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-ft■^p-.^::^';:?^m:. ty5.’:‘ ■ r^'p; ■ • ■ kv V- ,v$ • ■. /s f‘% ?-.V"T TV \ ? v ? rr*v r.vi;.t-il . .r. • , .; V <$0»mwwial l &t#a&* 4 ^ 1 *• •>« ' ^imes, A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. * -•• -f '*' ; .-<•"•• ♦* *• - >. »- • ^ : :■. VOL. 4. |'--- •> -•' -■■' --v - NO. 104. Bankers and Brokers. LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TBAV- Co., 'V‘ELLKRS. BANKERS , SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW. STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. STREET, NEW YORK. Exchange, Governments, Bonds, Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable ^ccurilii^s* Interest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Draft or Check. •' Advances made on approved securities. Bell, Faris & Co., -’ EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS.' BANKERS) No. 53 WILLIAM Bankers and Brokers. ^ i-'-1 SOUTTER & Dealers in Bills of :■■■.■|k - SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1807. Bankers and Brokers. ' v ;. James G. King’s Sons, AND BANKING ROUSE 54 William Street. . or Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper. Collections both inland and foreign promptly made. Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated. ..... i — «... —. Frank & B. Murray, < , Government and otlier 27 WALL Cash GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. • as an incorporated Bank. Government Securities Bought and'Sold at Market Rates., We. also execute orders for Purchase and Sale of ^Stocks, Bonds and J- ‘ * - Gold C I N C l N N A T I.;, Howard, Jos. F. Larkin, John Cochnower, Adam Poe, j f Thomas Fox. general I I John M. Phillips. ( partnership. | Thos. Sharp. Harvey Decamp, J I John Gates. . : •. Government Bonds of all kinds, State and City Bonds. Ra lroad and other Stocks and Bonds, Gold and Silver bought i««d sold on commission. Inter¬ i n C. & G. BANKERS Sc Woodman, - o o IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES. I DEALERS SECURITIES, LAND WARRANT’S, OOL- T-‘“ LEGE LAND SCRIP, &C. Advances made on approved Securities and Interest *y; f f allowed on deposits. ANB • - interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. STOCK BROKERS AND BANKERS, No. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Bny and Sell on Commission Government Secnrities Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds, Steamship,Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum, and Mining Stocks. * ,• Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to . Stocks, Bonds, Government Secnrities and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission:5 Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received on Warren, Kidder & Co., of IT NASSAU BANKERS, No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬ cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLOW KD STREET. OB Bills of Exchange on London bought and sold. Draftsissned and bills collected on San Franciscorand on the Haslbtt McKix. Interest allowed other places. Hagen, r ■* ■ ■ ~ ai z * i. t- 18 WALL i? 4. . >' ' ■ Co., 9 h 4 STREE' R 318 BROADWAY. - Capital Bussing, — f Chicago. Central National 4 • v - e«——r- Bank, -t x ‘ % ■ 63,000,000. • Has for sale all 4 / f . descriptions of Government BondsCity and County accounts received on terms most favorfble to our Correspondents. j >. Collections made in all parts of the United States an Canadas. f i & ‘ Co. y AND *’ BROKER, HtBRCBIANTB, 4 ^:;^^;.*8BBOAD STREET, NEW YORK. Xu 33 WILLIAM STREET, ■•'.•'i&csu-y-ik ' V“' • k' ^ '£. ■ * ? ' NEW YORK. •*' on Tackson ' Brothers, •. ^ f; i. Vj f;{ DEALERS IN ; KENT ex- SECURITIES, la. ID Broad Street, New York. WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President. H. Sakvokp, CashJer„ r > ;•» f ' The Tradesmens AND J. Curren 3r, subjectto accounts of country banks and hankers given to check at sight, and particular atten ' William : .;■■■■-' RATIONAL tn BASIC.*-' BROADWATCSjrwritQ^" CAPITAL. M• «M.«»»»»t>M!j«.<*• M.< ......R 1,0^X1,000 URPLUS^ 400,000 RICHARD BERRY. President. r.,! ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. Tenth National Bank. STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, St GOVERN - and Governments bought [and sold clusively on^Commission. k DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES,: Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and executed for Bankers, Brokers and Merchants. Bankers"'8c,Commission w j,- .. -- ) 36 NEW AND 38 BROAD STREETS.; Orders ' -Wrenn ix - > v ; Hoyt, GOtD ANB EXCHANGE if S . NO. 1 Wall Street.- Stocks, Bonds Tylcr. irr : ' t ^ , ——!■■■1 AND DEALERS IN BULLION, SPECIE, UNITED STATES SECURITIES. T. A, , BANKERS A BROKERS *1 WALL STREET, All orders receive our Personal Attention. Wm. J. Gxlsto ;■ ; > Joaaf S. Bussing e; bankers; - y •. . _ * Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency, subject to check at sight. T v TYLER, ULLMAWI A. CO. on Gelston & K. GILLIAl’ & CO., • Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securities, purchase and Bny and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT arm Sell GO' SECURITIES, GOLD, &c. Orders for purchase and sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed. deposits subject to draft at sighr, and special attention given to orders from NO. 44 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks* Bonds and Gold bought and sold on the moBt liberal terms. Mer¬ chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco, &q„ consigned to ourselves or to our : , of all issues, and execute orders for the sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD. Jno. A. McKjm. BANKERS, ' Cohen & -t- sga. l4, Wali street, Mow York. 63 WALL STREET. Bankers and Commission Merchants. ^ Robt. McKix. McKim, Bros. & Co., Wilson, Callaway & Co., \ t ADAMS, KIMBALL & MOORE, NO; Brunswick and British Columbia. Drafts for £2 and upwards granted oh Scotland and Ireland. - " ■ ■ , : J Rkfbbxncbs: J. H. Fonda, Pres. National Mech. Banking Ass., N.Y. C. B. BiUMB, Pres’t Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. deposits, subject to check at sight. principal towns Of Canada, Nova Scotia, New correspondents, Messrs. Liverpool; j ;> favorable terms. BANKERS. British North America. NO. TURNER BROTHERS. Drake Brothers j'' THE AGENCY OF TilE Bank K BANKERS Sc 28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. No. 36 Broad Street, Office No. 16, 30 PINE STREET, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT " ' J. 1„ Bro^cU & fro., BROKERS, BROKERS, HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 80 TQ; f Commission. Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Orders Promptly Executed menismaae. wraers rrompuy Coupons and Dividends collected. est on Real Capital, $1,000,000. BANKERS, ... & Securities, STREET, NEW YORK. Capital, $150,000. BROTHERS, NO. 14 NASSAU STREET, Corner of Pine, Opposite U. S. Treasury. We receive Deposits and make Collections, the same Jos. F. Larkin.&-Co., No. 14 WALL STREET. BANKERS Sc BROKERS, j No. 10 WALL STREET. * TURNER Jr., ' BROKER IN Gans, bankers and dealers in u. s. Dibblee BROKERS, 1$ NEW & 14 BROAD STK3ETS, Members of t he Stock, Gold and Government Boards, Dealers in Governments and otlier Securities. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency subject to check at sight. ' : » No. 20 BROAO *., STRElRT. Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers, and Dealers* Accounts solicited. D. L. J. H. Stout, Cashier. - LOSS, President. -J 770 Cashier. Thxudobb Stanwood, THE FIRST No. £ Bank of the Cincinnati. of Collections made on and Bankers on & Co., to semvet vners Hilles, Benjamin Rowland, NOTES, and all nd William UNCURRENT BANK £ astern Page, 114 P. Cashier of the Ceedits OF NATIONAL RANK WASHINGTON, COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.), Pbeb’t. H. D. WM. S. CHICAGO. J. Young Scammon Robert Reid ..... .... President. and Collections attended to. Bank or BANKERS AND & Bro., given to State, City, bought and & Co., BROKERS ST., RICHMOND, VA. Gold and Silver, Bank Note*, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ac., sold on commission. |4j?“- Deposits received and Collections all accessible points in the United States. N. x. collections. on—Drexel, Winthrop & Co., and Winslow, Lanier & Co., New York; Drexel & Co., Philadel¬ phia, and Bank of Montreal, Canada. , 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 Per Cent 5-2U Bonds of 0 “ “ “ 0 “ 5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury 0 Per Cent Currency & Ce. Haskell & Co., change . L. New COLLECTIONS MENT STOCKS VERMILYE & CO. G A. PROMPTLY REMITTED FOR. BANKERS, LOUIS, ST. Muldon & Sons, Jas. M. Francis St., Mobile, Ala. Sell Exchange on all the of the United States and Canadas. London and Paris for sale. principal cities Also, drafts on Bank. Second National ST. LOUIS, MO. Capital..$200,000 I Surplus.. $150,566 Prompt attention given to the business of corres¬ E D. JUNES, Cashier. pondents. & Co., Scott Late Kerr A Co., Scott, BANKERS, LEAVEN WORTH, KANSAS. and re¬ current rates Collections made on all accessible poiuts mitted for on th ; day of payment, less 9 oi exchange. Exchange, Gov¬ and Silver. Prompt Dealers in Foreign and Domestic ernment Securities, Bon tip, Gold attention given to Collections. References : Babcock Bros & Co., MISSOURI, Bny and Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New E. ll. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. York. Byrd & XIa.ll, New York. Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York. Geo. D. II. Gillespie, late Wolff *fe Gillespie. Henry A Uurlburt, late Swift & Ilurlbert. Home Insurance Company ot New York. At Sight or Sixty Day*; also, Circular Note* Letter* of Credit for Travelers* Uae, on L* P. MORTON, J B. Chaffee, FIRST Pres. Geo. T. Clark, Cashier. NATIONAL BANK V. Pres. of Denver, DESIGNATED DEP08IT0ET Of THE D. S. Authorized Capital- - - - $500,000 Fald In Capital Transact a Blake and F. *200,000 Banking business corner of - - General Sts. DENVER Citizens’ - - Hartford. Available in *11 th* Ala. Co. COMMISSION MERCHANTS Mud Denier* in Domestic and Foreign Exchange. GALVESTON, TEXAS. at all ac¬ REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. Tennessee.) MEMPHIS, TENN. Sell Foreign and Domestic Exchange tntcdStates Securities, State of Tenne tee, Shelby J*>unty, and Memphis Bonds, an t ]>aet due Coupons. Particular attention paid to Collections. Bny and National Park Bank, Howes & Macy, and SpofforcL TllesWm A Co., New York. • Second Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel A Co. and D. 8. Stetson A Co., Philadelphia. T. F. Thlrkleld A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and Jos. E. Elder A Goodwin, St Louis. Fowler, Stanard A Co, Mobile. Pike, Tiapeyre A Bro., New Orleans. Drake, Kleinwertha Cohen, Lon4m and Liverpool. National COLORADO, (Chartered by the State of Co., BANKERS, 54 CAMP Draw on ORLEANS, National Bank, New York, and STREET, NEW Merchants Bank of Liverpool, Euglaud. Collections and remittances LONDON, principal towns and cities of Europe and the East. Purchase and Sale oi Stocks and Bond* In London andN*w York. Telegraphic order* executed for the B. Miuroa, Leyi P. Mobtoh, Chablh Waltxb H. Bunin, H. CBuexn Oaxliy. of all kind*, having prompt and reliable correspondent* cessible points in the State, and Union Bank, London^ AMD TH* New Yo>k, Ch .rles Walsh. Pre ident Bank of Mobile. Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Burke & tad BURNS Sc CO., UNION BANK OF Underwriters Agency Special attention given to Collections STERLING EXCHANGE (58 Old Broad Street, New York Life Insurance Company., Aetna Insurance- Company of T. H. McMahan & STREET, NEW YORK. 80 BROAD Garth, Fisher & promptly attended to. Hardy, BANKERS, REFER TO H. J. Rogers, Co., L. P. Morton & BANKERS, Co., Benoist & Bounty Loan. ADVANCES MADE ON GO VEEN TO BANKS AND BANKERS. LIBERAL No. 52 St. A. York State 7 per cent. BROKERS, AUGUSTA, • BANKERS, Cold and Ex¬ all accessible points and promptly remitted for at current rates of ex¬ Notes, 1st, 2d, & 3d series Certificates. Co., Charles D. Carr & BANKERS AND ST. LOUIS, MO Dealers in Government Securities, change. Collections made on 1802, 1801, 1805, Compound Interest Note* of 1864 A 1865 Bought and Sold. Draw Established 1848. STOCKS STATES INCLUDING UNITED made on Correspondent. Vereulyb Co.T & RANKERS. No. 44 Wall Street. New York. immediate delivery all Keep constantly on hand lorof issues BOB’T T. BROOKE MAURY. Biokers. Vermilye 1014 MAIN Sterling Exchange, No. LASALLE ST., CHICAGO, (Lake Bank of Montreal.) Special attention JA8. L. H. Maury R. NORTH-WESTERN STATES Geo. C. Smith regard to Government loans furnished. HENRY RAYL1* JAMES BFCK, DUPEE, hankers and Manager. General Hanking: promptly JAKKS A. Full information with at all times cheerfully ROB’T H. MAURY. abroad. BOSTON. STATE STREET, No. 92 HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Government Depository and Financial Agent of the United State.. We buy and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and give especial attention to business connected with the several departments oi* the Government. of Traveller for the use OF LONDON STREET, STATE Dupee, Beck & Sayles, STOCK BROKERS, Washington. FIRST Company The Marine Richardson & Co, BOSTON, EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND JOHN MUNROE Sc CO., PARIS. ALSO IRS me Commercial Credits for *he purchase of Merchaa Traveller* disc in England and the Continent. Rhawn. President, Central National Bank. Mum ford, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia National Bank. GOVERNMENT BONDS, MADE at all accessible points UNION BANK OF Bankers. BILLS OF H. Rhawn, Late Joseph FOR SALE. 48 Jr., William H. remitted for on day of payment. Checks on • •— kinds of COLLECTIONS ^ Franklin Bank! H. Maury & Co., Richmond, Va., Charles D. Carr A Co. Augusta, Ga. Edward B. Ora*, William Errien, Osgood Welsh, Frederic A. Hoyt, Samuel A. Bispham, •v GOLD, SILVER, STOCKS, AND BuNDS. Drexel A Co~ Philadelphia; The and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. liberal terms* Joseph T. Bailey, CINCINNATI, OHIO. Dealers in DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE. BANK NOTES, DIRECTOR*: Street, West Fourth 110 Sc S. c., Especial attention paid to Collections. Refer to Duncan, SDerman A Co., New York; $ 1,000,000 Banka and Capital Nathan 108 , Wilson, 2 Broad Street, Charleston, BANKERS Sc DEALERS IN FOREIGN* PHILADELPHIA. Wmslow. Gilmore, Dunlap Republic, CHESTNUT STREET, 809 A 811 all point* WEST and SOUTH, promptly remitted for. Capital Mock, *1,000,000. Surplus Fund, $250,000. Direct* rs.—John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L. B. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M. Bishop, William Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. S Conner & National V.-Prut. NATIONAL BANK Prest. Lewis Worthington, J.W. Ellis, Bankers. Southern Bankers. Southern Bankers. Western [June 22,1867. CHROMuLE. THE STREET, Harrison, Garth & Co. and No. 18 NEW Successors to Hardy). Henry C. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, bought and sold at the “regular” Board of and at the Gold Exchange in person and on etc., Brokers commis¬ sion onlv. Foreign and col I ected. Domestic Exchange bought, sold and E. S. Munroe & Co., BROADWAY & 5 NEW ST., Bealers lu Government and other 80 Securities. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cnrrencv, of New York subject to check at sight. Membeis Stock Exchange, Government Exchange Room of oitto, and also of Gold amJ.ittf, ntlll vwAmixilu ottorlorl 1a and Long Room—where *U (H. C. FAHNESTOCK, JAY COOKE, ) WM. G. MOORHEAD, > Travellers’ Credits. ELLERS Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Financial. LETTERS OP 7fl THE CHRONICLE. 22,1867.] June H. CREDIT FOR THE USE OF TRAV¬ IN EUROPE AND THE EAST. D. < EDWARD DODGE, ( PITT COOKE. ) COOKE, Taussig, Fisher & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, Jay Cooke & Co., Street, New York. No. 32 Broad bankers. Corner Buy and Sell at Market Rates, Wall and Nassau Sts., New York. ISSUED FOB ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. BANKERS, and balances, subject to Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, & Co., London, J. S. Morgan Messrs. No. 114 South 3d BY Dabney, Morgan Sc Co., - LIVERPOOL. LONDON AND subscriber, their representative ana West Indies, South America, &c; Marginal credits House issued for the same purposes. SIMON DE VISSER, 26 Exchange Place, New York. with 1 of Securities. our H. C. Fahnestock, House, and Mr. Pitt he resident of our Washington Cooke, of Sandusky, S. G. & G. C. AGENTS FOR 28 STATE STREET, SECURITIES Of bonds orders for purchase and sale of stocks, and gold, and to all business of National Banks. JAY COOKE & CO. Satterlee & Jameson,Smith&Cotting RANKERS, Co., NOS. 14 & 16 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Deposit* in Currency and Gold, at the rate of FOUR PER CENT annum ou daily balances which may be chocked <10 BROADWAY A IB and allow Interest NEW STREET. per for at NO. 69 faithfully executed. & Co. Receive Hedden, W inchester&Co All orders Lotting, Amos James D. Smith, of the late iirm of James Low & Co., New York and Louisville, Ky. j I Joseph A. Jameson, Of Jameson, Cotting St. Louis. March 1,1866. BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Bankers anil Brokers. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold at market rates, on commission only. Interest allowed on balances. Advances made on ap¬ „ ^ proved securities. Particular attention given to orders for the purchase or sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells, Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks. BOSTON. the purchase, all issues ; to of the London COMPANY, STREET, NEW YORK, 56 WALL partners. and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT Ward, RARING BROTHERS Ohio, will give particular attention to We shall SALE, promptly execute orders for the Purchase or sale Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad aud Washington we have this New York, Mr. Attorneys in the United States, is prepared to make advances on shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile credits upon them for use in China, the East and The Sight Draft. Make Collections on fhvorable term*, houses in Philadelphia and day opened an office at No. Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co. In connection Drake Klein wort&Cohen others, and allow interest on daily Opposite Treas. Department. Washington. 1 —— — - Fifteenth Street, Place. 53 Exchange Street, Philadelphia. sight. purchase and sell Gold, and only on Commission. Will STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD ON GOVERNMENT Hatch, Foote & Co.., COMMISSION, RANKERS SECURITIES, AND ISAIAH C. BABCOCK, JOSIAH HEDDEN, ROBT. M. HEDDEN. LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, Bonds and Stocks strictly GOVERNMENT [SECURITIES, DEALERS IN GOLD, &c. all YArann. SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES exchanged for FIVE-TWENTY BONDS, on the most liberal terms, and without delay. IMPORTERS and others supplied with GOLD at mar ket rates, aud Coin ou baud for immediate delivery. No. 12 WALL STREET. All issues of & Co., Gilliss, Harney Lockwood ix Co., BANKERS, No. 94 BANKERS, BROAD STREET. Sell at Market Rates. ALL UNITED STATUS SECURITIES. NO. 24 Buy and BANKERS and balances, subject to Sight draft. • . make collection* on favorable term*, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. SOUTHERN BANK NOTES* Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, others, and allow interest on daily ^ Edwin Q. Bell, AND BROKER, In Southern Securities end Bank Bills. SB BROADWAY A 5 NEW STREET, New York. Co., Wall Street, NEW YORK. BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOV¬ ERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCKS AND GOLD. COMMERCIAL PAPER, ALSO, STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, «fec., BOUGHT AND 6n COMMISSION. 48 Pine Street, New York. SOLD John Munroe & Co., BANKERS, AMERICAN NO. 7 RUB SCRIBE, PARIS AND No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit lor Travelers parts of Europe, etc., etc. in all Also Commercial Credits. W. H. Whittingham, No. 8 Broad Street, [INING, EXPRESS, TELEGRAPH, > RAILROAD, AND ALL OTHER STOCKS, BONDS AND GOLD Commission, notations and sales lists furnished daily on applf- Ought and Sold on m. Orders promptly favorable terms. Rodman, Fisk & Co., BANKERS, AND - Government Securities NO. 18 NASSAU STREET, Buy and sell at market rates: Cent. Bonds of 1881; Ten-Forties ; Five-Twenty Bonds, all issues ; Seven-Thirty Notes, all series; Six per executed. C. Graham,, A. RANKER AND BROKER, 3 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, DEALER IN Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Southern Bills on London and Paris, Bills on Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile. In Compound Interest Notes, and Gold and Silver Coin. Collected and Coupons cashed taken in exchange for the new Consolidated 5-20 Bonds, on terms advantageous to holders of 7-30s. Merchants and Importers supplied with coin for cus¬ without charge. 7-30 Notes, all series, tom-duties at lowest market rates. Orders for purchase and sale of all miscellaneous securities promptly executed. Mail and orders will receive our personal attention. received, and interest allowed on balances. Collections made on all points with quick returns. RODMAN, FISK & CO. telegraph Deposits Pott, Davidson & Jones, Farnham, Robbins & Son,) (Late of G. S. and Bankers upon Registered Interest Van Schaick & George Interest subject to Dealer* BANKER £ No. 10 STREET. GOVERNMENT AND SEC U it IT IE-V. allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency, Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants DEALERS IN OTHER . , , BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL the new BROKERS, (Mesurt. Brown Bros. & Co.’s new building% 69 & 61 WALL STREET, NEW YOKE. Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and BANKERS AND Accounts of and Merchant* receiv¬ ed on favorable terma. Interest allowed on depos¬ its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬ tions furnished to correspondents. References ; James Brown, Ea^., of Messrs. Brown Brothers A Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., V^eeVdent of the Chemical National Bank; James H. Banker, Esq., Vice-President of the Bank ©* New York N £ A. Government Securities. P. Hayden, BANKER, AND DEALER IN BULLION AND SPECIE, 24 Nassau The Street, New York. Specie Department will oe iu charge (late of J. S. Cronise & Co.), who has sign the Firm name by procuration. of J. S. Cronise my authority to Riker & Co., BROKERS IN MINING BROADWAY. STREET and 80 NO. 5 NEW STOCKS, Winslow, Lanier & Co., BANKERS, 27 Sc 29 Pine Street, New York. Banks, Bankers, DRAW ON LONDON A P. D. Roddey, J. N. Peity, R. P. Sawyers. N. P. Boulett. P. D. Roddey & No. 2X Co., Wall Street, N.Y., (PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.) BANKERS AND BROKERS. Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬ mission. Particular attention given to the Purchase and Sale of all Southrm and Miscellaneous Securities. Collections mado on all accessible points. Interest allowed on Balances. AND PARIS, MOBILE AND NEW ORLEANS. Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers, of Europe. avail¬ able in all parts Interest Allowed on Deposit*. Duncan, Sherman & B A IV K. E R CORNER OF PINE AND Co., S NASSAU STS., I 8 S U E CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR OF CREDIT, LETTERS abroad and in the United all the principal cities of the For the U9e of Travelers States, available in world: also, COMMERCIAL CREDITS, For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good E ope, West Indies, South America, and the United Staes * THE CHRONICLE. 772 [June 22, 1867. Financial. Fisk & Hatch, BANKERS Street, New York, The Central Interest Six percent. Lawful Money. The attention of constructing a Railroad from Are now TO INVESTORS THE FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF THE HAVING THIRTY YEARS TO RUN. Company, DESIRABLE SECURITIES, RECOMMEND UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT BONDS Union Pacific Railroad AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND OTHER No. 5 Nassau Financial. THE Financial. OMAHA, NEBRASKA, westward towards tlie Pacific Pacific Railroad Co., * ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Dabney, Morgan & Co. EIOIIT PER This Company age is constructing:, under the patron¬ The of the UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT THE WESTERN now offer RAILWAY First ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Sacramento, Califor¬ nia. across the Sierra Nevadas to the California State line, traversing the richest and most popu¬ lous section op California, and thence through Their line will extend from Their road is miles of tho summit of the Sierras, and a larire Grading, Tunnelling, <fec., beyond that point has been accomplished. The First Mortgage Bonds of this Com¬ pany a fiord unusual inducements of Safety and Profit to Investors, for the following among other reasons, viz: First —The rate of Interest is Six per Cent, in l»old, payable semi-annually in the City oi New York. Second.—The NEW YORK. A small number for the low price of 80, -by THE Of tlie completed from Omaha 805 miles west on the 1st pf January, 1807, and is fully equipped, and trains are regularly running over it. The Company has now on hand sufficient iron, ties, etc., to finish the remaining portion to the eastern base of the Rocky Mountains,212 miles, which is under contract to be done September 1st of this year, and it is expected that the entire road will be in running order from Omaha to its western connection with the Central Pacific, now being rapidlybuilt eastward from Sacramento, Cal., during Bearing Bonds of the Government. Fourth.—Tbe United States Government provide** nearly half tlie amount ne¬ to bu Id tbe entire road, and looks mainly t«» a small per-eentage on tbe future traffic for re-payment. cessary Fifth.—Owing to this liberal provision, accompa¬ nied with Extensive Grant* of Public Lands, by which tbe Government fosters this great national enterpri-e. its success is ren¬ dered certain, and Its financial sta¬ bility is altogether independent of the contingencies which attenu ordi¬ nary Railroad enterprises. Sixth.-The Security of its First Mortgage Bonds is therefore ample, and their character for safety and relia nlity is equalled only by tnat of the obligat ons of the Government itseli. ♦ net earnings of the completed portion are already largely in excess of the interest obligations winch *he Company will incu on twice the dis¬ tance an< t are steadily increasing, rendering the uninterrupted payment of the lute- Seventh.—The absolutely certain. Means of tlie vested. The Bonds are issued in denominations of $1,000 with remi-aunual Gold Coupons attached, pa.\ able in New York, and are offered lor the present at 95 5er cen . 1st anuary and Orders may accrued interest <in currency) from be tor warded to us director through the principal Banks and Bankers in all parts of the country. Remittances m- y be made in drafts on New York, in Legal Tender Notes, National Bank Notes or other funds current in this city, and the bonds will be forwarded to any address by express, free ot or Inquiries for fhri her particulars, by mail or otherwise, wid receive punctual attention. Fisk & Hatch, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, NO. 5 NASSAU STREET, N.Y. N B.—All kinds of Government Securities ie coived at the full market price in exchange for the above Bonds. Also, All descriptions of Government Secu¬ rities kept constantly on hand, and Bought Sold or Jbxchanged. i3T"Gold Coin and U. S. Coupons bought, sold, and collected. Deposits received on Liberal Terms, subject to check at sight. f£r* Collections made throughout the country. Miscellaneous Stocks and Bonds bought and and sold at the SUica Exchange on commission for ash. Special attention giver, to the Exchange of SEVENTHIRTY NOTES of all the aeries for the new FIVE 7 WENTY RONDS Qf 1865, on the moat favorable METROPOLITAN NATIONAL BANK No. the road is finished at the average rate of about $*3,250 per mile, amounting to $44,208,000. The Company is also permitted to issue its own First Mortgage Bonds to an equal amount, and at the same time, which, by special Act of Congress, are. made a First Mortgage ou the entire line, the bonds of the being subordinate to them. a mile, amounting to 20,032,000 acres, estima¬ ted to be worth $30,000,000, making the total resources, exclusive of the capital, $118,416,000; but the full value now New York, June 14,1867. Dividend—The Directors of the “ Metropolitan Na¬ tional Bank” have this day declared a semi-annual Dividend of SIX Per Cent., free of all tax, payable-on July 8,1867. GEO. L. SENEY, Cashier. OFFICE No. 11 Capital Stock of the CompanyTs one dollars, of which five millions have already been paid in, and of which it is not supposed that more than twenty-five millions at most will be re¬ quired. The cost of the road is estimated one hundred THE INM R4NCE CO., Wall Street. New York, June 12,1867. Tlie Board of Directors have tins day .declared a semi-annual Dividend of FIVE (5; Per Cent., free of Government tax, payable on and after July 1. JAMES GILMORE, Secretary. THE NATIONAL TRADESMEN’S New BANK. York, June 18,1867. A Dividend of SEVEN (7) Per Cent, (free of Govern¬ will be paid on and after July 1st, the Bank also assuming payment of the city tax ou the shares of stockholders for the present year. ment tax; be realized. The authorized to be about OF HAMILTON PIKE ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. hundred million neers Broadway, donation of 12,800 acres of land to the of the lands cannot 108 The transfer books will be closed from June 17 until pany as The Government makes RANK, City of New York. New York, June IS, 1867. The Board of Directors of this Bank have Ibis un¬ declared a semi-annual Dividend of FIVE (5) Per Cent free of tax. payable on and after MONDAY, July 1st The transfer book will close on tbe 25ih instant, and open on the 2d proximo. W. II. SANFORD, Cashier. cific to be 1,565 miles, the United States Government issues its Six per cent. Thirty-year Bonds to the Com¬ by competent engi¬ million dollars, exclu¬ sive of equipment. Prospects for Business. OF BANK AiUEKlCt. New York, June 21,1867. Dividend.—The President and Directors of tlie Bank of America have this day declared a Dividend of FIVE Per Cent., for the current six months, free from tax, payable on and after MONDAY, July 1st, 1867. The transfer books will regain closed from this date until the morning of July 3d. ' WM. L. JENKINS, Cashier. . The railroad connection between Omaha and the now Pacific on complete, and the earnings of the Union already finished for the month of May were $261,782. These sectional earnings as the road progresses will much more than pay the in¬ terest on the Company’s bonds, and the through busi¬ ness over the only line of railroad between the Atlan¬ UNITED STATES the sections tic and Pacific must be immense. Value and GOVERNMENT BONDS, HAVING THIRTY YEARS TO RUN, BEARING SIX PERCENT. INTEREST IN LAWFUL MONEY. These Bonds are regarded by Savings and other In¬ stitutions, for a long investment, as the most desirable of all the Government Securities. For sale by Security of the Ronds. JOHN J. CISCO & SON, 33 Wall Street. The Company respectfully submit, that the above statement of facts fully demonstrates the security of their Bonds, and as additional proof they would sug¬ gest that the Bonds now offered are less than ten mil¬ lion dollars on 517 miles of road, on which over twenty million dollars have already been expended; on 330 miles of this road the cars are now running, and the re¬ maining 187 miles are nearly completed. At the pay an present rate of premium on gold these bonds Fourth National Bank. $5,000,000 Capital NASSAU STREET, N. E. CORNER PINE STREET All the Government Loans for sale. annual interest on the present cost of Nine per Collections made for Dealers on best terms. cent., and it is believed that on the completion of the road, Bonds, they will go above par. The Company intend to sell but a limited amount at the present low rates, and retain the right to advance the price at their option. like the Government Subscriptions will be received in New York by the Continental National Bank, No. 7 Nassau St. Clash, Dodge & Co., Bankers, 51 Wall St. John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, No. 33 Wall St. - Jones & Westervelt, BROKERS, J BANKERS & Government Securities, Stocks, Bondi, and Gold, bought and sold on Commission; COMMERCIAL paper and loans of gold AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED. NOS. 19 NEW 4c 14 BROAD STREETS* and by BANKS AND BANKERS generally through¬ out the United States, of whom maps and descriptive pamphlets maybe obtained. They will also be sent by mail from the Company’s Office, No. 20 Nassau street, New York, on application. Subscribers will select their own Agents in whom they have confidence, who alone will be responsible to them for the safe delivery L. S. Watkins, NO. 11 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, BANKER, And Dealer in all Classes of Govern¬ and Gold. ment Securities of the bonds. JOHN J. CISCO, — . Company. Estimating the distance to be built by the Union Pa¬ United States NATIONAL MONDAY, 1st of July next. " East is of Gold they pay near¬ Per cent, per annum, on the amount in¬ Ei«hth.—At t e present rate was 1870. Principal is payable in Gold at Third.—The cost of the Bonds, Ninety-five Per Cent, and accrued interest, is Ten Per Cent , les^ than that of the cheapest Six Per Cent. Gold sale, with accrued interest, at SOUTTER & CO., No. 53 William st.. CENTRAL maturity. INTEREST PAYABLE JANUARY AND JULY, IN GOLD, already completed, equipped, ard amount ot the work of fW#! Wilmington, Charlotte & Rutherford Railroad, AT This road Bonds THE OF Ninety Cents on tbe Dollar. rnulling for 94 miles from Sacramento to within 12 charge. First Mortgage Mortgage Bonds SIX PER CENT. IN Bonds. CENT. ‘ It forms the sole Western link of the only route to the Pacific which is adopted by Congress and aided by tbe issue of United States ly limited amount of their having thirty years to run, and bearing annual interest payable ou the first day of January and July iu the City of New York, at the rate of the great mining regions of the Territories, to the vicinity of Salt Lake City. rest a END OP THE NATIONAL GREAT Company long investment. by Ocean, making, with its unbroken line an the' most desirable as of all the Government Securities for For sale connections, Savings Banks and other Institu¬ tions is invited to these Bonds Treasurer, NEW YORK, Collections made in all parts of the ■° British America, United States and ammwmf & ifflmanr teeth, tenmcrcrot limess, Railway Ponitor, and £nssimww frontal A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. VOL. 4. SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1867 CONTENT8. THE CHRONICLE. York 1... 773 Debt and Finances of Chicago .. Latest Monetary and Commercial The Government Credit and the Revival of Business Siirn- of the Times in and oat of Wall Street Railroad Earnings for May A 774 771 English News 774 775 776 Commercial and Miscellaneous Quarantine worthy of New News 778 THE BANKERS’ GAZETTES AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks'. Philadelphia Banks Cotton 785 Tobacco Breadstuff's Groceries.., National Banks, etc isale Prices N. Y. Stock Exchange National, State etc. Securities Commercial Epitome r 787 788 788 „ 7*2 Dry Goods Imports 783 784 Prices Current and Tone of the Market : 797-98 770 .. 780 790 v THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Railway News Railroad, Canal, and Miscellaneops Bond List 701 792-03 | Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. Insurance and Mining Journal | Advertisements .. . 794 795 .769-72, 796, 799-S00 ®l)c tffyrottitU. The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every NO. 104 satisfy the clamoring multitude of Treasury creditors, and the emergency was met by the issue of Seven-Thirties, by which 830 millions of needed cash were gathered into the Treasury in a shorter space of time than was ever a similar sum raised by any government of modern times. During last fiscal year a vast and embarrassing aggregate of short obligations were paid off, and the consolidation of our nation¬ al debt is now advancing so swiftly to completion, that in¬ stead of a confused multitude of government securities which bewildered investors, the leading bonds in the market are so few and so simple that no difficulty need occur in estimating their obvious relative advan¬ tages. At this moment we are approaching another much predicted crisis. The August Seven-thirty notes are on the point of maturing, and the prophets of evil have long fixed this on era as one at which the resources of the Treas¬ Satur¬ ury would be put to their utmost strain. But instead of are the facts? We find that the Treasury has a plethora of funds in readiness. We can promptly meet not only the accruing claims of every kind, swelled as they are by appropriations for the army and for bounties, which far day morning by the publishers of Huni's Merchants' Magazine, this what with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. For The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,) For One Year $ 10 00 For Six Months 6 00 By an arrangement with the publishers of the Daily Bulletin we are enabled to furnish our subscribers with that paper at the reduced price of $4 per annum making the price of Cukonicle with Daily Bulletin, -j s^Mcmths exceeded the estimates, but there is another trouble of a dif¬ ferent nature from what $14 00 8 00 Postage is paid by the subscriber at his man post-office. R w, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Dally Bulletin $120 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & OO., Publisher*, 60 William Street, New York. set down in the catalogue of evils Treasury has too much money. We are actually assailed by complaints that the Treasury vaults are so full of currency that the proper officers cannot disburse it so rap¬ idly as to repress the accumulation, or keep down the bal¬ ance to its normal working average. Mr. McCulloch was not over sanguine as to results, and judging from some of his utterances he was somewhat depressed perhaps by the gloomy visages and sinister vaticinations of the prophets of evil. But, like a good general, h« put the necessary forces into action, and worked them valiantly till victory came. The long predicted crisis, then, which the Summer of 1867 was to bring in the national finances, we may almost regard as having passed away. The compound notes are provided for, the August Seven-thirties are reduced from 300 millions to 90 millions, and the whole will soon be converted or paid off. As for the June and July Seven-thirties, which mature a year hence, their aggregate now is 420 millions, which must inevitably, at the present rate of conversion, be all transmuted into long bonds before next Spring. In view of these facts, then, it is no wonder if our bonds in Europe and at home should show an increased buoyancy, and should prove more attractive to purchasers than ever. But if we gather reasons for a revival of public confidence, to come : was the t THE GOVERNMENT There is CREDIT AND THE REVIVAL OF BUSINESS. close sympathy between the Government credit and the industrial prosperity of the country, and if success is any test of good seamanship, those who have been a very pilots and chief ollicers of our financial barque, may lay a conspicuous place in the monetary annals of the times, for at each successive crisis'in our financial affairs we have had difficulties of no ordinary virulence to contend with, and we have usually found that not only the worst evils we looked for never came, but unexpected benefits were realized. In a few subordinate details of policy, as is well known to our readers, we have often doubted the soundness or feared the expediency of Mr. McCulloch’s arrangements, but it is singularly gratifying have to record the results which have so far justified most of the plans in which he has persisted. On his entering upon office, the inflating unpopular fiveper cent, legal tenders had to be got rid of, and the object was accomplished by the issue of compound notes, which when we look at the Government finances these reasons are were effective for their end, and will soon disappear quietly strengthened by the aspects of the money market where there from the circulation. On the dispersion of the war cloud in is an abundance of unemployed capital, and especially by the the South a vast sum of ready money had to be raised to brightening promise of ample crops, which, after all, are the pay off the army, to retrieve the government credit, and to sheet anchor of our hope for a prosperous Fall trade. the claim to THE 774 [June CHRONICLE. RAILROAD EARNINGS FOR MAT. WALL STREET. The long expected rise in stocks has not only not come, The gross earnings for the but during the past week there has been a somewhat marked month of May, 1866 and ‘1867, decline in all the leading railway shares, and the market is or decrease) between the two periods 1867. 1866. apparently weaker than before it gave signs of promise, subjoined statement: Railroads. $451,477 $459,370 338,691 Some attribute this to the expected meeting of Congress in 329,1-51 89,349 120.460 787,736 735,082 July, and the consequent apprehensions which have been ex¬ 251,916 325,110 ISO,675 210,783 cited, while others claim that fears of a stringent money Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific 1,101,632 1,122,140 market growingoutof the preparations of the National banks 477,607 569,250 9U,526 95.664 Marietta and Cincinnati. for their next quarterly returns has much to do with thepre 333,952 365,196 358,601 SIGNS OF THE TIMES IN AND ODT OF 22,1867. under-specified railroads for the and the difference (increase are-exhibited in the . . Increase $7,893 8,840 31,011 . . .... 52,654 73^94 . 30,108 . . 20,508 91*643 . .... 5,138 31,244 67,892 148,388 15,101 .... .... . vailing stagnation and depression. . however, not th# direct cause ; the of outside support being the main source of These influences are, absence Milwaukee and Prarie du Milwaukee and St. Paul Ohio and Mississippi . . Chien. . . 426,493 267,488 245,598 283,130 . . 682,510 316,433 86,913 119,104 230,497 282,939 578,292 329.078 .... .... 791 .... 104,218 12,645 29,061 57,852 The recent advance was pro¬ Western Union $524,745 f $6,613,070 $6,088,325 moted by the Street in anticipation, of a demand for 334,438 5.696,240 6,030,678 stocks from investors, stimulated by the highly favorable The gross earnings per mile of road operated for the same crop prospects, and the promise of largely increased railway earnings But the public has not thus far shown any dispo-1 month of the years, respectively, are shown table : ^-Differ’ e—* Length in miles—* r-Eamings—> sition to discount the effect of an abundant harvest, and the 1866. 1867. 1866. 1867. Railroads. $16 $... 507 $890 $906 operators on the Stock Exchange have become somewhat dis¬ Atlautic & Great Western. 81 1,209 280 1,178 SO 138 400 and Alton 538 224 224 couraged. It is thought, however, with much reason, that Chicago and Great Eastern. 24 Chicago 688 712 1,032 1,145 178 615 793 410 after the first week of July a decided change for the better 410 174 Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific 1 3 1,218 1,044 173 Cleveland aud Toledo 68 will take place. 775 798 1,380 1,448 The quarterly returns of the banks will Erie 130 674 804 703 21 360 381 then have been completed, and a return flow of currency Illinois Central 251 251 109 Marietta and Cincinnati 285 1,281 1,172 130 684 from the interior is likely to be felt to a moderate extent, Michigan Central 814 524 524 633 609 Michigan Southern 234 1,142 234 48 wdiile the crops will be so far beyond the reach of danger, MilwaiiKee & Prairie da Chien. 845 893 275 275 1 Milwaukee and St. Paul 832 833 34 * 340 223 that uncertainty will no longer prevail with regard to the Ohio and Mississippi 468 1,458 1,235 468 24 631 607 ttsburg. Ft. Wayne andChica^. 521 521 164 results of the harvest. The general public, it is expected^ Toledo, Wabash and Western. 327 491 177 177 Western Union will then come into Wall Street as buyers of stocks, and $83 $ ....: 7,207 7.297 $917 $834 Total in May. 36 826 790 business of all kinds will be likely to recover from the 7,207 7,297 Total in April. stagnation and depression which have prevailed for a long The above table shows that the gross earnings of the rail¬ time past. roads specified have fallen off in relation to the gross earnings The proposed meeting of Congress in July is no doubt a in May, 1866, to the extent of $83 per mile operated, which source of disturbance, but from present indications it seems is equal to 9.05 per centum. This presentation of a month’s to be inevitable. The importance of practical reconstruction business would be a serious matter not only to those most innot only to the South but the entire business interests of the timatelv interested in the several lines, but also to the public country, is obvious, aud can hardly be overrated. It is also desirable that all such causes of disturbance as the proposed generally, were the results a measure session of Congress should be cut short as much as possible. ness transacted or of the net , Thus its adjournment should follow its reassembling as soon that the}7 rtre e^,er the one or the primary object which called it together is accomplished, the decline in the amount and unnecessary tinkering with the finances be avoided. It causes which have operated in a should meanwhile be remembered by our legislators 111 ent °f business, and do not therefore that the South is still in such a prostrate condition °ffm 7ie* earnings, that the revenue derived from that section of the coun¬ try is trifling while the civil and military expenditure of the Government under the Reconstruction Law, as A administered, is on such an enormous scale as to add The subject of the health of the we largely to the burdens of taxation which we are compelled say* without intending to pun upon a to bear. The policy of Congress should be to develop From year to year it is Southern industry, trade and commerce, and to diminish tention of politicians, legislators the cost of administering the laws in the South ; for by such the public listen, the press advocate means only can we look for rapid improvement throughout and very little comes it one vast extent of country where the devastating influence of °f preserving the health of so as weakness at present. •• in the following Incr. JJO«. • • • • 2 • . . ... • . . • • • .. . • . • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • . . . . . -o... . . . ... ... .... shown,either of thebusiproceeds of that business but the other connot be admitted, being the natural effect of the same reducing prices in every departnecessarily show fall- as now a the late We war are disposed to interpret more the signs of the times favor- should have considered as already stated, we conducive to commercial and ably, although, it ' is still visible. financial tranquility it Congress was not to have a Summer session; but, apart this, the indications are cheering. After three partial crop failures in succession, we have now on all sides the promise of an unusually, if not unprecedently bountiful harvest. The hay crop is already secure, and so also are some of the smaller grain crops, and the aggregate of wealth which these, added to the wheat and corn crops, will confer upon the country is so immense that their influence will be sensibly felt throughout the country, and from them trade and enterprise generally will be likely to derive a new and suecesaful impetus, from QUARANTINE WORTHY OF NEW TORI, city of New York, canf it, is vital question, warmly discussed; it enjoys the atand the medical faculty; the propriety of action, of after all. As of the means the city, far it is endangered by the introduction of infectious diseases from abroad, an effectual system of quarantine is admitted to be indispensable. The yellow fever and the cholera are the two most dreaded visitors, since when they make a lodgement with us they are most deadly and unmanageable. And yet we are without proper safeguards against their assaults, and one of the principal reasons of our weakness in this respect is that we have not a proper station for the detention of foreign vessels importing disease, and it seems we are at present not likely to have one. The Government will or can do little, the State Legislature seems unable to devise any positive and perfect system, and the city of New York is equally at fault. Our medical men feel perfectly able, and are always ready to grapple with the 775 THE CHRONICLE. 22,1867.] June RECAPITULATION. 1867. 1866. but they demand that there shall be arranged some $2,000 Decrease.. $353,000 $355,000 32,030 Increase 992.500 900,500 convenient station, where the sick may be properly treated. (new issues) 20,000 Increase 70,00“ 50,000 123,000 Increase 1,359,0 0 To depend upon vessels as hospitals is • o deny them the fa¬ 1,230,000 70,000 Increase 163,000 93,000 161,000 Increase cilities required by the healing arts, and also to subject the 1,820,000 sick to great discomforts, as well as to expose the citizens to $4,353,500 $4,757,500 Total funded debt ..$4,353,500 $4,757,500 Increase .. $404,000 the dangers of necessary or accidental contact with the in¬ The floating debt of the city, consisting chiefly of certifi¬ fected. Hospitals and wharves even if provided on any cates given for temporary loans, payments for schools and san¬ shore of the harbor do not and cannot secure isolation, with¬ itary purposes, judgments, water fund, etc.— $398,926 12 out which quarantine is but a farce. A suggestion is there¬ Amounted lo... Bi'ls payable ($4.3*0). warrants on Treasurer (236,114 04), and 240,638 38 fore made to us, which we think worthy of consideration, and city orders ($174 34) . the objections to it'may not seem sufficient to over-balance Making a total floating of $639,564 50 The amount in the treasury at the close of (he fiscal year the advantages. At all events, we offer it to the public in to the credit of the several funds was $778,990 60. The the form it comes to us. amount of warrants and city orders outstanding drawn upon It is no more nor less than the establishment of a quaran¬ tine on one of the islands at the east end of Long Island? the treasury was (as above) $236,288 38. Net balance to such, for example, as Shelter Island. This location is certainly credit, $542,702 28. It will be seen from the above exhibit in very many respects well suited for the purpose. It is, that the bonded debt is gradually increasing ; and, the Comp¬ troller continues, “if we keep pace with our rapid increase of as its name indicates, a place of refuge for vessels; has deep water, and is fully protected from storms. It is large and population, it must continue to increase upon us for many fertile, and yet could spare some hundreds of acres, which years to come. The water-works will require duriug the pres¬ would not be costly to purchase, without injury to the re¬ ent year (1867-68) not less than $500,000 to complete mainder. It communicates easily and quickly with the city buildings, engines, and improvements that are imperatively by railway, and by steamers through the Sound. Infected demanded. The erection of school buildings, sewerage, river vessels off the coast could as easily make port at Shelter improvements (deepening of the Illinois and Michigan Island as the harbor of New York itself. A few hours sail and tunnels, will add, perhaps $500,000 to $800,000, so that would take them from any point off Sandy Hook, and even that at the end of the present fiscal year the bonded debt of if it caused eight or ten hours delay that is no objection, for the city will not fall much short of $6,000,000; and infected vessels ought not to come into our harbor under these improvements shall have been completed, for bonds are authorized to be issued, the bonded debt cannot any circumstances. On the other hand, at Shelter Island commodious hospitals, vary much from $10,000,000, of which about $5,000,000 have good wharves and marine railways could be constructed of been provided for, to be paid by receipts from water, sewer¬ the most approved forms, so that sick passengers could be age, sinking fund, and probable State assumption placed in proper buildings, in pure air, with good waters, provement bonds. The total city debt at the present while infected cargoes could be cheaply and easily landed, $5,397,064 50. Of this sum $398,926 12 is for temporary loaus, viz.: $222,159 81 for the water works (to be paid from depurated and cleaned; the vessels themselves could be purified without danger and with entire convenience; com¬ the proceeds of bonds to be issued) and the balance enemy, • .. .. .. .. .. ..... .. the canal), when all which of river im¬ time is for school be kept purposes (purchase of lots and erecting school buildings) sani¬ The rate and amount of tax up at all hours of the day, and transportation of passengers tary expenses, judgments, &c.” levied, and the purposes for which levied for the service of the and goods be readily and cheaply effected when this was Amount. proper. So great would be the advantages of the arrange¬ year ending April I, 1867, were as follows: Rate. $171,906 50 Purpose. Purpose. fil'd 2 1,000 ment, that the station might be made self supporting in Geueral fund.4>£ p 1,000 $386,789 63 & alley 171,906 50 Gen’l sinking fund 2 “ 85,953 25 many obvious ways, and certainly we could be entirely pro¬ fund 1 lamp 85,953 25 128,929 88 fund... 1 “ 85,953 25 tected from infection. These general statements, it is thought, Iinp’ment fil'd 1 257, S59 75 Temp’y loan 42,976 62 fund.. 3 fund X “ might be followed up by details of the most convincing char¬ school 42,976 62 fund % Total 20 1,000 $ ,719,065 00 257,859 75 acter, but it is enough for the present merely to allude to the School tax. fd. 3 position thus easily attainable, and its obvious points of The receipts from general taxes for the year, including superiority. It is to be hoped that the proper authorities $44,735 64 collected on the tax warrants of 1863 and 1865, will give some attention to the proposition, as it seems to amounted to the sum * of $1,559,502 84; the receipts from offer a solution of the difficulties which have so long stood special assessment warrants, including miscellaneous receipts in the way of the establishment of a perfect quarantine for from the Board of Public Works and other sources, to $478,the great commercial City of New York. 540 43 ; from licenses $153,858 ,84 ; from tines in the police courts $81,038 45; from Recorder’s court, rents, &c., $15,Including 580 68, and from a judgment $25,492 20. DEBT AND FINANCES OF CHICAGO. $901,863 17 balance from previous year, bills payable $159,The tenth annual statement of the Comptroller of Chicago, 226 11, and bonds $6,400, the total means of the city treasury covering the fiscal year ending April 1, 18*57, supplies full in¬ amounted to $4,864,933 44. The principal disbursements were on account of: Public formation relating to the financial affairs of the city and the works $385,871 17, certificates $120,575 00 ; the Bridewells transactions of the year then closed. The following is a state¬ and cemetery $55,227 07; evening schools $6,957 08; Fire ment of the public debt outstanding at the end of the fiscal Department $254,409 41; fuel $31,217 23; health depart¬ ment $61,387 86 ; interest $100,612 79 ; judgments $22,year: Municipal Debt (schools), viz: 151 11; lamp districts $120,922 21; permanent improve¬ Municipal Debt (old isBues), viz : c. bonds, due July, 1885 $25,000 c. bonds, due July, 18(56.. $1,000 “ due Jan 1S80.. 25,000 ments $15,391 13; printing and stationery $17,585 66; podue Jan., 1867.. 1,000 due Jan., 1887.. “ 20,000 “ due Jan., 1874.. 60,000 lice$307,8ll 44; Receiver’s court $28,591 92, redemption Sewerage Debt, viz: “ due Jan., 1868.. 1,000 $413,000 $13,861 18; Reform school $73,299 99; river improvements c. bouds (1st loan) “ due July, 1873.. 50,000 “ (1st loan) 87,000 “ due July, 1874.. 40,000 $129,162 37; salaries $47,247 50; schools $412,367 55 ; “ (2d & 3d loans,in¬ “ due July, 1875.. 100,0(0 munication with shipowners and consignees could Rate. Amount. it ... ftt Int’st p. Sewerage Street it Street luni it Police Reform it ...... 7 p. 6 7 10 6 6 6 6 7 p. 7 “ i p. . , 7 7 p. 6 7 „ ■ • “ due July, 1876.. Municipal Debt (new issues), 7p, c. bonds, due Dec., 1872.. 7 “ due Apr., 1881.. 7 “ due Apr., 1885.. 7 “ due July, 1896. i 100,000 viz: $39,000 904,500 24,(WO *5,909 cluding 40 bonds Lind, Treasurer charged S. .'. sinking fund, $20,842 50; special assessments $685,903 76; tunnel $19,265 85; water $163,000 I $666,791 89, &c., &c.—total $4,085,942 78, leaving in Trea- Diver Impr&v me»t Debt, viz: 7 p. c. bonds, due July, 1890.. Water Debt, viz: 0 p. C. .bonds 7 “ 859,000 1,030,000 I 790,009 sewerage sury $416,546 48; sewerage, $778,990 66* following statement gives a summary view of the pop¬ ulation, valuation aud taxation at the stated periods for the past 30 years : TFrom The Year, 1837.. 1840.. 1843.. 1845.. 1846.. 1847.. 1843 1849.. 1850.: 1853.. . Total pop-, Assessed Valuation , Valua. ulation. R'l Est’te. Personalty. Total, p. cap. 4,170 962,221 12.088 14.169 16.859 2,273.171 3.064,425 4,995,446 20,028 4.99.8,266 23,047 5,181,635 1860.-109,260 1862.. 138,186 1804. .169,353 1865.. 178,492 1866.-200,418 p.cap.p.$100 $5,905 15 $1 41 $2 49 4,721 85 1 a5 5 00 8,647 89 111 0 60 11,' 77 58 0 91 0 36 15,825 80 1 11 0 32 18,159 01 1 08 0 31 22,051 M 1 10 0 35 1,441,314 190 14 791.851 3,065,022 253 56 857,231 4,521,656 31912 853,704 5,849,170 346 96 1,302,174 6,300.440 314 66 I,495,i47 6,676,684 246 31 1.554,284 7.220.249 240 97 3,711,154 1 6,841.833 284 82 5,355,593 20,992,893 337 41 5,843,776 31,736,084 877 30 5,855.377 37,653,512 349 13 5,5r2,:i00 37,139,845 268 79 479,093 5.085,965 13,130,677 21,637,500 25,892,308 31,198,155 31 ,.f 80,545 37.148,023 11,684.759 44,004,499 20,614,078 66,495,116 19,458.1:34 * Am’t 21 15 94.437 94.487 7,580 Taxation , $256,842 $56 80 * *2:16,842 4.470 29,963 59,130 1855.. SO,000 1856 84,113 48,732.782 1 30 0 84 O 45 0 35 2 30 2 58 ft 80 0 77 396 652 39 4 72 1 25 362 55 428 87 373,315 29 3 42 1 01 501,038 06 974.655 64 1,294.183 54 4 08 5 75 7 25 1 50 2 00 1,719,064 00 287 75 04,719,177 85,953,250 30,045 09 25,270 87 135,662 48 206,209 03 S 57 2 00 2 07 That year [June 22, 1867, THE CHRONICLE. 776 Chicago has been gradually growing wealthier, and by year more able to bear taxation, the above table fully illustrates. In 1850 the valuation was $240 07, and the taxes 84 cents per capita, or 35 cents on each $100. By 1860 the valuation had increased to $340 13, and the taxes 84 capita, or $1 01 on each $100. The first years war materially affected the value of property, but in 1864 a reaction was evidenced which continued upward through the next two vears, bringing tlie per capita valuation from $268 79, as it was in 1862 to $287 75 in 1864, $362 55 in 1865, and $428.87 in 1866. The rate of taxation in 1864, ’65 and ’66 was $2 on the $i00, but owing to the movement in population and property, the tax averaged in 1864 $5 75 ; in 1865, $7 25 ; and in 1866, $8 57 per capita. The taxes here spoken of are municipal or city taxes purely. The State taxes for 1866 amounted to $1 28 per capita, and the county taxes (though we have no means at hand to certify our estimate) may be stated at a like rate. These added to the city taxes, will make a total of taxation levied for domestic purposes on the people of Chicago of $11.13 per capita. And cents per of the late matter of course the people bear their.share of Federal taxation and customs. In the 1st district of Illinois, whicli covers Cook County, in which Chicago is located, there was collected on account of internal revenue for the year 1865-66, the sum of $6,672,286, from the following sources: as a our own Correspondent.] London, Saturday, June 8,1867. the stock aud share for the realization of profits. Considering, however, the extent of the late rise in the Consol market, the fall that has taken place can by uo means be considered as indicating depression. On the other hand, it seems manifest that the tone of business in that department is inherently firm and satisfactory, for uuless such had beeu the case, the decline in the quotations must The present week has witnessed a reaction in markets, in consequence of numerous heavy sales have been much more considerable ; the decline from the late highest point being confined to about one per cent., thus establishing a rise dur¬ ing the last fortnight of quite 3 per cent. As the supply of money is still very abundant, and as there is no increase in the demand for ac¬ commodation, but, contrariwise, a diminution, while the tendency of the discount market is towards a 2 per cent, minimum at the Bank of England, there seems every probability that a further advance will be established in the Consol market The public still refrain from making investments to any very important extent in the shares of public com¬ panies, owing to the want of confidence engendered by the nature of past revelations. The slight increase of confidence during the last few days is, however, perceptible in the quotations for the principal bank¬ ing institutions and the soundest railway companies, but it must still be admitted that such a movement is by no means general. The ex¬ treme ease of the money market, and the resulting fact that the rate of interest allowed for deposits at the joint stock banks and discount offices is only 1 to H per cent., necessaiily lead the public to find out a better means of safely employing their fuuds. Public attention is therefore first turned to the Consol market, there being no doubt that Consols are the best and safest investment at the present moment, as a secur¬ ity, to which no risk is attached. The upward movemeut, however, will now be less rapid than has been the case during the last few days, and the speculative movemeut will be less extended. This is the nat¬ ural result of high prices. Investors will be more cautious, because they will calculate what are the probabilities of depreciation during the period prior to the next dividend, while speculators will show less dis¬ position to operate extensively, owing to the improbability of any fur¬ ther considerable rise. Nevertheless it seems certain that the public will continue to purchase this stock for investment, and perhaps during the next few weeks Cousols will fluctuate between 94 and 95, and will probably approximate more closely 95 than 94. Money continues in good supply, aud there is not the slightest im¬ S47,523 Legacies and successions... Sales provement in the demand. During the present week the quotations 295 11,301 Passports, Ac Articles in schedule A 16,863 Penalties, Ac 71,849 have given way, bills having been discounted at as low a figure as 24 The population of the county in that year may be estimated or three eighths per cent, beueath the Bank minimum. There is no at 220,000 persons, and hence the federal taxes averaged doubt then that we are tending strongly towards a two per cent. mini, about $33 to each inhabitant. mum, aud the rapid increase which has taken place in the supply of The customs collected in the United States in the same year bullion held by the banks of England and France during the last week amounted to $170,000,000 in gold. The population of the seems almost to indicate that such a change is not likely to be long United States in that year was not far from 35,000,000. This delayed. So far as the Bank of England is concerned, the increase this gives about $5 per capita. All these taxes added, viz.: do¬ week will certainly be much lees rapid ; nevertheless, the supply now mestic $11 13, United States internal $33, and United States held is sufficiently large, in fact more than sufficient to meet all possible customs $5—make a total of $49 13 per capita paid by the Mannfac’es and productions $3,302,168 Slaughtered animals Gross receipts Licenses Income 69,243 - $615,103 1,730,760 7,18ft1 . people of Chicago. Omitting customs, the internal taxes paid are about $44 per capita. Catcat JHonetarg anil Commercial (Smglist) Neros. RATES OF EXCHANGE AT AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON LATEST OATES. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— J ONE 7. EXCHANGE ON LONDON. ♦ LATEST TIME. ON— Amsterdam Antwerp. Hamburg - ... . RATE. short. 1117#@11.18# 3 mouths. 25.40 @25.45 is 13. 9#@13. 9# Paris 2o.32#@25.37# short. 25.15 @25.22,5* Paris 3 months. 12.80 @12.85 Vienna ii Berlin 6.25#@ 6.26# 44 Bt. Petersburg 31#@3!# 44 49 @49# Cadiz Lisbon 90 days. 52 @ 52# Milan 3 months. 27.15 @27.25 44 Genoa 27.15 @27.25 44 27.15 @27.25 Naples New York.... Jamaica Havana Rio de Janeiro Bncnos Ayres. — — — — 60 days. — is. id. is. id. # p. c. dis. 44 Madras Calcutta — — Bombay Sydney — — Singapore Hong I£ong... Ceylon — — Valparaiso.... — — Pernambuco.. — 44 30 days. lslld Is lid * Is lid 1 p. c. dis. TIME. DATE. June 7. RATE. short. 44 11.87# 44 44 44 25.20 @ 13. 6#@ 44 44 — — 25.17# 3 mo’s. 25.22 — — — — — — June 7. 3 mo’s. — 31# — June 2. 30 — 53 days. — —_ _ — — June 7. 60 days. IK) days. 60 days. May 10. May 17. May 9. April 26. Abril May May May May 44 44 44 27. 16. 6. 15. 14. J une1. Mav 28. 44 6 mos. 44 44 110 par. 10i@ll p. c. prem. 23#@24 48% @49 46# @47 is. 4«. 23#@ — 3#d.@4s. 3#d 5#d.@ — — 44 44 44 May 30. April 27. 30 days. Is. ll#d. 1*. Is. ll#d. ll#d. 1# p. c. prem. wants. The new Russian loan which has just appeared may absorb a small portion of our surplus funds, but it is only for £2,000,000, in payments extending to the 15th of November, while as the proceeds of the loan are to be devoted to the construction of a railway from Arel to Vitebsk, there is every probability that by far the greater proportion will be spent in this country. This lailway, when completed, will con¬ nect the ceutral part of Russia, that, viz., between Moscow and Russian Poland, with its Western ports, and will be the means, therefore, of augmenting the productiveness of one of the most fertile districts in Russia. A new Russian loan is also to be brought out at Berlin uext week. It is to be for £3,000,000, and its object is to construct a rail¬ way fiom Kiev to Odessa, and will therefore develop the resources of another fertile region, and one which has Jong been famous for its crops of grain. As soon as these lines of railway shall have been completed, St. Petersburg and Odessa will be connected, the course of the railway being from St Petersburg to Moscow ; from Moscow to Orel; from Arel to Vitebsk ; from Vitebsk to Kiev, and from Kiev to Odessa. Without railways uo country situated like Russia can progress, aud per¬ haps the pn sent system now in course of development will be the means of enabling her to secure a more important position, as it will certainly tend to increase her export trade, especially in grain. An Italian loan is in embryo, viz., for £20,000,000, for which the ecclesias¬ tical estates will be hypothecated. This will not be out probably for some time to come, and will be introduced in Italy, France and Eng¬ land ; but some doubts are entertained with regard to its success, more especially as regards this country in particular. At present, therefore, there seems but little probability of anything transpiring likely to check the downward movemeut in the value of money. Financial causes the moat probable, for trade is still very slack, and shows little sign of general improvement. Annexed are the quotations so far as regards the best descriptions of paper : appear Per Cent. Per Cent 2% @2% 30 to 60 days’ bills 3 mouths’bills In a 2%@2% commercial point 2%@3 2%@8 3 @3% 4 months’ bank bills 0 mouths’ bank bills 4 & 6 months’ trade bills.... of view, the changes since last week are few, unimportant. In cotton, however, a good busiuess has been transacted, and prices as regards American produce have advanced to the extent of $d. per lb. At Manchester there has been less animation in the demand for grain and cloth ; nevertheless, late and in most 777 THE CHRONICLE. 1867.] June 22. The arrivals of gold during the week have amouuted The prices of bullion are now as under : dency. to about £190,000. GOLD. St Bar Gold do Fine . oz.'standard. .per do 9 77 77 75 73 76 price last do Spanish Doubloons per oz. do South American Doubloons... United States Gold Coin do Refinable do d. 77 9 11 6 9 3 s. @@— @76 @— @- SILVER. S. cases Bar Silver do containing Fine Cake Silver Mexican Dollars standard. do peroz. 5 grs. gold 5 5 5 4 peroz. peroz. . d. d. s. o% @0% @5% @- 10% @- Quicksilver, £6 17s. per bottle; discount 3 per cent. As stated above, in numerous realizations the value of Consols has prices are fully supported. Respecting the crops in this country, the accounts from all quarters given way this week. A large amount of money stock has been sold, this week are very favorable. The rains of the present week have* . , . , . . , , . . , I but considering the magnitude of the done much good, aud almost every crop promises to yield an abundant T any mtans be viewed in an un¬ . . per cent, since Saturday last cannot by return. Hay is now beginning to attract the attention of the farming favorable light. On the other hand, there can scarcely be a doubt that community, and there is no doubt that there will be an abundant yield, the Consol market is inherently firm and satisfactory. Two failures the only anxiety being respecting the state of the weather, whilst the are announced on the Stock Exchange of parties who had been specu¬ crop is being harvested. It is now a generally admitted fact that the lating for the fall. The highest and lowest prices of Consols each day average of land under wheat cultivation in this country i9 larger than during the week are subjoined : in years past, and with the present favorable aspect of the plant, and Sat. Thur. Friday. Tuesday Wed’y. their appearance Weekending Juue8. vionday. the very full oars of corn which have already made 94 -94% 93%-94 93%-94 >4 94% -94% 94,%-91% 94%-91% Consuls for money in some of the forward southern countries, th» re i9 every prospect of In American securities the amount of busiuess transacted is very more than an average yield. In France, the prospects are equally en¬ couraging. Your readers may remember that during the rapid up¬ moderate. United States 5-2(K bonds have declined in value f per ward movement in prices here last autumn, when exaggerated reports cent., but Atlantic and Great Western consolidated mortgage bonds were in circulation respecting the deficiency of the French crop, I have realized enhanced quotations. Erie Railway shares are fiat, but observed that it would uot be at all unlikely if as we approached a Illinois Centrals have ruled steady. United States 5-20 bonds close fresh harvest, we should find that France had purchased more of Black this afternoon at 72$ to 73, Atlantic and Great Western Railway con¬ solidated mortgage bonds 24 to 25, Erie Railway shares 39$ to 40$ Sea Wheat than she required, and would tranship a considerable quan¬ tity to this country. I then noticed that the Imperial Government, in and Illinois Central 78$ to 79. The highest and lowest prices of the order to keep the price of bread in France at a comparitively low point, principal American securities each day during the week are sub¬ would of itself order supplies to the South of Russia. As the French joined : HIGHEST AND LOWEST PRIORS OF PRINCIPAL AMERICAN SECURITIES. crops are always earlier than ours, and the internal arrangmeuts for Sat’rday. collecting the necessary information more perfect, the government is Week ending June 8. Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. 72%-73 72%-73 72%-73 enabled to ascertain at an earlier period the extent of the ultimated 73 -73% 72% -73% 72%-73 Atlantic & G’t. Westdeficiency, and the French therefore become buyers of wheat at Odessa 25 -26% 24%-25% 124 -24% 24 consol’d bonds 23%-23% 25%-26 39%-40% 39%-.... 39%-40% 39%-.... Erie Shares ($100).. 40%-,... 41 and other Black Sea ports, when there is a short crop, sooner than we 7 8%-79 78%-79 Illinois shares ($100) 77%-7S% 78%-79% 78%-78% 78%-... In nearly all such cases, however, the purchases made are in excess of the actual requirements, and this year seem9 to have formed no excep. Eu^UnIi JJIarket Rcports-Fer Cal»le. tion to the rule. Advices from the various French ports state that con The repairs of the broken cable were completed, and communication siderable supplies of foreign wheat will be shipped to this country restored at 6 A. M. on the 19th inst. during the next few weeks. This fact, combined with the favorable London Money Market.—American securities closed lower and rail¬ , . - , recent advance, the decline of 1 . * -.... ern -... both here and abroad, have produced much heaviness but ls.@2s. per quarter lower than on Monday. At present, however, there seems no probability of any decline of importance in the quotations. The annexed statement shows the extent of our importations of cereals into the United Kingdom in May, and during the five months ending May 31. The return is as complete as I can make it; but I may observe that in regard to May ibis year, the importation embraces a period of 28, and uot 31 days. The figures, therefore, are rather below the actual import. Imports of grain, Ac., into the United Kingdom in May : 1867. 1866. harvest prospects in the trade for wheat, and prices are 1864. Oats Peas Beans Indian Flour 361,918 77,089 828,564 314,749 cwt,. 2,816,701 1,270,209 1,049,528 07,904 131,199 109,556 .. ;.. Barley 1,244,234 261,601 85.697 Wheat 1865. 414,376 ..... 59,566 Corn Imports of grain, Barley ........ Oats Peas Beans Indian Corn Flour 8,285,541 2,099,576 1,412,5 ?3 261,580 423,755 687,832 2,400,530 last 903,148 153,223 5,389,222 3,504,383 2,342,020 138,455 380,518 1,677,935 1,300.125 12,055,106 3,009,703 3,298,804 533,166 792,721 3,427,273 1,367,400 the rates of interest on the generally speaking are quiet and the rates tend downwards. The supply of bullion held by the Bank of France is now £34,430.000, while discounts are reduced to £19,346,000. The following are the quotations at the chief Continental Very few changes have taken place in during the week. The markets Continent cities: /—B’k rate—, /—Op. m’kt—, 1866. 1867. 1866. 1867. 2 4 3% 2% At Paris 6 4 4 5 Vienna 9 2% 4 9 Berlin.... 7 l%-2 2% Fraukfort 7 3 6% 2 -2% Amst’ril’m 6% .... .. /—B’k rate—, /—Op. m’kt—. 1866. 1867. 1866. 1867. Tnrin 8 5 nom Brussels ..6 3 5 2%-2% Madrid 5 < nom ... Hamburg. St. Petb’g. 5% — 7 The 94% 73% 79% 40% 25% Tues.18. Wed. 19. Thu. 20 94% 91% 94% 79 40 26 .... prices daily for U. S. 73% 79 39% 25% ' 78 77% 77% Bank of Holland has recmced its rate of discount to 2$ per 78 77% 77% ceut. Market.—The pales for the week ending on the the trade, aud 18,000 for export, Ac. The stock on hand at that date was 861,000 bales, of which 451,000 bales were American. The current week has been quiet, and closed with a downward tendency. The daily sales and last quotations of each Liverpool. Cotton 14th amounted to 61,000 bales to day have been as follows : Hales sold Price Mi.id. ITplds. “ “ Orleans 12,000 Fri., 14. Sat,., 15. 10,000 ll%d. ll%d. ll%d. ll%d. Liverpool Breadstuff8 Mon., 17. Tnes., IS. Wed., 19. Tim. 20 11 %d. 11 %d. ll%d. ll%d. ll%d. 8,000 ll%d. 8,000 8,000 10,000 ll%d. 11 Market.—Corn has declined on the week Is. at 13s. 6d.@9d. for California Barley is firm at Id. advaace? 3d., and Peas 6d. Wheat closed firm Wheat. Milwaukee Wheat is nominal. The course of the market is reported as follows ; Fri. 14. Sat. 15. Mon. 17. s. d. &. d. s. d. Wheat (Mil. red No. 1) p. ctl 13 38 4 3 37 (Califor. white) “■ Corn (West. mx’d) p. 4801bs Barley( American) per GO lbs Oats (Am & Can.) per45 lbs Peas.. .(Canadian) per qtr. “ G 6 8 7 6 13 38 6 6 4 3 8 7 37 6 13 38 4 3 37 Fri. 14. s. d. 130 0 i 75 0 Pork(Etu. pr. mess) p 200 lbs (Cumb.cui) p. 112 lbs (American) “ “ Bacon Lard Cheese (fine Am.) “ “ 41 50 64 0 0 0 Tns. 13. Wed. 19. Thn s. 8 7 6 d. 6 0 9 7 0 13 38 4 3 37 6 0 -Beef and bacon are Liverpool Provisions Market. advanced—beef to 132s. 6d. and bacon to 41s. 1%-1% on the week, and lard is 3d. lower. Cheese is 7 no 6% 7%-8% The daily closing quotations are given below : foreign exchange the variations during the week have not been important. As regards the bullion market there has been a great want of activity Gold, however, has commanded rather more attention for export; but silver has ruled heavy, and the quotations have had a drooping ten- 73 79 39 26 73% 79 40 26 6’a at Frankfort have been as fol¬ - In the rates of Mon. 17. 94% 73% 73% 79% 40% Atl.&Gt.W. C. bds.,’90. in five months :— 9,342,578 * 3,306,640 2,660,719 363,090 197,324 4,900,140 2,75S,784 Bat. 15. 91% Consols for money U S. G’h(18G2) Illinois Central shares.. Erie Railway shares 2,7* 3,276 2S3,863 807,116 147,740 142,110 1,138,879 237,009 2,159,170 698,215 been as follows : quotations of each day have The closing lows: Frankt.nt reported firm. The U. S. 6’s, though lower, are weak. Fri. 14. ' Ac., into the United Kingdom Wheat road shares s. d. 13 6 87 4 3 37 6 firm, 9 7 0 s. 20. d. 13 37 4 3 37 9 7 3 9 0 and have 6d. Pork has lost Isnominal at former rates. Thu 20 Sat. 15. Mon 17.’Tues IS. WedL 19. s. d. *■ s. d. .8. d. S. Ia. S. ([1. 132 G 132 6 130 0 130 0 0 130 74 0 74 0 75 0 75 0 75 0 41 6 41 6 41 6 0 41 41 6 49 9 50 0 50 0 50 0 50 0 64 0 61 0 . .. .. .. ... Liverpool Produce Markets.—The course has been remarkably steady throughout the week, anti prices without material change. Ashes are firm at 6d. advance ; Rosin is without change ; Spirits of Turpentine is 9d. lower ; Petroleum Id. higher ; tallow steady at a decline from the highest of 8d. ; clover seed unchanged. The closing prices daily are shown in the following table - Ashes—pots Rosin (com 112 lbs per VVilm ). “ “ (fine) : ’ Wed. 19. Th Fri. 14. Sat. 15. Mon 17. Tu. 18. 8. C 8. d. s. d. 8. d. 30 30 0 30 6 30 0 7 7 0 7 0 7 0 12 0 12 12 0 12 0 32 32 0 32 0 32 0 d. 30 0 7 12 32 Sugar (No.l2Dch std) p. 112 (Calcutta). “ cake (obl’g)... “ Linseed “ “ oil “ Whale oil, p. The 252 galls following are 12 31 34 10 54 0 (8c. pig mxd num) p. ton. Tin (Straits & Banca) p. 112 lb firm and “ decline noted firmer, and both are quotations unchanged. corn and have regained all the peas yesterday. Ashes and tallow have 12—Steamer advanced, the first to 31s. and the latter 44s. Other articles of American production are unchanged No change is Dotable in London except Whale Oil, which is quotec Ii England has increased £562,000. dise, the total being £4,995.809, against $4,226,685 last week, and $6,950,715 the previous week. The exports are $3,0S5,804 this week, against $8,829,587 last week, and $2,437.899 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week weie 12,990 bales, against 6,010 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) June 14, and for me week endiug (for general 1864. In POR EARNINGS 3,956,946 $1,213,042 1,457,394 1867 $2,009,003 $925,695 4,070,809 7,046,742 $5,0S8,S52 $2,670,436 110,054,789 64,736,833 $9,055,745 14o,638v721 $4,995 809 113,831,587 $115,143,641 $67 40i\274 $155,694,466 $113,827^396 .. .... 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 18 : EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. - 1864. 1865. 1866. For the week $5,231,326 $2,105,979 Previously reported 72,275,033 Since Jan. 1 $77,506,359 The value of of $145,« 11 $1,314,626 $1,459,637 FOR the following we compare of the under-named railroads for June, Atlantic & Ot Wesferu Chicago & Nor;hwestern... 1,032 1,147 Chicago, Rock Is. & Pacific. 410 410 Cleveland and Toledo Detroit and Milwaukee Marietta and Cincinnati 188 251 173 Michigan Central Michigan Southern 524 Western Union 177 285 173 188 251 2S5 524 177 '3,547 3,660 IN WEEK FIRST THE M. of road—. /—Gross 1866. 1867. 1866. 507 507 $107,^39 road*) 800 800 r the repot ted weekly earnings 18(36 and 1867: FOR THE JUNE. Earn’gs earn’gs-^ p. m 1867. 1866. 1867. $95,073 $212 70 218,651 96,019 211,984 70,270 39,189 34,S32 22.329 211 87 23419 264 89 161 04 96 52 $187 52 185 14 171 39 72,804 81,518 67,410 71,065 255 45 155 57 2:36 52 135 62 $700,796 $627,729 $197 29 $17151 45,825 30,277 24,226 SECOND 132 54 15,577 23,637 an average loss in 1867 as against mile of road operated, or a falling off equal to 226 52 1S5 24 88 96 8811 1866 of $25.78 per 13.07 per centum. WEEK IN JUNE. t—M. of road-^ /—Gross earn’gs—» 1866. 1867. 1866. 1867. 7l)5 705 Atlantic and Gt. Western... $123,524 $102,394 1866. $178 04 191,808 83,179 214,974 61,518 202 87 187 75 150 04 32,739 21,556 35,112 22,436 174 14 85 83 186 76 89 33 89,920 23,456 73,941 171 65 14,829 132 52 141 10 83 78 25 41 Chicago and Northwestern. 1,032 1,145 410 410 Chicago, Rock Is. & Pacific. CleVelaud aud Toledo Detroit aud Milwaukee Marietta and Cincinnati 17 3 188 251 285 524 177 Michigan Central Michigan Sent hern Western Union 173 188 251 285 524 177 3,287 1,400 Total 1866. report of the dry-goods trade will be found the our 877 1 Previously reported THE WEEK. 1865. $M31,9fl6 Drygoods General merchandise... Since Jan. 1 | 4,S00 38,874 Earn’gs 185 81 p. m-^ 2867. $145 24 : FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK Previously reported “ —showing Imports and Exports for thb Week.—The imports this week show coneiderabie decrease in dry goods and a large gain in general mercfmn Total for the week.. 1 Arizona, 200 400 — 12S 1 EARNINGS merchanJise) June 15 “ ... Total (9 COMMERCIAL AIND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. a Gold Silver 14—Steamer Mississippi, Havre Gold 14—Schr Hannah, Belize, Honduras— Gold Silver i 745 Aspinwall— at £34 10s. The Bullion in the Bank of '1 Arizona, Gold Silver 13—St. A. B. Patterson, Total for the week “ 7S7 Moro Castle, Havana— $96,800 1| June 13—St. Havre— Gold “ have been, as Total since January 1, 1867 Railroad Earnings (weekly).—lu American. Breadstuff's 1852 11—Steamer St. Laurent, 54 0 Liverpool cotton market is quiet and steady. The sales of the past week amounted to 65,000 bales, of which 18,000 bales were for speculative export. The stock in port is 824,000 bales, of which 429,000 are 1854 1853 Laguayra— Aspinwall— 20 The bales 1855 Gold Gold Friday, June 21, P.M. Consols have declined and closed at 94£. are 1857 1856 : 11—Steamer ,, Latest: American Secuiities $11,870,151 20,056,996 12,2:16,930 15,696,472 14,364,938 7,918,836 10 518,262 1858 $43,534,278 17,521,047 27,411,833 19,931,040 21,749,363 3,024,822 18,429,776 31,431,107 Gold 34 10 54 0 54 0 Same time in Southampton— . 54 0 54 0 $22,873,174 . ... 8—Steamr. Allemania, June the quotations for metals: Iron 1, 1867 imports of opecie at this port during the week The reporting.- 34 10 34 10 Total since Jan. Same time in 1866 1865 1864 1863 1862-... 1861 1860 1859 follows 1 0 43 42 Fri. 14. Sat. 15. Mon. 17. Tu 18. Wd. 19. Th. 25 25 0 25 0 lbs. 25 0 25 0 25 0 04 0 64 04 0 64 0 64 0 64 0 £915 £9 15 £9 15 £9 15 0 £9 15 0 £9 15 42 IK) 42 U0 42 00 42 00 42 00 42 00 “ 130 00 (115 00 Sperm oil 7 20,088,211 Previously reported quotation for Saturday last is probably an error in on 30 1 0 43 42 “ oil at £115 8. 8. Sp turpentine “ 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 Petroleum (std white).p. 8 lbs 0 0 7 0 7 0 7 spirits....per8 lbs 44 0 44 0 44 0 43 9 Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs. 42 0 42 0 42 0 42 0 Clover seed (Am. red) “ London Produce and Metal Markets —'No change. *1 he sperm [June 22, 1867, tee chronicle. 778 72,354,033 an average los3 in 1867 us against 1866 of $17.89 per a.ile of road operated, or a falling off equal to 10.37 per centum. Comptroller of the Currency and Certified Checks.—The follow¬ ing letter was written by the Comptroller of the ident of the Bank of the Commonwealth in this $102,195,879 the specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the fol- on the 5th inst. was mented last week : Treasury Department, Office of Comptroller - ) Currency. 1 Washington, June 5, 1867. ok the Dear Sir.—I notice your by Mr. Callender’s report of his examination of bank two points to which I desire to call your attention. I refer to the certification of brokers'checks in excess of actual balances, and The first 1 presume to be au abuse of to the i*sue of cashier’s checks. This week. Since This week. Since to be a necessity in the transaction of busi* Probably you would reject without hesitation $2,803,262 3 4,o33 ' 108,354 Hnyti 629,793 a proposition to certify in this way for your depositors without Other W. I 95,822 164,118 3,404,665 discrimination, aDd very few outside of a particular class would have Mexico 478,459 76 <,473 Germany the impudence to demand the privilege ol overdrawing their accouuts. New Granada... Other N.Europe 28,727 27,583 1,418,238 Venezuela 13,774 Spain 316,691 How it happens that brokers alone claim this extraordinary indulgence Other S. Europe 106,325 2,342,006 Br. Guiana....1. 55,342 595,424 I am not prepared to explain. Why they cannot trusL each other instead Brazil East Indies 31,722 1,273,475 of Other S.A. ports requiring each oilier to put forward his bank as the responsible China <fc Japan 109,536 1,172,615 1, 80,612 Australia 1,003,131 All other ports. 40,541 party in all transactions I will leave you to explain. It only seems to 746,851 Br.N A Colonies 40,023 1,126,0*6 me that the demand is utterly unreasonable, and one that the banks The following will show the exports of specie from the port of New would not only be justified in rejecting, but one that prudence would York for the week ending June 15, 1867 : require them to repudiate. I do not say this as bearing particularly June 12—St. Scotia, Liverpool— June 14—Bg. O. Barter, Ponce— upon your particular case, but upon the practice in general; and I am American Gold American Silver $960,000 62,500 much gratified to learn from Mr. Callender that you have "expressed a Gold Bars 14—St. Corsica, Havana— 147,533; readiness to lend \our co-opeiation to some practicable remedy. Mexican Silver American gold 9,958 i 40,000 As to the second point, I ground my objection to the issue of cashiers’ 13—St. Deutchland, Bre¬ 14—Allcinania, Hamburg— men— American gold checks upon the law. A National bank can borrow money in either of 50,000 Silver Bars Foreign silver 1,500 129,974 three different ways—by issuing bills of exchange, by receiving de¬ London— Foreign Silver 1,500 American Gold ceits, and by the issue of circulating notes. I find no other method 14—St. Laurent, Havre60,000 £ • Gold & Silver Bars 50,314 Foreign Silver 15,300 authorized in section eight of the law which defines your corporate Gold Bars Southampton9,500 irivilegep. If a cashier’s check is issued in payment of a depositor’s Gold & Silver Bars American Silver... 40,981 5,090 check it is paid out in lieu of the money called for by the depositor, 13—St. Columbia, H evana— American gold.... 225,000 and as such would be prohibited by the last clause of section twenty14—St. City of Paris, Liv¬ Spanish Gold 39,475 American To Great Britain... France Holland & Belg. $1,691,873 Jan.1,1867 $50,743,890 6,164,145 2,348,SiO 10,266,124 714,611 450,767 To Cuba Jan. 1. a practice which has ness grown in New York. .... . . “ .... “ “ .... .... “ ... ii “ •* n Oi i * ~ ir _ ' it “ Silver... American Siiver... Total for the week 12,534 t,000 -i i i i. t\ • v • erpool— American gold. .. 918,944 $2,784,963 ; rise to the rumor which prevailed soon afterwards that about to interfere with the practice of the banks in re¬ certifying their customers’ checks, and upon which we com¬ Treasury lation to $90,307,132 exports from this port to different countries (exclusive Currency to the Pres¬ city and this gave $3,085,804 87,221,328 $74,457,-62 $172 —showing 1867. $2,397,972 100,097,907 $506,182 $525,204 three. If the ‘ depositor has the money to his credit he is entitled to receive it; if he has not, you are tinder no obligation to pay the check at all. 4 June TEtE CHRONICLE. 22', 1867.] In a personal interview with you I could talk-of these things in a way that would not be objectionable ; in a letter there i9 necessarily more of formality, and what I say may seem more dictatorial. I only wish you to understand that my only desire and study is how best to pro¬ mote the interest entrusted to my charge, and I am confident that with the assistance and co-operation of the New York banks the national banking system can be made all that its most ardent friends could de¬ sire. But the New York bankers must take the lead—must give tone and hearty support. It rests with them to direct, control and the system. If they would realize how much depends upon should have no fears for the future. Very respectfully, perfect them, I yours, H. R. Holburd, Comptroller. Hon. E. Haight, President National Bank of the Commonwealth, New York city. New York and N. H.. Ohio & Mississippi ($100) .. Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic. Reading St. L., Alton & T. H.... do do do pref. Tol., Wabash & Weat’n... do pref. ing company was held at Boston on Wednesday. The Treasurer’s re¬ port shows that the year ha9 been one of prosperity, during which div¬ idends amounting to twenty-five per cent, were paid. The dividends from the establishment of the mills had averaged 13 37-100 per cent annually. The reserve fund at the close of the year was $515,079 61 ; value of cloth and prints on hand $268,627 ; and the total stock $541,246. Gross profits of the year $295,250 64. Profit atid loss balance to the new account $495,199 99. A new mill is in process of construc¬ tion, which will contain 19,000 spindles, so that when completed the would have about 100,000 spindles in operation. About $40,000 worth of machinery had been added during the last six months. company Coal—-American “ Ashburton “ Cumberland “ Del. & Hudson “ Wilkesbaire Gas—Citizens The PAYABLE. iiAlli name of oompahv. CuOK8 o’t. p. CLOSED. WHERE. WHEN. 24,237 130 8,300 2,200 4,930 30 2,932 *900 4,000 100 &50 600 600 400 250 625 1,000 733 200 616 1,100 4,700 1,500 1,890 8,000 700 300 400 200 450 600 100 400 300 800 100 .... 900 300 1,100 .... 600 3,474 14,390 1,800 200 40G .... 100 900 100 1,650 5,700 1,400 650 50 100 . 200 . .... liO 300 2u0 .. Express—Adam s .. . “ 3,280 .... 620 300 ... 240 757 .350 150 100 .... 5 250 . . . 2,325 1,900 600 . 6,253 2,250 9,590 10,752 1,520 500 590 . 3,610 10 .... 88 123 645 205 DUO .... .... 100 600 300 2,333 5,671 30 100 .... 200 100 .... .... 100 800 300 1.250 300 1,050 1,015 .... .... „ .... 1,227 164 200 American. Merchants* United States... Wells. Far. & Co “ 1,250 . .... 400 300 100 825 100 1,438 . .... .... 200 600 10) . .... .... .... 1,025 .... ... Pacific Mail “ 400 30 J00 500 45 74 200 500 .... 100 .... 200 .... ... 100 ' .... .... .... Jdegravh—West’n Union Steamship—Atlantic Mail. “ u 100 15 100 *100 .... .... "74 Cautou 810 355 350 2,045 860 1,455 tent, State and City and other bonds sold Sat. U. S. 6’s, 1881 U.S 6’s (5-20’s). U.S 6’s (old) U.S. 5’s(10-40s) U.S 5’s (old) U. S 7-30 notes. $5,000 807,200 . are Tues. Mon. $ S59,700 ... .... $.... 384,000 35,100 State Bonds, viz.: 58,000 .... Thur. $ 630,000 ... 10,666 48,700 2,000 109, >00 120,000 .... 12,500 36,000 277,700 7,000 10,000 71,000 366,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 130,000 7,000 1,000 328,500 4,000 23,000 11,000 7,000 34,666 26,500 31,000 71,660 .... .... ... Week. Fri. $ $5,000 255,000 3,3.7,900 19,666 .... 47,010 78,900 15,000 .. Wed. $ 412,000 200,666 ... the at given in the following statement: Regular Board, daily and for the week, 1,666 .... 21,000 29,000 3,666 17,666 53,000 Virginia 6’s.... City Bonds, viz following Dividends have been declared during the past week : 4,020 .... “ ... DIVIDENDS, 4,755 .... .... Mining— Mariposa Pref.. Quicksilver Improvin't—Bost.W. Pow California 7’s... Missouri 6’s New York 7’s.. “ “ 6’s.. N. Carolina 6’s. Rhode Islandfi's Tennessee 6’s.. ®l]c Sanfeeru’ ©imttc. 3,600 Miscellaneous shares, viz “ Manufactures.—The annual meeting of the Merrimack Manufactur¬ 77** 29,666 14,666 22,000 4,000 500 220,000 1,500 1,000 : Brooklyn 6’a... Company Bonds, viz : Railroad 30,000 1,(00 Telegraph.. 1,000 1,000 14,000 .... 31,500 16,000 150,000 3,000 26,500 32,000 2,000 .... Banks. 5 5 7 5 5 6 5 5 5 5 4 5 .. .. Marine National Fourth National Hanover National Mechanic**1 iNational North River. ... Eighth National Manufacturers’ National.. Bank of a me »ca Tenth National 5 5 National Shoe <fc Leather »t allroads: New 5 ork & Harlem New York & Harlem pref . Eastern of New Hampshire Boston & Worcester Boston and Providence... Phil., Wilmington & t 4 5 5 4 4 4 5 alt.. ... 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. July July 3% July 5 July Qreit Western Marine. Kings County Fire Mining. June 25 to June 25 to Jnly 15 .July 2. July 3. July 3 to July 12. 22 to July 5. June Ji ne 25 to 4 BUSINESS AT June 22 to July 1. June 20 to July 1 June 20 to July 2. Broadway. STOCK BOARDS following statement shows the description and number ot shares sold at the Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday: The Mon. Sat. 82 Bank Shares 115 Wed. 61 400 350 100 100 50 2,300 Tues. 115 Thnrs. Fri’y. 190 118 Week. 60 8d0 400 50 50 100 15) 2,200 6,100 15,700 21,673 2,460 10 Jersey... Chicago & Alton, do do • ♦ • • • • • 100 pref Chic. Burl. & Quincy • m . + .... m . . s .... 2,300 l,6u0 3,400 3,806 4,167 2,600 3,500 Chic., Rock Is. & Pacific. 5,3:30 20 Clev., Coi. and C ncinnati Cleveland & Pittsburg.... 1,000 2,700 2,725 3,300 4,150 Brie Railway 6,800 Chicago & Northwestern. 2 900 Pref. 2,500 do do 2.100 , Cleveland and Toledo Hannibal .& St. Joseph... ■do do pref.. 9,300 2,100 3,200 • • • a Illinois Central Indianapolis & Cinn ....... Michigan Central Michigan Southern Milwaukee & 8t. P to do pref.... . ... Harlem Hudson River 5,100 3,300 6,250 400 60 m ^ . 54 • .... , • • • t . 200 800 300 mm ** 1,200 1,500 7,800 • 295 295 100 4,100 6,600 10 100 700 • • 400 2,400 19,000 7,400 39.500 300 100 300 100 . . .... • . . . 300 60 250 .... . in the city was increased by ou Government account of three and a Seven-thirty notes. Compound interest notes are The disburse¬ June Seven-thirties which fell 15th inst., amounting to about nine millions, has also purchased to some extent. the coupons of on had some influence had were the notes held like other government securities, in such a on the market, but much less than it would have that the greater part of coupons would be presented for pay¬ ment as soon as due. anticipations which have been held by many of a stringent market in the latter part of June, in consequence of the pre paration by the banks for their statement on Ihe first of July, show no signs as vet of being realized. It is probable that the compara¬ tive inactivity iu business, and consequent small demand for loanable funds usually prevailing at this season has been too little considered by those who have looked for an increased stringency in money. The most noticeable leature of the market at the present time is the money unimportant demand for loans, it being difficult to find employment for the funds offering. Call loans, on stock collaterals, are generally 6 per cent.; in Governments the rate is 5 per cent. Discounts continue quiet, with ofleii .g aud few buyers , prime uames pass second class at 8i@12 per cent. little paper cent; The 80 8,050 .... . . 4,700 10 300 the resources Wednesday following are the quolatious 13,800 .... 4,000 7u0 2,700 • • 155 800 • • 750 1,500 1,600 • 300 1,700 .... .... • 10 .... .... reuuced due 20,6U5 681 Railroad shares, viz. Central of New were The June 21. Far. L. & T. Co. THE on ment of interest on way , But’er Coal purchase also said to have been — 73 The amount of loanable half millions of 11 Wall Street. 191 Broadway. 39 William ot. 8 Pine St. July 1. curtailed $11,079, and the loans was $4,248,833 during the week. the — July 1. 4 Union 20 to July 5. 20 to July 5. Philadelphia. 1. l. 1. 1. tendency towards greater ea*e in the money market noticed in our lust report has continued, and the rates-on call loans to-day on the ordinary stock collaterals are nearly one per cent, below the quotations of a week ago. The returns of the city banks for the week ending June 15 showed a gain in the legal tender reserve of $2,001,187, with a loss in the specie reserve of $3,042,649, and in the deposit line of $4,412,572. The circulation 1 3* . Jnly 2. June 29 5 Fire buaruiaa Mutual Life... T, ust. <uue 21 to Bo-to a. Boston. 15. Mercantile Bank 1. Union Nat. B’k. 3. i< ar. L. <fc T. Co. 10. Far. O. & T. Co. 1. Treasur’d Office. 5 10 Hamilton Fire . Boston. July Juiy July July July July 1. 4 Biooklyn Fire Mnnrfink Ju y 3 Norwich & Worcester New York & N ew Haven.. Connecticut River Insurance. 1. July 1. July 1. July 1. 5 4 5 Michigan Central 1. Friday, June 21,1867, P. M. Tfie Money Market.—The July 1. Company’sOffice June Julv 1. Company’sOffice June Boston. July 1. Boston. July 1. 4 4 Boston & 1 oweli Eastern RaProad Rome Waterr. & Ogdens . liartford & Ve* Haven.... At Bank. At 1 ank. At Back. .at Bank. At Bank. At Bank., At Bank. At Bank. At Bank. At Bauk. At Bank. At Bauk. At Bank. At Bank. At Banfc. Jnlv 1. July July Juy Jnly Ju*y Juiy July Broadway. At Bank. Jnly 1. July 1. luiyl. July 1. 5 5 People’s 108 Jnly 1. July 1. July 1. July 1. July 1. 6 Metropolitan Bank of N Y. Nat. B’k Ass. Central National Tradesmen’s National National Bntch. & l.’rov Merch. Exchange Nat’l .. .... .... .... 100 100 ... . 7,200 ... 800 20 1,500 at 7@8 per for loans of various classes Per cent. Call loans. Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 2 months - 6 6 7 @<§r 7 @8 : Per cent. Good endorsed bills, 4 months do single names Lower grades f 3& 8 9 @9 tf&lO 11 ®15 has shown less activity in Government securities thau the previous one, though all 1,055 28.500 classes have been firmly held, and no pressure to sell has been 175 8,100 evinced. The quotations at London for the old Five-twenties of o»>4 350 United States Securities.—The week past 1862 have declined this has Lad the effect of stopping quarter, and a purchases in this market by foreign banking houses. To-day, how¬ ever, a rather better demand for foreign account was noticed. For the other public funds a fair inquiry has prevailed. Orders have been received to a considerable extent from the country, in¬ duced by the slightly lower quotations of the past few days. The bonds most in demand with these buyers have been the new Fivetwenties of 1865, and the old Ten-forties; the latter are much sought for of late as an investment, and are held very firmly in consequence. The principal purchases of Seven thirties have been on bank ac¬ count, though later in the week these orders have fallen off, and a renewed demand is not expected till after quarter-day. The following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬ pared with preceding weeks : May 17. May24. 106% JH% 109% 105% 106% 10b 108 111% 109% U. S. 6’s, 1881 coop U. S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupon U. S. 5-20’s, 1864 “ U. S. 5-20’s, 1865 “ U. S. 5-20’s, 1865, N. iss. U. S 10-40’s, U- S 7-30’s 1st series U. S. 7-30’s 2d Series ... U. S 7-30’s 3rd series... May31. June 7. June 14. June21 105% 99% 106% 105% 105% 99% 106% 3 105% 105% 108 99% 1 < '0 % 105% 105% 112% 112% 112% 109% 105% 106% 108% 99% 106% 105% 105% 111% 10!-% 105% 106% [June 22, 1867. CHRONICLE. THE 780 110% 110% 106% 107% 109% 100% 106% 105% 105% 107 . 107% 109% 100% -106% 106% 100% weekly since April 5 are shown in The transactions in shares following statement: the Tele- Steam- Im- Min- Rail- ing. pro’t. graph, ship. Other. Total ending— Bank. ro’d. Coal. 528 465,847 505 May 3 10 11,761 371,270 2,463 “ 17 827 294,415 1,151 826 293,377 2,163 24 934 290,750 1,583 31 dune 7 1,828 314.512 1,381 14 653 397,920 2,586 21 681 224,243 819 Week 6,160 12,150 14.084 12,700 4.946 516,920 3.300 10,150 14,247 17,491 5,680 425 777 3,620 7,500 7,925 8,916 9,358 333 713 “ .. 15,875 11,82S 7,-810 9,350 10,177 17,148 9,978 10,005 16,517 23,295 2,825 2,500 6,253 11,915 5,600 6.950 7,870 4,000 10,050 5,254 “ “ “ “ 6,007 338 679 9,038 333437 6,212 3KMis 6,061 407 615 15,395 204*661 following is a summary of the amount of Government bonds and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds old at the Regular Board on each day of the past week : Sat. Thnr. Mon. Tues. Wed. Fri. Week If. S. Bonds... .$827,200 $906,700 $612,001 $505,500 678,700 272,000 $3,801,000 U. S. Notes .‘15,100 78,900 12,500 109,500 120,000 10,000 366,WO State* City b’ds 74,(MW 116,500 51,000 60,000 84,000 103,500 495,(KM) 14,000 31,500 16,000 34,000 24,500 153,01*) Company B’nds. (31,000 The Total Cur. 690,500 910,700 412,000 4,815,600 891,200 1,00', 500 881,000 713,500 4,775,100 707,000 w’k...$967,3001,116,100 858,400 Previous week... 425,500 The totals, weekly, since April 5 are lation: Week ending May May May May May Company Total City Bouds. Bonds. amount 14'"’, 100 567,200 Bonds. .3,918,600 3 10 17 24 State & Notes. 643.000 203,000 520,006 682,800 238,500 223,200 158,100 4,910,700 5,954,500 4,2(11,900 Governments , Friday. shown iu the following tabu. 4,628.800 , 22.000 3,363,900 4,355,200 1,905,600 3,172,650 3,585,350 515,000 85,100 333,500 68,500 161,500 366,i 00 5,113.400 218.500 3,266,100 SOS. 500 Stocks.—The stock market has 31 4,143,150 15S,000 714,000 June 4,775,100 233,000 795,250 been moderately active since our last report, aud has shown to-day J 14 153,000 4,815,000 495,000 3,801,600 June 21 more lively business than for several days before, closing this The Gold Market has been without any feature of great interest evening at an advance in the prices of nearly all the leading shares. to notice; it has been steady throughout the week, the tendency Speculation seems to be much confined to the brokers, and neither being to slightly higher quotations, and closing this evening at 138. party appears to have had a decided advantage for some time past. The export demand has not been large, the steamers on Wednesday Cornbiued operations have probably been put off until after the 1st taking out less than a quarter of a million. For customs, a more of July, in expectation of a certain degree of stringency in the active demand prevailed in the early part of the week, which has money market, and the present ease in money is a surprise to both sides. The election of officers of several well-known companies lately fallen off’.' The disbursement of coin interest on government bonds the first of July will materially increase the supply on the has lately taken place, and these elections should be carefully ob¬ market, but canuot be relied upon as a cause for decline in quota¬ served by the public, and ought to have an important effect upon the value of the stocks of the companies, at least as an investment. tions, as other influences may have a counterbalancing effect. The fluctuations in the gold market during the week closing with The manipulation of railroad and other stocks by officers and direc¬ tors of the several corporations for their own purposes, has become Friday are shown in the following table : Tone of • HighClos¬ Market. Opening. Lowest. est. Range, imr. so frequent, that the character of the directors having charge of a 137 137% 0% 137% Steady. Saturday, JnnelS 137 137% 137% 0% 137% Firmer. company should afford to purchasers for investment some indication Monday, 44 17 137% .137% 138 Tuesday, 4* 18 137% 137% 138% 0% 137% Steady. &g to whether their stocks will be permitted to stand in the mar¬ 0% 138% Firm. Wednday, “ 19 137% Railroad and Miscellaneous r* une a real value. The business at the two stock boards for the current week amount ed to 264,(501, against the previous week's business 467,615 shares. kets at their The principal stocks sold were—Chicago and Northwestern, common Pacific Hudson 15,700 and preferred 21,673; Chicago, Rock Island and 20,605; Cleveland aud Pittsburg 13,800; Erie 39,500; River 1,500; Michigan Southern 25,500 ; New York Central 24,237; Pittsburg, Fort Wayne aud Chicago 3,474 ; Reading 14,390. The Mining, amounting to—Coal, 819; stocks sold miscellaneous Steamship, shares, Current week Previous week Jan. 1 to date The movement 0% 0%' 137 137 138% 1% 136% 136% 137% 132% 132% 141% 9% 137% 137% 137% receipts from California rmport of coin aud bullion from foreign Treasure Total paid from U. S. Treasury shown in the following formula: ; -. $15,699,038 $16,898,634 against 69,042 shares last week. The following were the closing Apparent excess of supply for Specie in banks Saturday, June 15 compared with those of the six May 10. 31 Cumberland Coal Quicksilver i Canton Co .... Reading Mich. Southern.. Michigan Ceniral Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern.... “ - ^ .... 34% 60% 89% 96% Rock Island Fort Wayne..... Illinois Central .. .... 97% 62% 100% 103 67% 109% 72% 30 • 114 34% 59% 88% 96% 114% • • 30% • .... 25 41% 77% 97 58% 102 103% 68% ' 71% 76% 75 119 .... 31% 56% 87% 95 115 33% 57% 87% 96% 115% 34% 58% . 88% 99 119% . . 19% 102% 60% 59% 108% 308% 107% 306% 70% 68% 113 x.d.107 77% 76% 318 120% 35% 34% 59% 59% 90% 89% 98 97% 120% 101% 111 .... . 20 20% 100% 6(1% 309% 105% 68% .... 98% 58% 1U2% 60% .... . .... .... 27% 28 25 25 43 1(H) 113 113 preferred 27 .... 19% 97% 63% 97% 103% 67% Mariposa pref.... New York Central Erie Hudson River.... June 14 June 21 May 17. May 24. May 31. June 7. ...» 43 preceding weeks ; following statement shows the volume of transactions in boards coujoiutly, on each day ol shares, at the regular aud open the week, closing with this day’s business : The Bank shares Railroad “ Coal “ Wed. Thnrs. Fri. Week. . Sat. 82 Mon. 115 115 61 190 118 681 26,775 ... 41,519 42,781 34,370 37,966 40,832 115 130 200 “ Improv’t “ Telegraph “ Steamship44 Express 44 1,025 3,100 600 620 400 400 825 400 100 1,438 ,250 3,380 1,527 690 44 469 1,007 .... .... 200 2,065 480 ... 100 1,250 2,633 7,331 .... .... 700 300 2,518 15,195 .... 19,919 27,064 17,600 29,890 16,641 21,165 24,766 22,090 29,605 25,012 Total current week. 30,909 46,983 47,490 38,731 Total Previous w% 61,732 94,153 80,492 109,516 2,825 2,500 6,253 11,945 9,759 21,150 . 819 1,520 1,090 . At Regular Board At Open Board... .$2,789,963 ...... 200 109,850 154,811 50,770 49,778 261,661 59,700 62,022 467,615 1,895,713— 4,685,576 $12,212,958 week 12,650,389 $437,431 nnreported sources Only Chaoce” steamboat, nine and a half days from Fort Benton, arrived at St. Josephs, Mo., on the 14th inst., with $500,000 in gold dust and a cargo of buffalo hides and peltries. She met forty-five steamers upward bound, and passed three coming down the river. The bulk of this and other consignments of the The “ precious metals will undoubtedly reach New York in due course swell the volume of the unreported supply. The transactions for the last week at the Custom House and and go to Sub-Treasury were as June follows : Custom House. Receipts. 10 11 12 13 11 15 “ “ 44 “ .1. Total Balance in Sub-Treasury $222,241 13 337,178 67 * 3*3,664 13 32 r,257 60 396,591 71 278,780 24 $1,895,713 48 morning of June 10. -Sub-Treasury- Dednct ReceiDts. Payments. $1,563,316 06 4,614,517 76 .3,327,434 64 3,200,144 92 602,736 71 4,017,126 98 $1,465,816 30 5,004,731 3S 3,440.176 64 3,226,819 47 2,711,140 34 1,985,944 79 $17,331,277 07 $17,834,628 92 224,243 200 500 200 174 100 ’Mining Gas Tues. Deficit made up from “ .... 1,199,596 reported supply for week Export of coin and bullion to foreign ports Paid into U. S. Treasury on account of customs board, $653,262 144,334 402,000-^- ports 2,825; Improvement, 2,500; Telegraph, 6,253; 11,945, and Express 15,195, in the week’s aggregate 39,737 quotations at the regular Steady. this port for the week for in coin and bullion at ending Saturday June 15, was as Specie in hanks Saturday, June 8 Coin interest 137% 137% s/ ... Dull. 137% 137% 137% 137% 137% 137% “ 20 “ 21 Thursday, Friday, 134,112,919 60 $151,947,548 52 17,331,277 07 payments during the week $134,616,271 45 503,351 85 Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $2,176,000. Included in the receipts of customs were $150,000 in gold, and $1,745,713 Balance on Saturday evening Increase during the week in Gold The Certificates. following table shows the aggregate Treasury since April 6 : „ transactions at the Sub- June 4.... 11.... May Balances. Dec. $9,531,366 Inc. 11,905,228 Inc. 6,458,7*9 Inc. 3,583,223 Dec. S.691,487 Inc. 10,529,186 Inc. 503,351 Balances. $2,190,166 $37,933,020 $28,401, £54 ;$110,334,049 28,272,343 16,507,815 17,042,109 1,116,949 2,068,648 2,006,097 18.... 44 25.... June1 1..:. 44 8.... 44 15.... 44 27,547,745 1,955,086 1,789,140 8,317,553 17,331,277 1,895,713 40,177,571 122,239,278 22,966,533 128,697,997 20,625,333 132,281,220 1S,850,257 123.583,7532 18,876,740 134,112,919 17,834,628 134,616,271 Banks for May 31. May Swiss — Hamburg Amsterdam Frankfort @5.12# @5.12# 36*@ 41#@ Bremen Berlin 41 1., 16,881,109 8. 16,800.720 June 15. 16,5)00,010 June June Boston Banks.—The Boston Banks’ statement 30 *@ 79*@ 72#@ 72# 41% . 72# .@ Specie. tion. Capital. $3,000.000 $6,512,186 $2,459,555 $790,473 217,225 12,221 4.794.972 ••2,050,000 60i,043 885,307 6,D0<,833 3,000,000 5*58,000 1*58,912 5 070,215 2,000,000 83,328 480,5‘28 3,802,363 1,500,000 2,025 1,790,736 7,724,255 3,000,000 Ranks. JTew York Manhattan Merchants’ Mechanics’ Union . America Phcenix 1,800,000 1,000,000 City Tradesmen’s 1,000,000 *>00.000 Fulton 300,000 Chemical.. Merchants’ Exchange.... 1,235,000 1,500,000 800,000 *H)0,000 National.... Butchers’— Mechanics and Traders’. 200.000 Greenwich?.. 600.000 500,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 Leather Mannl'. National Seventh Ward, National. State of New York....... American Exchange.. Commerce 10,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 ... Broadway Ocean 3,340,560 3,670,381 3,302,247 2.177.152 5,610,671 3,262,449 2,671,769 2,759,098 1,192,682 3,007,130 1.228.299 4,346,183 9,975,293 22,998.101 5,125,379 3,01*0,483 422.700 2,000,000 450,000 4,891,891 1,761,797 412.500 Mercantile Pacific Republic Chatham People’s North American Hanover 1.414,114 1,873.385 2,53-2,8.84 1,538,000 10,623,765 1,000,000 1,000,000 ; 500.000 Irving Metropolitan 4,000.000 400,000 Citizens - Nassau 1,000,000 1,000,000 Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather Corn Exchange 1,500,000 1,000,000 2,000,000 .750,000 300,000 400,OX) Continental Commonwealth Oriental.. Marine Atlantic Importers and Park 1,000,000 Traders’.. 300.000 1,500.000 2,000,000 795,151 2,527,497 5.210.300 3.481,981 4,386,081 2,715.952 1,206,911 1.908.972 Circulation Circulation (State). 280,961 .. past • 6 tl 92.I9W.587 .. 27 .. 3 J une 92,428,114 .. . it 10 tfc 17... . . . 92,22677 92,694,925 93,136,167 93,725,428 1.137,681 3,327,188 4,390,934 3,473,905 2,371,015 BANK 1,147,972 990,185 781,439 1,511,401 7,249,40-, 2,31*5,241 2,181,474 2,059,691 503,821 36t),808 750,735 830,005 1.922,958 (Marked thus * are 1,17:5,231 730,<587 1*51,881 514,405 576,364 118,178 2,385,812 716,531 2.209,138 not Par America* 4,529 881,757 179,381 4*5,*593 258,311 2,1-0,461 776,718 253 525 Atlantic 3,416.093 1,3155,012 1,384,280 6,205,877 1,401,575 Atlantic Bowery 195,720 178,79*5 187,000 " 712,032 995,265 1,676,954 5,928,245 117.747 30, *58 1 51,731 23,298 413,431 71,7‘25 2*5,9-26 89,3 tO 51,492 ! *00.000 789,490 481,909 111,247 858,750 130,892 0,1586 332,520 288,445 194,845 9,000 154,428 2,192,372 16,899 131,493 83,245 . 851,013 26.010 77,693 26,107 106,945 25,767 10.490 39.8*51 20,1:52 5,390,092 12,219,167 934,308 910,210 74.770 723.505 33,319 4,210 547,976 750,046 944,*556 8,560 570,013 213,727 9,465 1,679,517 685.608 5,118.33*5 7,313.001 4,23*5,505 72 i.449 2.243,327 2,338,423 601,509 4(58,8555 1,609,089 8955,219 3,515,6*55 1,669,754 1,235,825 1.479,299 1,521,281 412,019 191,819 451,438 429.685) 444,000 1,3 >5.000 1,915,(567 393,6*52 4,978,597 1,395,252 1,738,31(5 1,929,529 27.5,657 5:50.752 471,884 9955,5500 981,101 3,122,830 2,2*54,418 2,.583,089 20UHM) 0* 555,000 5*59.1*56 200.010 472,900 291.522 2,169,60-.) 1,010,056 356,900 1,567,080 99,199 975.223 503.090 * 4,291,591 993,500 15,106,101 308.3X1 - 1,159.791 2,839 283,.500 17,862 1,000 859,782 1,109,918 512,01 9.59,018 24,02S 1,675,9-25 10,696,522 6,146 18,590 24,616 80,000 11.081 270,000 927,619 446,7 It 794,500 267,968 906,600 10,677 180,000 90,*HM) 948,643 6,478,658 (Brooklyn). Broadway Brooklyn Bull's llead* Butchers Central Drovers Central (Brooklyn).. Chatham Chemical Citizens’ City Croton Dry Dock East River. Eighth Fifth First First (Brooklyn). ... Fourth Fultou Far. & Cit.(VVm’bg). 3,263.593 series of weeks Bid. Askd 141 July... July ’67.... ...5 .. ■ Jan. ’67 — 4 115 5 6 6 5 12 240 5 1,0*R).<HR5 4 5 6 8 Hanover 115 150* 6 5 220 5 120 5 119 112 6 5 106# 107 6 5)00,000 Jan. 5 122 10 3# 5 4 5 500,000 May and Nov... May ’67 ’67 Jan. and July... Ju too 1(H) 5,(HH),000 Jan. and July.., July’(>• 30 600,000 May and Nov... May ’67 10 10 . 160,(HH) Jau. and July.. 2(H),000 May and Nov.. 3(H).0(K) Jan. and July... 50 1(H) l.OOO.CHM) Jau. and July... 114 6 1,000.00* May and Nov... May '07 20 25 271,049 'Friday. 500,000 Ian. and July... [Jan. ’67 5,0(H).(HHi May and Nov... ;May ’67 3()0,(HH> Ian. and July... Jan. ’67 5(H),* HHi Ian. and July... Jan. ’67 100 283,514 283,491 280,961 279,275 268,768 Last Paid. Periods. Ian. and , State. 283,806 LIST. and July... Jan. ’67 ’67 100,10,600,000 Jan. and July. . Jan. ’67 1(H); 750,000 Jan. and July... Jan. IJun. ’67 100! 2,(K)0,000 Jau. and July... too! 1,000,0<H> Feb.aud Aug... ;Fcb. ’67 200,000 100 Jan. ’67 100,000 .Quarterly 1(H) 5)0 2(H), (HR) Jan. and July.. Jan. ’67 Jan. ’67 50 350,000 Jau. and Julv... 100 250,000 Jan. ami Julv... July '67 1(H) 150,(HH) J an. and July... Jau. '67 Grocers’ 2,441,102 1,213,838 995,649 a 25*'.(HH) Jan. and July.. Jau. ’61 Ian and July... Jan. ’67 SOO.lHHi Jan. and July... Jan. ’67 Apr. ’67 2(H), 000 Quarterly 800,000 Jan. and July .. July ’67 3,(HH),(HH> Ian. and Ju y .. July ’67 200.000 Jan. and July .. Jau. ’67 450.0(H) Jan. and July .. Jan. ’67 May ’67 3*H),(HH) .Quarterly 100 25 4(H), *»()(> Jan. and July... Jau. *67 Greenwich* 311,900 lor . Currency 212.22*5 192,191 288,768 Dividend. 1*>0,(HH- Jan. and July j Commonwealth... Continental Corn Exchange* ... 302,025 3,000,000 1<H>, 50 Commerce 248,059 STOCK Amount. 100 25 1(H) 100 75 50 100 25 50 50 25 100 50 25 36,039,933 24,771,778 271,049 24,804,153 . City (Brooklyn).... 1.172,13-5 3,681,451 524,387 0 of Share. National.) 11,680,271 36,033,716 38,721.760 24,784,332 16,552,421 38,504,761 24,808,992 16,499,3*9 37,874,852 24.83S.469 16,884,361 37,132,051 24,805,860 17,17 V-'- d 37.006,894 24,725,794 16,767,854 36,033,716 24,804,153 15,719,795 36,039,933 24,771,778 APITAIi. Companies. * 11.315,521 16,571,736 511,095 Tenders. 511,095 15,719,795 12,001,098 Deposits. National. Tenders. 589,878 517,597 507,806 4 41,072 571,526 436,767 92,671.149 .. 13 20 436,66? 11,757,854 11,052,106 Circulation. Legal Specie. Loans. 93,436,167 92,694,925 511,526 17,173,901 11,550,243 11, 38,5)50 37,006,894 24,725,794 279,275 comparative totals the 36# .... 12,v(H)0* 24.805,860 America (Jer. City) . American American Exchange. 440.406 12,318 867 10,959,7)06 37,132,051 (National). 257,0*53 1,-231.101 50),0)0 Mechanics’ Banking Ass. 300,0)0 Grocers’ 400.000 1,-291,267 North River 7 930,282 350,00) East River 500,000 1,300,109 Manufacturers & Mer.... 5,000.0)0 Fourth National o,(H>*),000 11,571,991 Central National 1,220,355 5300,000 Second National 5,710,070 1,000,000 Ninth National 500.IMM) 3.0!W,IH)7 First National.... 1 ,(HH),*HK) 2.907,0.351 Third National 5H)0.*HH) 992,5361 New York N. Exchange. 2,920,700 1,0*H).(HH) Tenth National 200.000 1,317,160 Bull’s Head 200,0IH) 561,510 Croton National 267,015 100.000 National Currency. 697,419 250,000 Bowery National. 10,863 316 35,248 21,029 1.450.153 2,038,181 2,707,550 452,318 491.959 27,9*50 June 17. $41,900,000 93,725,428 441,772 Deposits Legal 4,663,951 639.703 111,397 June 10. Deposits. $7,999,506 $3.10.5,002 289,835 493,326 30,977 164,409 1,951,928 3.121,100 1,885,998 1.000,000 14,3.035 of the last compared with those of the three previous $41,(MR),000 Due from other banks. Due to other banks.... May Net Circula- 37,252,614 37,174,269 June 3. Legal tender notes 7834 @79* 72 @72# AMOVNT OF 368,261 following are the footiugs 92,222,677 City Banks.—The following statement shows the coudition of the Associated Banks of New York City for the week ending at the commencement of business on June 15, 1867 : ERASE 346,615 37,778,785) 37,35)2,144 $4l,(KH),(HH) Specie New York Loans and Discounts. 38,25)0,833 10.65)0,831 10,635,55)0 10,637,432 10,642,‘*20 10,016,298 May 24. 40* @ 41 >b 41#@ 41*@ 79#@ 72>j@ 41% 1* >,627,953 334,39) 53,158,124 53,192,049 37,5)71,054 38,172,169 $41,900,(MI0 5.17#@5.12# 5.17#@5.12# . 53,826,320 53.5:16,170 52.747.5)1-8 Deposits. 10.65)9,695 386,053 406,762 4U2,978 369,133 weeks: 21. 5.15 @5.12# 5.15 @5.12# 30 %@ 5.15 5.15 5.15 @5.12 vo 5.15 @5.12X 36%@ 41>j@ 41,Ja@ 41% 79j$@ 72j$@ 12% 25., 16,770.491 16,017,150 • .... ... Antwerp 18., 109*@ 109* 109?8@ 109 sa 109#@ 110*, 110 @ 110* 110*@ 110* 110*@ 5.12# @5.11# 5.17*@5.12# 5.12#@ 5.10 5.10 @ London Comm’l. 109*@ 109* 109*@ 109* 110 @110* do bkrsV/i£ 110 @110* lid%@ do 110%@ do shrt 5.12^@5.11^ Paris, long 5-ll><i@ 5.10 @ do short....... 5.10 @ .... 11. May Philadelphia Circulation. Specie. Loans. Legal Tenders. 17,196,558 53,051,267 53.474.5)88 17,278,919 4.. MayMay Exchange.—The leading drawers have been very firm in their rates, though the business done has been quite modei ate both lor Wednesday’s steamer and for to-morrow’s. Commercial bills are in light supply. At the close the turn is in buyer’s favor, but without any quotable concession from drawers of prime bills. The following are the closing quotations lor the several classes of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : June June 14. a Date. Foreign June 7. shows the condition of the series of weeks. The annexed statement Changes in -Sub-Treasury- Custom House. WeekB 781 THE CHRONICLE. 22, 1867.] 5 l09# 5 Jail. ’67 110 5 10 May '66 Jan. ’67 5 Julv '67 5 iJan ‘67.1&23-10z 116 Jan. ’67 5 1-25 12*) 1,500.0(H) Jan. and July... 131 500,000 Jau and July... 31.228 Irving. ...., 246,181 6 7.913 600,(HH) Feb. and Aug... (Feb. ’67 Leat herManu fact’ rs. 6 635,300 26,100 4(H),000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’67 Long Isl (Brook.) .. 5 6,983 2,050,000 Feb. and Aug.., iFeb. ’67 145,172 Manhattan* 2,683 5 July ’67 252.(HH) Apr. and Oct 110,752 Manufacturers’ 3,430 5 500,(HH) -Ian. and July.. Jan. ’67 190,460 225,000 Manui’ac. <fc Merch.* 150 6 400.000 Jan. and July.. July ’67 Marine Jan ’67 5 1,000.000 Jan. and July.. S2,520,200 246,228,465 12,656,38933,707,109 180,317,7653 57,924,294 118 Market Total 5 2,(RH),000 Jan. and July.. July ’67 Mechanics’ 6 Cleanugs for the week ending June 8, 1867 5(H),000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’67 Mechanics’ (Brook.). 5 iio# Clearings for the week ending June 15, 1867 500.0(H) May and Nov,. May ’67 21,684,131 98 Mech. Bank. Asso... 25 600,(HH) May and Nov.. May ’67 Balances for the week ending June 8, 1867...... 5 .? . Balances for the week ending June 15, 1867 20,8o3,552 14 Meehan. & Traders’. 1(H) l,(HH),(HMt May and Nov.. May ’67 5 Mercantile 5&1 50 5),000,(MM> Jan. and *uly. July’67 The deviations from the returns of the previous are as Merchants’ no 5 50 1,235,000 Jau. audJuly.. July ’67 Merchants’ Exch.. lows: 6 1(H) 4,(HH).(HH) Jan. and July.. Julp ’67 107 Metropolitan 5 105* 1(H) 1,000,000 May and Nov . May ’67 ...Dec. $4,412,572 Nassau*... Loans Dec. $4,248,&33 Deposits Jan. ’67 5 2,001,1S7 3(H),000 J an and J uly. .■ Inc. Nassau (Brooklyn) . 1(H) Dec. 3,042.649 Legal Tenders Specie 6 50 1,500,000 April and Oct.. Apr. 67 Circulation Dec. 125 11,979 National (Gallatin) 5 120 100 3,0(H),(KH> Jan. and July.. July ’67 New York Jan. ’6*'..9&a:2# The following are the totals for a 200,000 Jan. and July.. New York County.. 1(H) 6 Legal 300,000 Jan. and J uly.. Jan. ’67 Aggregate NewYorkExc.hange 1(H) 5 115*' Circula’67 5 1(H) 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. 10, tion. Loans. Specie. Deposits. Tenders. Clearings Ninth 5 K'S Jan. ’67 100 Jan. and July.. May 4. 250,877,558 9,902.177 33,571,747 195.729,072 70,587,407 559,860,1 IS North America.... July ’67 5 104' 105 50 4(H),(HH) Jan. and July.. May 11.. 253,682,829 14,959,590 33,595,869 200.342,832 67,996.05)9 524,319,769 North River* 50 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. "07. May 18.. 257,9 51,874 15,567,252 33,632,301 201,436,854 63,828,501 503,675,793 Ocean Feb. ’67 5 130 50 300,000 Feb. and Aug.. May 25.. 256,091,805 14,083,667 33.697,253 193.675),5)45 60,562,440 431,732,622 Oriental* Feb. 5& May’67.5 422.7(H) Feb. and Aug. 50 Pacillc June 1. 252,791,514 14,617,070 33,747,039 190,386,143 58,459,827 442,675,585 Jan. ’67 7 100 Jan. and July.. Park Juue 8 250,477,298 15,699,038 33,7P),088 184,730,5)515 55,923,107 461,7531,216 5 25 412.5(H) Jau. and July.. Inly ’67 Peoples’* June 15 246,22 ,465 12,656,389 33,707,109 18*),3U,763 57,924,294 460,968,602 Jan. ’67.. 4&-ex 107 20 1,8(H),000 Jan. and Jnly.. Phoenix Fel). ’67 5 115 1(H) 2,tKK).0*H) Feb. and Aug.. Philadelphia Banks.—The following shows Republic Feb.’67 100 l,(HH),(HHi Feb. and Aug.. St. Nicholas’ iio' leading items of the 1(H) 5(H),0(H) Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 Seventh Ward 5 June 15. Jnne 1. June8. 1(H) 3(H),000 May and Nov . Nov. ’66 Second '67 5 112" 112* 100 1,500,000 Jan. and July. Julv Capital $16,017,150 $16,017,150 $16,017,150 Shoe & Lea’.her 6 Loans 52,747,3 )3 53,158,124 53,192,049 Increase . 100 2(H),0(H) May and Nov.. Nov. ’65 Sixth 5110 100 i,000,t)TM * May and Nov.. May ’67 ... Specie. .334,5)93 346,615 £68,261 State of New York. 200 (X 0; 100 Legal Tenders ....... 16,881.109 16,800,720 16,300 010 106 Stuyvesant* ...5 1(H) 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. Ju y '67 Due from Banks 4,456,401 3,950,827 4,621,578 Increase . Tenth. ..5 100 1,000,000 Ian. and July.. Jan. ’67 DuetoBauks 6,501.292 6,180,126 6,273,711 Increase. Third ..7 140 40 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. July ’67 Deposits 37,832,144 .37,252,614 37,174,269 Tradesmen’s .... ...5 May ’67 50 1,500,000 May and Nov.. Circulation 10,637,432 10,642,920 10,046,208 Decrease. Union .3*1 .... 50 W UKUJen. and July. Jau. ’67 i Clearing* 5; 129 ...... 3,410,113 2,193,076 681,460 1,726,5300 1,142.5)16 405,879 4.80,909 480,192 Importers & Trad... $461,734,216 96 460,968,’02 0 week 1(H) 50 50 50 50 :X) 100 1(H) 100 25 50 50 lol series of weeks past: __ . . the totals of the Philadelphia Banks for last and previous weeks : Increase. Decrease. .... , ... 29,479,883 2,535,811 Decrease. 32,522,182 32,603,347 Increase. 2,502,511 2,868,484 Increase. $33,925 21646 500,710 670,751 93,585 78,345 596.712 81,165 365,973 ... . .. vUliamfibuig City* .. ... ... .... Satur., Mou. | SECURITIES. Americau Gold Coin (G >Ui Room) U6S. . ' 1 It allroad Stoclts Central of New Jersey.... - ,137% 138% 137% 137% 8 National: ’ r United States 6s, 1867 registered. do do 6s, 1868 coupon. do do registered. 6s, 1868 do do 6s, 1881 coupon. do do 6s, 1881 registered. 108%] — £110% 110% do do 6s, 5-20s (1st issue) coupon . 110% 107% do do 6s, 5-20s registered. 106%'107 107% 107 do do 6s, 6-20s (2d issue) couj>on j do do —registered 6s, 5.20s do £ 107% !l07% do do 6s, 5.20s (3d issue) coupon j do do 6s, 5.20s, do —registered 109% 109% 109% 109% £ do do 5.20s (new issue)... .coupon. do do r>. 20s do ....registered do do 6s, Oregon War 1881 . • do do 6s, do. do. (I yeaily). do do 5s, 1871 coupon. do do 5s, 1871 registered. 109% 110% 4 do do 5s, 1874 coupon. 106 do do 5s, 1874 registered. 100% 100% do do 5s, 10-40s coupon. do do 5s, 10-40s registered. do do 6s, Union Pacific R. R.. .{cur.). £ 106% 106% do \stseries.\ do 7-30s Treas. Notes i 106% 106% do do do do '2d series. do lu6) B do do do do do ....‘3d senes. Chicago and Alton — - — _ — — — 1110; i — — — — — — — — — 110% 110% 107% 1 — — — — Cleveland and Pitfcabhrg Cleveland and Toledo., ♦....... • • -«’ * •••;*; Delaware, Lackawanna alld V 106% '107 1 109% 109% — — 113% - 107 100 — 100 — — McGfregor Western Marietta and Cincinnati, 122 — _ — — — — — — Louisiana 6s Michigan 6s — — 99 99 Joseph RR.)... 99% - do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 j _ do 6s,1867-77. do 5s, 1868-76 do 7s, State Bounty Bonds (coupon)., do do do do (registered) North Carolina 6s ex-coupon do 6s. (new) Ohio 68,1870-75 do 6s, 1881-86 Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 5s do 6s coupon do 6s, (new) Virginia 6s, coupon do 6s, new 53 — — 98% 53% 64 54 Chicago and Alton, Sinking — 68% 67% 67% £ 67% 69 67 67 — - —— — do do do „ — — _ New York 7s do 6s do 5s — — - — — — — — “ ^ Ashburton 45 .. 6 ^ Sutler I . . — — - ^ Central Consolidated Cumberland Delaware and Hudson ^ ^ JJJJJ ibu — ( 31% 30% 30% — — — 50 . • Spring Mountain Spruce Hill - —— — — — j® 190 Wyoming Valley Gas.~-Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) —~ - - 130 — 50 Manhattan Metronolitan 20 50 190 New York 50 1 'nprovement.—Boston Water Power 20 Bruuswick City 24% 23% 23% — 45 42% 44% 44% 42x — — ! —— 107% 141% 140%' 139%! 141% " 100 — Nicaragua Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Tmst New York Life and Tru t Unicn Trust United States Trust Insurance.—Home Express.—Adams American Merchants’ Union United States Wells, Fargo &Co Mining.—Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred Minnesota Copper New Jersey Zinc Quartz Hill Quicksilver Rutland Marble gmith and Parmelee 100 — 25 100 100 100 100 100 500 63% 63% 64% 64% 64 .'.100 12% 100 100 100 100 50 15 26 .100 25 10 - 97% 97% 107 56 44% 69% 58 81 24% 24 24% 97% 07% 97% 107% 106% 107% £5 58 83 85% 82 68% 68% 68% 44% 44% Extension 45 84X 1st mortgage... do do 80 80 74 103 new 7s Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort do do do 2d mort. Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 97 98 1S69-72. do Consolidated and Sinking Fund do 3d mortgage, 1868 | Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885 3d mortgage, 1875 do do convertible, 1867 Illinois Central 7s, 1875 1 44 106% 107 100 139 ... 24% 50 103 104% — 64 13 58 64 19% 19% 12% 12% 69 — 68 68 8 71 69% 65 64% 70 9 73 — no — — — do 2d mortgage, 7s do do Goshen Line, 1868 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort.... Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage 2d mortgage do do Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage 2d mortgage do do New York Central 6s, 1883 do do 6s, 1887 do , do 7s, 1876 do do 7s, convertible, 1876 New York and New liaven Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage; do Peninsula, 1st mortgage Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, m 28% 28% — w— do do St. Louis, Alton do do do — 28 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund do do do ' do do 98 90 90 90 88 £H% 84 — 96 97 96 102% rH — 1st mort.. 96 2d mort... 3d mort... and Terre Hante, 1st mort do do 103 cclOOf — — 23%; Michigan Central Ss, 1869-72 do do 8s, new, 1882 23 — Pacific Mail 24% 120 88 — 190 Cary 100 Telegraph.—Western Union 100 44% Western Union,Russian Extension. 100 Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 100 Transit.—Central American— 121 McGregor Western, 1st mortgage Marietta and Cincinnati, let mortgage. ..-190 Canton 102% 101% 101% 101% 102 Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage 50 Williamsburg 66 - “ 20 .. 36 55% Interest do do do do Harlem, 1st mortgage, - — 199 Harlem do I 36 56% 68% 69* Fund j yx Wilkesbarre Jersey City and Hoboken — — - Pennsylvania 36 68% do 4th mortgage, 1880 do 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended do do 2d mortgage Great Western, 1st mortgage do do 2d mortgage.. — 153% 153% 69 69 18T7.-. lai Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage do do 3d mortgage, conv do do 4th mortgage Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund — Jersey City 6s, Water Loan 44% 68% 1st mortgage..., Income do _ — 52 76 consolidated... Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage. Chicago R. I. and Pacific, 7 i er cent.... 95% — 6s, Public Park Loan 6s, Improvement Stock 50 — — 42 % f il3% 113% Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent. Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage.... Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund.. 68% 61% 68% do do do — — _ Miscellaneous Shares s Qoal.—Americau Chicago Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., Central of N w Jersey, 1st mortgage ioT _ 120% 120% 80 80% Railroad Ronds 54% 54 — Brooklyn 6s do 6s, Water Loan Schuylkill 99% — ’20% 56% 100 101% 100 100 100 25 100 100 97 100 Reading / 50 St. Louis, Alton and Tefre Haute 100 do preferred. 100 do do Stonington .. 100 50 Toledo, Wabash and Western. do do do preferred.... 50 Troy, Salem and Rutland .100 08 98% 54% 53% i 53% 98% 78 120% 1C8 1109 35 68% pref..l00 .100 .100 100 ,...100 Pittsburg. Fort Wayne and — _! ) Municipal: do do 114 ....100 Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 do 7s, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s Missouri 6s do 6s, (Hannibal and St. 108% 119% H9% 100 100 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chienllst do do 2d pref.. do Milwaukee and St. Paul do do preferred Morris and Essex New Jersey.. New York Central New York and New Haven ... New Haven and Hartford Norwich and Worcester Ohio and Mississippi Certificates Panama — — _ 59% 90% 49 59 100 100 guaranteed. ..100 do do — 36 59% 58% 59% 50 100 50 100 1st preferred 2d preferred Michigan Central Michigan So. and N. Indiana — _ 1860-62-65-70. do do — — — 50 100 100 1 Joliet and Chicago 106%| Long Island • 60% 60% 100 50 Indianapolis and Cincinnati — — 140 100 do preferred Hndson River Illinois Central * 106% 139 189 .196 do preferred Hannibal and St. Joseph do do preferred Harlem — — State: — 60% Erie.'.. — — California 7s... Connecticut 6s Georgia 6s.... do 7s (new) Illinois Canal Bonds, 1S60 do Registered, 1860 do 6s, coupon, ’79, after do do 1877 do do 1879 do do War Loan do Indiana bs, War Loan do 5s 100 . — - 114% 138 119 113 115 140 68teni(CcrlP'100 Dubuque & feioux City....*- — — —-— — 112 111% 112 35% 35% 35% 34% 34% 58% 58?* 59% 59% 69 90% 99% 90% 89% S9% 100 99% 76% 77% 77% 76% 76% 119 120% 121% 122% 122 199 109 109 do do - — preferred... preferred 106% |106% Chicago, Rock Island and 1 aciflc. Cleveland, Cohitribns and Cincinnati — - 119 *99 {vV 114 190 and Qumey........... .lw 199 Chicago and Great pastern Chicago and Milwaukee Chicago and Northwestern.... — {JJJ — - — : Chicago, Burlington — — do do — — fcjdiur SECURITIES. AND STOCKS hurs cU 1 AND EXCHANGE. NEW YORK STOCK SALE-PRICES AT THE STOCKS [Jane 22,1867. CHRONICLE. THE 782 91% .. 91% iii 2d, pref..., 2d, income. Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mortgage Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended. 2d mortgage do do Troy, Salem and Rutland, 1st mortgage 89% — 90 77% 96% 81 81 SECURITIES LIST. NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL Subscribers will confer a INTEREST. lut&iamliug. DENOMINATIONS Marked thus * are iu default for interest. Due. Pay able. 137* 137* Gold Coin National Securities. Bonds of 1847 registered. 6,417,300 do 1848 .coupon. ) 8,908,342 registered, f do do coupon, i do 1860 7,022,000 do do registered, f do 1868 coupon. I 20,000,000 do do registered, j do 1861 coupon.} do do registered. 1 283,746,350 6 Jan. & July 1867 6 Jan. & July 1868-j 5 Jan. & , July ... 1S82 May & Nov. 1884 106*1 1C6* May & Nov. 1885 106* 107 July fa Jan. & July July Jan. & J do do (i yearly) f cmip‘ Bonds (5-20s) of 186*2 — coupon. ] do do do .registered. : do 1864 — coupon. \ do do do .registered. \ do do 1865 ...coupon, j do do do do .registered. | do do 1«65 (new).coupon. J do do do do registered. J o o CO of 1874-j 1881-j 1881 May & Nov 6 6 Tan. & July Apr. & Oct. 3,774,000 1,548,000 7 Jan. & July '77-’S0 122 '33-’84 do 8,000,000 2,000,000 6 6 610,000 ♦State Bank Loan. ♦Real Estate Bank Loan California ($5,322,000): State Bonds of ’57 and ’60 899,000 :. (war) do (war) tax exempt.. Florida ($370,617): | State Bonds.. do S70,093 f Canal Loans do do do do (Fire 1,775,000 1,210,803 6 6 6 6 6 Quarterly. 1870 Jan. & July ’75-’79 do ’71-’Si do ’77-’90 do 1887 2,347,340 2.175,400 13,911,900 5 6 6 Apt, & Oct. Loan) Bonds (Blue Ridge RR.)., do (State House) Stock ( do do ) Bonds (Funding) 500,000 * * * 1879 1S79 do do . 1875 .... ; Feb. & Aug. Various. Feb. & Aug. do Various. 9,178,800 .... ..... 541,000 Mar.& Sept Feb. & Aug. June & Dec. Quarterly 5 do do do 3,000.000 2,113,000 1,966,000 10",000 1,100,000 463,000 • 1,000,000 5,000.000 723,966 2,192,168 225,000 1871 1883 1880 1889 .. Jersey City 6 6 7 7 Jail. & July do do 73-’&3 1879 1SS6 100 100 May & Nov. 1890 •• 5 5 6 7 • • • • ($1,953,596): 250.0(H) 8 100,000 7 622,000 6 11,132,000 6 7,000,000 6 .. coupon registered.. 3,0o0,000 6 1,194,100 6 600,000 6 609,500 6 500,000 1,798,900 1,002,900 C 93,400 442.961 2,569,000 21,726,500 12,700,000 -5,466,000 1867 1877 .... Apr. & Oct July 6 6* 6 .... .... •... .. 1869 7 7 6 5 .... .... . • • • • do u • • • • ,... • Various. May & Nov. ••• •> • 4 June &Dec. 1894 5 F. M.A.&N. 1870 1880 1890 1883 2,147,000 5 900,000 5 1,800,000 6 1,878,900 6 2,748,000 6 3,066,071 6 2,500,000 6 2,083,200 6 1,133,437 6 2,000,000 1,500,000 1,800 000 5 6 829,886 5 5 6 ., Bonds, ’75 ’93 Apr. & Oct. ’82 ’93 May &Nov. 1887 94 478,397 4,097, :J S3 Railroad ’67 ’90 1887 Various. 7 99* ’67’84 do 1,620,000 1,122,400 Municipal Bonds 99* * Various. ’68 '86 Jan. & July 1871 4,000,000 Real Estate and Improv. Bonds Water and Sewerage Bonds.... Harbor and Wharf Bonds 95* Jan. & July ’72’90 May & Nov. ’70 ’97 April & Oct. ’95 ’00 2,000,000 do do do do do do do do do 1875 1878 1887 1876 1887 1873 May & Nov ’69 ’72 do do do do do do ’73 ’75 ’75’92 ’83 ’90 ’73 ’76 ’77 ’82 ’91 ’07 18,109,955 6 11,650,000 6 Jan. & July ’67’86 ’67 ’82 do ’67 ’95 do 67 ’04 do '94 ’95 do 5 6 Jan. & July 1913 ’88 ’98 do 6, Jan. & July do do do 1,800,000 1,516,000 • .. 108* • 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 99* Sacramento—City Bonds St. Louis ($5,644.000): .... . .. do do (new) do do (old) do do (new) War and Bounty Loan Bonds... Pittsburg ($ ): Railroad Bonds 101 1870 Jan. &July '68 ’78 99 May & Nov. 1868 Jan. & July ’74-’ 78 1877 108 do 1877 do 99 Quarterly do Municipal Bonds (old) .... Qiiarterly Bonds.. 91 Jan. & July 73 ’76 ’72 ’96 Various. Jan &July ’81 ’90 do 1876 do 1886 Riot Damages Bonds .. Soldiers’ Bounty Fund Bonds.. Philadelphia ($35,165,621): 83 81* 291,000 6 1,062,500 7 1,435,000 7 1,(3 >,000 6 790,000 7 Soldiers’ Bounty Fund Bonds do Substit. & Relief B’ds 99* ’ Jan. & July do do 5 5 Sold. Family Aid Fund do do do Court House Stock « 98 98 Jan. & Jnly Mar. & Sep, Jan. & .... 45 ’81-’99 ’85 ’90 3,000,200 CentralPark Fund Stock do do Impr. Fund Stock do do do do Real Estate Bonds. .... ... Jan. & July do do ’72do 8 700/00 7 2,489,780 6 2,609,607 Jan. & July do 60 1894 ’15 ’16 861,500 .... : 6 7 6 7 1,231,000 6 1,975,000 6 851,000 6 Floating Debt Fund Stock ... 6 650,000 Water Stock do do Croton Water Stock do do do Water Stock .... 60 ’67 ’95 ’67 ’95 ’67 '91 do 561,251 6 689,900 7 .... .... Jan. & July do do 1 do do do do Jan. & July 469,968 7 650,000 7 Municipal (re-adjust.) Bonds., 100 68* 67* ’67 ’87 ’67 ’78 ’74 ’76 ’70 ’79 ’75 ’76 575,000 .. ... Various. do do do do May & Nov. 5 6 6 5 6 896/00 Railroad Loan Bonds Water Loan Bonds Milwaukee ($911.500): .... ... 67* 1895 1,083,000 * Municipal Loan Bonds .... do 615,000 do do do Water Loan Bonds Louisville ($4.118,(X)0); .... 6 6,188,600 . City and War Bonds .... do Jan. & Jnly Mar.&Sept. 589,000 Water Loan Bonds .... 62 62 68 1870 1870 J.,A.,J.&0. 850,Of 0 7 do do Water Works Bonds...% Detroit ($1,109,968): ... 94 Jan. & July ’68-’88 622,000 6 Municipal Loan Bonds 1870 1874 • ’68-’99 J.,A..J.&D. 1,217,000 Municipal Bonds .... 1 6 6 6 6 893,840 Water Bonds do do Cincinnati ($3,203,000): .... .... • 1873 1875 1886 1890 1S90 1893 6,088,200 1,000.060 1,800,000 1,08S,000 336,000 Sewerage & River Iinprovem’t. 90* .... • ’71-’94 l 100* ’ 845/22 5 4,1: 5,399 6 250/00 6 4,335,0:34 6 Municipal (old issues) & school (new issue) do • . 90 .... ’68-’74 do do ’67-’71 do Jan. & July ’77-’93 May &Nov. 1894 Jan. & July *71-’76 Mar. & Sep. 71-’S6 ' 8,376,372 90 • • Various. 5 6 j- 6,826,196 \l 1,688,000 10 yrs Various. 6 6 loi" 92* 97* ’86-’95 ’S4-’95 ’6--’99 ; do do do do do Water Loan Bonds Soldiers’ Aid Fund Bonds Chicago ($5,397,464). .... • • ' 406,100 6 do do • 99* Var. Var. 1871 Jan. & July do do do Municipal Bonds (various) Improvement Loan Bonds .... .... .... Securities do do do (currency) do Water Loan Bonds do do (currency) do Brooklyn ($10,023,419): ’ 103 ’86-’87 Mar.&Sept. 67-’78 3,000,000 6 5 1,0 0 6 525,000 6 798,000 ’68-’S6 ’67-’7*2 1886 99 1875 6 6 6 6 Prospect Park Loan Bonds 6 6 6 6 6 .... ’71-’78 Floating Debt Stork ($12,845,376): Municipal Bonds ... 76-’8i Jan. & July ’67-’73 ’68-’72 do July Jnn. & Dec ... .... .... too' * 1 ’68-’71 6 Boston Jan. & July do 475,000 ", .... .... 54* 1S68 do 1868 Jan. & July long. do 1888 Internal Improvement Stock... do do do Jail Stock ; Water Stock Pittsb. & Connellsv. RR.Loan. Baltimore & Ohio RR. Loan Park and Park Improve. Stock. Defense Loan 85 92 1868 18 0 1875 1880 1881 11,108,000 21,896,2'.‘S 494,000 1,450,949 ... War Bonds.... .... 69 80 54* 54 1860 1,567,500 do do do (registered) do (Funding) coupon do ( do ) registered rEST Virginia ($ ): State Bonds .... do do do do do 6 Bonds... 122* Virginia ($43,166,286): State Bonds (coupon) 1868 1881 2,832,500 .... , do do do .... Jan. & July ’72-'86 1886 do 315,000 6 800,000 6 525,000 6 act Mar. 24,’63 (free) act April 14,1864... do Various. Funding Bonds (new) Vermont ($1,650.000): var. Jan. & July do 4,838,933 569,000 1,000,000 409,800 1,992,000 New York ($51,753,082): General Fund Loans do do do do do do do State Stock Municipal 271,000 5 3,346,000 6 (war) 1S66 ($3,395,200): War Bonds, act May 10, ’61 (free) Bounty Fund Loan, 6 War Loan Bonds ••• var. 98,975 6 500,000 7 (war) 1864 (war) 1866 do do Feb. & Aug. 318,159 1,000,000 Military Loan Bonds Internal Improvement do * do Railroad Loan Bonds • 7 7 300,000 Buildings Loans do 3 Various. .... '72-’84 too 74-’84 100 1885 Jan. & July do 6 184,000 State Loan Bonds do 5 5 6 War Loan Bonds.. Jan. & July pleas. 4,578,017 5 1866 do 1,514,489 2# May & Nov 1868 848,000 6 do do War Loans do do do do do do (currency) Michigan ($3,970,921): State Loan Bonds Canal do War Loan do , 1868 1S61 1,157,222 6 Jan. & July 1S70 1870 do 1,229,667 6 '60 ’65 do f0 '69 ’70 do J6 >•5,263,254 ’76 ’77 do ]6 Railroad Loans “ do 6 7 945,200 Missouri ($35,404,515): ♦State Loans (old) ♦Railroad Loans (various) do do (Pacific) do do (H. & St. Jo) New Hampshire ($2,903,600) : State Bonds (war) 1861 6,168/90 29,209,000 3,000,00 State Bonds, coupon..... . do do tran smissable ... Railroad Loans of ’53-66 do do do do New Jersey July April &Oct. Jan. & \l 3,030,000 do do do do do do War Loan Bonds Indiana ($7,009,091): State Bonds do do War Bonds, coupon Iowa ($484,000): State Stock War Loan Bonds Kansas ($604,475/: State Bonds do do Kentucky ($5,324,612): State Bonds. do d6 Louisiana ($13,3h7,999): Bank Loan Bonds State Bonds Levee Loan Bonds Funded Coupon Bonds do 7 1,269,500 Coupon Bonds do do do 2,000,000 6 State Bonds do do (funding, etc.) Illinois ($8,63*),252): Canal Bonds do do registered State 1872 1883 1S87 5 5 5 (incl. int. $3,252,401): Bounty Loan Bonds Minnesota ($2,525,000) Jan. & . Ask* d State Bonds 1904-j 168,000 Maine ($5,127,500): State Bonds (civil) do do (war) of’61 do do (war) of ’63 do do (bounty) of ’63 do do (war) of’64. Maryland ($13,549,766): State Bonds do do do , bounty do do do Massachusetts ($25,555,747) : State Bonds do do 7 Bounty and Relief Bonds. 1 .... 1,941,000 437,850 State Bonds Georgia ($5,706,500): 218,574 379,866 2,183,532 1,6 0,000 4,(95,309 2,400.000 112* 113 Jan. & July 1S86 Alabama ($4,066,210): State Bonds do do (extended) do do (funding) War Bonds Connecticut ($10,000,000): State Bonds (war) 679,213 444,022 113 109* 109* I '05*; 100 i 100* do (10-40s) 1S64 ...com>on. \ 171,409,350 Mar.&Sept. 99* J do do do .registered, j 106* 106* 7.30 Feb. & Aug. 1867 Treasury Notes (1st series) i Jun. & Dec. 1868 106*1 106* do do (2d series) V 511,939,525 7.30 Jan. & July 1S68 7.30 106*; 106* do do (3d series) ) State Securities. Arkansas Jan. & Julv do f V Bid Various. 3,626,500 1881 Jan. & Pal Due. Payable. 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 1,425,000 July 5 tf r ’67-’76 do ’77-’86 do ’87 ’96 Jan. & July 1900 Funded Coupons.. lii'* i 6 6 6 6 477,000 874,000 5,514,500 3 . State Bonds. do do (Union Loan) do do 106 108 do do 112* 11-2* do do 108* 1US* do do do do 107 (domestic) ): 110* Oregon ($110*1 ....... (yearly) { dale State Loan Bonds, do do do do do do May & Nov. , Oregon War Bds 1871-j 136 135 J OuUtamiing. DENOMINATION?. Marked thus * are in dofault for interest. Asked Uid IM'KIiWil. lUiuuul FRIDAY. pal It ate. discovered In our Tables. immediate notice of any error great favor by giving us itUlOU&l American 783 THE CHRONICLE. 22, 1867.] June 1,138,000 1,062,000 '902,000 982,000 1,104,0f( 6 6 6 6 do ’67’86 ’71 ’06 ’70’88 ’67 ’87 ?71 ’77 94* 99* 81 [June 22, 1867 THE CHRONICLE. 784 Articles from New York. Export* of Leading &()e Commercial <$iutcs. exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York since January 1, 1867. The export of each article to the several ports for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount ?n the last number of the Chronicle from tha* here given : COMMERCIAL EPITOME. June 21. Friday Night. r-1—ro •wr-ost-wr-i x o c; u t• t- n» or (7»i—- c m h c; J( o roofr-Tcf ’ scr-I-r last week, but it is not so from the absence of buyers, as from a disposition on the Trade has not been so much good Custom House returns, shows the table, compiled from The following io scci as ask more money for their goods. Domestic goods are in small stock, with light receipts, and foreign goods, though in good stock, are not coming forward so tieely; and operating upon both is the apprehension that at the coming session of Congress in duly some disturbing financial measures may be proposed, if not adopted. Cotton has been dull, and closes heavy. Bread shifts have declined, but close firm and more active. Groceries have been fairly active, with a material advance in sugar. Tobacco has part of holders to request and buoyant. Provisions have been without essential change. o Eri ■omoCTWat't- <m m ® of Ph -SCCC . o o : a> ■2 less the growing districts are advanced. are dull. The accounts from favorable to a large yield. High wines have slightly Wool is in fair demand ; the stocks light, and prices Hops firm. disposition to discourage any liberal movement until the new clip is secured. Freights have been fairly active. There were liberal ship¬ ments of Provisions and Tobacco, with some Cotton, to Europe, early in the week, and latterly the engagements for grain have been considerable, including to-day 90,000 bush. Corn to Liverpool at 4d. by sail, and Sd. by steam, with the option of some is, however, a wheat. 9 o Receipts of Domestic Produce Tor tlie Week, and since in « i th . Cl l~ • Ashes, pkgs... 258 3,037 2,802 BreadstulVs— Flour, bbls.. 31,315 647.971 Wheat, bush. 28,913 692,631 953,440 392,893 Rosin 7,184 444 Tar Pitch Oil cake, pkgs .. .. 396,9:182,971,095 3,729,026 Oil, lard 83,457 791,047 1,539,914 Oil, Petroleum. 41.547 68,000 66,139 Peanuts, bags. 248.082 Provisions— Malt' 1,940 271,140 Barley 43,732 121,435 Butter, pkgs.. Cheese 99,883 Grass seed... 3,012 46,318 4,214 Cut meats. Flaxseed 7,720 36,223 Beaus 126 16,142 Eggs Pork 105,089 Peas 13,980 267,855 56,995 Beef, pkgs. ... C. meal,bbls. 2,629 36,089 208,814 C. meal,bags. 1,799 209,271 Lard, pkgs..... Lard, kegs.... Buckwheat »fc 6,776 Rice, pkgs B.\Vr. flour,bg 6,085 363,210 Starch .......... Cotton, bales 8,708 374,932 3,860 Stearine* 5,304 Copper, bbls... 574 2,817 Spelter, slabs... Copper, plates. 1,218 6,557 5,437 Sugar, hhds & Dnedlruit.pkgs 171 20,556 2,224 bbls Grease, pkgs... 295 9,572 348 Tallow, pkgs... Hemp, bales 536 Corn Oats live .. 229,312 Tobacco, pkgs.. 3,406 Tobacco, hhds.. Leather, sides .59,685 1,21S,100 1,023/252 Whiskey, bbls.. 1,109 Lead, pigs 4,558 Wool, bales Dressed Hogs, Molasses, hhds 981 12,480 and bbls 7,358 No Naval Stores— Rice, rough, 150 2.946 bush 23,374 Crude trp,bbl 18,632 Spirits turp.. 1,683 24,346 Hides, No Hops, bales. ‘ * .. 5,215 172,632 35 2,930 ’ .... ... 139,821 189,965 10,829 2,905 37,011 1,222 --Of-*© • O Cl Tf ©© t-Tco 03 o» o m -lOicctx T— • •c.hhtt • CM o o» <M i CM r-i SO_ • T}1 T-4 n Xl 03 CO a ~ ® 5 ■s • «i9 • • ■d-C • CM Cl sc • tf?-* t— ci 5f ;q«« • cc CO ; ci -r •<?»' <c: • ’ yA lr~ 1d o-f so ci ■ cf ' 2^'* C ;©o ■lOCWf m © w co -IQ oo cs t- (—i ri'f rt O - PQ : a 3 :g - O CO CO C ; rH • ’3 1-H CO CO o, -l«C GO t— r}< • -ZL 2 o-ciLCo 5XK 3 43 to ■ ; 52 to 1C r-t r- h rn o 03 rH t- N <& T3 C3 H .ooin --rS 'GCrHcioJco-croaoci C* CC1 30. CC Cf.: •rt 0 O cs «ci^co o 03^ cT Ih cpic in inr- oci r* c* ■ -f O rH rH tt tt ’ £4 • t- Tji " rn o H • co . o < « Cl g ’<£ ri S Cf H f—- o • "O' . ■ • in ’ n-T ^ . <c* Cl Cl O CC O tan ; ' go" tp oo in co cr, c: CC in co a? go t— o o C- in •COcOQO t-h co" rsi •03 ‘ tt tC 4i • rH cin, ?3 tAcrJd in ot cot•COrf o ■ ^ 2 O H c* • rH co -r oo ^ ci -+* . rj* Ot *03 m -t oo Tf H-r CC 03 • •oo^smot •rfO'^ •ClCt ■ • rH H rH «5 ^ 3 rHO CO» • OV • c4 U <J W c S S3 -r H- c; O) io Cl « C HI th ■ Ct^rH O 00 Cl m TT 00»O-T< C3 (/_• 03 rHef <?«cf 03 rH 03 03 rH Oi TH nt o in ci <03 Tf . * OCOOOOOCCt-TtiTjiCO^,^^ — • ct cc rf T-I CO 03 t -m in CC rH ctco • oo t* in n* r— > t- -Ct• t— • o CC Cl CC f— . • • , • co ci in (-jo • 03 O • T H Ct •cCCtf-rHd'-ripco • ci <?t fr- o m o o t- ■rKMcJi • ct 03 : ■thjj •Ocirr* Tf» Cl • o cc m m —i • • 00 ci m oo • • i Tji in CO 03 CM Sh M W Eh 03 n» • o •10 71 3 Ph • • t- .03 • 03* r-I m . -h-h-HS . CC co rH • « ’go" ct * r« w • rH ISC 3 cn • • • ci 03 ct • th • m GO Cl I - S3 • comin t- r-1- .oocco • m o? ci . a 00 Cl X •t*mo • SC -H GO SCO? • ’o' 2 CO u CD 03 . . o ft, o XJ SC Ot • • o m o t- co ■ • oo -rt co so rf nt rf in (M Cl • CJl >H ie 3 >- • 1 ‘rilOspCI ’ Cl io 03 o 1 1J in cm • cj w • C? -r-H ^5 rH ci or 0 « <M {- sc • TH in • HT Cl Cl O ' ; •H-rcoo •OCChci’H • • cc ci ■ th' ci • -H CO 03 30 • sC • {- 73 0 OO ci t— CCCl • M M • C/3 (M • • cc 0 • ’rf ^ • 00 ;d • CM 'CM-C'CI-I'-B TH CC»H CC SC O -O • H t^HOV t7* (MOM (M CM rH rH t- Cl O CC iH r-4 • ^ ; O IO Cl t- • • Cl GO • • • rH • O rH CC 1—1 32,476 50,044 2,072 2,952 16,719 435,068 437,572 52 12,012 7,008 2,060 25 ■CHCt-meif a % ■ C ’co -103 (M • CO -M • rH — ic in • 0 0 0 m t- co th' a 03 ■ o 03 o 3 O W ^ • CM co if.) •<M £X <u I • . o .r • • rl 6 Ih • .« •o (M CX Cl cf rf t* co O W ' C> O 03 K3 13 71 in SO • ct 03 CO • • The This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’OO. in m o* m O rH ; © • T-t o’ in +-■ This Since Same wee k. Jan. 1. time’OO rH CO •CM i-f of .'TCMhCCIO OKO W cr> in o* Of :gg XS receipts of domestic produce for the week ending June 21, since 1, and for the same time in 1866, have been as follows : T—Tof in lA CO -f n .-r ijl oi O Ti •lOCCt^ l - O Cl •(NM t- I- r •* cTCH CO Tf .CO^TICO CD Jaunary 1. Jan. • . ^ , CO -H ce O o co ci t-i 73 (- co i- <m L- ir rH rH CM • ;co_ ; • transactions of im¬ Q ~ Cl Cl . * co co • * co — • CO i • . portance, but prices are well sustained. Metals have been active, and scarcely so firm. Petroleum has further declined under large supply and dull accounts from the European markets, standard refined white in bond closing at 2»lc per gallon. Emits show an irregular advance, with a better general busi¬ ness. Fish are dull and heavy. There co —i , CO • • 8 « been the usual have been without *“• Jr s; a t-I (M Cl CO co • Goat Skins very dull. East India goods t-t-o PI . speculative fluctuations in Mess Pork. There is a party determined to break the price down to §18, and others determined*to maintain it above §20. The close was firmer, at §20 SS, cash. Lard has been weak under liberal supplies, and dull accounts from abroad. Bacon, with favora¬ ble foreign advices, has been more active, closing at lOfc. per lb. for Cumberland Cut. Beef of all kinds is in a very reduced stock and price. Butter remains dull. But there were large shipments of cheese to Great Britain early in the week. Hides have been more active ; the sales to-day were about 15,000 South American dry at 20c., gold, for Rio Grande, 20Ac., gold, for Montevideo, and 21 Jo., gold, for Buenos Ayres, average weights. Leather is firm and in demand. Deer and t? rH CO -r c» t- L— f-i . g? There have c c» ro c i-1- o 1C ' < has been in brisk o • m» th CO THrn in ■ -- o -c cc .co wnerH io .,—■ ^ CCtC'MCM.'Jt-'OCOT-irHCCa • Cl o o o» —< co tt m o? ci • o a* :av.r-t • or n» • lO f I rH ■ • rjf> sc o ;Oooo-fC;»o of CC l- rH 03 CO a & jf ci-tf ■£ • e • cc -moo 'OcMof-^eiooMO 2 .2 OO • • • • Tf" T—1 m m cc t— »n r- co m 03 or or rr 0 01 n> o> sc t- m co rn cf th 00" CO Cl t?i rH rH - o> in in tm co 0 rf • ’ • SC vH -iT * • • : ’ ■ c? . •ICC 1 rH rr • 00 03 • ’ . cf cr • ^ iqci • CO 0? o' . • 468 24 18,215 109,63 CO Cl (M IO rH 8,776 243,311 185,291 31,856 216,366 72,166 301 76,591 7,054 139,847 702 112,834 377 25,156 3,805 90,244 111 7,055 90,932 98,851 89,836 45,884 77,089 5.067 8,460 1,460 94,9,0 52,829 5,267 1,101 5.725 306 .... 56 439 5,187 4,377 3,769 936 4,843 2,801 5,644 2,607 3,400 56,787 39,889 77,719 22,358 75,115 21,117 38.991 38,502 1,759 79.873 81,769 h-> rt o 3 nt m ?c in go sc t— ci *x> ■s thwWthmoji-h o in *n -r co_sc -sfi SC 07 rH t- t— in 'C CC rH 2 n» <m" l°n 15,792 o.'. • O m" CC' rH Cl IM * m " h ^ j -.3 a6 0U ,-j i— Tp Cfl g wi oj m 9) <n <f‘ m M 3 tro: tciixiiJ 2x7Xix7 ~‘ .r £ ic m ai d rO O r- • r J. S r; 3 E ^ pO »--< ^ 3) •a33 0 £ a o ■* . • 31 Q> - • 00 OB Cl’ ’ in'M«ccociot-ciino-H-s<ci(N • 07 XI G Lr Xi S 70 — rH M CO CO C3 HCOhCSHNCO C7iOH7IC’-‘r,tO I l7-Tjl.°VTlfcr’ OlMHCOifC r-T-r-^ CC th r-I in nf■2 H t HOI IO Cte cf of —T 2» cC 1C 00 CC rH (M 03 TH (M CO CO rH rH 00 03 gJ cc m m ji cc m jj cb sr* oo jj ai cf* sj ai ^ ‘ si' ’ s3' el as* ’'o‘ —’ r r — •—•—• os C3’ " — ’ r « - 1 ~ —' Vi § ^ qu *2 S 0 QU 94 CD 7? • • * ’» rj r, g O si SWEh 0; * CD . 3 «H « .So® exa QU *\ * • YI ® O H 1) of S 0).^ .’ 2 •2 Ocd(£««woJ _ O aS 5 iD ® ? O ojwuHaii ©<► ® :S o :S SA OQQQPMtUa 00 o «h ® 0,3 O ■? I 1 8 O O .—. 000 • . .0B /D (K CJ K! I 5a)iflbflt>t'c.ol8gOgoo.p33 £ jI ! (cSrHiHiHrl i! i E-i ^ _ 3,964 OGOrHCl'TrOOO-'M'MrH • w * C8 3 - Q , i June 23, 1867.] Receipts and Leading Articles. Imports of 785 CHRONICLE. THE Exports of Colton following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows rec’d foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this SINCE PORTS. for the week ending Juue 14, since Jau. 1, 1867, and for the correspond SEPT. 1. ing period in 1866 :• 698,059 N cans, June 14. [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] 226,463 Same For Since Same M< June 14 • Since For * the time Jan. 1, time Chu »rst<)U, June H. 145,538 the Jan.1, 1866. week. 1867. 1866. 1867. week. 77 5,306 2,470 3,280 Hardware... 171 7,001 Savannah, June 14. 218,274 Buttons 168,645 34,281 56,710 Iron,RR b’rs 13,187 154,055 113,148 Texas, June 14 5,342 Coal, tons 7,605 Lead, pigs.. 0,558 211,232 244,047 New York, June 21* 110,895 0,618 ‘2,584 Cocoa, bags... 825,2 3 The Codec, bags 25,381 .. Cotton, bales. Drugs, Ac. Bark, Peruv „ Cochineal... Or Tartar ... 14.437 Gambier Gums, crude Gum, Arabic Indigo 176 104 183 Madder*.... Oils, ess 86 ... Oil, Olive... Opium Soda, hi-carb Soda, sal.... Soda, ash... ' i3 8,200 572 823 11 1% 826 Flax Furs Gunny cloth Hair . 120 706 Hemp, bales.. Hides, «&c. 60 177 Bristles Hides, dres’d 642 14 India rubber.. Ivory Jewelry, &c. Jewelry Watches.... 10,632 3,102 Linseed Molasses Metals, &c. 608 Great 1,661 2,825 2,IKK) 13,746 61,379 Cigars 16,«'00 Corks 22,220 Fancy goods 72,720 8,062 16,421 1,497 21.322 2,110 GS,820 16 3,301 3,256 149 895 323,587 578,047 10.020 19.394 243,203 253,206 225,289 576 817 9,519 370 574 321 445 221,484 88,257 Ginger Pepper 1,793 2,970 70,297 Logwood , ... 2,984 208 Mahogany.. 32,157 7H,90( 99,3-10 30,110 156,617 Fustic 66,678 24,325 26,600 92,294 17,863 64,628 73,575 99 339 1,793,670 bales, against 1S65-6. The details gate receipts since Sept. 1, this year, 1,918,698 bales for the same period in of the week’s receipts are as follows : Receipts. 2,038 715 Mobile Charleston ....... Savannah Texas Tennessee, 1,689 2,418 1,737 Received this week at— Florida North Carolina Receipts. hales Virginia Total receipts 291 132 506 10,952 for week 1,326 Kentucky, &c noticed that Savannah, Char¬ leston, and the Southwest, the receipts are still large for this season of the year, while at New Orleans and Mobile there is steady and considerable decrease week by week. The aggregate receipts at all the ports for the corresponding week o£ 1866, was 13,500 bales. The exports show a decrease over the figures in our last statement, the total from all the ports reaching 24,409 bales, against 32,360 bales last week, and 11,251 bales for the corresponding week last year. Below give the particulars of the week’s shipments from all the In the above table it will be a we Liver- pool. 11,737 163 4,495 From New York Boston New Orleans Mobile Total this -Exported this week to Ham- Ant- BarceHavre. Bremen, burg. werp. Iona. 823 75 104 251 287 470 6,00-1 10,395 6,108 total foreign exports The Total. considerable a bales 823 163 against 470 251 .75 757 from the United States 24,409 since 1,404,862 bales, against * as N. Orleans Mobile. & Texas Florida. 21 24 26 21 23 25 27 29 21 24 26 • 28 27# 31 30 week from New York show increase, the total shipments reaching 12,990 6,010 bales last week. The particulars of of Cotton this shipments are as follows : steamer—City of Paris, 935 ...Helvetia, 2,100....Min¬ nesota, 1,742 Per ships—Alex. Mar¬ Edinburgh, 387... .Hecia, 611 shall, 1,131 Ontario, 1,469... Mount Washington, 3,332.j Total lmlesll,737 To Havre, per steamer—St. Laurent, 10-1. Total bales 104 To Bremen, per steamer—Baltic, 291 — Deutschland, 529: Total bales.. 825 To Hamburg, per steamer—Allemannia, 251. Total bales 251 75 To Antwerp, per steamer—Concordia, 75. Total bales Below we give our table showing the exports of from New York, and their direction for each of the last four To Liverpool, per Cotton also the 1, 1866; and in weeks ; of the total exports and direction since September the last column the total for the same period previous year : Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1, 1866 Sams WEEK ENDING EXPORTED TO June 3. May 28. 2,263 Liverpool Other British Ports Havre Other 4,100 4,575 .... French ports 2,263 -4,100 711 Britain.. 1,593 Bremen All others *• and Gibraltar Total Spain, 4,575 17. time to prev. y ear. date. 11,737 331,709 365,433 6,057 17,962 11,737 337,766 382,395 104 915 .... .... 20,727 33,956 6 88 etc Grand Total Below we give our Receipts of cotton Sept. 1: 1,593 915 104 26,733 34,044 177 339 999 73 323 144 53 S23 251 75 31,734 12,799 5,277 17,745 15,097 6,052 520 1,149 49,810 38,894 860 952 1,748 1,812 2,502 .... ... 516 Total to N. Europe.. Spain, Oporto .... Total June 711 and Hanover ports .... .... Total French Other June 10. .... 10,786 usual table of the movement of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing at a glance the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: In this table, as well as in our general table of receipts, &c., we deduct from the receipts at each port for the week all received at. such port from other Southern ports. For instance, each week there is a certain amount shipped from Florida to Savannah, which in estimating the total receipts must he de¬ the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We are thus par¬ ducted ticular in the statement of this fact, as some of our readers fail to understand it. in 1866. £40,000 .... these 12,990 1,447,598 bales for the same period last year, and the present stocks 279,072 bales, against 346,609 bales at the same time Sept. 1 now amount to The exports % Hamburg week .... liberal share for export. $ lb 21 23 25 2*i>; 28 Middling Low Middling Good Middling Total to Gt. ports : 88,856 26,886 321 Upland. previous bales 36.566 12,901 .... week has embraced a Ordinary Good Ordinary receipts of cotton this week at all the ports show a very decided decrease, the total reaching only 10,952 bales (against 17,845 bales last week, 14,416 bales the week, and 16 643 bales three weeks since), making the aggre¬ . 534 480 39,149 .... «... .... 102,000 .... 3,011 • .... 12,901 26,565 M., June 21, 1867. The week at*- • ing quotations: Friday, P. Received this Orleans 534 • immediate wants, and there has The continued delay in the long cotton goods, and the favorable crop accounts have in great part dispelled the hopes that were entertained by many, that there must speedily be a reaction and higher prices for raw cotton. The sales for the week are about 11,500 bales, the market closing dull (under the Liver¬ pool quotations of 11 Jd. for Middling Uplands) at the follow¬ COTTON. New 3,'ll • .... Spinners buy only to supply been little or no speculation. .313,215 125,873 expected revival of trade in 127,705 7,359 Saltpetre 147,315 Woods. 6,512 51,022 337.766 26,733 shade Setter currency business of the 4,936,370 3,456,615 3,018 i .... .... figures were realized on an export demand, i>ut the improvement was at once lost on the decline in gold, and a decline of -Jd. in the Liverpool market. The a 473.101 418,417 Viugi Cassia k*56 609,574 423,556 4,927 5,074 Rice 13,121 Spices, &c. 4,230 22,087 1,321 959 102,320 51,742 21,743 5,665 10,069 19,429 and Wednesday, Liverpool, 60,301 1,319,565 2,012,835 Raisins 70,329 103,279 58,254 416,121 141,405 279,072 $214.328 $795,632 75,004 125.140 $20.945 1,248 II ides,undrsd. 251.072 0S6 555 3,524 79,686 212,738 57,801 74,639 99,819 79,346 566.142 688,914 1,793,679 1,112,4691184,863 107,530 1,404,862 To n 234,818 524.611 11,871 The market has ruled quiet without essential change 4,302 7,951 46,570 67,820 througlwrvt the whole week. On Tuesday 50.536 224,510 with ar. ’vance in gold and steady accounts from 41,895 23,320 136,005 25,463 . 573,106 602 15,457 7,304 Fish 1,892 Fruits, Ac. Lemons 10,228 Oranges 2,621 68,887 Nuts 020 POUTS. 1‘or’gn. 72,250 STOCK. NORTH. Total. 371,843 149,285 45,014 4,362 3,506 133,537 37,099 102,147 29,880 June 21 Virginia, June 21. . Other June 21* 1,819 reported by value. 430 Articles 405 N. Carolina, France Other Britain 56,679 .. 8HIP- 177,166 163,872 bids.. 10,052 7,083 Tobacco 2,018 Waste........ 1,161 Wines, *fcc. Champ, bkts 7,117 2,607 Wines 74,450 Wool, bales... Florida, June 7+. 1,882,081 3,001,220 37,650 22,870 Sugar.bxs«fcbg 4,310 11,080 Tea... 11,847 8,207 2,420 35 Cutlery tcs & 231 710 701 hhds, 88,750 370,370 111,212 282,818 4,410 Steel 11,128 Sugar, 9,213 13 23 6,103,083 .. . Tin, boxes.. 13,003 3,260 Tin slabs,lbs 22,736 11,528 Rags 2,166 4,001 '•150 622 13 2 Briinst, tns. , 1,500 245 p’wd’rs Blea 167 Spelter, lbs. 426,877 1 TO— m’ntsto . 43-1,047 SEPT. EXTORTED SINCE por^ the and (bales) since Sept. 1, Mentioned. Stocks at Dutes 1,072 .... • • • • .... .... .... .... 3,490 6,765 at the port .... ... ... .... 6,010 754 12,990 416,121 457,835 of New York for the week and since * The receipts given for these ports are only Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated. t These are the receinta at all *ho port* Apalachicola, which are only to June % Estimated. 7. the shipments from Tennessee of Florida to June 14, except The stack at New York is also estimated. 786 THE CHRONICLE. This week. Bales. From New Orleans Since . . 2,146 92.608 88 Texas Savannah Mobile Florida Bales. 122,395 58,230 1,453 . 24,876 32,262 2,682 Total tor the week. Total since Sept. 1 This From South Carolina North Carolina Since week. Sept. 1. Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. 1,699 65,785 75 410 30,65*2 73,658 155 115,222 Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.. Per Railroad 8,708 605,728 The following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬ tember 1: /—Boston.—, Last week. 1.167 Receipts from— New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile Florida South Carolina North Carolina Last Sep. 1. 25)6 16,235 696 951 207 86 6,681 200 90 2,477 220 57 39 927 ... 2, 73 13,578 .... .... 493 6,952 .... +21,318 .... 402 30,942 Reshipments. There have been no receipts at Philadelphia. exports this week from these cities except 163 bales from Boston, all of which to Liverpool per Laurens, had we were shipped Shipping News.—We have given which the foreign above the vessels in shipments for the week were made from the Northern ports; we now add the same information with regard to the Southern ports: Cornelia, 2,170 per barks Ro¬ 4,405 , per 1,5:35 Rate Brigham, 1.328 To Barcelona—Per brig Cronometer, 287 Mobile—To Barcelona, per bark Salvadora, 470 schooners Hartsiein, European kets our Indian Cotton Mar rets.—In reference to these correspondent in London writes as follows :* and Total exports this week from Southern ports The Growing Crop.—We had our 6,004 287 470 * bales. 11,256 prepared and intended to give this exchanges respecting the growing columns compels us to confine our¬ crops, but the crowded state of our selves to a brief statement of the facts our advices have elicited. general terms we would state that the cold, In rainy Spring has retarded, the growth of cotton in almost every section of the South, but the stand is good, and under the present warm, pleasant weather, the grass is be¬ ing got rid of and the plant is growing finely. New Orleans, <fcc.—The New Orleans Price Current of the 15th says that the weather has been generally clear and warm, and decidedly favorable to the planter. The Feliceana Democrat of the 8th inst. says the fine weather of the past the growing mar¬ Liverpool, June 8.—A large business has been done in cotton this quotations. The total sales of the week amount to 95,470 bales, of which 5,400 bales are on speculation ; 18,900 declared for export, and 71,170 bales to the trade. As compared with the close of last week American cotton shows an advance of |d. ; Brazilian, £d.; and Egyptian, per lb. On the other band, East Indian cotton shows, in some instances, a decline of £d. per lb. Auuexed are the prices current for American cotton : week at enhanced 1867. , SeaJsland.... 17 11 Stained Upland Ordinary and middling. 18 12 Mobile New Orleans. Texas 10 @10# 13 13 14 14 11% fine. 24 16 14 following statement Good and good fair. 20 - &3 17 . Upland cL 40 .. .... 28# .. Mobile Orleans.... .. .. * Annexed is d. d. 27 13 34 16% 16% 25# 28% d. 18 13# 13# 17 Stock at “ ,.13# 13# 13# 52 22 15# 16 16 1864. 1865. Middling— d. Pernambuco. Egyptian. 11% 11# 11% :. Dhollerah... ports: - 17 17 . .. cot 1S66, d. d. 27% 15# 27# 15 . .. Broach showing the stocks London, including the supplies of American to those 33 20 15 prices of middling qualities of table a , Fair. Good 27 18 13 .. ton at this date in each of the last four years : 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. Sea Island. Mid. 64 18 - .. shows the 1866. ,, Fair and 11% 11# 11% 9%@10# 9%@1 U# 10 @10% Middling— — week extended extracts from an at this present year. Georgia.—We had prepared extensile items from our Georgia ex¬ changes, but the substance of them all is that cotto) is rather small, owing to the cold, wet spring, but is now growing rapidly and gives promise of fair crops. Some, however, say that cotton never was better. The Total bales Havre—per bark "Aberdeen, 3,141... public meetings opportunity of knowing the prospects of the farm¬ season, in adjoining districts. The cotton and corn crops are somewhat retarded by the backwardness of the spring, but are growing finely at present. The Sumpter Watchman of the 12th instant says:—We were much encouraged by the accounts received by us, on Saturday last, from some of our planting friends of the Mechanicsville region of Sumter District. The corn crop is promising, ihe cot¬ ton crop fair and the oat crop fine. With a continuation of the fair season enjoyed,.a comparatively abundant yield will crown the harvest the ing community steamer Peruvian. Exported this week from— New Orleans—To Liverpool, per ship sa Boettcher 553 Egeria, 1.772 To many these, the crops of Clarendon will be unusually heavy. The Anderson Intelligencer of the 12th inst. says : During our late jaunt to escape .... 225,024 t This does not include the railroad only danger is that of drought in July, and too If we .... 29,880 3,745 Total receipts... 7,317 660 1,171 Sep. 1. - ... .... 9.420 53.236 New York. &c* Since 1,020 6,036 Tennessee, Kentucky, &c... Sep. 1. 9,577 107 112 ill Last week. .... 14,185 28,912 600 Baltimore.-^ Since week. 66,318 ... Virginia * Philad’phia.—, Since [June 22, 1867. CL 33# 11% 13 8# 12# 7% 6% 6% 8# 7% of cotton in Liverpool and and Indian produce afloat 1866. Bales. London American cotton afloat •“ Indian 1867Bales. 95*8,770 96,720 Liverpool 852,950 66,100 127,000 ... 80.000 701,800 1,924,290 Total 632,000 1,631,050 SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Sales this week. / Ex- Trade, port. American hales. 37 350 7,630 Brazilian 8,430 2,610 Egyptian 3,880 1,160 West Indian 3,140 270 East Indian IS,330 7,230 tion. 4,060 Total, 49,040 11,070 Total Same this , Specula- period year. 1866. Average weekly 1867. sales. 1866. week Ins had a most benificial effect on 20,820 18,230 30 4,730 5,510 crops. Cotton is small, though healthy and thriving. The 390 5,430 Caddo Gazette of the 8th inst. 8,930 3,670 200 says the intensely hot sun of the past 3,610 43,720 41,090 1,490 1,470 week has given renewed 720 26,280 50 *,600 472,160 vitality to both corn and cotton. 12,490 13,880 China and Japan.. 40 40 3,190 1,S40 20 Alabama.— A writer from Lee 20 county to the Columbus Sun says the Total 71,170 18,900 5,400 95,470 1,458,4601,417,950 king” is pretty much dethroned, and the cold May has given him the 43,540 42,7S0 “sore skin,” &c.. but the stand is pretty good, and the*e is reason yet Imports Stocks to expect a full To this To this crop. The freedmt n arc doing as well as could be ex¬ Same This date date Total pected. The Montgomery Mail of the 12th inst. says the most This date Dec. 31, week. glow¬ 1867. 1866. I860. dav. 1866. ing accounts come to us respecting the growing crops. The result of American 1866. 68,433 872,7:351,156,130 1,156,130 463,550 401,7:30 167.270 the cotton 12,466 255.8^5 404,865 crop is not so certain. The cold Spring has somewhat re¬ Brazilian 404,865 162,080 125,740 41,760 tarded its growth ; but since the 1,55*7 134.691 200,083 200,083 60,680 delightful growing weather has set in Egyptian 54,880 23,180 West Indian.;.... 7-13 54.101 it has 90,274 90,274 25,740 27,750 11,620 greatly recovered, and should the season continue to be propi¬ East Indian 56,270 31)6.7031,544,675 1,544,675 138,630 tious a fine 3S6,460 270,100 product will be the result. The Montgomery Advertiser of China and Japan 894 12,993 12,993 2,270 2,210 2,840 the 12th inst. says a full grown cotton blown was shown us Total yesterday 130,55)01,625,0063,409,020 3,409,020 852,9:0 998,770 516,770 by Mr. J. M. Farble, who has the well-known farm of the late Major Of the present stock of cotton, about 54 James A. Ware, on the Mount per cent is American produce Meigs road. This is the earliest bloom that has been known for some years. London, June 8.—In the early part of the week, the cotton trade was firm at an advance of Mississippi.—The Aberdeen Examiner of the 2d inst. -^d. to £d. per lb ; but this improvement has says : “The re¬ since been entirely lost. port from the fields of Chickasaw and Monroe are most The annexed particulars relate to East India, cheering and encouraging. The growing crops are full of promise. The freedmen China and Japan produce : are doing exceedingly well, ami with anything like a propitious season, 1865. 1866. 1867. we will have a Bales. Bales. Bales. glorious harvest.” The Coahomian says :—“ The worm Imports, Jan. 1 to June 6 is 102,860 • 186,771 75,723 devastating everything mthe bottom this year —whole fields of corn Deliveries 127,250 127,929 73,418 and cotton are Stock, June 6 swept away in a few days.” 84,676 96,713 66,065 South Carolina.— &. Bombay, June 1.—There is very little change to notice in the state correspondent ol the Charleston Courier writ¬ ing from Fort Motte under date of June 16, says, in substance, that the of our market. The shipments from January 1 to May 11 were as colds and frosts of May have prevented the plant flourishing as it would under: have done had 659,681 :617,890 147,210 180,760 100,060 104,210 ' .... .... “ , ^ , .... . ^ the wmather been mure seasonable. The freedmen are The Barnwell Sentinel has the following:—The weather continues fine, and the crops of corn, cotton, <fcc., is fully coming up to the expectations of every one. So far, the laborers of the husbandman have been crowned with success, and from all parts of the district the accounts of the growing crop seem of the most encouraging nature. The Yorkville Enquirer of the 13th inst. says:—Cotton and com are, in doing well. 1866. Destination. London hales. Liverpool Clyde 586,342 Total Great Brit’n 17,991 2.438 1867. hales. 6,734 568,118 1866. bales. 31,131 Continent China 8,935 Total 606,771 614,918 574,852 1867 hales. 19,791 .. . 626,563 Alexandria, May 29.—Rather more disposition has been shown to buy cotton, and fine samples command extreme rates. Good middling farmers, believing a bird in the hand worth two in the bush, are devoting their energies chiefly to 14d. to 14£d.; fair to fully fair 16d. to ]5^d.; good fair to fully good the gathering of the crop which is made. The Clarendon Press of the fair 16d. to I6fd. per lb., free on board. Shipments stand thus— 11th inst. says :—Crops both of cotton and corn were never more prom¬ * ising than at present. The nights have been unusually cool, and continue For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph des¬ so, but cotton crops are patches at the close of our London" letter in a previous generally in fine order and growing off well. Our i, Commercial & Financial part ol this paper.—{Ed* Chronicle. some places, heavily in the grass, but our . June 787 THE CHRONICLE. 22,1867.]’ Great Britain, bales. From Continent. bales. Total. hales. 1,690 28,423 17^,123 2S,96S 26,534 34,754 May 18 to May 24 Previously from November 1 545 1 77 1,145 . changed. * Total 1865-6 1864-5 QUOTATIONS -3 150,824 224,729 Light. .. © 7 7j*@ 9* 9 fall considerably short of the large total for last week, the shipments from New York reaching only about half the aggregate for the previous seven days, while from the other ports there is no increase. The receipts continue to be very liberal, amounting during the past week at New York, Baltimore, and New Orleans to over 7,000 hhds., besides a large supply of cases and manufactured pkgs. The following table gives the particulars of the week’s shipments from all the ports: exports of tobacco this week ,—Stems Exported this week from Hhds. Case. 1,464 1,447 New York Baltimore Boston New Orleans Bals. Tc.s. 657 hhds. bales. Pkgs. 24 111 4 .... 89 2,898 4,224 1,598 2,615 816 1,037 previous week... 2,177 779 426 . we ....... give j211 46 24 107 68,466 9 .... 100 3,253 Germany 1,625 70 21,894 5,50T 601 119 21 S5 761 61 4,521 Holland 10,711 8,178 . . Italy 3,981 • • • 5,496 Gibralt.&c Mediterranean 1,066 ... 14 Austria South America... West Indies East Indies Mexico 684 Honolulu, &c All others 955 97 • • . . . - ... . . • 30 • • - . . • ... • ... • • • 1 4,446 566 • ... 1,382 • 92 ... ... . * . 1.299 499 29,506 12,669 157,375 397.582 320 . 449,779 ... . • • . . 3,678 5 60 8,906 9,211 709 8,248 1,829,286 441 ... ... 113.040 4,403 • ... .. 17,276 46,411 18,215 595,688 72,605 8 . . . 466 50 • • . . . 264.165 39.807 . - 15 . - » • . ... ... 21 ... T’l since Nov. 1, 1S66 66,268 ... ... . . 4 . ... . . 443 191 642 746 372 37 125 15 472 154 • ... • . . . . • . 664 ... 1,565 ... .... Australia B. N. Am. Prov.. . ... 99 • 247 1,356 ... &c. . • . • ... 424 ... . 709 2,S24 ... ... lbs. 1,125.048 445 8 5,164,405 the ports from which the following table indicates above exports have been shipped The Tcs.&^-Steras- Bxs. & Lbs erns. hhds. his. pkgs. mant’d. 709 4,450 230 1,561 20,02210,461 Hhds. Cases. Bales. From . ..S2,429 ...28,453 ... 994 20 Portland.. ... 3,890 51 .. 14 31 461 234 29 Total since Nov. 1, ..66,258 The market this • • 45 3,125 1,992 21 San Francisco. o . ... 124 47 45 ... 12 1,687 ... • • . 216,111 3,602 530 ... * • • 70,579 • ... ... 467 499 3,24S 709 9,211 week has exhibited an active demand, but advancing views of holders have checked business, although some advance has been paid. In Kentucky Leaf the sales of the week foot up about 1,100 hhds., and for the finer sorts, l@2c. per lb. advance have strong feeling at the close. The de¬ mand has been mainly to fill the French and Italian contracts, for which 12@19c. have been paid for fair to prime leaf. Only a moderate business has been done in lugs and low leaf paid, with a 5@7c. been paid for good stock, but a further advance being asked, has in a measure shut out exporters. There is, however, a disposition to speculate in the Connecticut crop of 1866, against the wants of the home trade, and it is held in the country higher The sales of the week include the fol¬ than in this market. lowing lots of Connecticut crop of 1866 : 65 cases 18-^-c., 68 do life, 42 do 13c., 61 do private terms, 82 do private terms, 37 do 16fc., 62 do 15c., 20 do 25c. In Ohio the sales are 260 cases at 6@llc., the latter for choice. Havana Tobacco is steady, with sales of 250 bales at 85@95c. The market for good Seed leaf has paid. 25 “ - 40 “ line work,medium, in bond 8 good & fine “ 14 Black ©i.70c 60 @17c 15 @40c 60 @S5c ‘25 @.40e Bright work, medium... “ good & fine “ 45 ©75c Blight work—common “ good “ @4 25 @12c Fine, tax paid. 80 <0 30c @*5c FOREIGN. “ Yara. S5 90@1 00 Good Fine 75@ Nov. ... Yara, average lots.. AT NEW ^-Previously—, pkgs. hhds. r-'This week—» hhds. pkgs. From Virginia .... Total 5,187 4,377 61,749 23,180 853 32,999 124 24,427 39,445 1,247 Other 6.104 29,253 124 ... 3,740 Ohio, &c 58.002 85,564 43,822 90,951 3,319 403 2,723 1,872 3,126 403 2,662 4,787 193 6! 85 Baltimore New Orleans........ pkgs. hhds. 5,610 3,747 485 1. 1866. r-T’l sin. Nov.l—» SINCE NOVEMBER YORK .. week, and since receipts of tobacco at New York this 1, have been as follows: RECEIPTS 00 55©1 05 60© 70 ..1 20@2 Havana.—Wrappers, 70 60@ Havana.—Fillers—Common. 853 New' York following are the exports of tobacco from the past w eek : The for EXPORTS OF TOBACCO YORK.* NEW FROM Manuf. Stems, Hhds. 125 84 Liverpool London Bristol Bremen • • . • • . . . .... 61 Antwerp 94 53 . Gibraltar Genoa Africa Cuba Other West Indies British N. A. Colonics British Guiana China •. 163 .... .... . . * The exports in this table to fests, verified and corrected by an The direction of the 1,464 . . . . . . . . , . • . • . 1,147 , . . , . . . , . 111 24 m . 16,560 14,716 1,129 3,601 4 65,864 European ports are made np from mani¬ inspection of the cargo. exports for the week, from the other follows: From Baltimore—To Bremen, 600 m .... . 4 . t. 3,506 . , . •• .. 757 .... . . . • m . . . 9,669 . . . , • 16,683 . . . 174 •24 .... export for the week , . . . .... • . . . 413 . . . . ... .... • . . . . .... . . . .... 1 5 28 2 llayti . Ill lbs. . . . . 170 82 362 117 . . . . . 608 594 532 Hamburg.. Total Cases. Bals. Tcs. bales. Pkgs 24 hhds. leaf and 5'* hhds. of stems... terdam, 795 hhds. h af and 50 hhds. stems — Mayaguez, and 2,602 lbs. maul'd St. Johns, P. R., 2 hhds. .To Rot¬ 1 hhd., 12 cases Liverpool, 30 cases To Cayenne and Swnnam, 2 hhds. llayti, 89 bales British Provinces, 6 hhds, 1 case and 5 boxes poits, 10S cases. From New Orleans—To Marseilles, 23 hhds To Bordeaux, 4 hhds ...To Matamoras, 1 hhd. From Boston—1To 29,506. 12,669 tlie at Black work—c<>m., tax 120 222 '. @18 2*@ 3* 7 @10 10 ©18 10 manufactured. ports, have been as ... ^ @30 3*© 4* 6 ©13 8 @12 15 @30 2 @3 4*@> 8 10 @25 “ @14* Manfd, Cases. Bales, tcs. hhds. bales. &bxs. 790 Hhds. 5,415 24,203 Belgium been Average lots Wrappers Pennsylvania and Ohio Fi lers Average lots “ “ Wrappers 78,870 from the United States since Novem¬ ber 1, 1866. 4*@ 5# 10 15 5 @6 “ 134,836 101 58 New Crop. @‘0 45 Fine wrappers “ “ @20 7 @10c. 25 @?5 New York State Fillers “ 19 @16 The our ; To Great Britain Africa, &c China, India, “ lbs. 5 Cer’s &,—Stems—, Pkgs. Spain, tk @15 @18 Old Crop. Fillers Wrappery lots “ 28 Exports of Tobacco France.. “ 65,864 usual table showing the total exports of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their direction, since November 1, 180(5: Below Connecticut & Massachusetts 2,602 100 12 139 Total this week Total last week Total 1,398 8 Man’f, , (BOXES). SEED LEAF Friday, P. M., June 21, 1867. The ©i 8* ©11* 7 0 Heavy. @12*c. 12 @14 16 10 13 15 Good Leaf Fine do Selections. .. do (HHDS.). Light. Heavy. © Common Lugs.. 4 @ 4*c. Good Lugs 4*@ 5* 5*@ 6* Medium CURRENCY. IN LEAF KENTUCKY CommonTLeaf... TOBACCO. quiet, and prices nominally un¬ manufactured tobacco remains been less active ; l@2c, advance has To other off in Mary¬ Maryland.—At Baltimore, inspections show a falling land leaf and an increase of Ohio. The market for both descriptions been quite active. Sales embrace 1,000@ 1,200 900 hhds. Ohio, the latter, principally medium reds, taken for has hhds. Maryland and and reported at prices within our range. Kentucky little inquiry for new, but we hear of no sales being France, is quiet; some consumated. In¬ spections this week 1,552 hhds. Maryland (61 reinspected), 1,175 Ohio (178 reinspected), 57 Kentucky—total, 2,7S4 hhds. Cleared same pe¬ riod 795 hhds., 50 do. stems, to Rotterdam ; 600 hhds., 60 do. stems, to Bremen ; 3 hhds., 1*2 cases, to West Indies. ; New Orleans.—The market has remaiued in a rather inactive state since our review of last Wednesday morning. The transactions latterly have been chiefly in light lugs, aud the market is pretty well cleared of all parcels of this description, for which holders were willing to ac¬ cept 44c per lb. The light descriptions of admitted are not much en¬ quired for, but there is a good demaud for dark heavy, rich parcels, ouly the prices offered are not fully up to the views of holders, and hence the market is inactive. Ouly about 50 hhds. have been sold dur¬ ing the past three days, making about 150 hhds. for the week, including lugs at 44c.; leaf, 8@18.' Receipts for the week, 590 hhds. Exports for the week : To Marseilles, 23 hhds; to Bordeaux, 4, and to Mata¬ moras, 1 ; total, 27. Stock on hand and on shipboard, 4,750 hhds. Kentucky.—At Louisville, the market continues active for all grades^ and prices have tended upward. The sales for the week foot up about 1,650 hhds. Good common lugs were quick at $3 per 100 lbs. We quote : Common lugs, $2 60(3)3 ; fair to good $3 60(3)5 ; common leaf, #5(3)7 ; medium, $8@10 ; fair to good, #11@16 ; good to flue, #16 @20; fancy cutting, $25@40; fancy wrapping, #20@50 per 100 )b 788 THE CHRONICLE. [June 22,1867. Eastward Movement of Flour and Grain by Canal.—The following show about the amount of grain aud flour on cauals destined for tide water: BREADSTUFFS. statement will Friday, June 21, 1S67, P. M. Tb«re has been further decline in leading staples, but he close is generally firmer and more active. Flour has f urther declined 50c.(d!$l per bbl., in which all grades have shared about equally ; but, at the close, prices coming fairly within export limits, there is more doing, and the market is rather firmer. The improved demand is mainly for fresh ground ; but as the stock has been much reduced there is very little else offering. The receipts of Western Hours by raij have increased, and the local millers are more fully employed ; but from other quarters the supplies have nearly ; so ceased that with an average business the supply is scarcely equal to the wants of the market, and prices advanced to-day 10(d)2Oc. per bbl. Wheat has declined fully 2d cents per bushel for all medium qualities, and ruling at the close relatively lower than Hour; a circumstance that has brought millers into market freely. There has been something done for export. The mar¬ ket has experienced much relief from these purchases, and the close is rather stronger in tone. The business yesterday was about per 00,000 bushels, at #1 04(a) l 75 for No. 2 Chicago ; some $1 90 for No. 2 Milwaukee From bbls. The sales to-day . • Oswego, 9 days . Wheat, Corn, bush. bush. bush. 727,220 145,198 307,650 872,418 14,821 308,150 254,555 792,517 7,300 8,500 - 100 Total Previous week 100 15,800 27.500 .... Corresp’di’g week’66. 5,390 Oats, 341,590 2,230,318 bush. bush: 500 6 Rye. Barley, 22,960 8,087 .... 31,047 30,360 25,897 99,693 Liverpool, June 7.—The markets have been weak, aud on Tuesday were lower. To-day a further reduction was submilted to, which induced more business at 12s.7dj<^l3s. ior Chilian, and los. ld.@13s. 6d. for Californian wheat. Flour declined Is. per sack. For Indian corn the demand was very sluggish, eveu at a decline of Is. 6d(©2s. per quarter, mixed American 37s(d)38s. per 480 lbs. Average price of wheat last year's 65s. 5d. 4ss. 5d. Last week’s deliveries from farmers Corresponding week last \ IMPORT THIS I. corn, qrs. America and Canada Flour. Bbls. Sacks. , , qrs. 35,689 19,737 Europe, Ac 19,856 3,920 7,765 30,49 3 43/54 64-,721 Since 1st Sept., 1866. Same time 1867 621.130 604,157 OF GRAIN INTO THE UNITED I. corn, Qrs 4,725,193 Qrs. 1,954,957 4,073,104 Same time last year 23,276 33,936 72,912 421,802 447,377 KINGDOM. Wheat, Sept. 1, 1866, to May 31,1867.... „ WEEK. Wheat, • IMPORT , \ *)cr tir* 44,752 qrs. * 51,282 qrs. year FOREIGN Club; $2 05 for No. 1 Club, and 82 42@2 60 for White California. Flour, Buffalo. 14 days...... 1,840,937 Oth. grn.,- FI. & Ml. Owt. Qrs. 3,665,629 2.914,158 2,6f 5,710 4,084,088 were GROCERIES. 3@5c. advance, but mostly on speculation. Shippers with drew, millers bought sparingly, and only about half of yester. day’s business done. The market was stimulated by private at Friday ! There has been Night, June 21. fair business in Groceries, considering that is^the midst of the dull season generally, and that all branches telegrams reporting a large Milwaukee trade. The principal of trade are unusually quiet. business was for No. 2 Club at 81 02. There is little or no speculative Corn shows little change for the week, feeling observed, but there is a growing confidence in an early although fluctuating daily, with a feverish tone to the market. The supplies are improvement in business. TEA. so much below last year that, with the presence of a good ex¬ Tea has been quite inactive as usual at the dull season. Later in the port demand, holders are firm. Yesterday a large export busi¬ week a fair inquiry for Green Teas has been observed, and the transac¬ ness was done in Prime New Mixed at 81 07(a) 108 per 56 lbs. tions are more liberal including 7,200h alf chests. In other kinds we Tiie scarcity and high rates of freight, especially by steam, by notice sales from first hauds of 1,400 half chests Japans, and 1,500 half which it is advisable to ship the new corn, have, in a measure, chests Oolongs. The imports of the week have included two cargoes from Foochwo, checked the export business. At to-day’s market there was a follow's a it brisk sale for Prime New Mixed at 81 Oats advanced five cents 10. speculative demand, but a portiou of the advance has since been lost. Uye has declined five cents. Parley has done rather better, and is scarce. Ca¬ nada Peas are unchanged, having sold to a considerable ex¬ tent for export at 81 10, in bond. The following are closing quotations : on lour, Superfine..$ bbl. $7 (Kkql S 50 Extra State S 75@10 50 Shipping!!, hoop Ohio. 10 00(^11 25 Extra Western, mon to good com¬ 8 85<3il2 12 Double Extra Western and St. Louis 12 257*15 50 Southern supers 0 25<j*ll 75 Southern, fancy and ex. 12 00^15 00 California 11 50@13 00 Rye Flour, line and super¬ fine Corn 0 25<& 8 00 meal, Jersey Brandywine aud 5 50© 6 25 a Wheat., Chicago per as : by the “Robin Hood,” 118,300 lbs. Congou aud Souchong, 780,100 Oolong, aud 56,000 lbs. Young Hyson ; by the “ Gen. Have¬ lock ” 2,500 lbs. Congou and Souchong, 572,000 lbs. Oolong—making a total of 1,623,000 lbs. There have been imported also 1,531 pkgs. from Liverpool. SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN. , $1 40© 2 10 Milwaukee Club. Red Winter Amber do White 1 25© 2 20 © • ... .... .,...© 2 Corn, Western Mixed.., Western Yellow Southern White. 1 1 Rye i Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State. Barley Malt ' . 1 1 l 1 . Peas, Canada.. .... 00© 2 (15 90© 1 14 loc/S 1 12 10© 1 15 25© 1 40 77© 78 SO© 00 08© 1 20 50(h) 1 60 lo© l 20 > Congou A Sou 1,869,236 468,163 10,857,437 Punehong Oolong&Ning I'ekoe Twunknv lfvson skill 12,078 Hyson Young llvson. Imperial . . Gunpowder... . . Total 675,962 63,641 , . Japans 121,887 1,067 164,171 (>50,285 67,375 132,503 33,056 1,164,271 1,900,060 7,581,246 1,756,801 1,797,015 5,458,983 BOSTON.—s 1,448,639 From G’t Bri267,493 96 16,036 10,571,209 472,033 9,950,773 7,043,955 1,313,955 1,598,185 6,568,462 AT N. Y. Direct lndir’ct At at New At N. Bo8York, York. ton., lbs. pkg. ail sorts. 1,137,338 35,944 800,052 145,928 1,322,925 from China and Japan 15, 1867, and impor¬ <—IMP’TS To Atlantic ports. * To San J une 1 to Same FranApr. 1 to Apr. 15. Apr. 1. 165-00, cisco. lbs. lbs. ‘ lbs. Pkg«. , Sprln, bushel.. ? The following table shows the shipments of Tea to the United States from June 1, 1866, to April tations at New York and Boston since Jan. 1. 12,078 489,642 54,403 49,948 From 112 Europe 1,493,115 From E’tlnd. 6,119,863 436 1,350,512 1,414,565 From oth. p’rts 50 4,693,739 17,127 32,267,632 30,389,550 j 49,948 18,06g COFFEE. The movement iu breadstuff at this market has been RECEIPTS AT NEW . v —1801* . For week. S’e Jan. 1. 67,315 928,660 644,135 3,480 136.720 22,335 meal, bbls. Wheat, hash.... 693,115 2,803,115 101,855 738,615 3(*,220 11,825 690,835 Rye, hush Barley, &c., husn. 10,885 14,190 1 <jj,9 It) FOREIGN EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK bbls. bbls. 3,440 78 2,250 FOR bush. ,350 THE 153,875 445,545 3,742,110 65,990 397,480 259,055 273,900 Flour, C. meal, Wheat, To Gt. Brit, week since Jan. 1 1,543,005 WEEKANI) Rye, Barley. bush. bush. ... 2,212 14,086 6,515 1,115 since Jan. 1 17,475 We»t litd. week. 6,011 3,321 since Jan. 1 10-^,877 56,108 1,205 63 Total exp’t, week 9,978 4,822 since Jan. 1, 1867 202.901 78,274 37.549 136, 87 game time, 1866 463,287 63,197” 131,491 199,200 N. A. Col. week.. 25 1,667 45,390 835 : Philadelphia Baltimore 47,642 26,771 500 8,302 Oats, bush. ...: S60,217 2,758 1. Corn, bush. 121032 116,4063,970,347 1,750 1,750 300 Since Jan. 1, from 9,807 14,652 SINCE JAN. .. . 75,970 34,822 Coffee has also been quiet with only light transactions, until to-day reported. The sales for the week are 1,610 bags Laguayra, 2,220 do. Maraciabo, 310 bags Lautas, aud to day 3,709 bags Rio, principally ex steamer North America at the wide range of 8|@13 cents, gold, in bond. The imports of the week, have been confined to four cargoes of Rio and one of Java, with the exception of a small quantity of sundries. The Rio amounts to 19,912 bags, 4,000 per “ Canton,” 4,100 per “ Minuet,” 5,600 per “ Sharaton,” and 6,212 per steamer “ N. America.” Of Java there have beeu received 10,229 bags, including mats reduced to bags, of sundries 251 bags, and of St. Domingo 384 bags. The imports since January 1, and stock in first hands June 8, are a 30,015 Corn Boston follows: YOKE. 1S07 Fur week. ti’e Jan. 1. Flour, bbls as 4,S77 2,050 3,280 35,314 3,280 69,292 128,89'-* 124,75^4,084,524 720,073 3,661,827 257, S95 4,454 620,S43 m 638,870 better business is to be as follows: OF RIO COFFEE. Import. New York, bags Philadelphia “ Baltimore New Orleans Galveston Mobile Savannah “ “ “ “ “ ...... 307.718 10,7:30 111,816 55,882 3,200 5,000 2,500 OTHER SORTS. Stock. At New 66,i73 import. Java, bags 45,492 Ceylon “ 5,000 “ 18,503 Singapore, Maracaibo, “ 21,196 Laguayra “ 23,660 St. Domingo,“ 18,423 Other, “ 14,291 5.950 25,500 2,770 Total 496,846 97,923 York, At Bost. Stock. Import. 9,0H8 li*,454 .... 9,151 3,636 3,694 12,197 414 5,003 7,820 531 Total...,..,150,544 34,033 36,950 .... June Porto Rico SUGAR. Sugar has been active for speculation and to the trade during the higher prices reported in Havana prices have advanced }@} cent. The sales from first hands are 7,420 hhds. Cuba and Porto Rico, closing at 11}(3)11} for fair to good refining, and 11,136 entire week, and with the box $ lb II ® 10}@ do fair to 11 j® do fair to good grocery... lip® do pr. to choice do 12}® do centrifugal lu ® do Melado Hi® Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7 to 9 104® Cuba, inf. to our last have been on an scale at New The details are as follows: Cuba boxes, bhds. ,— Other Manila hhds. bags. , At.— N. York 6,293 Portland Boston 2,301 Fhilad'l. 239 9,952 1,392 107 20 228 318 2,098 3,049 . Stocks June 18, 3,009 boxes, ; Cuba. , For’gn, *,,, 81,74x3 do do do 162,896 1,078 2,882 28,227 24,360 1 ,474 42,345 do do 1,294 5 111 6 991 9,479 8,024 15,752 1,118 49,336 25,231 9,142 149,924 224,668 55,534 280,252 8,065 15,556 Total import Includes barrels and tierces reduced to . . . . •••• • .... 159 • » • • 17,107 57,768 hogsheads. following will show the receipts, exports and stocks at Havana ■* Year. ,—Expts to U. S.—, 1865... 48 1 ■-•8,590 25,408 32,411 836,092 ® f8 cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and cloves, 20; pepper and and ginger root, 5 cents 19 lb. Cassia, in mats..gold 'jjilb 41 ® 42 I Pepper, (gold) 21}® 21} Ginger,race and A f(gold) 13® 1} I Pimento, .Jamaica, (gold) 19® 19} Mace f-3 ® 8i I Cloves (gold) (gold) 27 ® .► 824® 1 S5 Fruit. •Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds, Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1}, Filberts and Walnuts, 3 cents ^ lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 2 5 Raisins,Seedless, .f? }cask do box Layer Bunch Sardines fi> Citron, Leghorn Prnnes, Turkish Dates 24 10 19 qr. box Figs,Smyrna....go d $ ft ®3 70 til) ®.... 11}® 11} 28 ® 30 201®. 2» } ® 13 4 ® 42 2S ® 28} 21 ® 21} 36 ® 3n, ® 29 ® SO .... u 1'}® 18} Brazil Nuts 8 50 ®.... Filberts, Sicily 1'}® 11} 1» ® do Provence do Sicily, Soft Shell do Sartlines Shelled... box do .. $ lit. box $ lb Apples . Almonds, Languedoc ® 26 ® 12 Walnuts. Damn Fruit— Blackberries Raspberries Pared Peaches Unpeeled do Cherries, pitted, new.... • 4 873,168 431,555 4 14 ® 10 16 ® 18 50 ® 40 ® 9 ® 46 ® .. 44 10 43 THE DRY GOODS TRADE. MOLASSES. Molasse9 has been 46 ® 49 *5 ® 62 ; 522,807 192,213 generally quiet with The sales for the week ...... 430,791 739,290 «,537 Since Jan. 1. Clayed.... Burb&dot's.... Stocks boxes. week. 5,937 24,805 40,123 50,168 1867... 1866... /—Total export—, Since Jau. 1. 251,867 week. do .. Spices. : Rec’d this week. ® . 53 ® 70 Currants for No. 1*2. and Matanzas gallon. $ gall. 18 cent ad val. „ 4,056 Hanana, June 15.—The market opened quiet at'the beginning of the week, but bee <ine active and firm on receipt of new.s from Europe. Sales have been large, amounting to about 9, 000 boxes ; grades under No. 12 are most in demand and are scarce. We quote at the close, 8s. The 8 cents Now Orleans Porto Hico Cuba Muscovado do * : Nutmegs, No!....(gold) 37,408 109,4S5 13,051 57,609 4,176 29,471 .. : ♦hhds. 25,318 .. ® 16 ® 15 ® 14} Duty: mace, 40 Brazil, Manila, Total hags, bags, Ac 84,524 137,573 @ 17 @ 16 Molasses* ; Dott pimento, 15 follows 60,950 Imports since Jan. 1.. Baltimore New Orleans x boxes. ♦hhds. ♦hhds. Other bhds. 595 387 307 and imports since January 1, are as At— N. York stock Same date 1866 Philadelphia 471 .... New Orleans. Other Portland Boston Cuba » bhds. , At— Baltimore do .... Loaf Granulated Crushed and powdered White coffee, A Yellow coffee 13 12} 8} 11 flo 10 to 12 11}® 11} average York, but less than usual at the other ports. do do 12} de 13 to 15 12}® 13} do 16 to 18 IS}® 14* do 19 to 20 14*® 15} white 14}@ 15} do do do do do do 13} 11 HO ... do imports since refining good do com. ... Havana. ex The 789 THE CHRONICLE. 22,1867.] Priday, P. M., June 21, 1867. , no material change in prices Trade in all departments of the Dry Goods Market is as an¬ about 1,400 hhds. of all kinds. are ticipated at this time, exceedingly quiet. The only business goods is the receipt l>y the jobbing houses of small as follows Torto Porto orders from the country merchants for small parcels of goods At— Cuba. Rico. Other At— Cuba. Rico. Other. New York....hhds. 3,398 459 2,507 Philadelphia., hhds. 520 30 to keep up assortments. There are only fair stocks of goods 07 Baltimore Portland.... 708 Boston 2,134 176 50 New Orleans in agents1 hands in this city, and manufacturers are producing Stocks, June 18, and imports since January 1 are as follows: sparingly in order to relieve the market and prevent any un¬ N. O. Cuba. .—P. Rico-y-Oth. Fo’gn.—, Total, natural decline. In Jobbers hands stocks are small and prices hhds. ♦hhds. ♦hhds. bids. ♦hhds. At 11,415 New York, stock.. 3,170 1,685 6,560 steady, although they anticipate no advance even up to the 18,060 88,106 7,041 N. Y., imp’ts since Jan. 1. 56,547 13,499 479 99 32,787 1,122 Portland 32,21)9 opening of fall trade. The favorable reports from the country 984 46,439 2,905 3,799 53,043 Boston, “ 4S8 42,371 40,739 1,144 Philadelphia “ continue and all parties anticipate prompt payments and little 316 760 “ 10,826 Baltimore 9,750 175 30,066 New (Jrlear s “ 29,891 difficulty in making collections. The export demand continues 257,199 Total 33,586 9,147 o*ood with the lower prices and favorable advices from distant 18,188 215,475 Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads. markets. Foreign goods are in only light demand. The auc¬ * SPICES. tion houses are still doing some business in odd lots, millinery and straw goods, and bidding is fair, and prices show but little Spices are in only light jobbing demand, but with a good degree of steadiness in prices. decline. The following is the statement of exports : Imports of the week show a falling off at all the ports. .... Details are in domestic .... . • 4* • • • • -. • • • “ “ 44 “ 44 “ 44 “ — * . FRUITS. FROM generally very quiet. Considerable sales of layer raisins reported at 3.65@3.70 for layer. Other kinds are quiet and unchanged. Domestic fruits are dull, aud quotations rather Fruits are for the season are nominal. We Domestics. annex quotations : Tea. Duty: 25 cents per ,—Duty paid.— [yson, Common to fair ... 80 ®1 05 do Superior to fine.... 1 Id ®1 5 do Ex fine to finest.. .1 40 ®l 65 ’g Hyson, Com. to fair ... bo ®1 .0 do Super, to tine. .1 15 ®l 40 do Ex tine to finest! 45 ®1 75 unp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 00 ®1 15 do v Sup. to fine! 25 ®l 50 do do Ex. f. to finest! 05 ®1 90 i. Sk.&Tw’kay,C, to fair. 65® 70 do Sup. to fine 75 ® 80 /—Duty paid—> do do Ex f. to fin’st 85 ® 90 Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair. 80® 9n do Sup’rtofine! 00 ®1 05 do Ex f. to finestl 10 ®1 20 do Ex fine to finest .! ?0 @1 6> Souc & Cong., Com. to fair 65 ® 75 do Sup’rtofiue. 85 ®l 15 do Ex f. to finestl 25 ®1 50 , Liverpool Cuba. New Granada China East Indies.. St. Pierre Total this week. Since Jan. 1....... Same time 1S66... We annex a growth or production; also, the growth of countries this side the Cape when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents ^ fi>; all other 10 $ cent ad valorem in addition. ... .... . ... .... .... .... . • • 5,558 223 1,495 2,500 31,000 . .... .... .... BOSTON Domestics Pkgs. • * 19 ' 1 4 5 207 .... .... Val. • • • • • • cases. • • .... .... .... .... 712 1 . 5 4,537 2,120 42,684 few $618 621,389 336,064 236 $40,816 713 3,322 1,950 719,148 621,744 4,017 . . . .... . 1,689 23,442 particulars of leading articles of domestic manufacture: Brown Sheetings and of of its D, Goods. packages. $618 5 makes, and prices are imported direct in American or equalized vessels from the place Val. pkga. - British W. I Oolong, Common to fair.75® 85 do Superior to fine... 90 ®l 20 Coffee. Dutt: When Exports to Indies.. Dutch W. -PROM NEW YORK. H light request for standard The following are the prices Shirtings are in firm at 17(mlSc. leading makes in jobbers’ hands. Atlantic 12}, Indian Orchard L do 12}, Union do 10, N 3-4 104, Lawrence Boott H do 11}, Pep- perell N do 13}. Indian Jlead do 14 }, Atlantic V 7-8 14}, Atlantic E do 15, Pacific E do 15, Tremont E do 11}, Bedford R do 11, Boott O do Java,mats an! hags 14, Indian Orchard W do 13}, Lawrence G do 13}, Pepperell O do .gold 24}® 25 Rio, prime, duty paid ...gold 1S|® 19 ® do good gold 1"}® 18 Native Ceylon 15, Indian Head 4-4 18, Princeton A do 17, Pacific extra do 17}, do 17}® 19 gold 16j® 16} Maracaibo do fair 17s® 18} H do 17}, do L do 16, Atlantic H do 17}, do A do 18, do L do 16, do ordinary.. gold 15 ® 15} Laguayra St Domingo.....15}® i6 do fair to g.cargoes ..gold 15}® 17 Lawrence E do 15}, do C do 17, do F do 16, Stark A do 17, AmosSugar. keag A do 17}, do B do 17, Medford do 16, Kenebeck do 11, RoxDuty : on raw or brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on white bury do 16, Indian Orchard B B 14}, Broadway best do 14}, Nashua or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 3} D do 14, Pepperell E do 17}, Great Falls M dt 14}, do S do IS}, above 15 and not over 20,4; on refined, 5; and on Melado, 2} cents $ B>. of Good Hope ..— ^.... — . 790 THE CHRONICLE. Sagamore do 12$, Albion do 124, Dwight W do 144, Standard doll’ Pepperell R do 16, Macon do 17, Laconia O 9-8 17, Pequot do 22, Iu- dian Orchard A 40 inch do 17$, do O 15, Utica 5-4 374, Utica 7-4 42$, 10-4 45, Utica do 70, Utica 11-4 80. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are in fair demand and firm for prime brands. Other kinds are dull. Revere 3-4 8$, Globe do 9, Pearl River do 9, Boott R do 11, do H do 12, Globe A do 10, Strafford B do 13, Waltham X do 15, Amoskeag Z do 13, Great Falls M do 14$, do S do 13$, do A do 15A, do J do 164, Pepperell 9-4 37$, Pepperell Lyman Cambric do 16$, Straford M do 14, Lawrence A do 134, Hill’s Semp. Idem, do 194, Boot C do 15, Bartlett 31 inch 15$, Greene G 4-4 1 *2A, Lewiston G do 18$, Newmarket A do 15, do 0 do 164-, Great Falls K do 154, Bartletts do 19, Constitutional do 114, James Steam do 19, Indian River XX do 18$, Attawaugan XX do 15A Lawrence 1> do 154, Hope do 17 $, Tip Top do 20, Blackstone A A do 15, Ftanklin do 184, Amoskeag A do 21, Boot B do 184, Forestdale do 20, Masonville do 224. do XX do 24, Androscoggin L do 224, Lonsdale do 224, Wauregan do 224. Ark¬ wright do 234, Lyman J do 22L Wamsutta H do 82$, do O do 32$, Atlantic Cambric do 29, Lonsdale Cambric do 814, New York Mills do 40, Amoskeag 42 inch 24, Waltham do 20, Wamsutta 9-8 374, Naumkeag W 5-4 20, Boot W do 20, Nashua do 26 Bates do 27, Wamsutta do 42$, Amoskeag 46 inch 27, Waltham 6-4 27$, Mattawamkeag do 27$, Pepperell do 30, Allendale do 27$. Utica do 424, Wal¬ tham 8-4 87$, Pepperell do 40, Allendale Jo 32$, Mattawamkeag 9-4 40, Pepperell do 45, Utica do 65, Allendale do 40, Monadnock 10-4 45, Waltham do 52$, Allendale do 50, Pepj >eteil do 55, Utica do 70, Pepperell 11-4 do 72$. Ticks are inactive but steady. Amoskeag A C A 46, do A 36, do B 31, do D 21, do C 26, Pemberton E 19, Brunswick 174, Blackstone River 17, Hamilton 80, Somerset 15, Thorndike IS, Pearl River 42$, Pittsfield 9$, York 32 inch 40, do 30 do 31, Cordis A A A 32 inch 31$, do 4-4 32$, Duck A A 30 inch 274, Everett 21, Boston A A 27$ Swift River 174, Eagle 4-4 30-24, Albany 10. large stocks and dull. Amoskeag 25$ and 26$, Uncasville 16$ and 17$, Whitteuton A A 25, do A 3-3 22$, do B B IS, do C 16, Pittsfield 3-3 10, Pemberton Awn 374, Haymaker 16 and 17, Everett 27 inch 16 and 17, Massabesic 6-3 25$, Boston 14$ and 15$, American 14$ and 15, Eagle 12$ and 13$, Hamilton 25, Jewett City 13$ and 14$, Sheridan G 14. Stripes Checks are in export. vVinthrop 144, Amoskeag. 18$, Pepperell 19, do fine jean 20, Stark A 18, Massabesic 16, Wood¬ ward duck bag 26$, National bags 31, Stark A do 57$, Liberty-do 31. Print Cloths are are less active at reported at 8|@9c. for 64x64 Prints continue ily held. in rather lower square prices. The last sales cloth. request for the better styles, and prices are stead¬ Manufacturers producing are more American tend to over stock the market. do purple 15, do sparingly, and do not in¬ 15, Amoskeag dark 14, shirting 14-144, do palm leaf 15, Merrimac D 15-15$, do purple 16|, do W dark 18-19, do purple 19, do pink 19, Sprague’s 15$ do purple 16, do shirting 16$, do pink 16, do turkey red 15, do blue check 16, do solid 14$, -do indigo blue 154, Loudon Mourning 14$, Simpson Mourning 14$, Amoskeag Mourning 13$. Dun* nell’s^ 15, Allen pink 16, Arnolds 11$, Gloucester 15, Wamsutta 11$, Pacific 15$, Cocheco 16, Lowell 12$, Naumkeag 12, Hamilton 15, Victory 12$, Home 10$, Empire State 9, Wauregau light 14, Hovey 8$, Troy 9. Lawns and Ginghams are No. 1,400 sell at 224, do do and Manchester Chambrays in only light demand. Pacific Lawr/s No. 20, plain black and colcrs IS to 25, at 24 for B, 264 for C, 31 for D, 38$ f .r no E, and F 38. Lancaster Ginghams 23, Hartford 17, Ilamp len 19, Glas¬ gow 20, Clyde 124, Berkshire 18, Roanoke 12, Bates 20, Manchester 15. Canton Flannels are in improved request. Laconia Bro. 26, Slaterville do 21, Hamilton do 27$, Rockland do 124, Nashua A 18$, Extra Plush 22$, Arlington 17$. Corset Jeans are in moderate demand at steady rates. Andros¬ coggin 12$, Bates colored 12$, do bleached 12$, Naumkeag 18, Pepperel 20, Naumkeag satteeu 21 Laconia 18, Indian Orchard 154, Backport 18$, Ward 17. Cambrics and Silesias sell at 12 cents, are in demand. Washington cambrics Victory 10$, do A 13, do high colors 14, Fox Hill 10$, Superior 9$, Pequot 11$, Waverly 11$, S. S. & Sons paper cambrics at 15$, do high colors 17$, White Rock 15, Masonville 15$, some and Indian Orchard Silesias 19, Ward do at 19. Muslin Delaines are very quiet, but prices are unchanged. Lowell 20, Hamilton Co. 23, Manchester dark 20, Pacific dark 20, Armures dark 23, High colors 28, Pacific Merinos 40, Mourning 23, Shepherd checks 20, Spragues 19, Skirtings 80. Linbeys inactive at this time. Westerly, 82$, Park 45 inch 32$ do 60 do 87$, do 65 do 42$, Miners’ Flannel 85 and 40, Rob Roy 24, are White Rock 31$, Black Rock 32$. Cottonades IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending June corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866, have been ns 20, lS67,and the follows : entered fob consumption for also in very small demand, but without change in price. Farmer’s and Mechanics’Cassimeres 4 5, Pemberton d<fct 42$ Rodman’s Kentucky Jean 47$, Plow, L & Anvil 38, York 22$ to 37$, New York Mills 57$, Whittendend et 25. Carpets are moderately active and prices unchanged. Velvets, J. Crossley’s best $8 60, do A1 qual. 3 85, do patent 2 85; body Brussels, Roxbury 2 75, do Bigelow 2 60 ; Tapestry Brussels, G. Crossley 1 80, Lowell, ex. 3 p 2 00, do super 1 55, do med sup 1 40, Hartford Carp. Co, ex. 3-ply 2 05, do Imp. 8 ply 1 95, do superfine 1 55, Med. aud low pri. are Ingrain 1@1 30 American Linen is in fair demand at steady rates. the week 1865. v Value. Pkgs. ending JUNE 1866. , Pkgs. 20,1867. 1 867. s $433,523 Manufactures of wool... 1,081 1.037 Value. $453,620 Pkgs. cotton.. 775 231,217 silk flax.... do do do 497 730 481,395 214,523 679 151 144,170 1,796 555 5S.152 218,802 263 85,967 3,638 |l;421,840 3,926 $1,102,870 1,691 ... Miscellaneous dry gooas, Total—v WITHDRAWN Value 377 382 102 726 104 . , FROM WAREHOUSE AND 200.311 THROWN INTO THE $176,653 116,761 122,444 140,654 49,792 $606,312 MARKET DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... do cotton. do do silk flax . .... .... Miscellaneous dry goods. Total Add eut’d —. 307 $136,477 169 34 194 67,439 Total thrown upon 223 225 46 273 259 $102,009 236 72,4:35 205 103 228 170 .1,026 3,926 $281,284 1,102,870 1,691 $322,233 606,312 4,952 $1,384,154 2,633 $928,545 39,31)8 46,857 2,881 6 710 $282,962 1,421,840 forconsumpt’n3,638 mak’t4,34S $1,704,802 51,744 50,225 4,871 $107,337 68,081 90,883 49^814 Bills 942 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... do do do 45S36 cotton.. silk flax .... . .... Miscellaneous Total Add ent’d lor dry goods . $186,742 1,095 8,703 382 133 649 47 101 158,355 49.146 15.406 171 30 794 $418,352 consumpt’n 3,638 1,421,840 Total entered at the port 4,432. $1,840,192 . $157,626 121,943 649 110 $289,418 176,549 55 188,541 26,753 60,980 172 15,120 *971,412 1,154 1,102,870 1,691 $428,677 606,312 ' 2,306 3,926 6,232 $2,074,282 32,783 30;376 168 2,845 $1,034,98 IMPORTS (OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND WEEK dull and easier. Park Mills Red 20, Union 50 4x2 30, do 50 2x2 30, do 20 4 2 274. do 20 2-2 27$, Caledonia 15 inch 28, do 11 inch 22, Kennebeck 264, Wamsutta 24, Star No. 600 15$, Jo No. 800 2x2 20$, do No 900 4-2 24. Denims are inactive and nominal. Amoskeag 35, Haymaker 28 inch 16, do brown 15, York 28 inch 80, Warren brown 27 inch 15, Boston Mfg. Co. 29 inch 13$* Pearl River 30„ Union 16, Monitor 15, Manchester Co. 20, Columbian XXX 334, Arlington 18, Blue Hill 12£, Otis AX A 27 4, do BB 25, Mount Vernon 25, Pawnee 11 J. Brown Drills are in demaud for are [June 22,1867* SPECIE) ENDING AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK JUNE FOR THE 14, 1867. [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Pkgs. Value Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value Lemons China, Glass & E. Other 10,920 28 8,153 ware— Nuts Bottles China 313 Eaith’nw’e .1421 Glass 14,541 Glassware.. .528 ... 1,816 ..... 13,124j Pineapples 38,982 10,2:3 Prunes Plums 25,681 plate..155 Drugs, &c.— Sauces and pres. 5,261 3,116 3,116 913 71t»i 4,329 4,330 1,458 83 Aunatto Alum... Alum’s cake Bark Peruv. .215 672 .. 2,342 661 2,555 158 Barytes Blea powd.. .150 976 ..».. Brimstone, 622 tons Chlorodyne 100 Camph >r ... .185 1 Carmine Chalk Cream tartar .2 676 Min’l Porter Wines.. water 1733 310 3256 Chickory 58 1,072 Cochineal Cudbear Cuteh 13 10 SO baskets.. .3301 5,905 1,485 Metals, «fcc.— Gums, crude.176 Glue 5.085 3 331 Indigo 104 22,607 Lae dye Lie paste 57 133 2,593 3,485 Madder 5,707 3,288 51,453 Champagne, 37,258 Brass Goods.. .1 Bronzes 2 Chains&anc.l06 2,597 Cutlery 35 1,670 14 Guns Hardware.... 171 Iron hoop, tons 98 29,829 183 21,329 ..86 7,737 do linseed..448 39,381 7,376 Paints Paris white..62 41,934 1,488 3,583 Iron, RR Potash, hyd.... 82 500 Iron, Pig, Oils, ess... Opium do 13 50 chlo...20 511 Phosphorous. 50 Reg antimony.10 2,557 509 1,704 4,658 Rhubarb Shellac 33 175 Soda, bierb.8200 33,076 sal ....572 do 3,551 do ash ....823 29,780 do caustic 167 3,93 1,042 7,359 6,055 188 7,812 Sponges Saltpetre 31 Vermillion Whiting .. .92 60 Other Furs, &c— Felting 200 Furs Hats 196 Total 5,017 tons 13,117 Iron, sheet, 86,859 43 2,891 1374 48,028 51,360 11,694 3,359 1,720 7,647 1,98S 940 ... tons Iron, other, tons Lead, pigs 9558 Metal goods..41 Needles Old metal Platina Plated ware... Per. caps 6 3 10 4 8 Saddlery Steel 4479 do si’s 316 Wire 2,563 22,736 57,59' 88,194 4,165 2 578 Tin, bxs ..13693 Cocoa, bags 2584 33,338 Coffee,bgs.25,381 371,413 Emery 164 Fancy goods.... Firecrackers... Feathers Flax Fish Flour Grain 11 1,477 60,501 *,343 2,455 2,469 895 1,500 119,425 Gunny clth. .826 16,261 Hair 129 21,828 Haircloth Hemp Honey. 9 716 .76 India rubber.642 Ivory. 14 .... Machinery.. .264 Marble &man.. Molasses .6207 Onions Oil paintings. 14 .. Paper hang 1 Plaster Perfumery... .27 Pipes 2,791 1,796 18,523 4,583 3,102 1,668 5,110 450 1,417 2,272 14,176 Potatoes Provisions Rags 5,838 12,440 1,756 44,223 4,073 812 2166 Rice Rope 52,277 9,519 692 Salt Seeds Linseed...19,632 Soap 13 Sugar, hhds,bb 8,612 5,457 70,592 395 s. & tcs...10,932 592,872 Sugar, bxs. & bgs 4310 87,426 75,463 431,063 297 11,542 3,018 1,083 2,795 Tea 70 8 890 554 Engravings... 10 881 Paper ........225 5,538 13,685 Wool, bales. 1819 176,508 Mustard - . 2,153 Stationery, <jsc.— Bananas Citron Dried fruit Figs 208 3,0m Lith. stones 6,605 300 tons 686 Spices, &c.— Cassia 89,171 2,880 Cinnamon goods.. .23 Fruits, <ftc. 2.984 .... 332 782 11,026 Willow 809 Other 884 Mathematical..2 1,076 Miscellaneous— Musical 97 12,218 Alabaster ornm’s 412 Optical 6 2,344 Baskets 177 6,745 Surgical 1 153 Bags 9,M9 Jewejry. &c 13 39,009 Boxes 1,953 Watches 23 40,757 Buttons 77 20,298 Leather, Hides, &c.— Blacking 718 Bristles 69 13,612 Burr stone 4,767 Boots & shoesoS 2,046 Clay 2,589 Cheese Hides, dress¬ 107 6,720 ed 177 82,299 Cigars 20,746 Hides, undress¬ Coal, tons..5342 19,230 ed 251,072 Corks 749 Patent leather.1 305 Clocks. 18 2,632 358 . - Rattan 7,297 16,486 Liquors, Wines, <fcc.— 1.513 Ale 276 2,889 530 Brandy 3 306 203 1,310 Beer 2,417 172 5,356 Gin 4,295 Cubebs.. Castor oil 4,927 Woods— Cork 19,394 1,733 Logwood, M. 2,241 lbs. 600 3,185 Mahogany 1,762 Instruments— Alkali 290 Acids 25 Ammonia ....46 do sal.lO Arrow root Bismuth.. Presv'd grapes. 58,951 Glass Argo Is Oranges 1,4 0 « Books Toys Tobacco Waste 602 16 13,719 Other 849 642 $4,070,114 Oar General Prices Current will be found on pages 79T and 798. stock 202, flat 468—total freight cars 1,779. Also one pay car. by locomotives with trains was 1,621,307» viz-.with passeuger trains 467,763, with freight trains 1,058,136 Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad —The consoli¬ and with wood and general trains 95,408. The amount of freight dation of the Chicago and Rock Island and the Mississippi and carried one^mile was 79,565,902 tons, and the number of passengers Missouri Companies was consummated on the 20th August, 1864, carried one mile was 22,701,661. The tonnage transported over and the whole merged into the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific the Mississippi B-idge was 212,149^ tons, viz,: westward 88,587^ and eastward 123,562. Railroad Company: The income account includes a balance of $2,367,764 23 from The property of the Iowa Company which by the consolidation became the property of the consolidated company consisted of 183 previous years, which with the earnings and interest detailed in the miles of railroad in operation with a moderate equipment and the Operating account, amounted to a total of $5,911,797 94 Operating, rent interest and dividends (*ee operating lands granted by Congress to aid in the construction of the Missis¬ account) $3,237,045 82 Discount on convertible bonds ($2,600,009) issued pro sippi and Missouri Railroad. Since the consolidation the company rata to stockholders 2,OSO,000 00—5,317,045 82 have been engaged in constructing the railroad, from Kellogg to Des Moines, a distance of about 42 miles, which will proba¬ —leaving'an unexpended balance of $624,753 12. The general balance sheet of April 1, 1867, reads as follows : bly be opened for business in the month of July. Including this extension the total length of the railroads owned by the company Capital Stock $9,099,400 00 Road and equipment.... $15,313,822 81 Mort. B. (C. Cash 57,894 18 will be 406 miles, viz.: Iu Illinois 182 miles, and in Iowa 224 miles; Inc. Bonds ai.T.RR.Co) 1,397,000 00 Loans&c., for iuc. bonds ( “ ) 47,000 00 payable frn dem’nd 1,642,870 00 and iu addition thereto the company have a perpetual lease of the Mot. B. (C.,K.l*feP.RR.Co 6,702,534 12 Trustees land grant M.& M. HR. Co Chicago, K. I. & Pac. Bit. 16,405 52 Co. of Iowa Peoria and Bureau Yalley Railroad, 46 miles in length. 628,381 89 Cash in hands of Treas’r 1,263,288 87 Trust. E.Div.Miss. RR.Co 7,103 80 I Balance in hauds of cashThe gross receipts and expeditures of the Chicago and Rock Balance laconic account. 624,753 12 j ier, .Chicago 212,481 52 Island from April 1, to August 20,1866, and of the Chicago, Rock Total Total $18,506,762 93 $18,506,762 93 Island and Pacific from August 20, 1866, to March 31,1867, were The Report contaius a short account of the consolidation and its as follows : terms (already generally known) and also a copy of the article o ®f)c ftatltoatj Jttonitor. Operating exp.(incl. taxes)$l,995,034 68 Receipts from Passengers. $988,960 86 “ from freight 2,428,824 26 “ Ren I of P. <& B. V. UK... Interest on bouas Dividends and tax Interest on Bridge Bonds. 21,199 94 from mails. from rents, &c. from interest.... “ “ The number of miles 61,156 66 73,S91 99 125,000 00 256,131 20 820,878 94 Surplus 40,000 00 836,9S8 89 Total $3,574,033 71 $3,574,03311 Total run consolidation. The following table gives the mouthly range iu the price of Rock Island Stock in the New York market for the last three years: 1S64. 1865. 1866. I April. 110 @,134 May.. 105 @119 8H@103 107 @123H 91 @105 S9f@ 96* | June. 110 @117* 93 @102 91 @ 95* July 10T*@114 101i@10'i @ | Aug.. 109*@'i 14J 103 @109 1021@100* | Sepi.. 95 @109* 108*@113* 108i@112* | Oct... 1864-’65. S5*@ 97 99 @110 1865-’66. ^ 1866-’67.s 105 @113* 10T*@U1* Nov.. 104<@109$ 110 @112* Dec.. 101*@108* 105*@108* 102 @105* Jan.. 8S.@105* 90*@ 99* 91 @104* to August 20, on 228 miles of road and OVb.. 89*@ 98* 9S @107 95 @100* from that date on 411 miles, averaging for the year 338 miles.' Mar.. 85i@l00 104*@118f 92*@ 97* Year The earnings, not including interest account, amounted to $3,500,85±@134 Sl*@118* 89j@123* 141 72 or $10,355 45 per mile, and the operating expenses to Former notices of this Company will be fouud in Chronicle of $1,895,034 68 or $5,902 47 per mile, leaving net earnings $1,505,- September 16, 1865, and Juue 23, 1866. 107 94 or $4,452 94 per mile, being 43.01 per cent of the gross White Mountains Railroad.—The extension of this line from earnings. Littleton to Lancaster is nearly complete, and from the latter place During the year the company constructed 145 box, 40 coal, 4 it is proposed further to extend it to Northumberland and a con baggage, 3 drovers’ and 1 passenger and purchased 25 box and 25 nection with the Grand Trunk Railway. stock cars. The Company also added by purchases 14 locomotives. Augusta and Savannah Railroad.—This Company have de¬ The equipment at the close of the year consisted of the following : Locomotives 92, viz : coal burning 35 and wood burning 57; pas¬ clared a dividend of 3£ per cent. The road extends from Augusta senger coaches 46 and baggage, mail and express cars 20, box 1,109, to Milieu, 53 miles. This aecouut is based up . COMPARATIVE 1866. (466 771.) $289,400 327,269 399,870 343,408 399,364 429,669 472,483 596,583 540,537 587,121 614,849 475,723 1865 1867 (507 tn.) (507 in.) $504,992 408,864 388,480 394,533 451,477 474,441 462,674' 528,618 $361,137 377,852, Jan.... . t eb— 275,282 299,063 April.. May... 258,480 443,029 4:39,370 ..I mlie.. .July... .Aug... .Sept... 526,959 541,491 497,250 368,581 .Oct .Nov Dec.:.. ... Railway 1366. 1865. (798 in.) $1,070,890 $1,185,746 (798 m.) 1,011,735 1,331,124 1,538,313 1,425,120 1,252,370 1,274,558 987,936 1,670,917 1,153,441 1,101,632 6,501,063 14,596,413 $906,759 Jan 917,639 ..Feb... 1,139,528 ..Mar... 1,217,143. .April.. 1,122,140. ..May ... ... .. .June... . uly... ..Aug .. J 1865. 1866. (524 in.) 366,361 351,489 387,095 301,613 418,575 486,808 524,760 -495,072 351,799 283,179 412,393 409,427 426,493 392,641 339,499 380,452 429,191 500,404 416,690 339,447 4,826,722 4,652,793 413,974 865,180 $314,598 307,919 236,824 142,947 . . . .Oct... .Nov.. .Dec.. (708 m.) $603,053 528,972 505,266 616,665 516,608 505,465 460,573 569,250 567,679 480,626 578,253 571,348 661,971 588,219 504,066 617,682 678,403 747,469 — — 739,736 ..Oct— ..Nov... ..Dec.... 641,589 ..Year.. 643,887 518,088 7,181,208 6,546,741*. 1867. .. 1865. 1867 1866. (234 in.) fan. 302,437. .Feb.. ,302,714*. v Mar. 379,761 391,163. April. 3j8,601.. .May.. (234 rn.) $98,183 $121,776 74,283 70,740 84,897 72,135 108,082 267,488 262,172 170,795 116,224 150,989 245,7"1 244,854 98,787 106,689 June. 146,943 224,838 .July.. 217,159 Aug*. ..Sep.. 170,555 228,020 ..Oct... .Nov.. 310,594 • .Dec.. ..Year.. 226,840 110,664 1,985,712 1,948,900 196,580 9,088,994 — ..Year.. ...July.. — — ...Aug... *...Sep... — ‘ ....Oct..- — oi**: 1865. (285 in.) $94,136, 78,976. 343,736 362,783 333,952 ..Oct.. .Nov.. .Dec.. 328,869 365,196 335,082 324,986 359,665 429,166 493.649 414,604 308.649 104,608 96,023 106,410 ..July. ..Aug.. Sep.. ...Oct.... 116,495 .Nov... ..Dec... 116,146 ..Year.*. 105,767 108,338 150,148 .. . 110,932 111,665 1,222,017 1,186,808 . . — ..Year.. -Milwaukee & St. Paul. 1867. $aoo,i 279,15 265,796 4,504,546 4,260,125 —Ohio & 1865. 1866. (275 in.) (370 in.) $131,707 $146,800. .Jan.. 188,815 ..Aug.. 276,416 ...Sep.. ...Oct.... .Nov. ^3< >0,841 £ 346,717 416,359 328,539 ...Oct.. .Nov.. 344,700 350,348 372,618 412,553 310,763 302,425 .Dec..*. £*.171,125 129,287 .Dec.... 284,319 281,613 72,000. ..Mar .. 87,510. .April.. 119,104. ..May... .June . ..July... ..Aug... ...Sep... . . - - Year.. S 395,579 2,585,00! 123,4u4 123,957 121,533 245,59S 244,376 208,785 2,538,800 i860. 1867. . . 134,900. ..Mar.. 192,548. April. 230,497. ..May.. .Juue. ..July. . - 1866. (340 m.) (340 m.) 130,000. .Feb. ..Year.* — Mississippi. (234 m.) $98,181 86,52S 95,905 106,269 203,018 237,562 251,9(6 241,370 (234 m.) $143,000. ..Jan... 85,000. ..Feb... 1867. 337,158 nly.i ..Aug... ..Sep... 115,184 125,252 1866. (285 m.) $2S2,438 337,240 401,456 365,663 329,105 413,501 460,661 490,693 447,669 106,315 76,248 w 344,228 .Jan.. .Feb.. ..Mar.. . . 107,525 . 280,283 251,916 (285 m.) $304,095 283,661 375,210 .June. ...i $.292,047 224,621 272,454 Michigan Central. 1867. (251 in.) 1866. (251 in.) (251 m.y $96,672 $90,125 87,791 84,264 82,910 93,763 78,607 82,722 95,064 ... 1867. (410 m.) 3,313,514 3,466,922 ..June... — 84,652. 72,768. .April. 90,526. ..May.. .June.. — 289,403 7,960,981 1865. (708 in.) $560,438 ..Jan... 554,201, ..Feb. 417,352. ..Mar... 420.007. .April.. 477,607. ..May Mil. and Prairie du Chien. (524 in.) - 411,605 183,385 257,230 209,009 ..Nov... ...Dec,.. — -Marietta and Cincinnati.- 1866. (708 m.) $571,536 .April.. ...May... . 246,331 — 840.354 ..Year.. — ...Jan... .Feb... ...Mar... 1866. 546,609 747.942 702,692 767,508 946,707 923,886 . i860. (228 m.) (228 th.) $305,554 $241,395 922,892 77‘*,990 778,284 989,053 1,210,654 1,005,680 698,679 une. . 387,269 322,638 360,323 323,030 271,246 -Chic., Rock Is.and Pacific.-* 1867. 277 51)5 234,612 306,693 321,818 244,121 238,926 306,231 317,977 389,489 ''8400.941 307,523 £ 428,474 270,073 = 315,027 201,779 3.260,*268 .July ..Aug.. ...Sep.. .J 321,597 1866. (860 in.) (1,032 m.)(l,145 m.) $541,005 $523,566 $690 832! 482,164 453,695 586,743 499,296 609,033 747,392 617,970 720,651 468,358 585,623 735,082 787,736 Feb.. ..Mar., 238,362. 371,543 RAILROADS. 1 283,951. .April. 338,691. ..May.. 3,840,091 3,695,152 ..sep— r.Mich. So. & N. Indiana. (524 m.) $363,996 357,956 1865. 1867. (775 m.) 1,580,317^1,476.244 1,687,592j 1,041,115 1,416,001 1,524, 322,277 355,270 335,985 409,250 401,280 PRINCIPAL 1865. (2S0 in.) $240,238. ..Jail.. 222,241 290,111 269,249 329,851 OF .. -Chicago & Northwestern-^ 1867. Illinois Central.- 1,243,636 1,208,244 1,418,742 1,295,400 1,435,285 1,416,101 . 1866. (280 in.) (280 in.) $280,503 $226,152 438,046 .ibarcli . 5,548,359 5,476,276 3,050,340. .Year.. Erie EARNINGS —Chicago and Alton. -Atlantic & Great Western. 1865. MONTHLY .. $259,223 $267,541 239,139 246,169 326,236 813,914 271,527 277,423 283,130 290,916 304,463 253,924 349,285 247,262 305,454 278,701 3,793,005 8,880,683 1867. (340 m.) $242,793 219,065 279,647 284,729 [June 22, 18f>7, THE CHRONICLE. 792 — ■■■ - BOND LIST. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS immediate notice off any error discovered In onr great favor by giving us Subscribers will confer a FRIDA? INTEREST. DESCRIPTION. Amount ^.B.—Where th.-total Funded Debt is not given in detail in the 2d col outstand¬ ing. mnn it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co's name. 6 $ N.R.—WTiere the total Funded Debt Amount outstand¬ is not iriven in detail in the 2d Princpal payble. Payable. +-> col-j -d £ < do •d 1st sinking fund, (Ohio) 3,081,900 2,05.3,001) 1,332,000 ) do (Burt*, ex Mortgage S’k’-* Fund 1,500,000 0 do do «s Mort.(Portlaud) 263,900 0 484,1 K)0 6 019,0:)0| 1,1)24,750| 028,5001 1,852,000! 1 Bonds o .Til y 1 9 Of Oct. 'Hfil. ($2,395,000): Mortgage 1st 7 7 ! 0 ! t> : 589,5(H)! (> j ‘ <M>,'K l 2,000,000 380,000 • Central Ohio: 1st Mort *• Central Pacific of Cat: 1st mortgage Convertible Bonds Cheshire ‘ Bonds Chicago and Alton : July Ap’l & Oct. 0 j 1 Railway ($22,370,982): Georgia. do 2d do Grand Junction : Mortgage Great West., 111.: 1st, Mort., .... 1st 53 50 - . . • . 0 0 0 1889 J’ue tfc Dec. 1893 1 8 41,902 ft 7 1880 4**:j iH)0 r* 1870 .Jan. it 7 7 f> 2,500,000 7.331*0 M HI 0 7 7 3,525,000 s dan. ft Julv 1883 5 OIMI (HH) 7 Ap’l & Oct. 1895 lsr Mort 98 101 1885 1885 1803 1915 1885 93 83 1870 1896 102 At ay .t Nov. Quarterly. July do 7 4 450,000 r* Jan. A; 8 500 0(H) 7 1,0003)00 r* Jan, ft. .Inly 1874 1880 do 1,1*29,000 1,019,5(H) 1,107,540 7 7 0 2 081 (HM 7 *300,(XK 7 July Jan. ft July 600 000 8 8 108,1 (H ti 283.0(H 109,5tH 7 7 7 7 Jan. ft July 1807 do 1881 Af ’eh ft April 1884 do ’8l-’y4 500,0(H 0 Jan. ft 2,00 *,(HH fid do 042 (HH Depot Bonds Western ($3,491,500): Conpon Bonds.. do Toledo ($734,000) NX i 7 1,122. 1 008 (XX l 7 572,OLH ) 7 ) 1,740,00. $2,500,001[J 1 % . .... 74 102 104 non no . . . . . 97 98 7 7 , Feb. St An;£1876 , , , • 80 70^ 73 .... .... .... ..... ... • • • • • . Feb. & Am: 1869 6,668,500 2,523,000 2,563,(HMi 7 April & Oct 0 6 6 do do 358,000 do 1875 1875 18(H) 1875 300,000 7 108 1 (Hi xi ((Hi 99 7 112 .... .... .... .... .... Jan. & July 1866 1870 do • • • • Fob. & Aug 1S82 600,000 364,000 10 500,000 * Jan. & 7 July 1866 • .... • • • *» 040,(HK) 7 May & Nov. 1881 397,(HH) 7 April & Oct 1873 612,500 2,000,(HR) 7 7 May & Nov 1881 April tfc Oct 1906 485,000 8 8(H),(HH) H 900,000 7 7 7 7 Jan. & July Jan. & July Jan. tfc July Marchtfc Sep 400 (HH) 11 500,000 200,000 Extension April tfc Oct May & Nov. 1882 1874 1875 1385 1SS0 1890 1,000,000 7 1,465,000 0 May & Nov. 1,300,000 6 7 April tfc Oct .... May & Nov 1883 886,(HH] 114)4 115 May & Nov. 1872 Jan. tfc July 1869 903,000 7 1S73 150,000 May tfc Nov 0 -XT- - * - * f 91)4 1877 500,(MH) 0 Jan. tfc July 1875 175,006 7 Feb. & Aug 1890 2,297,(HH 4,504,5(X • • • • 1893 1st : Income Bonds Real Estate , 297,500uo ($0,133,243) : 881,900 bonds 75,84J Interest bonds Montgomery A West Point Bonds ofl970 | • • • • • Income Bonds Mortgage Bonds (new) 8 4,187,0( C Sterling bonds .... :$1,130,70C 7....... . 80)4 108 109)4 iio‘ 97)4 98 • . - 90 • 98)4 .... 1891 1893 1893 1884 1875 • • • 83)4 88 • • • . . .... • . * % . .... 600,000 0 Jan. &July 1876 Mortgage Income .... Jan. & 4,269,000 7 Jan. tfc Jnly 324, OCX 7 April & Oct 1,500,500 7 April tfc Oct 135,500 7 Jan. <fc July (Mil. & Western)... Mobile and Ohio 7 July 296,560 Income” ( * March&Sep 1809 April & Oct 1882 863,000 7 May & Nov. 1885 do 1877 2,693,<HX 7 051,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1808 Mortgage do do do 8 8 4 Mississippi A: Tennessee ($1,069,600). 100 1887 May & Nov 1875 1804 1875 various. 1378 * Feb. ffc Au< 1886 ell 9*4,00 1881 Ap’l & Oct 250 00 ) 7 250 000 8 .... 2d uly81871 M’ch ft. Sej • Mav tfc Nov 1870 Feb. & Aug 1875 ceased) Bonds Milwaukee A: Prairie du Chien 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Milwaukef.'and St. Paul: „ 90 April & Oct d an. & J 1876 0 6 2d do Ooshen Air Line ,,, 1875 7 s L005!640 July 1875 July 1873 5(H),000 5(H),(HH) Michigan Central, ($7,46-3,489) Convertible Sinking Fund do Mich. S. A N. Indiana: ($9,135,840) 1st, Mortgage, slukiug fund 1st Delaware: guaranteed .... . j’ne ft Dec. 1870 Ap’l ft Oct. 1904 do 1!H>4 do 109’5(K do ... . 1875 1892 Jan ft July 1885 do M’ch & Sep 1879 • • — 1,650,00(1 7 Jan. & July var. Mortgage '280,000 7 May & Nov. van. Memphis Branch Mortgage Marietta ib Cincinnati ($3,088,385): 2,362,800 7 Feb. A Aug 1892 1st Mortgage, .: 4,000,000 7 Jau. tfcJuly 1885 McGregor Western 1st Mortgage Maine Central: ($2,733,800) 1,095,600 6 Feb. & Ang. ’90-’91 $1,1°0,()(X> Loan Bonds 315,200 0 June tfc Dec. ’70-’71 $400 000 Loan Bonds .. 660,'(MR) 6 Apr. & Oct. 1874 1st. Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds. 300,(HH) 6 Feb. tfc Aug. 1870 2d do (P.& K.Rlt.) Bonds.. Memphis Am Charleston: Mort.. bonds 1,294,000 7 May & Nov 1880 * do • 1st. 1st M’ch & Sop 1873 250’(HX ($3,782,430): .... ' a 7bp($lyt02,142): Lehigh Valley ($1,477,000): 1st Mortgage Little Miami ($1,500,000): 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill ($1,000,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund I/mg Island : 1st Mortgage Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point). do (Glen Cove Br.) .. do T/ntisville and Nashville ($3,297,000): ..... 1875 Jan. ft ... . . . 1S83 1,907,(HM) 7 J’ne tfc Dec 1885 192,000 7 May tfc Nov 1875 1867 do 523,(HH) 7 La Crosse A Milwaukee: 1st. Mortgage, Eastern Division.... do do 2d .... 1890 Feb. ft Aug 1873 M’ch ft Sep 1870 795,(HH) 7 5343KK) July Mortgage d<» May <t Nov 1893 r* *. Exteusi do 1895 7 iotJHH Detroit and Pontiac R.R 80 85 97 97 1 St *S do 7 . Mortgage Lackawanna A Bloomsbtirg 1st Mort May ft Nov 1880 -lau. «t July 1885 r* 1,250,000 .- Mortgage Bonds Detroit arid Milwaukee ($5.200,080): 1st Mortgage, convertible SO 82 88M 85>£ 87* { Joliet and N. Indiana: 1st 2d Jan. ft : Joliet, anel Chicago : 95 96 186S Jan. ffc 4 Tndianap .fr Madison R.R., 1st M.. Aug 96 April ffc Oct 1881 Jan. ffc July 1883 7 7 0 Jeffersonville RR., 2d ATort Feb. ft • 1868 do do 927,(H H* 1st A1ortiru«'e -• July. 2,655.000 Jefferson rifle, Madison, A Indianapolis. 111 7 1st. Mort Laeka. and West. 1st. Mort. Des Moines Valley ($2,038,009): 633jO(H) Indianapolis and, Cine. ($1,302,284) 90 88 R. ($800,000): sinking fund 3,437,750 Mortgage 1st « 101 101V 101 % 1893 700,000 6 Jan. & July sinking fund Indiana Central: 1s( Alortirncre (interest 2d do ° • « Sep 1875 May A Nov. 326,(HH) 7 700,000 7 UR),000 7 Illinois and Southern Iowa : . * ...'. Feb. A Aug 188S 1.455,000 7 rt 2,5(H),(HH) Redemption bonds Sterling Redemption bonds 91 1898 2d Detroit, Monroe A ;l»t Mortgage . . . July Mort.'fftire Dayton and Michigan 1st Mortgage W, Div. Illinois Central: Construction bonds, 1875 do do 0 per cent do . - .... Jan. & 1,300,0<H) do 4th (7?t veland and. Toledo t $2,740,280): Sinkimr Fund Mortgage Movt-nun; Bonds of 1800 2d do let & 2d Funded . l66 • .... 927,000 1,(M)0,(HH) Iff April & Oct 1868 do 2d 7 .. Bonds 2d Mort. Bonds Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,872,860): 2d Mortgage 3d do convertible 1,086,(HR) 73 «... 1877 Jan. ft duly 1893 Ap 1 ft Oct. 1883 1 r** 1st Mort. .... . • • - Mortgage Huntingdon A Broad 1873 1879 1382 121,(HK) 7 cent bonds • .......... r* 0’003’(HH) Ashtabula: 1st Mortgage, Deux., Lacka. A 1st Mortgage, 2d do • . 1,5(H),<KH) 7 073,200 6 Jan. ft July ’75-’80 483 000 Irdv. A Fish kill 2d do' " 3d do (Convert ible 98 92 X Feb. ft Aug Mar. A Sep. 1875 Feb. ft Aug 1870 " May ft Nov. 1875 M'ch it Sc]> 1890 900, (H Kl 7 (HHUHK) July Ap’l \r, Oct.. ,1 m’ooo 7S<000 1st • Feb. ffc Aug 1882 May A. Nov. 1875 Jan. & July 1S70 Hudson River X $7,702,810): May & Nov. 7 Hubbard Branch 7 7 0 1,963,000 • . . . • • Tan A, .1 uly 1870 Jau. ffc July 70-75 Bonds unsecured Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,6(H)): Land (Jrnnt Mortgage Hart/., ■ 397,000 do° 7 7 do do 1870 1875 1 ($450,000): 149 (HH1 Greenville <f; Columbia: 1st Mort— Bonds guaranteed by State 91 90 M’ch & Mortgage Whole Line 2nd • .... Tune & Dec 1888 7 6 Mortgage, sinking fund....%... 1st • LS88 '926,500 3,875,520 find, in C. ffc N. IT.): Gal. A Chic. U. ...... 0 484,(KM) (payable $25,000 per year) Cleveland A Mahoning ($1,752, U)0): 1st Mort,rage . Cumberland Valley: 2d do 10 • Tan. & July 1880 April tfc Oct 1802 as8’ooo April & Oct' July .Ian. tfc 7 7 ($1,029,000): Oonn. and Passurnpsic 7 5 0 7 May ffc Nov. [807 4,000,(MX) 7 M’ch & Sep 1879 1883 do 6,000,000 7 4,411,600 7 April & Oct 1880 do convertible do 3d 4th do convertible 5fh do do Sterling convertible (41800.0(H)) Erie and Northeast ($100,(HH)): 1,180,950 000,000 7 )st Mort. Contectlcul River: Ap’l & Oct. Hartford A: New Haven : till 1870 2,(HH),(HH» (new) Cleveland, hoi. and Cine. cent? Bonds 1870 _ 7 Cincinnati Richmond A Chicago.. Cincinnati A Zanesville. Igt Mortome 7 1,000,000 570,(HH) : 2d 84 To * Williamsport Mortgage Erie • • • May tfc Nov 1872 750, (HH) Cine., Ham. & Dayton 1st Mortgage do • • 1,250,000 Chicago, Rock, [eland <fc Picitic: )nt faorfic.'vn* (C. K, 1.) » 598,000 7 Interest. Bonds Toledo 1st 861,000 Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. Extension Bonds 6 per . 873 187!) 4 1st • ’ll. 1,10()’(HH) income Pain. . . | Dec.' 1877 T’ne A 7 2.4(H)’(KM) Preferred Sinking Fund , Elmira A 180ft Chicago and Milwaukee : Offer .... , Ap 1 & Oct.; nref Chic., Burl, and Quincu ($5,754,400): Trust Mortgage (S. F.) 3d . 807.00',1 fSO.-.r F'lllldt c Convertible Bonds Harrisburg A Lancaster : Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage Central of' New Jersey : 1st M ortgage do” „ . T’ne tfc Dec. 1867 M’ch & Sep 1885 Feb. «& Augl 1877 i Jan. .fc '490,000 1st < .... Tan. ffc July 1872 Feb. ffc Aug 1874 1885 do East Pennsi/lvania: '70-’7!) 1870 July do 0 4 41,00 1st. Mortgage 2d . | 4,437.300 do do U Pel). * Aug! 1805 1805 01 do 1889 do 200,000 01 Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan.... ‘■Uorlincr URtfO R55 at $4 S4 1st .... 7 Hollar Loan Camden and Atlantic : 5 160,000 338,040 075,000 General Mortgage Bonds conv. into pref. stock Camden and Amboy ($10,201,403): Mnrhrsovi M £ » 394,000 750,(HH) do do do do .. 500,000 7 ($1,200,000): Buffalo aiid State Line 1al fan. & r* Buffalo, .V. Y. and, Erie . .... 13'4 isi;7 1875 1880 1885 Ap’l tfc Oct. 500,001)1 do Sinking Fund Bonds T 5 per Jan. & July do 1 000 OOOi do do Cone. A Montreal ($1,050,000): do I ! '433,000! 1st. 55 1800 May & Nov. Ap’l .fe Oct. | . fd Afort > « 0 o 0 0 1 225 000 .. Boston and Lowell: Ap’l tfc 7 „ . 1895 Bdlefontaine ($1,715,000): bOsion, i do Mortgage iS. F.) of 1855 do do 1S50 ,.d Mort. n 7 4)15 -UK) »l do Jffti xtdPTS //(?t£LtL}ClVti -d 300,000 7 Jan. & July 1883 1894 do 060,(HH) 7 Mortgage, 1st, section do 2d section Eastern, Mass. ($1,848,490): Mortgage, convertible 1st 1st .... 55 1870 1883 Oct. 1834 17 105 INK) of 1994 do 1882 1879 1881 do do do do Jan. & July Dubuque and Sioux City : 55 1877 Ap’l tfc Oct. 7 7 701. (HK) do Atlantic. ASt. Laio. 1st 2d Mortgage Princpal payble. Payable. a K Railroad.: Railroad: Atlantic A. Gt. Western ($29,910,000): $2,151,500 7 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) 757,500 7 2d do do 880,0! K) 7 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (.V. Y.) 2d Hn 1st Mortgage, FRIDAY. <V ing. it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co’s name. imin Oj Tables. INTEREST. DESCRIPTION. • s do 1870 . May & Nov 1867 do do do 1882 1892 1876 Jan. & • • • • .. • •• Jill]f 1870 .... • ••• • ••• 1 100,00() 7 310,(XX ) 7 750,0001 7 do do 1876 1881 • • • • • • • • • • • • RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST will confer a great favor by giving us immediate notice of any error Subscribers Description. Description. fkidav. . in Railroad: Morris and Mssex : 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do (convert.) .... N. liavt'n tfc Northampton : Bonds... Hampshire A Hamden R.li. do . New Jersey ($855,000); Bonds of 1853 New Jxnuion Northern: 1st Mortgage New Orleans, Jackson <4- Gt. North.: Mortgage Sinking Fund 2d Mortgage New Orleans, Opelou. & Gt. West-.: 1st Mortgage Construction Bonds. New York Central : Premium Sinking Fund Bonds Bouds of October, 1803 (renewal).. Real Estate Bonds 1st Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B'ds (assumed debts).. Bonds of August, 1859, convert.. ) Bonds of 1805 f York and Harlem ($0,098,045) ; General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage New 1st 3d Mortgage N York and New Missouri : General Mortgage 1st Bonds.. ($0,000,000) *jNorth Pennsylvania ($3,124,737): Mortgage Bonds Chattel Mortgage Norwich and Worcester ($5S0,000): General Mortgage 11.12.: — • • Orange dr do 2d 3d Oswego 1st Alexandria ($2,923,004): Mortgage do 1st Extension 2d Extension dt Rome ($657,000). Mortgage (guar. byR. Income .... W. A O.) -. ($311,500) : Oswego and Syracuse 1st Mortgage 2d do Pacific, July pril A Oc 1,730,000 Apr. & Oct. May <fc Nov 83 June So Dec May & Nov. 105,1 MX) 606,000 do Feb. A An do do 1,398,000 400,000 : Panama: ($13,000,000): (Sunbury & Erie).... (general) (general) Phlladel., German!. dc Norristown: Convertible Loan Philadelphia eft Reading ($0,900,063); Sterling Bonds of 1830 do 1,5(H),(XX) 2,500,000 721,550 149.400 339,000 . Pittsburg and Steubenville: 1st Mortgage do Quincy and Toledo : 1st Mortgage Portland A Kennebec ($1,394,601) : 1st mortgage bonds, ext Consolidated bonds Raritan and Delaware Bay: sinking fund Convertible Bonds Reading and Columbia: 1st Mortgage ICO SO . .. < 89 7 113 July Aug 9 Jan. & do 1 st 750,000 July ..! 4 var. 09 84 .... var. 70 .... April A Oct 1,458,000 400,000 1,110,500 570,000 May & Nov. Jan. & July May »fcNov. 0 5 3 350,(XX) 200,000 May & Nov. 0 Jan. A July do. Jan. & July . Bonds, coupon & registered 1st 2d 3d .... .... . .... ... 'j ] 1st Feb. & Aug .... 80 .... 5 .... do .... .... 1 1st Mortgage ) Varren : 1st Mortgage i Yestchester A- April & Oct Feb & Aug 1st ’70-' 75 .... i Mch A Sept .... (convert.) Coupon .registered.. i July ) 99^8 April A Oct > 93 .... V 1st July 1870 > .... April & Oct April A Oct April A Oct 5,000,000 4,000,000 143,800 Jan. & .... J vn 408,(XX) 182,400 95 450,000 400,000 1875 1875 1807 7(X),(XX ) 7 Fob. A Aug Preferred Bonds .... 98 1871 I) D ... 92 92 . .... • • • . 188t 'are K L ... 1872 300, (X« 3tXV‘> ( 0 Jau. A July 7 Jan. A Juiy 1880 7 7 7 April A Oct Jan. A Julv June & Dec 1870 1870 1894 900,000 7 Feb. A Aug 1)00.000 rt do 7 1 May & Nov. 7 i < 0 Apr. & Oct. do 7 Jail. A July •• ... • • •- -. . 550,000 511,400 0 Jan. & July Feb. A Aug • 7 8 Jan. & July • . • « « • 77 77 07 77X 77^ 69% .... • • • • • .... • • • • • • • • • • • • • .... .... • • • 54)* 56* 29 1873 1878 April & Oct • «• 1883 1875 400,(XX) ..... .... 1801 1807 502,800 • — .... .... 1(90 1890 1878 187S 1883 1871 7 7 * .... 1871 r* . . ”.0 ’72 '05 '08 do do n- 2,500,000 1,000,600 1.500,000 . July ‘70 ’75 Jau. 6 18S9 i. Jan. A ynly do Feb. A 25,000 500,000 0 0 32 ••2 ••« • • • .... • • .... • 1,875,000 [,609,500 800,000 752,000 7 414.15S 0 0 Aug do Boat Loan • .... Jan. A , • 1886 1870 1890 1885 1878 July Mch A Fan. A Quarterly. do A Julv * * • • '-X • * • • • 1 * • •**-! • * .... f f , . Sept 1870 July 1805 14S,(HH> 0 J an. 708.250 0 ;April A Oct do 232,087 (i Mortgage Bonds • • 1S77 Tan. A July Ja Ap Ju Oc do • .... 1890 1890 1890 May A Nov. 1870 Fan. & July 1871 0 0 5 0 0 >,434,851 M M (i 536.000 7 Mortgage Loan of 1870. 1.0 Ml ol 1881 .... .... Division : 1st Mortgage. Plain bonds (coupon) of Pennsylvania.- 1st. . ... .... • . 55,(KX 7 Mar. & Sept 1870 2,280,111 5 Jan. A Jul\ 1880 08-74 Various. 1,070,(MX ) 0 2,(MX),(XX) Sterling Bonds, guaranteed Aug Feb. & ... c c ... 92 July Jan. A July Jau. A July June A Dei ’,254,000 Bonds Canal 1882 May & Nov Jan. & 7 7 175,000 0 Guaranteed (Baltimore) April & Oct Jau. A July do ‘ do do 7 7 1st Mortgage 2d do .... Jan. & July do July .... 200,000 G do .guaranteed... Union : 1st Mortgage 1 1,000,000 1900 590,000 Mortgage 1st Jan. & 9S1,(XX ) 0 Feb. A Auc 4,319,520 5 April A Oct '6S-’71 089,000 0 Jan. & Julv ’70-'70 930,500 0 April A Oct 1875 Dollar Bonds 575,000 .... 9 «t • • .... 1870 188*1 1887 1870 • • .. • ^ S7& • .... • • • • • 1S70 • • • • ■ • V * 103 5,250,(XX) 5,160,000 Semi an1 ally do 191: April A Oct May & Nov. Jan. So July 1912 Feb. A Aug do 500,000 1881 1881 1890 230,000 300,(XX) April A Oct 1883 1895 1,000,000 250,(XX) 208,000 Mch & Sept do do 200,(XX) 1,000,000 500,000 do 1st .... 96 85 .... 590,000 0 1!day A Nov. 1870 0 JLIch A Sept 980,070 0 ,1 an. A July Mortgage (North Branch). Sc 580,500 0 1day & Nov. 1872 1882 1870 ,183,701 ,093,000 6 0 J an. & July do 1805 1878 ,704,330 do 1870 1881 f. .... • .... • • • .... .... Ui n ft L*a.): 1st Mortgage anch and Susg..1st Mort| \g Valley: 1st Mortgage. 227,509 3,000,(XX) May So Nov. 750,(XX) 000,000 Jan. & July Jau So J uly • • • • .... 68 • o > k .... 1&83 1878 1878 JIIftBcellaneoitM: Mch & 800,000 1888 1888 1876 Sept 1879 do do 340,000 1890 1880 Feb. & Ang ’69 ’70 do 826,000 140,547 (130,500 175,000 do Sterling (£899,900) Bonds Albany City Bonds ... Jan. & .... - so 74 Mortgage : .... '■ .... 1 (guaranteed) Philadelphia 2d ... ...: 1,500,000 .... .... 1892 2,000,000 7 June A Dec (consolidated). Mortgage 2d .... I960 83 .... 300, (XX* 7 Jan. A Julv 188^ 800,(XX) 7 Apr. A Oct. 1S85 050. (MX) 7 May & Nov. 1875 200,IKK) 7 Mar. A Sep. 1882 630,000 0 Jan. A July ’0S-’74 Mortgage. do do Convertible.. . J. A. J.& O .... lc92 Equipment (Tol. A Wab. R. 41 way) Sinking Fund (T. W. So W. RNvay; 1,000,100 .... e 150 92 84 80 1(94 1,400,(XX • 'oledo Wabash A Western;(13,3(X),00) IstMort. (Tol. So lliinois RR). New 1st Mort. (L Frie,Wab Jo St L 2d More. (Tol. So Wab. RK) ... 2d Mort. (Wab. A Wed Railway) ' OS 97 April A Oct "200,(XX Mortgage .... 700, (XX ) 7 Jan. A Juh 1,20 ,(XH ) 7 June A Dei Y.): 1st Mortgage 1,180, (XX nofedo,Peoria and Warsaw -IstMort 1,000,(XX .... 7 8 1,372,00( 7 B’d m 145 50 1894 1894 1894 Pacific R.R.. 2,000,(XX < o Jan. & Feb. & .by At. «fe .... ... 00 1880 2,200,(HX 7 Semi an'alh do 2,8(H),(XH ) 7 1,700.(KX ) 7 May A Nov 175,(XH)( 0 outhem Minnesota: Land Grant laten Island: 1st Mortgage 120 J11I3 < 1875 1881 nhird Avenue (N. 1 0 April A Oct .... Jan. & 34 n 1803 1803 . .... 7 'd 521,50 ) 7 Jun. A Dec ’09-’7S1 530,00 > 7 •fun. So Dec 1891 . Special Mortgage .... 709,50) > Princir pay bl 500, (XX ) Mortgage (guar, by Petcisburg) 3d Mortgage . .... &July April So Oct 500,000 €tenenil Mortgage 1st .... .... o Saratoga & Whitehall.... Troy, 8. & Rnt. (guar.) . Richmond A Danville ($1,717,500): 4thMortsrage j <0 8(X ),00( ) 1st Mortgage Shore Line Railway: 1st Mort. bonds >uth Carolina: Sterling Loan Domestic Bonds South Sub ($1,031,900) : ... .... .... At .... • • • • .... .... . ... ::: June A Dec ,Mar. & Sep. 1875 1870 .. July 429.000 1 Co Ch Me S Pei «! 2 8 Jan. So Jan. A Jan. A Jan. & July 7f-’84 July 1885 Co 629,000 417,000 We July 1879 600 000 ’*'00,000 do do July IS¬ April & Oci IS Feb. & Aug 1(81 June & Dec 1,000,000 Tan. & July 1873 1879 2,000,000' II May & Not. :b$7 1,500,000 2,000, (XX. 1 .. 188:* 2,000,000 .... 400,000 7 May & Nov. 1890 Interest Bonds Richmond A Petersburg ($319,000): Payable. S 1,290.(XX ) . Funded Bonds Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage.... ... .... d 75 10 187 4 >7 Rmsselaer A Saratoga consolidated: 1st Mort. Rensselaer A Saratoga . 1st Mort. 1st Mort. free) 90 1 2,(XX),(XX) 158,500 mortgage. 1st Mortgage July Jan. 1,521,000 do do preferred ait • • Bonds guar, 970,800 228,500 200,000 1st Mortgage, 2d do )3 78 ►0 Jan. & 50,000 Sterliug Bonds of 1813 Dollar Bonds, convertible 2d Aug July Quarterly. Jan. & July April & Oct April & <>ct Mar. & Sep. 100,(XX) Philadelphia A Trenton : IstMort.. Philalel., \\ timing. A Baltimore: Mortgage Loan Pittsburg A ConneUsviUe ($1,500,000): 1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.) F'b'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) 1st Mortgage IRate. ing. , 1(H) V ’78 2,001,600 Bridge O. & P. RR 187 72 Feb. A (an. A of 1819 1801 1843-4-8-9 Akron Branch : 1st 70 75 4,904,810 1st Mortgage 1st do 2d do . 2d 3d 90 April A Oct 4,980,000 do do Dol lar Bonds do do do do 90 103 105 105 Haute ; 2d income do St. Louis, Jacksonville A Chicago: 1st Mortgage St. Paul A Chicago ($4,000,(MX)) ; 1st Mort. land grant, S. F. guar .. St. Paul A Pacific oj Minn : (l,s7 Div) 1st Mortgage (tax free).. 1st Laud Grant Mortgage (tax 'la n dusky and Ci. ucin n : 90 93 ^7 Si 83 70 70 May & Nov. Pennsylvania ($18,209,0-40): 1st Mortgage Philadelphia and E/ie 1st. Mortgage 2d Mortgage ... Feb. & Aug do 702,000 Central ($S00,000): r—< _ 1,800,00 ) 7 Fob. A Am do “ 940,00)l) 7 . do Swramento Valley: 1st Mortgage do ' VC. Louis, Alton A Terre ... 1,000,0(X) 1,000,(XXI 1,150, (XX) 1,072,000 2d .... ... 3,000, (MX) Mortgage, sterling do do Peninsula : 1st Mortgage 1st Amonni outstane 400, IHX ) 10 Jau AJuh 320,UK > It) Feb. & Am Mortgage Mortgage bonds guaranteed by Missouri — 2d do Pldla. and, Balt. 1st Mortgage ... 89 0,450,438 2,925,000 .. 80 90 • 1st ... 74 73 85 Jan. A Rutland and Burlington: .... 69 198,500 ISO,000 ; - or or 81 2,741,(XX) 423,000 223,000 do do Feb. »te Aug 140,000! 0 Jan. A J uly 180,000 Bonds 1st 485,000 6 !!! 76 2,900,000 Mortgage 2d Mortgage Old Colony & Newport Railroad: Rome, Wafert A Ogdens. .-($1,848,000) Sinking Fund (Wat. A Rome) Potsdam So Watertown, ghur. R. W. O., sinking fund 5 1,494,000 1st Mortgage.. Ohio and Mississippi: 1st Jan. &July 221,‘too do 180,000! 0 45<),O0oj 7 Fan. A Julv 200,000 0 April & Oel 100,000 300,000 Champlain: < ... 2,500.000 300,(XX) Steamboat Mortgage Ogdensburg and L. Way &Nov. lCU.OO' Improvement Bonds •JJ discovered in our Tables. FRIDAY. 1 250,000 Northern Central ($5,424,500) ; 1st Mortgage, State (Md.) Loan... 2d do 3d do ; North M 1,000,000 Haven : Mortgage Bonds N. Y., Prov. and Boston ; 1st Mortgage Northern New Hampshire : North Carolina: Loan 2 c. 5 000. one L7H.000 Naugatuck : 1st Mortgage New'Bedford <£ Taunton . a expressed by the figures brackets after the Co's name. it is Debt is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ umn it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co’s name. T3 (continued). INTEREST. N.B.—Where the total Fnnded Amount N.B.—Where the total Funded Debt outstand¬ is not given in detail in the 2d col ing. umn 793 THE CHRONICLE. 22,1867.] June do Telegraph: Jan. & - >•! (June THE CHRONICLE. 794 RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS IV. B. — name, ist The figures after refer to the thej Stock vol. aml| PHintT. Last out¬ Kail road. Alton and St. Louis* Atlantic So St. Lawrence*. Baltimore and Ohio Washington Branch*.. . Belvidere, Delaware Berkshire? Bloseburg and Corning* TAR ..100 990.647 Apr. "67 Apr. ’67 Feb. ’67 do ........ «• 60 Cape Cod 4 5 5 5 5 July ‘67 Jan. ’07 Feb. ’67 Ogdunsburg So L. Cliamplain. 1(M) ....j Ohio andMiss.certif., 4,p. 631.100 do preferred. .100 Old Colony and Newport..... 1(H) do .... .... • . ... .... Panama » . - | * 133* *! 132 .... ii’.jj 6(H),(MX) 721,926 Jan. So July Jan. ’67 5 .... 6,000,000 •fan. & July July 1,755,281 795,360 3,008,400 4,518,900 4,000,000 2.469,301 3,150,150 2,363,600 3,077,000 20,222,647 3,007,197 400,(KK) preferred.... (preferred) 100 124,550 Chicago and Alton, 4, p. 329. .10<' 3,886,500 do preferred. .100 2,425,u(H) do Cheshire Quincy, 3, p.261.100 Chicago and Great Eastern. ..100 Chic.Bur. and Apr. '67 6 Apr. '07 '2% April. 5 5 5 Sep. Mar. '67 Sep. Mar. '67 10,193,010 May & Nov May ’67 4,390, (KM) 1,000,000 Jau. tfc July July ’60 2,227,000 •Jan. & July 13,160,927 Mar So Mar So ; consollOO Saratoga and Whitehall.... 100 Troy, Salem So Rutland .100 .j 113 113 ... 1 114% 110 Richmond and Dan., 4, p.456.100 Richmond So Petersb.,1,p.488.100 141 140 Rome, Watert. So Ogdensb’g..l00 10 ..*.*.*: 5* Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska*.. .100 Chicago and Milwaukee* ....100 Chicago and Northwestern .. .100 do do pref. .100 12.994,719 Annually. Dec. ’66 Apr. '07 Chicago, Rock Isl. & Pacific..1(M) 9,100.000 April So Oct Cincinnati, Ham. & Dayton.. 100 3,129,200 April & Oct Apr. ’67 i 58% i 89% i Sandusky, and Cincinnati 58% 7 5 5 r Rutland and Burlington 100 St. Louis, Alton, & Terre n.. .100 do do pref.100 St. Louis, Jacksonv. So Chie.*10() 35* 34% 89% 117 ’67 125 90 Jnne ’67 Quarterly. Feb. ’67 08% LFeb. ’67 5s. Jan. So July Eeb. A Aug January, July ’67 Feb. ’67 Apr. ’67 4 3 4 72 61 99 % 24% jjan. ’67 *7*' 3 24% 68 ’67 KM) 2,063,6551 482,4(H) 50 Rensselaer So Saratoga 54% June So Dec 4.848,300 Jan. So July Jan. | do Ask July Jan. ’67 356,400 Apr. So Oct 21 j 50 1,150.000 3% 53% 54% Portland So Kennebec (new)..100 April & Oct preferred 50 2.2(H),00.) June So Dec Apr. '67 5 Dec. ’60 Portland, Saco, & Portsm’th.100 1,500,000 Central Georgia & Bank’g Co.100 4,666,800 119 j Providence and Worcester... .100 1,800,(MM) 13.(MK),(KH) Quarterly. Apr. ’07 2% 118% Central of New Jersey 100 Raritan aud Delaware Bay.... 1(H) 2,530,700 2,600.0(H) Central Ohio Catawissa* Periods. Jan. So FWD4T Last p aid. Date. rate Bid. 'eb. So Aug Feb. '67 4% 260 6 262 100 ■7,000,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’67 67|3o5s 105% 105% 20,(HK).UUU May So Nov May ’67 Pennsylvania 50 3 56% 56% Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5,083,7W Jan. & July! Jan. ’67 5 07 107% Phila. and Reading, 4, p. 89.;. 50 22,742,S67 Jan. So July Jan. ’67 5 126 Phi la., Germant. So Norrist’n* 50 1,507,8*0 Apr. & Oct i Apr. ’67 4 104% 105 Phila., Wilming. So Baltimore. 50 9,OK),300 Jan. So July!July ’67 1,776,129 Pittsburg and Counellsville. '2% 97% 97% Pittsb ,Ft.W. So Chic.,4,p.471.100 11,440,987 Quarterly. Apr. ’67 .... ... preferred. 100 Orange and Alexandria Oswego and Syracuse .... 5 5 50 100 j ... 3% 100 North Missouri j North Pennsylvania Norwich and Worcester ... 127% 3% •Jan. ’67 Feb. ’07 Feb. ’67 j j .... 12% • •July *67 * .... 2% July ’07 July '67 * • i% 600,000 Quarterly. Apr. '6i 50 250,000 June So Dec Dec. 06 11,377,(KM) .100 100 preferred 50 ... * .100 100 ... I * of Chronicle containing * means “ leased.” standing. report. New York Prov. So Boston Ninth Avenue 100 Northern of New Hampshire.KM) j Northern Central, 4, p. 508.. 50 .... .... ... Boston, Hartford and Erie... Boston and Lowell .500 1,830,000 jau. & July Jan. it July Boston and Maine, 3, p. 355.. .100 4,076,974 Jan. Boston ana Providence 100 3,360,000 Jan. A July & Boston and Worcester 100 4%500,000 •Ian. So July Broadway So 7th Avenue 1 0 2, KM), 000 Feb. So Jul) Aug Brooklyn City 10 1,000,000 306,000 Brooklyn City and Newtown. 100 850,000 Jan. & Jul v Buffalo, New York, <fc Erie*.. 100 Buffalo and State Line 100 2.200,(M)o Feb. & Aug Feb. <fc Aug Camden and Amhov. 4, p. 599.100 6,936,625 522,350 Camden and Atlantic 50 do 2 4 5 3 Feb. ’67 Dividend. Stock out¬ New York and New Haven.. ...J Apr. '67 1% 153.000 Quarterly. ! 2,494,900 Feb So Aug 16,151,962 April «v Oct 1,050.0(H) April & Oct 4,42 >,<HX) Feb. So Aug last i I if.—The ngures after the refer to the vol. and page Bid. Ask. ;rate STOCK LIST. name i! paid. Date. Periods. standing. report. N. Dividend. 1 22,1867. 50 pref. 50 do do .... 99% June So Dec Dec. ’66 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 800,000 April tfc Oct Apr. 5(H),(MM) April So Oct Apr. 800,000 April So Oct Apr. 2,000,000 1,008,600 2,385,500 Jan. So July July 2,233,376 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 54 80 2.300,000 1,700,000 Annually. 1,469,429 2,989,090 393,073 May So Nov 900,000 1,020,000. 1,<’00,000 576,050 Jan. & July 869,450 Feb. So Aug 6:15,200 Tan. & July 750,000 Quarterly* 5,819,275 1,365,000 2.203,400 ^eb. & Aug 1,200,130 1,983,150 Jan. So July 1,170,000 Quarterly. 776,200 1,651,314 908,424 5,700,000 1,000,(MX) May & Nov May ’66 55 82 May ’67 Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark. 100 350,000 Saratoga and Hudson River..KM) 1,600,250 10 99%! Savannah So Charleston Feb. ’67 4 Columbus, tfc Cm.. 100 6,000,000 Feb. So Aug Cleveland, Jan. ’67 2% i Schuylkill Valley* 4 50 May Cleveland & Mahoning* 50 2,044,6(H) May tfc No\ Jan. '07 5 Feb. ’67 2% ,....! Shamokin Val. So Pottsville*. 50 ’67 Cleveland, Painesv. So Ashta.100 5,(MK),0(H) Jan. tfc July Jau. ’66 4 Jan. ’67 3 77 77 %! Shore Line Railway 100 116 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 5,391,575 Jan. tfc July May ’67 0 120% 120%; Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) 100 Cleveland aud Toledo,3, p. 104 50 4,341,600 April So Oct Apr. ’67 100 South Carolina Quarterly. Apr. ’67 2% Columbus & Indianap. Cent..1(M) South Side (P. * L.) 4, p. 521.. 100 5 Columbus and Xenia* 5(> 1.780,800 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 5 130* * Feb. ’66 South Wesr.Georgia, 3, p. 616.KM) 1,500,000 vi av tfc N ov May ’67 Concord 50 Syracuse, Bingh’ton So N. Y..100 350,000 Jan. So July Jan. '67 3% Concord and Portsmouth 100 Jan*.* ’67 Terre Haute So Indianapolis.. 50 Jan. ’67 3 Conn.& Passump. 3,p.*216 pref. 100 1,514,300 Jan. & July Third Avenue (N. Y.) 100 Jau. tfc Julv July ’67 4 100 1,650,000 Connecticut River I Toledo, Peoria, So Warsaw.. .100 4 Cumberland Valley 50 1,316,900 Apr.;& Oct Apr. ’67 1 do do lstpret.100 Dayt on and Michigan 100 2,384,9 40 do do 2d pref.100 406,132 Jau. tfc Julv Jan. ’67 3 Delaware* 50 44% 45 129% 130 Jan. ’67 5 Toledo, Wabash & Western.. 50 Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50 11,288,550 Jan. So July do do May ’67 3% <58% 69 1 ftfiO I IMl preferred. 50 Des Moines Valley 100 834,400 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 4 Utica and Black River 1(M) 452.350 90 Detroit and Milwaukee....... 100 4 100 2,250.000 June So Dec June’6 1 Vermont and Canada* do do pref... 1(M) 1,500,000 Vermont and Massachusetts.. 100 2,860,0011 Jan. So July Jan. ’67 1% 50% 51 Dubuque and Sioux City 100 1.673,952 Mar. ’<7 7 s. Virginia Central, 3, p. 678 ..100 3,353,679 March. do do pref. ..100 1,983,170 108% ....] Me stem (Mass), 4, p. 247 .100 6,710,800 Jan. & July July* ’67 530^ 3,575,300 Jan. tfc July July ’67 4 Eastern, (Mass) 100 100 1,800,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’64 4 j M estern (N. Carolina) East Tennessee & Georgia.. .100 2,111,970 ;... Western Union (Wis. & Ill.). 2,687,237 1,902.000 East Tennessee & Virginia ..100 75 1,141.000 Jan. & July Jan.* ’67 *5% i Worcester and Nashua.. 500.0IK) May & Nov May '67 2% 5S Elmira and Williamsport*.. . 50 80 1 Canal. 500,000 Jan,, tfc July Jau. ’07 3% do do pref. 50 59 4 Feb. 59%; Chesapeake and Delaware.... 25 1,818,963 June &Dec June’67 Erie, 4, p. 599 100 16,574,300 Feb. tfc Aug Jan. '66 7 74 74% Chesapeake and Ohio 25 8,228,595 do preferred 113 100 8,536.900 January. Feb. ’67 5 t Delaware Division 50 1,633,350 Feb. So Ang Feb. ’67 ’67 600,000 Feb. So Aug Erie and Northeast* 50 152 153% .' ’l00 10,000,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67 1 Delaware and Hudson Jan. tfc July Jan. ’67 5 Fitchburg. l(M) 3,540,000 Delaware & Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 2,521.300 Feb. So Ang I Feb. ’67 6 4,150,000 Apr. tfc Oct. Apr. ’07 94% 95** Georgia KM) 47% 50"i Lehigh Coal and Navigation 50 6,137,000 May So Nov'May ’67 Hannibal and St. Joseph KM) 1,900, (MM) 54 ....1 Monongahela Navigation Co. 50 728,100 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 ' do do pref. 1(M) 5,253,836 55* Morris (consolidated),4, p.631. 10 1,025,000 Feb. So Aug Feb. ’67 .Io0 3,000,000 Quarterly. julv ’67 3 Hartford and New Haven. H9 do 4 preferred 100 1,175.000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67 Housatonicpreferred KM) 1.180,000 May tfc Nov May '67 Feb. ’67 Feb. So Hudson River 100 13,937, U)0 April tfc Oct Apr. ’67 4 107% 109%: Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,207 Feb. So Aug Feb. ’L7 Aug do prefer.. 50 2,888,805 494,380 Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50 36 36% ••-! Snsqnehanna So Tide-Water.. 50 2,052,083 do do 190,750 Jan. & Julv Jan. ’67 3% pref. 50 119% 120%) Union, preferred 50 2,907,850 Feb. tfc Aug Feb. ’67 5 Illinois Central, 4, p. 311 100 23,386.450 West Branch So Susquehanna. 50 1,100,000 Jan. So July Jan. ’65 80 Mar. ’67 Indiauapolis aud Cincinnati.. 50 1,689,900 Mar. tfc Sep Jan. '60 4 90 106 Wyoming Valley 50 800,000 Irregular; Sept.’66 Jan. tfc July Jeffersonv., Mad. tfc indianap.100 2,000,000 Miscellaneous. • • • • Apr. ’07 1% 300,000 Quarterly. Joliet and Chicago* 100 46 Coal.—American... 25 1,500,000 Mar. & Sep. Mar. ’67 3lex 44 300,000 Jan. tfc July Jan. '67 4 Joliet and N. Indiana | Ashburton ’ 50 2,500,000 Lackawanna aud Bloomsburg 50 1,335,000 Butier ;;;; 2o 500,000 Jun. &Dec. June ’67 lis Apr. Lehigh Valley 50 10,7:84.100 Quarterly. Nov. ’07 2% 116% Consolidation 100 5,000,000 ’00 3 514,646 May tfc Nov Lexington and Frankfort 43 ”100 2,000,000 Jan. So July Jan. ’67 Central „ Little Miami 50 3,572,400 June tfc Dec Dec. ’00 4 30% 0 Cumberland 54 *.*!l00 5,000.000 50 2,646,100 Jan. & Julv ; July ’00 L<ittle Schuylkill* 162 170* 38 50 j .**!.*.’ 50 3,200,(MM) Quarterly Feb. ’67 Pennsylvania 3,000,000 Quarterly. | Feb. ’07 2 40 50 ? Spring Mountain ’* 50 1,250,000 Jan. & July iJan. ’67 1,109,594 Jan. tfc Julv 1 Jan. ’67 8 Spruce Hill 10 1.000,000 Jan. So July Feb. tfc Aug Feb. ’07 4 5,500,000 j 88 Wilkesbarre J/ 100 3,400,000 Apr. So Oct 2,800 <M)0 Louisville, New Alb. So Chic. Wyoming Valley....ITII .100 1.250.000 Feb. & Aug Ang. ’66 May ’07 5 1,500,000 May & Nov ) Gas.—Brooklyn ’’ 25 2,000,000 Feb. So Aug Aug. ’66 1,600,860 126 Citizens (Brooklyn).." " 20 1,200,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 50 2.029,778 Marietta and Cincinnati Harlem 50 19 644,000 Mar. tfc Sep! Sep. ’66 3s. 11 do do 1st pref. 50 6,586,135 Jersey City & Hoboken.. 20 386,000 Jan. So July .;an. ’67 do do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. tfc Sep Sep. ’66 115 150 Manhattan 50 4,000,000 Jan. So July Jan. '87 Manchester and Lawrence... .1(M) 1.000,000 May & Nov! May '67 5 Mar.’62 Metropolitan .*.".100 2.800,000 Memphis & Chariest., 3p. 487.100 5,312,725 Tsew lorx 50 1,000,000 May & Nov May ’67 113 112 Michigan Central, 3, p. 152.. .100 7,502,866 Jan. So July July ’67 William burg 69/a 69#! ’ * 50 750.000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l00 9,813,500 Feb. & Aug! Feb. ’65 43% 44% Improvement Canton lOO.(ieipd) 4,500,000 do 787,700 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67 5 guar. 100 do 22% 23% Boston Vvater Power 100 4,000,000 July ’66 20 89** 91* Milwaukee &P.du Ch.lst pref.100 3,204,296 February.,. Feb. ’67 8 Brunswick City ’l(H) 1,000,000 do do 2d pref.100 841,400 Februarv... Feb. ’67 7 42% 42% Telegraph.— \Vestern Union. 100 28,450,000 Jan. & July ju’y ’67 36% | 38 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 3,627,000 Jan. So July! Western Union, Russ. ExlOO 10,000,000 Quarterly. do preferred 1(M) 7,371,000 Jan. & July; Jan. ’67 510s 56 j 66% <9% 70** 116 <116% Express.— Adams 100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Nov’66 Mine Hill & SGhuylkill Haven 50 3.775.600 Jan. & July1 Jan. ’67 4 68 American "500 9,000.000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66 825,399 Mississippi So Tenu.4, p. 489.100 8% ii * Merchants’ Union ]l00 20,000,000 Mobile and Ohio 100 3,588,300 72 75 100 6,000.000 Quarterly. Dec. ’66 United States ; Montgomery and WestPoint.100 1,644,104 64% 65 Wells, Fargo So Co 100 10,000,000 Morris and Essex 50 3,500,000 Mar. So Sep Mar. '67 3%S Steamship — Atlantic Mail... .100 4.000,000 Quarterly. June ’67 2% 107 107% Nashua and Lowell 100 600,009 May & Nov;May '67 5 141 141% Pacific Mail 100 20,000,000 Quarterly. Jnne ’67 3 Nashville & Chattanooga 100 2,056,544 S. American Navigation*. .100 Naugatuck 1001 1.408.600 Feb. So AngjFeb. ’67 5** Union Navigation 100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’66 *5* 500.000 Jan. & July j Jan. ’67 5 New Bedford and Taunton .100 128 Trust.—Farmers’ L. & Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 5 Jan. ’67 3 New naven So Northampton..100 1,224,100 New York Life & Trust..100 1,000,000 Feb. & Ang Feb. ’67 10 New Jersey, 4, p. 183 100 6,250,000 Feb. & AngjFeb. ’67 5 Union Trust 100 1,000,000 Jan. & July July ’67 4 New TiOi.don Northern.. 100 895.000 Mar So Sep.jMar. ’67 4 United States Trust 100 1,500,000 Jan. So July Jan. ’67 5 N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt. WestlOO 4,093,425 8 100 5,097,600 N. O.,Jackson &Gt.N.,4,p.l34l00 4,697,457 Mining.—Mari posa Gold 20 18 Mariposa Gold Preferred. 100 8,774,400 New York Central, 3, p. 769 ..100 26,530 000 Feb. So Aug Feb. ’67 101% 101V 100*! 50 6,285,03. Jan. So July July ’67 Quartz Hill Gold. York and Harlem 25 2,500,000 88 Feb. Quicksilver 100 10,000,000 do ....jllQ preferred 60 HuUftad Mwbl#,.. ... ao 1 OOOtQOO'SUy & Not NQYi Cincin.,Richm'd & Chicago...100 Cincinnati and Zanesville 50 ... . , . . . .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... * * # * .... .... .... .... .. .... _ , • - .... .... m m , , • • . .... .... ... , .... .... .... * * .... • • • • • • * * ... • .... ... .... .... . . .... .... .. . . .... i .. ... -- „ • .... .... j ... * .... ! .... - • - . . .... .... .... „ ... ... .. .. l,5CQ,00^Jan..& July^July ’67 . • .... . - • • .... . . • • . . .. . . . , PETROLEUM STOCK Companies. INSURANCE STOCK LIST. LIST. Marked thus (*) Bid. Askd Companies. Bid. Askd 795 CHRONICLE. THE 22,1867.] June Jan. e i. . JBennehoff Run Bennehoff Mutual Bergen Farm • • • 90 N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons .... 10 20 . : so .... . 5 5 5 10 10 Great Republic G’t Western Consol .... . . . . . . 15 . .... ■ . 9 s m .... .... COPPER MINING paid 3 11 25% & Boston Algomah 3 Allouez IX American 1 17 Amygdaloid Atlas 2 . Aztec 4% Bay State 13% • Adventure Boston Caledonia Oak — ) 20 00 24% • • • • • • . • • .... • . Astor . • . . • • . • Bowery (N. Y.) Broadway Brooklyn Central Park Citizens’ 75 40 ... - 14 10 .... , i5 2 .10 2 50 10! • .... • . 4% • (Alb’y).' Commercial... Commonwealth... 1 Continental * ] Corn Exchange... .. • • IX Firemen’s Fund... Firemens Trust.. .... . • • . . . . • * * * t . . • . • «• • .... Greenwich Grocers’ • ... .... .... Guardian.. Hamilton ' . ) .... ... Portage Lake ) . • 12 3 St. Clair 1 St. Louis 5% St. Mary’s X Salem 1 Seneca Sharon Sheldon & Colomfcian.21 1 South Pewabic o South Side .11% Star .. . • • • .... • • • • . . . • 17% IX 2X IX • • • . . G 50 75 0 25 25 • ^ • . go! i • .... 30 00 35 00 Hecla Hulbert X Hungarian 1 ..... • • . 4 00 3 75 19 Huron Indiana .... 1 00 6 Humboldt . .... ,....33 Royale* • 5 Keweenaw Knowlton • • • - ...... • i .... • • • • . Superior Tolr.ec 50 50 .... 1 00 8 . .21 Tremont Victoria Vulcan • • . Washington West Minnesota . . Vi 1X 6 1 ....[ Winthrop . • .... ax 3 Winona .... 8 . ... .... .... • • .... .. Capital $1,000,000,* in i 5®“° GOLD AND SILVER MINING Alameda Silver American Flag Atlantic & Ayres par . Pacific . Mill & Mining. — . . Bates & Baxter Benton Bob Tail Boscobel Silver — 45 1 05 2 00 — . — .... . Burroughs — • • • — . . . , — # • . 50 ><00 Corydon Crozier . 25 550 1 46 .... • Drh Moines . •• . 65 s'ss! : so ... Downieville Eagle . Fait River First National Gilpin ... .... .... .... 10 2 30 • — 100 — 5 10 Nye 25 Quartz Hill Reynolds . GO 1 00 * 5 75 00 12000 1 60 1 75 60 4 35 1 38 71 7 70 10 00 — 3 95 1 CO 5 50 1 40 10 74 4 00 1 00 5 10 — 100 45 00 65 00 75 70 i — Parmelee Symonds Forks Texas Twin River 2 45 20 — Vanderburg Silver 20 Cooper 25 Siuyvesant Tradesmen's...... 25 United States 20 Washington 50 Washington *t... .inn Williamsburg City .50 Yonkers & N. Y.. 100) The Central 167,833 800,604 Feb. 863,(Kit* 150.000 121,(07 212.521 150,000 150,000 .... • • • • .v • • ,.. . .... • . . . • . • • • .... .... .... .... .... ’< 6 ..5 July’66 ..5 Oct. ’65.. .5 Jan. ’67 ..7 Mar. ’64..5 • . .. • • ..... . ... . July’65 ..5 July '66 .5 • .... , . , , . . . . .... • • . • .... . .... ... .... . ... . . . .... . .... . Feb. ’67 ..5 July ’66 .5 July ’65 .5 July *67.3*: Aug ’66..5 Apr. ’65..5 July ’67 3X July '67 ..5 - .... . ..... . . . Jan.’67 .... .... • .6 July ’65 ..5 Jan. '67 do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do July ’65 July ’65 . • • . . . .... .... .5 . , . .... . .... . . . ..... .5 . July’66 .5 Jan. €7 .... ..... ..... .5 do .6 and Aug. Aug.’66.3% .... .... .... .... . . .... • . July ’67 . • Feb. ’67..5 Mar. ’67 A 5 • • • • • • • .... .... .... . . 9 , Jan, ’67 ..5 .... .... Jan. ’67 ..6 Jan. ’67 ..5 . . July’65 ..4 Jan. ’67 ..5 • • • • « • • . .... .... . . -* • • • ... • • • • • .... . . .... • • • . . . . • • . . . .... • . . . . . . . . . • • « • ... .... .... .... • • • • .... . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • . . . . e -*''V • » ... . . . . . . . . . * . . . Jan. .... .... Jan. ’67 ..5 .... .... Jan.’67 ..5 • July ’66 .5 • • • Tan.’67.3% Tuly’66.3% • Feb. ’67..5 Feb. ’67..5 Tan.’67 ..5 • • . „ _ ... . .... • • • • . . . . . Tuly ’66 ..5 1,1Fuly '66 .5 >-0 . .... - . • .... Aug.’66 .5 Feb.’66.3% • « . .... . . do . .... . do do do • • . . 501,244 400,000 303,700 . • 500,000 250.000 • . .... 150,000 150,000 • • .... 198,182 n*eb. avdAng. Aug. ’66 5 358,733 «’fan. and July. Tan. '67 .5 ran.’67 ..5 do 336,691 .5 630,314 1(’eb. and Ang, 1 ^eb.’67.. 100.206 I ’°b. and Ang. I<'eb. ’67...5 an. ’67 ..5 179,008 Jran. and July. J 200,000 • • . . . . .... .... .... .... .... ... . . . , .... .... • . • • .... .... • • • • • • • Railroad is preparing to carry beef to market in non-conductor of heat. The atmosphere is forced through the car in chambers at both ends, keeping up a con¬ stant circulation of cold air. These cars have been tested, and it is satisfactorily demonstrated that cattle can be slaughtered near cars — Smith & .... ....... 20 .... — Seaver . 30 95 10 Mountain • .... — Colorado G.& S. 45 People’s G. & S. of Cal. 5 Ohio & 2 • • r. •-» • lined with cork, a ] their pasture grounds, some condition. The estimated and brought to market in a amount of gold in fresh and whole¬ existence at the commencement $427,000,000. At the discovery of Amer¬ in 1492, this amount had diminished to $57,000,000. In 1600 of the Christian era was Bid. Askd Companies. 5 par Copake Iron — Foster Iron ...MOO 5 .... .... .... .... •• .. ■ tjhenix Lead Iron Tank 8torage... • — MISCELLANEOUS STOCK Denbo Lead Manhan Lea*d a • « • 2 Montana New York 4 66 Gunnell — Sensenderfer .... — Gold Hill 25 — 25 15 12 15 2 LaCrosse Rocky . 1 — Holman Liberty 80 Manhattan Silver. Midas Silver . . S par .... 10 . Consolidated Colorado.. Consolidated Gregory.. 3 00 • . Central Gunnell Union Hope Keystone Silver 50/ 1 50 Knickerbocker 65 Kipp & Buell 50 5 . Bid. Askd .... . . 50 . Bullion Consolidated.... Church Union Columbia G. — 10 9 00 50 2 25 STOCK LIST. Companies. Bid. Askd Companies. • • • Aug. 185,305 14 ,203 Feb. and Ang. People’s 20 Jan. and July. Phcenix t Br’klyn. 50 1,000,000! 1,077,288 do Reliei 50 200.000 190,107 do 300.000 453,233 Republic* 100 200 000 185,952 do Resolute* 100 200,000 216,879 Feb. and Aug. 25 Rutgers’ do St. Mark’s 25 150,000 140.679 Tan. and July. 156,220 150,000 St. Nicholast 25 and Aug. Security + 50 1,000. (MX) 962,181 Feb. and July. Tan. Standard 50 200,000 226,756 do Star 100 200,000 195,780 Sterling * KM) 200,000 206,731 Peter t Capital $600,000, in 100,000 shares. 20,000 shares, Capital $200,000, Ira 20,000 shares. In ttnnopiAP nami il Af T.q {^“ Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares * 195,926 300.000 200.000 501 4X • 284,605 200,000 Long Island (B’kly) .50 Jan. ’67 .5 j Loril lard* 25 1,(KM),000 1,118,664 Jan.’67..5 610.930 ) 500,000 100 Manhattan Jan. ’67 3X 2S8.917 ) 200. (RIO Market* 100 Jan. ’67 ..5 222 921 200,000 Meehan’ & Trade’. 25 Jan. ’67 ..5 146,692 150.000 Mechanics (B’klyn) .50) July *66 4 195,546 Mercantile 1001 200.000 Jan. ’67 .10 ) Merchants’ 50 200,000 245,160 Jnlv ’65 ..5 3(H),000 516,936 Metropolitan * +.. .100 July '67 ..5 150,0(H) 161,743 Montauk (B’k’yn)..50 Jan.’67..8 150.000 ■259*270 Nassau (B’klyn)... 50 Jan. ’67 ..6 2(H), 000 228,628 National *1% Jan. ’67 ..4 319,870 300,000 New Amsterdam.. 25 264,703 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 ..6 210,0(H) N. Y. Equitable 3 35 247.895 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67 ..5 2(H),000 N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100 1,053.825 Jan. and July. Jan.’67 ..5 Niagara 50 1,000,000 511,631 do July ’66 . .5 500,(XX) North American*. 50 Apr. ’67..5 350,000 379,509 April and Oct. Jan. ’67 ..6 2 North River 244,293|Jan. and July. 200, (XX) ’67 ..5 . . .... 546,522 ) .. .... • Jan. ’67 ..5 141,431 Lenox • • ► . July’64.3% 150,000 1 • Jan.’67 .10 Feb. ’67.7 % 5 Jan. ’67. 150,000 280,(MX) Lafayette (B’klyn) .50 Lamar 100) . • • July’64 ..4 ) .... .... 200,(MM) 200,010 Knickerbocker.... 40 . • Aug. ’65..4 Doc. ’66. .5 Feb. ’67...6 Julv ’67..10 do 206,179 238,808 March and Sep 176,678 Jan. and July. do 303,741 Jefferson 7 87 7 00 3 25 1,000,000 j Trving .... .... • King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20)) . . • I 25 1 International 25 00 22 50 10 ex . ) Import’ & Traders. . . Rockland ., .... 2 2 Hope 500, (MM) 200, (MM) 200,000 ) Howard. .... — Ridge .... 5 Hanover 200.000 ) ... 15 '.229 2,000.000 2,271,387 ) Hope do do do do do 419,952 200, (MH) ) Hoffman ..11 7 ..50 . Hilton 200,(XX) 150,000 400,000 5 .. Resolute .... ... Hancock 200, i MM) - .. .... .... •11% • . . 4 1,000.000 200,000 • •- Mar. ’67..5 250,766 149,689 Mavand Nov 227,954 iFeb. and Aug. 525,762 Jan. and July. 200,015 Jan. and July. 2,385,057 Jan. and July. 255,657 Feb. and Aug’ 170,225 Anril and Oct. 177,178 Jan. and July. do 182,571 5O0.0OO 200, (M>0 0 5 0 .... 1 ..lu Quincy* .... 9% 8% 17 25 17 50 Hamilton 0* 150,000 5 200.000 0 150,000 0 200,000 • • • • Aug. ’66...5 do do 165.933 • • .... . 150,000 • • 241,840 Jan. and July. Jan. '67 .5 do July ’66.8% 121,468 204.000 > — .. 300,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 0 • • • • • • .. July ’64 .5 424,295 April and Oct. Apr. '67..5 203.91X1 Jan. and July. July’66 ..7 Jan. ’67.. .5 do 220,276 134,06’ Feb. and Aug. 200,000 0 0 7 0 Germania 8 00 7 00 2 Princeton Providence . .... Great Western... 0 0 0 .... .. .. 250,000 600,000 400,000 0 5^ Consol.. 200,01)1 O Fulton .* . . . .... ...... 200,000 400,000 0 0 ..... • • Excelsior «... ... ASX . 500,001 0 0 Empire City. .... .... . . . .. 6% .. • • .... 5 .. • 0 .... 4% Vi • .: (N.Y.). 250,000 Bid. Last Sale. paid. •Tan. ’67. .5 J. ’67.3*.r^ Jan. ’67 Jan. 65.. .5 208.501 jJan. and July. 02,683 Jan. and July do 884,261. 3:18,878 Feb. and Aug. 275,591 Jan. and July. do 309,622 do 214.147 424,189 Feb. and Ang. 228,696 Jan. and July. 234.87V April and Oct. 1,289,037 Jan. and July. 404.178 March and Sep 36,518 Jan. and July. 153,000 150.000 300,000 210,000 o Columbia* .... .... 200.000 5 ..,1'7 0 0 . 5M • .. • 5 0 Commerce Commerce • 200,(KM 200.001 300,000 5 .. C’itv .... ... 300.001 0 5 Atlantic (Br’klyn) Baltic Bcekman .... 5% Bluff.. Excelsior Flint Steel River. Franklin French Creek.... Girard • • 50 1 13 5% Petherick 3% 11 50 12 50 1 25 Pewabic ..15 { Phoenix 5X 32 00 35 00 Pittshuro- & Boston i Pontiac . 10 1 Everett • • . 1% 3% 1% ‘.. • Jan. and July. Jan. and July. Jan. and July. Jan. and July 282.127 Jan. and July. 257,753 Feb. and Aug 336,47( March and Sep 204,71M May and Nov. 170,171 Feb. and Aug. 345,711 June and Dec. 266,368 Fob. and Aug. 300,(XX 200,001 200. (XX 500,(KX 250,000 Last Periods. 151,002 325,203 515,896 222,073 .. * Empire $300,(HX ... 1 Dudley 4 00 .... 1 American * American Excli’e. Arctic .... • . . .10 Pennsylvania * —20% Dev^n Dorcneeter 15 5 Ogima 2% 3% Adriatic. ... ..... 2 North western... Norwich • .... — Edwards % 1 Davidson Delaware Eagle River « • Dana Isle ... • 10 • New Jersey New York North Cliff .... 5 4 Central Concord Copper Creek Copper Falls Copper Harbor Dacotah Evergreen 8 00 . Charter — — . . _ 110 — - Bid. Askd Medora J Mendotat Merrimac 2 3 12 4 00 Mesnard Milton Minnesota 00 National j 35 OS Native 50 Naumkeag — Calumet Canada . .10 .25 Mass 17 X 2% Bohemian. • 5 5 5 . . Madison Mandan Manhattan • • • .... paid 1 Lafayette Lake Superior • v T Capital. ,5 0 0 0 0 5 • Companies. .... JStna Albany • STOCK LIST. Bid. Askd Companies. • 5 Venango (N. Y.)... .... .... • — Oceanic .... Pit Hole Creek Rathbone Oil Tract Rvnd Farm Shade River Union United Pe’fl'm F’ms United States .... .... 5 Germania • ... ‘I 5 National .« • 100 Empire Cits*. Excelsior .... • .... Cherry Run Petrol’m.... Cherry Run special Clinton Oil... 10 First 18 . m .... 2 2 Ivauhoe Manhattan Mountain Oil Natural N. Y. & Alleghany New York & Newark... N. Y. & Philadel 5 00 2 50 5 10 5 10 Brevoort Brooklyn .— Net as’te 20 HamiltonMcClintock... .... .... 10 Bradley Oil Buchanan Central 5 10 — Coal and Oil par Hammond par 10 Allen Wright Bemis Heights dividend. 1,1867. . .. — .... •... LIST. ica, Bid. Companies. Tudor Lead Saginaw, L. S. & Wallkill Lead Wallace Nickel .par M. Rutland Marble ... Long Island Peat.... Russel. FiLe Savon de Terre . .. .. — 25 .... the amount • ... 55 47 — . . 25 9 00 • • • • .... 6 .... had risen to $105,000,000; in 1700, to $351,000,000; $1,251,000,000. The Russian mines, extending over one-third of the surface of the globe on parallel 55° north latitude, In 1843 the estimated of gold in existwere discovered in 1819. In 1853 the amount in existence was ence was $2,000,000,000. $3,000,000,000; in 1860 it was $4,COO,000,000. in 1800, to • .... Askd ' 796 THE CHRONICLE. Insurance. Insurance. Metropolitan Insurance Company, ./Etna NO. Insurance 108 OF BROADWAY. NEW YORK, April 1*5, 1807. This Company having reduced its capital according to law, under (lie sanction of the Superintendent of the Insurance Department to the sum of C A F IT A L intends hereafter to confine its fire business to thecity of New York and vicinity, and will also write Marine Risks Cargo only, at the otiice in Baoij Building. on the Assets Metropolitan .Charter .Joseph B. Yarn uni, 62 JAS. A. CAPITAL, Co., 240,4 82 43 TOTAL ASSETS Capital and Assets,— Secretary. PAULISON, Vice-President. Walker, Secretary. January 1st, 1S66. $100,000 00 150,30:1 98 *vw; :inj os . INSURANCE $1,201,349 ORGANIZED APRIL, 1S11. During the past Policy-holders, * ji>X) bo a in year J UNE: 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City. Ilth—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis 21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South. Pacific ports; 1st and Uth lor o p Baggage cnecKed through. Company, $200,000 00 Assets, March 9, 1866 Total Liabilities Tosses Paid La 1865 TWENTY - - - - - 252,550 22 20,850 OO - - 201,5S8 14 any other responsible pany. ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS SOLICITED. James Freeland, Samuel Willet •, Robert L. Taylor, William T. I'rost, William Watt, Com¬ Board oi* Directors: Henr.y M. Taber, Theodore W. Riley, Steph. Cambreleng, RoJiert Schell, Fred. Henry Eyre, Schuchardt, i Cornelius Orinnell, Joseph Shvrg, .Joseph Britton, •Titos. P. Cummings, (’yrus H. LoutrelT Jacob Reese, Jno. W. Henry S. Leverich. Lydig Suvdam, Joseph Foulke, Mersereau, William Eemsen, D. Stephen Hyatt, Amos Robbins, William H. Terre, David L. Eigenbrodt, Joseph Grafton, VENT. Financial. Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne AND TR USTEE8. Company insures against Lessor Damage by Fire favorable terms as PER equivalent discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits remaining at tlie close of the year, will be divided to the stockholders. This Company continues to make Insurance on Ma¬ rine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Mer¬ chandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Cur; rency, at the Otiice in New York, or in Sterling, at the Otiice of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liverpool. This Lebbeus Li. Ward. J. D. C.dden Murray, E. HavdecK White. L. Sit Creadv, Daniel T. Willets, L. Eilg«rton, N Henry R. Kunhardt, John S. Williams. William Nelson, Jr., Ja<. D. Fish, Charles Dimon, Geo. W. Hennings, A. William lleve, Francis Hathaway, Harold Dollucr, Aaron L. Reid, Paul N. Spotlbrd. Ell wood Walter. ELL WOOD WALTER. President. CHAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-President. Despard, Secretary. Chicago Railway Co. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY, Pittsburgh, Pa., May 28th, 18(37. SUBSCRIPTION TO NEW STOCK. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT IN PURSUof authority recently granted to the Board of Directors of this Company, hooks of subscript ion will be opened at the office of WINSLOW. LANIER <fc CO., New York, from the 20th to the 29th day of June next, inclusive, for the taking of 15,000 shares in the new stock of the company, at 80 per cent, of its par value; 20 per-cent, of such par value, representing the amount of bonds redeemed by the Sinking-Fund, being credit¬ ed to Hie subscribers. Those who are registered as shareholders on the lOtli day of June will possess the privilege of subscribing to the extent of 15 per cent, of the shares then stand¬ ing in their names. Such SO per cent, will be payable in cash at the time of subscription. No fractional shares will lie issued. Certificates for such new stock will be ready for delivery during the month of July. The transfer hooks will close on said 10th day of June at. 3 o'clock P.M., and will reopen on the morning of the lith June next. By order of the Board. F. M. ancc HUTCHINSON, Secretary. JACOB REESE, President. IIartsiiorne, Secretary. The Mutual Life InsuRANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK, CASH ASSETS, September 1st, 1803, over 116,000,000 (X). FREDERICK R. A. S. WINSTON, President. McCURDY, Vice-President. j< John M. Stuart. AnJF*TTActuary, Sheppard Homans. liEMOVAL. The North American Life INSURANCE COMPANY. Will Remove to the r New Offices, 229 Broadway, corner ok" Barclay st,, on May 1st. The office now One hundred pounds An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and attendance free. For passage tickets or further information, apply it the Company’s ticket otiice,'on the wharf, foot of Canal street, North River, New York. F. R. BABY Agent. scrip dividend to dealers, based all classes of risks are equally profit able.tins Company makes sueli cash abatement or E €?»*li Capital- Secretaries Those of 1st touch at Man¬ allowed each adult. Instead of issuing a 011 tlie principle that OFFICE, No. 92 BROADWAY. „ list of every month (except when t hose dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company's steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. this Company has paid to its rebatement on premiums in lieu of scrip, value to an average scrip dividend of WALCOTT, President. Fire Insurance occupied by them, 63 William Street, corner Cedar is to Rent, COMPANY. No.35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Lane, Secretary. FI ‘ ER, FOOT j 1 Canal street, at 12 o'clock noon, on the 1st, 31th, and IN CASH, BENJ. S. „ Carrying: tlae United Slate** Mail, LEAVE PIEIt NO. 42 NORTH RIV- ’eutral American Ports. zanillo. Assets, January 1st, 1867 Gross Assets Total Liabilities ..; Chas. D. ..$1,614,540 78 JOHN P. No. 15 WALL STREET. on as jSiiVjfcSjSK nSamiESBBEBUm The Mercantile Mutual COMPANY, California, And Company having recently added to its previous assets a paid up cash capital of. $5(XUHX), and subscrip¬ tion notes in advance of premiums of $300,000, continues to issue policies of insurance against Marine and In¬ land Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected from Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are en¬ titled to participate in thejn'Otits. MOSES H. GRINNELL. President. Hanover Fire Insurance J. Eemsen To BUILDINGS) GARRIGUE, President. Surplus THROUGH LINE 49 WALL STREET. $ 740,4S2 43 Cash capital PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S COMPANY. (INSURANCE - quantity of merchandise will be conveyed to he made to Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall st., Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William st.. New York ( • S^tes gold w run to the newly-discovered gold the Pacific Mail Sun Mutual Insurance Isaac II. John E. Kaul, Fares payable in United under through bill of lading. For further information, application ALEXANDER, Ajreut. This $500,000 00 SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1867 cabin. A limited STREET. Incorporated 1841. BROADWAY, N. Y. RUDOLPH WALL NEW. AND AUSTRALA¬ region of Hokitika. New Zealand. Children under three years, free ; under eight years, quarter fare ; under twelve years, half-fare; male ser¬ vants, one-half fare; female do., three-quarters fare; men servants berthed forward, women do., in ladies’ NEW YORK AGENCY NO. : Germania Fire Ins. CASH coin. FIRE. W. R. WADS WORTH,■Secretary No. 175 $25 additional. 394,976 96 INSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DAMAGE BY F. H. Wolcott, P. W. Turney, William T. Blodgett. Charles I’. Kirkland, Watson E. Case, John A. Graham. John (’. Henderson, James L. Graham, Clinton B. Fisk. Lorrain Freeman, Edward A Slanshurv, ,T. Boorman Johnston, Samuel D. Bradford, DEE, President. Special steamers Vice-President. Directors Perpetual. January 1, IS67 -$4,478-100 74 GItAllAM, BETWEEN YORK. SIA via PANAMA. NOW, Secretary. . COM M U N IC A- The Panama, NeW-Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th ol each month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬ tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving New-York for Aspinwall (Colon) on the 11th of each month. First and second class passengers will be eouveyed under through ticket at the following rates: From New York to ports in New Zealand, or to Sydney or Melbourne, $346 to $364 for first class, and $218 to‘$243 for second class. The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward cabins of the Australian steamer: after cabin, better $3,000,000. . President. Martin Bates, Dudley B. Fuller, Franklin H. Delano. Gilbert L. Beeckman, 1 Company, Liabilities JAMES LOUIMEROIIAIIAM i OBEKT M. €. TION HARTFORD. L. J. HEN J. GOOD Steamship Companies. STEAM Incorporated 1819 $300,000, - [June 22,1867. Niagara Fire Insurance United States NEW COMPANY, REDEMPTION OF COMPOUND INTEREST NOTES. Under the directions from the Secretary of the No. 12 WALL STREET. CASH CAPITAL $1,000,060 2iS,000 : SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1867 Treasury, YORK, June 5.1807. Losses equitably adjusted-and promptly paid. Char¬ tered 1850. Cash dividends paid in 15 years,253 per cent. JON ATHAN D. STEELE, President Not man*, Secretary. Steamship and Express Co.'s. Treasury, notice is hereby given that the Compound Interest Notes, bearing date June loth, 1864, and pay¬ able three years after date, will now be received at this office for redemption. Interest on the notes will cease on their maturity, and holders will be of presentation, claimed to be due. after verification paid in the order of the amount The notes must be put up in packages of one hun¬ dred, each denomination separately.' Schedules may be had on application at this office. H. H. VAN DYCK, Assistant Treasurer- SAMUEL THOMPSON A: NEPHEW'S’ Black Star Line ok Liverpool Packets, and National Line of Liverpool and Queenstown Steamers, sailing every week. Passage office 73 Broad¬ way ,co r ne r o f Recto r S treet (forme r 1 v 275 Pear 1St.reet >. Sight Drafts on the Royal Bank of Ireland, payable in all its Branches, and on C. Grimshaw& Co., Liverpool, payable in any part of England and Wales. Bankers supplied with Sterling drafts and through tickets from the Old Country to any part of the United States. United States Treasury. JUNE 3.1857. SCHEDULES OF (30) THIRTY OR MORE 7-30 Coupons due June 15th, will now be received for ex¬ amination at the United States Treasury. H. H. VAN DYCK, Assistant Treasurer ‘-'M June 22, duties noted below, a discriminating duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on nil imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. On all goods, wares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good In addition to the place or places of their growth or produc¬ tion ; Haw Cotton and Haw Silk excep*rd. The top in all eases to be 2,240 lb. Anchors—Duty: 2} cent* TP Tb. 012001b au<l upward]# lb 0® 1C 13 oO © invoice 10 TP ct. Grande shin TP ton 15 00 ©47 50 Bones— Duty : on 8 . © Navy.*....; 9i © Crackers 14 Breadstuf fs—See special report. Brick*. hard..per M.10 00 ©M 00 Croton IS oO @20 <'0 Philadelphia Fronts... 5 > 00 @.5 00 Common Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair 1 TP lb. Amer’n,gray &wh. $ lb 55 @ 2 00 Butter and Alcohol cents. Butter— Fiesh pf.il, $ lb , new. Ht-fLkm tubs TP lb * Welsh, tubs TP lb. Fine to extra Sta e,... Good 'O !i"e Stat , C >mmon Stvte, W^ tern l>uiter, Grease butter, nrk. T)^ ft Cheese— do © 2 26 10 © © © © © 14 15 10 Common Farm Dairies do Common Is Annato, good to prime. Antimony, Eugulus of Argols, Crude Argols, Refined 20 12 Assafootida 22 16 lb 16 13 ceti and wax s; At. eariue and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents TP lb. Sperm, patent,. . .$1 lb 48 @ 50 3-1© 30 @1 18 © 40 81 211 Cement—EosendaleTpbl— © J 75 - © @ .... ... Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ ft. Caracas (in hond)(go!d) TP ft Maracaibo do ..(gold) Guayaquil do ...(gold) St Domingo;...(gold) 10 © © 1 i© 9j@ 21 131 10 Coffee.—See special report. 3 cents TP ft. Baltimore Detroit 31 @ 23 © ?5 © 35 © * i@ 2l*@ 23*© Portage Lake 35 . . 3» 36 • . 24* -- Cord affe—Duty, tarred, 3; nnurred Manila, 2* other untarred, 31 cents TP ft. Manila, TP ft Tarred Russia Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia 2 .. .. J© @ © .. © Corks—Duty,50 TP centad val. 55 © Regular, quarts^ gross Mineral Phial 50 © 12 © 2"* 1 'i 19* 22 Berries, Persian Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ castle gold 70 70 40 Drug's and Dyes—Duty,Alcohol, 2 50 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft; Alum, 60 cents $ 100 ft; Argols, 6 rents $ ft ; Arsenic and Assafcedatl, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus, 10; Arrowroot, 80 TP cent ad val.; Balsam Copaivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 50 cents $ ft ; Calisay* 4p@ Bi Chromate Potash... IS © Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined <4© 3i 3t © Brimston . . .. 19 41 Aj Crude TP ton (gold) J18 50 @40 (;0 Brimston*, Am. Roll 4 ..© TP «> •. 1 lor Brimstone. Sul¬ 5 ..© tide, (in (gold) Camphor, Kciined > Cantharides Carbonate Ammonia, in bulk © 28* @ 1 GO © 1 70 . 95 .... IS © 19 Cardamoms, Malabar.. 3 00 © 3 25 Castor Oil Cases TP gal 2 17 © 80 © Chamomile F ow’sTp lb 45 h2 © Chlorate Potash (gold) 83 Caustic Soda 91© 9 Carraway Seed 20 © Coriander Seed 14 @ Cochineal, lion (gold) 9o © 9? Cochineal, Mexic’n(g’d) Copperas, American .. Cream Tarar, pr.(gold) Cubebs, East India Cutch Epsom Salts Extract Logwood 90 © n2 If© 29 28*© © @ 30 19 4 @ 10*© 17 @ oz. Gambier 18 30 @ 60 f*© Flowers,Benzoin.TP 5 Gamboge 1 75 © 2 0u 85 @ 9i) Ginseng, Souths West, Gum Gum Gum Gum Gem Arabic, Picked.. Arabic, Sorts... Benzoin ..(gold) Kowrie Gedda Gum Uainar Gum Myrrh,East India Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. Gum Senegal ...(gold) GumTragacanth, Sorts Gum Tragaeanth, w. (gold) fiakey. 1 Hyd. Potash, Fr. and © 85© @ 80 @ 25 © 40 © Ipecacuanha, Brazil... Talap Lai* Dye Licorice, Paste, Sicily. Licorice Paste Spanish Solid... Licorice Paste, 80 88 .. © 55 © .. 55 36 27 ' @ 30 © .. 65 2S 50 60 © 1 60 ..(gold) 3 75 Eng Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 Licorice Paste,Calabria Cotton—See special report. Petayo Fenneli Se d Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 21; old copper 2 cents $ ft; manu¬ factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 @34 oz. TP square foot, Sheathing, new.. TP ft Sheathing, yellow Bolts Braziers’ Bark. 2 © 25 © 35 @ -.5 @ 85 1 25 © 1 HI 25 (>i if Go1 <7 ft 38 © 4U © 3 80 © © 4 00 ' © 55 25 @ 31 © 24 © 25 90 S4 © 42 30 © Madder,Dutch..(gold) 7 © 7; do, French, EXF.F.do €}© 7; Manna,large flake.... 1 6o @ Manna, small flake.... 1 tlO @ 1 06 8 12 Mustard Seed, Mustard Seed, Greek. Cal.... Trieste. Nutgalls Blue Aleppo © 14 © 35 © 37 Oil Anis Oil Cassia.. 4 50 ^ 5 0) 3 75 © 3 77* Oil Bergamot fi 60 © 9 . to 38 40 2} @ 24© 25 © Snip Quinine, AmTP oz 2 1 @ Sulphate Morphine.... 6 75 @ Tart’e Acid..(g’ld)Tpft 51 © 11 © .. @ 10 @ Tapioca Verdigris, dryex dry Vitriol, Blue Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Raver.a, Light. .TP pee 16 00 @ Ravens, Heavy . 8 Uu @ Scotch, G’ck, No. I $y © Cotton, No. 1... TP y. (0 © - .. 6 .. .... 51* 45 Rifle .... 72 25 ©IS Hi 00 @.n 50 a ... do tinner @ do Cross do Red do Grey Lynx Marten, Dark do 10 © pale Mink, dark Alusk rat, Otter Rine do Cut Tacks Cut Brads do 5 00 @20 On Ayres$ ftg’d unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Window, not exceeding JOx J*; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 24x30 ,2* ; all over that, 8 cents TP ft. .American Window—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th 15 inches square, qualities. Subject to a discount of 40 © 15 TP cent. 6x 8 to 8x10. .TP 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50 8x.. to 10x15........ 7 75 @ 6 00 12x18 16x24 20x30 24x30 24x36 30x44 32x48 82x56 9 9 11 14 16 17 18 25 © 6 50 50 @ 7 00 75 © 7 50 50 @ 9 00 00 @10 00 00 @11 00 00 @12 00 20 00 @13 00 24 00 ©15 00 English and Ereneh Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th qu»lities. (Si ngleThicky—Discount 4C©45y«ert fix 8 t9Sxl0.fl50 feet 7 75 © fi 00 @ .. Dry Hides— Buenos 50 —Duty, Cylinder or Window Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches, 2* cents TP square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents TP square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents TP square foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents TP square foot; all above that,, 40 cents TP square foot; 1 lx H to 12x19 to 18x22 to 20x31 to 24x31 to 25x36 to 80x46 to 32x50 to Above 6j@7*$ft >, List Hide**—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬ ed and Skins 10 $ cent ad vaJ. 7g Common List 2b©30 * dis. English Spades... List 5 *dis. 8isal 3 00 © 6 00 8 © ;-0 5 00 ©. S 00 30 on . 30© 35 *udy Hay—North River, in bales$) 100 fts for shipping 1 20 @ llemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $-*5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 TP ton; and Tampico, 1 cent $ ft.. Amer. Dressed.TP ton 860 00@8'0 00 do Undressed.. 2i0 0o@;90 t*0 Russia, Clean 3 5 00@.i5u (0 Jute ....(gold) 105 00@li0 00 Manila..TP ft..(gold) 1J|@ 12 2(0© 5 00 30 © List 20 * dis List 7o<fc5 * dis List H»* dis. Shovels and Horse Shoes Planes 75 50 @ 2 00 © 4 < 0 Skuik, Black , Bivet , Iron List ?5&40 * dis. Screws American... List 10&5*dis. 5 Of @50 00 in © handled, List 40 *adv. List 2(Kfc 10* dis Short Augurs,per dz.NewList 90* dis. 3 00 @ 5 00 1 00 @ i 50 15 © List 40 *adv in sets. Augur Bitts 2o Raccoon <io do in set^ 4 00 © S 00 Opossum ^ ft :Q @ gg >: i *di s, oo GO @ 1 00 75 50 @ House List 20* dis. ..List 55©6(» * dis. •* Framing Chisels.NewList37* @ Fruits—See special report. Flirt* —Du„y, 10 TP cent. Beaver, Dark.. TP skin 1 00 @ 4 00 do Palo... 50 @ 2 HI Bear, Black 5 00 @i2 00 do brown 2 00 © S 00 Fisher, Fox, Silver Fa ten i do 3 afVs Sm ths’ Vis FI;*x—Duty: $15 TP ton. 4 Jersey TP ft 16 @ 22 Badger „ ^ @ Herring, Scaled^ box. @ 45 Herring, no. 1 18 @ 2J Herring, pickled^bbl. 4 50 © 6 00 Cat, Wild . . i0 @18 :0 @ ^ ^ *’** 8!) 00 © .. no @17 50 .... 1 to 3 S 00 © 9 50 do ordinary 6 17 © 7 50 Broad Match’s 3toS bst. 15 50 @25 tO do . uli •ary 12 HI © Coffee Mills List t % dis. do Bri Hopper @ do Wood Back © Cotton Gins, per saw.. ,$5©i less 90* Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 * dis. Cast Butts—Fust Joint. List Hi ©Jv. Loose Joint.. List. ITinges"wri.U!.ht,.... v List 5 % adv. Door B. Its, Cast Bbl L st 20 % his ^ „JO Carriage and Tire do List 40@6 * * vis. Door L cssand Latches List 7* dis. Door Knobs—Mineral. Iist7**ilis. ‘‘ Fore lain List 7» * dis. Padlocks New List 25&7* * dis. Locks—Cabinet, Eagle List 15 * .us. “ Tiunk List 10* dis. Stocks and Dies List 30* dis. icrew VVrencuts—Coe’s , rels, 50 cents TP 100 1b. Dry Cod TP ewt. 6 37 © Pickled Scale...TP bbl. o 25 © 5 50 Pickled Cod Tp bbl. 6 50 © I On Mackerel, No. I, Mass shore @20 50 Mackerel, No. 3, IL'fax Mackerel, No. 8, Mass Salmon, Pickled, No.l.37 Oil Samoa, ri kled. p tc. .... 21 25 ’ @ V5 00 Mackerel,No.l,Halifax.8 Mackerel, No. I, Bay..19 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..17 Mackerel, No. 2,Ha ax 7 Mac’el,No.3,Mass. i’gelO ordinary Shingling Hatchets, C’t Steel, best br'ds, Nos. Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 TP bbl.; on other Fish. Pickled, Mnoked, or Dried, In smaller pkgs.than fcar‘ © 21 @ 82 11 24 do .... 7S @ 17 15 15 13 Carpe tor’s Adzos, @11’ 0<> .. © @ Axes—Cast steel, best biand perdoz do ordinary Feathers—Duty: 30 Tp centad val. Prime Western...TP ft 90 @ Tennessee. T4 Hardware— .... (gold) © © © . .... Limawood © 1 06 . ... Bar wood 6 50 © Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬ ters $ 1b 86 Hair—Duty fbkk. 33 KioGrande,mixedTP ft Buenos Ayres,mixed 81 10 Hog,Western, unwash. Dye Woods—Duty free. Camwood,(gold)Tp t'nP.M) 0G@ 31 uu @ 3i 00 Fustic, Cuba Fustic,Savanilla @ Fustic, Maracaibo 25 00”© Logwood, Hon. 50 00 © .... Logwood, Laguna (gold) @ Logwood, St.. Domin..*0 00 @ 1 On Logwood, Cam .(gold) @ Logwood .Jamaica oO @16 00 ... 00 ©15 00 10,4 cents TP ft. Calcutta, standard, y’d © 23* Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or less S ft, 6 cents TP ft, an 20 TP cent ad val.; over 20 cents $ ft, 10 cents TP ft and 20 TP centad valv Blasting(A) TP 25ft keg © © Skipping and Mining. 30 i8 @ Soda Ash (80Tpc.)(gJd) S ugar L’d, W \ (go .•!).. _ . Balsam Copaivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru. r © 4 70 20 @ 21 s5 75 © @ 4 8(@ 55 © 1 25 © 12* IS © 2u IS @ 35 .33]© _ bond) Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 ft to the bushel; other than bituminous", 40 cents $ 2rt bushels of 80 ft $ bushel. Liverpool Orrel. $ ton of2,240 ft... © .... Liverp’l House Cannel @ Anthracite. 0 50 © 7 00 Cardiff steam @15 00 LiverpO'HiasCannd Arsenic, Powdered phur Camphor, Chains—Duty, 2.* cents $ ft. One i nek & upward TP ft 0 @ Newcastle Gjs aSteuin Alum 26 Candles—Duty,tallow, 2*; sperma¬ Refined sperm,city... Stearic * Adamantine TP ft Aloes, Socotrine 36 2D @ is © 15 © 11 She’l Lac 60 57]© 27 @ 20 50 ©16 00 50 00 50 00 00 24 00 ©18 00 special report. Gunny Dags—Duty, valued at 1C cents or less, ]p square yard, 3; ovei 10, 4 cents TP ft 20J© 21 Calcutta, light &h’y % Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 1C cents or less TP square yard, 3; ovei 22 43 © 30x45 to 32x48. 82x50 to 32x-56 2© 8enna, Alexandria..,. Senna, Eastlndia .. Aloes, Cape 21 © 2 1 @ 15 Factory Dairies (gold) 85© © 8 9 10 15 16 18 Groceries— See 9i@ Seneca Root Gum Acid, Citric Cheese*—Duty: 4 , 20 © Sarsaparilla, Hond Sarsaparilla, Mex Geeda and Gum ... 85 80 F4J @ © . Salaratus SalAm'n ac, Ref (gold) Sal Soda. Newcastle... cent ad 75 Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Pilot $ lb © Myrrh, 56 Rhubarb,China.(gold) 2 75 © 8 50 Sago, Pe i. led 7© 8 Senegal, Gum Tragaeanth, 20 TP val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬ limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $J TP ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 TP cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents TP ft J Phosphorus, 20 TP cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents TP lb: Quicksilver, 15 TP cent ad val.; Sal ASratus, 1* cents TP ft ; Sal Soda, £ cent TP ft Sarsaparilla and Senna, 2o TP cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; Soda Ash, * ; Sugar Lead,20cents TP ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 TP cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 TP oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents TP ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20; blue Vit¬ riol, 25 TP cent ad val.; Ktherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $1 TO lb; all others quoted below, fkice. Cum Beeswax—Duty,20 $ cent ad val. American yellow.$ fl> 41 @ 42 >Rio Quicksilver Potash, 0; Caustic Soda, 1*; Acid, 10; Copperas, £; Cream Tartar, JO; Cubebs, 10 cents TP ft; Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 TP cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, l cent TP lb; Extract Logwood, Flowers lienzola and Gamboge, 10 TP cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic,20 TP cent ad val.'; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Datnar, 10 cents per ft; dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the 90© Prussiate Potash rate Citric imported from places this side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ to 10x15 to 12x18 to 16x24 to 24x30 to 24x86 24x36 to 30x44. .... 35 ©^ Phosphorus Cardamolns and Cantharides, 50 cents $ ft; Caster Oil, $ 1 TP gallon ; Chlo¬ Hope, when Ashes—Duty: 15 TP cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... TP 100 lb ... © 8 Opium, Turkey.(gold) 7 00 © Oxalic Acid 25 © 6 75 © 7 50 © 7 50 ©12 50 ©13 8x11 11x14 12x19 20x31 24x31 Oil Lemon 4 00 © 4 25 Oil Peppermint,pure. 5 §:*© .... Bark, 80$ cent ad val.; BiCarb. Soda, 1*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents TP ft; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $1 100ft ; Refined Borax, 10 cents $ ft ; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 $ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 TP ton, and 15 TP cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40cents TP ft.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.; PRICES CURRENT. Pearl, 1st sort 797 THE CHRONICLE 1867.] , 20*© do do Montevideo Rio Grande 19 © 1M@ 77*© 1 *@ © <4Hnoco do California gold California, Mex. do Porto Cabello Vera Cruz .. do do 1-°*© 1 © 16 © 14 © do Tampico do Texas Dry Salted Hides— Ch li (g°lfl) California... Tamp co 13 © © do . do . Sout h & Wes>\ do 14 .. © • 10 @ 10* Wet Salted Hides— Bue Ayres.TP Rio Grande California Western ft g’d. .... do do lf*@ I0i@ 1»1@ . ^ l’*@ Coutry sl’ter trim. «fc cured. do City Upper Leather B. A. & Rio Hi© do 1* © Stock— Gr. Kip TP ft cash. Sierra Leone.... do Gambia & Bissau do 28 © 30 © 24 © Honey—Duty, 2 sent $ gallon. Cuba (in bond) (gr1 TP gall. „ 58 © Hops—Duty: 5 coiiU ^ ft. Crop of 1866 do of 1865 Foreigu $ ft .. 45 © 30 © 40 © ?0 81 2i 60 Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande.. C 10 i 0® 10 25 Ox, American 8 00@ 10 00 India Rubber-Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val. @ East Inlia Carthagen*, Ac ... @ .• Indigo—Duty free. (,old) $lb 1 01 @ 1 70 Bengal Oude (gold) 75 @ 1 35 Madras (gold) 60 @ 85 Manila (gold) 65 @ 1 60 Guatemala (gold) 1 00 @ 1 *2 > Caraccas (gold) 75 @ i 0> Iron—Duty,Bars, 1 to 1* cents $ 1b. Railroad, 70 cents ^ 100 lb; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents $ tt>; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to 1| cents ^ lb; Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 $ lb. Pig, Scotch,No 1. $ ton 40 P0@ 45 00 00© 4t O'i Red’d EngAAmer 85 l) @ V0 (H) Pig, American, No. 1.. 42 Bar, Bar, Swedes, sizes assorted (in gold) Bar Swedes, sizes 95 00@1«>0 00 ^-Stobe Prices—n assorted @155 00 Bar,English and Amer¬ ican, Refined 102 do do do Common 92 13 > Soroll Ovals and Half Round lbO 50@1'>7 50 5J@ 92 f> 00@ ’ 82 .r0 l0@140 00 @135.0 .130 00@ ... Rods, 5-8@3-16 inch.. 107 50@167 50 Band Horse Shoe. .'...140 00@td5 00 Hoop Sheet, Single, and Treble 13J@ 19 5j@ Double Rails, Eng. (g’d) In* 9 @ $ lb Nail Rod Sheet, Russia 8 $ ton 53 5* @ f 3 0 > 82 50@ 85 00 Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime ^jptt) 3 U0@ 3 2*> East Ind Billiard Ball 3 00© 3 7,0 African, Prime.. .. 3 00@ :< 1 African, Scrivel.,W.C. 1 60@ 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, 12 $ 100 lb; Old Lead, 1* cents $ lb ; Pipe and Sheet, 2* cents ^ ft). Galena $ 100 1b .. @ American do , (sold) 6 50 @ 6 6*2j German (g.d 0 6 «*0 @ 6 6*.* (gold) 0 56 @ 6 Ss* English Bar net .. (@1U On Pipe and Sheet net ..@10 25 LeatUer—Duty: sole 35, upper 30 Spanish $ cent ad val. cash.$ ft).—, Oak, Slaughter, light . do do middle do do heavy. light Cropped.... middle do .... bellies do .... Heml’k, B. A., Ac., l’t. do do middle. do do heavy . do Califor., light. do do middle. do do heavy. Orino., etc. l’tdo do do middle do do heavy. do do A B. A, do do do 3 @ 40 33 @ 46 44 @ 47 5) 4i @ 47 @ 19 @ 29 @ »9@ 29 @ 28l@ 29 @ 28 i@ 2s @ 2Si@ 2? @ 4*i 21 SI 30 30* 29* 29* 29. 29 29 28 fOJ2* dam’gdall w’g’s do poor do Slaugh.in rough 21 @ 19 @ 87 @ Oak, Slaugh.in roa.,l’t do do mid. do and heavy 39 35 @ 40 do do ' 39 @ 38 @ 41 45 JLime—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Rockland, com. $ bbl. .. @ 1 2 > do heavy ... .. @ 1 85 Lumber; Woods, Staves,etc. —Duty: Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, free. Spruce, East. $ M ft H> 09 @ 22 00 Southern Pine SO 00 @ 87? 00 White Pine Box B’ds 80 00 @ .... White Pine Merch. Box Boards 38 00 @ 35 00 Clear Pine 80 00 @100 00 Laths, Eastern.$ M 3 :5 @ Poplar and vVhi e wood B’ds A Pl’k. 55 00 @ 65 0J Cherry B’ds A Plank 80 00 Oak and Ash 60 00 Maple and Birch ... 85 00 Black Walnut 100 00 STAVES— White oak, pipe, ^ ext,a 31. .. do pipe, heavy .. do .. pipe,light. do pipe, culls . 120 00 do nhd., extra. .. do .. hhd., heavy do hhd., light. .. do hhd.,culls. .. do bbl.,extra. .. do bbl.,heavy. . do ... bbl.,light.. do bbl.,culls.. „ Rod oak, hhd.,h’Ty. do hhd., light.. @ 90 00 @ 65 00 @ 40 00 @120 00 @300 00 @250 00 @200 ufl @1S0 00 @250 00 @200 00 @12-00 @100 00 @175 00 @140 @110 @ 60 @130 @ 90 oo 00 00 00 00 HEADING —White @150 00 oak, hhd ffahograiiy* Cedar, wood —Duty free. V&hqgft&y & t> Domin- fO etotohWt ftx,. Rose¬ 50 7 @ 30 @ crotches do Port-au-Platt, 40 10 @ 10 @ 11 @ ,15 Honduras Mansanilla Mexican Florida. $ c. do do do 8 @ * @ 12 12 25 @ 5@ 70 8 S@ ft. Rosewood, li. -Ian. $ ft) 4 @ Bahia do Cadiz 6 @. - bush. Fine screened ^ pkg. do .... 32 22 28 @ 20 @ Horseshoe,fd (6d)T8ft Horse h<e, pressed... Copper 4i@ Yellow metal Zinc 2* @ 23 18 @ .. refined and 4 eo @ 4 25 Rosin, common 3 50 @ 8 75 do strainedamlNo.2...-* MJ @ 4 2> do No. 1 4 56 @ 5 . 0 ! Pale and Extra 6 01 @ 8 00 00 @ Co (230 lbs.) Spirits turp., Am. $ g. do West, thin obl’g, 0 00 @ • .... and cocoa nut, 10 ad val.; cent sperm and whale or other eign tlsheries,) *20 $ cent ad Olive, qs do in Palm fish (for¬ val. (gold per case 6 25 @ .... casks.$ gall.. 1 60 @ 78 lb 10*@ Linseed,city... $ gall. 13. @ 1 40 Whale 70 @ 75 refined winter.. do 8»@ do do unbleach. 2 7 @ Lard oil 1 12 @ 1 Red oil, city distilled . 6u @ 75 @ Bank Straits Paraffine, 28 — 15 65 30 gr.. (free). Kerosene 40 Paint*—Duty: «>n white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ Ih; l’aru white and whiting, 1 cent 1b; dry ochres, 56 cent* 100 lb : oxidesofzim, 1 i cents $ ft); ochre, ground in oil. | 50 ^ 100 Spanish brown 25 ^ ceL tad val; China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red ft ; vermilion 25 ^ cent ad val.; $10 $ ton. and white chalk, Litharge, 11 J@ 1 s@ City... .^ft> Lead, red,City do white, American, pure, in oil white, American, puie, dry Zinc, white, American, @ 12 12 10 10 @ 11 14 @ 15 $ *00 ft) 2 O' @ 2 E0 gr’4 in oil. "{9 ft) 8 @ 9 Spanish brown, dry 1 12 @ 1 25 gr’d in oil. <{8 ft) 8 @ 9 Paris wh., No.l^lnOib 2 75 @ 2 8"i Wh ti g, Amer 2 @ 2£do VermilioiuChinese^ft) 1 25 @ I 35 ...... 1 05 @ 1 10 1 26 @ 1 80 5 @ 80 Venot.red(N.C.)$cwt 2 75 @ 3 00 Carmine,city made$ ft>lG 00 @20 no China clay $ ton31 00 @15 00 . $ bbl. 4 00 Chalk Chalk, block....$ ton?i O' Chrome yellow... 38 15 @ 4 CJ @23 0» @ 35 39 00 @42 00 Barytes. Per role uni—Duty; crude, 20 cents; gallon. refined, 40 ents Crude,40@47grav.$gal. 14i@ Refined, free in bond do 23 @ Naptha, refined Residuum Planter 33 @ 2).J 21 @ ^ bbl. 3 70 @ over 7 cents and not above . . .... *10 11, 3 cts 19 @ l'H i.0 13{@ 16 Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Sicily ^ ton.. 150 00 @225 00 I0j@ lli@ mesa Old -24 50 @21 00 U0 @ .... to the United States is 32 cents or less tt>, 10 cents ^ ft) and 11 a cent, ad val. ; over 32 cents $ ft) :2 cents $ ft) and 10 cent, ad val Class 3 — Carpet Wools and other . similar Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 12 cents or less $ ft., 3 cents $ ft); over 12 cents $ ft 6 cents $ ft). Wool of all classes Imported scoured, three times the • duty as if imported unw ashed. 50 ffh . do Texas common Valparaiso,unwashed.. 28 @ 80." S. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. do common,w... Entre Rios, washed .... 8. American Cordova 82 @ 84 80 @ 81 85 @ 40 3 4 @ 88 18 @ 25 8 - @ 40 38 @ 21 26 @ so .... washed . Mexican,unwashed.... Smyrna,unwashed do 5; 55 50 87 go 2S 33 40 @ 80 @ 24 @ 18 @ 1« @ Peruvian, unwashed do tS 47 @ 5o @ . African, unwashed 7ft .‘2 @ .... washed 85 @ 58 Zinc—Duty: pig 100 ft>».; Bheets Sheet or block, $1 50 « 2i cents $ ft>. $ lb - li @ 11 j I'reijflitsTo Liverpool: Cotton $ lb Flour $ bbl. Petroleum d. s. s. Hi 8-16@ @18 @ 4 D Heavy goods.. .$ ton 10 0 @15 0 Oil. @20 0 Corn,b’kA bags$? bus. @ 4 Wheat, bulk and bags @ 4 Beef $ tee. .. @20 Pork $ bbl. .. @16 Tin—Duty: pig,bars,and block,15$ Heavy goods. ..$ ton 15 0 @?0 0 Oil ' @<!5 0 Flour $ bbl. , @ ... Sngar.—See special report. .... .. .. .. Tallow—Duty :1 cent ^ ft). American,prime, country and city ^ ft)... 11 @ .. , To London Teas.—See special report. : ... cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cent, ad va*. ft) Banca Straits English Plates,char. do do do (gold) ..(gold) (gold) 26 @ 2ii© .. @ I.O.$ box 12 00 @13 22| 0 > 10 50 @12 25 I. C. Coke Terne Charcoalll 60 @12 00 Terne Coke.... 9 25 @ 9 0 Tobacco.—See special report. .. place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less $ lb, 19 ceuts $ ft) aud 11 ^ cent, ad val • over 32 ceuts $ ®>i 12 cents ft> and 10 $ cent, ad val ; when imported wrashed, double these rates. Class 2.— Combing IPoofo-The value where¬ of at the last place whence exported .. Wines and Llqnors—Liquors —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $3 per gallon, other liquors, $2.50. Wines— Duty: value net over50 cents 46 Petroleum Beef Pork Wheat.... @ ... @80. ..@2 0 ,39 tee. bbl. .. ...$ bush. .. gal¬ lon 20 cents cent gallon and 25 ad valorem; over 5- and not over 100, 50 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cen1 aa valorem; over $1 $ gallon. $1 $ gal¬ lon and 25 $1 oent ad val. @ 6 Corn @ To Glasgow (By Steam): Flour # bbl. ..@86 Wheat $ bush. .. @ 7 @ ^ ..@46 @25 0 Corn,bulk aud bags.. Petroleum (sad)$ bbl. Heavy goods.. $ ton * .. ©3° 9 Oil @ 4 00 @ @ 2 40 @ 2 50 Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ct; lams, bacon, and lard,2 ts 7$ ft). 3eef,plain raSas^ bbl..14 50 @2^ 00 .*..23 00 @27 50 do extra mess 9 Class 1 —Clothing California, unwashed... Hi $ ft>; over 11 cents, 3£ cents ^ ft) $ cent ad val. (Store prices.) English, cast, $ lb 18 @ . 23 German li @ 16 American,spring 12 @ 15 Amer c.n cast . Superfine No. 1, pulled and 10 English, spring English b ister hnglisn machinery.... do 7© 47 @ 57 @ Amer., Sax. fleece ^ ft. do full bl’d Merino. do i and J Merino.. Extra, pulled.. 64 x*aris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 $ cent ad val. Blue Neva Scotia^ toe .. White Nova Scotia— 4 50 Calcined, eas'ern^? bbl .... Calcined city mills do 57* @ @ 9 $ ft) 20 per cent) Hoofo—The value whereof at the lust 57i 18 @ domestic .... practiced.” fore ... .. >.i 20@-5 $ ct off li8t< ct. off list 34A& 0 3E A 5 $ ct. off lief . .... Copper .. .. 2 8t@ do 11 0U@ 25 00 Wool—Dutt: Imported in the “ or¬ dinary condition as now and hereto . dry Trieste Cal. Ac Eng American Plain Brass (less 13J do do do do @ 55 @ 56 @ 01 © do cases. Telegraph, No. 7 to tl Spices.-See spocial report. Ochre, yellow, French, 100 ft) 52 J@ in val. No. 0 to 18 No. 19 to 26 No. 27 to 36 Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and plates, $1 50 $ 199 ^s* 6|@ Plates,foreign $tt> gold 6| do .... < 0 . Wive—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered $2 to $3 5* $ 100 ft), and 15 $ cent ad Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 ceuts $ ft) or under, 2± cents; 9$@ dry, No. 1 do white, American, No. I,in oil do whiie, French, in oil do cent 1? ft>. 7 00 85 Champagne.... bushel of Soap—Duty: 1 cent ^9 ft), and 25 ad val. Jastile 7U@ .10 $ cent 14£ do 13 @ Sisal ^451 Para gold Vera Cruz .gold Chagres ...gold Puerto Cab-gold 8 50@ .. 11^@ Bolivar ...gold Honduras ..gold ,ti> do Malaga,sweet ^?ft) 11 @ 12 Timothy,reaped ^ bus 3 (0 @ 8 25 C Dary bus 4 £0 @ 5 74 Linseed,Am.clean$Hce @ ... do Am. rough bus 3 20 @ 3 2r> do Calcutta .gold i 5 © ... do do do do do do do 4 75 .. do do do Sherry ad val. Clover Deer,SanJuan^ft)gold 456 cts; hemp, li 8'i@ Skins—Duty: Hi $ cent ad val. 87 35 © Goat,Curacoa$ ft) gold 37 i 81 @ do Buenos A.. .go d 41 @ do VeraCruz .^.eld 4*i do Tampico...gold 42* @ 41 © do Matamoraa.g»)id do Payta gold 5-3 © 85 42 ;@ do Madras,....gol ; do Cape ~ g-11 8.8 @ 31 ... 3 5t© 8 5f’@ 3 00@ .-...© 90@ 1 10 do dry do 1 15© Claret, In hhds. do 85 00@ 60 06 9@ ... •‘*0 @ 4 > @ 35 @ 4 75@ do .. Madeira.. do Marseilles 15 .- 2 25 @ Sperm,crude 4 75@ do {....@ @ Whisky ( n b nd)— 3C@ 33 Wines—Port (gold) 2 2;@ 8 5« Burgundy Port, do 9?@ 1 40 do 1 9< @ 9 00 Sherry Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk. 35 $ cent. Tsatlees, No.l@3.^ft)ll 00 @11 50 Taysaams, superior, No. I @ 9 fO @10 50. no medium,No3@4. 9 00 @14 (M) Canton,re-reel.Nol@2. 8 5.j @ S 75 Japan, superior. 10 50 @i3 00 do Medium 11 00 @11 *0 1» 04 @18 00 China thrown...... - 75@ 4 75@ 4 St. Croix d> Gin-Differ, brands do D«*m c—N.E. Rum.cur. Bourbon Whisky.cur Shot—Duty: 2} ceuts $ ft). Drop ft) 10£@ Duty: linseed, tlaxseed, and rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or llasks, $1 : burning lluid, 50 cents gallon; palm, seal, Oils Rum—Jamaica .... 4 “5@ do P Romienx.... partially refined, 3 ceuts; Buck.. ... do Alex.Seignette. do ArzacSeignette do .. Oakum-Duty fr.,$ lb 11 8@ Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val. City thin obl’g, i n bids. "{9 ton.54 75 @55 00 do in bags.52 50 @53 00 do A. Seignette . Hiv. Pellevoisin 52 52 @ oq 00 ....© .*]* 4 90@ 10 6ft 4 90@ 9 10 5 0t @ 10 00 4 75@ 7 00 @ Pellevoisinfreresdo @ 3 00 .. 0<i .@ .. do do L^gerfreres ... do Other br’ds Cog. do soda, 1 cent ^ lb. nitrate i do J. Vassal A Co.. Jules Robin.... Marrette A Co. \ ine Grow. Co. @30) .. oo oo * Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2} cents; ^ ft) Refined, pure Stores—Duty: spirits ot Crude turpentine .u, cents gatlon; crude Nitrate soda gold Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 $ cent ad val. . i Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 Turpent’e, tf ..^82801b 5 00 @ 7> ’9* i cent fla ; canary, SI Tar, Am rlc •. bbl -6 3 4 5i 60 ft); and grass seeds, do 42 @ 50 @ 54 @ 240 lb bgs. 2 75 F. F Naval Pi cli (gold) 4 S0@ 9 Hennessy (gold) 9t @ l * Otard, Dup. ACo.do 4 8 @ 13 Pfnet,Castil. ACo.do 4 75@ 17 Renault A Co. do 5 00@ 16 14 1® @ .. do do Solar coarse Cut,4d.@00d.$ lOott. 6 00 @ 7 5 J. A F. Martell }3 Liverpool,gr’nd^ sack 1 HI @ 1 95 do fin<.-,Ashton’s(i’d) 2 60 @ . . do fine, A-orthingt’a 2 o"- @ 2 90 Onondaga,coin.fine ols. 2 50 @ 2 60 do do 210 ft) bgs. 1 tO @ 1 90 !?Iolasses.—See special report. Nails—Duty: cut!*; wrought 2*; horse shoe 2 cents lb. Clinch 12 @ 12 @ &i@ Salt—.Duty: sack, 24 cents ^8 100 ft); bulk, 18 aents ^ 100 ft). Turks Islauds bush. 45 4*ty@ 20 12 14 @ (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas Brandy— 18 73 @ Rice—Duty: cleaned 2£ cents $ paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents $ ft). Carolina ....•:$ 100 Tbll 50 @72 E0 East India,dressed.... 9 25 @ 9'7o 14 14 1" @ .. ^ ft> Hams, Shoulders, 14 Nuevitas.... Mansanilla Mexican..... do do do do prime, Lard, 10 Port-au-Platt, do Pork,mess, new WO do St. Domingo, ordinary logs do logs 85 @ @ @ $ ft) Para, Fine Para, Medium Para, Coarse cents [June 22, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 798 Beef Pork #tC9. $ bbl. .. $ To Have* : Cotton Beef and @80 @2 0 $ l@ $ lb * pork.. ^ bbl. 1 00 @ ... Measurem-g’da.^ ton i0 90 @ .. Petroleum 6 6@* 0 Lard, tallow, out m t 4*kiiTpoV»id pUrl 8 0Q*@18 W 799 CHRONICLE. THE 22,1867.J June Commercial Cards. Commercial Cards. Safes. WILSON, SON A CO, TO - and Stock, Note Brokers. & Merchants. Bankers All Widths Formerly of Alexandria,Va Produce, Merchandise, Baltimore, Md. Sprigg, cashier; J. Sloan, Jr., cashier, Bal¬ timore, Md. And by permission to Jacob lleald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Balt.; Tannahill, Mclllvaine & Co., N. Y.; Ambrose Rucker, President 1st Nation¬ al Bank, Lynchburg, Va. and Weights. hand. Large Stock always on A THEODORE POLHEMUS A CO MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS. Freder¬ Warehouse and office corner of Lombard and ick streets, No. 39 East End, Exchange Place, Duck, Cotton PETER WISE, Late of Richmond. JOS. H. WILSON. ROBT. N. WILSON, Late of Lynchburg, Va. IMPORTANT 59 Broad of Beaver Street, corner Refer to D. Lillie’s PROVISIONS. AND NEW YORK. Safes. Co., J. M. Cummings Sc Co., Blair, Densmore & unequalled Burglar proof Safes constantly on haHd at our V\ arerooms. Also, safes of every description, designed for both Fre and Burglar-proof security, Tne public are in vited to call and examine for themselves as lo the WASHINGTON 165 AND MERCHANTS, COMMISSION Safes. merits of our DISTILLERS \ assortment of these A full STREET. STREET, NEW YORK, Offer for sale, IN BOND, tine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class Dis¬ tilleries,Kentucky^ Lillie Safe & Iron Co., Nos. Brokers. Bankers and FLOUR, 148,150,152, 154 and 156 N. SECOND STREET, BETWEEN WASHINGTON AVENUE RECEIVERS OF YORK. BROADWAY, NEW 198 Jacquelin & De Coppet. N.Y. Norton & STREET, MILLERS & Rondo, Securities, Government BOUGHT AND SOLD ON ioHM H. Jaoqusujt. COMMISSION. Hsnbt Db Cofpet. Heath & Hughes, BROKERS BANKERS A COMMISSI ON IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, AND GOLD, RAILROAD 13 STOCKS, York. AND MINING Broad Street, New subject to Check, and Interest al¬ lowed. HEATH. T. W. B. HUGHES, Member of N. Y. Stock Ex Chicago, HI. Lockport, Ill. West Lockport. Ill. A known brands of Flour always on ltaud. Eastern orders will have prompt attention at low est market price. Our Chicago mills being situated on the railroad track cars are loaded with Flour, Middlings, Bran, &c., to all points Fa*t, saving ex¬ Oriental Mills, Lockport Hydraulic Mills, Sweepstakes Mills, full supply of our well Orders lor pur¬ in this market pense and damage from cartage. chase of Grain. Flour, or provisions will.be faithfully a tended to. E. W.Blatchford A. HAWLEY RANKING HOUSE 1 White, Morris LEAD PIPE AND OF 29 WALL Members of change, and Mining Board. . 155 Kinzie Street, subject to check at sight. White, morris & co. A Chicago. Sc Loring, AND NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds and 65 . Files of BLANK . . permission to (Messrs. Lockwood & Co., ^ Dabsev. Morgan & this Paper 36 MERCHANTS, Commerce Street, Mobile, Ala.. Carrington, AT LAW. EXCHANGE PLACE, Corner of William St NEW YORK. E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. AGENTS FOR BURLINGTON WOOLEN Nos. JOHN CLARK, Jr. A End, Glasgow. IS CO’S. UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE BE WINQ. RUSSELL, Sole Agent, CHAMBERS STREET, N.Y. THOS. 68 r-v- •>«7' CO., CO., 43 A 45 WHITE STREET. Lindsay, Chittick Sc Co., IMPORTERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, British Staple, And Fancy Dress Goods, Irish and Scotch Linens, Ac., Ac*, 150 <fc 152 DUANE STREET, NEW YORK. Lane, Lamson COMMISSION Gas Mile Sheridan, OF White Goods, Spool Cotton. STATIONERY, Cooper & St. WHITE STREET, W EST CHURCH STREET, 97 BOOKS, ENGRAVING, PRINTING,. &C., &C. Removed from 139 Duane FACTORS 11 3 MAIN STREET, ’ RICHMOND. VA. Co. Round to Order. Langley & Co., MILTON MILLS, ATTORNEYS collected. other Securities Professional men, . Wm. C. GENERAL COMMISSION Ould Sc ^ Interest allowed on Deposits. Dividends, Coupons and Interest Liberal advances on Government and Information cheerfully given to Executors, etc., desiring to invest. . New York. VICTORY MANUF. Burnham COTTON Gold Commission, at the Stock, Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem¬ Refer by 45 Maiden Laue, supply everything in our line for Business, Pro¬ fessional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders re¬ ceive prompt attention. We TENNESSEE. Erastus EXCHANGE PLACE, Government Securities, bought and sold, ONLY on AND BLANK-BOOK MANUFACTURERS. CHICOPEE MANUF. CO., England Sc Co., . STATIONERS, PRINTERS BROKER, BROKERS, COTTON BROKER, 38 BROAD STREET AND 36 NEW STREET. CINCINNATI, OHIO. Government Securities of all kinds, Gold, attention given to. filling orders for Spinners. State,* Rank, and Railroad Stocks and Special Interest allowed on Ronds Bought and Sold. Deposits subject to check at sight. Collections Wm. G. made in all the States and Canadas. bers. Francis Sc Loutrel, 17 A 19 Cummins, L. . MEMPHIS, BANKER**, YORK. SOLICITED BY CLSIOAl YOUR careful and prompt attention. COTTON Gibson,Beadleston & Co., BROADWAY, NEW of 76th St. 2 3d Avenue*, corner TO RANKERS AND 50 No. 73 Factory, WASHINGTON MILLS, Memphis, Tenn. Foute BELTER A CO. Oak Library, W. W. Loiung. A. M. Foute, Late Pres. Gayoso Bank, Bros., Fine Rosewood Parlor Patent Rosewood Redsteads, Patent Rosewood Bureaus, (one lock controlling four drawers). Also, Rosewood, Black Walnut and Dining and Bedroom Furniture. Have BROKERS, HIDE Gold ESTABLISHED 1S44. SHEET LEAD, ] [. S. Bush Sc Co., Orders will receive allowed on Balances, CAKE, CHICAGO, ILL. Sc Co., STREET, (Established 1854.) the Ne w York Stock Exchange, &Co., Manufacturers of LINSEED OIL AND OIL DOMESTIC USE, AND STREET, NEW YORK. Furniture, PROPRIETORS OF Deposits received, If>2 FRONT LATE J. H. CHICAGO, IL.iL., ST., FOR EXPORT Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 138 LASALLE Gold, and Sons, MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE Springmeyer (Established 1848.) Railroad Stocks, Henry Lawrence Sc MO. LOUIS, ST. 58 BROAD STREET. AND GREEN NO. 26 NEW Co., Yaeger Sc President. LEWIS LILLIE, MERCHANTS, COMMISSION Chicago, Ills. <sr STREET, NO. 47 BROAD SEEDS GRAIN, FLOUR, BURGLAR PROOF AND FIRE COMMISSION MERCHANTS, WROUGHT IRON DOUBLE CHILLED AND & Co., Sawyer, Wallace Sc Co., MERCHANTS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS, FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK. Fixtures, Oil Lamps, Description. Kerosene Chandeliers of every John Horton ScROOMS, Co., MANUFACTORY AND SHOW CANAL STREET, Corner of Centre Street, opposite Earle’s Hotel, 233 A 235 THE 800 Commercial Commercial Cards. S. H. Pearce Sc No. 353 * Co., Alexander BROADWAY, D. ENGLISH SILKS, and Manufacturers of And Linen SILK ANI) COTTON HANDKERCHIEFS, Manufacturers of importer of HOSIERY MEN’S superior finish, and Wm. Otters FURNISHING a new GOODS, Stock of the above at r LEONARD Oscar Delisle STRFET, French Dress Muslin IMPORTER AND MANLFACTUR1CR OF otton, Organziue Silk, George Pearce Sc Laces, Railroad Material. Gilead STREET, NEW YORK. IMPORTER OP provided for United States St., to No. 94 Consignment* solicited term* York, May 1st, 1807. TYNG A 194 WOVEN Embroidery, Organzine, and Tram. 84 CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK. CORSETS, SKIRT MATERI¬ ALS, W EBBINGS, BINDINGS BED LAf’E, COTTON YABNS, Ac., 234 CHURCH Co., 198 & 200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK. W. W. Coffin, Treas. Wm. G. Watson Sc Reavers. Anderson & 33 PARK PLACE, NEW YORK. BELFAST, JAMES GLASS A Agents for the sale of WHITE REST SIX-CORD JOHN & HUGH AUCHINCLOSS, SOLE AGENTS IN NEW Umbrellas & 49 MURRAY Importers A Commission 198 A 200 CHURCH SHOE THREADS, SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC. BARBOUR BROTHERS, CHAMBERS STREET, NEW YORK. Mills at Patterson* N. J. Steel or Cars, etc., LINEN . AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, FOR HAYES A LINEN Strachan & GOODS. J. Pope & Bro. STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET, NEW YORK. Miscellaneous. A. Merchants, CO, Belfast, PRODUCE J. Chapin, COMMISSION FOR LINENS, Murray Street, New York* MERCHANT, CINCINNATI. Consignments and orders solicited. ESTABLISHED IN 1826. A. 1 B. Holabird Sc Co , CINCINNATI, O., ENGINE AND MILL MANUFACTURERS. Particular attention is ealled to Malcomson, Broadway. METALS. 29-2 PEARL HMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS 40 69 & 71 5 DUCK, AC. CO., Banbrldge. SCOTCH Roads, FOR SALE BY AC. CHECKS, Ac., WHITE GOODS, IRISH AND Railways. Railroad Iron, PATENT LINEN THREAD. Aud F. W Cos., Rails, Locomolives. and undertake all business connected with STREET, Ageuts tor' DICKSONO FERGUSON A Threads, Iron SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS, Sole Parasols, Bonds and Loans for Railroad George Hughes Sc Co., STREET, NEW YORK, Linen FLAX SAIL DWIGHT, MANUFACTURERS OF , Negotiate Thomas BURLAPS, RAGGING, YORK.; No. 108 Dnane Street. DOUBLEDAY A LINENS, CABLED Thread. MERCHANTS, S. W. HOPKINS A Co., WILLIAM GIHON <fc SONS’ C ambric Ha ndk ercli ief M a n u fact u rers J. & P. Coats’ JeSUP & CoMPANYj GOODS, Jobbing and Clothing Trade. CO., LURGAN, MERCHANTS, York. 12 PINE STREET. In full assortment for the Linen Manufacturers. New Steam and Street MURRAY STREET. IRISH A SCOTCH LINEN KIRK Sc SON, M. K. Gihon, Agents for WILLIAM COMPANY, Broadway, Importers A Commission Merchants, 42 & 44 usual PATERSON, N. J. Brand Sc Smith, AND SILKS, BROADWAY, NEW YORK. WORKS Mixtures, the Staples Contract for MACHINE TW IST SEWING No. 335 Silk Son, MANUFACTURERS OF SUPERIOR on COMMISSION BANKERS AND W. 1). Si monton. Fancy Cassimeres, AND STREET, NEW YORK. PATERSON, N. ,J. Woolen Exclmng Continent. of any of the IMPORTERS Mann fact urer of MANUFACTURERS OF or Spacious Counting and Reception Rooms availabl for Americans in London, with the facilities usually found at the Cont inental Bankers. Orders for the above may be sent to John Graham, John O’Neill & Sons, Silks, Railroad Bonds and United States and other Amerioan Securities negotiated, and Credit and LINENS, DUNDEE Has removed from 125 and 127 Duane Read Street. New Smith, PLACE, LONDON, W. RAILROAD IRON, BESSEMER RAILS, STEEli TYRES A METALS. James Smieton, machine Twist A. 15 LANGHAM s, Globe Goods, REHOVA Bj. British and Continental. Agents for Corsets, Ac. 73 LEONARD Importers of Linen Handk’ffe, MERCHANTS, TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C. Oiler to Jobber* only. YORK, Emb’s, Co., MACHINE AND SEWING SILK, BUTTON-HOLE Edgings, Imitation Laecs, Co., 70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW York Agents for the Glasgow Thread Company’s SPOOL COTTON. Real Brussels Tram Silk. New C. Holt Sc Draperies, . HANDK’FS, AC. Street. 119 CHAMBERS STREET. Swiss A French White Oiled ( MILLS AT Church Also IPdkfs, Oiie<1 Silk, . 185 COMMISSION Goods, Machine Cotton Sew I it"- Co., OF Lace Curtains. Pongee ii’dkts, Laces and & IMPORTERS LINENS, / LINENCAMB’C 3T4 BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN STREET. invented. John N. Stearns, 'White Go Importers of IRISH No. ever Thompson Sc Co., and and durability. Agents for the sale of the Patent Keversible Paper Collars. PARASOLS, Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN STREET, NEW YORK. appearance 58 UMBRELLAS AND CRAPES, HANDKERCHIEFS, silk, which it equals in Hall, Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red Imitation Oiled Silk. the most economical collar Byrd Sc Napier, Cards. and Lawn Oiled Silk, costs hut half as much as real Commercial Cards. Agent lor S. Courtanld A Co.’s CHINA Our “ IMITATION” has a very [June 22, 1867. (late of Becar, Napier & Co.) Importers of EUROPEAN ANi) CHRONICLE. our IMPROVED CIRCULAR SAW MILL. It Is superior to all others in strength, durability and simplicity, will cut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumber per day. REED’S PATENT GOLD PREMIUM WHEAT AND CORN MILLS. Built of solid French Burr Rock. given to Southern patronage. Particular attention ,