey, tcs 2 Peas, bbls 10 Peas, bags 45 Rye flour, bbl,130 Beet, bbls 27 Nails, kegs ... 16 148 54 147 845 415 128 191 125 Leather, sides 25 Starch, bxs. .100 .250 5,000 Hoops 438 404 Leather, rolls.. .6 Trunks, pkgs.. 45 Domestics, cs...1 Boots & shos,cs9 Tobacco, bxs.. .4 312 497 258 1 Hops, bales Photo mtl, bxs .2 Furniture, cs.. .9 Perfumery, bxs50 Mf tob, lbs. .6,443 Iron safe 1 .. Miscellaneous 600 Pork, bbls.... 282 8,668 4,4:14 Miscellaneous 294 Beef, bbls.... 158 Flour, bbl9.2,944 28,717 2,490 $348,578 Cornmeal,bbls531 Bread, pkgs..344 2,005 LONDON. Lobsters, cs..450 2,700 Peas, bush..1,417 2,343 595 2,592 Corn, bush...730 Maizena, bxs.600 3,409 Tobacco, hhd.327 81,660 Coal oil. gal s7,000 325 Flour, bbls .10 150 Lumber, ft. 10,000 941 830 Hardware, cs..61 1,560 Shooks 2,137 Corn, bush.77,267 58,621 Lard, lbs....9,762 Ail nqlrn 590 Matches, cs 20 lbs .’.2,708,888 64,874 Shingles... 15,000 109 Sperm oil,gl 1,034 1,561 Candles, bxs,812 2,686 Soap, bxs 5 52 Cotton seed cake, 1 36 lbs....... 87,000 1,700 Wine, pkg 1,127 Ore, bbls. 4 165 Shoes, cs.... 12 ?57 Mahogany, pcl099 6,862 Dry goods, cs... 1 859 Beeswax.*cks.. .6 550 Butter, lbs .2,545 Lampblack, hdlOO 1,400 Hams, lbs..8,729 2,036 665 Japan wax, bx50 t,250 Cheese, lbs. .4,232 1,012 Cheese, lbs50,863 10,197 Mfd tob, lbs.4,540 214 Rubber, cs... .100 21,108 Paint, pkgs....61 461 Ess oils, cs 3 253 Lumber, ft. 11,042 2 145 Crude gums, cslO 536 Rice, bgs 1,369 Tobacco, bl9.10fl 1,865 Agl implts,pbgl2 153 Oars 1,508 2,254 Drugs, pkgs....2 261 Clocks, bxs... .44 879 Syrup, kegs...25 • 650 Hickory, logs. 130 250 W’dware.pkgs200 600 Maples, bgs...49 511 Paper, reamsl,500 6,900 Live stock,hd.150 't,475 Oats, bush. 11,597 50 125 Skius, bales...67 30,811 Bran, bgs 2,0i7 Carriages, pkgs.9 1,200 Miscellaneous Veneers, cs.... .5 250 Bi 200 97 25 1,107 ... * HAMBURG. $51,793 . 1,500 13,922 25,682 Segars, cs 86 Tong beans, cs.2 Carriage •. .1 260 Skins, bales... .1 Clocks, bxs . .223 Pistols, bx .... .1 Coffee, bgs. 2,610 350 450 6,055 150 Ext 228 bbls 835 Hides 1,574 Mfd tob, lbs7,727 Dental mtls, cs.l DUTCH WEST INDIFS. Flour, bbls...285 3,240 285 Beef, bbls 30 .30 Lard, lbs....3,000 Soap, bxs ... .500 engine...1 Hardware, bxs 14 Coal, tons 10 Steam 1 Rope, coils 3 Mf iron, pkgs. .40 Lumber, ft..5,227 Empty bbls.... 45 Oil tank ... 133 733 720 1,800 1,057 95 225 141 948 227 S24 Nav stores, lbs.81 Lard oil, gals 420 Whale oil,gals201 $436,309 Rasp syrup, kegs ....75 Miscellaneous... COWES. 756 5150 17,000 bxs.200 600 Lumber, ft 3,000 Paper, rms.. 1,500 7,932 Mfd tob..i.. 1,344 482 34,820 4,610 lbs 291.063 Oars .'300 Staves D'd fish, 770 9n0 ’lobacco, hhds.38 1,052 Hogs’hair, bis.25 1,450 Machinery, cs.ll Corn, bush.31,465 Cotton, bis....25 7,600 1,450 $42,032 GREENOCK. U' A AT' Corn, bush.14,974 344 $18,355 5 586 370 5,840 78 $9,326 CADIZ. Stave s ..:.. 24,400 Hardware, cs... 2 12,517 6 bxs LONDONDERRY. Corn, bush.50,502 Flour, bbls...500 Tobacco, hbds 21 600 1,852 2,760 85 8,500 Tobacco,hhds.650 61,964 Tobacco stems, Tar, bbls...2,954 DPT 750 Machinery, bxs.4 Sew mach, cs..22 Wh’bone, bdls.53 Miscellaneous..^ 29,605 a 875 42,950 5,600 6,024 $10,095 Pet’m,galsl60,545 61,667 Corn, bush.26,743 22,923 ROTTERDAM. 7,965 Petro, gls. 32,218 16,779 Oats, bush. 12,684 Spts turp, bbl.160 4,796 Peas, bush. .7,601 9,122 4,800 900 Rosin, bbls...314 1,095 Staves Mf wood, pkgs 30 514 $102,577 Mf iron, pkgs.. .1 18 106 $64,915 CUBA. cs.4 Gin, cs 100 $54,574 Perfumery, CS..77 CORK. 220 Rosin, bbls.... 50 $48,142 MADEIRA. 2,500 Corn, bush. 2,500 Flour, bbls 700 Petroleum, 6,650 439 Clocks, 896 galls 4,428 156 76 58 310 88 860 32,040 500 Staves Lard, lbs 162 Sew mach, cs.. .1 Lumber, pcs.. 75 Miscellaneous.... 145 1,099 120 273 883 oil, galls Coal Tinware, cs... .21 220 Hams, lbs.. .6,000 813 1,372 1,890 164 Blocks, cks 900 1,554 '84 ' 804 8,968 Lamps, pkgs.. 114 81 Perfum’ry,bxsl03 7,130 381 Hoop skirts,cs.24 2,559 Mouldings, cs.. .6 7 590 124 Oars 696 Lumber,ft.100,229 Hams, lbs....500 $15,725 Lumber, ft.25,640 Mfd iron, pkgs 12 VENEZUELA. Sew mach, cs.. .2 60 Tobacco, hhds. 10 84 Starch, bxs....30 Leather, cs 1 Coal oil, gals.700 336 Codfish, bxs.. .20 Syrup, cs 40 424 Miscellaneous 127 Cloves, bales . 951 2,806 370 1,466 .25 2,414 Blacking, bxs. 250 105 Spts turp’tine, cs 60 150 555 1,482 3,293 6,639 471 339 Clocks, bxs.... 30 Alcohol, bbls. 150 $59,225 Starch, bxs. 1,300 Oakum, bals.. .82 REPUBLIC. ... Firecrackers, 240 13 pkgs Safety fuse, pkgs 2 .*. Books, cs 1 Hardware, cs.. .2 Flour, bbls.. 1,8*0 Soap, bxs.. .1,000 ARGENTINE 3,926 120 Drugs, pkgs..166 $57,516 108 Furniture, cs.666 10,361 CHINA 144 Sew mach, cs.166. 9,174 Coal, tons....750 5,200 19,900 Perfumery, cs. .65 1,045 Pork, bbls....200 4,800 1,550 Petroleum, 650 galls 6,640 3,622 Butter, lbs. 2,100 Butter, lbs. .3,288 1,200 528 224 Blacking, bbls. 10 Cheese, lbs...325 $10,650 526 244 Sand paper,bxs.5 Ptg mtl, pkgs.. .5 Grand total $1,943,494 Tel inst, box .1 240 Hoop skirts,cs.ll 1,836 .. IMPORTS MOTHER THAN DRY GOODS Leath. cloth, Coal oil,gals.8,235 Furniture, cs.,97 Mf iron, pkgs. .10 2,650 500 926 3,846 2,081 533 AND SPECIE) AT THE PORT OK NEW YORK FOR THE ENDING JUNE WEEK [The quantity is given 8TH, 1866. in packages when not otherwise Pkgs. Value Pkgs. Value. China, Glass & E. ware— Instruments— Bo-ties 1,150 Mathematical. .1 69 China .201 9,942 Musical Earth’nw’e...484 Glass -..137 Glassware....198 14,430 Optical 416 Jewelry, &c.— 11,122 Jewelry- 2 - 305 8,580 759 17 39,234 54,818 Glass plate....99 17,209 Leather, Hides, &c.— Drugs, &c. 70 16,087 Alum 1,968 Bristles 965 1,611 Boots & Shoes.6 Annatto 1,278 Hides, dress¬ Anoline ed 190 74,154 6,698 Acids 72 1 Ammonia Arrow Root...10 Argols 2.. 54 Barytes Brimstone, Watches 251 216 327 461 140 4,017 Camphor. ...250 2 7,334 1,217 1,274 tns Carmine Chalk Tartar. .2 424 Chickory 90 160 Hides, undres’d. Pat. leather....5 100 Porter Wiues Building stones. 575 117,734 2,214 774 8,114 46,633 Champagne, bask 1,425 16,219 Metals, &c.— 1,504 Brass goods... .4 Bronzes 1 Chains and an¬ chors 138 1,737 159 Lard, lbs. .176,279 .... . • . ... 7,590 722 11,542 Liquors, Wines, &c.— Brandy 1,733 31,148 Beer 2,054 250 2,280 Cochineal Cutch Cream 32 specified.] Pkgs. Value Logwood, lbsSOO 1,629 Rattan 4,67 Willow 987 Other Miscellaneous5 Baskets Bags Buttons 55 402 75? 4,868 Gums,crude.. .21 38,164 2,232 Indigo 11 2,151 Copper 204 Woodware,pkgs.4 935 Cntlery 135 50,787 Insect powder . Nails, kegs 26 419 8,078 Guns 64 735 Oils .25 Paper, rms 4,350 2,174 Hardware... .134 24,292 469 Oils, ess... 7 Tallow, lbs..9,264 1,158 Oils, linseed.174 19,582 Iron, hoop, Rosin, bbls .200 867 tns 100 3,605 455 BRITISH NORTH AMERICAN Stages 3,008 1,500 Oils, olive... 151 Plaster, bbls... 5o 125 COLONIES. Paints 9,287 Iron, pig, Glassware, cs..37 553 tons * 1867 34,352 $24,702 Flour, bbls.5,876 55,612 Hoops Potash, muri¬ 79,800 4,7.50 Cornmeal, 4,252 Iron R. R., ate 254 LIVERPOOL. bars bbls 16,647 99,118 1,641 7,281 Machinery, cs.. .4 2,557 531 Corn, bushl23,593 109,573 Quinine 4,700 Hardware, cs..89 1,406 1,945 Iron sheet, Rhubarb ....15 Cotton, bales.449 61,832 Pork, bbls....240 1 208 tons .53 3,257 Rosin, 90 Belting, bdl Soda, hi car¬ Tar, bbls .. .2,200 6,475 Beef, bbls.... 18 2,417 Drugs, pkgs.. 132 2,402 Iron, other, 932 bbls... 142 bonate 200 Fruit, cs 35 261 1,000 1,293 tons.. .• 448 11,985 6,605 11' 320 Oars do ash 239 Dry goods, bals 9 13,923 Beef, tcs 110 Tobacco,bales 185 3,330 Matting, rolls...8 1,039 Lead, pigs. .8,504 44,4 do caustic. .40 Cheese, lbJ 88,479 31,232 Metal goods.. .92 7,336 3 130 Shooks &H.6,183 17,127 Bacon. Ibsl32,862 21,555 Clothing, cs 91 3,331 Needles Sponges 305 3,010 5 138 Cement, bbls.239 542 Lumber, fl .11,016 Sugar of lead . .2 Rags, Dales 6 423 Paper hangings, 898 Hams, lbs... 2,472 635 Old metal 4.343 Sumac 1,200 Sew mach, cs.719 23,743 828 903 Plated ware.'...l 544 1 41 Paper, bdls...147 cs Whiting Furs, bales....16 9,760 Bacon, lbs... 500 120 Per. caps 523 12 2,499 Yellow ochre Books, cs. 11 3,675 Drugs, pkgs .a . 50 2,500 Matches, bxs..13 725 2,033 902 Saddlery 8 Tel insts, pkgs.51 4,000 Saffron 1 Ptg mtl, bxs... 2 27,446 Tin Blocks, cs 102 1 plates,bxs.50 250 Rope, pkgs....44 2,C44 Safflower 1,067 Steel.......1,930 31,241 Cond milk, CS..25 400 236 2 30 120 Mfd tobacco, 1,376 Silverware Santorine Leather, bdls.235 2,350 Tin, pkgs Tin, bxs.... 7.671 49,226 809 Other 4,606 lbs Agl implts, pkg.9 320 Lamps, pkg9 . .5 3,845 1,223 Zinc,lbs. 242,383 13,079 70 Britannia w*e,cs4 722 D’d apples, bbls 2 Butter, lbs.. 1,169 495 Furs, &c— 100 386 1 Felting 951 Spices— Machinery, cs .13 8,288 Hides 216 3 .~ 1,560 130 Zinc, cks 81 58,833 Cassia Furs Fire arms, cs.. .7 1,700 Hardware, cs..10 104 Mfd tob, lbs.4,958 1,752 2,000 Grindstones... .72 Ginger Fruits, &c. Hardware, cs.. .1 100 157 4 248 250 Nails, ck9 5 Bananas 3,307 Mustard Peas, bush..7,280 8,350 Paint, pkgs Cutlery, cs 7 810 Coal oil,gals.3,275 1,382 Bricks 3,343 Stationery, &c.— Citron Logwood, tns 100 2,2-0 2,000 120 163 16,231 1 241 Lemons 9,804 Books Spts turp, bbl 150 4,936 Hats, cs pkgs..3 231 Mfd iron, 420 Corn meal,bbls.50 8,241 Engravings ... .8 2,352 Nuts 2,478 Ivory nuts,bx.548 .425 950 Salt, sacks... 223 15,657 26,644 Paper Oranges Tow, bals.. ..28 339 Paper, bdls....25 1,200 Flour, bbls 50 563 Other 62 5,672 Harp 1 600 Pine apples 7,425 Woods73 Alcohol, hhds..25 1,738 Beans, bbls... 45 Spools, pkgs.. .15 961 Raisins 15,673 Button w’d,lg.440 1,461 312 Cork 88 236 Com, bush.... 300 Sauces and pre¬ Beeswax, cs....6 590 Miscellaneous... Candles, bxs... 50 190 12 126 server 634| Fustic Rosin, bbls...537 1,859 173] $90,795 Potatoes, bbls.50 Cond milk, CS..75 1,200 . 2,354 8,070 63 50 Oars 2,016 8,152 15,200 154 118 Glassware, cs. ..6 4 cs Pepper, bgs.. ..10 Candles, bxs... 10 Shoes, cs 1 334 Shooks Lamps, pkgs.. .21 Lumber, ft. .9,921 40;000 160 Lath.. 1 Tobacco, cs Rice, bbls 2 Clocks, bxs.... 11 240 1 cs Wagon gins, cs.66 Hardware, cs. .40 Paper, rms .. .600 Cutlery, cs 20 Matches, cs.... 48 Glassware, cs.. .6 Spts turp’tine, galls 170 Cotton 121 120 HAVRE. $49,214 Effects, GLASGOW. gals 110,311 Sew mach, cs. ..2 1 Drugs, cs 900 1,410 1,020 BRISTOL. Corn, bush.41,552 Rosin, bbls. 1,022 Staves 3,000 Oil cake, Petroleum, 184 2,841 862 47,567 20,929 Drugs, pkgs.. .90 Shooks & hds.500 gals ..80 360 Leather, rolls. .10 135 356 150 158 138 Oars 67,768 29,538 600 69 7,350 Lard, lbs.... 2,500 100 4,615 Bran, bgs 200 2,320 Oats, bgs logwood, tons 1,321 644 52 Ptg mtl, bxs.. .23 244 Furniture, cs .42 133 Shoe nails.bxs.17 410 Drugs, pkgs.. 150 438 Varnish, pkgs.38 81,981 Hardware, cs. 105 759 Sew mach, cs. .85 4,704 Dental mtl, cs..l 1,<>90 Agl implts, pkgs 62 348 1 775 Gasfixt, cs 2 590 Wicking, cs 77 Woodware, pkgs 14 7 pkgs Perfumery, cs. .80 Tinwara, bxs.. .2 817 Paint, pkgs.... 13 Matting, rolls.. 20 47,332 Flour, bbls..2,888 152 Lard, lbs....3,122 $99,3:36 GENOA. ... 57,420 Ligvitie,stick8379 Petroleum, Miscellaneous Miscellaneous.... . $126,740 . Stationery, cs...1 Buttons, cs 1 .. Beef, tcs.*. ..175 1,727 ...3 Sails ... BREMEN. Bread, pkgs Bread, pkgs... .40 Hoops, odls.. .300 ... 600 Petroleum, Tob. stems,bis 71 Tob. stms, hhd20 Sew mach, cs 417 * 50 ef, bxs 12,786 4,500 3,065 .945 Tobacco, cs .152 Tobacco* bales 51 Muskets, cs galls Quan. Value BRITISH WEST INDIES. 292 $79,438 520 Sew mach, cs.180 8,365 BRITISH GUIANA. Furs, his 229 74,772 320 bbls.... 100 656 Rosin, bbls.. .552 7,445 Pork, bbls....200 2,900 5,600 Tallow, lbs32,790 3,975 Beef, 102 Flour, 425 152 Bacon, lbs..48 500 9,000 Bread, bbls....50 pkg*.. 100 425 120 Whalebone, lbs 11.960 12,050 Match splints, 187 cs 110 550 1,447 Shoe pegs, W’dware,pkgsl35 300 Books, cs 2 Coal oil, gls. 1,455 Paint, pkgs.... 6 Cheese, lbs.2,997 Candles, bxs 1,400 50 Eggs, bxs INDIES. 12, 1866. Quan. Value. Q,uan. Value. DANISH WEST 70 1 Fancy goods, cs.l Cider, cs 70 Oysters, cs 20 Soap, bxs 25 Sand, bxs Clothing, cs 8PEOIE) PROM THE PORT OF NEW YORK TO FOREIGN PORTS FOR THE WEES 943 548 Drugs, pkgs ...72 860 Hardware, cs..43 647 226 Mfd wood, pkgs.5 136 Miscellaneous.... 2,583 Clocks, bxs.... 30 150 4 1,117 $25,960 Books, cs 140 Sew mach, cs.. 52 BRAZIL. 1,704 240 6 818 220 Rosin, bbls... 185 1,158 Lamps, cs Starch, bxs... .50 170 394 Coal oil] 234 galls 12,922 6,425 Agl implts, 23 811 Bread, pkgs .. .70 pkgs 987 638 Drugs, pkgs .. .60 526 Lumber, ft.50,526 1,516 21« Furniture, cs .28 *' 522 Alcobol,bbls..210 4,270 100 Slnooth’g irons, $46,013 cs 10 115 *12 CISPLATINE REPUBLIC. W oodenware, 6 Pork, bxs Quan. Value Quan. Value Quan* Value. EXPORTS (EXCLUSIVE or 757 THE CHRONICLE. 16,1866.] Burr stones Caudles Cheese 52 Cigars Coal, tons. .1,896 208 766 687 3,426 23,078 4,725 15 312 1,814 Cocoa, bgs.. .214 2,461 Fancy goods.... 51,584 Corks Clocks Coffee,bgs.. 6,411 101,926 Flour 398 6,378 Feathers Fire crackers.... Flax 36 Furniture 5 Grindstones...* Hair 39 Haircloth... .13 Hemp 25 141 10,472 J,302 712 198 2,370 5,828 921 2 2,750 73 4,043 Ivory 32 Machinery ..212 11,938 Horses Hops Ind. rubber.. .98 Marble & man.. Maccaroni... .328 Molasses.. .1,209 Onions Oil paintings.21 Paper hang. .26 Perfumery, .. .24 Pipes Potatoes Rice Rope 6,947 4,979 6,445 501 26,592 2.384 7,412 2,764 6,234 4,442 1,933 15,717 1,106 Salt 3,511 Statuary 1,664 1,918 Soap 300 761 Sugar, hhds, bbls and tcs.. .6,261 317,439 Sugar, boxes & bgs 5,434 39,049 Trees & plants.. 1,091 Tea 2,485 32,306 Twine 3 449 Toys 98 6,141 21 Tobacco 879 Tomatoes 1,711 Waste 68 2,999 Seeds Wool,bis ..1,981 160,517 Ollier 1,249 Total $2,119,885 758 THE CHRONICLE. PRICES Native Ceylon Maracaibo CURRENT. may be transhipped to any port of the Pacific, or West¬ 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 ern regulations as if originally imported there; any goods remaining in 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 owners of said merchandise, and if exported directly from said cus¬ tody to a Foreign Country within three years, shall be entitled to return duties, proper evidence of such merchandise having been landed abroad to be furnish¬ ed to the collector by the importer, one per centum of said duties to bo retained by the Government. C# 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 Stales. {2SPr’ On all goods) wares, and merchandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Good 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 Silk excep'ed. The ton in all production o*- eases to ; Raw Cotton and Raw be 2,240 lb. Aslies—Duty: 15 $ cent a(l Pot, 1st sort. $ 100 ft) r 50 @ Pearl, 1st sort .. Anchor*—Duty: 2* cents $ St>. upward $ lb Ol 209 lb and .. Beeswax-Duty, 20 $ cent ad val. 40 American yellow $ ft> Bones— Duty: on Rio Grande shin invoice 10 $} cent. 9 ton 85 0° Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. $ Navy 7 75 © -• © 10 © 41 © 6* Si © Pilot © 14 Crackers Breadstuf fs—See special report. Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair, 1 $ ft). American, gray and white... fl> 70 @ 2 50 Batter and Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. Thote Is a hette- feeling in the butter market with a good shipping demand for fine Western tubs. Butter— N. Y.,-Welch tubs, strictly fine, fair to good do do do Firkins, do * fir. tubs, strictly fine 30 30 35 85 Western, good to choice ...... Pa., common to medium do flrkiDs, finer kinds, yellow .. West. Re-erve, good to fine, yel. do com. to medium Southern Ohio 30 80 28 Canada, uniform and fine 83 do . . ordinary, mixed Mich,III.,Ind.it Wis.,g.tof.yel. 80 do ^8 do com.tomed. 3) 85 40 40 © © © © © © © © © © © © © © , . 88 87 30 . . 85 . . 87 30 Cheese— Factory made dairies ► Farm dairies do do common 15 1- 12 English dairy Vermont dairy . . 21 19 © © © © © 15 . • Candles—Duty, tallow, 2*; spermaceti and 8; stearine and adamantine, 5 cents $ ft>. © Sperm ^ lb do © patent, 'Refined sperm, city .. © .. • • • , • 30 Cement—Rosendale...... ^ bbl @ ‘-2 Stearic Adamantine © .. Chains- Duty, 2* cents $ lb. One inch and upward $ lb @ . • wax , , 50 40 31 23 1 75 8* Coal—Duty,bituminous, $ 1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 lb to the bushel; other than bituminous,40 cents ^ 28 bushels of 80 lb $ bushel. © 10 00 Liverpool Orrcl..$ ton of 2,240 lb © 14 00 Liverpool House Oannel # 8 00 Anthracite Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ Caracas. .(<rold). (in bond).. Maracaibo .(gold).. do . Guayaquil .(gold) . ft). 39 lb 22 . , 14 do © © © © 9 00 23 . . 15 Coffee—Duty; When imported direct in Ameri¬ can or equalized vessels from the place of its growth or production; also, tho growth of countries this side the Oapeof Good Hone when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents $ ft); all other 10 $ cent ad valorem in addition. Coffee has been inactive during the week and the week and the market closes dul . Rio, prime, duty paid do good do fair do ordinary do felr to good cargoes,... Java, mats and bags gold gold gold gold .gold gold 20 © 18* © © »5 © 1*4 © 25 © steady. Sheathing, new Sheathing, Ac., old Bheathing, yellow , Bolts Braziers’ Baltimore Detroit Portage Lake 19 28 Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val. 45 12 . are Alcohol now (gold) .39 gall. 39 7b sold for cash. Antimony, Regulus of 24 .' (gold) Arsenic, Powdered Assafoetida Balsam Capivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru Bark, Calisaya ,; (gold) (gold) .. 25 85 ... 40 Bi Carb. Soda, Newcastle Bi Chromate Potash Peppers — African, Sierra (gold) Bird Peppers—Zanzibar.......... Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined Brimstone, Crude.. 39 ton.(aol<i) Brimstone, Am. Roll 39 7b Brimstone, Flor Sulphur Camphor, Crude, (in bond).(gold) Camphor, Refined * Cautharides Carbonate Ammonia,in bulk.... Cardamoms, Malabar Castor Oil, Cases Chamomile Flowers Chlorate Potash Caustic Soda 39 gallon 39 7b (gold) 70 1-4 25 28 35 90 90 S7± © © © © © 50 s: 23 2S © © 7 © 29^ © 40 00 5 . 1 05 32 34 30 © -.2 50 © @ © @ 4* 5* l 16 75 75 50 34 < > 16* © © 25 3 2 80 60 © 34* 9 Cobalt, Crystals.. .in kegs. 112 lbs Cochineal'Honduras (gold) Cochineal, Mexican 1 00 © @ (gold) Copperas, American Cream Tartar, prime (gold) ft) : Epsom Salts Extract. Logwood Flowers, Benzoin Flowers, Arnica Folia, Buchu 39 oz. © 301 © © 13. © © © 11 © 60 © bales $ ft> Gamboge Ginger, Jamaica, bl’d, in bbls Ginseng, Southern and Western.. Gum Arabic, Picked (gold) 75 .... Arabic, Sorts Clam Myrrh, East India Benzoin Kowrie Gedda Damar trA i . , SO 57 42 (gold) 33 22 , . ... 2* 46 14 k 80 25 75 r-5 Gambier io 00 .. Cubebs, East India Cutch Cuttlefish Bone ‘4 © 261 @ 3 @ 25 © Wt © S5 @ " Berries, Persian Bird ... '... (geld) 7* © 2 00 © 88 1 00 75 44 55 35 24 84 50 © © © © © © © © 37* 24 39 , ■ (gold) (gold) .... Seed, Anise do Canary do Hemp do Caraway .39 lb 39 bush. ' 39 ft) Coriander s 1 90 £0 © 4 50 5 00 . ,, # 9 3 25 4 00 , . , „ „ 44 • 90 . . 90 6 50 . . , Mustard, brown, Trieste .. , do California, brown, do English, white , . . . 26 4 75 0 39 cent; (geld) Sulphate Quinine, Am Sulphate Morphine.. Tartaric Acid (gold) Valerian, English 39 oz. 39 2) 0 12 15 © © © © © 2* © 40 © 25 © © 55 © © © 56 © © . .... Dye Woods-r-Duty free. (geld). ..39 ton Fustic, Cuba Fustic, Tampico Fustic, Savanilla (gold) Fustic, .Maracaibo do (geld) .(gold) 3 43 2 40 7 50 66 54 - # .... © 72 .. .. .. .. ►. .. .... © © 85 CO Feather*—Duty: 30 39 cent ad val. ,39 7b 90 Prime Western do Tennessee © © @ @ 25 00 © 25 00 © 20 00 © 26 00 @ 27 CO 23 00 @ 20 00 © 2> 00 @ ...(gold; Sapan Wood, Manila # 13 © @ 30 00 110 00 Limawood Barwood 85 .. Camwood , 45 , Duck—Duty, 30 39 cent ad val. Ravens, Light' 39 pee 18 00 22 00 Ravens, Heavy Scotch, Gourock, No. 1 per yard. Cotton, No. 1.... 39 yard 8S Logwood, Campeachy Logwood, liond Logwood,Tabasco Logwood, St. Domingo Logwood, Jamaica . , . Dutch Verdigris, dry and extra dry Vitriol, Blue 50 18 16 17* 24 85 80 40 Sugar Lead, White . 55 , . ... 11 , # 20 , . Senna, Alexandria. Senna, East India Seneca Root Shell Lac Soda Ash (80 , s* © © 3 1.0 © 8 75 © 6 37* © © © 40 © 85 © 5 50 © © © loi © -* © 50 © 30 © 24 © 4 25 © © ie* © © © © . 25 5 55 © © © © © 7* © 1 75 © , 6‘) 5 0 “ Sarsaparilla, Hond Sarsaparilla, Mex do 1 00 3 624 •* Rose Leaves Salaratus 63 44 26 12* © Argols, Crude Argols, Refined Alum Phosphorus do do do do 36 23 38 30 8 • Quicksilver Rhubarb, China (All m © Annato, fair to prime .„. (sold) Sal Ammoniac, Refined Sal Soda, Newcastle © © @ n © 55 @ 1. Aloes,Cape Aloes, Socotrine (geld) Oxalic Acid 50 40 © © © © Drug's and. Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, 40 cents 39 gallon ; Aloes, 0 cents 39 tt>; Alum, 60 ceuts 39 100 lb; Argols, 6 cents ^ lb ; Arsenic and Assafoetida, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus, 10; Arrowroot, 30 39 cent ad val.; Balsam Capivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 50 cents 39 ft>; Calisayn Bark, 80 39 ®ent ad val.; Bi Carb. Soda, 1 £; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents 39 Bleaching Powder, 80 cents 39 100 lb; Refined Borax, 10 cents 39 ; Crude Brimstone, .$6; Roll Brimstone, $10 39 ton; Flor Sulphur, $20 39 ton, and 15 39 cent ad val.; Crude < ’amphor, 30; Refined Cam¬ phor, 40 cents 39 7b.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 39 cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Cautharides, 50 cents 39 ft>; Castor Oil, $1 39 gallon; Chlorate Potash, 6; Caustic Soda, 1*; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents 39 7b; Cutcb, 10; chamomile Flowers, 20 ^9 cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent 39 tt>; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gam¬ boge, 10 39 cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 39 cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per lb; cum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 39 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 39 7b ; Oil Peppermint, 50 39 cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents 39 lb; Phos¬ phorus, 20 |9 cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yellow, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents 39 7b: Quicksilver, 15 39 cent ad val.; Sal aEratus, 1* cents 39 7b ; Sal Soda, * cent 39 7b ; Sarsaparilla and Seuun, 20 39 cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; rmda Ash, *; Sugar Lead, 20 cents 39 ft>; Sulpb. Quinine, 45 39 cent ad val.; Sulph. Mor¬ phine, $2 50 39 oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents $ ft); Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vitriol, 25 39 cent ad val.; Etherial Preparations and Extracts, $l 39 ft); all others quoted below, free. Mo-t of the nominal.) Acid, Citric 0 2i 40 . 40 4 00 4 75 8 00 Opium, Turkey 70 Cotton—See special report. articles under this head Nutgalls Blue Aleppo Oil Anise Oil Cassia: Oil Bergamot Oil Lemon Oil Peppermint, pure 60 © © 85 © 85 © 8 35 © 5 50 © 4 75 © 2 20 © © 25 © , . Prussiate Potash..;. 55 39 gross' Short Tapers Mineral Phial. 26 15* 21 © © 18* 17 8i'* © Gum Gum Gam Grin Gam i9 30 31 @, Regular, quarts finer Berries Lao Dye Licorice Paste, Calabria Madder, Dutch (gold) Madder, French, E. X. F. F. do Manna,large flake.... Cordage-Duty, tarred, 3; untarred Manila, Sm¬ Tarred Russia Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia flakey... 11yd. Potash, I'r. and Eng. ..(gold) Iodine, Resublimed Ipecaeuanna, Brazil i Jalap. 45 45 0 20 (gudd) Gum Tragacanth, Sorts Gum Tragacanth, white Liccorice, Paste, Sicily Licorice Paste, Spanish Solid... Licorice Paste, Greek other untarred, 3* cents 39 ft>* Manila, ;..$■} ft> 50 , Gum 45 25 33 © 24 © © © © V9* © 3*< © 30 © 39 Leon, bags 81 © # 39 lb; manufactured.30 39 cent ad val.; sheathiug copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 Inches wide, weighing 14 © 34 oz. 39 square foot, 3* cents 39 ft>. All cash. Ingot is in fair .'emanl but easier, Other kinds are Gum, Myrrh, Turkey Senegal 20* © © 16* © cents 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 original importation, but may be withdrawn by the owner for exportation to Foreign Countries, or and risk of the 22 © 17 17 2' Laguayra 8t, Domingo HI Cow-iM'r—Duty, pi ".bar, and ingot, 2*; oldcopper* 2 WHOLESALE. customs at the expense 20 [June 16, 1866. 80 © 90 @ © 00 10O 85 Fisk—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 39 bid.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smoked, or Dried, in smaller pkgs. than bar¬ rels, 50 cents 39 100 lb. Drv Ccd abundant. is scarce and firm, Mackerel is 39 cwt. 39 bbl. 6 00 39 bbl. 39 bbl. Mackerel, No. 1, Mass, shore .... Mackerel, No. 1, Halifax Mackerel, No. 1, Bay Mackerel, No. 2, Mass, shore...... Mackerel, No. 2, Bay Mackerel, No. 2, Halifax Mackerel, No. 8, Mass, large Mackerel, No. 3. Halifax .! 4 50 7 00 23 00 Dry God Dry Scale ! Pickled Scale Pickled God Mackerel, No. 3, Mass Salmon, Pickled, No. 1- © @ 7 50 © 5 CO © 7 50 © 23 50 © 19,50 @19 75 @ IS 50 © 19 00 18 50 @ lo tO @ ' © 14 50 @ 15 00 © 38 00 14 50 @ 15 00 13 f 0 @ ’4 00 65 © 67$ 55 @ 4 00 © 6 00 .... ..... .. . .. .. Shad,Connecticut,No. 1.39 hi. bbl. Shad. Com ect cut, No. 2 Herring,Scaled Herring, No. 1.. Herring, pickled .. more 39 box . ... 38 bbl. Flax—Duty: $15 39 ton. Jersey 39 17 © 23 Fruit—Duty; Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes, 5; Shelled Almonds, 10; Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dat.es,2; PeaNuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filbers and Walnuts, 3 cents 39 tt>; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger. 50; Green Fruits, 25 39 cent ad val. T; ^ Market liss been effected cl< sina: nominal. Raisins, Seedless do do by the gold fluctuations Bunch Currants Citron, Leghorn Prunes, Turkish Almonds, Languedoc Frovence do . Sicily, Soft Shell...'.., Shelled do Sardines do .. © © 8 00 © .$ hf. box qr. box 131 @ 14 28 $ ft> Dates do do 75 10 75 39 i cask 39 box Layer 29 © 16* @ 16 © 8) © 80 © 27 © 44 © 85 © 47 90 3S © 40 20* © 21 17 18 85 32 2S June THE CHRONICLE. 16,1866.] Brazil Nuts Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, French Delhi) Fruit— N. State Apples Blackberries Black Raspberries Pared Peaches Unpealed do Cherries, pitted, . © © © @ IS ..$ ft* 40 ... 25 18 new... . • 21 Dry Salted Hides— 15* ‘5 50 Gold Prices—Add prices. 39 ft 1 r0 @ 2 00 1 25 @ 1 50 Beaver, Dark do Pale Bear, Black ... $ skin 5 00 @15 00 4 00 @ 8 08 brown do 90 @ 1 50 90 @ 1 50 Badger Cat, Wild 10 @ do House 20 1 1 5 4 . . , , . .10 00 @75 00 Fox, Silver 3 00 @10 00 M 00 © 2 25 do Cross do Red dc Grey 00 @ 1 25 1 25 @ 3 50 Lynx 5 50 @10 50 Marten, Dark pale Mink, dark rat, 5 00 @ 8 , . . . 00 20 @ 80 Opossum Raccoon 70 @ 1 Skunk, Black 75 @ 1 40 @ Striped do do . 150@3 00. 3 00 @ 6 00 10 @ 85 do 10 @ White 25 00 00 00 40 40 10 3 00 6 00 3 00 1 00 50 1 00 4 50 1 00 3 00 10 3 00 20 65 75 35 8 . 5 00 @10 00 Fishor, Musk Otter Western. No. 1. North, auil East. No 1. 00 00 50 12 @ 1 @ 1 @10 © 7 @ 1 @ 1 ©» @ 5 @50 @ 0 @ 2 @ 1 @ 2 @ 8 @ 2 @ 4 @ @ 5 @ @ @ 1 @ @ to • 7 7 9 10 11 12 16x24 20x30 24x30 24x36 30x44 32x18 32x56 ish and French R 00 13 00 15 00 to to to to to to to 12x18 16x24.... 24x30 24x36 30x44. 32x48 32x56 7 7 12 18 15 16 : 00 50 00 00 00 00 18 00 @ @ @ © @ @ @ 00 00 50 00 25 00 Gumiy Clotli—Duty, yard 27* @ 80 90 00 7 75 8 25 9 75 10 50 15 50 16 50 13 00 20 50 24 00 23* 23 .. 7 50 Sporting, in 1 ft canisters... $1 ft @ 40 @ Rio Grande, mixed, 32 Buenos 31 .(cash).. 39 ft Ayres,mixed Hog, Western, unwashod Hay—North River, in bales $ 100 fts, for shipping @ @ Hi @ 1 10 33 82 13* @ Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Snnn and Sisal, $15 39 ter; and Tampico, 1 cent 39 ft. American, Dressed $ ton 310 00 @.3‘25 00 do $ ft -do do Orinoco :.... do do California do California, Mexican do Porto Cabello do Vera Cruz do Tampico do Matainoras San Juan and Cent. Amer... do do Maracaibo Montevideo Bio Grande 18 00 @ 13 00 @ 15 00 v .. @ 9i @ do 17i@ 16 @ 15 @ Madras Manila Guatemala Caraocas. @ @ 70 85 85 (gold) (gold) 70 2 00 1 25 @ @ @ @ 1 25 1 1*5 65 /—"Store Prices—, 160 00 @ .... Common 105 00 @ .. 145 00 @195 00 Scroll, 140 00 Ovals and Half Round Band .0. @150 <0 @14) 00 , HorseShoe.. 14<» 00 Rods, 5-8 @ 3-16 inch 117 f 0 @175 00 1.0 00 @215 00 Hoop 10 27 @ 6 @ Sheet, Russia Sheet,Single,Double and Treble.. Rails, English.. .(gold) 39 ton 23 8 55 Oj @ SO 00 American do @150 00 @ 9 ^9 ft Rod Nail @ S5 00 African, Serivellos, "West Coast.. @ 3 50 @ 4 50 @ 3 00 © 2 50 Iiea.<l—Duly, Pig, $2 $ 100 ft ; Old Lead, 1* cents 38 lb; Pipe and Sheet, 2* cents ^ ft. © Galefti ..39 ioo ft . Spanish * ^ 6 62j © 6 62 @ ?"i i German 6 < 2- @ 6 6 !*0 . . 6 both in goo 1 cash. 39 ft Slaughter,light middle. do do do do heavy.... do light Cropped do do do middle bel ies . .do ........ do Hemlock, B. Ayres,*fcc..l’t <lo middle, do do do hu-avy .do California,light, do middle do heavy, do do do Orinoco, etc. l’t. do do middle do do heavy., do do & B. A, dam’gd all weights do do poor all do Slaughter in rough, .cash. do 87* @ 10 12 I.eatHor—Duty: sole 35, upper 30 $ cent ad Oak aud Hemlock are firmer. do do >-‘6 © 39 lb Bar do do do do do do do do do do mid. &. h’vy do val. demand and 32 @ @ @ @ 48 @ 16 @ 30 @ 32 © 33 @ 29 © 32 © 32 © 23 © 31 © 28 © 35 40 28 19 32 81 37 30 22 37 42 43 Lime—Duty; 10 39 cent ad val. 39 bbl. © © © @ @ 48 46 52 19 82 34 3? 30 35 3.3 29 -'2 3.) 34 31 44 16*© 17 15 12 14 14 J6 1.3 Rockland, common do heavy 14 Lumber^ Woods, Staves, Etc.—Duty Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; @ @ © @ 13i© © © , .. , .. • • •• *- © © 1 60 2 10 Rosewood and Cedar, free. Spruce, Eastern . Southern Pine.... ► •« • Mahogany, St. Domingo, crotches, 39 foot do St. Domingo, ordinary /• logs @ 50 17 @ 20 i*2 @ @ @ @ ie @ @ 19 @ 10 @ 50 @ 5 @ 4 00 @ 20 16 14 14 1 00 Port-au-Platt, logs do do 25 Port-au-Platt, crotches. Nuevitas Mansanilla. ..;. Mexican Honduras (American do do Cedar, Nuevitas Mansanilla Mexican Florida do do do ...$ M feet ♦#-« Mill II 21 00 55 00 00 00 00 00 Rosewood—Duty Cedar, Mahogany, free. 39 cubic ft. 39 Bahia. 12 12 10 14 12 Molasses—Duty : 8 cents 39 gallon. 66 39 gall. Cuba Muscovado. GO 45 do Clayed English Islands.. © © © © 65 Porto Rico 4«> 16 16 15 8 6 00 10 76 65 50 70 Nails—Duty: cut 1*; wrought 2*; horse shoo 2 cents <$ 1b ) $ 100 ft 6 75 @ 7 00 Cut, 4d. @ 60d 8 50 Clinch @ 82 @ 60 @ $ ft shoe, forged (Sd) Copper Horse Yellow metal Zinc .. .. @ @ ... 84 35 20 spirits of turpentine 30 $ gallon; crude turpentine,rosin, pitoh, and tar, 20 39 cent ad val. The Market has been somewhat irregular«closing Naval Stores—Duty: cents Turpentine, N. C. Tar, American do foreign.: @ 24 00 @ 65 00 39 280 ft 39 bbl. ..... Pitch Rosin, common do do ? strained and No. 2 No. 1 Pale and Extra (2S0 do lbs.) Spirits turpentine, Am.... 39 g&U* .. Oil Cake—Duty: 20 10$ © • oblong, in bags .... 5 50 © 3, 00 © 8 75 © 4 66 3 0 » @ 8 25 © 5 00 G 00 © 7 60 8 00 © 10 00 90 88 © $ cent ad val. 39 ton in bags Western thin © 2 50 39 ft. Oakum—Duty free do 3 00 3 50 2 55 2 00 $ 1b East India, Prime East India, Billiard Ball African, West Coast, Prime d> do ^ City thin oblong, in bbls Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. do <io , 00 00 00 steady. .... American,Refined H5 00 @ do @175 @150 @110 @ 70 @110 @100 @150 1 35 44 00 @ 46 00 4 00 @ 45 00 95 00 @!i 5 00 Swedes, assorted sizes Bar, English and do do do bbl., culls do somewhat unsettled by t£e Pig, Scotch, Best,No l(cash) $ ton Pig, American, No. 1 Bar, Swedes,assortedsizes(in gold) Bar do Rosewood, Kio Janeiro Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1* cents 39 ft; Railroad, $ 100 ft; Boiler and Plate, l-‘- cents 39 ft; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to lg cents 39 1b; Pig, $9 $1 ton ; Polished Sheet, 3 cents ft. 10 . 70 60 70 cents 6* , 77* nominal. ..." The Marker has been fluctuations in g.dd. bbl., heavy bbl., light wood) val. @ @ @ @ @ @ 20 95 39 ft Kurpah do do 00 00 00 00 00 00 @125 00 @100 0 0 New Orleans Bengal Oude do @?00 @250 @200 @120 @250 @200 hhd., culls bbl., extra do <5 55 @ 40 00 @120 00 ’ do Indigo—Duty frke. Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salted, and Skins, 10 $ cent ad val. Th * Market is dull and hardly so firm. >ry Hides— 20 17*@ Buenos Ayres gold 39 BofoU 40 Carthagena, etc Guayaquil 815 00 @340 00 120 00 @140 00 Russia, Clean (gold) (gold) @ East India @250 00 Undressed Jute Manila.... Sisal 15 39 ft Para, Fine Para, Medium Para, Coarse Oak, 60 S3 70 Pipe and Sheet Hair—Duty free. @ .... Red oak, hhd., heavy do hhd., light HEADING—white oak, hhd © India Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent ad 50 10 .. : S5 @ @ 65 0J @ 90 002 @ 65 00 39 M. ext. a pipe, heavy pipe, light... pipe, culls hhd., extra. hhd., heavy hhd., light., do do do 21 16 25 ^C Ox, Rio Grande Ox, Buenos Ayres Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or less ^ ft, 6 cents 39 ft, and ,20 39 cent ad val.; over 20 cents $ ft, 10 cents $ lb and 20 $ cent ad val. @ 5 00 $ keg of 25 ft Blasting (A) @ 5 50 Shipping aud Mining Kille lu Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. valued at 10 cents or less 39 square yard, 3; over 10,4 cents 39 ft. - Calcutta, standard 23 25 .. .... of 1864 do ft 23 @ @ @ @ 9 @ $ ft cash. Hops—Duty: 5 cents $ 1b. Crop of 1865 $ ft 50 00 @ @ 19 14 Honey—Duty, 20 cents 39 gallon. Cuba..(duty paid).(gold).$ gall. 00 Kagfs--Duty, valued at 10 cents or less, Gunuy $ square yard, 3; over 10, 4 cents $ Calcutta, light and heavy .. $ pee 14 bullalo qualit es. 11x14 12x19 20x il 2ix31 24x36 30x45 82x50 24 dead green.... do Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th (Single Thick)—Discount25 @ 35 per cent. 6x 8 to 8x10 39 50 feet 6 00 Cc 8x11 to 10x15 6 50 @ 20 @ do do do do 60 00 100 00 Black Walnut @ @ @ @ .. Maple and Birch STAVES— White oak, pipe, @ SO 00 @ 83 00 @100 00 25 00 29 00 4 00 55 00 80 00 60 00 85 00 39 51 Oak and Ash Si Si Si .. do do 20 00 00 11 Poplar and VV. wood B’ds & Pl’k. Cherry Boards and Plank 11* .. . black, dry 75 25 50 75 50 @ 16 00 @17 00 @18 00 @ 20 00 @ 24 00 00 00 00 do do do Laths, Eastern © .. Coutry sl’ter trim. & cured. do City do do do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. <fe Kio Gr. Kip 39 $ cash. Calcutta, city sl’ter @ @ @ 00 50 do 00 00 11 @ *i@ do 00 10 8 39 ft gold. 00 7 9 9 @ 11 @14 6 00 6 50 10x15 12x18 11 .. €»la«s—Duty,Cylinder or Window Polished Plato 10x15 inches, 2* cents 39 square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents 39 square foot; argor and not over 24x39 inches 6 cents 39 square oot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents $ square foot.; all above that, 40 cents 39 square oot; on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and common Window, not exceeding 10x15 inches square, I*; over hat, and not over 16x24,2; over that, and not over 24x30, 2*; all over that, 8 cents $ ft. American Window—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. (Subject to a discount of 2 > @ 30 $ cent.) 6x8 to 8x10 $ 50 feet 5 50 @ 7 25 8x Bahia Chili Wet Salted Hides— Buenos Avres Rio Grande.. California '...t Western Sierra Leone. Gambia ami Bissau East India Slock— 50 25 not over 1 lx to 12x19 to 18x22 to 20x31 to 24x31 to 25x36 to 80x46 to 32x5 l to Above © @ @ 10i@ 10 @ do do do do do do Tampico and Metamorns... 56 35 9 10 10 do . White Pine Box Boards White Pine Merchant. Box Boards Clear Pine © .. t..39 ft gold. Maracaibo Maranham Pernambuco 13 13 -Du.y, 10 39 cent. premium on gold for currency Furs cash. Western 26 © @ © © © © 28 15 12 11 ...39 ft Figs, Smyrna • • » 47 50 12* © © 52 50 @ 48 00 linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 28 bottles or flasks, $1: burning fluid, 50 cents 39 gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, 10 ^ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish foreign fisheries,) 20 39 cent ad valorem. 5 15 © 5 20 Olive, 13 bottle baskets 1 65 @ do in casks.'.... ? 39 gall. Palm 10* @ ”ii ^ ft 55 @ 1 58 Linseed, city 39 gall Oils- Duty: cents; olive and salad oil, in Whale. , do refined winter .... - Sperm, crude do winter, bleached do do unbleached Lard oil Red oil, city distilled do saponified ' Straits.: Paraffine, 28 — 30 gr Kerosene 30 45 75 95 I 10 . (free)... © © © © © © © i*50 2 50 2 80 2 05 90 58 58 Painf«—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and ft; Paris litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents white^and whiting, l cent ^ ft; dry ochres, 56 cents dn <19 * $ 100 ft: ’oxides of zinc, 1J cents $ ft ; ochre, ground in oil,$l 50 39 100 ft ; Spanish brown 25 39 cent ad val.. China clay, $5 39 ton ; Venetian red and vermilion^ 5 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 $ ton. 12 © $ 1b Lithrage, American 12 © Lead, red, American 17 © do white, American, pure, in oil 16: © 17 do while, American,puie, dry. 10 © 10* Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1. 10 12 do white, American, No. 1, inoil OcMe,yellow,French,dry 39 *00 lb do groan in oil.;...^ ft Spanish brow dry...loo ft do ground in oil.39 ft Paris white, No. 1...... 39 1(HI fts do do Am 100 fts Whiting, American Vermilion, Chinese do do do Venetian ;.. 50 9 50 8 00 50 10 © © © 12* $ ® 60 California & English.. American..., 80 80 Trieste . N C.) V* owt, © 9 50 3 I 70 1 00 1 35 40 8 00 Chalk 19 ton 15 ft yellow @20 00 40 © .. Petroleum—Duty: crude, 20 cents ; r&flned, 40 cents $ gallon. Crude, 40 © 47 gravity .. $ gall. 25$ © Refined, free . @ 56 do in bond 41$ @ Naptha, refined 38 © Residuum 19 bbl. 5 50 © Plaster 20 business. Cassia, in mats Ginger, race and Paris—Duty: lump, free; calcined, $ cent ad val. Blue Nova Scotia White Nova Scotia <(8 ton. Calcined, eastern Calcined, city mills $ bbl. .. Nutmegs, No. 1 Pepper, Pimento, Jamaica Sugar—Duty : on raw 16 u0 @ 21 00 @ © 24 50 © @ 32 00 © • .... © 29 75 24 50 29 25 24 00 © © 17 © 17 © 12$ © © $ ft Lard, in bbls do kettle rendered Hams, pickled dry salted Shoulders, pickled.... do dry salted 22$ 19 do io 16 14 $ bbl. Beef hams Bacon 16$ 14$ © Rags— (Domestic). in White, city City colored Canvas Country mixed 24 cents Salt-Duty: sack, 18 1 1H 5$ ft.; paddy 10 Rice—Duty: cleaned 2$ cents cents, and uncleaned 2 cents 19 ft. Carolina ..18 loo ft. East India, dressed.... cents 10$ 5$ © 4$ © f © 11 © 4$ © Seconds 12 <0 9 50 100 ft ; © 13 © 00 9 75 bulk, 18 18 100 ft. Turks Islands Cadiz .. © © 1 54 © 2 71 © 2 50 © 2 50 @ © 2 25 @ 1 65 @ 38 @ 46 18 bush. Liverpool .ground do do do do fin e Ashton’s ...('old) tine, Vorthingtoms.... fine, Jeffreys A Darcy’s fine. Marshall’s Onondaga, com. fine.. do do do do Solar coarse Fine screened do ’ F. F . bbls. .210 ft bgs. . . . 45 . . 2 75 .240 ft bgs. © © © © 47$ . . 1 52$ 2 60 2 60 . . 2 5') 1 75 40 • • 46 8 00 3 00 Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2$ cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft. 19 ft Refined, pure Crude Nitrate soda .. © 1° © 3$ @ gold IB 4 hemp, $ cent $ f 1 $ bushel of 60 ft ; and grass seeds, Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cents; lb; canary, 30 $ cent ad val. Clover..., Timothy, reaped 18 Linseed, American, clean... 10 @ 11 5 5o © 6 25 . © 26 On 2 90 © 8 20 18ft bush. 19 tee American,rough. 18 bush do do do © © Calcutta Bombay Shot—Duty: 2$ cents $ 10 © 11 cent. Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk. 35 10 00 i 11 25 Tsatlees, No. 1 @5 18 ft Taysaams, superior, No. 1 © 2 ... 9 50 © 10 50 9 50 do medium. No. 3 © 4.... Canton, re-reeled, No.l@2 S75 © 9 00 Japan, superior 10 50 © 13 00 do No. 1©3 8 0 © 10 00 China thrown 14 50 © 16 50 ... Italian thrown Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Goat, Curacoa 18 ft (cash) do do do do do do do f Buenos Ayres "Vera Cruz gold Tampico © gold... Cape Deer, San Juan gold $ ft do do do do do .* Chagres Puerto Cahello gold gold gold gold gold gold . gold Soap—'Duty: 1 cent 18 ft, and 18 ft* Castile 55 © 52$ © 60 © 55 © .. © €0 © 64 57$ 55 62$ 55 © Madras, each 45 45$ 55 57$ 42$ 60 40 55 40 © Payta Bolivar Honduras Sisal do Para do VeraCruz 40 © 40 © © .. @ .. Matamoras • • 40 © 65 © 47$ © 42$ 60 £0 25 f? cent ad val. IS © Spelter—Duty, in pigs, bars, and plates, $150 $ ft Plates,foreign gold.. 18 lb Of © U do domsstie.»~*10f © ed, 8$; above 15 and not over 20, 4 ; on relined, 5 ; and on Molado, 2$ cents 19 ft. There has been a fair business in raw Sugars hut at Refined are quiet but steady. low t rates. 10 © 13$ Porto Rico %9 ft 10 9$ © Cuba, inf. to common refining l"f 10$ @ do fair to good do 11$ D’f © do fair to good grocery 11? © 12$ do prime to choice do 13 n © do centrifugal 8$ 6? @ do Melado 10 © 10? Havana, Boxes D. S Nos. 7 to 9 11 nr do 10 to 12 © do do 13 12 do 13 to 15 do © do 14$ do 16 to 13 13$ © ..do do l'» 15$ do 19 to 20 © do do 15$ white 14$ @ do do 17? © Loaf.... 16? © Granulated @ 16$ Crushed and powdered 16 © White coffee, A 15 © Yellow coffee 10 18 cent ad val. Tallow—Duty: 1 cent 18 ft. American, prime, country and city 18 ft Tea—Duty: 25 cents per 70 10 40 10 30 50 55 65 75 85 95 © © © © © 1 10 © SO © 90 © 1 20 © 60 © SO © 1 00 © 1 1 1 1 1 Tin—Duty: pig, bars, and block,15 18 cent ad Plate and sheets and terne plates, 2$ cents 18 ft. 18 ft (gold) Banca Straits (gold) (gold) Plates, charcoal I. C 18 box English I.C. Coke. Terne Charcoal do do do Terne Cuke 70 80 90 05 15 85 10 65 70 90 50 do do do Yara 10 © 8 @ 5 .. X fts—(dark) ~do do do do do & N.Y. val. (Virginia)—Ex. fine, bright... do do do ' Fine Medium Common Navy fts—Best Virginia do Medium & N.Y.. do Common....! Cigars (domestic). New-York Seed, Conn. Penn. do do Common Cigars *. Wrapper. do D' mestic—N. E. (■ ur.) (ciir.) (gold) (gold) ..(gold) Burgundy Port Sherry Madeira do. Marseilles d> Sherry Malaga, sweet do" dry Claret, in hhds 25 (gold) (gold) 00 85 90 1 25 1 10 8 i -00 2 40 12 00 (gold) (gold) (gol.d) (go d) .(gold) incases ..(go d) 4 85 6 00 3 75 8 50 4 90 2 60 6 00 @ © © © © © © © © 45 50 26 00 90 (cur.) Rum.. Bourbon Whisky Corn Whisky Wines—Port 8 00 1 45 8 00 8 00 1 20 1 25 1 75 1 50 © © ©150 00 © 30 00 © 25 00 9 S © 52 45 38 palled ..a Entre Rios,, washed unwashed do S. American Cordova Persian African, unwashed do © © 22 43 42 25 15 85 Donskoi, washed washed * 19 bbl. 19 ton 20 Corn, bnlk and bags Wheat, bulk and bags ‘5 10 0 Oil 85 70 28 @ 25 @ 30 26 . , , . 0 85 35 t 80 00 @105 00 25 00 @ 45 00 20 00 © 30 00 18 00 © 25 CO 18 00 © 25 00 28 • • 24 48 45 80 25 45 25 25. 45 d, s. 18 ft Heavy goods © © © 75 @ 60 © 40 © 32$ © 32$ © © © © © © @ © © 12,@ 18 ft Sheet 15 82 28 25 33 80 87 Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 5 $ 100 ft; sheet 2$ cents 18 ft. 17$ 60 45 35 12 15 10 6 45 © © © © © © © 22 85 f 5t$ 45 88 25 © 20 washed 51 © © © S3 20 30 15 82 27'32 18 common... 13$ 28 @ 26 @ .. $3 5C 5@!0 18 ct off list. 20 18 ct. off list. _25 18 ct. off list* >. rreigrlils— To Liverpool : Cotton Flour Petroleum 30 27 @ val. S. American Mestiza, unwashed.. do common,unwashed.. do 55 00 @ 80 00 Seed and Havana, per M Clear Havana. do d > Codnecticut Seed 00 Mexican, unwashed Smyrna, unwashed .. Fine - 4 90 4 95 4 95 4 75 © 4 • 5 @ 4 00 © 3 60 © 2 90 @ Whisky—Scotch and Irish .(gold) Valparaiso, unwashed. 105 26 ("Western.)—Ex. fine, bright... do @ © © 30 © Best Virginia Medium Common .(gold)(gold) .(gold) (gold) • . © 10 00 7 t»0 5 00 4 95 50 0‘> Peruvian, unwashed 63$ © Manufactured (in bond)— do do 40 @ , 10s and 12s—Best Virginia do Medium fts do fts 8» © l‘-$ @ 16 © 45 © 30 © Havana, fillers, Rum—Jamaica St. Croix Gin Different brands do do Texas 10 75 ©12 75 13 50 © 13 75 © 10 75 " fair wrappers . fillers New York running lots Ohio do New York and Ohio fillers . (gold) Superfine No. 1, pulled California, unwashed 1S$ 19 © 14 25 @ 14 50 4$ © 6$ @ prime wrappers @ . Extra, pulled cent ,ad valorem; over $45, $3 per pound and 60 per cent ad valorem. 6$ Lugs (light and heavy) $ 18 (gold) 4 © 9 do do do do do 4 85 # . Arzac Seignette J Romionx Other brands Rochelle... • Wool—Duty: costing 12 cents or less ^ ft, 8 cents 18 ft; over 12 and not more than 24, 6 cents; over 24 and not over 32, 10, and 10 18 cent ad valorem;; over 82,12 cents 18 ft, and 10 18 cent ad valorem ; ©a the skin, 20 19 cent ad val. fleece. Foreign Wools are moderately active. 65 60 © American, Saxony fleece .... 18 ft 57 50 © full blood Merino...., do 45 42 © do $ and $ Merino Tobacco—Duty: leaf 38 cents 18 ft ; and manu¬ factured, 50 cents 18 ft. Cigars valued at $15 or less per M., 75 cents per lb., and 2rper cent ad valorem; over $15 and not over $3u, $1.25 per ib. and 30 per cent ad valorem; over $ <0, and not over $4% $ ' per Common leaf do Medium do doGood do do do do Fine Selections do do Conn, selected wrappers !>0 85 S() 85 • Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain. 18 ft © .. 50 @ @ @ @ @ No. 0 to 1^...* © 20 00 5 5 4 4 4 4 No. 19 to 26 No. 27 to 36 on 25 50 90 30 70 20 45 80 60 © © © © © © @ 35 - Ex fine to finest do © 10 50 50 L'gerfrt-res .(gold) Other brands Cognac.... .(gold) (gold) Pellevoisin freres A. Seignette .'. .(gold) Ilivert Pellevoisen .....". .(gold) Alex. Seignette (gold) 18 100 ft, and 15 18 cent ad 12$ © 90 10 . Souchong & Congou, Com. to fair, do do Sup’r to fine, do do Ex f. to finest 60 50 5 30 Champagne ft. Hyson, Common to fair do Superior to fine do Ex fine to finest Young Hyson, Common to fair ... do Superior to fine ... do Ex fine to finest... Gunpow. & Imper., Com. to fair do Sup. to fi:ie. do do do Ex. f. tofintot H. Skin &Twankay,Com, to fair, do do Sup’r to flue.. do do Ex f. to finest. Uncolored Japan, Com. to fair ... do i do Sup’r to fine., do Ex f. to finest do Oolong, Common to fair do Superior to fine 40 80 45 10 10 10 10 10 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered, $2 to 12 50 @ © © © © @ @ © © io o« do ©195 00 100 00 18 ton 50 50 .(gold) .(gold) United Vineyard Propr.. .(gold) Vine Growers Co .(gold) lb. and 50 per ft. 18 ft Drop and Buck © 13 11$ © 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¬ Sumac—Duty: Sicily 5 5 5 5 5 5 J Va-al&Oo Jules Robin Marrette & Co .. .. 1 30 @1 32$ 1 '2$ © 1 35 1 82$ © 1 85 ad val. Brandy—J. & F. Martell.. .(gold) .(gold) Hennessy Otard. Dupuy .(gold) Co Pinet, Castillion & Co. .. .(gold) Renault & Co .(gold) 17$ 12$ 11 © 81 75 cent American,spring, English, spring tions. 21 50 21 20$ @ (gold) 15$ © pork, 1 cent; $ lb. | $The PoTk Market has been more uniform and prices are Beef is steady at last week's quota¬ firmer. do new do do extra mess new do -do do India mess Pork, mess, new do prime mess do mess, Old do prime, do 27$ @ 90 @ , Wines and Liquors— Liquors — Dnty: Brandy, first proof, $3 per gallon, other liquors, $2.50 Winks—Duty: value set over 50 cents 18 gallon 20 cents 18 gallon and 25 18 cent ad valorem; over 50 and not over 100, 50 cents 18 gallon and 25 18 cent ad valorem; over $1 18 gallon, $1 18 gallon and 25 $ Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents 18 ft or under, 2$cents: over 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cents $9 ft; over 11 cents, 3$ cents 18 ft and 10 $ cent ad val. (Store prices.) 24 English, cast, ^ ft 18$ © Provisions—Dnty: beef and $ bbl. 90 Cloves hams, bacon, and lard, 2 cents Beef, plain mess 87$ © 22$ @ (gold) Mace @ 2 40 © 2 50 .. 44 23 (gold) (gold) ...(gold) 43 © 20 @ gold 18 ft African., German @ @ .. South Sea North west coast Ochotsk Polar.... cassia and cloves, 20; 5 60 ® 5 00 # bbl. Chalk, block YVU&lebone—Duty: foreign fishery, Opcad val18 ft 1 20 © 1 22 Spices—Duty: mace, 40 cents; nutmegs, 50 pepper and pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 cents 39 ft. Spices are very quiet with only a light jobbing 16 00 @ 20 00 32 00 © 85 00 $ lb $ fon Carmine, city made China clay*. Chrome [June 16, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 760 19 bush. . 19 tee. 19 bbl. Beef. Pork To Lonpon : ^ ton Heavy goods Oil Flour Petroleum Beef Pork W'heat Corn To Glasgow : Wheat Corn, bulk . . . . . - 6 6 0 0 3$ ■'f 0 6 ^ © © 20 ..@19 © 6 @ 8 © 2 @ © .. .....18 bbl. .. 19 tee. 19 bbl. $ bush. .. .. .. 2 and bags... Oil Beef Pork To Havre: d s. © © 1 © 5 @12 © 17 © © © 2 © 1 16 8 '. .. Petroleum Heavy goods 13$ .. ....19 bbl. .. .. .. 19 tee. ....18 bbl. . .. $ 0 J © 6* © © 5 0 © 20 0 @30 0 © 5 0 © 8 6 $ c. c. © Hops 19 bbl. Beef and pork. Measurement, goods "Wheat, in shipper’s bags.. Flour ^ ton bush. 19 bbl. Petroleum Lard, tallow, cut meats, Ashes, pot and pearl. etc 18 ton «••• t>e © © © ] 10 5 6 .. 8 @ © © $ 0 .. 10 June NEW NETWORK OF ®l)c Railway JRonitor. Monthly Earnings.—In addition to the list for week, Erie we publish the following May, given last 1866. 1S65. Pittsburg, Fort Wayne *fc Chicago $1,101,668 Dee. 1.107,000 Dec. $323,451 85,000 Inc. Dec. 35,442 522 198,0S2 Dec. $1.4*25,120 1,255,000 Detroit and Milwaukee Cleveland and Pittsburg 672.628 30,276 30,75)8 215,784 Increase. 1865. 2,580,788 33,387,118 9,663,735 15,074,464 34,198,420 2,799,273 38.301,294 13.328,321 18,147,617 35,909,302 218,485 4,914,176 3,664,586 3,073,153 1,710,832 “ 4,687,639 5,765,009 1,077,370 11 “ 425.988.467 445,746,202 19,757.735 99,592,163 114,250,816 14,65S,663 11 525,580,630 559,997,018 34,416,388 francs “ ' “ “ “ Northern Eastern Western Orleans.... Lvon and Mediterranean Southern 17,702 637,186 New York Central ROADS. 1864. : (including Buffalo Division).. 761 CHRONICLE. THE 16, 1866.] Old network New network.. ... Total Wheelwright, an Ameri¬ the Andes for a suitable pass for falo a Argentine and the Copiapo rail¬ as follows : roads, which, together, will form a continuous route across the Con¬ 1866. 1865. January $1,070,890 $1,187.1S8 Inc. $116,298 tinent from Rosario on the La Plata to Copiapo on the coast of February 1.011,705 983,855 Dec. 27.880 Chili. 1.331.124 March 260,690 1.070,434 Dec. Operations have been commenced some time ago at both 1,538,313 1.153,295 Dec. 385,018 ends of the April route, and about ^40 miles from Rosario, west, are in a, 1,425,120 1,101,668 Dec. May 323.451 course of rapid construction. Ten years may elapse before the*, Total $6,377,182 $5,496,440 Dec. $880,742 project is fully realized, but when it is, the U. S. Pacific railroads,, French Railroads.—According to the report of the Minister and even the Isthmus lines will meet a competitor of no mean pre¬ of Public Works for 1865, recently issued, it appears that the tensions, for it will be shorter than our owu Continental lines, and length of the railroads in operation at the close of the year 1864 have, as between Europe and Australia and Southern Asia, a was 13,052 kilometres (8,192 miles), and of 1865 13,557 kilometres shorter sea distance. The Andes will be scaled with as low grades miles). The receipts of the several lines for the two years as those found anywhere in the Rocky Mountains, several known (8,415 are given in the following statement: passes offering comparatively trifling impediment when compared Central Argentine Railroad.—Mr. Erie Railroad.—The earnings of the Erie, including the Buf¬ division, for the first five months of 1865 and 1866, have been OLD NETWrORK OF ROADS. francs l. U Ifc tt Lyon and Mediterranean Southern Victor Emanuel (sect, Ceinture (Paris) tl — du Rhone 76,518,873 50.098,605 53.489,649 3,390,984 52,791.781 73,091,008 55,054,977 75,294.730 2,203,722 140,521,129 144.523.018 30,913,117 32,505,687 1,795,575 1,855,398 4,001,839 1,592,570 50,823 2,206,253 449,323 2,510,>"81 390,901 304.628 58.422) Ct Graisseseac-Bezier 848,304 1,850.323 Cw 4 L Carmaux-Albi COMPARATIVE -Atlantic & Great Western. 1864. (322 in.) $207,398 229,041 226,733 197,269 314,679 314,521 332,098 406,076 446,044 396,847 381^10 357,556 3,709,970 Erie 1864. (490 m.) (466 m.) $319,711 $504,992. .Jail.". ..Feb.. 347,648 388,18 \ ..Mar.. 899,S70 394,533. ..April. 343,408 460,422 ..May ..June.. 521,174 695,523 ..July.. 738,527 .Aug.. ,..Sep 677,625 ...Oct... 719,911 (257 VI.) $100,991 154,418 195.803 162,723 178.786 . 731,270 . 599,752 . 6,568,068 . — . .. -> — — — 278,891 358,862 4,110,154 426,493...May.., ..June.. — — — ....Oct... ...Nov.., ...Dec.. — — — ...Year. — 1865. (468 m.) $690,144 457,227 678,504 611,297 588,066 525,751 532,911 506,640 625,547 075,330 701,35 691,55 ,914,08 857.583 7,180,45 733,866 637,186 646,995 584.523 712,495 795,9118 858,500 712,362 580,963 8,489,062 749,191 546,609 ...Oct... .Nov... ...Dec,. 6,114,566 7,960,981 .- 654,390... Mar... 606,078. .April.. 672,628...May.. ..June.. — July..Aug. . — ..Oct Nov .Dec. . — — . . Sept.*. — — — . . 1,711,281 ,. .. ... ./Year.. (210 in.) $100,872 147.485 160,497 157,786 149,855 155,730 144,942 218,236 234,194 203,785 202,966 204,726 2,084,074 585,623 1864. (70S in.) (708 m.) $582,828 (251 in.) 747,469 739,736 641,589 643,887 518,088 7,181,208 1865. 512,027 ..Feb. 516,822 ..Mar. 406,773 .April. uly. 91,809 ..Aug.. ..Sep.. 94,375 93,078 90,576 96,908 95,453 ..J — —' — ...Oct... .Nov.. — — . — . .Dec.. 1,038,165 ..Year — — 110,664 1,985,571 1865. (234 m.) Jan... $51,965 Feb... 72,1:35, ..Mar... 46,474 64,993 83,702 269,459 222,924 208,098 162,694 2,290,696 Year — , 408,115 3,966,946 . 1864. - 1866. (234 m.) ...Aug... ....Sep... 164,710 ...Oct.... ,.Nov.-v .Dec.*- 221,638 198,1:35 129,227 30,841 395,579 (340 m.) $210,329 . A - ear .. 1,402,106 ^-Toledo, 2,5:35,001 (242 in.) $79,735 95.843 i.May... 132,896 123,987 127,010 ..June.. 156,338 ..July.. .Aug... 139,628 Sept... 375,534 221,570 Oct .Nov.... .Dec..,. Year ... 244.1*4 220.209 265,154 2,050,323 ...Aug... — ....Sep... — ....Oct... ...Nor... ...Dec,... — — — — 3,311,070 ..Year.. 1865. ’ 1866. (484 in.) $226,059... Jan... 194,167...Feb... 139,171. 256,407.. Mar... 155,753 270/300. April.. 144,001 138 7:38 ..May... ..June.. 194,521 July.. f271,725 (242 m.) $144,084 — — — . 4,374.534 ^ 379,981 ci 375,534 f361,610 f 247,023 2,926,673 — . — . — — — - — 1865. , 1866. (340 m.) (340 m.) $259,223 $267,541 246,109 239,139 526.286 313,914 277,423 271,527 290,916 — 304.463 — 349,2S5 344,700 350/348 — — — 372,618 — 412,553 284,319 — — 3,793,005 Western Union. Wab. & Western.—. 1864. . ...July.. — 346,717 171,125 260,466 309,261 269,443 224,957 223,242 268,176 302,596 332,400 278,006 346,243 275,950 ..June.. — 4,504,546 Ohio & Mississippi / 241,370 95,905 460.661 490,693 447,669 328,S69 405,510 376,470* — 86,4*2 1866. — , . — 99,662 .. — . — ...July... — — (2:34 in.) $98,181 8)1,528 — (285 m.) (285 m.) $306,324 $282,438 279,137 265,796 337,158 344,228 337,240 343,736 401,456 365,196 365,663 329,105 413,501 410.802 ..Oct... .Nov... .Dec... 245.511...May... . — . 237,562 251,9 6 — — . 203,018 — — 265.780 263,244 346.781 .. — 126.970 — — 271.553 . ..June.. — — 338,276 — 106,269 — — 348.802 — 1865. 3,223,088 278,848 — 1,222,017 197,886 264,606 261,141 190,227 (285 m.) $252,435 . — 104,587 186,172 227,260 311,180 232,728 2SS,095 384,290 300,707 Michigan Central. 1866. 1865. . 117.604 114.512 174,164 226,251 1864 1866. — . 1866. 246,331 289,403 3,095,470 . 131,648 April.. — 218,236 ,. ...May... - (210 m.) $178,119. .Jail... 155,893. ..Feb... 202,771 192,138. ..Mar... 169,299 .April.. 173,722 162,570 — 1865. (182 m.) (182 m.) $305,554 $237,555 321,037 . $131.707... Jail... 122,621... Feb... 124,175...Mar... 121.904.. April.. ... II 153,903 177.625 271,140 331,494 324,865 336,617 (251 m.) (251 in.) ' $98,112 $90,125. .Jan. 84,264. Feb.., 86,626 93,503 82,910. ..Mar... 82,722. April. 82,186 ..May.., 73,842 June.. 110,186 108,652 ..July., 112.156 ..Ang... Sep.., 120,051 3864. 1866. 84.897, 226,840 . r-MUwaukee & St. Paul-^ ' - 74.283 70.740 170,555 228,020 310.594 74.409 .June. — (234 in.) $121,776, *’224,838 177,159 518,73G. .April. 735,0d2. ..May., . 89,901 72,389 83,993 78,697 ..May — — 1865. $77,010 (234 in.) $98,183 106,689 146,943 175,482 243,150 185,013 198,679 213,178 224,980 . 523,744. ..Mar.. Marietta and Cincinnati.—» 1866. 617,682 578,403 168,218 178,526 149,099 117,013 317,S39 3907155 1S65. 510,100 1864. (468 m.) $555,488.. .Jan... 474,7:18...Feb... — . ^St. L„ Alton & T. Haute.^ 1866. — ..Oct... .Nov.. ...Dec.. vuiitrdit 516.608 460,573 139,547 113,399 ...July.. ...Aug*. ....Sep.. — -Pittsh.. Ft.W.,& Chicaeo.-> (468 m.) $290,676 923,886 716,378 563,401 423.797 406.373 (234 in.) $102,749 115,135 88,221 140,418 ISO,717 212,209 . 4,868,951 1864/ 729,759 409,250 416,588 459,762 1864. (524 in.) fan. $314,598. 283,177. .Feb... 412,393. .Mar.. 409,427.. April., 309,083 448,934 411,806 404,568 669,605 ..July ..Aug... ...Sep... " . r-Mil. and Prairie du Chien.—» 1866. 424,206 484,173 521,636 498,421 366,192 402,219 .June.. 702,692 767,508 946,707 $571,536 528,972 616,665 6,329,447 Year.. ^-Mich. So. & N. Indiana.-^ $363,996 300,361 413,322 366,245 353,194 402,122 747.942 480,710 519,306 3,840,091 423,573 586,964 799,236 661,391 657,141 603,402 1S64: (182 in.) $158,735 (679 m.) $523,566. ..Jan.. 405,634. .Feb.. 565,145 2,770,484 — (609 in.) $541,005 482,164 499,296 1S66. .July ..Aug.. ...Sep.. 236,824 $327,900 1865. .June. 252,015 — (524 in.) % 355,270 335.985 .Dec.., .. 18647 s 307.919 1864. (708 m.) ,—Chicago and Rock Island. Chicago & Northwestern. 1866. 468,358 307.803 ., RAILROADS. PRINCIPAL 421,363 466,830 320,879 (657 m.) (797 ill.) $984;837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188. ..Jan 983,855. .Feb... 947,146 934,133 1,114,508 1,256,567 1,070.434. .Mar... 1,099,507 1,458,455 1.153,29o., April.. 1,072,293 1,333,461 1,101,668. May ..June... 1,041,975 1,177,372 ..July... 994,317 1,202,180 ..Aug 1,105,364 1,331,046 ...Sep— 1,336,61 1,301,005 ...Oct... 1,222,568 1,433, ...Nov... 1,522,472 1,224,909 ...Dec.... 1,334,217 1,429,765 — 1 . .Nov... Year OF (609 in.) $273,S75 iuiiiuis 1865. Valley Line, to New York. —The Eastern Shore (Md.) Railroad is completed to within eight miles of its Southern terminus, Somer’s Cove, in the lower part of Somerset County. 4 —The Grand Trunk (Canada) Company has leased the Erie and Niagara Railway, a>'d are now7 at work putting it in order. It will be completed by July 1. EARNINGS 401.280 357,956 1866. 13,429,643 15,434,775 1,181) soon (280 m.) (280 m.) $280,503 $210,171. Jail.. 207,913 ..Feb. 275,282 304,885. ..Mar.. 299,063 370,889. .April. 258,480 322.277 ..May.. 312,165 354,554 (657 m.) (524 m.) $256,600 304,445 338,454 330,651 267,126 315,258 1865. 224,257 ., 1864. IOiIS: 206,090 . 1865. (dec. road Chicago and Alton. ' Railway. 504) 88,744 7,692 MONTHLY V24M 1864 1866. 1865. 23,179) 59!>,421 191.175 183,483 145,681 144,500 (in progress.) U Croi$-Rousse-Sathonay Lyon-La Croix-Rousse La 5,928.025 (dec. 825,113 (dec. 1,849,819 (dec. 501.677 Anzin-Soinain heights scaled by the Mont Cenis road. 4 Lehigh and Mahoning (Quakake) Rail¬ has been extended to Mount Carmel, and the connections will be made to send coal from the Shamokin region, via the Lehigh Miscellaneous.—The 2,263,196 t; Besseges-Alais Increase. 1865. 70,591,848 t; Epinac-Velars engineer, is with the 1864. Northern Eastern Western Orleans now surveying in railroad to connect the Central can Aug... Sept.... ..Oct ..Nov...,. ..Dec ..Year .. 1864. (140 m.) $30,840 37.488 42-038 41,450 48.359 68,118 50,308 49,903 60,565 56,871 54,942 42,195 587,078 1865. -> 1866. (157 m.) $43,716 37,265 (177m.) 45,102 6.006 32,378 39,299 43,333 86,913 33,972 63,862 82,147 68,ISO 59,862 75,677 92,715 61,770 37,830 689,383 — — - — — — 762 INTEREST. FRIDAY. r- o • CJ outstand¬ ing. '■ ~ Payable. S3 > Des Moines Railroad: Atlantic and Great Western : 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) $2,500,000 528,000] (N. Y.) 1,011,000 (Ohio) , 1st Mortgage S'k’g Fund (Buff, ex’ 1st do S'k’g Fund(Silv.Creek) 4,000,000 4.000,(MM)j 800,000 Ohio Ap'l & Oct. May & Nov. 700.000 2,509,000 ! tidlefontaine Line: 1st Mortgage (B. & I.) convertible 1st do do extended.. 2d do do 1st (I. P. & C.) do 2d do do do do 2d Mort. 3d Mort. and A. 347,000 1,000,006 5<M).0(M) | 200,000 250. (MM> 100.000 200,(MX) York and Erie. 2d Mortgage Buffalo arid State Lint*. 500,000! 1st Mortgage Income Northeast Camden and Amboy ; Coneoldated ($5,000,000) Loan.... Camden and Atlantic: 1st Mortgage do do do Chicago, Fund), pref.... 1 income. inconvert. do Bonds Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. Extension Bonds Chicago and Rock Island: Mortgage Cincinnati, Hamilton ,Ap l A 467,000 3,167.000! 6S0,0(HJ 8 IJan. & July 8 | do 7 ]M'ch . 484,000 & July 1870 1,300,000 7 May & Jan. & .. 850.000; 7 Feb. & Aug 244,200 7 M'ch & Sep 643,200; convertible do do 900,000' 500,000, 1.129.000; 1,619,500; Cleveland and Toledo: Sinking Fund Mortgage (on necticut Ri rer: iFeb. & 7 7 7 7 6 Bonds Cleveland and Pittsburg : 2d Mortgage do 1,108,124 1 Mortgage 1st Mortgage 161.000 8 Bonds 1st Mortgage 2d do 109.500 do Michigan: do do '1 oledo Depot Delaware: do 642,(XX) 7 162.500 7 Bonds | | ! do do ! 6 1,500,000 7 Jan. <fc July 900.00U 7 ina and Western.,, f 600,(XX) 7 1875 iM’ch & Sep 1881 Jgly a871 July 1874 99 April & Oct 1870 1861 1862 98 250,000 903,000 May & Nov 18S3 Schuylkill: Mortgage, 960,000 April & Oct 500,000 sinking fund 1,804,000 Mortgage Memphis Branch Mortgage 300,56(1 2,691,293 and Hocking Valley mort Western.*—1st Mortgage 102 99 Feb. Feb. & Aug ,90-,90’ 75 June & Dec. ’70-’7l Feb. & Ang 69-72 April & Oct 1882 May & Nov 1885 855,000 2.253.500 do 95% 96 1877 1868 88 97 99 Feb. & Aug 402,000 Jan. & July 1891 Jan. & July 1893 91 1,500,000 April & Oct|1893 1,000,000 7 *lst Mortgage, convertible 2d do sinking fund 1st do Oskaloosa 1st Land Grant, Mortgage 2d do do do . —... -Tan. 400,000’ 8 590,000 7 3,612,000! 695,0001 7 . * 100 4,600,0001 do fund 108 651,000 Mortgage 80 Apr. & Oct. 74-’75 Feb. & Aug. 1874 4 & North. Indiana : Mort is and Essex: 1st Mortgage, sinking 1885 2.230.500 4,328,000 sinking fund 80 Aug| 1892 May & Nov, 1888 . Central: 72 1877 Feb. & Aug 1883 1883 do 1,000,000 .. 93 July 1870 May &Nov 1890 300.000 .. 92% -Tan. & 225,000] Dollar, convertible Sinking F’nd do • lOIXl May & Nov. 1872 July 1869 1,300,000 Mississippi and Missouri River: 100 do do 230,000; Miami: 1st 2d July 1875 500,000! Western: 1 fund ! , j Jan. & 800,000 Mortgage, sinking fund Milwaukee and St. Paul: ,13— I guaranteed Mortgage, July 1882 1873 Mortgage Michigan 18— Delaware, Lackawanna and 1st. Mort gage, sinking d dc Jan. & 800,000 1st 1904 Jan. & 1°t 500,000; Goshen Air Line Bonds. 91X! Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien; Ap'l & Oct. 1904 i April & Oct May & Nov. 1873 Michigan South. 283,000! 5 Jan. & July 1867 :1881 do 2,655,500 8 ; 1st Mortgage 3d ! 8 May &Nov. 1881 1,465,000 1st Mortgage, 2d do 1876 J’ne & Dec. July 1866 6S5,000 1,092,900 Bonds 314.1001 $400,000 Loan Bonds 681,000 1st Mortgage (P.& K.RR.) Bonds.. 399,000 do 2d do ( ) Bonds.. M’ch & Sep ! 1878 800,000 Cumberland Valley : Jan. & Julv 1S66 1870 do Jan. & Central: $1,1 0.000 Loan 100 103)* 1875 1875 1890 500,000 Maine July. 1885 80 Mortgage Scioto SO do do 600,000 364, DUO do McGregor 94 91 97” Jan. & 11875 I April & Oct 6,837,000 2,896,500 2,563,000 Marietta and Cincinnati: 1st. Mortgage 1864 103)* 187,000 1873 75 250,000 Connecticut and Passumpsic River: 1st 1st do 11875 !Jan. & July 1892 2,205,000 Little 102% 102)* May & Nov 1870 Feb. & Aug 1S75 500.000 Long Island: Mortgage. Extension Bonds Louisville and Nashville: j M'ch A Sep ! 1873 Jan. & 523,000 500,0(H) do 1st 1876 1876 1,000,000 2d 1st j1S74 do 192,000 Division... Little 101X 103 18S3 Feb. & Aug 1870 1869 do J’ne & Dec. 18S5 May & Nov. 1875 1867 do 1.907,000 .: 90 |Jan. & July 1877 110,(XX) Mortgage 1st £ 3,890,000 . 97 April & OctjlSSl |Jan. & July|1883 1883 Jan. & July l 191,000 Lehigh Valley: Aug.lSSO | fund S6 July: 1890 491,500; 7 ;Jan. & July i do | La Crosse and Milwaukee: 1st Mortgage, Eastern Nov! 1893 and Cincinnati : Painesville and Ashtabula : 2d 90 >1S67 do 7 6 Mortgage, sinking fund Joliet and Northern Indiana: lsr mortgage Kennebec and Portland: 1st Mortgage 2d do 3d do ;Feb. & Aug; 1885 379,000! 7 1,037,500 1,000,000; 1st S6 do 1,39T,000 ! 7 Jan. — 80 Feb. & Aug 7 7 7 |Feb. & Aug Joliet and Chicago : 109 1885 1885 I May & Nov. 1863 : Quarterly. } 1915 756,(XX) 6 2d Mortgage 95 3.000.000 927,000! Jeffersonville; 87 i j g Mortgage 1st SO 7 7 700,000! 633,600. 7 Indianapolis and Madison: 96 85 July 1898 1,250.000! 7 Mortgage, convertible..: do " Sterling 1st Jan. & . do Dayton and ; 1-883 3,437,750; 2d do Indianapolis and Cincinnati: A Sep 1890 2,000,000; Mahoning: Dividend Bonds Sunbury and Erie lii '75-‘S0 1883 7. Redemption bonds | April & Oct!l868 Jan. & July 1865 l,350,000- iIndiana Central: ! 1st Mortgage, convea-tible Oct. 1895 and Dayton : Zanesville: Cleveland, Columbus 1st Mortgage 1st Mortgage 2d do ! 97% 92 Oct.; 1883 7 do 1st 1st 96 1890 1890 1865 1.000,0(X)Ln Mortgage 2d 1,249,0001 7 May & Nov. 1880 let Mortgage lid 4th & July 1,100,000 till 1870 2,000.000; 1st 2d Cte eland, ! 'Jan. & JulyjlSTO 927,000' j Illinois Central: 102 ! 102 519.000 7 | May <fc Nov. :1S77 2.400.000 7 iJan. & July! 1893 II Mortgage (consolidated) Chicago andNorthwestern: Preferred Sinking Fund 1st Mortgage Cleveland and (Feb. & Aug May & Nov M'ch & Sep River: 1st 5,600,000 7 Ap'l & 1st Mortgage do Cincinnati and i 6 98 ;May & Nov. j1875 Mortgage ; do 2d do sinking fund do 3d Convertible Huntington and Broad Top; & Aug 1S82 Feb. & Aug 1870 )May.& Nov. >1875 7 7 7 7 1st 1st Ap’l & Oct.; 1879 7 800,000; Burlington and Quincy: (S. F.) convert... 3d 493,000 450.000! 800.000} Bonds, (dated Sept. 20, 1860) Chicago and Great Eastern: let. Mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee: 1st Jan. A Julyi 1873 7 60<),000j 0 {Jan. Trust Mortgage do Interest 7 600,000- Bonds Chicago and Alton : 1st Mortgage (Skg 1st 2d 490.000! 909.000 7 do 2d Hudson 1883 141,000; 7 j Feb. Mort^ige Central of New Jersey: let Mortgage 2d do Central Ohio: 1st Mortgage W. Div 1st do E. Div 7 1,086,000 and Fish kill: Mortgage sinking 2d do Ilousatonic: 1st Mortgage 1st 93 ;Feb. & Aug!lSS2 1.963.(XX) Haven: Hartford, Iimidence Oct.'1866 Feb. & Aug [Mortgage 1st j May & Nov. 1889 J'ne & Dec. 1893 4,269,400 Catawissa: Cheshire: Mortgage Hartford and New 96 92 do 7 I 97 199)*! 4,441,600 7 June & DecilS88 April & Oct!1880 926,500 7 3,SI6,582;! 6 iM'ch & Sep 1875 149,000: 7 Jan. & Julyjl870 Convertible Bonds Harrisburg and Lancaster : New Dollar Bonds 98% 1879 6 6 6 1,700.000 867,(XX) Dollar Loans Dollar Loan 1st il889 2(H). (MX); 7 'Jan. & Julvi,()9-*72 do 11870 400,(XK) 7 i Erie and 2d Ap'l & 7 I Land ((rant Mortgage 2,000.000j 7 J'ne & Dec. 1877 380,000 7 .May & Nov 1872 Mortgage | 6,000,000; Union : Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do do ' Grand Junction: Mortgage Great Western, (111.): 1st Mortgage West. Division-. do East. do Hannibal and St. Joseph: 1870 j 96 July 1873 1876 1st 1865 Jan. & 1888 3,000,000i 7 May & Nov. 1879 M'ch & Sep >1883 Galt net ami Chicago 1877 do 7 96 4.000.000 7 Mortgage 1S6~ 1870 6 1 0Q & July 1872 & Aug.1874 Ap'l & Oct. 7 1,000,000 : convertible j 4th • do do 5th do | Sterling convertible j Erie and Northeast: 1885 do 598,000 do 3d do 6 1 i,1865 7 i Jan. & July 6 j 739,200 6 Feb. Erie Railway: 1st Mortgage..., — 2d do convertible ! 400,00*.H 6 Jan. & July Bonds 94 94 92% i 94 92% I 92 >61 (1870 Feb. & Aug < 1887 Oct. Ap’l 420,000; 5 Jan. do iEast Pennsylvania: j Sinking Fund Bonds Elmira and. Williamsport: j 1st Mortgage 98 97% j May & Nov. j 1871 6 300.000 7 Sinking Fund Bonds Boston and Lowell: 1st do i; J'ne & Dee. 6 iM’ch & Sep 6 Feb. Aug 150,000 do" 11870 do do j 7 7 650, (MX) Mortgage do do 2d 2d do Buffalo, Mew I 116,000 M S 300,000; 7 1Jan. & July 1863 lSW do 11.QOJ. 600,000; 7 convertible Mortgage, July 1866 do * ’70-’79 1 Toledo: (Mass.): Eastern ;Jan. & < . j Dubunue and Sioux City: j! 1st Mortgage, 1st section 2d section. (k 1st. do 90 Ap'l «fc Oct. 11885 422,000 i. i 1st 1st Mortgage .. 1875 ilS80 do : „ 580,500 Montreal: BostonfConcord and 308,000 .... Blossburg and Corning: Mortgage Bonds I 6 6 . . 1867 1,128,500 T3 •c a Ps & $1,740,000 8 j 348,000; 7 ,J ne & Dec.18 *4 I I _ L_ Lor.c 2,500,000, 7 May & Nov.l8i5 j 1,000,000; 8 i do 1864 \| 734,000}\ 7 iFeb. & Aug!lS76 _ . ...: 1866 1878 6 iJa ApJuOc 6 : Jan. & July Monroe and i-t Mortgage. .. 11884 11895 1,000.000 1855 1S50 1853 \\Detroit. — 088,000 484,000 : Belrldere J/etaware: let Mort. (guar. C. ! 1876 do 13,858,000 6f 1834 Mortgage (S. F.) do do do do do do ! 1-SS1 do Railroad : Valley: , = «fc July 11883 Ap'l & Oct. 18^4 300, LHX i Sterling Bonds Baltimore and — I Jan. 2,000.000 Consolidated Bonds Atlantic and St. Lawrence: Dollar Bonds H882 1882 1879 do do do do do 1,000.000 2d do do Franklin Branch ....do 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, 2d do do 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, do 2d do ing. Mortgage Bonds Income Bonds i!Detroit and Milwaukee: 1 1st Mortgage, convertible ||. 2d do 35 Ap’l & Oct. 1877 7 SS5* Payable. < l£~ S’ .e-S 'outetand- DESCRIPTION. ei o * FRIDAY. INTEREST. I Amount- I .£■— Amount DESCRIPTION. MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. AND RAILROAD, CANAL [June 16,1866. CHRONICLE. THE '3.500,000 &July 1875 do 1 95 80 do May & Nov. do - 1876 1876 1877 1883 May & Nov. 1915 59 92% 69 June 16, 1866.] 763 THE CHRONICLE. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued). INTEREST. ci Description. C.O Payable. ing. 'O a s3 •c 2? tu a Description. do New Haven and 1st Mortgage 300, OiX) : ing.' Jersey: Feiiy Bonds of 1853 New London Northern: Mortgage i York Caiitvcih * Premium Sinking Fund Bonds —! Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal) . .jr Real Estate Bonds .( Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks'). Sink. Fund B’ds (assumeddebts).. Bonds of August, 1859, convert .... Bonds of 1865 New York and Harlem: 1st General Mortgage Consolidated New York, Providence and Feb. & Aug do Boston: 6 1*500,000 2,500,000 220,700 6 j.lan. & July; irred. Jan. Sc Julv I 1885 !April do do do 1,000,000 G 500,000' 6 500,000 G 90 ! 1873 1,885 1885 96 90 93 loo.ooo Jan. Sc Feb. Sc Oswego & Rome. lst'Mortgage (guar by R. W. & O.) Oswego and /Syracuse : 1st Mortgage Pacific, OS’. W. Branch): by Mo 1874 1870 April & Oct 1869 93 Jan. <fc July l do 1872 1874 S7% 350,000 7 May & Nov. 1916 300,000, 225,000! 7 Jan. & do Feb Sc Aug Mch Sc 4,980,000! 6 Jan. & Pennsylvania: 2.621,000 6 do 2d do sterling Philadelphia and Baltimore Central: , Philadel., Germ ant. & Norristown 1,000,000 5,000,000! 4,(XX),000; j : 119.800! Consolidated Loan Convertible Loan 292,500; 1S75 April Sc Oct April Sc Oct April & Oct Jan. & Julv do 1S77 1881 1901 1.521,(XX)! Bonds, convertible Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible .... 96 90% 91% 400,000 Feb. & Aug 93% 90 107 95 91 108 1st Mort. 1,438,000 800,000 Mch Sc Sept Sacramento Valley: Mortgage do Louis, Alton and Teri e Haute : 1st Mortgage 2d do preferred 2\1 do Income Dec! 1867 1861 96 1867 33% Jan. & Julv: 1883 i 1876 .... 399,300 554,908 .... 168-,711 April & Oct do, I1875i.... Jan. & .... June & Dec D’m’di .... Jnlyf66-’76j 1,000,000 150,000 1890 1890 596,000 200,000 • 93% j July1 1873 j April & Oct! 1878 j 4,319,520 , 93 100 Jan. & 850,000 1st do guaranteed York d' Cumberland (North. Cent.) : 1st Mortgage : 2d do Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds .. Aug! 1875 Feb. & Jan. & mly do 175,000 25,000 76 80 90% 96% 80 94 87% 88 90 91 82 88 Alay&Nov. 1870 Jan. & July! 1871 500,000 do Chesapeake and Delaware: 1st Mortgage Bonds Chesapeake and Ohio: Maryland Loan Sterling Bonds, guaranteed 2,382,109 ..... Jan. & 2,000,000 4,375,000 1,699,500 Ja ; i 1877 July: 1886 Ap Ju do Oci 1870 1890 1885 800,000 Jan. & July 1878 641,000 Mch & Septj 1870 752,U00 161,000 Jan. & do Julyj 1865 1868 2,778,ail Mch & Septj 1884 182,000 Mortgage Mortgage, sinking fund Erie of Pennsylvania: Jan. & July 1876 750,000 April & Oct 1876 590,000 May „ . Lehigh Navigation : Unsecured Bonds 400,000 May Sc Nov. 500,000 do do 1890 1890 1880 800,000 200,000 123,000 800,000 Jun. Sc Dec. do Mch Sc Sept do 1874 1862 1871 1880 Mortgage 2d &Nov.! 1870 _ do ... Alch & Jan. & Sept July Alay & Nov. 1S72 1882 1870 Jan. & July do do do 1865 1865 187S 1864 Alay & Nov. 18S3 450,000 6 |Jan. & July 1878 750,000 1,764,330 3 980,670 1879 340,000 . I June & Jan. & July; Semi nn'allv do 586,500 Improvement S5% Susquehanna and Tide-Water: Alary land Loan do Sterling Loan, converted Coupon Bonds Priority Bonds, 1.000,006 200.000 1st 1888 1876 2,500,000 Mortgage. West Branch and 1st Mortgage 400,000 6 Cincinnati and 1,700,000 86 6 Jau. & July 1878 j 80 85 July; 1884 do 1,500,000 2,000,000 Jan. &. July! 18— April & Oci; ‘8 - S8 Pennsylvania Coal; 40 Quicksilver Mining ; 1st do d) 25 Covington Bridge Mortgage Bonds itanposa Mining: 1st Mortgage 1st 1st Mortgage, an’ally 24 Miscellaneous: Jau. & July 1875 Feb. Sc Aug 1881 Semi 60% Susquehanna ; 1st Mortgage... 2d Feb..& Aug 1863 do 1863 2,200.000 2,800,000 60 Union (Pa.): 1,800,000 937,500 329,000 t00 Jan. & T,1"0,000 325,000 Wyoming Valley: . do do ) ( do do (Watertown & Rome) do do do ) ( Rutland and Burlington: 1st Mortgage J no int. pajd 1865 1888 140,000 Mch Sc Sept do do 251UKX) J July! 1863 1875 1,OX),ooo 2d 1st 2d St. July 500, (XX) Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg: 1st Mortgage (Potsdam & Watert.) 1st 2d Jan. Sc 102 1881 1881 1,000, OX' Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.) Sep. 1882 550,600 Albany and W. Stockbridge Bonds Hudson and Boston Mortgage Western Maryland; 1st Mortgage 1st Feb. & Aug do 200,(XX) Rinsselaer dVSaratoga consolidated: 1st Mort. Rensselaer Sc Saratoga 1st Mort. Saratoga & Whitt hall 73 do > 1875 | do 1865 Jan. & July 1874 600, (XX) Schuylkill Navigation ; 1889 April Sc Oct July 2,(XX).(X¥) Reading and Columbia: 1st Mortgage 90% j .. Mortgage Bonds Pennsylvania & New Yoi'k: 1st Mortgage (North Branch).... Jan. & 5,160.000 fund. 90 70 1,135,000 (guaranteed) Mortgage 1st Mortgage Bonds Interest Bonds 1912 101 95 1912 85 1912 1884 5,200,000 Mississippi: 1st Mortgage Raritan and Delaware Bay: May & Nov. 1865 1881 1875 Delaware and Hudson: July 1884 2d do Racine and ; Morris. Jan. & 1st Mortgage, sinking 21 do Convertible Bonds do ‘ (no interest) Vermont and Massachusetts. 1st Mortgage. Venn. Cen. d: Verm, d' Can. Bonds Warren : 1S08 692,000 Pittsburg and Steubenville: 1st Mortgage Aug! Jan. & do 2.000.000 Mortgage Monongahela Navigation: Mortgage Bonds Mortgage Loan Pittsburg and Connellsvitle: 1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.) Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago: mortgage Feb. & do Alar. & 180,000 /. 1886 1886 May & Nov. 2d do 3d do Akron Branch: 1st 1894 500,000 1880 1880 258,000 Mortgage. |Jan. & July. 1870 200,000 Preferred Bonds Delaware Division : 1865 1885 Mortgage Philadel., Y\ timing. & Baltimore: 1st 1866 Canal : let 1866 68-74 300,000 7 Jan. & July: 1887 300,000 7 Apr. & Oct.i 1885 650,000’ May & Nov. 1875 do do do do 6 976.800! G 564,000 G 60.000! 7 600,000 do July 1876 408,0001 5 Jan. & Julv 1867 do 1880 182,400 5 2,856.600’ G April Sc Ocl 1870 106,000; G Jan. Sc July 1871 do do do Dollar Bonds of 1S49 do do 18G1 do ‘ do 1843-4-8-9 Philadelphia and Trenton 103 98 do 1,000,000 1,500, (XX) 152,355 Troy Union : Mortgage Bonds 1st, Philadelphia and Reading: Sterling Bonds of 1836 Sterling Bonds of 1843 Dollar July 1880 102 April Sc Oct 1875 96 Jan. & 575,000 Mortgage Philadelphia and Erie : 1st Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie)... 1st do (general) 2d do (general) 80 2,283,840 6 900,000 .. 77 7 7 7 7 7 7 2,500,000 Sterling (£899,900) Bonds 1872 jMch & Sept ' 7 jJune & Dec 1,391,000 Dollar Bonds..... 1875 Sept 1884 : , April & Oct 1870 1,029,000 Mortgage Mortgage Pecrria and Warsaw Mortgage 7 1,180,000 7 1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon 2d do registered Western (Mass.): 74 1872 Aug i April & Oct! 1876 7 94,000 r Westchester and Philadelphia: July ’70-’80 1,139,000 6 Jan. Sc July '72-'8 Y.) 2d do' 3d do Convertible 1st 416,000 346,000| 1,150,000 1st Mortgage, sterling 1st do do do do 2d Peninsula (Chic, d• N. IV.) : 1st Mortgage 93% Feb. & Jan. & July Various, i 1,400,000 1st Toledo and IT abash: 1st Mort. (Toledo & Wabash) 1st do (extended) ,— 2d do (Toledo and Wabash) 2d do (Wabash and Western). 1st 2d jjune & Dec 1867 7 1876 July ' Vermont Central: July Aug 7 200,000 7 Jan. & Julv! 1871 Equipment bonds 90% | Troy and Boston: 1st Mortgage 97 92 96 Jan. & 2,000,000 1,070,000 Mortgage, convertible do 2,900,000 750,000 Ohio and Mississippi: 1st Mortgage 2d do ( W.D.) 86 7 700,000 - Sinking Fund Bonds 1887 1.500,000 G Jan. & July 1873 1,290,000 500,000 Toledo; 84% Feb. & Aug 1900 May & Nov V*75 201.500 and Pottsville: Third Avenue (N. & Oct! 1S74 do 360,000 10 1,000,000 Syracuse, Binghamton and New York 1st Mortgage — Terre Haute and Indianapolis : 1st 95 1,494,000; , 1st il02 i April & Oct 1875 2,500,000 6 April &> Oct! 1,880 Ogdensburg and L. Champlain ; 1st Mortgage - 1st 99 <1 75 May & Nov. 1894 : Domestic Bonds Staten Island: 1st Mortgage l 6 6 1,700,000 * : 1st Mortgage Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage Shamokin Valley IstAlortgage South Carolina : ’B "E s* April & Oct Sterling Loan 232,000 6 Feb. & Aug '73-'78 Chattel Mort gage North- Western Virginia: 1st Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore). 2d do (guar, by B. & 0. R R.) 3d do (do do do ) 3d (not guaranteed) do Norwich and Worcester: General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage 2d 94 : Mortgage Bonds , 92 91 86 85 1883 1883 1*76 102% 1876. It 3 1876 1872 1893 1868 do 1st. Northern Central: State Loans 2d Mortgage Sinking Fund Northern New Hampshire: Plain Bonds North Pennsylvania r guar, ’May & Nov. 1,000,000 Mortgage Mortgage, do Feb. Sc Augi do do 1,39.8,000 604,000 1,088,000 Mortgage Bonds Panama: 165,000 G May & Nov. GG3,000 1,000.000 3d Mortgage ..... X New York and New Haven 1 st 6.017,508 6 May & Nov| 1883 2,925,000 G jJuue & Dec! 1887 Payable. Chicago: Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: 300,000 G Jan. & July; 1885 3.000.000 Mortgage 2d s ►» : St. Ijouis, Jacksonville db 1st Mortgage 2d do 2d do Income Sandusky, Dayton and Cincinnati 1st Mortgage (extended) $500,000 7 Jan. & July' 1S69 j i I I ! 485,000 G ;Feb. & Aug 1S73 New 1st General 92 July 11876 450.000 7 M’ch & Sep j 1861 200,OOf [ 6 Jad. & July 1F6S 2d Northampton: Jau. & 7 'Zi S Railroad eS nj Amount outstand¬ AS Railroad: Naugatuck : 1st Mortgage' (convertible) ... N. Haven, N. London d Siotiinglon 1st Mortgage FRIDAY INTEHE8T. FRIDAY ao Amount. outstand¬ 2d 1894 1894 85 1894 77 Mortgage...' do 600 000 Feb. & Aug! 1871 500,006 June & Dec Tan. July 0, *« 1873 1873 Western Union Telegraph. 1st Mortgage 2,000,000. Jap. & July ^7’5o t 764 RAILROAD, j Companies. Marked thuB (♦) are lease< and have fixed incomes. 1 Last p'd. Bellefontaine Line. [ Quarterly. . 1,000.000 00 Cape Cod Caiawissa* "Central of New Jersey Cheshire (preferred) Chester Valley* Chicago and do Alton 100 preferred.... 100! 2,425,400 8,370,510 Sep. Mar. .5 May & Nov. May .5 Mar and 129 - • 50 1,150.000 Feb. «fc Aug. 2,200,060 50 10, OSS, 940 Quarterly. Apr... 2% • • -100 2,085,925 Jan. and July Jan.. .2% 100 871.900 50, 1,783,200 Mar and Sep. Mar. .5 preferred do 681,005 Jan. and July Jan... 3% 27% 117 66’ 90 ’ 102 117% St. Louis, do St. Louis, 00 39% 10O 13,100,927 June & Dec. June..3% 59% do do pref.,100 12.994.719 April and Oct Apr. ..5 93% 6,000.000 Chicago and Rock Island...... .loo 1, KHi, 125 and Chicago Air Line 100 3.<HX).(HX) Apr and Oct. Apr .4 Cincinnati Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 2,000,000 117 Cincinnati and Zanesville....... .1(H) 6,000.1 KHI Feb. and Aug Feb..5 Cleveland, Columbus, *fc Cincin.100 May & Nov. May. .4 1,036,000 Cleveland & Mahoning* 50 5.(XX).000 Jan. and July Jan .5 S2 Cleveland, Painesville & Ashta.100 •Tan. and July Apr ’60 4 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 5,403,910 April and Oct Apr. ..8 104% 4,654,800 Mar. .2% Cleveland and Toledo... 50 Q uarterlv. Columbus <fe Indianapolis Cent.100 1.490,800 Jan. and July Jan., .5 50 1.500,000 May and Nov May..4 Columbus and Xenia* Concord 50 356,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .3% Concord and Portsmouth 100 5(H),(XX) 100 392,‘HX) Coneyr Island and Brooklyn Connecticut and Passumpsic.. 100 1,255,200 Jan. and July Jan... 3 do do pref.100 1,591,1(H) Jan. and July Jan...4 Connecticut River .100 1.582,109 Covington and Lexington 100 2,310,705 100 4(Xi,132 Jan. and July Jan... 3 D&vton and Michigan Delaware* 50 10,247,050 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 147% Delaware, Lacka., & Western .. 50 Des Moines Valley 100 952,350 .... . . .... . 100 124 2,360.700 Alton, & Terre HautelOOj 2.3(H),000 do pref.100 1,700,000 Annually. May. .7 Chic*100 Feb. and Aug!Feb..3 do do pref.100 862,571 07 Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO Jan. and July Jan...2% 30% Schuylkill Valley*. 50 576,050 Apr. and Oct 050.000 .100 809.450 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 2 59% Second Avenue (N. Y.) 130 140 94 Shamokin Valley & Pottsville*. 50 750.000 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)...-, 100 5*819,275 Quarterly. South Carolina 100 1,200,130 Jan.. .6 Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.100 118 Terre Haute A Indianapolis 50 1,929,150 Jan. and July 1,170.000 Quarterly. Third Avenue (N. Y.) 100 1,700,000 152 ’ Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw .. .100 1.700.000 do do 1st pref.100 82% 1 4% do • do 2d pref.100 1,000.000 June and Dec June.3 34 % 37 Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 2,442,350 June and Dec Dec. 3% 98-1,700 do do preferred. 50 Jan. and July Jan,. .3% ’67 * Tioga.* ' -1(H) 125,000 007.111 Troy and Boston '. 100 274,400 Juneand Dec Dec ..3% 100 811,500 Jan. and July Jan. .4 Troy and Greenbush* 100 2,800,0(H) June and Dec Dec ..4 98% 100 Utica and Black River. 50 70 100 Vermont and Canada* Jan. and July Jan...2 Vermont and Massachusetts... .1(H) 2,800,000 Jan. and July Jan... 3 104 135’ Warren* 50 1,408.300 Jan. and July Jan.. .0 Western (Mass)....-. 100 5,027,700 and Cincin. .100 2,989,090 354,866 — Western Union (Wis. A and Nashua Worcester 147% Ill.)—... Jan. and July 75 1,141,650 January 317*050 Gettysb’g* 50 Chesapeake and Delaware 25 Wrightsville.York A Canal. Jan.. .5} Jan.. .2 1,550,363 100 8 228,595 Chesapeake and Ohio 25 L033.350 Feb. and Aug Feb. .3 do do pref....,100 1,500,(XX) 1,751.577 Delaware Division 50 10.(HH).000 Feb. and Aug Feb.10 Mar 7$.. 100 1,982,180 March Dubuque and Sioux City 100 2,528.240 Feb. and Aug Feb.10 io5 ‘ Delaware and Hudson pref. 1(H) 3.155, (XX) Jan. and July Jan.. .4 do "do Delaware and Raritan 100 200,000 .100 1,000,000 Quarterly. Apr Eastern, (Mass) Lancaster and Susquehanna 50 May and Nov May. .5 Eighth Avenue, N. Y* 100 500,000 Feb. and Aug Feb. .2% 29 Lehigh Navigation..._ 50 5,104,050 Elmira, Jefferson, A CanandagualOO 720,800 500.000 Jan. and July 45 Monongahela Navigation 50 1,025.000 Feb. and Aug Feb. .5 Elmira and Williamsport* 50 500,000 Jan. and July Jan.’. :.3% 50 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 5 do do pref... 50 10,570,100 Feb. & Aug. Feb.. 4 66% 01% Morris (consolidated) do preferred....... 100 1,175,(XX) Erie 100 8,535.700 Feb. & Aug. Feb.. 3% 73 74 138,080 Pennsylvania and New York... 50 do preferred Feb, and Aug Feb.. 65. 100 (XX),(XH) Feb. & Aug. Feb.. 5 Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 1,908,207 Feb. and Aug Feb..6 1± Erie and Northeast* 50 3,540,(XX) Jan. and July Jan.. .4 2,888.805 do preferred. 50 Fitchburg 100 750.000 April and Oct Apr .5 2.051, (XX) Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 2,787.(HX) Forty-sec'd St. & Grand St. F'y.100 1,900,000 Union 50 55 50 Tan. and July Jan.. .5 100 Hannibal and St. Joseph West Branch and Susquehaima.l(H) 1,100,000 do do pref.. .100 5,253,8:30 Quarterly. April.3 Apr and Oct. Apr 4 Wyoming Valley 50 750,000 Hartford and New Haven 100 3,000.000 820, Miscellaneous. “ Feb. and Aug Ilousatonic 100 1.180, (XH) Jan. and July Jan.. .4 (XX) Coal.—American 25 1,500,000 preferred do 100 2,000.(XH) Apr. 5 116% liok Detroit and 31 6J 30% 02% Jacksonville & Sandusky, Dayton, l.(XH),(HX) 97% ?97% andOct!Apr...4% consol. .1001 800,(XH) April and Oct Apr.. .3 500.000 April Saratoga and Whitehall 100 800,000 April and Oct Apr.. .3 Troy, Salem & Rutland .... 1001 Jan. and July Jan...5 Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb'glOO 1,774,175 : -100; 2,233,376 Rutland and Burlington. 51 2,250,000 100 100 Rensselaer & Saratoga 37 4,390,000 Nebraska*.. .100 100 Chicago, Iowa and Chicago and Milwaukee* Chicago and Northwestern 50 Providence and Worcester Raritan and Delaware Bay . 110* 206 . 5,069,450! Ja'. and July 50[20,240,673 1,476,300-Apr. and Oct,Apr. .4 I Phila., Wilmington.»& Baltimore 50j 8,973,300;Apr. and Oct Apr. .5 Pitt Pittsburg and Connellsville..... 50i 1,774,623 Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolGOj 9,312,4421 Quarterly. Apr . .2% Portland, Saco, & Portsmouth. 1001 1.7(M),000 June andJuly; Jan...4 1,500.000, Jan.and Dec.Dec. .4 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3% 082,(XX) preferred.. 50 do do 28 80 108 Jan 7,000.000! Quarterly. 54% llH) 20,000.0ou: May and Nov May. .5 (and Steamship) 50 218,100 Pennsylvania 31 Jan...3 Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentl(H) De.’65 10 109% 109% 50 i Philadelphia and Erie* &4% 55% Philadelphia and Reading 00 Phila Oermant’n, & " ‘ “ Norrist’n* 50i “ Phila., ' . Camden and Amboy Camden and Atlantic 27k January. .7 Apr . .6 100 19,822,85n 2.950,500 Panama 141 .5% Jan.. .3% 850,000 Jan. and July Fe' .5 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug. Feb .10 129 4,988, ISO Feb. and Aug 160 100 50 3,077,000 Jan,..4 1,500,000 Jan. and July Apr...3 Ill 115 1,508,000! Quarterly. “795,360! 94*‘ 3,068,400 May and Novi May3&4a 45 4,518,900! Quarterly. |Apr..2 38% I 3,150,150 50 2,338,600 Jan.and July Jan.. .5 102% 1(H) Oswego and Syracuse 122 135 366,<XX) .100 Newtown. Buffalo, New'York, and Erie* Buffalo and State Line Ask. Bid. Last p’d preferred. .100 Jan. and July Jan.. .4 Newport...... .100 3,609,600 Feb. and Aug Feb .4 482.400: do Old Colony and *101 r .4 .5 . .100 Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. Ohio and Mississippi .4 . Brooklyn City Brooklyn City and ,1‘2S% .2% . 469. 150 108 .... Apr.. .1% 250,000 June & Dec. 1 Dec. 8,500,000 Jau 1,8:30, (XX) Jan. and July Jan 4,076,974 Jan. and July i Jan 3,100.(HH> Jan. and July Jan 4,500.006 Jan. and July Periods. 5,OSS,050! ..... Ninth Avenue Northern of New Northern Central North Pennsylvania. Norwich and'Worcester 5.7 ! 997,112 (XX),(XX) Blossbur 50; 5h BostonlOO 1(H) Hampshire.. .100 50 New York and Harlem do Dreferred New York Provuience & Apr. .1% 13.188,902 'Apriland Oct Apr...4 1.050,000 April and Oct Apr. ..5 Feb..3 ! 4,434,250 Feb. and Aug and Ohio. standing. FRIDAY. ; 2,494,900 ! Atlantic & St. Lawn out¬ roads, Marked thus (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. Bid. Askd 16,1866. Dividend. Stock Companies. FRIDAY. 1 1 1.919.000 preferred Baltimore Periods. 153,000 Quarterly. 11,522.15 ****** ’ . . * .. Louis* Alton and St do Stock out- MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. CANAL, AND Dividend. j standing. Railroad. . [June THE CHRONICLE. Milwaukee 53% 154% 155 • 52% 77 - 117% 27% 3:)% 15 16 - . 25 «7% .. River Hudson Huntingdon and do Illinois 100 6,503,250 494,380 Broad Top *... 50 190,750 pref. 50 do 1(H) 23,374,400 Central April and Oct Jan. and July Feb. and Aug Mar. & Sep. Jan. and July , Jan.. Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50 1,089,900 Indianapolis and Madison 100 412,(HX) Jan.aud July do do pref. .100 407,900 50 1,997,309 Quarterly. Jeffersonville 1,500,000 Joliet and Chicago* .. .100 Kennebec and Portland (new). .100 835,666 and Bloomsburg.. 50 500,000 do pref. 50 50 0,032,250 Lehigh Valley 510,573 Central .3% 161% Feb.. 5 Mar. .4 Jan.. .3 Jan.. .4 Cumberland / Pennsylvania 121% 50 50 50 Lexington and Frankfort Little Miami Little Schuylkill* Long Island 50 50 100 Louisville.New Albany & Chic. 100 100 Macon and Western McGregor Western* 100 Maine Central 100 50 Marietta and Cincinnati Louisville and Frankfort Louisville and Nashville do do Manchester do Wilkesbarre Apr...i% 95* Wyoming Valley Gas.—Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) 9i m i* • • r ii‘i* ’ 37% Feb. and Aug Feb .38 Feb. and Aug Feb .3/5 May and Nov 6,491,380 Jan. and July 9.381.800 Feb. and Aug 1.089,700 Feb. and Aug May.. 4 Jan. .5 do do 28 •• • 10' 4<)” is" 108% 25 169 109 Aug.. 3% 79 Feb. .5 2d pref.100 50 100 1,(XX),000 Feb. and Aug Aug. 3% do preferred 100 2,400.000 Jan. and July Jan.. .4 Mine Hill & SGhuylkill Haven. . 50 3,708,200 Feb. and Aug. .3#. 50 3,000,000 May and Aug May. .4 Morris and Essex Nov 000,009 Nashua and Lowell 100 Feb. and Aug Feb..7 Paul 71% 79% 80* 66" 57 72 59 80 110 1,100,(XX) 100 500,(MX) June and Dec Dec. .4 100 Bedford and Taunton 7.38,5:38 New Haven, N. Loud., <fc Ston .100 New Haven and Northampton..100 1,010,(XX) 4.395.800 Feb. and Aug Feb..5 New New Jersey 50 New London Nort.hprn . 100 New York and Boston AirLine.100 New York Central 100 2^ew York and New Haven 125 24,386,000 Aug Feb..3 100 5,000,000 Irregular. 50 Manhattan. .100 Metropolitan 50 50 New York Williamsburg | 98% May..5 109 98% 110 10 100 Telegraph.—American Western Western Merchants’ Union 2,000.000 2,000,000 Wells. Fargo A Co 4,000,000 Tramfit.—Central American 1,000.000 Nicaragua 4,000, (XX) Steamship.—Atlantic Mail New York ...100 2.500,000 1(H) .100 100 100 100 United States Pacific Mail . 45% 55 58% 5S% 50 56% 116* ’ 50% 100% 120 111% 111% 115 220 128% RIO Quarterly. 1(H) 7,000,000 Quarterly. June. 5 210 Union Navigation 100 2,000,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .4 125* Trmt.—Farmers’ Loan A Trust. 25 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug Feb. 15. New York Life & Trust.... 100 1,000,000 Union Trust .100 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan. 5 11 United States Trust 100 1,(XX),000 24 Mining.—Mariposa Gold 100 5,097,000 Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100 5,774.400 1,(XX),000 QuartzHill Gold 25 10,000,000 Jan. and July Jan... 5 50 ; 56% Feb. 500 3,000,000 100 American 145 38 600,000 2,500,000 100 Ex press .—Adams 144 30 50 Feb. and Aug 100 3,000,000 22,000,000 Quarterly, 100 Union Union, Russ. Ex.. 100 10,000,000 Quarterly, United States 44 044,000 1,000,000 Jan...5 4,000,000 Jan. and July 2,800,000 May 1,000,000 May and Nov Jaii.. .5 750.000 Jan. and July 2,000,000 25 1,000.000 100 1,000.000 Brunswick City Cary (Boston) 41 45 Jan...5 ion Power Rutland Marble Feb. and 20 City A Hoboken Q.uicksilver 700,000 788,047 rsey Boston Water ChienlOO Naugatuck J Improvement.—Canton 3,014, (XX) 90 Feb. and Aug Feb..4 1st pref.100 3.082,(XX) Feb. and'Aug Feb.. 3% 85 1,014.000 Milwaukee and Prairie Du Milwaukee and St. • 9 100 1,000,000 Michigan Central ioo Michigan Southern and N. Iud..l00 do do guaran.100 do do Apr.. 2% 2,800.600 1,500,000 Apr and Oct. April.3 1,447,060 2,022,484 50 Harlem 01% Jan,. .5 2,000,000 Jan. and July 5,(KX).(XX) 3,200,000 Quarterly. Apr. .5 1,000,000 Jan. and July Apr. and Oct 100 2,175,000 Feb. and Aug Feb 1.256.01 H1 100 2.000,000 Feb. and Aug Feb.... 25 Jan. and July Jam...4 20 1,000,000 Hill.., Spruce Feb. and Aug Feb...2 Jan;.. 5 3,572.430 Jan.aud July Jail...3 2,040,100 Jan. and July Feb.. 2 1,852,715 Quarterly. Feb.. 2 1,109,59-4 Feb. and Aug 5,527,871 Feb. and Aug Feb..3% 1st pref. 50 6,205.404 2d pref.. 50 3,819,771 do and Lawrence Quarterly. “50 1(H) li) Spring Mountain. Lackawanna do 50 100 —100 Ashburton 10 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July 25 Saginaw L. S. & N. Y 25 2,500,000 r. Smith & Parmelee Gold..... 20 2,500,000) 210* 11% 24% 51% Dec. are DIVIDEND. 31,1865. participating, and (t) write Marine 25 50 50 100 50 American* Amerienn Ercb’e Arctic . Astor. . 200,000 Baltic Beekman "‘200^000 205,976 250,000 200,000 . 200,000 25 .100 20 Citizens’ 70 City 100 Clinton .100 Columbia* Commerce (N.Y.). .100 50 Commercial Commonwealth.. 100 .100 Continental * 50 Corn Exchange.. 100 Croton 40 Eagle .100 Empire City 50 Excelsior 2(H),000 150,000 300,000 210,000 30 150,000 . . 250,000 500,000 200,000 200,000 . 250,000 500,000 .... 400,000 . . 200, (HR) ... 300,000 200,000 . 200.000 . Exchange . . . 500,000 200,000 1,0(H),000 . 200.0(H) 200.000 . . 200,000 150,000 . Harmony (F.&M.)t 50 50 .100 Home 50 Hope 50 Howard .100 Humboldt Import’ & Trade’. 50 .100 Indemnity .100 International Hoffman ... . 200,000 300,000 200, (HH) 280,000 500,000 2(H), 000 197.633 Equitable 200.000 200,000 300,000 210,000 200,000 3 35 .100 7S 228.644 90 ... . . . ..... • ..... 75 .5 July '65'. .6 .5 Feb.’66.3>; Aug. ’65. .5 100 55 .... . .... t ' ..... . 200 Jan. ’66 .4 .5 Jan. ’66 .10 Jan. ’66 3% . 90 100 ..... . ... ’66.31£ July ’65 .10 July ’65 .5 .8 .... 90 88 . * . . .- Jan. ’66 .5 Jan. ’66 ..5 • . • • 287,400 500,000 Feb. ’66..4 .5 .... .... . . Out¬ Companies. standing Atlantic Mnt 1864 2.599,520 do do Commer’l Mu do do do do 1805 1S6C .186( 1861 ,1865 ,1866 .1861 .1865 do ,1866 do Gt. Western, ,1861 1862 do ,1866 do ,1864 do 1865 do ,1866 do Mercan’le Mu .1860 .1861 do .1862 do ,1863 do ,1861 do 1865 do 1866 do N. T. Mutual .1860 1861 do 1862 do 1863 do 1864 do 1865 do 1866 do 2,705,000 J ! 97 ! .... .... .... 100 w~ 96 81,120 48,660 84,120 78,700 126,540 103,854 . ] * ’* * .... .. 57 1 ..1863 ..1864 1865 ..1866 •_ I Sun Mutual 1862 do .1863 do 1864 do ..1865 do 1866 Union Mutu.. 1860 ..1861 do do ..1862 . .. . 111 580 -• V* • .... 180,650 177,330 ..1863 SO 75 70 ..1864 125,670 185,540 . . 1865 1866 Washington ..1863 do ..1864 do 1865 .. do «1860 . . .... , • 10 .... • . 50 20 . .... 2# .... • • • .... .... ... 2 50 2 30 . . . ... . 5 . .50 .10 21 ••. .... 50 50 30 6 . • .... .10 5 Story & McClintock... .10 .10 Success 5 Sugar Creek 5 Tack Petr’m of N.Y .10 Talman .10 Tarr Farm 5 Terragenta v.... .10 Titus Oil .... 66 .... 9., • .... .... . 20 - .... . .... . a «... . 66 3 .10 2 3 50 19 6 65 .... . . Union 3 . .10 Tygart’s Creek 2 30 • Titus Estate.. 20 6 00 20 6 75 10 Venango (N. Y.) • • • • Venango & Pit Hole.... .10 Vestal Watson ■ 6 Petroleum Webster .. 5 4 W.Virg. Oil and Coal.. .1C Woods' & Wright.... 100 1 ’ • • • • • • • • • Copper: Adventure Albany & Boston.. . 26 Annita ' 4M ....133/ 17X 2# Canada Central - ... 5 • * • • .... • • • • • • • • • • • . . • . .... . • . i. . . . . .... . . • . • Ask — 2 2^ 1# — 5 .... .... 90 Holman 25 •... .... — .... — Manhattan Montana New York • • • 1 00 .... .... • • .... • • • .. .... .... .... .... 2 .... .... i'oo 4 00 . .. 5% .... 5 .... 6X .... 4 • .... . 14 30 .... ....10 - .... ....11 .... • . 3% • . • . ... . .... • . . - » Columbian - ....13 par 50 Copake Lake Superior .... 4 75 .... Superior U .... • « . 75 1 00' 10 90 100 50 : British American, pref..: Co.umbian — 10 , Express: . Adams United States — Wells, Fargo & Co — Mlscellanc o us. Rutland Marble 25 Saginaw, L. S. & M .... Lake 10 — 7 OO Schuylkill .... • .... 1 40 2 75 — — Coal .... 14 00' Iron: .... . . 9 30 5 Mount Pleasant .... 4 10 2 50' — Redwood Wallkill .... 35 3 85 2 00 9 20 — — Lead and Zinc: Bucks County par Denbo Manhan Phenix .... 95 5 00 37 35 50 3 50 40 1 50 30 60 1 00* — Waddingham • • — Virginia City .... .... — Texas .... .... 25 Rocky Mountain Smith & Parmelee .... .... 10 6 10 Quartz Hill .... .. .... 45 13 90 14 90 1 50 1 80 47 49- Gunnell Gunnell Central .... 00 75 00 ou 15. — Eagle .... .... 1 .. 2 00 1 56 1 35 — Downieville Gold Hill .... ... .... 2 .... ....10 ....33 8 Consol — — Bullion, Consolidated... — Consolidated Gregory.. .100 Corydon 25 • • 4 00 1 10 1 00 1 05 ....19 . Norwich Rockland • . .... Sheldon and * • . 8^ .... 25 Quincy MM* • par .... .... Princeton Providence........ 30,000 • - .... ..... Pewabic 10,590 i‘7,230 • Hope 10 00 Kip & Buell i'35 j Liberty Liebig.. 9% 3% 5% .... Evergreen Bluff... Excelsior Flint Steel River.. Forest City Franklin Pnvtncrft • .... 1 2% Ogima . • 24% • Ada Elmore Altona American Flag Atlantic & Pacific Bates & Baxter Benton Bob Tail . .... New Jersey New York .... .. • .... - Lake Superior Manhattan Mendota Merrimac Minnesota .... - • .... — ... .... Copper Creek Copper Falls Copper Harbor.... Bid. Companies. Gold: paid 3 .... Aztec Bav State LIST—Friday. Bid. Ask. Knmvlton ..... ... . | Standard Petroleum... 5 Lafayette 153,420 do do do 2 50 • 1 Southard 12 .... . . 5 ..10 SageR Hudson Huron Indiana Isle Royale 130,180 do • . . j Sherman Oil 0 .. Hilton j 129,000 224,000 587,930 549^000 • . .... 15 United Pe’tl’m F’ms United States flartford • . . • Barnsdale.. 2# Sherman & ! 1 .. Hope 180,790 • .... . [1 Rvnd Farm Second National 9 ..20 French Creek Great Western.... Hamilton 100,830 . do ..1865 do 1866 Pacific Mut..1860 do ,1861 ..1862 do do do * 121,460 # „ 435,404 84,620 101,340 Ask¬ Bid. ed. 105,770 .... . • • • 20 .10 1 Shade River .. Eagle River 131.270 ..I860 ..1861 1S63 • 5 President Rawson Farm.. Revenue I .10 ..10 5 Dacotah 53,610 do do 80^30 42,700 69,470 standing Mut.,1859 do do do 7 Caledonia ..... Out¬ Orient. • Plumer - Boston SCRIP.—Friday. Companies. * ** ‘ i Bohemian . ! L 5 Dover Ask¬ ed. : Bid. ..... Algomah .... ..... .. • • .10 .20 Petroleum Consol Pit Hole C. No. 2 Pit Hole Creek Pithole Farms MINING STOCK 103 77 . MARINE INSURANCE 40 . • 103 ..... Jan.’66 .5 569,623 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66. .6 581,6S9 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66...2 Jan. ’66 .5 do 550,301 250,000 400,000 8 • .... Pennsylvania Oil Pepper Well Petroleum ; Companies. 90 Feb.’66.3)K . 66 Lily Run . . July ’65 1 50 . 15 .... .... do • .... ..... 350.412 . . . T.ibertv . 150.000 • .... . Latonia & . Feb. and Aug. . , .... 230,90)3 Jan. and July. do 217,843 177,915 208,049 Feb. and Aug. 142,830 Jan. and July. .... 36 .. ..... Tradesmen's United States Washington Washington *!... Yorkers and N. Y.100 • .10 100 Oak Shade Oceanic Oil City Petroleum Oil Creek of N. Y Pacific Palmer Petroleum .... 5 .. . Sterling * Stuyvesant 5 00 .... .... . 5 Knickerbocker .... . 85 ... ..10 Island Ivanhoe Ken. Nat. Pet & Min 105 . . Star .... .... • Tripvluiimtihlp. . 200,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 .... . «... . • TTnmmvai k 93 Jan. • • . 5 2 .. ..10 ..10 Home 100 . 1,000,000 1,277,564 . • • • .. Heydrick . 4 25 18 .... .. Hicrh Gate.... July ’65 .6 • • . .... 5 Hevdrick Brothers Hickory Farm . 50 50 100 100 25 25 26 50 100 2 50 2 40 Hammond Hard Pan . Security *! Standard • • . ... «... 1 .. IlamiltouMcClintock. .5 July ’65 311.976 . . . . . B . Jan. ’66 ..5 100 . . .. 85 .6 Jan. ’66 . ..10 Fountain Oil 5 Fountain Petroleum Fulton Oil 5 Germania ..10 Great Republic G't Western Consol... .1(H) 10 Guild Farm . Jan.'66 • . .... . Fee Simple First National Forest City ..... . . • .... . .... F.vrelsinr 90 . «... .100 Everett Eureka . . „ Enterprise Equitable .... . . .10 . . .... .... . 1 00 35 33 . .. Enniskillen .... . . . 5 . . 2 00 .... .. Empire and Pit Hole .... . Feb.'65 10 .... Emp'e City Petrol'm.. ..... ’66 .4 '66 .5 '66 .5 '66 .5 '66 .5 '65 ..5 '66 .6 July '65 .... .... .... Devon Eclectic Apr. '65..5 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. .... . Dp Kalb 82X Jan. ’66.3)£ Feb. '66..5 do 235,518 90 .' .. .5 . .... . ..10 Clifton ..10 Clinton ..50 Columbia (Pbg) .100 Commercial ..10 Commonwealth Consolidated of N. Y... ..10 75 do July ’65 .5 244,066 Jan. and July. Jan.’66 .4 222,199 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66.3j£ N.Y.Firti and Mar 190 Jan. ’66 .6 50 1,000,000 1,175,565 Jan. and July. Niagara Jan. ’66 .5 do 500,000 601,701 North American* 50 350,000 385,489 April and Oct. Apr. ’66.. 4 North River Jnn ’66 .5 do 25 2(H),000 229,729 Pacific do July ’64 .5 80 100 200,000 194,317 Park Jan.’66 ..5 do 20 150,000 173,691 Peter Cooper .... 20 150,000 154,206 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66.. 4, People’s 998.687 Jan. and July. July ’65 .5 50 1,000,000 Phoenix t do July’65 .5 50 200,000 188,170 Reliex do Jan.’66.3}£ 457,252 300,000 100 Republic* Jan."66.3^" do 208,969 200.000 100 Resolute* Feb. ’66. .5 25 200,000 206,909 Feb. and Aug. Rutgers’ Feb. ’65. .5 90 do 25 150,000 150.580 St. Mark’s 25 150,000 138,902 Jan. and July. July ’63 .4 St. Nicholas! N. Y. ..10 5 ..10 5 . 50 60 . July ’65 do do do do do do 1,000,000:1,192,303 7# Natioual 25 New Amsterdam. Jan.’66 .... 5 Montana 3 Mount Vernon 5 National .10 New England 5 New York 5 4 50 N. Y. & Alleghany New York& Kent’y Oil.100 5 New York& Kent’y Pet 5 New York & Newark.. 5 N. Y. & Philadel..: N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons— 1 8 Noble & Delaneter Noble Well of N. Y.... .25 .10 North American .10 Northern Light .... . • Cherry Run Oil. .* 2 Cherry Run Petrol’m.. Cherry Run & Shenango. 5 .... .... .6 .5 . 20 15 . Mingo 50 . .. ..... 6 Jan. ’66 .... • Monongahela & Kan.... ..20 ioo May .... • • • . ... .5 . 11 50 11 50 5 3 00 3 25 ..10 • • . Marietta Mercantile Mineral Point, .... • • . Maple Grove Maple Shade of N. Y .... o Cascade Central ..... do do 200,000 211,178 640,(HH' 1,322,469 100 Metropolitan * t.. « .... do 704,303 282,35i 200.000 Mercantile Mut’l*!10<) 50 Merchants’ • • ..... do 346,126 129,(344 150,000 1,000,000 1,182,779 300,000 . • .... SO .5 . Jan. "66 do 195,571 245,984 March and Sep Mar. '66 279,864 Jan. and July. July ’65 200,000 200,010 30 Knickerbocker... 40 .100 Lamar 25 Lenox 25 Lorillard* 100 Manhattan 100 Market* Meehan’ & Trade’ 25 .100 Mercantile .. July’65 do 1,000,(KM) 1,024,762 Jefferson • ..... .5 .5 . 5 California • . 8,825 138,166 Feb. and Aug. 150,000 Irving • • .... July '6-1 .5 Apr. '66..5 do do 1 200,000 , • ..... • . . „ .10 Bradlev Oil.. Brevoort Brooklyn Buchanan Farm Bunker Hill 90 . . .... Bliven Blood Farm . do do do do 207,345 2,485,017 152,057 349,521 201,216 2,000,000 . 90 . do do do 163,8(30 4)0,295 253,214 400,000 300,000 200,(HH) . ..... . Jan. ’66 Jan '66 . „ a „ .10 5 2 5 .10 Manhattan - and Oil... Bergen Coal Black Creek .... • «... 10 nar McElhenny McKinley .... .10 ..... Jan. ’66 .5 Jan. '66 .5 Oct. ’65.. .5 Jan. '66 .7 Mar. ’64..5 do 215,079 149,755 May and Nov. 224,309 Jan. and July. do 592,394 195,875 Jan. and July. 8,177,437 Jan. and Jnly. 228,12- Feb. and Aug. 186,176 April and Oct. 172,318 Jan. and July. 200,000 . .... July'65 5 July’64.3^ do 156,063 100 Bennehoff & Pithole... BennehotT Run . 150,000 . ..... 140,324 Feb. and Au°\ 230,3 2 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66 .5 Jan ’66.. 3% do 149,024 2(H), 000 . ..... F.3% p. sh. 314,787 Feb. and Aug. 231,793 Jan. and July. do 391,913 do 212,594 214,296 Jan. and July. 268,893 April and Oct. 1,199,978 Jan. and July. 36 ,970 March and Sep 16S,32o Jan. and July. 861,705 April and Oct. 212,145 Jan. and July. do 258,054 204,000 150,000 150,000 17 10 10 25 Fulton 50 Gallatin .100 Gebhard 50 Germania 50 Globe Great Western*!. .100 25 Greenwich 50 Grocers’ Guardian 15 Hamilton ...' 50 Hanover Firemen’s Firemen’s Fund.. Firemen s Trust. 95 100 100 '663t£ 320,111 June and Dec. Dec. '65.. .5 248,392 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’66. .5 123,577 Jan. and July July '64 . .4 Jan. ’66 .10 378.440 300,000 Bowery Broadway Central Park Jan. MeClintoekville 10 nar Allen Wright Anderson Beech Hill Beekman 125 Jan. ’66... 50R543 Jan. and July. Jan. 65...5 253,232 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’66...5 200.362 May and Nov. 181,052 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65..4 500,000 25 . Jan 440,603 Jan. 213,590 •Tan 200 000 25 25 . July. and July and July. anr) July 223.775 Jan. and $300,000 Adriatic Adamantine Oil Alleghany Bid. Askd Companies. Bid. Ask. Companies. Bid. Ask. ed. paid. Last Periods. Risks. Capital.: Assets. LIST—Friday. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST.—Friday. INSURANCE STOCK Marked thus (*) 765 THE CHRONICLE. [June 16, 1866. 25 — 116 120 111# 115 220 PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE Cooper & Sheridan, Stationers and Blank PLACE, Corner of William Co., PROPRIETORS, N. Y, This old established concern is prepared short noiicc, orders for to fill, at AND JOBBING TYPE OF EVERY Foundries, Scripts, Borders, Cuts, Rules, Labor Saving Rules, Wood Type, kind. and Furniture of every Presses. Hand, Power, and Job Commercial Cards. Formerly of experienced Surgeon on hoard. Medicines and ittendance free. . For passage tickets or further information, apply it the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of Janal street, North River, New York. F. W. G. BELLOWS, Agent. An Jr., Mississippi. Total mission. REFERENCES: This Company New Orleans. Messrs. Crane, B' eed & Co . Cincinnati. .a. E. Addison, Esq., Virginia. Geo 8. Cameron, Esq., South Carolina, lion. W. B Ogden, Chicago. SALVADOR, Savannah by “ “ 16 San “ Jacinto, July 7 the Pier. Freight or GARRISON & ALLEN, Agents. 5 Pacilic Mutual Insurance INSURANCE AND Bowling Green, N. Y. OFFICE No. 35 WALL NEW YORK. Davis, R. M. (FORMERLY OF NEW ORLEANS.) EXCHANGE AND STOCK BROKER, and COMMISSION MERCHANTS. NOS. 38 BROAD No time risks or risks upon profits of the Company ascertained January 10, 1S55, to January 1, 1865, for which certificates were issued The from STREET, NEW YORK. $1,366,699 ORGANIZED APRIL, 1S44. The Company has paid to its Customers, vp to the present time, Losses amounting to over from January 1, 1865, January 1, 1866 to Total New York, profitable, this Company will hereafter make such experience maining at the close of the year, will he the stockholders. This Company continues to Marine and,-Inland Navigation make Insurance on and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, ancl "Freight. Policies issued making loss payable iu Gold or Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Rathhone, Bros. & Co., iu Liver¬ pool. TRUSTEES. , drafts and hills, bills accompanying goods, etc. Secretary. INSURANCE NO. 31 PINE STREET, NEW YrORK. Surplus, $781,000 00. Cash Capital A Insures COMPANY, Buildings, Merchandise, Furniture, Ves¬ sels in Port and their Cargoes, Leases, Rents, and other insurable Propertv, AGAINST LOSS OR DAMAGE BY FIRE, at the lowest rates charged by responsible Compa¬ nies. DIRECTORS: William Mackay, Ezra Nye, Edward Rowe, Albert O. Lee, Joseph Morrison, George Mi In, J. C. Morris, Robert Bowne, John D. Bates; Edward C. Bates, Daniel W. Teller, Henry J. Cammanu Charles Hickox. E. A. STANS BURY, President, ABRAM M KIRBY, Vice-President, ELLIS R. THOMAS, Secretary. Joseph Slagg, Charles Diinon, , Cornelius Grinnell, Henry R. Kunhardt. E. E. Morgan, John S. Williams, Her. A. Schleicher, William Nelson, Jr., •- Jas. D. Fisaf Geo. W. Hennings, A. William Heye, Harold Dollner, Francis Hathaway, Paul N. Spofford. ELL WOOD WALTER, President, CIIAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest. C, J.-Desfard, Secretary. G. M. Harwood, General Agent. Marine & Fire Insurance. METROPOLITAN INSURANCE CO., NO. 108 Cash Capital Assets Nov. 1, BROADWAY, NEW YOKK. 1865, over . $1,000,000 1,600,000 - Aaron L. Reid, Elhvood Walter, D. Colden Murray, E. Ilaydock White, N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Joseph Walker, James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Watt, And others should send by the facilities for the rapid and Feb. 20, 1306. divided to cash abatement or discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬ Bankers, Merchants, they have unsurpassed $1,107,24 Morris Fire and Inland past mneyrears the cash dividends paid to Stockholders, made from ONE-TI11RD of the net profits, have amounted in the aggregate to* One Hundred and Twenty-one and a half per cent. Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based on the principle that all classes of risks are equally duce solicited. afe forwarding of GOLD .SILVER, JEWELRY, & MERCHANDISE of every description. Also for the collection of notes $1,896,334 profit for eleven years previous to 1S63 have been redeemed in cash For the promptly and carefully attended to. Consignments of Cotton, Tobacco, and other pro¬ aa 189,024 The certificates EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS. Orders 65 Broadway, $1,707,310 amount, to Additional profits COMPANY. Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866 STREET AND 36 NEW STREET Office, No. 29. HARNDEN EXPRESS, hulls of vessels ar taken. THOMAS IIALE, Henry Eyre, * insures against MARINE and IN Risks, on cargo and freight. ALFRED EDWARD, President. WM. LECONEY, Vice-President. NOS. 38 BROAD AND 36 Broker. $1,164,380 Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866 II. Hardee. Insurance. WATER ST. RISKS* SOLICITED. JACOU REE^E, President. HARTSHORNE, Secretary. CHAS. D. COMMISSION MERCHANTS No. 12 OLD SLIP, cor. by responsible THOS. P. CUMMINGS, HENRY M. TABER, ROBERT SCHELL, JOSEPH FOULKE, STEP. CAMBRELENG, WILLIAM n. TEHRY, THEODORE W. RILEY, FRED. SCHUCHARDT. JOSEPH GRAFTON, JACOB REESE, JNO. W, MERSEREAU, L. B WARD, JOSEPH BRITTON, D. LYDIO SU YDAM, AMOS ROBBINS, WILLIAM REM SEN, HENRY S. LEVERICH. Saturday, at 3 Carleton, Foute & Co., The Mercantile Mutual Tobacco, Note and Exchange Insures against Loss or Damage Board of Directors: „ Agent at Savannah. B. E. S. Thackston, 201.588 14 LAND NAVIGATION Have been placed on the route to he Atlantic Mail Steamship Company of New York, and are intended to he run by them in a manner to meet the first-class requirements of the trade. The Cabin accommodations of these ships arenot Passage, apply to J. - Company. This company 1,500 Tons Burthen each. Bills of Lading furnished and signed on For further particulars, engagement of Commercial Agents. NEW STREETS. G. N. CARLETON, A. M. FOUTE, New York. R. B. SPEED, A. M. SUMMERS, New Orleans. J. H. SPEED, W. B. DONOHO, Memphis. W. M. COZART, J. J. STOCKARD, Mobile. Consignments and orders solicited. carleton, foute & co. Nkw York, Feb. 1, 1866. References—Duncan, Sherman & Co., Bankers, New York; I. B. Kirtland, Hill & Co., Bankers, New York; Third National Bank, St. Louis, Mo.; Hon. Thos. II. Yeatman, Cincinnati, Ohio; Hon. James - •' Returning, Leave Savannah, every General - DIVIDEND TWENTY PER CENT. SAN JACINTO, Commander, Winslow Loveland, o’clock, P. M. . - - - Fi^ on as favorable terms as any othar Commander, Joshua Atkins, and San Salvador, Ogden, Fleetwood & C ., Chicago. D. B. Mol'oy, Esq., Memphis. Messr Porter, Fairfax & Co., Louisville, Ky. Francis Surget, Esq. Natchez, Miss. H. B. Plant, E q„ Augusta, Oa. Hon. Milton Brown, Mobile. W. Mead Addison, Esq., Baltimore. A. P. MERRILL, Jr„ 36 New Street, New York City. - 111 'BROADWAY. and although Co., N. Y. s 1865 i - - (TRINITY BUILDING,) excelled by any Steamers on the coast, their carrving capacity is large, their draught of wa¬ ter enables them to insure a passage without deten¬ tion in the riverSan Salvador,Sat. J une 2 San Jacinto, Sat.June 23 San JacintOj “ 9 San Salvador, “ •t 30 York. Speed, Attorney General U. S., Washington; Smith Speed, Louisville. UUtbiliti Losses Paul 1 $200,000 00 2i»2.55a 22 26,850 00 ----- Assets, March 9, 1866 COMPANY, Elegant Side-Wheel Steamships SAN of Cotton, To¬ Machinery and Agricultural Implements of every description supplied. Southern Real Estate Bought and Sold on Com¬ George S. Mandeville, Esq., Cash Capital- Every Saturday. r The GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHA NT 36 NEW STREET & 38 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK CITY. Messrs. Duncan, Sherman & Co., New U. A. Murdock, Esq., New York. W. R. Dixon, Esq , Pres. Hoff an Ins. Dr. W. N. Mercer, New Orleans. OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. SAVANNAH, GA., FOR Merrill, Advances made on consignments bacco. and other produce. Fire Insurance Company, Empire Line SLCCESSOR TO Goodman & One hundred pounds Baggage thecked through. allowed etch adult. Merrill, P. A. Departure^ of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports; 1st and 11th for Central American Ports. Those of 1st touch at Man¬ E P o ONLY FIRST CLASS 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City. 10th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis 21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento. zanillo. VARIETY, ImCLUDING from other Printing Inks, month (except when those dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, v'ith one of the Company's steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. JUNE: 63 Sc 65 Beekmao Street, BOOK, NEWSPAPER RIV¬ 21st of every Farmer, Little & rass Siates Mall, LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH ER, FOOT 3f Caual street, at 12 o'clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and 1810. H United And C’arryisijr the St. “ White's” Type Foundry, ESTABLISHED IN e California, To Book Manufacturers. 26 EXCHANGE The Old Insurance. Steamship and Express Co’s. Miscellaneous. .> [June 16, 1866, THE CHRONICLE. 766 This Companyinsnres at customary rates of pre¬ mium against all Marine and Inland Navigation Risks on Cargo or Freight; also against Fire. loss or damage by If Premiums are paid in Gold, Losses will be paid in Gold. The Assured receive twenty-five percent ofthe net profits, without incarring any liability, or, in thereof, at their option, a liberal discount upon lieu 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. June 767 CHRONICLE THE 16,1866.] JAY Mutual Insurance Sun Central National Bank, COMPANY. 31S STREET. 49 WALL ASSETS, Dee. 31, 1865 - $2,716,424 32 - DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT. Risks on Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland Navigation Risks. Premiums paid in gold will be entitled to a return premium in gold. City and 253 per JONATHAN D. STEELE, P. 15 years, R. A. ~ $1,000, OCR RICHARD BEKRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. ABBATT, w MORRIS. Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS. Co., Corn, Tweedie & Co., BANKERS A No. 30 BROAD and Government 45 WALL No. STREET. January 1st 1866. Cash capital Surplus $400,000 00 Gross Assets $556,303 98 24,550 00 156,303 98 Total Liabilities. EDWIN D. FOSTER, Member of the New York Stock Exchange. Secretary. & Vermilye No. BANKERS. 44 Wall Street. New Keep constantly on UNITED York, hand forof immediate delivery a issues STATES STOCKS INCLUDING 6 6 6 6 5 7 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, “ “ 1864, 44 44 1805 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, Per Cent Currency Certificates. New Y6rk State 7 per cent. States, available in all the principal the United cities of the Depew & Potter, BANKERS, 2d, & 3d series, 1804 A STREET, NEW YORK, interest at the rate of - Allow FOUR PER CENT PER ANNUM ON Hohn Munroe & Co., DEPOSITS, chocked for at sight. Special attention given to the of VERMILYE A CO. SCRIBE, PARIS WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Cred t tor Travelers in a parts of Europe, etc., etc. Alsu Conrrercial Credits No. 8 purchase and sale GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. Miscellaneous slocks and bonds bought and .sold on commission. Collections made promptly on all points. HENRY W. POTTER. & Gray, Lockwood & & Esq WALL ST. Government and other Se¬ BROADWAY AND No. 6 Dealers in BROKERS, STATE STREET, BOSTON. STOCK No. 22 JAMES A. JAMES BECK, DUPEE, HENRY SAYLES Culver, Penn & and bankers upou Co., Butler, Cecil, Rawson & Co. deposits of gold and currency sight. Cold loaned to merchants favorable terms. Drake Kleinwort&Cohen Sale ol Government Securities receive partic¬ the ular attention. Special attention is given to tram* action of all business connected with the Treasury Department. Galwey, Kirkland & Co., 49 EXCHANGE RANKERS AND SIMON DE VISSER, Place, New York. PLACE, BROKERS. Railway Shares, Ronds, and Govern¬ ment Securities bought and sold. W. T. Galwey, J. L. Kirkland, W. B. Dinsmore, Jr J. C. Morris, STREET, LONDON AND 52 Exchan e Co., BANKERS, 19 & 21 NASSAU STL1EET, NEW YORK, Receive Deposits from Banks, Rank Orders for the Purchase and ers und others. curities. LIVERPOOL. The subscriber, their representative and Attorney, NO. iu the United States, is prepared to make advances GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, on shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen AND OTHER STOCKS, BONDS, &c., London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only. Deposits received subject to check at sight, as credits upon them for use in China, the East and with Banks. DEWITT C. LAWRENCE, West Indies, South America, &c. Marginal credits Member New York Stock Exchange. of the London House issued for the same purposes. CYRUS J. LAWRENCE, JOHN R. CECIL, Sayles, Dupee, Beck & BANKERS, 16 WALL STREET, N. Y. HALSTllD. Mcllvaine Bro’s, Washington Murray, New York. Co., BANKERS, No. 94 subject to check at Brothers WM. A. securities. & John O. Brien, Westoa Bankers and Bickers. Interest allowed upon Lawrence references and Messrs. Ward & Co., Wm. CHAUNCEY..M. DEPEW, (Late Secretary of State.) RANKERS, AND late Paris bought and sold on and Gold. Commission—also Gold Stocks, Bonds, NO. 11 BROAD Bounty Loan. Compound Interest Notes of 1865 Bonght and Sold. 7 RUE AND CIRCULAR LETTERS BROKER, STREET, ROOM 4. Exchange on London and ' COMMERCIAL CREDITS, Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, South America, and the United States. which may he NO. No. 30 PINE Travelers abroad and in For the use of AND EXCHANGE world; also, ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN¬ STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS. AMERICAN STOCK Chs. M. McGhee Dana, W. S. OF CREDIT, ' Governments bought and told exclusively on Commission. Columbus Powell, I. F. Green, ISSUE CIRCULAR NOTES STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds and , For use in LIBERAL MENT a Co ec AND NxVSSAU STS., Commission MERCHANTS, Co., Duncan, Sherman & Co., BANKERS, CORNER OF PINE & 33 BROAD Deposits, subject tc Cheques at sight. Prompt attention given to the lion of Dividends, Drafts. &c Bankers. Bankers to Interest allowed on President. Benj. S. Walcott, POWELL, GREEK & CO. C. suit purchasers; and also to .ssue Circular Letters of Credit, on this Bank, for Travellers* use. Government Securities, Stocks anc Bonds bought and sold on Commission. Orders for Securities executed abroad DORAS L. STONE, COMMISSION. ADOLPHUS M. CORN, DAVID TWEEDIE, Members of the New York Gold Exchange. Hanover Fire Insurance Union Bank of London, sums Securities, OUGHT and SOLD on prepared to draw Sterling Bills of Exchange, at sight, or sixty days, on the n BROKERS, STREET, NEW YORK. locks,Ronds,Gold, Foreign Exchange Are COMPANY, give particular attention to March 1, 1866. NEW YORK. McCURDY, Vice-President. ISAAC ,a . Secretaries, Ij-THE0 „ BANK. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Bankers, WALL STREET, 35 OF NEW YORK. CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1865, over $13,500,000 00 FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President. Philadelphia and the purchase, sale, and exchange of government securities ol all issues; to orders for purchase and ale of stocks, bonds and gold, and to all business of National Banks. JAY COOKE & CO. We shall President. The Mutual Life Insu- with our houses in will he resident partners. Lj. lj. MoKTON & NOTMAN, Secretary. RANCE COMPANY Cashier. NATIONAL 291 CAPITAL Cash Dividends paid in President. The Tradesmens $1,000,000 cent. v.-x this day opened an office at No. Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washing¬ ton House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, Correspondents. all parts of the United State WILLIAM H. SANFORD, 270,353 adjusted and promptly paid. equitably Losses Chartered 1850. . Washington we have and Canadas. STREET. SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 / - BondsCountry accounts received on terms mos WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, ( PITT COOKE. , Jay c Cooke & Co., BANKERS. Collections made in Niagara fcOMPANY. Fire Insurance CASH CAPITAL, $3,000,000. H. descriptions of Government favorable to our Sec'y. NO. 12 WALL MOORHEAD, V D COOKE, } In connection MOSES H. GR1NNELL, Pres't. EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres't Isaac H. Walker, .. Has for sale all insures against Marine This Company BROADWAY. Capital (U. C. FAHNESTOCK, -< EDWARD DODGE, 1 COOKE, WM. G. buildings,) (INSURANCE Brokers. Bankers and Bankers. Insurance. NO. 5 WILLIAM Broker in PETROLEUM AND MINING STOCKS, & RAILWAY SHARES, GOVERNMENTS, At all the Stock Boards. REFERENCES: Morris, Harbeckt, & Co., B. C. Galwey, Casado & Teller, Caldwell & Morris. THE CHRONICLE. 768 [June 16, 1866, Fire Insurance. Commercial Cards. Bankers. Fourth National Bank. $5,000,000 Capital Pearce & S. H. No. 353 Germania Fire Ins. NO. 175 BROADWAY, Importers of PINE 9 x'REET. NASSAU STREET, N. E. COR. Co., EUROPEAN AND CASH CHINA SILKS, All the Government Loans for sale. Co., BROADWAY, N. $500,000 O CAPITAL, SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866 205,989 83 and Manufacturers of TOTAL ASSETS Collections made for Dealers on best terms. RUDOLPH Oiled W. H. Whittingham, Silk, JOHN E. KAHL, Our “ Imitation” has a PAPER appearance Bought, Sold and Collected. superior finish, and very .ZEtna silk, which it equals in costs hut half as much as real J. the most economical collar ever invented. GOLD, AND GOVERNMENT SECURITIES on Commission. Tracy, Irwin & Co., NO. 400 $3,000,000 LUCIUS J. HENDEE, President. GOODNOW, Secretary. DIRECTORS. Joseph Church Drayton Hillyer, Robert Bukle, Thus. A. Alexander, Ebknkzer Flower, Walter Keney, Elipualet A. Bulkeley, Chas. H. Brainard, Roland Mather, William F. Tuttle, Samuel S. Ward, George Roberts, Austin Dunham, Thomas K. Brace, Gustavu- F. Davi?, Erastus Collins, Edwin D. Morgan, of New York. Assets, Jan. 1,1S66, OP Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, No. 240 BROADWAY. $4,067,455 80 244,391 43 Liabilities, NEW Designated Depository of the Government. D. L. BROADWAY, IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS Tenth National Bank, including ROSS, Fresiden t a superb stock ol DRESS J. H. STOUT, Cashier. 1819. Capital Paper Collars, Co., Hartford, Conn. INCORPORATED Patent Reversible BONDS, Insurance * and durability. Agents for the sale of the STOCKS, Bought and Sold GARRIGUE, President. Secretary. Imitation Oiled Silk. No. 8 Broad Street. COMMERCIAL $705,989 83 HANDKERCHIEFS, SILK AND COTTON No. GOODS, YORK AGENCY, 63 Wall Street. JAMES A. ALEXANDER, Agent. AND HOSIERY and WHITE GOODS. Purnett, Drake & Co., AGENTS . WASHINGTON GOLD, STOCK, AND BOND BROKERS. Personal attention given to the purchase and sale of Stocks and Bonds at the Boston Brokers’ Board. Page, Richardson & Co 114 STATE To Capitalists. No. 35 Sc 37 PARK BANKERS, B O 8 T O N Miscellaneous. E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. Eastern Bankers. PLACE, N. Y„ MILLS, SARATOGA FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS Victory Manufacturing Co., and , and ALSO CO., PARIS. ISSUE Commercial Credits for *he purchase of Merchan¬ dise in England and the Continent. Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers abroad. NEW l866. SKIRT, J. W. Bradley’s j Capital, 1 $500,000 BANK, Jeremiah M. Ward well, (of the late Ann of Neilson Wardwell & Co.) Importer and Dealer in Hardware, and PHILADELPHIA. Attends to business of Banks Sc Bankers on liberal terms. J. W. TORREY, National OF Cashier. Bank, RICHMOND, VA., All Government. points in the South. S. A. H. G. all accessible FANT, President. Glover, Cashier. HO West Fourth City of New York, Merchant, Best of references •> Caldwell & Successors to Brewer & COTTON B. C. MORRIS, JB. AND SLIP, NEW YORK. purchase of Goods will receive prompt attention. Street, CINCINNATI, OHIO. Hoffman & Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, NO. 24 WHITEHALL ST., NEW YORK. Cash advances made and remitted for on points day of payment. Messrs. Gilman, Son & Messrs. Brown & Ives, Y. Co., Bankers, N. Y. Providence, R. I. Catlin & on UNION BANK OF LONDON for sale. Satterthwaite, LATE SATTERTHWAITE BROTHERS, ADJUSTERS OF AVERAGES No. a very application to CO., 70 Beaver Street. REAL ESTATE AND M ining S. 70 Bureau. HASTINGS BROADWAY, GRANT, NEW YORK. Agent for the sale of Lauded Estates, Mines, Tobacco and Cotton Lands in Virginia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, Georgia, &c., now offers properties of great value, many of which cover Gold, Copper, Lead. Plumbago, Iron, and Coal Mines, Water¬ power, and Mineral Springs. The fullest informa¬ tion with regard to the above may he obtained through this office. References: Messrs. Gilman, Son & Co., M. K. Jasup & Co., Phelps, Dodge & Co., A. R. Wetmore & Co Satterlee & Co., Lathrop, Ludington & Co., Wilson G. Hunt, Esq., John Torrey, M. D., U. S. , Assay Office. STORAGE, Cotton Taken, No IN FIRST-CLASS AND Checks on S. W. HOPKINS Sc consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides'and Naval Stores, by our friends in New Orleans, Mobile and Galveston, NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, accessible SECURITY, terms that render them on Mechanics’ National Bank, N. COLLECTIONS MADE at all - DESIRABLE INVESTMENT. REFER TO Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK on Further information Caldwell, General Commission Merchants,* strictly cheap and Morris, FACTORS are a and will be sold given if required. B. CALDWELL. the on FIRST-CLASS Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, &c., 20 OLD Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Sc Commission All orders for the Western Bankers. 108 ROAD COMPANY, [First Days of May and November. STREET, NEW YORK. orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬ solicited. SAM’L Designated Depository and Financial Agent of the Collections made in this city and in the 45 CLIFF tention. First ROME, WATERTOWN & OGDENSBURG RAIL. Street, N. Y. RAILROAD guaranteed and payable by the Manufactured solely bv WESTS, BRADLEY Jfc CARY, 97 Chambers Street. ROME COMPANY. These Bonds Exchange NATIONAL AND DUPLEX ELLIPTIC. 79 A: 81 Reade The Corn OSWEGO Interest Southern Bankers. A. G. GATTELL, Pres’t ) A. WHILLDIN, V. Pres’t f OF THE BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO. STREET, BOSTON, JOHN MUNROE Sc SEVEN PER CENT. Chicopee Manufacturing Co., EXCHANGE ON LONDON BILLS OF Attention is called to the FOR Insurance Brokers, 61 WILLIAM ST W, STUYVESANT CATLIN. JAS, 8. SATTERTHWAITE. Nos. WAREHOUSES, 115, 117, 119, 121, Sc 123, Greenwich Street. R. P. GETTY Sc SON, 115 GREENWICH STREET.