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Imtte’ feettc, dtammiiit crimes, A ftnftarcy ffHattitor, mut #nsuwnce Mutual • " 'i WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, 'N REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. rapid increase of capital seeking investment, these;bonds will be eagerly bought up ? For we must remember that these five-twenties, for reasons, some of which we adverted to last week, are extremely scarce, and the demand from all parts of the country is growing with most active rapidity, while the supply is almost stationary. There are two things, however, which render it probable CONTENTS. TUB CHRONICLE. Return of NOA47. SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1866. YOL. 2. Five-Twenties from Europe • National Bank Failure at Wash- ington American Commerce with Mex¬ ico 609 610 Analyses of Railroad Reports Latest Monetary and Commercial English News 611 Commercial News ■ 611 Georgia State Debt THE BANKERS’ Trade of Great Britain with the United States ... and Miscellaneous National Banks, etc Sale Prices N. Y. Stock Exchange National, State, etc., Securities. 614 615 Gift GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Commercial Epitome Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks, Philadelphia Banks 613 624 Cotton BreadstulTs 617 621 622 625 626 Dry Goods Exports and Imports 627 627 Prices.Current and Tone of the Market 629-31 THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Europe will not, for any great length of time, be dvept up. First, there are comparatively few of our Five-twenties in England. Of that the return current of ' our securities from the 350 millions of these securities which are in the hands European holders, it is ^computed that not more than 50 millions are owned by British capitalists. Hence, if on the Continent of Europe, in consequence of the troubled state of the political atmosphere, a considerable amount of bonds <£I)C £1)ronicU. should be thrown on the market, they will be very likely to The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ be taken up in Europe, where there is always an immense day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine amount of capital waiting to invest itself in sound and safe vnth the latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all securities. The firmness in Consols indicates that the scare the Commercial and Financial netos of the previous day up to in the London money market is passing away, and that the the hour of publication. financial atmosphere is clearing up. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. The same cause which has given a turn to British invest¬ XW" Agents make no Collections out of New York City. Money paid to them will ments in the direction of consols, can scarcely fail to operate in he at the risk of the person paying it. For The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, with Titk Daily favor of American securities, especially as all the securities Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, and mailed to all others,(exclusive of postage) $12 00 of the Continental Governments are temporarily depressed For The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, without The Daily Railway News Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. Railroad, Canal, and Miscellane- of 634-35 632 1 ous Bond List 633 Insurance and Mining Journal... 636 | Advertisements 636-40 Bulletin, (exclusive of postage). For The Daily Bulletin, without-Tue Commercial and Chronicle, (exclnsiveof postage) Financial 10 00 Postage is paid by subscribers at "their own post-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & CO, Publishers, 60 William Street, Nfew York. cle, for holding the Chronicle Price 31 75. Files Neat Office. or Bulletin can and avoided. 5 00 be had at the is . 1 Secondly, there is in England a growing conviction which permeating the masses of the people, and is obtaining more power over the moneyed and governing classes, that this country is well able to bear its load of debt, and that our unbounded faith in the vast resources and recupera¬ and more of the United States does not rest on a false This conviction has recently found expression in the House of Commons in a' speech by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Mr. Gladstone, whom no one will suspect of undue partiality. He observes that “ the debt of the United States is in itself something wonderful—wonderful as the creation of four years, strictly of four years, and no more; and yet amounting to nearly 83,000,000,000, or £600,000,000, and the rate of growth of the debt in the last year ex¬ ceeded, I think, £200,000,000. That is a wonderful debt, and its charge is enormous. Well, now, looking at these figures, a man would be struck with something like despair: but if we look at the position of the country which has to bear the burden I must confess that I think the future of America, as far as finance is concerned—political problems are not now in question—will not be attended with any em» barrassment. I do not believe the debt ivill constitute any dif' tive energy THE RETURN OP FIVE-TWENTIES FROM EUROPE. Wo have amonff us a o certain class of financial men who small alarm lest the European holders of led, under the pressure of the conti¬ nental war panic, to send them back to this country in larger amounts than can easily be absorbed by our own investors. The experience of the last four weeks does not justify these tremulous forebodings. During that time, probably, ten millions of five-twenties have been imported' here from European markets. Yet the whole amount has been ab¬ sorbed, and a glance at our Stock Exchange report shows that the price is nearly one per cent higher now than when the return movement first set in. .Suppose that during the next two months another ten millions should come this way, is there any reason for contending that a similar result would not recur? Is it not extremely probable that with the profess to be in our no securities should be foundation. * \ confident that if they prestige of being a depository of public money. The Uni¬ show with respect to finance, any portion of that extraordi¬ ted States Treasurer, Mr. Spinner, it has accordingly been in some quarters supposed, must have known something of the nary resolution which on both sides alike they manifested dur¬ loss of credit*of the bank. It is certain that he has acted ing the war, and of that equally remarkable resolution with which, on the return of peace, they have brought their mons¬ with commendable caution in drawing down his deposits. trous and gigantic establishments within moderate bounds, On this subject, Mr. Spinner, in a letter to an evening paper, I won’t say that this debt, according to an expression which makes the following statement: ficultg for the American people. r I am be a tleabite, but that in a within very small limits, and may, even within the lifetime of persons now liv¬ ing, be effaced altogether A In these remarks we see not merely what is thought of American securities by Mr. Gladstone, but they are still more valuable as an echo of British opinion, and especially of the opinion of British capitalists and investors. \V ith such testimony before us, we are still of the opinion we ex¬ pressed recently, that in proportion as our securities leave Germany, they will have a growing tendency to find a rest¬ ing place in England. We do not wish to be understood as favoring the retention of our bonds in Europe.' On the con¬ trary, jt is extremely probable that we are well able rapidly to absorb the whole of them in this country, and that our financial position would be stronger, or less open to distur¬ bance if none of our government bonds were held abroad. Our argument simply amounts to this, that there is little prospect of our being able to get the foreign holders to part with their bonds, and that there are persons among us who, fear that our monetary affairs here will be disturbed by the heavy importation of these bonds during the next two was once . [May 19,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 610 fashionable in this country, will moderate time it will be brought months. Now the facts are, that there was etandiDg to the credit of the Treasurer of the United States only $3,858 83. On the day of the failure the hank issued a certificate that $1,155 31 was deposited on account of its semi-annual duty, and on the same day General Robinson directed the bank to pass from his credit to that of the Treasurer of the United States the sum of $51,258 93. No money passed in either of these l&st.two transactions, and both were n ade when it was known that the bank had failed. So far as the Treasurer’s account wa9 con¬ cerned. there was and is now standing legitimately to his credit less than four thousand dollars, while he holds in his hands securities, exclusive of what will be required to redeem the entire circulation of the bank, that would on a sale to-day exceed one hundred and thirty thousana dollars. The truth is, that but for the disobedience of orders of a military officer, and the indiscretion of two officers in the Treasury De¬ partment —of neither of which the Treasurer had knowledge—no harm could by any possibility have come to the government.” Under the 45th section of the National Banking law, it is the right of Mr. Freeman Clarke, as Comptroller of the Cur rency, to order, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, an official examination of the affairs of any na¬ tional bank. It is of the gratifying features of our financial opera¬ during the last five years, that although such vast.sums of money have passed through the hands of government officials and agents, there have been so few instances of em¬ bezzlement or peculation. When exceptional instances do occur of attempted fraud or collusion it is therefore a high public duty to make of all who are implicated in them an example which will show that breach of trust, and tamper¬ ing with public funds is one of the most ignominious of tions one case of the Merchants’ National Bank, this examination should have been deferred until after the failure is on every account to be. greatly regretted. By falsifying its returns, or by some other contrivances, a dis¬ ingenuous shaky bank might deceive everybodyjin the- office of the Comptroller of the Currency; but it could scarcely watchful officers in other bureaus of the Treasury Department. Several disbursing officers at any deceive many rate must THE NATIONAL BANK FAILURE AT WASHINGTON. That in the have been in the secret. Now, it is the obvious duty of these subordinates to report to their chief, the1 Sec¬ retary of the Treasury, any and every case of irregularity on the be no part of. the depositories of public money. If there regulation requiring this, such a rule should be made delay. For how otherwise can it be known by Mr. McCulloch what banks require looking after, and what pub¬ lic depositories should have their deposits of government money reduced or removed. How long ago certain disbursing officers have-been aware of the dangerous position of the bank we are not told, but crimes. there is every reason to believe that the meeting of the 20th The opprobrious circumstances which attended the collapse April, at which the official examiner says that Lieut.-Col. E. of the Merchants’ National Bank at Washington are partly E. Paulding, Paymaster, United States Army, was present detailed in the preliminary report which has been issued was the last of a series of anxious consultations of the “ friends of the official examination of the books of the bank by order of the bank.” A fter this meeting, when the insolvent condition of Mr. Clarke, the Comptroller of the Currency. If we are of the bank was well known, Col. Paulding, instead of taking not misinformed, however, the truth is not all known as yet measures to draw out the 8300,000 of Government funds and further surprising disclosures will shortly be made. One which he had deposited there, proceeded next day to place of the most noteworthy circumstances connected with this 8200,000 more in the bank, two other dishonest officers of failure is the small extent to which the customers of the the Government adding 843,000 more. bank are sufferers. On the first of January last the deposits Notwithstanding this evidence of fraudulent and concerted of private persons were officially reported at 8602,309. purpose we do not hear that any of the parties to the crime Had the bank failed, then the loss of individual depositors, have as yet been arrested with the exception of Col. Pauld¬ would have been very heavy. From some causes, which re¬ ing himself who will probably be trie i by court martial. quire explanation however, these private deposits, on the The preliminary inquiries are, indeed, still going on, and day of the failure, were reduced to 838,610. In other words, some of the features of this disgraceful affair may assume more than half a million of dollars appears to have been a different color as more light is shed upon them. In paid to preferred creditors a short time before the crash. view of this investigation we have only to ask on the Now, from this point of view it is a singular coincidence part of the public that the fullest, publicity be given to that the government deposits between 1st Jam and the foilure the facts, and the severest punishment to the men who increased from 894,225 to 8762,312, and a more remarkable shall be found guilty of contriving and conniving at so circumstance still is that over a quarter of a million of gov¬ heinous a crime. ernment money was placed in the bank within a fortnight Among the subordinate points on which the public desire of the closing of its doors by complete insolvency. information is the almost unlimited command which Pauld¬ It has for a long time been no secret, that the Merchants ing seems to have had of Government money. We have National Bank did not enjoy the hfoh credit which should be every reason to believe that our paymasters and other dis¬ indispensable to every bank which is permitted to enjoy the bursing officers have, with very few exceptions, proved them- without I May 19, 1866] selves THE CHRONICLE. worthy of the highest trust; but positive and emphatic manner 611 we must object in observes that the Collector at Browmsville “ fails to state by allowing of wffiat authority, whether Government funds to lie in the hands of purely local or otherwise,” the order any pay officer of which he complains w'as promulgated. It is possible that longer than is absolutely necessary. His office is to disburse this “ failure to state” so and not to hold the public important an element of the case money. His bonds are fixed at may have resulted from ignorance on the a rate which indicates that he is never to hold part of the Col¬ more than a the most the to lector; and it is worth while for us, therefore, to call the at¬ limited amount and for a very limited time. Our dis¬ tention of the Secretary and of Congress to the fact that the bursing officers must be made to understand that the money order undoubtedly emanated from the central government entrusted to them must be placed, with the least possible at Mexico, and wTas issued in pursuance of the new financial delay, in the hands of the creditors of the Government. policy inaugurated in Mexico under the advice of Mr. So far, however, have we diverged from this right and Langlais, just before the sudden death of that gentleman. safe rule, that Paymaster Paulding can accommodate his Mr. very friends with a loan ot halt banks, it is reported, a million of dollars, and are accustomed to offer Langlais, certain will ment as our remember, inducements of of France who pecuniary character to disbursing officers to place Govern¬ funds on deposit with them. Any paymaster who re¬ ceives any such gratuities, whether as interest or in any other form, should be instantly disgraced and dismissed the ser¬ vice. It is worthy of note that no less than sixteen officials in various bureaus had money deposited in the Merchants’ National Bank. As its capital was $306,000, the stock¬ a merce readers interested was a was sent out Emperor Maximilian in Mexican .com member of the Council of State to Mexico at the request of the to examine into the condition of the Mexican finances, and to report upon the measures necessary adopted in order to disentangle those finances from the to be confusion in wdiich they have been weltering for many years past. After devoting many months to this arduous task, Mr. Langlais, wrorn out by its pressure and by the effects of the Mexican climate, suddenly died in February last, just holders will, of course, be responsible for the debts of the after completing a great scheme of financial reform, for the bank under the stockholders’ liability clause of the national adoption of which he is understood to have expected such a banking law. regularization of the treasury as w'ould ensure to the Mexi¬ The currency now outstanding amounts to $179,810. It can Government a revenue of about is supposed by some persons that as the twrenty-five millions of Government will dollars per annum. redeem broken bank notes from the proceeds of the bonds Several features of this scheme were made public in Mexico deposited at Washington for that purpose, these notes will early in the present year, and among them one in pass as freely now as before the bank stopped payment. particular, having been fully adopted by the Government of Maximilian, This is a mistake. The motes of a broken national bank are made its appearance in the form of an no longer legal tender from or to the imperial decree abol> Government. They eventually paid by the Treasury, and destroyed. shing the practice of which the Collector at Browmsville speaks, and which had obtained for several years, not at But the law' does not provide that they shall be paid except Matamoras alone, but at all the Mexican ports of entry, of after such a day as may be fixed for that purpose. admitting, free of duty, all goods intended lor sale in the in¬ terior of Mexico, the AMERICAN COMMERCE WITH MEXICO duty on such goods being collected In reply to a resolution of inquiry, the Secretary of the subsequently to their entry, when they were dispatched from Treasury sent into the House of Representatives on Monday the port of importation to the points of consumption. of this week, a communication received Under this practise the business of by him from the smuggling had attained, as Mr. Collector of Customs at Browmsville in Douglass clearly showed, the most formidable pro¬ Texas, on a subject of considerable portions at Vera Cruz,> San Bias, Tampico, Matamoras, and importance to our Southwestern commerce. According to the Collector, an order w as promulgated in other Mexican ports of entry, to the great detriment, not only the city of Matamoras in Mexico, early in January last, to of the Mexican customs, but of consumers in the interior of the effect that all goods going to Brownsville from that city, Mexico. In his letter to the Secretary of the Treasury, the or to that city from Brownsville, should pay full duties at Collector at Brownsville states that “ many of the prominent the Mexican Custom-house. merchants of Matamoras are This order the Collector entirely opposed to the decree ” repre¬ of which he complains. sents as We presume there can be little being in conflict with the previous policy of the doubt of this, and wre may add that Mexican Government, under which the same thing is just as goods entering Matamoras true of were admitted “many prominent merchants” at Vera Cruz, and at free, the duties upon such goods being paid only when the goods wTere resold to go into the interior of sundry other ports which have heretofore profited largely by Mexico; and the Collector considers that the object of the the practise to wffiich the obnoxious decree was intended to order evidently w'as a- discrimination against the trade of put an end. Brownsville, dictated by a fear of Brownsville enterprise on But, it can hardly be thought desirable either in the inter¬ the part of the Mexican authorities, and by a desire on their ests of international law, or of American commerce, that the will be part to force American trade with Mexico into the Mexican port of Bagdad, lower down the Rio Grande. This being the state of the case in the mind of our Browns¬ Collector, that functionary proceeds to recommend that the Secretary of the Treasury should issue an order to the collectors of Newr Albany, Galveston, and Indianola, not to clear any vessel for the ports of Bagdad or Matamoras, until the ville obnoxious order in question shall be rescinded by the Mexican authorities. It is to be hoped that this extraordinary recom¬ mendation may be thoroughly sifted, and both its origin and^ its probable effects maturely estimated at Washington before the Secretary of the Treasury takes it into serious considera¬ tion. The Secretary, in his communication made to Congress, American Government should be used “ lever ” by these compel the Mexican Government “ as a prominent merchants ” to abandoning a reform which cannot fail in the end to benefit legitimate trade at the jexpense only of trade which is illegitimate.- Measures which tend to increase the consum. ing power of the whole Mexican people by equalizing their fiscal burdens, and developing a healthy state of internal traffic in that country, cannot but be ultimately beneficial to the United States, as the nearest neighbor of Mexico. into DEBT AND FINANCES OF GEORGIA. The amount of bonds issued previous to the war by the State of Georgia and outstanding March, 1866, including unpaid coupons, was 13,874,200. These are accounted for in the following abstract: * 1865.Westrn 612 5 per . 1862. “ Central Bank “ 1864.. $---- $ “ “ .Western & Atlantic 1863.. “ “ 1861 cent. 6 per cent. & Atlantic R. R 76,500 2G2;500 134,500 72.000 ) 234,000 157,500 $.... $176,500 $.... Sheep Sheep killed Dogs $176,500 334,500 134.500 «... 153,750 153,-750 623,500 . & Gulf R. R. 100,000 169.500 75,000 100 0(10 .. 723.500 169.5 H) 176,500 251,500 200,000 200,000 “ 200.000 • • 200.000 • 100,000 100,000 1880.. “ 11 It H 1,000 , 72,000 ' The average returned value per acre in 1862 $4;6S, of land was : in 1860 $4;8o, in 1863 $6;35, and ’61, and ’62 were made upon the specie currency far 1863 and 1864 were as required by law, in basis; and the returns made upon the value in Confederate currency. The reason the item of merchandize was so much increased in 1863 and 1864 was because all cotton, except that in the. hands of the original producer, was taxed under that head in those years. receipts into the Treasury from General and Income Tax for the fis¬ The collected on the lists of 1864, amouuted to $14,015,225 and the total receipts to $14,62S,603. The in that year amounted to $11,573,605, leaving in the treasury $3,054,998 or, including the balance from previous year, $5,201,086 ; which amount 2,543,750 cal-year 1865, 2,777,750 (comf. value), 596,550 97,472 34,316 166,127 11,799 447,965 31,016 81,423 in 1864 (in 108 of the 132 counties, 24 counties making no returns) $10;75. The returns for 1860— 1861 $4;S0, 434,000 2,271,750* 11,161 by dogs.. 276,500 2,195,250 72,000 160,964 15 & 55 55 & 65 do do 18,000 18.000 1870.. • 53,500 40,000 Hands emp 40.500 53.500 40.000 48,000 40,500 1869.. 1881.. $6,000 10,000 66,000 10,000 102,125 34,561 & 18 o’n 12 & 15 Childr’n betw’n 6 Total. cent. $o.000 - 18,000 R. R “ Past due 1871.. 1872.. 1873.. 1874.. 1878. .Atlaniic 1879.. “ 7 per [May 19,1S66. CHRONICLE. THE disbursements $3,374,200 being in Confederate currency, became worthless by the result of the principal sum of $'234,was also due for cou¬ made in the year 1865 for the service of the next assessment not paid the further sum of $596,550, making together an aggre¬ By a law approved March 3, 1866, however, the Governor gate requiring immediate legislation of $830,550, For the payment of assistance of the Comptroller-General, was authorized to assess provision wa9 made in the eighth section of an act over-due levy such a per centage on taxable property as will* produce the passed by the General Assembly of the State and approved by the $350,000, and in addition to this ad valorem tax, certain specific March 12, 1866. The act referred to also authorizes the viz.; every male inhabitant between 21 and 60 years of age, of $1,500,000 to meet appropriations made and to be made, and professional men and artists $10; on auctioneers and bil iard repairs and equipment of the Western ifc Atlantic Railroad ; end keepers $25 ; on bagatelle [table and ten-pin alley keepers, <fea, $600,000 to pay the State’s proportion of the $20,000,000 direct race-track keepers $50 ; on circus companies, for each exhibi¬ $10; ($584,367 33; collectable by the Uuited States under, the act of tion, $25 every agent or person engaged in any gift lottery or enCongress approved Augusts, 1861. Including the above and the undelivered bonds to be paid to the At¬ terprize in any county $1,000 ; on spirits sold by others than distil ers gallon, <fcc—-the taxes to be collected in United States cur¬ & Gulf Railroad for the State's subscription to the stock thereof It is supposed that these specific taxes will bring in $150,000, the act of 1,858, the funded debt of the State when all is paid up which, with the amount raised by general tax, will supply, in the ag¬ settled will stand as follows : $2,513,750 gregate $500,000. No revenue is expected from the railroads, the whole outstanding and not yet duebe-paid with other . bonds 23i;000 March, 1866 From the above statement it appears that the 000 was in March last past due, and that there funded debt Total war. was No pons fiscal year. with the money this and of sum Governor, on taxes, issue $1 ; on for the table also on tax ; on 25 cents lantic per rency. under and Bonds due “ “ and not to $700,000 596,550 sec. 1. 1,500.000 600,-.00 2,800.000 outstanding and appropriated $6,174,300 immediate resources of the State, beyond the taxable value of Total The personal property, are as follows : Western and Atlantic Railroad, from Atlanta to Chattanooga, about 137 miles, constructed and owned exclusively by the State (first appropriation made in 1830, and last in 1854) Atlantic and Gulf Railroad, in which the State owns 7,000 shares, And to this and some should be added 2,209 minor items, shares of $100 the actual value a as any be deter¬ ness not mined. Atlantic rapidly is finished to This road is in the is all valuable. The Western and Railroad for several years before 1863 paid into the State Treasury, as net earnings, about 10 per cent on the original investment, and is increasing in productiveness. The Atlantic and Gulf Railroad not yet completed ; it is now open to Thomasville, and will be The required for interest on government and leg¬ institutions and miscellaneous purposes. is thus apparent that Georgio is amply able to sustain its credit before the world, Its legislature has provided adequately both for its debt and income. Before the war the character and credit of no State in the Union stood higher than that of Georgia. 'Her bonds commanded least fair price as that of any other State, and even since tbe close of the war have sold at far better rates (95(5)100) than those of other Southern State. This is due to her good faith, and her prompt¬ in meeting all her obligations, The loss of her slaves may or may have cripled individual means, but the other resources of the people at each, in bank stock of which cannot yet and reconstruction., Of the sums It $4,441,532 700,000 $5,141,532 paid in required for repairs realized more^than $ 200,000 will be the debt; which will leave $200,000 for the State islature, and $100,000 for educational and charitable thus to be real and all earning3 being net due and to be paid with bonds Bonds to Atl. & Gulf R. R. per act of 1858 Bonds to West’n & Atl. R. R. per act Mar. 12,1866, Bonds to U. 8. per act Mar. 12, 1866, sec. 7 Coupons railroad property are still great and increasingly productive. of the debt contracted by the State during the war, and which has been thoroughly wiped out by the acceptance of the terms offered by President Johnson, as precedent to the restoration of the State government, amounted to about $18,000,000. As a matter of history, however, a summary of the securities constituting the evidences the Chattahoochee in a comparatively short period. direct line from the Atlantic at Savannah and Brunswick, and will con¬ of this debt it is presumed will be interesting, and on this account only it claims notice at our hand. The following we abbreviate from the nect at the Western State line with the Florida lines to Pensacola, Mobile, and New Orleans. Report of the Comptroller General to the Provisional Governor in Oc¬ The valuation of the State (exclusive of slave property) returned for tober, 1865: taxation in-1860 was $369,627,722 ; in 1864 it was $850,4S6,S12, ex¬ State Defence Bond* authorized by act of Nov. 16, I860, (7s, due 1SS1) do v do do (6s. due 1881) $842,05CW 25, 00 pressed in confederate currency. The probable valuation now is Confederate Tax Bonds, authorized by act of Dec. 11,1861, and sold $350,000,000. As a matter of record, we here give in detail the re¬ pay the tax assessed on the State by the Confederate Congress under act of Aug.TO, 1861 2,441.000 turned valuations of the years covering the late war, the tax being col¬ $3,30S,5(W Funded debt lectable in the next eusuing year : Notes and Certificates of Deposit, “payable ia 8 per cent bonds'or specie, six months after a treaty of peace, or when the I860. 1861. 1862. 1863. 1864. kTaxable property. $ $ $ $ $ bivnks of Savannah and Augusta resume specie payments, if before Land 161,764.9:5 161,624,244 150,240,023 15G.713,S5S 283,020,550 thattime 3.75S.OOO City and town prop 35,139,415 35,510,699 34,010,410 51,756,808 94,388,357 Notes and Certificates of Deposit “ payable in specie or 6 Money & solv’nt debts 107,336,258 112,301,877 108,432,823 112.230,383 137,694.173 per cent bonds of the State, six months after a treaty of peace 15,577,193 12,720,623 6,246,320 52.578,729 99,505.692 Merchandise 2,927,315 shall have been ratified between the U. S. States and the Confed¬ Shipping <fc tonnage.. <143,940 9u2,570 166,300 675,600 23.320,485 erate States” - 4,800,000 Stocks, manuft’e, *tc. 4,034,252 4,850,102 4,S05,407 10,276,004 14,417,689 Hi'iiseh'd <fc kite'n fur 2,374,284 2,215,646 2,327,307 4,194,999 194,612,549 Making the bonded debt and debt promised in specie or bonds $11,866,500 Other, not enumerat’d 42,427,295 41,604.747 41.485.532 66,140,352 Treasury Notes made payable in Confederate Treasury Notes “if 850,486,812 presented within three months after maturity ; otherwise not re$369,727,922 371,788,508 347,850,222 460,560,713 762,105,994 eemable except in payment of public dues ” 5,171,5w 302,694,855 272,015,490 230,502,040 379,480,414 Slaves Change Notes, made “ payable only in Confederate Taeasury Notes” 997,776 Total value 672,322,777 643,803,998 578.352,262 840,041,1271,612,592,806 Total outstanding October 16,1805 $IS,035,776 The following is a copy of the act passed by the General Assembly The following exhibits the returns upon which the general and specific in relation to the debt of the State and approved by the Governor, taxation is based : The amount do ' to Treasury . P .. Treasury < .. 99,748 2,699 Polls Professions Dentists Dagurrean artists Free persons Acres of land Slaves of color. 101,505 2,720 96 66 95 62 1,225 33,345.289 33,663,723 450.033 460,788 1,273 91,562 1,915 52.764 640 44 44 33 982 33 1,053 32,492,764 26,808^861 473.761 486,170 39,863 1,381 March 12, 1866: 878 25,892.569 432,666 General Assembly of of the Section 1. Beit enacted by the for the purpose of raising and for the repairs and equipment 38 ’22 i cellency the State for an State Georgia^1 to be m Railroad, vTii bonds dollars—said w funds to meet appropriations made, and of the Western and Atlantic Governor is hereby authorized to issue aud negotiate aggregate amount of one and a half million of May THE 19,1866.] CHRONICLE interest at a rate not exceeding seven per cent per annum, payable semi¬ place or places as he may choose to designate. The said bonds slnll run for a period of not longer than thirty years, and may be, if the Gover¬ nor so directs, redeemable in not less than five nor longer than twenty years at the option of the State, and known as “ Five Twenties,” or of such other form he may deem_most desirable. Sec. 2. The said bonds shall be signed by his Excellency the Governor and countersigned by the Comptroller Genera], and by him to be registered’in a hook to be kept for that purpose. If coupons are attached, then shall be signed by the Treasurer, or some one appointed by the Governor to perform that’serto bear annually, at such wice. Sec. 3. For the purpose dT effecting the negotiation of said bonds' the Gover¬ authorized to employ an agent, or agents, to visit such place or places as he may direct, and to empower such agent to make the negotiation upon such terms, and with such limitations as the Governor mav instruct, not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act. Sec. 4. For the payment of the interest on said bonds, and for the creation of a sinking fund to discharge the principal of the same, there shall be annually get apart, and pledged, so much of the income of the Western & Atlantic Rail¬ road, as will amount to the annual interest, and three per cent upon the princip¬ al debt, which pledge shall be incorporated in the bonds aforesaid, and the said sinking fund shall be invested from time to time in the purchase and cancella¬ tion of said bonds, or in such securities as the Legislature mav direct: but should his Excellency the Governor find it impolitic, or not desirable to pro¬ vide such sinking lund. or pledge the income of the said road, or he prefer to give other or additional security, then the Superintendent and Auditor of the Western jind Atlantic Railroad shall, on request of the Governor, make and execute to three Trustees, to he appointed by him, morrga m upon said road its appurtenances and franchises, which said mortgage shall lie a lieu upon’the same, for the security and benefit of the bondholders, and may he enforced against said Western and Atlantic Railroad as a corporation. On failure of the State to redeem said bonds, or to pay the interest as it falls due, said Trustees shall proceed to foreclose and enforce said mortgage lien whenever requested tc do so by any holder ol said bonds where the same are over due, or the interest ns unpaid. Sec. 6. inance of Be iifurther enacted, That the limitation heretofore placed by an be issued. That all laws heretofore passed appropriating and Atlantic Railroad for other purposes be, and the same are hereby repealed, except in such cases where the repeal of the same would operate as a violation of contract; provided, that nothing in this Act shall be so construed as to repeal an Act to provide for the education of the children -of this State between certain ages, and to provide an annual sinking fund for rthe extinguishment of the public debt, assented to December 11th, 1858 but the net income appropriated by said Act shall not be paid until the interest on Stare bonds and the three per cent sinking fund shall be first set aside Sec. 7. Be it further enacted, Thatdiis Excellency the Governor is hereby au¬ thorized to iss e and negotiate bonds to the amount of six hundred thousand ■dollars, at such time and rate of interest not exceeding seven per cent as he may find necessary and proper for the purpose of paving to the Government of the United States the laud tax about to be leyied on the people ef the State of Georgia, in behalf of the Government of the United States—said tax amounting to five hundred and eighty-four thousand thre hundred and sixty-seven dollars Sec. 6. Be it f urther enacted* the income of the Western ' and thirty-three cents, and interest which may be due thereon. Sec. 8. Be itfurther enacted, dec., That his Excellency the Governor is hereby authorized to issue bonds in renewal nf bonds now due, and interest thereon amounting in the aggregate, - principal and interest, to the sum of eight J - TRADE OF RREAT BRITAIN WITH THE UNITED STATES. o Our COTTON, BREADSTUFFS PROVISIONS London correspondent furnishes us with analysis of the just issued, of the trade between Great Britain and the States, for the the three months ending March 31st. The figures found my suggestive. ? official returns United will be BREADSTUFFS. The arrivals of wheat and flour into the United large. The leading COTTON. nearly four million cwts., aud of flour 1,200,000 cwts. in excess of the corresponding period last year. The extent of the arrivals of wheat, flour and Indian corn, during the three months ending March 31, will be seen in the subjoined statement: 1864. Wheat—From Russia Prussia Denmark March 31, as follows :— 1S61 1865 1S66 1,787 63,910 49,227 From United States, Cwts. Bahamas and Bermuda, ..cwts. 19,989 1,078,955 99,733 2,602 2,850 149,701 1865. 1866. 581,308 .1,148,273 1,071,117 139,189 2,839.170 259,147 68,699 42,524 114,958 117,915 27,529 24,828 191,819 396,886 149,504 33,904 9,980 35,612 1,282,140 139,611 268,541 2,249,559 10,838 139,000 148,363 174,835 124,426 2,294 290.980 8.789 139,044 750,053 5,617,855 1,912,614 5,671,948 427,714 1,173,942 106.914 1,011,090 649,470 66,671 538.219 71,441 3,33S,S74 47,832 1,589,437 4,072 23,889 9,959 8,203 149,570 4,343 64,278 1,795,435 691,493 1,S55,510 263,961 Schleswig, Holstein and Lauenburg Mecklenburg / r Haase Towns France 17,621 Turkey and Wallachia and Moldavia Eirvpt / United States British N>>rth America.. Other countries Total Indian Corn or Maize—Total Flour—From Hanse Towns ..Cwt. France L'nited States British North America.. Other countries.. •e Total It will be from this table that the United States figure for a supply—really almost nothing. In fact, prices of bread us have now reached'so high a point that the latest new from Europe (May 5) advise us of the purchase in Liverpool and ship¬ ment to this country of SOU quarters of American red winter wheat at at 51 I d. for 500 pounds, and 150 sacks of French flour ! seen very small stuffs with provisions. With the exception of in March into the United totals of each lard and pork the arrivals of provisions Kingdom fell off from previous years. The eggs, description for the three months 102,674 hams, cwts Beef, salt, cwt Fork, salt, cwt Butter, cwt Cheese, cwt *.. 26,609 209,056 , 244,845 ~ 108,291 56,700,360 17,359 Lard, number : 1S65. 121.745 53.307 35,786 192,763 Bacon and Aud the follows are as 1864. imports of live stock durin 1 the same 1S66. 127,184 111,366 39,825 52,161 200,931 102,045 67,855,200 19,004 88,717,200 41,560 periods 18(54. were as 1865. 29.343 Oxen, bulls and cows, number. 13,134 Calves, number Sheep and lambs, number Swine and hogs, number 3.634 55,012 14,256 2,067 under 1866 4,061 34,690 Our chief interest centres in this important staple, the largely increased receipts of which during the year has so unsettled prices. It seems that the total imports into Great Britain of Cotton from all quarters in March, amounted to 872,287 cwte.; against 621,673 cwts. in 1865, and 587,211 cwts. in 1S64. Of this quantity stated as arrivedNlui'ing the present year, 503,220 cwts. were from the United States, and 151,543 -cwts. from British India. The statement for the three months ending Kingdom continue of supply are now Russia and France—Rus¬ sia, in the course of March, having forwarded 628,513 cwts. of wheat, and France 536,701 cwts., together with 540,943 cwts. of flour. The total imports of wheal, in the three months ending March 31, were sources Eggs, ntimber ifco. an increase in the supply of 600,000 bales, and an hundred and thirty thousand five hundred and fifty dollars, the bonds so issued bv virtue of this section to bear the same rate of interest, to be payable at the same time and to be covered by the same security, as the bonds authorized to be issued in the first section of this Act. Sec. 9. All laws and parts of laws militating against this Act are hereby re¬ pealed. •• Approved, March 12th, 1SGG. figures show indicate the impossibility of our controlling the market in future, unless* as stated before, we can furnish cotton at a low price. ord¬ the convention limiting the discount of certain bonds authorized by said convention to be issued, is hereby removed, and said bonds shall or may be negotiated upon like terms and conditions as the bonds authorized by this Act to These 613 29,707 5,170 134,049 11,976 EXPORTS OK BRITISH AND IRISH PRODUCE AND MANUFACTURES. As regards the value of the total exports of British and Irish produce aud manufactures the figures are as U follows: V* > 1864. £10,413,586 February £10.489,330 £14,354.748 12,698,121 January 1865. 11.376,214 15,110,063 13,555,674 March £36,667,381 Total 1S60. 13,770,154 17,520,354 £35,635,707 £46,991,165 Hence, this year’s trade shows an inreease iu the department of £11,400,000 over last year’s, the augmentations being chiefly attributable improved demand for goods for America and other foreign coun¬ But the fact remains that while the trade in British produce and 61.210 119,818 41.374 57.226 47,756 Turkey manufactures witn most foreign countries sbow3 an increase as com¬ 246.897 Egypt *. 477,363 369,091 British India.. 459,i 08 404,610 457,150 pared with last and previous years. The colonial trade, so far as ex¬ China 106,146 105,476 Other Countries 34,453 46,5S0 72,714 ports are concerned, has fallen off. The extent of trade in British and Irish produce aud manufactures for the two mouths ending February Total 1,131,968 2,026,409 1,433,274 It appears from the foregoing that not only the supply from India 28, being the latest date at which the accounts are made up, with and America, but also that from Brazil is largely on the increase, so foreign countries and with the colonies, will be seen iu the subjoined that the Uuited States no longer has the monopoly of the cotton trade- statement 1866. 1865. 1S64. She may regain it £14,125 £47,<593 £08,236 if our legislators are mindful not to over burden, the Russia 1.272,977 Towns 1,365,917 2.656,769 production with excessive taxation—but it will require careful nursing Uunse 822.943 704,0*8 1,385,098 Holland i 515,816 486,627 505,934 —We must be able to produce cotton at low prices if we would drive Belgium.. 1.577.044 1.161,730 1,416.072 France out competition. 960,274 In this connection the following statement showing Italy 836,885 1,012,193 '. 1,183,987 739,640 747,346 <he 6tock of cotton now afloat for and on land in Europe, will be ot Turkey, European 1,680,464 988,515 927,242 Egypt , 493A37 359,993 688,666 interest, showing the largely iucreased supply pressing upon the China, exclusive of Hong Kong.. 39.874 217,589 59,812 If Mexico Brazil It 75,675 to the tries. U It It .• 11 tt ... . “ “ “ “ 1865 at .. ’ Japan market. Stock „ Liverpool bales... London “ “ Havre Rest of Continent kt American cotton afloat India 1 “ “ Total * • • ... ... ... ... ... . .... 1866 5.7,010 108,-497 60,000 30,000 376,881 784,630 59,780 94,000 20,000 135,000 645,705 1,147,388 1,739,115 35’000 • United States: Atlantic ports, “ Northern Southern Pacific ports 4,268,457 1,897,893 6,319,443 33,200 11°,410 14,764 63,397 966,110 189,951 1~S,061 - 806,570 Brazil 1,278,025 principal countries to which goods were exported, and the totals, including the value of the supplies forwarded to other countries, stand thus in each year The above are the 1866. £14,701,184 £16,128,305 £23,255,230 an increase of about eight million pounds Buffalo Division—Corning to Rochester Division—Avon to 1866. But as regards the British possessions, the figures show a diminution of British and Irish produce during the present, as com¬ 681 year. The total shipments for the first two months were valued at £6,216,672, against £7,164,369 in 1865, and £6,983,402 in 1864. In the India trade, there is a decrease to the extent of £800,- also but with Australia, the value of the shipments shows only a the pared with last 000 ; ialling off. slight £3,075,365 1,837.679 £2,263.014 7,164,369 6,215,572 6,983,402 Total, including minor possessions., 1,776,736 principal exports following statement shows of British and Irish produce to the United States during the three months ending March 31 in each of the last three years ; UNITED STATES OF MONTHS TO THE BRITISH PRODUCE. 1865. I860. £101.860 6.465 £281.971 20,841 28,056 15,989 19,361 809.530 91,121 400,9(5 1,511.479 29,013 99.047 123,912 88,975 190,204 465.527 217.363 570,423 36,356 28.029 18,379 93,707 44,209 38,387 210,222 1864. £112.861 16,211 Alkali Beer and ale Coals Cotton Manufactures— Piece goods Thread Earthenware and porcelain Haberdashery, &c .. 28,294 243 259 261 sum Valley Railroad, 10 miles from Ches er to Warwick, is This road is operated in connection with per follows; 1862, equivalent single track 729 334 10 945 1,073 miles Total The *.... Locomotive : 164 “ •l “ Flat Coal “ freight The 114 247 1&65. 332 133 264 2.633 3,386 310 540 2,975 1.212 S84 4,006 4,714 5.46S 3,380 Total number of cars.* 1864. 276 ( 1 .' 1,190 ( i 3,115 V 3,115 ... 1462* 1863. 243 109 201 1862. 226 101 engines and tenders Cars—Passenger Emigrant, baggage and caboose Box freight, cattle, milk and oil 1S65 797 883 10* the close of each fiscal year equipment of the company’s roads at following table 1864. 797 355 10 1S93. 628 307 10 miles is shown iu the ' 102.826 Manufactures of German silver.... Linen Manufactures— Piece goods Thread Metals— 71 operated, but not leased. Hardwares and Cutlery— Knives, forks, &c Anvils, vices, &c 240 21 Newburg Branch Railroad, the Company IRISH AND 240 19 Length of route Length of second track and sidings Warwick Valley Railroad - EXPORTS FOR THREE 224 19 The Warwick was as the value of our The 66 5 equivalent single track leased — Total fixed 1866. 1865. 1864. 18 receiving payment in a mile run The average length of track operated in the several years (the Buffalo and Rochester Divisions having been taken into possession May 1,1863) The statement for the principal colonies is a follows: India Australia 16 Hawley leased and operated.. miles sidings - Total length Second track and in the exports IS 48 140 16 140 18 Buffalo Rochester Hawley Branch—Lackawaxen to 1865. 18 48 140 18 18 48 18 48 Chemung—Elmira Junct. to Jefferson...miles Canandaigua & Elmira—Jefferson to Can’gua. sterling in 1866 over 1S64. 1863. 1S62. 1865. 1864. showing [May 19, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 614 -j 1,180 equipment of the Buffalo Division is not included in the returns It consisted of 28 locomotives and 469 cars, and made the for 1863. 1,418.111 595,725 38,322 914.917 62,819 55.623 281.888 Bar Railroad Castings Hoops Wrought Steel—Unwrought Copper, wrought L«ad, pig Tin plates 8.071 44,013 88.108 172,5 '7 295,677 5,636 86,383 Iron—Pig equipment 271 locomotives and 4,415 cars. estimating the freight capacity of the road, it should be borne in mind that the freight cars, on account of its wide guage, are of greater capacity thau those on narrow guage roads.1 total 37.906 21,139 93.509 720 4,426 82,973 13,218 48,415 76,793 107.7-6 183,529 11 502 104.8:13 77,282 198,451 152,351 153,898 20,929 51,829 423,921 34,377 0,716 39 42,555 6,142 37,237 38.498 14,887 Salt Silk Manufactures— Broad piece goods 6.164 5,077 9,295 Shawls, British 908 5,177 19,652 44,146 17,501 5,172 Handkerchiefs, &c Ribbons Other articles Manuf. mixed with other materials 8,584 21,068 23,505 44,028 25,553 1,657 7,110 180 242 24,877 391.640 43,471 142.023 24.740 7,329 959,851 472,116 Shawls Worsted stuffs of wool only, and of wool mixed with other materials.. ROAD. TME or engines, etc.; and the the road since the commence¬ in Jan. 1862, covering the following table shows the miles ruu by movement of passengers and freight over ment of operations by the existing company ) ears 1862, Miles ruu *63, 64, and ’65; renewals aud repairs— by auginss, and cost of Miles run. ! 1862 1863..... 1864 Movement of passengers— 14,918 “ computed real value of the principal articles imported in the two Tnonths ending Feb. 28 wa9 £26,457,723. In the corresponding period in 1865, that value was £19,253,701 ; and in 1864 £20,734,897. The SHIPPING. Respecting shipping, the figures in the Board of Trade tables respect¬ 05 77 3S 88 1863. 1364. 1865. 24,778 35,143 69,949 50,036 105.036 434,035 —West./.... 586,465 844,511 1,007,386 908,533 1,236,506 1,785,606 2,175,965 53.612 32,450 =. 570.651 427,061 —West Total passengers Movement of $10 9 13 20 1862. Way—East “ Cost per mile. Cost. '14,987 Through—East 237,171 ' 4,S35,359 $495,492 597.099 5,858,687’ 6,916,324 908,0:33 6,839,028 1,428,397 1,461,189 400,654 176,752 Carpets and druggets BUSINESS The 70,947 Oilseed Wool Woolen Manufactures— Cloths of all kinds In moved freight— 846,003 1,012,222 1865. 1862. 1863. 1864. Through—East 471.314 452,667 440,758 434.742 Way—East 501,018 635,442 616,605 932,151 677,268 1,310,288 1,675.234 1,874,634 2,214,295 2,534.791 “ “ 149,896 —West —West 553,006 . Total tons moved . 169,920 c 164,118 205,612 584,149 ing American vessels are most favorable. During the three months Gross earnings from passengers— 1864. 1862. 1863. 1S65. ending March 31, the number of American vessels entered inwards at Through—East.... '.... $115,861 $209,436 $315,112 $478,127 ports in the United Kingdom, including their repeated voyages,' was —West 180,516 279,864 458,986 864,398 432,364 642,963 1,057,202 1,295,539 123, or a total of 122,966 tons During the corresponding period last Way—East -West 471,71# 718,717 1,170,898 1,393,616 year, the number of vessels was only 60, with an aggregate tonnage of 1,200,450 1,850,954 3,002,198 4,031,680 Total 67,082 tons. The clearances in the three months were to the number Gross earnings from freght— 187—tonnage 139,994 ; against 67 vessels last year, with a total of Through—East $3,639,765 $3,853,073 $4,748,533 $4,615,592 —West 1.196,750 1,371,186 2,031,184 2,695.070 61,039 tons. The arrivals of vessels of all nations from United States Way—East 1,462,863 2,322,774 2,332,567 3,036,025 ports, in the three months ending March 31, was 413, their tonnage “—West...., 929,807 1,130,593 765,985 922,074 being 384,849 tons. During the corresponding period last year the Total 7,065,363 8,476,810 10,242,897 11,268.761 arrivals were 121, the tonnage being 130,992 tons. The report is deficient in not giving the mileage of passengers and freight, and consequently it is not possible to deduce the rates at which the business of the road has been done. Nor are there any ANALYSES OP RAILROAD REPORTS. data given from which we can learn the rates of cost to the company. —^ ERIE RAILWAY. The reports for the last three years are especially iucomp'ete in these • The Erie Railway, (successors to the New Y ork and Erie Railroad respects. REVENUE ACCOUNTS. Company, commenced business operations on the 1st January 1862 The following is a statement of the receipts and expenses of operaThe following tabulations present an analysis of the company’s affairs tin g the road for the four years since re-organization : 1865. annually from that date. > 1864. 1863. 1862. “ “ “ ( ROAD The several lines owned AND by the EQUIPMENT. company are as follows 41 : —Close of year— 1864. 1863. 1865. 460 460 460 1 Main Line—Jersey City to Dunkirk miles Branch—Ramapo to Piermont Chesterville to Newburg “ “ Hornellsville to Attica Total length owned by company Sacond track Sidings equiv. single track owned,. miles The branch roads leased and operated by Total yw bftvf been a* rtiown below; 1862. 460 18 19 60 $1,850,984 8,476,810 $3,002,198 10,242,84)7 101,652 101,052 101,.352 32.869 40,6:35 a3,14)6 8,400,334 $671,905 13,429,643 15.434,775 $1,224,4)07 2,284,660 $1.210.4r0 1,274,833 10,469,481 $915,587 1,355,549 126,419 158.315 331.548 1,177,241 1,248,610 1.455,761 1.475,426 190.273 161,319 86,859 134,608 48,324 198,S05 1,920,433 2,414,835 420,611 54,504 232,562 Total expenses 4,860,748 5,949,086 8,882,040 Net earnings,... 3,539,5^ Mails Other sources Gross earnings 18 19 18 19 Office and station 60 60 General expenses 557 190 131 '* 18 19 60 557 180 122 859 A 657 557 205 157 878 191* 145 893* 919 the Erie Company in each $4,031,680 $1,200,450 7,065,363 Passengers Freight exp’ses. Transportation Repairs of engines & cars. Repairs of track and road Repairs of structures Incidental Miscellaneous => 11,268,761 101,352 82,982 3,136,025 280,051 2.607,297 2,376,698 450,606 22,348 284,749 10,368,264 6,060,511 . . 9681 5 0681 3 4 5 May 19, 1866.] Disbursed THE CHRONICLE. follows, viz.: as Interest on mortgage debt Rants of leased roads Rent of Long Dock Prop¬ $1,399,405 $1,406,405 138,400 revenue taxes.... Taxes on real estate Hire of cars $1,231,806 182,400 133,400 144,040 27,617 71,830 erty Internal 143,552 135,163 113,505 Pavouia Ferry 25,006 Loss ay fire Interest 9’,736 r $1,399,770 182,400 165,690 561,250 225,416 . 333,812 259,819 85,783 104,259 28,246 39,352 10,000 2.200 322,780 582,242 2,309,096 2,635,427 3,218,311 426,785 699,062 761,040 925.992 906,641 8,512^965 3,769,198 4,468,051 1859. 1,903,235 1,182,945 Jan.1 Total disbursed Surplus income, Dec. 31.. Surplus income, Jan. 1 26,621 Total surpus income 26,621 906,632 283,579 4,408,531 79,552 26,621 surplus of Jan. 577,818 657,980 857,370 777,813 857,370 was paid the usual dividend ofA per cent ou the common stock, amounting to $656,004, which duces the balance of surplus income to next account to re- $859,346. 1862. 1863. 1864. $11,569,500 1865. 8,535,700 8,535.700 $16,400,000 20,105,200 24,935,800 3,000,000 4.000,000 3,000.000 3,000,000 4,000,000 6,000,000 6.000.000 3.6:34,000 4,441,000 200,000 200,000 186,400 40,000 1,500 5(50 20,131,500 851,597 Int. accrued but not due Div. declared but not paid Balance of income account 380, S37 426,785 26,621 $41,623,172 $39,021,293 Aggregate equipment Hawley Branch • Cash and cash items - 3,551,980 906.631 464,203 283,579 857,870 $48,045,284 $53,291,895 $42,583,058 $47,409,404 233,295 563,217 834.475 236,947 905,159 215,520 482,390 675,569 486,860 823,889 310,476 582,560 470,566 40,358 502,576 617,500 2,176,823 880,326 2,234,099 213,853 350 4.140 108,645 following table shows the 162,100 303,132 $42,950,214 $48,045,284 $53,291,895 amounts paid 4,140 on account of construe’ since the reorganization of the company in Jan., 1862' 1862. 1863. $465 1864. $164,065. 209,486 $361,016 441,003 1865. $301,608 Total. 3,455 4,360 672 27,969 28,216 257.414 55,844 628,535 30,214 81,998 96,324 73,539 177,661 359,443 916 12,601 601,640 • Land for road Machine and workshops.... Water stations • • Locomotives and tenders. and baggage cars Passenger Freight cars cars • • • . . 56,681 188,511 16,615 115,726 21,129 • • • • 2,175 Long Dock improvements... Hawley Branch Discount on 4th m. bonds Interest on clo .. March 33 . 92,962 106,590 2,977 55,665 e - . . • 106,044 626,481 348,343 6,120 15,387 103,297 r 513,892 152,294 IS, 513 1,571,344 350,186 402,748 367,141 1,055 121,217 215,520 129.9S7 3.652 46,615 .. $3' >3,843 PROGRESS 65,552 . FOE 257,831 32,039 2,418,176 493,974 1,237,917 822,074 12,327 192,269 215,520 236,947 46,615 65,552 TEARS. YORK. STOCK. • - . • - • July August September ... ... ... 'Year @35% 1S65. 106%@113 66% @86% 68%@78 44%@73% 50%©85 69% @84% 70%@79% 77%@9S% 66 April.... June July 60 August September @122 December £atest @126% 44%@98% 1864. 1865. 100% @104% 101 90 90 70 @101 @ 93 @ 90 77 @ 92 82 @ 90 81%@ 85 85 @ 88% 80 @ 87% 82 @ 86 82 @ 86 82 @ 84% @109 @102% 101%@111 100%@106% 105%@115% 105%@116 106 @109 ✓ 108%@113 100%©105% 107 102%@111% 102 @168)4 103%@112% @04 @105% 99% @105 1‘ 0%@103% 52%@97 93 @115% 101 100 104 90%@97 Year 82 STOCK. 96 67% @83 80 @93 87 @92 October... 86%@91% 85% @93% 90% @97 91% @97 93%@104% @ 96% @108 99 @106)4 93% @101)4 62%@69% 76%@91% @109 @98 82 97 54)$ @59 34 58%@62% 60%@62% 62%@67% 63% @67% May 93 84 1863. 52%@58% March 10S%@113% 106%@110%' 99%@110% 104%@109 1862. £ @124% @126% @126 @117% 110%@118 108%@116 @122 @118% 101 PREFERRED January February. 107 113 107 107 92%@103% 103 31%@65% ... 1864. @ 85% @ 80% 74 %@ 80% 76 @ 84% 84%@!05 90 %@ 98 33%@39% 36% @49% 49 @65% 59 @64% 60 @63% ... October November December 1863. 36%@37% 35%@40% 35%@39% ... @109 @104 100 @106% 99%@105 99%@116 @111% 84%@109% 70 @109% UTonetarj) anb Commercial (ffnglist) Netos. RATES OF EXCHANGE AT AT FOLLOW¬ ING PLACES. EXCHANGE AT 3 Cevlon Bombay Madras Calcutta May 4. do do do 25.42% 12.50 6 28 — 60 days. — — — — — ' 9. 7. 9. March 15. April 10. April 28. April 27. i March 24 1 [From 21. j .April 16. I April 3. - — 28% ■— 30 days. 51%@% — March 27 • — Jo do do do — 3 months. — — April April April April — — — ' .. — 24.90 — — ! — — 25 17% 13. 6' 25.24 — — - 11.76% — do 27% 47% 51% April 28. I Rat®. days. do ' do 3 months. — 29.50 do do LONDON. •* Time. 3 — — Sydney The week Lat. date. 13. 9%, 25.20 Valparaiso Singapore Hong Kong .- . Rate. — Pernambuco EXCHANGE ON ! days. 11.19% do Hamburg Paris 3 days. Paris 3 months. Vienna do Berlin do St. Petersburg.... do Cadiz do Lisbon 90 days. Milan 3 months. Geiioa do do Naples New York do Jamaica Havana Rio de Janeiro Buenous Ayres i LONDON—MAY 5. ... LONDON, AND ON LONDON, LATEST DATES. Time. Amsterdam... $999,204 $3,088,492 $4,941,293 $9,332,832 SEVEN NEW 66 70 34%@33 ... : ... $827,154 1,164,281 35,784 914,83T .=■ Machinery in shops Februaiy ON THE 76.793 467,786 .... Depots Januarv 1,515,350 103,297 1,550,767 $41,623,172 Total. 22,870,982 AT COMMON November.......... 2,998.562 523,521 161,2S2 U. S. War Department.... Accounts receivable Materials on hand Fuel on hand Coal 500 $39,404,648 191,936 Buff. N. Y. & Erie R. R. Co Buffalo, Bradford, & Pittsbum Railroad Co Grading Superstructure 186,400 3,816,582 $42,950,214 26,815 747,612 Long Dock Company Niagara Bridge stock Unadjusted accounts 17,823,400 • 489,005 761,040 777.81S . Road and 996,500 4.554 682,029 1,0*2,500 19,961,000 2,200 .... Skg fund, Buff. Br'ch b*ds Accounts payable tion in each year 4,0t>0,000 6,000,000 5.020,000 1,739.500 5,100,000 1,791,500 Sterling bonds, 1875 The 8,5F5,700 STOCKS 1862. 25,105,S00 3,1)00,000 4, (KM), 000 6,000,000 Real estate bonds Total funded debt PRICE OK The tables which follow show the range of prices paid for the stock of the company monthly and for the years 1862-64, both inclusive : $16,570,100 8,535,700 19,973,200 1st mortgage bonds, 1867. do 2d do 1879 do 3d do 1883. 4rh do do 18S0. do 5th do 1888. Buffalo branch bonds, 1889 profits would be materially reduced (say a third) by subtracting from them the rents of leased roads, taxes, Ac., which are payable be¬ fore interest and dividends on the proper capital of the company. J nne $11,437,500 Total stock. num. May CONDITION. presented in the following statement: Preferred. on the common stock ; the rate on the preferred 1862, and after that year 7 per cent per an¬ April The financial condition of the company, as exhibited on the General Balance Sheet made up at the close of each of the last four years, is do The above dividend is stock was 5 per cent in 1,515,350 1, 1866, there FINANCIAL 85.115 Ex pen’s Profits Rate ,—Per mile operated—, to earn¬ to of Earn’gs. Expen’s. Profits. ings. cost. Div. $8,129 $5,230 $2,899 64.33 4.48 Nil a 9,491 5,958 62.79 3,533 5.38 44 11,039 6,722 60.89 3,317 6.39 44 13,376 7,740 57.86 5,636 9.07 14,363 8,161 6,202 56.82 11.49 3% 16.850 11,144 16.13 5,706 10.69 S 19,336 13,009 67.28 6,327 10.68 8 The 751,197 .. From the 76,451 372,484 of operating Disbursements before dividends— Old debts paid Dividends July 1 ' 74,289 76,299 70,056 70,744 49^329 2,354 • $73,289 1861 1862 22,948 34,159 ses Cost of road per mile. Fiscal Years. 29,264 5,243 Sinking Fund—Buffalo Br. Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie R. R.: rents, repairs and expen¬ “ 615 our own — - 60 days. 60 days. 90 days. GO days! do do do 6 months. do do do do 30 days. — 13. 6% 2% p. c. pr. 27% 25%@% 51% @52 — 27%@% 4s. 7%d.@4s. 8%<L 4s. S%d:@4«. 8%d. 7 p. c. dis. 2@1% 2% 1@1% P. c. piem. — — Correspondent.] / London, Saturday, May 5,1866. just closing has been one of great importance, com the company, the miles operated, the gross earniugs, expenses, and net mercially, financially, and politically, and many changes have taken earnings on account of operations and dividends, yearly, for the seven place. The causes of the leading alterations may be traced to the un¬ satisfactory position of affairs on the Continent, and peop’e, although years ending December 31, 1865 : willing to believe that a war will not be the result of the present nego¬ Cost of Miles Fiscal Miles roads and operaGross tiations, are less sanguine, and fed that matters have now assumed so Dividends Nett Operating years, owned equipment, ted. earnings, expenses. earnings. paid. 497 threatening an aspect as almost to preclude the possibility of a peace¬ $36,420,907 563 $4,577,030 $2,944,507 $1,632,523 ...0681 497 36,921,763 563 3,342,395 3,354,587 1,987,S08 ful solution of the difficulty. 1861.. 497 Preparations for war have, indeed, made 38,019,711 563 6,214,182 3,784,484 2,429,698 1862... 557 considerable progress during the week, both in the 39,021,293 628 8,400,334 4,860,748 3,539,586 426,785 ...3681 shape of arma 557 39,404,648 729 14,469,481 4.520,395 5,949,086 1.460,102 ments and also with ..4681 557 regard to the means for meeting the expenses o^ 42,583,058 797 13,429,643 8,882,040 4,547,603 1,8:33,624 ...5681 557 47,409,404 797 15,434,775 10,368,264 5,066,511 1,846,224 the conflict. In Italy the Government have borrowed £10,000,000 of PROPORTIONAL DEDUCTIONS. the National Bank of Turin, giving that institution the option of issuings Taking the next preceding table a9 a basis the following deductions unconvertible notes. The volunteers have also been called out, and it ar* drawn, showing the cost of the ro^ds owned by the company per is feared that with the aid of Garibaldi, which, it i9 said, has been de¬ mile, the earnings, expenses and profits per mile expended, the ratio of manded, a war may probably be forced upon the Italian Government, expenses fc? earuings, th§ r&t.e t]he rat# of which it is not in the power of statesmen to of promts to posfc of md, prevent, The warlike dividends j rngfemepfa of Austria k»70 also been moreentQijs, and, The following gives the length and cost of the railroads owned by apeor^ipfl fo [May 19,1866. ■? THE 616 latest accounts, the celebrated quadrilateral fortress CHRONICLE. upward direction, and the quotations at the leading cities are held as under ; Bank Open Bank Open The movements discount. in Vecetia is being of these rapidly placed in a complete state of defence. In cousequeuce movements in Austria and Italy, the Prussian Government have or¬ dered the mobilization of 150,000 men. Such is simply and very briefly the present position of affairs on the Continent. rate. $ c. * 3% At Paris 5 7 5 6 h ive been in an rate. $ c. market. $ c. 3% 5% Turin Brussels Madrid market. $ c. 6 .... -- 4 4 ... The effect has been, in a monetary point of view, most unfavorable, the banks of Berlin Vienna Berlin Frankfort &nd Prussia market has been subjected to uumerons withdrawals of gold and the uncertainty of duced heaviness in the early part of the week ; but the Bank rate had the effect of producing temporary steadiness. Amsterdam having been compelled to advance the rates of discount. directors of the Bank of England have advanced their minimum The 7 4% 5 6 . — — .... 6% 6%-7 — Hamburg St. Petersburg... 5% .. fluctuations. The Continental politics pro¬ advance in the The mar¬ ket, however, continued to fluctuate as the week closes, and is in a The highest prices in each of the last six days very sensitive state. The Consol unsettled quite unsale¬ although the time when cent. The exchanges have also been in a most the Continent is concerned. Bills on Italy—owing to the suspension of specie payments in that country—are able ; and in Austria they are very difficult of disposal, were : quotation is greatly in favor of London. FOR THE WEEK ENDING MAY 5. The present advance in the bank minimum, coning at a Friday. Sat’day. commercial circles in this country were anticipating an easier rate for Monday. Tuesday. W ed’day, Tkur’day 86% 86% money, has created more than us1 al discussion as respects cause S6% 1 S6% Holiday. S6% Consols the recent withdrawals of gold from the establishment. During American securities have been very dull, and prices generally have week they have amounted to £280,000, and have been on ac¬ given way. United States 5.20’s have fallen about 2 per count. >One thing is certain, viz., that the demand is not even Central Railway shares $4, and Erie Railway shares $4. United on Indian accouut, for the silver market, both here and on the Continent, States 5.‘20 bonds have been pressed for sale by German holders, aud is in a most inactive state, whilst at the last sale of bills on India, it was plainly apparent that the demand for remittance to con¬ had it not been for a demand on American account, the decline in tinued to decline. By others, it is supposed that the six months’ paper, prices must have been more considerable. In addition^to which towards the close of last year was purchased largely for the general heaviness prevailing in the Stock Exchange, securities have been further depressed by numerous sales of Illinois Continent, had arrived at maturity, and that having been presented for Erie on acco nt of provincial fall in payment, the money has been withdrawn in order to more Central and The annexed statement shows holders ; hence the in the their value. the highest prices rate to 7 per state, so far as of the the French indirectly cent; Illinois the East the almost American railway invest it profitably on the Continent. But this can hardly be the case. The rate of discount at Paris is only 3| per cent, and although the rate at Berlin is high as our own, and at Turin, 6 per cent, it can hardly be expected that with the prevailing uncertainty in Austria, Prussia, and Italy, and with a low rate of discount at Paris that capitalists would withdraw money invested at a high rate in this country, the credit of which they must, at the present moment, have more confidence in than in that of any other country in Europe. It is, indeed, very probable days as that the recent revelations in reference to our great depreciation which has taken place shares, has had a somewhat prejudical effect on the finance companies, and in the value of these the Continent, and has capitalists more cautious; but the worst as regards these undertakings seems to have been passed, although several concerns are even now spoken of as in an unsatisfactory position. I have only to-day, that an important undertaking, which has loDg held its made Paris enumerated For week : Mon. ending May 5. United States 5-20's, 6 per cent Atlantic and Great Western, New section. 1st mortgage, 1880 49% York Pennsylvania section, 1st m, 1877.. do cons’tedmort. b'ds, 1895. Erie shares, 100 dollars, all paid do Convertible bonds, 6 per cent Illinois Central, $100 shares Marrietta and Cincinnati, 7 per cent... New York Central, 100 dollar shares... Panama Rail, 7 per cent, 1872, 2d morf. Pennsylvania R. R. Bonds, 2d mort,, 6 heard grouud per cent “ $50 shares Philadelphia ’and Erie, 1st mortgage, 18S1, (gua. by Penn. Railroad Co) do with option to be paid in Philadelphia Canada 6 per cent, 5 per cent, do Fri. Thur. 60 51X v 74 a 79*4 "O ’ 50% 49% . 73% 77 78% 69% 56% 68 56% 48" 74 73 60 47 74 73 74 73 60 74 73 60 47% 73% 76% 48% 73% 76% 69 69 69 69 67% 67% 67% HH 101 101 81 11 73 , , . , . 81 73 73 73 . 73 73 67% 101 73 . 101 81 81 40 40 S&t. 47" 6S% 39% 57% 49% 69% 57% 1SS2 Virginia 5 per cent cfo Tucs. Wed. 73% 93 93 93% 93 and which has promised to pay shortly a divi lend. 94 79 77% 79 79 7!) of ten per cent, cannot get the necessary account of assets and liabili¬ ties to be presented to the shareholders, signed by the auditors. Advices from Frankfort state that while most other stocks were With the best informed, however, it is the opinion that the recent dull, American, securities held firm at full quotations. The Chancellor of the Exchequer delivered his financial statement on withdrawals of bullion from the Bank have been in connection with the late monetary arrangements of some of the countries which are now at Thursday night. He stated that the actual expenditure last year was £65,914,000, against an estimated expenditure of £66,147,000; and variance, either, probably, with the recent advance of £1,000,000 by that the actual revenue amounted to £67,812,000. At the period of Paris capitalists to Austria, or with the arrangement lately entered into delivering his last budget, Mr. Gladstone estimated the loss to the reve¬ between the Italian Government and the Bank of Turin for an advance nue from the reductions in the duties on tea, fire insurances and incomes at £1,028,<>00 ; but at the close of the year, even with these important of £10,000,000. Should this assumption prove cerreet, the advance in reductions, the actual loss was only £2.836,000. The reduction in the the rate here will, for a time at least, check the outflow, and money income tax had operated most successfully in increasing fthe monetary will be retained here for more legitimate employment in the carrying resources of the Government, for this tax was bringing in a revenue of on of trade. Affairs, indeed, have already become more satisfactory . about £1,400,000 for every penny per pound. When the tax was much higher than at present, the amount produced was proportionately much a few parcels of gold have been taken into the Bank; and whilst bad less, or about £700,000 to £800,000 per penny per pound, hepce the peo¬ securities are in no favor, and continue to fall in value, the shares and ple must have returned larger incomes, and have, therefore, paid income securities of old established, and those which are known to be * sound, tax on a larger amount. The changes in the taxation proposed by Mr. Gladstone were few, viz.: The abolition of the timber duties; the undertakings, have been firm, aud are advancing in price. The bank of statement is very unfavorable. It is well to bear in mind, however, that equalization the the doty on wine in bottle to that in the wood ; the abolition of duty on pepper, aud the reduction in the tax on stage, the return is made up to Wednesday evening, aud as the rapid outflow carriage and post horses to jd per mile. Mr. Gladstone will thus sacri¬ of bullion led those requiring accomodation on the “ fourth” to anticipate fice the following sums : Timber duties .£307,000 Thursday’s advance in the^ate of discount, many bills were sent in in Wine duties.. 5S,009 112,000 Pepper duty i the early part of the week, and were discounted at the prices then cur. 85,000 Stage, carriage and post-horse duties .. as a private concern, 73 < advauces were then made which would, under £562,000 other circumstauces, have been delayed till yesterday, aud which would, Mr. Gladstone has also suggested reducing the national debt. Ai as a consequence, have been included in the next weekly statement. It the estimated surplus for the current year is £1,350,000, of which cannot, therefore, be considered that the Bank return represents the £562,000 is sacrificed by the above reductions in the taxation, actual state of affairs, but that it really places them in a worse position Gladstone proposes to invest £500,000 annually in the purchase terminable annuities, which will expire in 1905. He also suggests to than is actually the case. The next return may show the monetary po¬ convert the £24,000,000 of stock held on account of the savings baoks sition more accurately, but with the uncertaiuty existing on the continent into terminable annuities expiring in 1885, which operation would in¬ > iff volve an annual outlay of about one million sterling. By these two it is at present imprudeut to predict. The quotations for money in operations, £24,000,000 will have been paid off in 1885, open market are now as under for the best paper : ^ Per Cent, £40,000,000 in 1905. Per Cent. Rather a curious circumstance has transpired at Liverpool this week, 7%@ 4 months’ bills 30 days’ bills... 8 © 0 mouths’ Dills in the purchase of wheat and flour for shipment to New do 60 do 7 © 0&4 months’ bank paper... 7 © 3 months’ bills quantity of produce taken has been small, but according to rates in Liverpool and New York respectively, the operation can The discount houses have advanced their terms for deposits. 1 he rate performed with profit. The sale is 800 quarters of Winter Wheat at 51s £d per 500 lbs, imported duty free, under Ameri¬ for money on call is 6; if with seven days’ notice of withdrawal ; can certificate, and 150 sacks of French flour at a price which with fourteen days’ 6 per cent. yet transpired. ■* ' On the Continent, there have been several fluctuations in the rate of rent. Hence, numerous Mr. of • t % the and nearly York» The the current be .. and American Red has not / THE CHRONICLE. May 19,1866.J The public sales of colonial wool will be commenced in London on Thursday next. The arrivals are large, viz.: 121,100 bales, comprising 16,366 bales from New South Wales and Queensland, 69,703 Victoria, 3,791 Tasmania, 17,205 South Australia, 1,932 Western Australia, 8,267 New Zealand, and 13,836 bales from the Cape of Good Hope. The Liverpool public sales of East India wool were commenced on Thursday last, the 2nd week. The attendance of both home and foreign buyers were very good, and the competition, more especially for best wools very brisk. We con¬ sider prices of all clean and well-conditioned descriptions frilly equal to the closing rates of our last January sales, but inferior and was kinds are rather irregular and slightly in favor of buyers. COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. 617 banking association organized under the authority of this State, or of the United States, DUt the stockholders in such banks and banking associations afrgl) be assessed and taxed on the value of their shares of stock therein; said, shares shall be included in the valuation of the personal property of such stockholder, in the assessment of taxes at the place, town, or ward where such bank or banking association is located, and not elsewhere, whether tbe said stockholder reside m said place, town or ward, or not, but not at a greater rate than is assessed upon other moneyed capital in the hands of individuals in thiB State. And in making such assessment there shall also be dedncted irom the value of such shares snch sum as is in the same proportion to such value as is the assessed value of the real estate of the bank or banking association, and in which any portion of their capital is invested, in which said shares are held, to the whole amount of the capital stock of said bank or banking association. And provided, further, that nothing herein contained shall he held or construed to exempt from taxation the real estate held or owned by any snch hank or hanking assosame shall he subject to State, county, municipal and other taxa¬ tion to the same extent and rate and in the same manner as other real estate is tion; hut the Imports and Exports for the Week.—The imports show an increase general merchandise and dry goods, the total being $4,767,121 against $3,886,560 last week, and $6,229,635 the previous week. The exports are $3,738,972 this week, against $3,219,011 last week, and $4,718,633 the previous week. The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry-goods) May 10, and for the week ending (for general merchandise) May 11th : 0 this week both in FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 1863. ’ Drygoods 1864. General merchandise 1865. 1866. $978,182 $640,651 $1,213,994 $1,508,753 2,934,713 2,667,663 8,556,837 3,258,368 Total for the week $3,575,364 $3,645,795 Previously reported 66,712,586 85,232,912 $4,770,831 47,701,962 $4,767,121 120,855,752 $70,287,950 $88,878,707 Since January 1 In our $52,472,793 $125,622,873 report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry goods for one week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending May 15 : EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 1863. $3,326,892 67,588,155 * 58,985,018 Previously reported $2,229,028 $3,738,972 87,402,637 65,192,455 $62,311,910 $67,421,483 $91,141,509 ; $70,067,797 January 1 Since 1866. 1865. 1864. $2,479,642 for the week department will be found the official detailed state imports and exports for the week The following will show the exports of specie from the port of New York, for the week ending May 12, 1866 : In the commercial ment of the May 8—Brig A. B. Patterson, Laguayra— American gold “ “ $1,000 11—Steamer Arago, Havre— Gold bars Gold coin For LondonGold and silver coin ; Gold bars and silver coin 105,095 200,900 42,500 105,000 11—Steamer Borussia, Hamburg- Gold bars and silver coin German silver American gold Mexican silver “ 17,000 500 ". January 1,1866.-. Same time in 1858 1857 . ... . 4,891,005 9,823,839 following is an official table of tbe gold outstanding on May 12: Redeemed. 20s 100s $140,940 2,644,500 $87,500 1,430,300 1,000s 11,321,000 60,910,000 860,000 8,297,000 50,640,000 860,000 6,000s... 10,000s $61,314,S00 $75,876,440 Total Outs’g. $55,440 1,214,200 3.024,000 10,270,000 $14,561,640 give the product of the mines located in the Portage Lake district for the first quarter of the year 1866 : we lbs. tons. lbs. March. tons. lbs. 1,620 1,050 77 1,510 130 > 190 65 55 39 235 186 February. January. Royale...*; Grand Portage Hancock 7 Albany and Boston. Shelden Columbian. Calumet (ingot).... Total Taxation 1,440 1,780 28 23 1,506 26 24 1,485 728 903 ... 5 ... 789 Stockholders of 515 3 975 345 1,190 119 1,108 1,401 87 85 81 66 24 19 463 1,715 Banks—Act 1,773 86 35 18 13 13 1,680 1,421 80 70 39 25 - of 670 257 Total. tons. 250 195 170 005 1,000 1,644 1,631 1,579 1,001 los. 1,820 1,855 718 893 311 1,422 1,493 703 647 821 83 New York Legisla of the act passed by the Legis. April of this year : authorizing the taxation of stockholders of Banks, and the sur¬ turx.—The following is lature of New York An Act 275 291 of on a certified The People of the Stale of New act as follows : copy the 23d of plus funds of Savings Banks. 23,1866. York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do en¬ Passed April Section 1. No tax shall hereafter be assessed upon the capital of any bank or Sec. 7. Tbe privileges and franchises granted by the legislature of the State, savings hanks or institutions for savings, are hereby declared to he personal property, and liable to taxation as such in the town or ward where they are lo¬ cated, to an amount not exceeding the gross sum of their surplus earned, and in the possession of said banks or institutions ; and the officers of snch institu¬ tions or banks, may he examined on oath by assessors, as the amount of such surplus; and the property of such hanks and institutions shall he liable to seiz¬ ure and sale for the payment of all taxes assessed upon them for said privilege to immediately. f I have compared the preceding with the do hereby certify that the same is a correct of said original law. original law on file in this office, and transcript therefrom and of the whole FRANCIS C. BARLOW, Secretary of State. ®f)t Bankers’ (fi&a^ette. 9.477,159 11,457,549 .10,583,446 Issued. Isle hanking association, and the managing officer or officers thereof, to retain so much of any dividend or dividends belonging to snch stockholders as shall be necessary to pay any taxes assessed in pursuance of this act, until it shall he made to appear to such officers that such taxes have been paid. BUSINESS . 11.314,821 1853. 20,431,929 1852. *. payment of said tax. Sec 6. For the purpose of collecting such taxes, and in addition to any other laws of this State, not in conflict with the constitution of the United States, relative to the imposition of taxes, it shall be the duty of every such hank or 11,423,045 certificates issued, redeemed, and Pewahic Huron made; and the county treasurer, receiver of taxes, or other officers authorized to receive said tax from the collector, may all or either of them have an action to collect the tax from the avails of the sale of his shares of stock, and the tax on the share or shares of said stock shall be and remain a lien thereon till the $8,200,711 . 15.371,423:1855 2,904,791 1854. FraT'klin organ¬ ized under the laws of this State, or of the United States, shall not reside in. the same place where the hank or hanking association is located, the collector and county treasurer shall, respectively, have the same powers as to collecting the tax to be assesed by this act, as they have by statute, when the person as¬ sessed has removed from the town, ward or county in which the assessment was $11,333,491 17,867.475 1856 Quincey Sec. 4. Sections ten and eleven of chapter ninety-seven of the session laws of eighteen hundred and sixty-five are hereby repealed. Seo. 5. When the owner of stock in any bank or hanking association, 7,136,215 . $6,693,849 19,816,788 tons. 42 50 45 39 32 25 20 23 10 be.legally transacted. Office of the Secretary of State, $1,064,496 • • • Lake Superior.—Below each; and such list shall be subject to the inspection of the officers authorized during the business hours of each day in which business may to assess taxes and franchises. Sec. 8. This act shall take effect State of New York, 1 195,539 147,192 Total for the week.. Gold Certificates.—The he shall he held to be sole owner of all the shares in such business of bank¬ same shall he included iu the valuation of his personal property in the assessment of all taxes levied in the town, school district or ward where hit bank is located, and not elsewhere. Sec. 3. There shall he kept at all times in the office where the business of snch hank or hanking association, organized under the authority of this State or the United States, shall be transacted, a full and correct list of the names and residences of all the stockholders therein, and of the number of shares held by ners ing, and the 144,770 Previously reported Total since by each of them in such hanking business, ascertained as above provided, and the shares so held by any partner shall he included in the valuation of his tax¬ able property in the assessment of all taxes levied in the town, school district, or ward where such individual hanker is located, and not elsewhere; and such individual hanker shall pay the same and make the amount so paid a charge in his accounts with such partners; and if buch individual hanker have no part¬ [65,000 50,000 12 —Steamer Etna, Liverpool— American gold Gold bars and coin Gold bars and silver Same time in 1865 1864 1863 1862 1861 1860 1859 taxed. Sec. 2. Every individual hanker doing hanking business under the laws of this State, is hereby required to declare upon oath before the assessor the amount of capital invested in such hanking business, and each one hundred dollars of such capital for the purpose of this act, and for the purpose of taxation shall he held and regarded as one individual share in such banking business, and such shares are hereby declared to he personal property. If such hacker have part¬ ners he shall declare upon oath before the assessor the number of shares neld AT THE STOCK BOARDS. The following shows the description and number of shares sold at the Reguar and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday: Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri’y. Week. Sat. lank Shares... Railroad shares, Viz: Jatawissa Central of New Jersey.... 393 50 100 400 250 497 277 400 Chicago & Alton Chicago, Bur. & Quincy .. Chicago & Great Eastern. Chicago & Milwaukee.... Chicago & Northwestern. )hicago & Rock Island... fieveland, Col. & Cine.... Cleveland & Pittsburg.... 327 205 250 6,ioo 6,ioo 900 1,770 8*,900 18,800 200 400 )el., Lack. & Western 5rie Railway Central....— 2,627 Indianapolis & Cincinnati. jong Island dcGregor Western 700 4,700 9,800. 95*442 457 2,400 3,257 1,500 1,400 900 540 4,040 470 „ 570 100 ‘266 200 300 7,800 12,000 12^200 1,100 55,500 *600 1,600 6,312 200 100 300 8,590 13,000 11,850 4,600 40,205 1,812 100 270 *’i7 1,465 800 1,100 10,600 3,500 2,200 . *22 100 246 2,000 6,350 3,100 600 400 100 *200 900 1,500 Lotus, Alton & T. H.. 4,600 1*525 3,300 100 150 6,128* 4,i28 1,400 5,000 2,170 9,510 846 19,156 14,745 300 l66 600 620 42 25 200 110 86,010 1,210 20 100 ‘ 400 49 17 Toledo & Wabash Miscellaneous shares, 2,800 100 10 1,300 40,880 # 11,110 200 tonington viz: Lshburton Coal 100 317 Atlantic Mail *00 American Coal 300 1,400 100 lilwaukee & St. Paul.... [orris & Essex >t. r,700 12',900 23,666 15*800 23*,800 103*200 300 350 200 9,000 18,100 10,000 300 [ilwaukee & P. du Chien leading 9*666 8,040 100 Michigan Central fichigan Southern *itts., Ft. Wffyne & Chic. 7,950 414 700 52 2,900 .... Marietta & Cincinnati rew Jersey lew York Central rew York & New Haven. >hio & Mississippi ($100) ’anama 800 '*62 6,000 2.400 5,230 1,300. 1,050 100 100 800 .. 600 50 9,465 25,650 29.400 16,200 12*166 ludsou River 8 244 20 200 Cleveland & Toledo Jlino 900 100 100 .200 1,749 100 400 200 80 100 225 50 100 697 225 700 2,800 1.966 6*800 500 800 100 4,700 1,000 600 600 300 100 *200 *100 1,200 9,800 5.600 183 1,200 Cary Improvement Central Amer. Transit Central Coal 2,600 1,100 1,700 1.300 Canton 600 Cumberland Coal Del. & Hudson Caual Mariposa Pennsylvania Coal Smith & Parmelee Gold.. Spring Mountain Coal Spruce Hill Coal . • ... . 3!500 1,000 9,600 1,400 2,320 1,500 • • • 3,610 100 100 , 200 60 .... .... , 1,680 105 *200 .... .... , 8,200 - „ . . The volume of transactions in shares at *500 400 100 Wyoming Valley Coal.... the two boards, comparatively, for of the two last weeks, and the total for the same weeks, is shown in following statement: Reg. Board.^-Open Board.-v~Both Boards—, Last Prev’s Last i rev’s Last Prev’s each day week. 14,236 23,825 37,763 40,019 week 20,256 56,900 34,850 25,533 88,300 Thursday 44,643 24,857 oy.540 Friday.... 40,133 26,900 30,500 28,800 Wednesday 25.0*3 . 70,500 43,998 68,870 52,433 5o,357 . 59.873 49,066 329,597 566,549 182,500 190,450 205,608 139,147 Total of week week 45.526 73,225 94,663 128,319 114,183 110,633 week. week. 31.300 25,700 44,490 43,700 week. 18,298 25,170 Saturday Monday Tuesday weekly since the commencement of the year are following statement: The transaction in shares shown in the 243,900 328.400 667,509jMarch 272,300 516.115;March 301,400 549.143,April 239,700 440,807 April 227,800 436.940! April 23... .261,106 835,910 597,016 30. ...122,5*3 208,200 330,763 6.... 170,934 247,400 418,334 13....250,118 214,650 464,768 20... .176,956 208,650 385,606 27... .242,738 226,230 468,968 4. ...135,949 182,500 318.449 228,700 462.9S5jApril 383,200 371,113|May Februury23....187,913 2... Both j Week ending Regular Open Both Boards! Friday. Board. Board. Boards 425,2501 March 16....206,312 213,450 419,762 Open Board. endiDg Regular Board. Friday. January 5.... 161,350 January 12.... 339,109 January 19.... 213,S15 Januarv 26.... 247,743 February 2 ...201,107 February 9.... 209,140 February10.... 234 285 Week March March 439.461 May 221.500 211,300 .217,961 9....206,819 190,450 329,597 360,940 566,549 11... .139,127 41s,149:May 205,609 18.. State, etc., bonds sold at the Regular Board, daily, las The Government and week, are given in the following statement: Sat. U. 9. 6’s, 1881. U.S 6’8(5-20’e). U.S 6’s mid/.. U.S 5’s (10-403 U.S 5’8 (old).. U. S 7-30 note9 U.S Certific’s. . 45.500 38,000 8,u00 20,500 Tues. Mon $18,900 $50,000 390,600 134,500 21,000 23,500 . 223,500 .... 22,750 4,000 Fri. Thar. $. 419.000 98,000 54,000 10,000 llO.OiM) 10,000 . . • » „ Week $26,000 $166,500 327,500 1,407.600 23,000 10,000 319,000 ... 5,000 5,000 15,500 Wed. $27,000 * . 25.000 10,000 37,950 266,700 31,000 6-4,000 3,000 48,000 bonds, viz : State California 7’s, Connect’t 6’s. ■ - - $10,000 16,000 10,000 . 15,000 .... Georgia 6’s... Illinois6’8 Kentucky 6’s. • ..... Louisiana 6’8. • • • .... . $11,000 N.Y. State 6’s, New York 7’s N. Carolina 6’a Ohio 6’s Rhode Iel’d 6s. S. Carolina 6s. Tennesee 6’s.. 5,000 32,000 $32,000 8j 00 55.000 27.000 7,000 15,000 5,000 , . ,, . . • • 238,000 12,000 100,000 41,000 1,000* 14,000 . 21,000 137,000 2,000 • •.. • e . , 8,000 25,000 26.000 11,000 Virginia 6’s... City bond?, viz.: Brooklyn 6’s. Jersey City6’a N. Y. takings. - - applications for discounts are compai itively limited. Busi¬ ness paper, however, is in very active demand*, and prime notes having 60 to 90 days to run are readily bought at 5@5£ per cent, second grade paper is current at 7@8 per cent. There has been rather more activity in call loans, owing to the large transactions in gold and the purchases of coin from the SubTreasury. The general rate on demand loans is 5 per cent, with exceptions at 4 per cent. Probably seven millions of currency has been paid into the Sub-Treasury during the week on account of purchases of gold ; which is so much money taken off the market. The following are the current rates for loans of various classes : The Per cent. Per cent. Gall loans..; Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 2 months 4 6 @ 5 @7 5 @ 6 I Good endorsed bills, 8 & | 4 months do single names I 6 @7 7 @8 9 @12 ] Lower grades of government se¬ severely tested, during the week, by the return of further large amounts of Five-twenties from Europe, and the report by the Java of the decline in the price of those securities at London to 674*a67£. Probably ten millions of bonds have been sent home within the last thirty days, and there is an apparent probability that further amounts may yet be returned. The effect of this increased supply of a security which may be regarded as the consols ” of the market has been to put down the price tempo¬ United States Securities.—The strength curities has been somewhat “ rarily £ per cent, the bonds having declined to 101± ; but the price subsequently recovered, and closes firm at 101 f. The issues of 1864 and 1865 have not fallen to the extent of the old issue, and respectively, at 102 and 102£. Ten-forties are quiet, and re- price of last week, closing at 96. Seven-thirties are a fa¬ vorite security, and continue firm at 102fal02£. Certificates of Indebtedness are firm at 1001—u price at which the offer of Secre¬ tary McCulloch to redeem them, to the extent of #20,000,000, is close, tain the ... Michigan 7s, Minnesota 8’s. Missouri 6’s.. N. Y. State 5*9. from that section to this centre, .... . Wilkesbarre Coal the amount of .... .... . 656 Virginia Coal... 260 200 400 900 U.Telegragh—Russian Western 1,500 853 100 800 « 1,966 Telegraph 6 1,000 *200 *700 8U0 100 Quicksilver W. 19,800 3,400 12 300 Pacific Mail Navigation 100 .... '500 -. Western Union produce to the East, causes a constant flow of* funds which steadily augments the idle 2,300 1,000 surplus. From the subjoined statement of the Assotiated Banks, l',506 it will be seen that a further important addition to the deposit line 4,*845 20,845 501 was made last week, and that the legal tenders also increased nearly 2*400 S,900 four millious. The largeness of the surplus deposits produces an 760 200 3*200 12,663 expectation of a protracted ease in the money market, and 500 800 encourages speculative operations. 50 1,350 The general dullness in mercantile circles and the uncertainly 21,300 1,700 200 11,189 attending the future of the markets discourages new productive en¬ 3,633 165 terprises ; so that there is little demand for money for new under¬ 200 5,750 950 900 1,100 2<>0 100 100 Boston Water Power Brunswick City Union [May 19,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 618 5,000 12,000 26,000 • * • . 11,000 7,000 1,600 83,600 44,000 5,000 • city 6’8 The following is a summary of the amount oi Governments securities, and railroad bonds sold on each day : Sat. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thnr. , State Fri. and City Total for the week. U. S. Bonds $112,000 $4:34,600 $408,000 $533,000 $98,000 $373,500 $1,939,100 811.700 57.000 6S,950 15.500 23,500 26,750 120,000 U. S. Notes 67,000 141,600 44.000 127,000 106.000 51,000 636,600 State&Citv bonds 23,5n0 224,100 43,000 32,600 51,000 38,000 36,000 Railroad Bonds.. iikejy to be accepted. subjoined closing quotations for leading Government securi¬ ties, will show the difference in prices as compared with previous not The weeks U. U. U. U. U. U* U. U. U. S. S. S. S. S S S. S : 6’s, 1881 coup 5-20’s, 1862 coupons. 5-20’s, 1864 “ 5-20’s, 1S65 “ 10-40’s, 7-30’s 1st series 7-30’s 2d Series .. 7-30’s 3rd series Apr. 13. Apr. 20. Apr. 27. May 4. May 11. May 18. 109 109% 108% e J.9% 105% 104% 102 101% 106% X.C. 102% 101% 103% 162 102%105% x.c. 162 103% ;io4% - 103% 92 - .. S. lyr’s certificates 100%' 100% 100% 90% 104% 93% 101% 101% 101% 90% , 105% X.C.1I;2 95% 95% 101% 102 101% K>1% 101% 102 100 100% 102% ' 96 162% 162% 102% 100% 102% 96 102% 102% 102% 101% Securities.—The speculative damped during the first half of the week Railroad and Miscellaneous ardor of Wall street was by the unfavorable character of ihe advices from the money centers of Europe, and a temporary depression of prices resulted. The JThe totals of each class of securities sold in the first four months of the year street, however, appeared to soon reach a unanimous conclusion are shown in the statement-which follows: Governments State, &c., Railroad Total that the Bourse and ’Change had very little direct bearing upon Notes. Bonds. Bonds. Bonds. amount. January $952,900 $3,035,500 $12,155,700 Wall street, ai d the temporary flurry has consequently been suc¬ $4,327,200 $3,340,100 February 2.591,900 1,691,500 9,822,000 3,346,500 1,692.100 March 3.981,300 3,006,700 2,903,600 78L2I0 10,6*22,840 ceeded by a fresh activity in speculation for higher prices. Aptil 3,739,650 8:38,700 5.798,300 1,679,500 12,056,150 The outside pubMc do not appear to take much interest in gpecuand for the weeks ending on Friday— tive operations, The current movements are got up chiefly in the May 4 $2,099,800 $329,400 $194,800 $342,500 $2,966,500 Total amount.... $209,500 621,100 583,750 732,600 320,100 544,450 8,011,500 > “ “ 11 18 1,301.900 600.950 249.500 193,500 2,345,850 1,939,100 311,700 336,600 224,100 3,011,500 Friday. May 18, 1866, P. M. continuance of the extreme ease in monetary affairs, noted for several weeks. The deposits with the banks continue to augment, while their loans to The Money Market.—We have to report a the “ street" and commercial discounts do not iucrease in a corres¬ ponding rates. The resulting surplus of idle capital, instead of being pressed upon call borrowers at low rates of interest, is to a larger extent employed in Government Securities, as yielding a better rate of interest without any apparent prospect of loss upon the principal. The inability of the West to supply the usual parties connected with the management of the roads, and give the stocks an improved standing, correspond¬ ing to what the parties conceive to be the really better condition and prospects of the roads. The public do not appear to have yet risen in their appreciation of this class of securities to the point at which they are disposed to take the stocks as investments, and the present holders are therefore compelled to carry a heavy load of securities, relieved, however, by the extreme ease of the money mar¬ ket, and the hope that continued large earnings will, at length, in. duce the public to buy. Some of the leading stocks, especially New York Central, Erie, Cleveland and Pittsburg and Illinois Central are sustained through interest of are intended to THE CHRONICLE. May 19,1866.] having been sold “ghort.” Illinois Central and Erie are very much above the price at which they are held in Loudon and could not be supported at present quotations, but for the stocks being largely under the control of cliques. Olevelund and Pittsburg has ad¬ vanced to 86, in anticipation of the payment of a 4 per cent divi¬ dend* Hudson River is very active and strong, and cliqae mani¬ pulation, and closes at 1I1|—an advance of 2f since last week. There has been considerably more speculative activity in the miscellaneous list, and prices close generally higher. following The t1?e closing are quotations for leading stocks, com¬ 1230. April 6. Apr 13. Apr. 20. Apr. 27. May 4. May 11. May 18. 45 45 43% 44% 45 47 44% 50 53 40% 54 55% 55% 54% Quicksilver danton Co Mariposa pref.... New Erie 47 52 .... Hudson River.... Reading Mich. Southern.. “ preferred Rock Island Fort Wayne Illinois Central 104 80% 105 107% 81% 102% 103% 80% 80% 111% xd.101% 27 26% 65% 56% .... 79% 109% 26 54% xd.113% 118 90% 120 96 91% 115 .... ,. 73% 110% 103 109% 81 Michigan Central Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern.... 59 92% 72% 108% 73% 101 57% 23% 25% 92% 73% nu% .... 93 92% 74% 109% York Central 53 .... 93 82% 82% 104% 29% 59 123 98% 114% 78% 107% 122 94% 74% 111% 107% 79% .... 82 83% 104% 29 61% 86 104% 28% 58% 105’ 29% 59 123% xd.94% 100 181% 93% 98% 12U% 99 122 Yera Cruz. The following have been the highest and lowest quotations for gold, on each of the last six days : Highest. Lowest. ' 129% 128% May 130% 130% “ 130% 129% “ Highest. Lowest 130% 130% 130% The transactions for last week at the Custom House Treasury May were as follows Receipts. $323,018 55 312,104 93 456,370 08 413,192 39 487,442 94 425,262 24 Total Balance in $2,417,391 13 Sub-Treasury morning of May 7..- Deduct payments 130 129% 129% 4and Sub : Custom-house. 7 8. -Sub-TreasuryPayments. $1,152,178 33 2,566,871 2,414,837 2,354,200 1,038,093 5,508,152 ReceiDts. $2,272,461 29 2,296,009 81 13 36 44 29 77 $15,034,333 S2 3,311,076 72 4,341,077 95 1,583.198 81 6,222,213 70 $20,026,038 28 93,326,985 12. $113,853,023 40 during the week.... 15,034,333 32 Balance on Saturday evening Increase during the week $98,318,690 08 4,961,704 96 Included in the receipts of customs were $474,000 in gold and $1,943,391 in gold certificates. The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury since Januafy 6 : Weeks Ending Jan “ 6.... 27.... Feb. 3.... “ 10.... “ 17.... “ 24.... Mar. 8.... “ 10.... “ “ *17.... 24.... 81.... APr- 7 “14.,.. “ “ 21 ... 28.... May 5.... May 12.... Custom House. , Sub-Treasury Payments. Receipts. Balances. $2,107,341 $23,868,750 $15,861,866 $67,988,957 2,334,694 2,334,694 8,341,643 15,837,971 75,485,284 2.754.368 2,754,368 14,093,013 84,181,069 5,398,128 3,226,047 3,347,422 3,261,734 2,893,007 2,608,796 3,386,934 2,297,835 2,464,482 2,509,419 2,451,344 2,863,009 9,487,026 6,044,893 21,717,241 14,527,352 20,414,139 25,071,308 20,934,822 4,966,916 16,052,215 8,941,363 13,324,981 2,857,703 2,535,567 2,246,307 2,711,181 5,859,749 14,688,239 13,937,517 35,688,713 15,034,333 2,417,391 15,116,574 89,810,618 15,592,793 99,358,518 12,194,496 89,835,873 22,988,451 98,296,973 29,170,183 107,053,016 15,658,306 97,640,015 12,773,418 89,478,610 93,111,916 8,600,222 5.937,768 82,997,469 85,166,646 ll,10n,540 11,790,124 83,621,790 12,068,189 90,325,685 21,953,904 97,591,349 97,773,823 14,119,991 93,826,985 31,241,874 20,026,038 98,318,690 Foreign Exchange.—There is duce bills on the market, acid a Changes in Balances, dec $8,006,883 inc 7,496,327 inc 8,695,784 inc inc dec inc inc dec dec inc dec inc dec inc inc inc dec inc 5.629,548 9,547,908 9,522,645 8,461,099 8,756,043 9,413,001 8,161,404 3,633,306 10,114,447 2,159,177 1,534,856 6,704,395 7,265,664 182,478 4,446,833 4,991,704 extreme scarcity of city pro¬ large amount of sterling cotton bills an unsaleable, under the mistrust created by the decline in quota¬ tions and the return of bills upon the drawers. A large amount of the current bills are consequently drawn against specie, the rate for 60 day’s bankers sterling bring 109$ a 109f, and for francs, long are date, 5.11$.* r - April 27. May 4. London Comm’1.. 106%® 107% do bkrs’ long 108 @ 108% do do short ' 109 @ — 108 109 May 11. 108%® 108% 109%@ 109% 110%@110% 5.13%@5.12% 5.11%@5.10 6.15 @5.12% , @108% @ 109% 5.22%@5.21% 6.20 @5.18% Antwerp 5.56%@5.22% Swiss 5.23%@5.21% Hamburg 35%@ 35% Amsterdam...... 40%@ 41 Frankfort 40%® 4t% Bremen 77%@ 78 Berlin 70%® 71% do short May 18. 108%® 109% 109%® 109% 110%® — 5.11%@ — 5.08 @ — 5.11%@ — 5.15 @5.12% 6.12%@5.11% 36%® 36% 37 ® — 44%@ 44% 42 @ 42% 4i%@ 41% 42 @ — 79 .@ 79% 80 @ — 72%@ 72% 73%@ — 110%® — 5.16%@5.15 PariB, long 5.12%@ — 5.20 @5.16% 5.18%@o.l5 3f%® 36% 41 @41% 41 %@ 41% 78 %@ 79 - 71%@ 72 following statement shows the New York tor the May 12, 1866 : condition of the Associated Banks of the City of week ending with commencement of business on 22 92% 73% 109% 107% 78% beginning of the week, a very ac¬ tive demand for gold, for export, was developed, and on Monday the price advanced to 130|, with an unusually strong upward ten¬ dency, aided by speculation. At this juncture, the Government came into the market prepared to sell freely at over 130, and has sold during the week probably over six millions of gold. This source of supply has kept down the premium at about an average of 30, but the course of the Government has sorely disturbed spec¬ ulations for a rise in the premium. The shipments of specie for this week are probably larger than for any former week in the his¬ tory of the port. The export on Wednesday last was $3,479,194 and the City of Paris takes out to-morrow about $3,500,000. This morning, the steamer Manhattan brought $225,452 from . following are the closing quotations for the several classes foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks 61% 24% . The Gold Market.— At the May The of New York City Banks.—The pared with those of previous weeks: Cumberland Coal 619 -Average amount of- Loans and Banks. New York America Phenix City ..; Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical Merch’ts Exchange National Butch. & Drovers.. Mech’s & Traders.. Greenwich Leather Manufact’s Seventh Ward State of N. York... American Exc’ge.. Commerce 1,884,064 129,273 289,000 Republic People’s North America.... Hanover. Irving Metropolitan Citizens’. Nassau Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather. Corn Exchange... Continental 895,026 Park Mech. Bank’g As’n Grocers’ North River East River Manuf. & Merch’ts Fourth National... Central Second National. Ninth National.... First National Third National.... N. Y. Exchange... 51,738 108,794 63,049 Bull’s Head $257,621,317 189,900 882,016 135,478 4,626 516.300 85,297 60,708 716,333 37,670 847,685 27.500 480,423 216,427 116,890 281,850 34,125 218,479 47,357 19,430 77,280 11,301 . . 105,764 13,970,402 24,693,259 Ino.. $3,647,183 Loans .. Circulation ..Inc. Deo. The return indicates a 3,055,405 798,059 268,268 Deposits Inc. Legal Tenders Inc. still further increase of idle 239,337,726 Jan.20, Jan. 27,.. 240,407,^36 .. Feb. 3... Feb.10... Feb.17... Feb.24... Mar. 3... Mar.10... Mar.17 Mar.24... Mar.31... 242,510,382 242,608,872 243,068,252 239,776,200 235,339,412 233,068,274 233,517,378 234,500,518 237.356,099 Apr. 7..., 242,643,753 Apr.14..., 244,009,839 Apr.21... 242,067,063 Apr. 28... 245.017,692 May 5... 253,974,134 May 12... 257,621,317 .. , Specie. 15,778,741 16,852,568 15,265,372 13,106,759 10,937,474 due 199,636 187,795 307,923 3,742,662 4,869,854 362,758 2,315,001 1,248,006 1,483,830 264,221 36,000 217,552,853 85,040,66® 603,556,178 35 523,098,537 01 25,787,414 12 22,695,593 55 are as follows : 722,418 The several items compare as weeks : Jan. 6, 66 Jan. 13,.. 234,938,193 648,137 184,898 1,393,769 13,682 banks ; the increase in loans is probably investments in Government securities. Loans. 233.185.059 1,369,374 5,197,096 451,196 373,989 1,082,927 13,780,401 14,800,272 1,081,155 7,215,084 4,078,748 3,173,689 447,034 47,553 95,668 5,338 7,689 9,149 ' 664,449 285,376 926,921 723,413 619,000 1,998,000 488,675 936,027 1,054,"; 98 801,838 1,108,600 520,000 988,000 862,806 286,253 733,800 420,099 680, &35 270,000 879.717 59,2i6 1,576,709 3,779,599 17,259,941 1,422,102 1,037.321 1,336,116 513,641, 1,000,000 308,000 74,367 12,670 217,050 1,200 2,567,422 1,465,159 73,619 281,538 18,990 26,390 19,435 3,625 14,829 186,89p 54,775 1,523,606 575,512 1,684,924 1,294,928 92.500 Clearings for the week ending May 5, 1866 Ciearings for the week ending May 12, 1S66 Balances for the week ending May 5, 1866 Balances for the week ending May 12, 1866. The deviations from the return of last week Specie 5,137,947 9,241,467 11,167,358 6,203,132 2.537,107 3,444,030 1,660,445 4,395,520 2,086,250 1,304,849 • 2,810,189 1,798,807 1,493,000 6,040,066 1,385,033 2,125,871 2,289,881 1,420,681 2,858,500 2,029 000 2,689,956 3,047,610 1,053.411 248.300 19,000 39,567 23,496 182,645 17,417,585 Dry Dock 1,225,383 693,29* 2,681,535 6,611,851 5,877,170 2,518,468 730,780 777,457 900,000 288,185 116,540 1,010,392 1,598,007 1,001,314 1,395,287 13,695,479 1.318.181 6,475,194 3,589,581 3,389,886 619,059 95,993 1,219,508 2,653,018 792,6 7 298,950 87,059 655,533 131,551 7,434 295,576 5S,156 22,024. 15,417,409 1,319,196 .. 467,488 609,666 185,515 83,956 1,294,545 4,763,362 Imp. & Traders... 2,244,130 1,622,135 965,569 203,156 3,992,110 3,002,280 1,160,184 1.687.181 . 2,526,573 1.110,562 1,066,584 2,810,792 2,817,148 740,117 402,175 135,071 129,394 11,732 566,820 2,591,310 40,593 432,945 310,178 6,745,597 202,170 105,000 6,760 254.922 2,938,166 773,362 20,070 14,778 * Legal 453,833 494,647 33,335 67,715 2.841,314 2,800,031 4,450,000 Oriental Marine Atlantic 542.716 232,617 2,497,401 • 2,930 408,230 32,662 119,706 751,984 48,945 3,611,850 3,166,770 Chatham Totals... 423,559 400,416 10,196,260 23.335,747 6.142,523 1,978,526 6,037,350 1,962,869 1,366,487 2,774,016 2,453,215 1,519,000 10,085,584 1,549,694 $2,986,590 2,006,851 3,859,639 2,141,767 1,365,914 3,099,099 986,259 21,222 4,294,794 6,569,478 4,982,871 3,204,625 8,774,054 3,178,331 3,340,672 2,324 020 2,567,298 121,336 862,019 5,454,310 Ocean Mercantile Pacific $6,637,015 413,435 1,678,477 1,085-544 3,251,321 Broadway tenders. 13,548 665,910 785,915 deposits. $920,280 806.7S2 Net tion. Specie. $3,923,885 $8,050,186 5,622.656 7,909,992 5,769,067 4,859,025 9,163,732 3,966; 398 4.380,760 2,923,078 2,606,116 5,339,246 3,365,859 2,838,067 2,326,328 Manhattan Merchants’ Mechanics’ Union Commonwealth. Circula¬ discounts. very $7,179,550 3,836,212 funds in tb e much to increased follows with the returns of previous Circula¬ tion. 18,588,428 19.162.917 20,475,707 20,965,883 21,494,234 Deposits. 195,482,254 197,766,999 19S,816,248 195,012,454 191,011,695 188,701,463 189,777,290 10,129,806 22,240,469 10,308,758 22,983,274 14.213,351 22.959.918 183,241,404 17,181,130 22,994,0S6 181,444,378 16,563,237 23,033,237 180,515,881 15,015,242 23,303,057 185,438,707 13,945,651 23,243,406 185,868,245 11,930,392 23,736,534 188,554,592 11,486,295 24,127,061 189,094,961 11,035,129 24,533,981 193,153,469 9,495,463 24,045.857 196,808,578 8,243,937 25,377,280 202,718,574 10,914,997 25,415,677 210,373,303 13,970,402 24,693,259 217,552,853 Philadelphia Banks.—The Legal Tenders. Clearings. 71,617,487 73,019,957 72,799,892 370,617,523 608,082,837 638,949,311 70,319,146 516,328,073 68,796,250 508,569,123 68,436,013 493,431,032 64.802,980 471,886,751 61,602,726 497,150,087 58,760,145 626,539,959 64,341,802 594,204 912 68,402,764 579,216,509 60,496,033 593,448,860 72,158,099 529,240,648 71,445,165 602,315,743 73,910,370 578,537,855 77,602,688 535,834,774 80,589,022 545,339,668 81,204,447 603,556,178 85,040,659 523,098,537 following comparative statement condition of the leading items of the Philadel" phia Banks for the last and previous weeks : shows the average THE 620 [May 19,1866. CHRONICLE. May 3.1866. DEBTOR. f. May 12. May 5. $14,642,150 48,236,256 896,741 $14,642,150 48,006,654 912.023 19,144.660 36,987,007 ' 8,794,348 Capital Loans Specie Legal Tenders Deposits Circulation $229,602 Increase.. 15,292 501,603 Decrease.. Increase.. Increase... 19,646,263 38,414,588 Increase... 8,930,420. comparison shows the condition of the Banks at stated periods : Circulation. Loans. Specie. 1,427,581 136,072 Pkiladel- Capital of the bank Profits, in addition to capital. Reserve of the bank and branches phia Date. „ 45,941,001 2... 8. 15. 22. 29. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. 46.774.150 47,350,423 1,007,186 1,012,980 1,008,825 1,000,689 47,254,622 47,G07,558 47,233,661 47,249,383 46,981,337 46,865,592 46,604,752 46,546,878 3. 10. 17., 24. 3. 10. 17 24 31 ’ 46,028.641 Apr. 7. Apr. 14. Apr. 21. 45,114,699 Apr. 28. 48,236,256 National January 44 44 44 1,626 1,626 1,628 1,628 1,628 i. February 3 10 44 24 3 44 44 44 April 4* 44 44 May May 36,987,007 38,414,588 17 24 31 7 14 21 23 5 12 the National from January 240,094,560 252,926,620 245,866.540 248,734.715 251,360,050 253,116,380 254,902,275 257,072,910 258,432,790 260,556,750 . 261,638,920 409,408,203 409,408,203 1,645 1,645 1,645 1,650 1,6.50 262,816,870 264,247,170 265,382.560 206,504,340 208.029.940 ,, , 269,948,355 271,262,105 272,878,895 , 1,650 weekly statement of the Boston Banks in¬ condition of the money market. As compared Boston Banks.—The dicates the easy previous statement, there is shown a decrease in loans of $41,015; an increase in deposits of $816,700, and of $91,988 in amount due to other banks; an increase in lesral tender notes of $1,046,806, and of National circulation of $35,249. The amount due from other banks has decreased $8,262 ; specie $75,145, and with the State circulation The $24,161. following are the footings as returns compared with the two previous : Mav 14. Loans May 7. $41,900,000 90,328,554 Capital $41,900,000 Legal Tender Notes... 576,150 21.415,716 14,704,802 13,792,148 41,205,276 14,696,540 Duo from other banks Due to other banks.... 13,884,136 4-2,021,976 Deposits ,23,516,330 23,551,579 Circulation (National). 719,688 695,527 Circulation (State)..... Banking.—The following is the return England for the week ending May 2, 86,723,001 401,113 19,549,614 11,249,715 8,942.907 38,396,210 22,856,656 744,425 90,369,569 501,013 22,462,522 Specie Foreign April 30. $41,900,000 of the Bank of 1866 : ISSUE DEPARTMENT. £27,712,020 Government Notes issued £11,015,100 3,984,900 debt Other securities. 12,712,020 Gold coin and bullion £27,712,020 £27,712,020 BANKING DEPARTMENT. £14,553,006 Proprietors’ capital Rest Public deposits, Other deposits Seven day and other 3,210,015 4,922,990 bills. 13,587,965 £10,694,254 20,380,395 4,839,250 797,120 Government securities Other securities Notes Gold and silver coin... 437,049 £36,711,019 £36,711,019 gives the following results when previous week ; The return Rest Public deposits Other deposits £3,201,015 4,922,990 13,587,965 compared with the 505,843 293,324 On the other side of the account Government securities.. . Other securities Notes unemployed £10,694,254 20,380,895 4,339,250 No alteration. Increase Decrease following is the return of the Bank of France, May 3d. The return for the previous week is added ; The Dividends pajrable Various discounts Re-discounts 1,872,541 1,004,955 made up to * 7,654,361 24 91,855,094 54 6,698,970 11 106,537,584 56 165,580,212 65 27,899,274 0 Sundries distributed 15,440,'ti0 creditor. '. Cash and bullion.. Commercial bills overdue Ditto discounted in Paris Ditto in the branches Advances on bullion in 526,889,589 12,560,400 in Paris 6,190,700 32,445,500 Ditto on obligations and railway shares Ditto in the provinces . Ditto on securities in the Credit Foncier in Paris Ditto in the provinces Ditto to the State Government stock reserve Ditto other securities Securities held Hotel and property of the bank & branches management BANK (Marked thus * are og National.) £ OS Pi GQ 20,277,600 597,500 451,100 60,000,000 12,980,750 36,171,987 100,000,000 14 91 00 1,434,879,190 3T LIST. Friday. Dividend. Periods. Amount. 12 50 78 0 602,600 0 447,900 0 60,000,000 0 12,980,750 14 36,171,987 91 100,000,000 0 8,434,874 0 1,299,027 6 14,072,885 86 0 0 0 8,436,074 0 1,489,250 34 14,396,322 46 1,479,629,048 15 STOCK Capital. Companies. 517,673,868 639,064 303,285.533 294,289,799 4,221,400 11,262,700 12,071,500 6,054,900 31,402,800 19,967,600 0 5,274,900 12,079,500 Paris 8,690,209 25 1,434,879,190 37 322,410,891 48 306,762,637 0 -. provinces Ditto on public securities Ditto in the provinces ' 214,345 82 Ditto in the not 885,438 75 10,892,607 7 2,074,992 92 59 1,479,629,048 15 Sundries 4,000,000 0 2,074,992 92 Surplus of receipts not Bid. Ask. Last Paid. 139 3,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66.. Jan. ’66....... 100,000 Jan. and July 4 500,000 April and Oct... Oct. ’65 5 113* 115 5,000,000 May and Nov... May. ’66..'. 6 102 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 300,000 6 Jan. and July..'. Jan. ’66 600,000 250,000 Bowery ’66 12 225 25 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. Broadway Jan. ’66 Jan. aiid July, 60 300,000 Brooklyn Apr. ’66 4 50 200,000 Quarterly... Bull’s Head* 5 126 25 800,000 Jan. and July .. Jan. ’66 Butchers & Drov.... May. ’66 6 107 107* 100 3,000,000 May and Nov Central Jan. ’66 6 50 200,000 Jan. and July Central (Brooklyn).. 7 25 450,000 Jan. and July .. Jan. ’66 Chatham ’66 6 100 300,000 .. Quarterly... Jan. Chemical Jan. ’66 6 400,000 Jan. and July. 25 Citizens’ 6 190 100 1,000,000 May and Nov... May. ’65 City 5 50 800,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 City (Brooklyn) lio* 110 ’66 100 10,000,000 Jan. and July. . Jan. Commerce 5 100 102 100 750,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 Commonwealth 5 98 100 100 2,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 Continental. 5 115 lOOi 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66 Corn Exchange* ... ioo! 200,000 ....; Croton 15 Apr. ’66 100 100,000 .Quarterly Currency 3* 30 200,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 Dry Dock* 4 99* 50 350,000 Jan. and Juty... Jan. ’66 East River 5 100 250,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 Eighth ...5 100 150,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 Fifth 10 205 100 500,000 May and Nov... May./66 First 10 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 First (Brooklyn). .. 5 103k 104 Jan. ’66 America* America (Jer. City) American American Exchange. Atlantic Atlantic (Brooklyn). . 100 25 100 100 100 60 . . Fourth Fulton Far. & Cit.(Wm’bg) Gallatin Greenwich* Grocers’ Hanover Importers & Trad.. Irving. LeatherManufact’rs 100 30 20 100 25 50 100 100 50 50 50 50 30 Manufacturers’ Manufac. & Merch.*. 100 100 Marine 100 Market. 25 Mechanics’ 50 Mechanics’ (Brook.) 50 Mech. Bank. Asso.. 25 Meehan. & Traders’ 100 Mercantile 50 Merchants’ 50 Merchants’ Exch.... 100 Metropolitan 100 Nassau* 100 Nassau (Brooklyn) 50 National 100 New York New York County.. 100 NewYorkExchange 100 100 Ninth 100 North America 50 North River* Lon" Isl (Brook.) . Mannattan* Ocean 50 * Oriental* Pacific Park Peoples’* £5,163 Increase. Increase. Increase. 899,969,375 0 196,808,025 60 33,514,576 0 838,963 75 11,607,297 35 Accounts current at Paris Ditto in the provinces Circulation. Capital. 407,509,203 407,859,203 407,858,203 407,858,203 407,858,203 409.408,203 1,643 1,644 the total 904,184,275 0 provinces Expenses of 407,759,203 1,629 1,630 1,637 1,643 * 10 36,032.862 407,599,203 407,759,203 407,759,203 1,629 17 March March 32.257.653 32,762,280 34,640,864 35,448,955 ending May 12, 1866. Banks. 6 13 20 27 44 32.144,250 8,794,348 8,930,420 : 44 82,102,427 Bank currency was issued, making Date. - 32,835,094 32,594,508 S,666,230 8,720,270 8,743,396 circi^ption to that date $272,878,845. The following comparison shows the progress of Banks, in respect to number, capital and circulation, 6,1866 33.052.252 8,761,219 8,779,166 Banks.—During the week $1,616,730 of National 34,464,070 33,926,542 8,248,100 8,438,184 8.580,200 912,023 896,741 48,006,654 May 5. May 12. 36.214.653 35,460,881 34,681,135 8,161.949 890.244 45.762.733 46.832.734 36,947,70' 7,732,i /TO 981,932 990,630 946,282 949,116 936,876 46.642.150 46,043 488 30,618,00* 7,668,365 7,819,599 7,843,002 996,312 953,207 1,026,408 1,041,392 1,055,694 1,026,068 690,788 46 35,342,30" 7,226,369 7,319,528 7,357,972 7,411,337 7,432,535 890,822 983,685 branches.. branches in the Treasury account Deposits- 182,600,000 0 7,044,776 2 22,105,750 14 22.105,750 14 4,000,000 0 New reserve . Notes in circulation and at the Drafts drawn by the bank on the of the bank payable in Paris or The following April^26, 1868. c. 182,500,000 0 7,044,776 2 Phoenix Republic St. Nicholas’ Seventh Wa.rd Second Shoe & Leather Sixth State of New Tenth Third .... York.. Tradesmen’s Union Williamsburg City*. 50 50 100 25 20 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 4C 60 5,000,000 Jan. and July... 5 600,000 May and Nov... via<-. ’66 5* 160,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 6 105 1,500,000 Apr. and Octf... Apr. ’66 6 130 200,000 Apr and Oct... Apr. ’66 Jan. ’66 5 300,000 Jan. and July... 6 110 1,000,000 Jan. and Jnly... Jan. ’66 4 1,500,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 5 111 500,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 5 600,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66 5 400,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66 5 132 2,050,000 Feb. and Aug, Feb. ’66 5 100 252,000 Apr. and Oct... Apr. ’66 5 105 500,000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66 Jan. ’66 6 400,000 Jan. and July. ..6 112 1,000,000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66 5 115 2,000,000 Jan. and July...' Jan. ’6i)..<i 6 500,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66... .5 104 600,000 May and Nov,.. May. ’66 May.’66 ....5 600,000 May and Nov. 5 1,000,000 May and Nov. May.’66 5 115 3,000,000 June and Dec .. Dec. ’65 Jan. ’66.. 5 115 1,235,000 Jan. and July... 6 122 4,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 5 1,000,000 Jan. and July .. Nov. ’65... 5 300,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 6 106 1,500,000 April and Oct... Apr. ’66 118 3,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 200,000 April and Oct... Jan- ’66.. 300,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66.. 110 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66.. Jan. ’66 6 109 1,000,000 Jan. and July... 6 400,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 4 99 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66 5 300,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66 ...6 160 422,700 Feb. and Aug.. Feb. ’66 7 2,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66...118 412,500 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66........5 105 4 1,800,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 5 110 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66 0 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66 106 ..i. lio" 15 107 60 115 120 150 107 ... 500,000 April and Oct.. Jan. ’66 300,000 May and Nov .. Nov. ’65 Jan. Nov. Nov. Jan. Jan. Jan. 110 112 100 150* 154 105’ i6T — 5 110 ’66 5 108 ’65 6 105 ’66 .......5 105 ’66 5 1,500,000 Jan. and July.. 200,000 May and Nov... 2,000,000 May and Nov... 1,000,000 Jan. and July... ’60 1,000,000 Jan. and July... ’66 1,000,000 Jan. and July... 1,500,000 May and Nov. May. ’66 60 500 000 Jan. and July.... Jan. ’66 125 110 ..5 7* 135 ...5 114 in iio‘ 621 THE CHRONICLE. [May 19, 1866. EXCHANGE. SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK (REPRESENTED BY THE American States United Stab ' do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, do do do do do do do do do do do 121% registered. coupon. 122 — preferred 119 Chicago, Burlington and Quincy registered. 109% 109 108% 108% 109 Chicago and Great Eastern coupon. '•09% 103% ; registered. 102 101% 101% 101% 101% 101% Chicago and Milwaukee Chicago and Northwestern coupon. do dov preferred 101% 102 1868 1868 1881 1881 5-20s 5-20s...: registered. 5-20s (2d issue) coupon 5.20s registered do 5.20s (3d issue) coupon 5.20s, —registered do Oregon War, 1881 102 registered: 96 coupon. 10-40s 95% 96% 96% 95% registered. R.. .{cur.). 1 stseries. %d series. Zd series. 102% 102% 102% 1C2% 102% 102.% 102% 102% 102% 102% 102% 102% 102% 102% 100% 100% 100% 100% 6s, Certificates, do Marietta and Cincinnati do do 1st do do 2d 108% do *. War Loan Indiana bs, do 5s War Loan do 7s, War Minnesota 8s Loan, 1878 Missouri 6s do 6s, (Hannibal and do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870... 74% 74% 74% 75 76 Panama Pittsburg, Fort Wayne 103% 10)% 103% 103% 103% 103% 84 So 90% 90% 84% 84% 90% North Carolina 6s Ohio 6s,1870-75 do 6s, 1881-86 Rhode Island 6s 6s Tennessee do. 68, Improvement Jersey City 6s, Water New York 7s, do 6s do 5s 1875 Stock Chicago and Alton, do do Ashburton Central. Consolidation 100 ..1(M) 45% 100 142 Hampshire and Baltimore 100 International .. so 50 Pennsylvania 100 100 Schuylkill Spring Mountain Spruce Hill Wilkesbarre 10 100 100 25 20 Wyoming Valley Go#.—Brooklyn (Brooklyn) 50 Jersey City aud Hoboken 20 50 Manhattan Metropolitan New York 100 50 Williamsburg 50 Improvement.—Boston W ater Power 20 Brunswick City Canton 100 Cary.... 100 100 100 Telegraph.—American 100 100 Russian Extension. 100 100 Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 46 14) — 68 ** 40 40 .100 109 100 78% guaranteed... 100 . 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 ... .100 and Chicago...... .100 50 Terre Haute 100 do preferred. 100 109% 109% 109% 80% 80% — 79% 80 80 — 93 — 56% 71% 56% 71% 85 94% 94% 28% 76 2 % 77 9S% 98% — 92% 92% 93% 93% 26% 26% 26% 27 98% 71 128 128 128 70 85 70% 71 99% 99% 100 , 107% 107% 107% 107% 107% 107% 30 34 66 -— 100 100 100 39 38 37 — 48 47 25 61% 225 218 61% 102% 130 do 10 Income 87 87 .... — consolidated do , 85 87 ., 99% — — - 80 99 99 218 218 New York do do do do do do 11% 22% 22% 22% 20% 12 21 22 ' . 99% 100 - St. 93 — — — 54% 54% 53% 52 54% — 93% 6s,1887 6s, Rertl Estate 6s, subscription 7s, 1876... 7s, convertible, 1876. 78, 1865-76...., do do do do * do do do do do 107% 108% 94% — 8S 94% _— = — 89% 94% 88 97 89 — — — — 92 92 — „ — — 102 l< 2 — — — 87 — 1st mort.. 10?% 102 Haute, 1st mort... 1st mortgage, extended. 2d mortgage Interest Bonds — 97 2d mort... 3d mort... do 2d, pref.,.. 2d, income. do Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage do do ' do 102% — Central 6s, 1S83. Louis, Alton and Terre do do 98 98 93 Bonds Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage Pittsburg, Ft. W'ayne and Chicago, do do — — Cincinnati, 1st mortgage,' do do do do do do - 100 convertible, 1867 Michigan Central Be, 1869-72 do do 8s, new, 1882 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund do do 2d mortgage, 7s do do Goshen Line, 1868 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage do do Income Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants 105% Copper... 15 100 25 10' i>5% 25 1st mortgage Illinois Central 7s. 1875 Lackawanna and Western 5 v. 1877 Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund. do do Interest do do Extension.... do do 1st mortgage., Marietta and 50 25 — — 60% 107% 132% 131% 131% 62% 60 100 100 100 do do do 59 5" 5 Gregory Gold ‘ Sinking Fund 85 143 45% 100 Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred 75 75 , 25 100 100 Mining.—Canada Copper Saginaw L. S. & M 16 43 100 Nicaragua Smith and Parmelee 16% 43 100 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust.! New York Life and Tru-t Union TruBt United States Trust Quicksilver 16 43 100 Transit.—Central American Rutland Marble 64 142% 100 100 100 New York Pacific Mail Pacific Mail Scrip Union Navigation -. — no 110% 111% 109% 110 122% 121% 121% 120% 120% Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage.... Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage do 3d mortgage, conv do do do 4th mortgage.. 110 Cleveland aud Toledo, Sinking Fund 100% 45% Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort. 45% 45 do do do 2d mort. 4% 4% 4% Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 39% do '2d mortgage, 1864 40 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 93 do 4th mortgage, 1880. do 5th mortgage, 1888, ,, 150 Galena and Chicago, extended .. do do 2d mortgage Hannibal anti St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72 do Consolidated and Sinking Fund 42 41 42% 38% do 2d mortgage, 1868 42% 8% 01% Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 60% 60% 59% 60 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 18S5 do 15% 14 15% 15% do 3d mortgage, 1875 Delaware and Hudson Quartz Hill 16% 43 100 Cumberland 65 64% 65 17 % 43 % 100 50 Minnesota Copper.... + Montana Gold New Jersey Consolidated New Jersey Zinc 79 100 Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort do do 2d mort Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort, Loan United Spates Western Union Western Union, St. Louis, Alton and do do Second avenue Sixth avenue Third avenue 74% 73% 74% 39 Toledo, Wabash and Western 50 do do do preferred.... 50 90 6S 89 .... Coal. -American Corake Iron Benton Gold Consolidated Gunnell Gold 90% Reading 75% Railroad Bonds: Miscellaneous Shares. Citizens Harlem 90% 68% Virginia 6s, coupon Municipal. Brooklyn 6s.. V..-. do ' 6s, Water Loan do 6s, Public Park Loan % 79% Norwich and Worcester Ohio and Mississippi Certificates do do do preferred.... 75 75 6s,1867-77 5s, 1868-76 7s, State Bounty Bonds do do do 71% 78 St. Joseph RR.)... 59 94 74 7 preferred..... .100 preferred 100 Moms aud Essex New Jersey New York Central New Haven and Hartford \. 28% 29% 58% 59 95% 93% 28% 59 94 83% 84% 84% 8-% 84% 86 104% 104% 104% 105 104% 50 100 50 100 Mississippi and Missouri Kentucky 6s, 1868-72...., Louisiana 6s. Michigan 6s — 176 44 68 28% 28% 28% 58% 59% 94% 03% do do Milwaukee and Prairie dn Chien 100 do do do 1st pref.. .100 do do do 2d pref ... 100 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 do do preferred do 1877 do 1879 do 43% 43 50 100 100 100 t Michigan Central Michigan So. and N. Indiana Canal Bonds,-I860 Registered, 1860 6s, coupon, ’79, after 1860-62-65-70. 115 , 50 Long Island 96 .. 100 100 Indianapolis and Cincinnati Joliet and Chicago — 101 116% 116 10i 100 100 50 McGregor Western State. do do do 50 .. Erie do preferred , Hannibal and St. Joseph do do preferred Harlem do preferred Hudson River Illinois Central Georgia 6s do 60 Delaware, Lackawanna and Western.. I. Eighth Avenue . 96 ..coupon. 1874 1874 10-40s 100 100 Cincinnati 96% 96% 97 ...100 Cleveland and Toledo 100 registered. 1871 Chicago and Rock Island Cleveland, Columbus and Cleveland and Pittsburg 99 — do 101% 102% 102 102 102 105 102% coupon. 1871 6s, Union Pacific R. 7-30s Treas. Notes do do do do do do 102% 102 102 yearly). do. do. do 113% 100 100 100 100 .100 Chicago and Alton 117 California 7s, large Connecticut 6s Illinois 100 Central of New Jersey 6s, 1867 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, A Railroad Stocks. Gold Coin National. Fri. Thur. Wad. Tuea. Mon. £>aiur SECURITIES. STOCKS AND fn. Tliur •V ed. Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. AND STOCKS FRIDAY, MAY &) CLOSING SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING ■ r — — 90 80 — 75 80% 81 15 — 74 75 75% 75 [May 19,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 622 LIST. NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES Payable. Bonds of 1847 do 1848...., do do do 1860 do do do do do do 1858 do 1861 do -Bid Rate .Asked Municipal Securities ..:129%;130 .* 8,908,342 6 registered, i | coupon. j Jan. 20,000,000 registered, j ) 282,728,150 coupon. & Jan. & registered, f July July '1881 ! July Oregon War Bds {yearly 1,016,000 do do (t yearly) couPon- • Bonds (5-20b) of 1862 coupon. ) 514,780,500 do do do [ Jan. & 99 1874-j | 108% 109 10334; 109 1881 i ! July 1881 300,000 ; City, Pa.—Citv Bds.; ... ... 1,500,000 ! 6 Loan...; 3,500,000 6 B.&O.R.coup I ! 5,000,000 ! 6 554,000 ! 6 J.,A.,J.&O. | ... 740,000! 6 ’74 1,265,610| 6 1,949,711 \ ?% 993,000! 634,2Q0! 1,281,000' 121,540! 5,550,600; ' 216,0001 299,000j .. Jan. & July'1876 do j ’79 ’87 do x 11888 1,030,000 ... Apr. & Oct. jl895 Jan. & July . — Massachusetts—State Scrip do do do do do do do War Loans State Scrip do do War Loan .... .... 5,398,000 ! 6 532,000 ! 6 4.S00.’000i 6 2,450,000 6 1,088,(100 ' 6 250,000 ; 7 1,750,000; 6 Michigan—$2,000,009 Loan do do do do Renewal Loan 216,000! do < War Loan 1,122,000 do War Bounty Loan j 345,0001 Minnesota—State Bonds I 250,000 ' Missouri—State Bonds 602,000 do State Bonds for RR,.. 13 701 000 do State Bonds (Pac. RR)1 7,000,000 ’ do State Bonds (H,&St.J) n a ' 1 3,000,000 do Revenue Bonds' [ New Hampshire—State Bonds. 535.100 do War Fund Bds 1,650,000 New Jersey—State Scrip 95,000! j { 431,000' do New York*! War Loan Bonds.. do do do General Fund. do do do do do Bounty Bonds. do do do do do d# | Canal Bonds. do do do do do North Carolina -State Bonds.. 6 7 7 9 6 6 6 800,000 25,566,000 6.000,000| 2,250,000! 500,000 900.000 167,000 4,500.000 9,749,500 1.600,000 6 2,400,000 1 Militarv L’n Bds1 Rhode Island—State (War) Bds ; South Carolina—State Stock... i Tennessee—Improvement Bonds! do Improvement Bonds Coupon Bonds. Sterling Bonds War Fund Bonds... War Fund G&ztiS.. 6 ; do 1878 Jan. & July 1877 Ja. &Ju " JAJ&O 1866 do '1872 do i 1873 do ;1S74 do '1875 do 1877 do 1866 1868 do do 1871 1874 ;t 1033*' 103% New York do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do Jan. & July do do do do do do eSooo 5 90 oau non k 29,209,000 5 3.000,000 6 3,889,000 6 : 3.691.000 ' 6 2,347,340 5 2,115,400 6 13,911,900 6 • Various. var. i var. Jnn. & Dec. 1’71 ’78 Jan. & July !’84 ’95 do i’86’95 do il872 Jan. & July!’67 ’68 do j’77’88 4.L200 000 6 ^5sQ00i 6 Apr. & OctJ 93* VS do do do do CrotonW’r S’k W’r S’k of ’49 W’r S’k of ’54 Bu. S’k No. 3. Fire Indem. S. Central P’k S. Central P’k S. Central P’k S, C.P.Imp. F. S. C.P.Imp. F. S. Real Estate B. Croton W’r S. Fl.D’t. F’d. S. Pb.B.Sk. No. 3 Docks&SlipsS Pub. Edn. S’k. Tomp.M’ket S Union Def. L. Vol. B’nty L’n Vol.Fam.AidL Sol.B’ntyFd.B Riot Dam.R.B Railroad B’ds City Loan.... Rochester, N. Y.—City Bonds... do do City Bonds... Railroad Sacramento, Cal.—City Bonds... do St. 85% 88 90% 90% 68 County B’ds Louis, Mo.—Municipal. Real Estate...*. do do do do do do do do do San Francisco, do do do do do do . Sewerage Improvement.. Water Harbor Wharves Pacific RR O. & M. RR.... Iron Mt. RR Cal.—City Bonds, City Fire B. City' Bonds, C.&Co’tyB. C.&Co’tyB. C.&Co’tyB. C. -fcCo’t.yB. WjfjffHOTOBr, Del—City Banda. ■100 ; 100 ! 99% 90 91 95 88 S7 Jan. & July! 1871 Various. '65 ’72 Jan. & Julyi’75 ’77 Various, j’65’80 Feb. & Aug 1882 Jan. & July 1876 June&Dec. 1883 Various. *65 ’81 do ’65 ’75 Jan. & July ’77 ’83 Various. ! 6 6 !10 1 ' f 8 911,500, 4 219,000’ 6 100.000, 7 425,000 5 60,000 6 150,000' 5 200,000; 6 3,000,200! 5 2,147.000; 5 900.000; 5 100.000; 6 483,900! 1,878,900! 190,000 402,76S. 399,300 3,066,071 275,000 2,083,200 1,966,000 600,000 1,800,000 2.748,000 150,000 500,000 154,000 102.000 895,570 490,000 1,000,000 2.500,000 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 5 6 1,400,000 2,000,000 6 949.700 6 4,996,000 1.442.100 500,000! 300,0001 200,000! 6 6 5 5 6 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 5 5 150,000; 7 260,000j 6 1.496.100 | 6446,800: 6 1,464,000! 6 523,000 ' 6 425,000! 6 254,000; 6 484.000! 6 239,000) 6 163,000: 6 457.000; 6 429,900 ' 6 285,000 6* 1,352,600 10 178,500 10 329,000 6 1,133,500 6 300,000 7 V 960,000 7 1.000.000 338,075 7 do j ' S3%; 95 94% 95 93 94 92 var. var. May &Nov. 1887 Jan. & July! do June &Dec. 1894 Feb. & Augj’70 ’83 Jan. & July (1873 ' Apr. & Oct.l’65’84 Jan. & Julyi’67 ’87 Apr. & Oct:’73 ’84 JaD. & July *70 ’81 F.M. A.&N. 1870 1880 do 1890 do 1890 do do |’75 ’79 1875 do * do 92 92 94 i’70’73 Feb. & Aug, 1868 F.M. A.&N. 1898 do do do do do do do do do do do May & Nov. do do do May &.Nov. 1887 1898 1887 95% 1876 94 1873 1883 1878 94 1866 ’67 ’76 1873 ’66’ 69 1864 1867 1865 ’66 ’73 ’75-’89 94 ’73-’76 80-’81 ’a3’90 ’77-’82 ’65 ’81 ’65 ’82 ’65 ’93 94% ’65 ’99 98% do do do do Jan. & July do do do Jan. & July var. 1913 do ’66’as Various. Apr. & Oct. ’68’71 Mar.&Sept. 1885 Jan. & July 1876 1893 do ’65 ’82 Various, ’65 ’82 do Jan. & July ’65 ’76 Jan. & July 88- 98 1884 do Jan. & July ’65 ’83 65’90 do 79 ’88 do ’71 ’87 do 71 ’83 do ’65’86 do do ’67 ’81 71 ’73 do 72 ’74 do 74’77 do May & Nov. 1871 Jan. & July 1866 1875 do 1888 do ’77 ’78 do April & Oct. isas Jan. & July!1884 various, v 98% 68* 94' 94 \ ,95% in 93%! 94 do j var. do 11879 do (1890 (• '1871 do June &Dec.!’69’79 7 do do do do do Apr. & Oct. 1868 175.000, 6 1,650,000 6 do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do Vol.Fam.AidL NewYorkC’nty.—C’t House S’k do do Sol.Sub.B.R.B do Sol.S.&Rf.R.B do ■ do ; var. i 86 Feb. & Ang.il871 !l00 Jan. & July! 71 ’941 95% Jan. & July !’68 ’90 do ;1S68 Jan. & July; long 118,000- 7 650,000: 552.700 CityBds,new 739,222 City Bds,old 2,232,800 CityBds,new 7,898,717 Pittsburg, Pa.—City Bonds .1,009,700 do Railroad Bonds. 1,800,000 Portland, Me.—City Bonds 985,326 do Railroad Bonds, 1,500,000( Providence, R. I.—City Bonds... 600,000' 1860 1865 1868 1870 1875 1881 1886 ! City—Water Stock.. do Water Stock CrotonW’rS’ki' do Philadelphia, Pa.—City Bds,old May & Nov. ’68-’71 1,S00,000 6 300,000 G Wisconsin—State Bonds do 11878 31,888,898 6 12,972,000 6 Virginia—Registered Bonds * 1868 do City Bonds |New Bedford, Mass.—City Bds. New London, Ct.—City Bonds... 'Newport, R. I.—City Bonds INew Haven, Ct.—City*Bonds var. 4,095,309! 6 do do do July var. July ’71 ’72| J.Ap.J.&O. !1870 ; 100 Jan. & July pleas. | . 379,866 ! 6 2,183,532; 6 .* Bonds....! Jan. & Jnn. & ■ 192,585 1,163,000 Domestic Loan Bonds War Loan 6 3,050,000! 6 Loan Loan Loan Loan ; pleas. May & Nov.! 1868 Jan. & July 1875 900.000! P*ra8TLTAHii-StateBond8.::::| do State Stock do ilS66 !Jan. <fcJulv;i874 do do do 909,607 442,961 Foreign Loan 1 !’72 ’87 i’72 ’85' do do do 500,000' 800,000 562,268 1,009,500 .. May & Nov.; 1890 125,000, 130,000 600,000; 375,000 ' 6 122,000 6 .. (Newark, N. J.—City Bonds..... 94 do 11894 jJan. & July ’71 ’74ji07%'l07% do 1’75,7S;^^1 do ;1883 1 ;Jan. & July'1868 ! do 1’73 ’83! do '1878 I do H886 ! 400,000 .. (Milwaukee, Wis.—City, re-adj’d J01 j 319,457! . City Bonds..T do !May & Nov.jlSSO 6 6 Marysville, Cal.—City Bonds 86 ;Jan. & July ’71 ’89! 700,000' Ohio—Foreign Loan, do Foreign Loan do Railroad Bonds. Vermont—State Certificates Various. 6 1,189,780 Foreign Foreign Foreign Foreign Quarterly !Jan. & July; 1867 do * (1883 - 702,000 100 100 1870 ;i00 ’68 ’74! 8 6 731,000 do do do do do do (Quarterly ; var. Quarterly 1890 8,192,763 ! 6 1,727,000 6 672,0 >0; 5 220,000 5 6,429,000! 5 j JulypSO *89) Water Bonds do ■t 9 % Apr. & Oct. 1865 650,000 N. J.—City Bonds. J City Bonds. * Water Bds 7 i 20,000 256,368 50,000 ..j Water Bonds.. 83 95 ■ „ Louisville, Ky.—City Bonds.... do City Bonds.... 963*-; 97 Mar.&Sept.i’eO'67, 95- j 97 Jan. & 6 5 8,171,9i>2 do Jersey Citt, do do do do 97 97 ’72j 516,000; 6 3.942,000 ! 6 1.150,064 .... do ;1877 Jan. & Julyi’76 *78; Jan. & Julv *66 ’731 do ’63 dein. j 67 .69 300,000! 200,000' 447,000) 3.204,000 ! 6 ’78 ’79 ’65 *85 ’67 ’77 ’72 ’73 ’70’78 Jan. & July ’65’71 '65 ’95 do ' 1869 do ’81 ’97 do ’65 ’79 ’65 ’82 Apr. & Oct. jl881 571,000; 360,000; 913,000' ... do War Loan Bonds Kansas—State Bonds Kentucky—State Bonds State Bonds do Louisiana—State Bonds (RR) do State Bonds (RR).... do State Bonds for B’ks, Maine—State Bon ds do War Loan I Maryland—State Bonds { do State Bds .coupon. 1 do StateBds inscribed ( do State Bonds.coM/wn. !’6o 4 5 6,580,416; ' |l690-| jlS90’82 *65 M.J.S&&D. ' 100% July!l886 197,7001 6 583,206; 100 101 May & Nov 1875 Jan. & __ 95 do |1S70 Jan. & July 1S73 1,000,000 ! 6 B. &O. Park DA A>ked J.,A.,J.&O. !1870 YorktvCum.R. \ n j j -j |102 1 820,000, 6 RR../ May & Nov. 1882 j) !101 % 10134 1013*110134; j ! 10234 Bangor, Mo.—Citv Debt do do 1864 coupon. i May& Nov.j1884/ do do do .registered. 1100,000,000 . do Railroad Debt 110234 Boston, Mass,—City Bonds do do 1865 coupon. i 71,003,500 1 May & Nov. i 1885 do City Bonds do do do .registered. } | do 96 City Bonds.....* do (10-40s) 1864 ...coupon. Mar.&Sept,; 1904-j 96 do Water Loan Stg 1171,219.100! do do .registered. do do Water Loan Jan. & July 1895 4,634,000 6 Union Pacific RR. 3onds of 1865 !7.30 Feb. & Aug.! 1867 ries) 1 Treasury Notes (1st series) 10234(1023* Brooklyn, N.Y.—City Bonds do -< 816,512,650 7.30jJun. &Dec.;1868 ries) Improve’t St’k do do (2d series 10234! 1023* do Pub. Park L’n. 7.30 j Jan. & July 1868 do do ries) 102>4 1023* ( (3d series Debt Certificates do Water Loan... 62,620,000 6 j Maturity" jl year IOO34 10034 Buffalo, N.Y.—Municipal Bonds State Securities!. I May & Nov 11877 do Alabama—State Bonds Municipal Bonds 2,109,001) do do Chicago, Ill.—City Bonds do ! 648,000 jJan. & July|1876 (Sterling) do do 1876 j do do do do 688,000 6 City Bonds ! do i !( CALiFORNiA-State Bonds do ’72 ’80 108 Sewerage Bonds I 2,472,000 ; 7 do Water Bonds ! do do State Bonds large f ( j Connecticut—War Bonds 97 Cincinnati, O.—Municipal 8,000,000 ^ 6 •Jan. & July ’72 ’92 96 do Water Bonds Jan. & July 18S0 ! 100 Georgia—State Bonds 2.073,750 6 do do ,1S72 do do Cleveland, O —City Bonds i 525,000 7 Water Bonds.... do 93 Illinois—Canal Bonds 1,2S8.S87! 6 !Jan. & July! 1870 do do ;is70 i 9S do do do Registered Sewerage Bonds. j 1,758,406 6 ’60 ’65' 98do do Detroit, Mich.—City Bonds., 1,386,570; 6 Coupon Bonds '69 ’70 93 do do do do do City Bonds 2,371,725! 6 do ’76 \77: 98 do do do City Bonds.... 1,773,677 6 h° do Water Bonds. 1879 ! 98 do do do do 241,000 6 1879 do War Loan Bonds do Dubuque, Io.—City Bonds ... ; 18 1,157,700! 6 do Railroad Indiana—State Bonds Jan. & July 1 1866 2:36,000; 5 do do do do i 1 1866 Hartford, Ct.—City Bonds j 2,058,173 23* do Park Bonds do War Loan Bonds May & Nov 11868 ! 1,225,500. do Railroad Bonds..! Iowa—State Certificates Jan. & Jnly'18S6 200.0001 .registered — 6 N.W.VLrg.RR.j Water FRI Bid. do 1879 Jan. & July var. do (1913 > Miscellaneous. do do do do do do do 96 104 104 1 Water Loan Alb. Nor. RR...! Due. Jan. & July ,’70’74 do I’65 ’69 do !’70 ’82 $90,000 6 225,000! 6 850,0001 6 . City Scrip Payable. ) 6 do RR. Bds. j 600,000; 4 Baltimore, Md.—Improvement..; 4,963,000 5 101 99 & July 1871 ■ 'jan. 5 7,022,000 do do do Alleghany do 1867 122 1122% 'Jan. & July. 1868- ;118%;119% 118 1193* Jan. & July 6 9.415,250 registered. coupon. \ registered, j coupon, ( Albany, N.Y.—City Scrip Princi¬ pal Outstanding. DENOMINATIONS. Due. INTEREST. amount FRIDAY. pal Kate American Gold Coin. Princi INTEREST. Amount Outstanding. DENOMINATIONS. 96 96 85 85 85 The ®J)e Commercial ®imeo. r~~™~COMMERCIAL EPITOME. receipts of domestic produce for the week ending May 18, since Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1865, RECEIPTS OP DOMESTIC PRODUCE FOR week. 262 essential change in the aspect of trade. There is not so in a speculative advance in leading staples, as was shown a week ago. The report that the government is selling gold, is one cause of this reversion of feeling ; but another and probably the main cai «e is the better supplies of such articles of domestic produce as were in the catalogue of speculative articles. Cotton has advanced, but the upward movement is checked. Breadstuff's, with unimportant exceptions, show some decline in pri¬ no Ashes, pkgs... Breadstuff's— Flour, bbls 48,659 Wheat, bush 7,845 Oats 103,575 the most marked uniform declining tendency ; the 1. 2,191 6,991 Rosin Tar Pitch 858,895 38,450 Oil cake, 6,325 Same Jan.l. time’65 10,702 159,385 84,885 1,106 86,181 .... in Flour and Wheat, although the receipts are Provisions have shown a pretty follows; week. Jan. 1. time’65 .. the average. yet much below as as 3,310 611,953 pkgs 6,064 79,441 2,592 8,395 125 521,2411,854,590 ! Oil lard Com.. 168,543 692,024 746,570,Oil, Petroleum. 15,174 887,437 151,560 95 Peanuts, bags. 6,417 14,270 15,285 ~ Rye 130 Provisions— Malt 21,500 201,686 132,290 Butter, pkgs. 8,110 Barley 2,976 121,435 ♦247,945 886 Cheese Grass seed... 45,966 15 98,S66 Cut meats... 2,626 78,495 83,117 Flaxseed.... 3,781 1,559 63 Beans 32,822 4,898 78,003 Eggs Pork 84,174 106,470 Peas 1,351 21,343 C. meal,bbls. 2,271 Beef, pkgs. .. 43,798 +157420 40 48,358 59,155 74,295 Lard, pkgs... 1,012 C. meal.bags. 1,278 194,879 8,984 Lard, kegs B. W. Flour, 1,440 6,045 Rice, pkgs 65 bags 600 40.846 3,799 315,053 184,765'Starch Cotton, bales 185 iStearine. 3,994 2.720 Copper, bbls... 547 ....|Spelter, slabs.. 1,628 Copper, plates. 161 | Sugar, hhds & 5,223 Driedfruit,pkgs bbls 1,408 248 1,6:53 Grease, pkgs... 92 2,313 345 8,645 11 iTallow, pkgs.. Hemp, bales... 62,192 1,592 | Tobacco 8,684 209,976 Hides,No 12,482 3,3*24 12,560:Tobacco, hhds. 2,479 Hops, bales.. . 869 33,507 22,400 Leather, sides. 33,882 793,480 779,600 Whisky, bbls.. 797 24,460 82,408 Wrool, bales... Lead, pigs 3,117 Dressed Hogs, Molasses,hhds, 81,769 No & bbls. 5,959 much confidence ces : have been THE WEEK, AMD SINCE JAN. [Of the items left blank in 1865 no record was made.] This Since This Since Same Friday Night, May 18. There is 623 THE CHRONICLE. May 19,1866.] on. .... .. ly marked exception being Beef, which is scarce ; and the decline most decided in Pork and Lard, which had advanced most, and are still very — high. There is no increase in the receipts of Pork, but extravagant prices are found to check consumption and shipment very materially » and the only safety of holders is in a liberal reduction of stocks, as the season .... ......... .... .... The advance in Lard has stopped shipments to reduced the exports to other markets usually dependent besides there is a considerable city Lard making; and the progresses. Europe, and .... Rice, Naval Stores— Crude trp,bbl upon us; decline in Butter threatens to soon rough, 15,704 bush 19,170 Spirits turp¬ permit it to be taken in place of entine.:... 12,626 Lard. There is a pause in the advance in Bacon and Cut Meats, but Including malt. + Including bags reduced to barrels. the decline is slight as yet. Butter is comiog forward liberally, and The following table shows the foreign imports of certain leading prices have declined the past week 6c@10c. Cheese is unsettled. Groceries have in most items been drooping under large supplies. articles of commerce at this port for the week ending May 11, since Jan. Coffee has been very dull and gold prices are tending downward: 1, 1866, and for the corresponding period in 1865 : the stocks in this market and in the country are excessive. Sugar ar¬ [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Same Since For Same Since For rived in large quantities early in the week; while business hag been time Jan. 1, the time Jan. 1, the 1865. 1866. week. 1865. moderate. Quotations are nominally unchanged. Molasses has also 1866. week. 5.907 193 1,908 Hardware... 895 63 2,959 arrived freely, with sales amounting to about seven thousand hhds., Buttons 63,757 68,934 206 43,862 Iron, RRb’rs 1,634 220,688 Coal, tons 184.288 68,830 1,083 Lead, pigs.. 8,109 50 6,073 including Barbadoes, at 64c, and prime Porto Rico, at 7‘2@75c Rice Cocoa, bags... 24,972 303,675 194,402 Spelter, lbs.Ill,582 4,971,887 Coffee, bags 29,869 64,962 has been quiet, and Teas without important movement. 5,673 31 17,105 Steel To-day’s mar Cotton, bales. 1,538 156,648 14,392 280,693 Tin, bxs Drugs, &c. ket was firm for Sugar and active for Molasses. 1,100 Tin slabs,lbs 89,149 3.056,314 1.175,268 2,776 Bark, Peruv 826 14,140 19,408 8,882 Rags 7,579 Blea p’wd’rs Petroleum has ruled heavy for two or three days past, and prices are 374 1,168 Snerar, hhds, 7,808 Brimst, tns. 81,714 82,585 819 tes & bbls.. 9,880 227 Cochineal... barely supported at the close. The price of crude at the wells has ad 115,811 138,3S9 2 T9 Sugar,bxs&bg 9,180 619 5 Cr Tartar vanced from $3 to $5 50 per bbl, and is now free of Government tax Tea... 16,157 399.025 312,202 5,765 Gambier.... 4,283 68 10,380 82 1,026 Tobacco 5,474 Tobacco is more active, part for export—and we notice shipments of Gums, crude 7 2,871 4,613 78 T Waste 1,945 Gum, Arabic 150 hhd. Virginia to London. 1,628 2,061 Wines, &c. Wool has been active and buoyant. 51 Indigo 7,247 50,691 10 1,543 Champ, bkts 2,146 6,777 Madder. Oils have been active and advancing. Crude Sperm has brought 156,092 21,330 17,272 598 Wines 2.057 32 Oils, ess 20,090 34,525 7,241 Wool, bales... 1,011 169 36,449 $2 80 per gallon ; Crude whale $1 15 ; prime Lard Oil 82 ; Linseed Oil, Olive... 297 Articles reported by value. 341 Opium Oil 81 55 in large lots. The stocks of all descriptions have been re¬ 58,050 21,088 Cigars $43,022 $537,031 $136,647 Soda, bi-carb 1,846 48,199 48,557 576 5,247 Corks 10,919 Soda, sal.... duced materially. 10,964 Fancy goods.. 72.713 1,687,484 629,604 288 16,767 Soda’ ash... 4,274 576,062 260,919 1,502 Fish 17 5,035 Hides and Leather have ceased to advance, and have taken a slight Flax ♦ .... .. «... ... . . ... .. .... ^ turn Furs downward. Gunny cloth Naval Stores have been less active, and are without essential change Hair Hemp, bales.. Hide’s, &c. 83 60 for 280 lbs. Bristles speculative demand. Closing at an advance of Hides, dres’d 1,000 lbs. common Rosin sold to-day at Tallow has beeni . n lb. Metals have been decidedly more active, especially Copper and Lead which close with some improvement. Pig Iron and Straits Tin have been in good demand. Spelter and Zinc steady. But latterly all kinds India rubber.. Ivorv have been quiet. East India goods are irregular. Gunny Cloth, Gunny Bags, and Cal¬ cutta Linseed have continued in speculative demand, with further ad¬ vance iu prices. But Hemp, Saltpetre, <fcc., remain dull and The whole close quiet. Molasses Metals, &C. about one cent per neglected. Cotton shipments have been limited to a few hundred bales. We notice, however, in the past three days a consider¬ able revival of shipments, of Corn to Liverpool, amounting’ to about 1*25,000 bushels, mostly by steamers, at 8£d@4d per 56 lbs. The sail vessels are getting very little. Freights continue dull. EXPORTS OF LEADING ARTICLES. The following table shows the exports from this port of some leading articles of commerce for the week ending May 14, since January 1, 1866, and for the corresponding Ashes, pts, bbls Ashes, Prls,bls Beeswax, lbs. Breadstuff's. Flour, bbls. C.meal,bbls Wheat, bus. Rye, bash Corn, bush. Oats,bush.. Peas, bush.. Candles, bxs. Cotton, bales. Hay, bales Hops, bale*.. Naval Stores, S.Turp;bbl# TaiVbblg ' Oranges 56,561 865 4,178 10,730 ' 883 26 22 303 464 132,048 42,625 2,274 215 Cutlery 2,408 • . Since Same Jan. time • 15,024 Nuts 4.298 390,223 Hides,nndrsd. 92,531 2,658,049 1,180,289 633,756 164,292 1,214 Rice 11,285 Spices, &c. Raisins . 120 . . Cassia 224 425 Ginger Pepper 14,108 8,961 Woods. Fustic £3,032, Logwood 824. 19.872 112,736 27,231 3,064 * .. Manogany / and Foreign Produce Markets have though prices have been generally maintained. Cocoa.—1788 bags offered at auction chiefly • • « — 62,385 967 75,876 48,88C 15,090 189 235 Saltpetre.... 97.923 26,629 51,696 71,406 87,027 been quiet during the week , . , , consisted of Grenada which brought 65s@68s for common to mid, and 70s 6d@,79s for fine. 84 bags Surinam sold at extreme rates, yiz, 85s 6d@S8. Copper lower.—Tough Cake £86, best Selected £89, Sheathing £91, Y. M. Of 500 bales Manila, from New York, offered at public sale, about half sold from £45@£45 15s for fair current quality, being again easier.—Jute : the demand continues limited; of 1170 bales at public sale 750 bales realised previous rates, viz, £11 for rejections, fpom £13 10s@£17 10s for common and miBoS—Welsh quiet; rails and bars £6 16s f. o. b. in Wales. Scotch pigs 70s cash for mixed Nos. on the Clyde. Linseed—We are without arrivals during the week. On the spot the demand is limited and prices again easier, Calcutta Deing obtainable at 67s 9d. and Bom¬ bay at 69s 6d. For arrival there is very little disposition to buy at current rates. Linseed Cakes are in fair demand at £11 l*'e for New York in barrels, and £1015s in bags. Naval Storks—French Spirits Turpentine on the spot nominally 49s, imme¬ diate shipment 45s fid@46e. American 50s, Rosin : Brai Clair 10s 6d, Noir8s, American common 8s. Petroleum: we have a quiet market, and very little , For the week. • • .... .... May 4th, Baring’s Circular Reports. Our Colonist 34,657 196,561 530,021 207,164 192,851 139,478 594,031 270 • ^ x . 1, ’66. ’65. 176 925 Pitch, bbls. 39 211 Oil cake,100 lb 25,918 218,139 132,821 *884 90,443 103,787 Oils. Petrol., gals 502,4689,969,4812.966,226 80 10,900 9,454 30,738 387,556 458,637 Whale, gals 34,740 67,696 3,856 47,810 52,890 Sperm, gals 22,821 doing; the price on the spot is 2s 2d. 8,385 l",343 102,409 206,855 Lard, gals.. Spelter dull at £2215s@£23. * , , Provisions. 225 181,837 Oils.—Fish: a few transactions reported in sperm at £124@125, pale seal 53,008 42,550 Pork. bbls.. 2,387 57.324 2,176,902 156,156 1,075 665,908 Beef,Dbls&tcs. 1,463 34,293 46,675 £52 in retail; pale southern £50, cod £47 10s. Linseed is steady at £33 on the 3,466 210,216 205,002 spot : in Hull settlements of last month's delivery have been made as low as 2,152 Bacon,1001b £4,528 615 55,573 35s 9d; we now quote spot 36s 9d, month 37s 6d ; the export thence for 8,132 2,917 Butter, 100 Tb 29,297 32,872 91,813 week has been 203 tons against 630 tons corresponding week last year 6,253 .252,070 16,777 Cheese, 100 Tb 1,972 Rice.—For soft grain qualities prices have given way; 50,000 bags have 6,5 2 131,030 135,534 17,582 Lard, 100 Tb 3,634 352 5,117 changed hands at 10s for Necranzie, 10s 6d for Bassein, and lls 5 56,034 460 11,006 Staves M, 88,680 67,907 8,440 Tallow, 100 lb 37,481 59,700 ^°9pices—Black Pepper: market dull; 2,600 bags Penang were only partly dis¬ 512 1,885 11,856 Tobacco, pkgs 596 Tobaeco.mf,n>e. 218,794 1,? 12,921,640,947 posed of at 8>£d fojr common; 300 bags Singappre at 3%d; 850 bags Tellicherry 95 3,580 were bdught in at 3^d. Nutmegs: 250 40,910 273,747 4,618 99,016 &351 #0 350,l;r?rel8 ah4 25 casks Jamaica partly bage 'wild were withdrawn. Ginger : from 64s^72e for 13,438 m m , , the * C.Turp.bblf Rosing bbls, the week. 128 : Lemons 11,069 Watches.... Linseed London, 959 2.4S2 85 129 172.- 1,506 Fruits, &c. 1,098 10,583 8,011 .... . • period in 1865 Since Same Jan. time 1, ’66. ’65. 1,875 3,071 For Jewelrv, &c. Jewelry 1.614 69 100 18 525 1 3d for fine Ran- ‘ prd to good .4 THE CHRONICLE. 624 [May 19,1866. ord. 1.220 bales and 1,600 pockets Clove Stalks were withdrawn at 2Xdbags Pimento were taken in from 2%d@2% for common to mid. In Sugab the limited business has been at the full prices of last week. 3,968 hales, against 6,228 bales last week, and the shipment of 5.562 bales, against 9.886 bales last week, and 13,771 bales the previous week. The shipments for the week ending 'May 11 were : to Liverpool, 4,289 Tallow is flat—St. Petersburg Y. C. 47s on the spot, and 48s 6d for the end of the year. bales; to New York, 1,222 bales, and to Baltimore, 50 bales. Market Tea—The public sales on the 1st inst. comprised 8,752 pkgs, the whole of has been unsettled, holders showing an indisposition to sell. Freights which passed, and 7,622 sold, nearly the whole without reserve. No alteration to Liverpool are $d.@|d., and to domestic ports $c bv steamers. In prices. The market has since been quiet, but more demand expected next Below is the usual weekly statement: week. Common Congou Is Id $ lb. , , Lead Arm—Common pig £21@<£21 10s. Tin—English dull; Blocks 91s, Bars 92s, Refined 94s. 78fl®79s, Banca 80s 6d cash. Foreign lower; Straits COTTON. Friday, P. M., May 18 Week end’g Week end’g /—April 13—, /—April 20—, Sea Isl. Upl’d. Seals*. Upld. 281 Stock Sept. 1 3,724 281 3,724 Receiv. this week 93 5,757 6,081 Received prev 7,082 184,503 . 7,721 1S9,830 Week end’g Week end’g /—April 27—, —May 11—, Sealel, Upl’d. Sealsl. Upld. 281 281 50 855 3,724 fr 6,228 8,484 203,037 66 3,724 3,913 209,265 Total receipts 8,002 199,635 8,S31 212,989 1,186 216,002 8,056 193,984 receipts the past week at all the porta reached about 20,000 299 13,472 181 624 4,9:58 9,205 Export, this week 5 3,535 bales, and the exports about 30,000 bales, aud the 6tccks, at latest Exported prev... 7,180 172,414 8,248 194,282 7,259 177,049 8,067 185,077 dates, amounted to 417,926 bales. The total receipts since September Total exports. 7,185 175.949 8,872 199,220 7,558 190.521 8,248 194,282 Stock on hand.. 444 531 17,923 971 583 18,707 20,699 9,114 1 now amount to 1,842,663 bales, and since the close of the war, 2,259, Mobile. May 12.—By mail we have received one week’s later dates 165 bales, and the exports since September 1 are 1,357,252 bales Below we give our table of the movement of cotton at all the ports from Mobile. The receipts for the week endiug May 12th were 3,045 bales against 3,114 bales last week, aud the shipments were 9,019 since September 1, showing at a glance the total receipts, exports bales against 12,674 bales last week ; leaving the stock on hand and on stocks, dec. shipboard not cleared at 43,808 bales. Exports during the week were 7,842 bales to Liverpool, and 1,177 bales to Havre, There were no RECEIPTS AND EXPORTS OF COTTON (BALES) 8INCE SEPT. 1, AND STOCKS shipments to northern ports. The following are the weekly receipts for AT DATE8 MENTIONED. The .. a Rece’d ,—Exported since Sept. 1 to—> Shipm’ts since Sept. 1. Ports. Great Brit’n. Other France. to North. Total. 44 for’gn. ports. Orleans, May 11 629,894 303,964 114,137 18,706 436,807 188,163 154,369 37.318 Mobile, May 11 390,882 210,101 1,579 248,998 94,118 43,808 406 Charleston, May 11.. 88,653 31,740 5,959 38,105 40,253 5,838 78.390 124,622 Savannah, May 11... 221,778 1,492 76,898 18,454 Texas, May 5 1,770 1,739 157,041 53,095 56,604 60,054 11,715 New York, May 18*. 128,570 375,739 34,697 39,401. 449,837 177,000 Florida, April 21.... 136,752 31,772 31,772 113,433 6,742 N. Carolina, May 18.. 59,601 21 21 59,601 Virginia, May 18 29,492 29,492 Other ports, May 18 290 16.718 16,423 .... .... .... .... * • • .... .... Total • .... .... 1,842,6631,099,758 195,342 62,1521,357,2521,319,741 417,926 By Railroad, Canal and River. To forecast, at the present time, the future of the cotton market is unusually difficult. Yery large arrivals at Liverpool, increased ship¬ ments from India and Brazil, the continued receipts at our own ports, with rumors of war have served so to in : 14,659 Marcfc ’9... 44 9 16 23 Mar. 2 44 12,034 April The market closed 11,175 April 13 20 5,585 16... 23... 30... 6 44 9,791 9,299 U 44 7,270 May 5,159 5,393 4,664 3,114 3,045 27 4 6,841 May 11..:..:. the 12th inst. firm, with Middling at 32c@38c* Exchange sterling 137@138; sight on New York from f@.f pre¬ mium, freights to Liverpool fd, coastwise fc@lc. The statement on for the last four weeks is Week .... • .... 44 Stock. New .... series of weeks Feb. 2 * t f St’k Sept. 1,’65 Rec. this week.. Rec. previously. follows: as We« k ending /—Arpil 21—, 24,290 5,393 ending Weekending /-Arpil 2S—, 24,290 Weekending ,—May 5.—, ,—May 12.—, 24,290 24,290 4,6-4 3,114 3,045 374,646-3S0,039 380,039-384,723 ‘384,723-387,837 387,837-390,882 404 329 409,013 3,8:55 10,024 342.455 Exp. previously. 332,431 Burned and lost. 3,381-345,836 3,381-349,671 412,127 Exp. this week. On hand & shipsniphoard not cl’d. 58,493 415,172 12,674 346,290 9,019 358,964 3,381-362,345 3,381-371,364 59,342 49,782 48,808 New Orleans, May 12.—The mail returns for the week ending May 12 show the receipts to be 5,799 bales, against 10,888 bales last week. Later dates by telegraph indicate that the receipts this week will be still less. The shipments for the week reached 8,266 bales, a9 follows: To Liverpool, 5,914 bales; to Havre, 1,713 bales; to New York 405 bales ; to Boston 174 bales : to Baltimore 60 bales. Below are the re¬ Europe and a tight money market in London depress prices that many think a very low rate is to rule hereafter. Here, however, moat look for a reaction, believing the causes of the present panic will soon cease to operate. The stock afloat and in Europe is to be sure large, but manufacturers there are not ceipts for a series of weeks : Week ending Jan. 26—bales. stocked with cotton, the markets of the world are not 24,080 Weekending Mar.24—bales. 11,680 supplied with Feb. 2 31 21,362 15,237 9 goods, while, under the influence of low prices, shipments are likely to 21,673 April 7 18,133 16 14 19,592 fall off from all sources of supply. These facts, together with the 12,849 large¬ ,“24 " 15,468 10,801 Mar 3 12,492 ly decreased receipts in the United States, the demands of our own 10,303 10 16,473 May 10.S88 17 spinners, and the unfavorable accounts with regard to the next crop 17.002] 5.799 have made holders here firm. During the week there has been a The stock on hard was 157,319 bales. Freights are dull to good, Liverpool demand from spinners, and speculators have shown considerable confi¬ 9-16d., to New York, ly steamer, -$c* Exchange on London 133(5138$. dence for the reasons we have stated. These influences cul ninated on Sight .on New York f @-$ prem. Middling closed at S6@36c. Charleston, May 11.—The receipts for the week, ending May 11th Wednesday in an advance of fully one cent per pound, and sales for amount to 2,363 bales against 2,301 bales last week, and the shipments the day of fully 4,000 b£les. The Liverpool advices have failed to 1,901 bales against 2,370 bales last week. Of these shipments the past materially influence prices, although the demand has fallen off. Sales week none are reported for Liverpool or any foreign port. Freights to on Thursday were 2,000 bales, and to-day the market closes steady Liverpool are without change at $d. to 9-16d for Upland and Id. for “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ with sales 8,000 bales ; ing are sales for the week 13,500 bales. the closing quotations : Florida. 26 26 29 32 35 38 29 32 35 $ fl> Good Ordinary Low Middling Middling Good Middling Mobile. 27 30 33 36 39 38 The & Texas 27 31 34 37 40 receipts of Cotton at this market for the week ending this ing (Friday) were as follows : From New Orleans. Texas Florida Savannah.... South Carolina. Total for the week Bales.! From 504 North Carolina Bales. 200 318 812 31 263|Norfolk, Baltimore, <fcc. 121 Per Railroad.... 1,242! Foreign 3391 895464 Total since Jolyl 898,994 exports of cotton from this port have been as follows -Week To To To To To To Liverpool bales other British ports Havre other French ports Bremen Hamburg To other German ports To various Continental ports Total for the week Previously reported Total from N. York since July 1, ’65. To New York the steamers have reduced their rates and asking fc for Upland and lc for Sea Island, by sail the rates unaltered fc@£c. Exchange on New York, sight, par to premium. Sales of cotton for the week about 1,000 bales. firm with little offering, middling cotton April 25. 17,762 May 2. 10,573 "308 endingMay 9. May 16. 9,599 3,779 3,892 *237 1,005 l’.ioo "88 35 ' 683 982 246 2,396 22,277 391,966 414,243 •'704 folowing is the statement for the last three Week Stock on hand Sept. 1,1865 250 '500 79S 16,816 414,243 10,674 431,059 6,253 441,733 431,059 441,733 447,986 weeks ending May 4—^ , Sea Is. The : Week ending ,—April- 27—, Seals. Upl’d. Upl’d. 1,610 Week . ending May 11—v Sea Is. Upl’d. 362 1,610 362 1,610 4,356 76,365 2,999 4,625 269 43 79,364 2,258 668 10 81,622 4,987 80,974 5,030 83,232 6,040 85,585 4,202 72,142 3,852 4,422 220 75,994 156 4,573 2,314 286 78,808 1,615 4,422 75,994 4,578 565 4,980 452 78,308 4,924 4,864 Receipts from Sept. 1, 1865, to Receipts for the week Total Exports since Sept. 1, 1861, to beginning of week Exports for the week Stock : Galveston, May 5.—We have received 362 . 176 2,353 79,928 5,662 week later statement by 1,532 bales, against 1,197 ast week, and the shipments were 2,291 bales, against 618 last week. The following were the shipments for the week ending May 5th : To Liverpool, 2,034 bales; to New-York, 157 bales, to Boston 86 bales, and to New Orleans, 14 bales. The following are the receipts at Gal¬ veston for a The series of weeks receipts Jan. 26 Feb. 2. 9 16 23 ..... Bales. 6,632 Mar. 3 u 10 4,568 4,136 one were : Bales 25 513 The market closed being quoted at 29@30. mail from Galveston. Savannah, May 11.—The statement for this week shows receipts of* Sea Island. 3^830 Previously reported The even¬ “ are now are Upland. Ordinary The follow¬ “ “ “ 17 “ 24.... 4,337 2,790 Mar. 31.. Total receipts at Ga veston since jales. The last weeks statement weeks is as under: Bales. 2,721 April 7.... 2,597 “ 14 1,234 “ 21 1.252 “ 2,274 May 28 5... 1,379 2,626 3,277 1,197 1,532 September 1st now reach 187,884 compared with the two previous . May 19,1866.] THE CHRONICLE. Week Week ending -April 21- 1866. Stock on hand Sept. 1 Received this week Received previously Received at other ports.. ending —April 2b 1861. 1S66. Week 1861. 1866. 13,857 3,168 3,217 1,124 131,878 105,523 IS,824 25,619 13,857 1,197 135,155 The 19,G18 167,836 169,227 1861. 3,168 13,857 1,718 1,532 106,647 136,352 26,097 19,157 137,630 170,898 — ending May 5. , 3,168 following On the 5th of 135,434 Western Wheat, ' Western, to com¬ good...... 8 40®12 50 Double Extra Western 140,720 and St. Louis May, the market closed unsettled and prices nominal- 12 75®16 50 Southern supers Southern, fancy and ex. to Canada, common choice extra 10 50@11 40 11 50®16 50 Chicago Spring Rye Oats, Western Jersey and State 8 50®13‘50 Rye Flour, fine and super¬ ; ...per bushel 1 60® Milwaukee Club 1 75® Red Winter. 2 00® Amber State and Mich. 2 50® White 2 35®' Corn, Western Mixed.... 73® Western Yellow....... 84® 8 25® 9 40 Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 9 15® 9 70 Extra 26,865 , the closing quotations $ bbl $7 25® 8 00 Extra State 2,322 108,365 Freight, by sail to Liverpool, 9-lc@|d ; to New York, lc steamer ; sail* none up. Exchange on New York, at sight, par to A premium ; Ster ing 106 @ were Flour,Superflne State and mon Total 625 85® 48® 55© 85® 1 10® 1 10® 1 50® Barley Malt 1 2 2 2 95 00 40 62 3 00 83 1 20 60 64 1 15 1 25 1 20 fine 6 25® 7 00 Peas, Canada May 5.—Our own correspondent in London gives the following Corn meal, Jersey and W'hite beans full review of the Liverpool cotton Market; he writes under the date of May 5 2 40 3 90® 4 SR Brandywine The transactions in cotton have fallen off considerably, and although the im¬ ports are only 16,507 bales, whilst the exports amount to 18,5SS hales, prices of The movement in Ereadstuffs at ihis market has been as follows: all descriptions have further declined. American cotton shows a reduction in RECEIPTS. value from last week of Id to l%d ; Brazilian, Id to l%d ; Egyptian about Id » 1866.Smyrna, %d; and East Indian, Id to l%d per lb. The sales of the week are -1865.For the w’k. Since Jan. 1. For the w’k. S’e Jan. 1. 49,630 bales, of which 4,6f.O bales have been taken on speculation; 9,550 bales Flonr, bbls 598,580 74,005 858,895 by exporters, and 35,430 bales by the trade. The unsatisfactory state of Con¬ Corn meal, bbls. 5,205 134,S65 7,240 tinental affairs, and the continuance of heavy shipments from Bomba}', to which 157,120 Wheat, bush.... 340 69,970 6,825 must be added the advance in the Bank rate, have operated prejudicially to 38,450 662,905 84,980 746,570 prices. The latest adviees from America report a slight falling off in the re¬ Rye, bush 13.990 15.2S5 ceipts at Southern ports ; but this circumstance appears to have had no effect 13,885 on the market. The statement of stocks here and on the Coutinent as well as Barley, &c., bush 340,735 71,005 247,945 of the quantities of cotton at present afloat is as follows: 465,775 328,370 1,354,590 Liverpool, ... , . ... .... - 1863. bales. 537,010 108,497 Stock in Liverpool London Haver Rest of Continent American cotton afloat.... Indian do 784,630 59,780 94,000 20,000 135,000 645,705 60,000 35,000 30,000 ..... 376,881 Total *. There is still, 1866. bales. 1.147,388 1,739,115 of supply, present, and, what may be termed, immediately prospective, of 600,000 bales as compared with last year; and as it is stated that the damand for goods is subsiding, there appears a~t the present moment no possibility of there being any material or permanent re¬ covery from the recent fall in the quotations. The amount of business doing in goods for the Eastern trade is small; and as regards America, there is un¬ doubtedly a great falling cff, making the comparison with each of the last ten months. The probabilities are, indeed, that a further decline in prices must take therefore, an excess The prices current in Liverpool place. Ordinary and middling. 28 18 Sea Island Stained Upland 11% 11% H% 11% - ... Mobile New Orleans .. . Texas -1865. good fair. 30 20 36 22 42 23 13% 15% 14 16 14% 14% 16% 16% under: are as -1866.Fair and • Good and fine. 56 72 24 26 . . . . . • . . - , , EXPORTS. -1S66.-1865. For the w’k. Since Jan. 1. For the w’k. S’e Jan. 1. Flour, bbls 25,285 Corn meal, bbls Wheat, hush Corn, bush Rye, bush Oats, bush * Mid. 34 , - . , Fair. Good 40 54 , , 14% 14% 14% 14% . 16 100,295 2,147,440 55,150 - The export of breadstuff's to Great Britain and Ireland from Sept. 1 1865, has been as follows : From New York New Orleans Total To about do do d. 14% 14% 143* 13% 1865. 1863. Egyptian /—Ay. 4,900 Specu- Trade. American..... 16,060 East Indian... 11,640 Brazilian 4,030 Egyptian Other sorts... Total 730 360 100 35,430 9,550 2,970 490 3,820 495,510 355,720 17,670 13,030 12,780 5,030 3,010 3,940 1,460 3,940 4,540 41,130 29,000 70,720 372,590 186,260 84,350 89,190 140,370 33,880 117,070 „ 830 4,650 -49,530 1,110,560 785,100 -Imports- This week. American East Indian Brazilian Egyptian Other sorts Total To this To this date date 1866. 1865. w’kly sales year. this Exp’t. lation. week. 2,330 3,470 21,860 630 17,320 5,050 60 1,710 5,800 Total 1865. This 2,800 -StocksSame date Dec. 31, 1865 1865. . day. 57440 459,369 328,430 33 184,336 1,095,744 256,070 216,780 126,684 334,068 106,230 74.150 32 118,658 187,180 411,328 64,850 98,490 43,275 109,150 249,199 29,050 90.150 -a 16,5671,383,733 704,696 2,539,708 784,630 530,010 402,736 16,502 . 586,900 438,274 196,626 4,60i 5,429,905 7,790 587,763 719,815 1,119 22,795 57,389 17,810 126,573 98,131 820,109 1,030,048 1,198,969 1,537,553 9,880,217 16,797,194 6,763,083 300 8, 1866 May 11, 1366 ports..May 8, 1866 .. same period, 1865 do do 1864 1863.; 73,359 240,226 5,900,203 THE CONTINENT. Rye, WTieat, bbls. 3.159 Corn, bush. hush. bush. 245,051 68,111 34,627 7,176 245,651 68,111 91,484 41,803 11,485 12,535 58,411 May 11, 1866. 1,118 d. for cons’ption Same To this Same date period date 1865. 1866. 1865. Total this hush. 1,136,979 Flour, Middling— Total Corn, bush. 97,399 Mav From New York to 14% 8 S d. d. 27% 27% Wheat, bbls. .May 11, 1S66 May 3, 1866 ...May 8, 1866 Philadelphia Baltimore Boston Calif, and other Flour, To date. TO d. d. d. 20 27% 12% 14 Mobile... Broach 15% 17 7% 28 Orleans.-:^ Dhollerah 14% 15% 17% 7 The sales, imports, &c., for the week and the year are as follows : d. 21% 21% 22% 13.i85 458,640 52,890 206,855 156,155 -181,590 621,820 .... 1S66* .. 3,930 4 1864. Upland 45,625 53 755 .... 17 16 COMPARATIVE PRICES OP COTTON. Middling- 386,890 6,255 ‘ 4 • 1863, 1864. 1865. 1866. FOREIGN 97,266 do do 4,277 13,301 36,908 109,067 do do Weekly Receipts at the -Friday, May 18,1866, P. M. 215,236 1,305,788 Lake Ports.—The following shows the receipts following lake ports for the week ending May 5 : at '■ * Milwaukee Toledo Detroit Cleveland Flour. Wheat. 44,325 10,136 Chicago 179,741 309,457 34,224 Corn. Oats. 946,S87 274,447 Barley. 8,076 5,721 45.083 13,395 3,620 95,228 1.023 11,945 1,462 102,344 22,534 8,414 9,814 80,691 637,711 1,061,822 341,885 979,125 41,987 307,724 345,203 361,679 107,828 22,532 20,872 24,738 2,240 Totals Previous week Cor. week, 1865 351,605 , Rye. 21,S75 4,038 3.864 .... 25,913 38,107 16,988 Eastward Movements—The following will sir w the Eastward movement of Flour ane Grain from lake ports for the week ending May 12: Flour. ^ WTheat. Corn. Oats. 21,460 830,667 36,658 73,276 30,252 113.275 221,792 Oswego Port Colbome. Ogdeneburgh 1,845 . Cape Vincent. BEEADSTUFFS. 13,9(55 266,030 Cleveland Toledo S’r City Sarnia 11,920 43,666 . Barley. Rye. 16,760 19,&58 73.834 19,975 14474 .... 10,750 * 25 250 2^950 20,'i50 8,812 *315 6,875 12,000 wheat; in other articles no im¬ 15,475 Kingston .. portant change can be noted. The arrivals of flour continue at little Sandusky Other ports. 2.797 l‘600 190 i*25 2^947 more than half the average of former seasons ; but being fully equal to ♦Rail Road ’.355' 4,833 58,532 15,181 47,153 the wants of. the market, speculative holders have been pressing sales’ 375 51,692 585,080 331,559 254,870 17,115 prices have consequently declined 50@75c per bbl. Trade is very dull 646.915 1,331,817 39,843 370 372,180 22,000 Corres’ding waek,’65 62,960 612,180 at the decline, and the 591,630 166,363 2,347 2,448 tendency is still downward. There is still a * Shipments by railroad from Chicago, not included in above. large margin against export orders that are out of the usual line. Eastward Movement Br Canal.—The following will Wheat having declined 20c show the east¬ per bush from the highest point, specula¬ ward movement of Hour and grain from Buffalo, including shipments for tors are making an effort to steady the market. There are, as yet, no tide water for 14 days ending May 14, and shipments from Oswego arrivals by canal, and none are expected immediately; but the free 9 days from May 4th to 12th, inclusiue, which will show about what The market has declined in flour and . . . . _ . . Chicago, as advised by telegraph, are re_ there is afloat on canals destined for tide water: From garded as indicating lower prices, and millers continue to buy only to week Buffalo, Flour. ending Wheat. Corn. Oats. Bariev. Rye. 130 supply immediate wants. The feature of the trade the past we ek, is May 7 84,690 134,412 9,936 30 May 14 43,080 7,973 358,704 the sale of 20,000 prime old Amber 275,826 Michigan Winter Wheat, to arrive Total from Liverpool, at $2 60@$2 62. Corn 160 43,080 443,394 410,233 9,936 7,973 begins to arrive freely, and F’m Oswego, 9 days. 1,379 44,293 107,339 13,597 13,121 14,316 prices are down so as to permit the execution of liberal orders for the Total afloat 1,539 87,373 550,733 420,835 23,057 22,289 Liverpool market. Oats have been steady, with some further business Corres’ding time, 65. 9,071 181,961 528,149 1,090,618 31,050 21,149 for London market, including prime old Western at 59c per 32 lbs, in Liverpool, Saturday, 5th May : store. Rye has done better for The advance in the prime. Barley and barley malt are price of Wheat in America, and actual shipments of Win¬ ter Wheat being now m progress to New York, on orders received thence, and nearly nominal. the still unsettled character of movements at Milwaukee and • • . . .... political affairs on the Continent, haye failed to * [May 19,1866. - THE CHRONICLE. 626 unsatisfactory state produce any activity ig the market, in the face of the very of financial affairs at home. Holders show increased firmness, but there is no disposition on the part of buyers to speculate. At Tuesday’s market there was the usual attendance of buyers, a erate business was done in Wheat at last week’s prices, except for American Red Winter, which, in consequence of orders for shipment to New was held for more money. Flour was in better demand at full prices. A fair amount of business was done in Indian Corn for consumption, without change in prices. Our market to-day was without animation, and the limited business in Wheat was at Tuesday’s prices. Flour was difficult to sell, except at some decline, which holders resisted. Indian Corn had the usual consumptive demand with¬ out change in value. and mod¬ York, FARMERS Week ending 28th Same time 1865 do Zephyr 55c, Bradlv’s Duplex Elliptic, and Empress Trail prices unchanged, S T <fe A T Meyers’ IXL'in fair demand, J 0 Kelley’s -Gotham No. 60 ,°5@-52c, do do No. 70 47 to 68c. Mouslin de Laines are less abundant than usual this season, and prices are rather firmer. Manchester, Pacific and Hamilton readily sell at 23, all wool 40, Challiee 26. Balmoral Skirts are in fair demand, and quotations are quite steady, especially fur choice styles. Pont^osuc Spring colors *40 per doz Gil¬ berts, black and white, £36, do four X fancy $39,and Park Mills high Train 65c, April, 1866 71,745 qrs. at 45s. 5d •••••• 62,756 39s. do 5d. IMPORTS Wheat, qra. colors $32 50. in more demand, especially for finer qualities, while poorer dull and sales are pressed. Cotton warps sell at $1.95 for No 1, $1.85 for No 2, and $1.75 for No 3; 6-4 Conshohocken do $2.25 @$2.75; 6-4 all wool black doeskins $3.25@*3.75; Leicester ladies’ Cloths DELIVERIES. ,—Flour bbls. 600 745 , sacks. I. Corn, qrs. grades are are cloths $1.65. make sold well up. 298.505 57,845 Total since 1st January Evans, 30,977 56,428 Sam time 1S65 Seagrave A Co’s £ fancy $1 37$@*2, F. M. Ballou <fc Co’s do $1 25@ $2, S. &, H. Sayles, do $1 26@$1 50, Babcock <fe Moss, $1 50 THE DRY GOODS TRADE. @$2, Campbell Co’s d<? $1 37$@$2, Mechanicsville Co’s do Friday, P. M., Hay 18, 1866. $1 37$@$2, plough, loom and anvil 50c. Dighton’s silk mixtures $1 62$ The dry goods market presents considerable improvement at the @$2 12$, Farmer’s A Union cassimeres 47$ cents, Carolina mills fancy close, as compared with last week and the earlier part of the present. do $1 00@$1 25, tan mixture $1 62$@*2, Peacedale fancy doll 25, do black and white check S5c, American mills fancy $1 62$ for £, and There was on Saturday and Monday last a further decliue in most $3 50@54 for 6 4, East Wiudsor Woolen Co’s £ $1 25@$1 76, Gran¬ goods, or rather there was less firmness, and prices were nominal ; but ville mills £ fancy $1 25. Carpets without change in price while the demand is fair. Lo¬ Thursday the firmness of the cotton market caused a better feeling, well Co’s Ingrain sell at $1 60 for superfine, $1 75 for extra 6uper, and and, anticipating. an advance, jobbers and speculators took up some $2 15 for three-ply, Hartford Co’s $1 60 for medium superfine, $1 75 whole lines of goods, and prices became generally firmer, recovering for superfine, $2 07$ for Imperial three-ply and $2 25 for extra threenearly all the decliue of Monday, and closing quite steady, and in many ; ply. Brussels $2 45 for 3 fr. $2 56 for 4 fr. and $2 65 for 5 fr. Foreign G<h*ds drag heavily. instances firm at last week’s quotationsThere is but little if any demand, There has been some export i demand during the week, but not sufficient to exert any particular in- i except for a few styles of goods which the vagaries of fashion have fluence upon the maiket. Already there is talk of advancing prices i brought into use. Other goods are sold at a loss to the importer. The auction sales are not numerous, uor is there any animation among bid¬ but it is probable that it will mostly end in talk, as it is too near the ders and prices are below expectations. eDd of the season, and buyers are too cautious to enter the market upon Manchester.—In reference to the stftte of trade at Manchester, our own cor¬ United States and Canada Total for week . • t 4,936 202,125 66,139 7,872 223,094 111,163 7,236 7,236 Cassimeres are not sufficiently active to attract attention, or decided quotations. Some leading fancy styles are Millville f fancy cassimeres $1 37$@$2, silk mixed do $1 50, on are any fancied panics. Brown Sheetings and Shirtings submitted to a the lighter makes early in the week, but have firm at present figuies. There is no change for the quotations given last week. are further decline upon recovered or are very standard goods from Standards quoted at 21 ; this is the pricefor Nashua X X. Indian Head A, Amory,"Lawrence 0 aud Ap* pleton A, Indian Head B 30 inch 17, do E 48 inch 35, Nashua extra A 36 inch 18$, do fine 0 40 inch 22-$, do fine D 36 inch 2 l, Wachusetts 20, inch 17, G Washington heavy 36 inch 19, Griswold 3 4 10. Warren 36 Atlantic heavy A 37 in. 21, do P A 37 in. 20, do A H 37 in. 2l*£, do P H 37 inch 20$, do heavy shirt A V 30 inch 17, do do A G 15, do fine sheet A .L 36$- inch 20, do do P L 36$ inch 20, do shirt P E 33 inch 19. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings declined materially during the early part of the week, and have partially recovered. This is true, especially of the lighter grades. New York Mills are held by agents at, 42$, a (Recline of 5c per yard, while many other goods are still nomi¬ nal. Wam^utta 40, and Lonsdale 82$-, Canoe 27 inch ! 1$, Grafton 3 4 13, d > 7-3 il l, Methun 3 4 12. Aquidnecks 4 4 19, do 7-8 18, White Rock 86 inch 35, Waltham L 72 inch 70, do X 33 inch 42, do W 42 inch 80, do M 81 inch 95, do N 90 inch 106. Drills are more steady and there is considerable demand for export at firm rates. Globe Steam Mills 19, Park do 18, Pepperell and Indian each 25, Boot 26, Stark Standard 24. Corset Jeans are less active, but prices are steady. Indian Orch¬ ard are quoted at 16, Androscoggin and Bates 16, Newmarket 16$, Naumkeag 21 and Satteen 27. Stripes and Checks are not active, but prices are firm. Connecticut Stripes are quoted at 2u for 3-3, and 21 for 6-3, Albany 3-3 15, do 6-8 18$, Louisiana Plaids 26, Ringold Fast Plaids 20, Simpsons Chambrays 25. Ticks respondent in London, under date of May 5, writes as lollows : The market for cotton yarns and cloth has been greatly depressed. The amount of business doing is exceedingly limited aud prices are very irregular, some instances nominal. For India mule yarns the demand since this day week, by fully Id per in is very languid, and they are worse to sell, ib. The medio qualities are still more de¬ pressed. the decline in value being not less than 2d per lb, although, even at the lowest quotations, it is difficult t<» sell, and scarcely any business has been re¬ ported. In water twist the state ot affairs is very similar, and from 16s to 32s the average giving way appears to he about l%d per lb. The better qualities of 20s in the bundle and of 28s in the warp are to some extent exceptionally steady; and in these, as also in the counts from 6s to 14s, the decline does not much exceed Md per lb. The Bolton class of yarns from 60s upward are much depressed, and fully 2d per lbworse to sell than they were a week ago, being in¬ deed almost unsaleable at any quotable price. Twist and pin cops for the home, trade in the counts from 40s downwards are also very dull, the giving way on Blackburn 32s rather exceed ng Id per lb, although the firmness of spinners is little tested by actualoffers, except for prompt delivery. Doubled yarns continue neglected in almost all counts, and t e few speculative offers made for them are in general at prices so low as to ensure rejection. Of cloth w’e can give no more favorable report, and although the fall in prices, so far as can be ascertained in the absence ot business, does not seem to be so great as in yarns, the demand is equally sluggish, and the disposition to make speculative offers at very low rates, is less common than of late. The real truth appears to be that the rumors of a panic prevailing and extending in ■ iverpool, of the monetary difficulties said to exist in London, and the alarm felt at the prospect of a European war, all concur in adding to the previously existing cau¬ tion ot buyers, few- of whom have the courage to operate beyond the supply of their urgent and immediate w’ants. The quotations are now’ as follows : WATER EXPORT. TWIST FOR 16 to 24 6 to 12 Numbers tl. 20)4 d. Common quality Second quality Best quality 11)£ mule twist for d. d. , 25)4 21)4 27)4 29)4 23)4 25)4 21)4 13)4 23)4 19)4 58 to 43 28 to 53 export, \ Numbers 6 to 12 16 to 24 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 steady for heavy goods, and more active. Amoskeag A C A d. d. d. d. d. d. d. d. d. d. 62$. A 50, B 45, C 40 and I) 35. York 80 inch 45, 82 iuch 55, Everett Common quality.. 9)4 14)4 16)4 20 24)4 25)4 27)4 29)4 31)4 33)4 11)4 15)4 17)4 21)4 26)4 27)4 29)4 31)4 33)4 35)4 35, Pacific A 80, do B 40, Wiudsor 7-8 20, Sacondale 14, Passaic 20, Second quality Best quality 15)4 17)4 19)4 23)4 28)4 29)4 31)4 33)4 35)4 37)4 Concord 21, Arkwright 7-8 30, 44 36. GOLD F.ND GRAY SHIRTINGS, 87-$ YARDS. Denims and Cottonades : re quiet but steady, especially for leading 15 Inches 50 Inches « makes. Amoskeag 52$, Manchester 56, Albany 17-$, Wauregan 22. Reeds 72 56 64 66 56 64 66 72 Print Cloths have advanced during the week, aud have also been lb. oz. lb. oz. lb. oz. lb. oz. lb. oz. lb. oz. ‘ lb. oz. lb. oz. quite active, closing at 12$ for 61x64 square. Weights.... 8 4 9 0 10 8 8 12 10 4 11 8 10 0 11 0 15s. Od. 16s. 3d. 19s. 6d. 22s. 6d. 16s. Od. 18s. 9d. 21s. 6d. 23s. Od Prints have been quite steady, and some whole fines have been Prices closed out during the week. Prices remain steady, with the exception IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. of Arnolds, which are quoted 1c. higher. Garners are sold at *20$, The importations of dry D'oods afc this port for the week ending May Amoskeag pink 19$, do purple 18$, do shirting 17, do dark 17, do fight 18, 186'B, and the corresponding weeks of 1864 and 1865, have been ns 16$, d » mourning 16$, Swiss Ruby 18$. Lowell dark 16, do light 16, i Spriug Valley 12, Wamsutta 144, Dusters 14$. Columbia full madders follows : ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION POR THE WEEK ENDING MAY 18. 1866. .14, Concord madders 15, do purples 16, Glen Cove full madders 12, -1866. 1865. 1.864. Wauregan fancies 16, do rubies 17. do pinks 17, do purples 17, MerriValue. Value. Pkgs. Value. Pkgs Pkgs. mac W 20, D 19, Arnolds 16, American 17, National (Sprague) 16, do 678 820 369 $331,050 Manufactures of wocn.. $202,249 $143,023 madders, green, blue and white, and blue and orange 18, canary 17, solid 179 576 268 do cotton, 210,657 45,182 82,366 260 122 180 142.361 colors 18, mourning 16. 328,817 do silk... 96,011 454 851 445 127,866 240,689 do flax... 126,111 Ginghams are in less abundant supply, and prices are steadier. Lan¬ 219 113 72,764 87 59,659 41,032 caster 25 aud Glasgow 28. Lawns are in good request fur the firm makes, while lower grades are 2726 $1,183,977 1604 1291 $556,935 $608,925 nominal. Dunnell Manufacturing Co.’s 1,400 quality sell at 26 regu¬ withdrawn prom MARKET DURING IEHOU8E AND THROWN INTO THE THE SAME PERIOD. lar; Lodi fancy, mourning and plain solid colors, 23 nett, do 1,400-quali¬ 863 734 $379,900 $313,172 Manufactures of wool... 1187 $415,109 ty 25, do 1,600 do 27$, and Pacific Co.’s fancy 26$181.439 579 322 712 cotton.. do 224,697 106,496 Jacconets are quiet aud unchanged. White Rock 21 for high colors, 187 187,926 232 176 193,775 do silk \ 140,585 and 19 for plain. 444 111,871 362 613 63,860 do 159,736 flax 3239 33,014 678 4964 55,814 Silesias are in moderate demand, and there is little change in prices. Miscellaneous dry goods 17,502 Indian Orchard 21, Lonsdale 22$, Social 27$-, 5312 $894,150 3171 6809 $775,803 $914,943 Cambrics are tinner but not active. Mauville 14 for black, 15 for 1604 n 1291 508,925 .666,936 ?726 1,183,977 are .... , , ■—% , . . . . .. « , , . plain, and 16 for pink. Clinton 13. Skirts are in denptpj at uniform Tfcorppsop’s Wpjen 4569 42^,^$ , t v r— - May 19,1866.] THE CHRONICLE ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE Manufactures of wool... cotton.. silk flax 671 179 56 569 drygoods. 142 56,476 72,887 134,005 21,U38 do do do .... .... Miscellaneous Total Add ent’d for $232,781 103 28 SAME PERIOD. $36,879 11,531 19,262 17 140 Quan Value. 25,696 $225,989 Flour, bbls—995 10,720 71,636 377 $708,241 1,183.977 Rye, bbls...;:.75 Pork, bbls 100 Beef, bbls 23 Tallow, lbs..1.613 Lard oil, gal Is. 238 1617 $516,187 288 508,925 1604 $93,263 556,935 Total entered at the port. 2908 $1,0-25,112 1892 $650,203 191.206 192,449 26,811 2166 2726 4892 The following is a detailed ending May 18, 1866 : $1,892,218 STATEMENT. FOR past week CONSUMPTION. MANUFACTURES OF WOOL. Pkgs. Value. Woolens Cloths 131 Carpeting 354 $73,199 22,008 96.893 4 621 35 Shawls Pkus. Worsteds.. .112 Hose Worsted Value. 19 1 Value. 85 16,779 37,501 Braids & bds. 34 6,972 9.721 635 y'm 4.7 Lastings Pkgs. 66.721 Cot. & worst. Erab'd rnus’n 24 Velvets 5 Laces 18 Braids & hds. 22 S20 $831,050 Hdkfs Gloves .... 1.930 7.842 ... 12 18 39 170 Spool 8,444 Hose - MANUFACTURES OF Silks 112 3 $202,398 1,870 68 16 63,957 10,430 Hose 21 10,670 Raw Crapes Ribbons Velvets Laces Total. Gloves Cravats 425 1 $190,553 2 Laces Hdkfs 647 Total 3,360 4 7 1.968 7.185 7.904 Vestings Silk & worst. Silk & cotton 16 15,463 2601328,817 MANUFACTURES .669 Lixens&cot. 2 4,283 8 Braids & bds. 1,101 981 1,105 4 Sewing .....; Linens $210,657 3,154 SILK. 1 2 ... 9,692 52,578 576 ....... Total 13,451 OF 9 23 FLAX. 10,099 14,396 Thread 44 14,651 10,444 Hemp yam ..104 851 , $240,689 MISCELLANEOUS. Leath gloves. 12 $15,721 Kid gloves... 10 Matting 53 Oilcloth Clothing 7,908 2,508 16 1,464 WITHDRAWN - i 23 Feath & flow. 10 Susp. &r elas. 23 3,549 17,401 Embroideries 85 Corsets 30 Straw goods. 7 10.027 1,944 FROM Total 219 „ 2,988 9,254 $72,764 Woolens Cloths 6 4,571 Carpeting... .136 37,526 6 621 Blankets Pkgs. Value. 4 Worsteds.... 336 DeLaines 4 Lastings 2 Cottons Colored Prints 129 209 87 $39,503 70,172 Emb. muslins Braids & bds. 17 Cot <fc wos’d.163 167,268 2,132 1,157 MANUFACTURES OF Total 868 $379,900 867 4 10 1,745 4,282 6 2,087 Hdkfs 242 Spool 78 23 8,108 Laces Braids & hds. Total 31 15,708 10,455 579 Gingams 28,270 181,439 Hose MANUFACTURES OF 8ILK. Silks 45 $72,231 Crapes 3 1,670 Laces Velvets 2 1,688 Gloves Ribbons 115 5 2 97,756 Braids & bds. 3.555 1,695 • 2 770 Silk & worst. 2 Silk & cotton 11 187 1,249 7,312 $187,926 MANUFACTURES OF FLAX. Linens Hdkfs Total 409 4 $103,022 Thread 15 8,243 Hemp yarn.. 16 2,976 $111,871 $5,249 308 .. Matting... 3,196 Embroid’s... 19,479 4 Straw goods. 28 Susps&elas. 5.. 2,607 Total 3,239 FOR 2,701 2,670 $33,014 Pkgs. Value. $93,010 Cloths ..19 10,133 Carpeting... ..59 12,683 Blankets ..26 2,530 ‘ ... 154 .2 201 Candles, bxs. .125 395 116 bxs Starch, bxs.. .100 Cora, bush... .100 Tea, pkgs 6 Live stock,head20 Drugs, pkgs.... 11 Beans, bush... 50 Paint, pkgs 5 .1 Hope, bale Lamps, box.... .1 Pumps, cks.... .2 Glassware, es.. .4 Coal oil, galsl,500 Miscellai^ous.... 2 1,052 Furs, bales 12 Sew mach, cs.251 35 Honey, tes Coffee, bags . .221 Ginghams .. Muslins Total.. .... .92 ..27 .6 ...1 37,643 8,503 1,893 592 Emb. muslins. .6 Velvets 5 Laces.... 3 Braids & bds..11 1,696 2,706 809 6,401 . 189 9,956 $71,836 MANUFACTURES OF SILK. Silks Plushes Velvets .... Ribbons .34 .4 .31 .95 £54,510 3,652 31,721 76,870 Shawls 2 Vestings 2 Raw 12 Braids & bds.. .9 2,300 1,639 17,282 Silk & worsted2 Silk & cotton. .1 Total.. 1,858 i .185 741 633 $191,206 MANUFACTURES OF FLAX. Linens 621 Handkerchiefs .4 Total. Total.. 182,992 8,370 Thread... ....13 Hemp Yarn.. .87 2,760 725$192,449 MISCELLANEOUS. Leath gloves. ..5 Kid gloves... 1 3,065 Matting 471 Corsets 20 Straw goods. .16 3,884 6,292 Embroideries. 15 6,590 4,372 .528 2,608 .. $26,811 19,000 Butter, lbs. 17,481 Leather, sides 300 Currants, bbls.50 1,900 Valnuts, bgs..50 800 Whalefeets, lbs 19,899 Hogs hair.bales25 Dry goods, bals86 Hides 1,706 Furs, bales Spirits turp.bbl 80 Tar, bbls 400 Sew raacb, csl,522 Books.cs, 9 Prep corn, bxe450 5 Skins,bales Hemp, bales. .500 Coffee, bgs. .". .963 Clothing, cs 1 Hardware, cs...5 Machinery, cs..l Dental matl.es.. I Drugs, pkg 1 Miscellaneous... 2,094 bg*6 95 1,200 1,200 3,313 Clover seed, Herrings,. • 4,477 450 10 bbls R R cars 2,160 6,498 2,300 1,200 4 Drugs, pkgs.. 127 Cheese,lbs ..1,967 Pitch, bbls .30 35,452 Hemp, bales.. 100 2,300 Hoop skirts, cs.7 3,050 8,528 Poudrette,bblsl25 Coffee, bgs 99 2,160 1.000 EXPORTS (EXCLUSIVE OF SPECIE) PORTS FOR FROM THE THE WEEK Q,nan. Value. nabwa. OF NEW MAY YORK m eal, bbl350 £,Q81 TO FOREIGN 15, l 866. Quan. Value. Danish west indies. Cotton, bales. 798 J32J5Q Com PORT ENDING Quan. Valne Corn meal, pneb?dQQ 0,681 898 393 135 * 200 2,717 4,304 15,0(K) Alcohol, nhds..75 23,228 Whisky, hhds..7 100 Sugar, bbls....60 4U0 Redwood, ton...l 150 Lamps, pkgs..78 250 Beans, bbls ...82 150 Miscellaneous 930 1,122 100 691 349 202 ... 168 $869,078 $168,557 BRITISH WEST INDIES. LONDON Naptha,gals35,681 . * 5,800 Beef, tes 8,153 1,627 Mfd wood, 3,319 2,990 318 .350 Wh'bone,lbs6,486 pkgs ,..198 Shoe pegs,bblsl50 Tobacco, cs 17 bags 7,000 2,700 51 22,862 13,669 Tobacco stems, hbds 218 9,570 Cedar, logs.,.. 431 Cotton, bales.585 Coffee, bgs 343 9.672 1,195 5,185 7,000 86,534 5,356 Chinaware* cs..l 250 Whalebone, 5,100 6,528 Furniture, cs..40 Guns, bxs 4 Hardware, cs..79 Drugs, pkgs..204 8,432 Wine, pkgs.....3 Soap, bxs 281 1,000. Hams, lbs.. 1,105 13,300 650 1,700 2,656 Logwood, tons300 Sue . 6,750 pegs,bblsl00 404 50 $247,421 DUTCH WEST INDIES. Flour.bbls. .1,495 Rye flour,bbls 209 310 59 — 4 cs «... .3 Coal 15,354 1,170 345 198 2,847 1,527 1,009 408 1,165 133 9,871 2,048 2,433 2,531 240 108 820 465 570 900 1,420 Indigo, chts...l3 Clocks, bxs... .48 Miscellaneous.... 427 $223,228 BRISTOL. Tallow,lbs 345,534 Rosin, bbls...423 Tar, bbls 75 40,824 2,450 300 Tallow seps, lbs.; 67,303 Oil cake,lbsl2,241 Staves 4,800 900 600 580 43? Machinery, cs..5 Petroleum, galls 41.476 GLASGOW. Mfd tobacco, lbs 8,040 Staves 9,600 3,552 1,246 Whalebone, lbs 31,726 3,262 1,425 3,663 8,992 1,784 Machinery, cs.20 Tallow, lbs. 31,924 . 55,400 Sew mach. cs. .50 Cotton seed, bags 1,850 552 Cora, bush; 20,153 Cotton, bales..35 5 606 17.030 728 $44,138 GRANGEMOUTH. 184 gals petroleum, 38,500 10,000 GIBRALTAR. 100 Tobacco,hbds. 159 Staves, No.23,700 Tobacco, cs... 183 1,428 Miscellaneous 108 140 224 6 122 Oats. bush.. 1,075 Harness, cs 2 789 105 Cart wheels, 16 pairs 1,021 Nails, kegs....30 195 SadtLery, cs....l 132 Shooks.... 1,100 ' 1,365 Empty hhds..300 675 Machinery, cs...4 690 Cheese, lbs.3,900 702 Peas, bush....872 1,12S Oil meal,lbs22,500 570 Tar, bbls 25 150 Lamps, pkgs 2 333 Cotton gin, cs...l 120 Tobacco, cs.; .4 262 Miscellaneous.... 4,251 $112,213 Crude 1.380 Rice, bgs! 25 Bran. bush..1,125 17.500 $03,591 1,543 Tobacco, hbds..2 Drags, pkg 1 Perfumery, cs..50 Shoes, cs 26 bxs 1,700 1,400 1,580 Cheese, lbs 15,227 Tobacco, 1,795 175 2,828 238 284 Confectionery, 588 9,600 Tobacco, hhds..7 Lumber,logs. .718 Bac^n lbs 144 130 310 7 Starch, bxs....30 Codfish, qtls...20 Prevd meats, cs21 8,000 Staves 421 538 345 8-< 514 155 114 148 187 84 bales. .5 cs.. 10 3,332 cs 12 Bread, pkgs.2,771 998 Perfumery. bxs25 Hoop skins, cs.3 Brandy, bbls... 10 Leather, bibs..36 Twine, bbls 2 812 Hams, lbs Domestics, cs. .16 Trunks, pkgs.. 40 Glassware, Carriages 3.500 2.500 25,000 Books; Leather, rolls.. 4 Furniture, cs.. 58 24 bbls 5,504 2,267 1,000 Furs, bales... 82 Tobacco, kegs.40 oil,gals.2,051 Pork bbls Cornmeal, 2,550- Backing, CS...12 Oars 3,197 148 431 656 23 1,225 Drugs, pkgs....4 300 5,840 1,605 3,111 2,919 108 Bread, pkgs... 379 Corn, bush. .2,054 Drv goods, cs.. 10 2,864 Butter, lbs..4,931 2,050 Grease, kegs.. .40 55 9,000 Live stock, hd.79 Mfd tob,lbs 12,015 12,795 2,475 4,674 3,290 BRITISH Pork, bbls... 178 Beef, bbls ....315 Flour, bbls ...400 Bread, pkgs ..400 Peas, bush... 955 Bran, bush... .500 Feed, bush .75 Candies, bxs. .200 Perfumery, bx250 Woodw'e, pkgl75 Paper, ream.2,600 Cornmeal, bbl 100 Hay, bales....320 Vinegar, bbls..50 Pitch, bbls... .145 Tar, bbls 70 Turpentine, cs.60 Carriage.... 1 Drugs, cs....... 81 Com, bush .200 Leather, rolls.. .7 130 54 660 762 434 1,220 450 952 550 603 205 570 250 1,065 400 200 360 480 6,000 3,000 D’d codfieh,bx250 150 300 80 66 406 87 366 .. Shooks Staves Lumber, ft.10,000 $23,234 Lard, lbs ANTWERP. 4,786 5,977 3,800 1,650 1,695 ... Furniture, $46,279 GUIANA. cs . .10 252 BRITISH NORTH AMERICAN Petro, galls .1,134 Wool, bales. ..356 75,650 COLONIES Rosin, bbls.... 10 Rosin, bbls...713 2,345 Flour, bbls 11,307 93,698 Spts tnrp, bbls.10 Tobacco, hhds.44 2,489 Tobacco, bdls 100 1,000 Coffee,bgs... 225 4,500 Cornmeal, $31,308 Honey, tea 99 bbls 5,010 BORDEAUX. 5,563 .1,306 Pot ashes,bbls.67 2,841 Pork, bbls....438 10,810 Staves, Nol70,440 29,250 798 Lard, lbs.... ?,500 Mahogany, logs67 545 Beeswax, lbs.884 388 ' Total 301 175 Rye flour, bbls381 1,725 19.807 Turpentine, bxs 9,305 2,440 6,273 2,052 ' bxs 2,000 Beef, bbls 75 Rosin, bbls. 1,867 Tobacco, hhda.96 Tobacco, cs ..474 Oars 3,327 25,789 Beeswax, cks. ..6 Mf tob, lbs.23,010 282 Bacon, lbsl7S,074 Cheese.lbs 150.000 Tobacco, bales 28 175 318 . Extlogwood, Shoes 1,355 60 144 188 Lime juice,bbls.4 Mfd tob.lbs 32,635 Beef, bbls.... 155 45,729 7,100 .. Butter, lbs..3,454 Lard, lbs....4,888 Spirits, bbls.. .18 Soap, bxs....775 6 1 31 Tallow, lbs391,207 Hams, lbs..4?,186 - 123 122 124 295 120 750 154 1,050 Glassware, cs.. .5 Furniture, cs..23 Cotton. balesS,779* 623,046 Mfd wood, pkgs57 Co n, bush.33,115 27,189 Peas, bbls 75 M' bogany ,logsl 10 Petroleum, gals ...173,737 62,255 Horn tips,bgs 226 Naptha, gals. .834 133 Glue, bbls .25 Benzine, gals 800 264 Prep corn, bxe455 Drugs, bxs 7 444 Ess oils, cs..-.. .5 5,854 22,795 Hdkfs Gloves Hose Quan. Value Groceries.pkgs 21 Machinery, cs..l $103,745 124 81 BREMEN. C’andfes, bxs. 114 Total....539 $225,939 450 TTTTfPPAAT T Segars, cs 57 25,179 479 bags Muskets,cs.. .404 27,111 Oxide zinc,bbl 100 Cotton, bales. .51 6,416 Soap bxs 25 Pkgs. Value Braids & bds. .9 Cot. & worst. .49 MANUFACTURES OF COTTON. Cottons Colored 106 257 21’0 9,600 Flour, bbls. .8,959 37,733 7,200 Matches, cs... 81 922 Petroleum, Lard, lbs 11,172 2,287 galls.. ..103,843 37,000 Mfd tob, lbs.3,132 995 Oil cake, oal oil, galsl.441 3,627 lbs 2,579,056 64,286 Lumber,ft.116,702 3,997 1,636 Hardware, cs .18 400 Shingles.. 100,000 800 Sperm’ti, Hay, bales....338 786 lbs $33,311 112,000 4,256, Pork, bbls,... 210 6,155 HAMBURG. 30 650 Candles, bxsl,170 Tacks, bxs 3,981 57 Bacon, lbs.68,430 10,509 Beef, bbls Starch, bxs.... 15 49 1,318 Skins, pkgs.... 15 11,530 Cedar wood, Furniture, cs.207 4,590 Carts Pkgs. Value. 8hawls 1 605 Worsteds.. ..166 76,375 De Laines 2 902 Lastings 204 76 Kerosene.gals 100 Perns, bush 100 Carriage mtls, Beef, bbls Muskets, cs WAREHOUSING. MANUFACTURES OF WOOL. wooiens.... 215 151 158 561 82 20,000 Corn meal, bblsTo Bread, pkgs...61 ENTERED 432 Miscellaneous.... MISCELLANEOUS. Leatb.gloves. do No lbs 444 2,630 810 90 205 809 450 315 450 713 155 ’ Domestics, cs.. .3 Casks, nests.. .36 Hoops, No. 18,925 Cheese, lbs...637 Lard, lbs.. ..1,S75 Hams, lbs 933 Hake, qtls 42 Pkldfish, bbls. .10 Potatoes, bbls. 15 Turpentine, bbls2 ... Total Kid Tobacco, bxs...2 Oil meal, pm hsl-2 Bread, pkgs.. .139 Stares Rosin, bbls.. .151’ $92,500 Gutta pereba, 8,105 71,978 COTTON. 2 Velvets Tobacco, hhds. .2 Pkgs. Value. 2,221 106 gals.80 Hardware, es. .25 Clocks, bxs... .20 WAREHOUSE. MANUFACTURES OF WOOL. Pkgs. Value. 190 $94,321 Shawls 696 217 425 Shingles, Total MANUFACTURES OF COTTON. Cottons......119 $51,614 Colored 110 43,001 Prints 30 11.275 Gingham s.... 9 3,893 Whale oil, 2,703 Shooks & H. .150 statement of the movement the ENTERED Quan. Value. v 539 189 185 725 528 • consumpt’n 1291 DETAILED 627 Carriage 1 W’alebone,lb8 378 Petroleum, . Kails...... 26,9*2 850 520 Carriage Coffeedbags... .10 Rosin, bbls.. .395 8,292 Coal oil, gpls4,371 400 264 1,576 .( $29,638 BRITISH AUSTRALIA. 8 1,478 Opium, cs 350 Lard, lbs..449,724 Domestics, balslO Harness, cs 1 Drugs, cs 558 6 8,183 Clocks, bxs Kerosene,gl68,450 36,618 Pork, bbls.... 145 Butter, lbs.13,121 18,628 Hardware, cs.38* Mf wood, pkgs702 10,829 Hams, lbs. 41,191 Glassware, cs. .47 4,978 Mftob, lbs .9,164 Nails, kegs.... 17 110 Cassia, mats. .200 Agl iinplts,pk 152 5,264 Candles, bxs. .150 24 421 Potatoes, bbls823 Tacks, bxs Furniture, cs .612 8,047 Paper, rems20,700 Pres fish, cs.1,985 9,4:38 Whip , cs 1 56 Perfumery, cs.200 550 Beet, kegs Bacon, lbs .41,579 Marbles, cs 250 1 Segars, cs. ... 10 250 Matches, cs.... 15 6 Rosin, bbls...421 1,500 Tea, cs Lumber, ft.44,723 17,672 Corn, bbls.... 100 Carriage ware, 137 Lumber, ft,65,427 Pumps, cks. ...10 Clocks, cs 60 Woodware,pk 3*0 3,838 996 1,189 1,076 462 705 Mf iron, pkgs.299 Beaus, bo Is.... 50 Sew mach, cs. .11 2.000 Tin cans Staves ..1,620 848 Rice, bags Oars Ptg mtls, pkgs. .3 Whale oil, gls.789 Boards, pcs.. .261 Tallow', lbs.44,789 HONDURAS. BRITISH 4,260 408 •Salt, bgs 84 Bricks 1,403 Soda ash. 24 Hake, qtls Sugar, bbls... .49 Candles, bxs..206 Hams, lbs.. 1,600 Fork, bbls....203 Coal oil, galls.672 807 130 100 186 102 610 291 Nails, kegs.... 14 Drugs, pkgs...35 Codfish, qtls ..64 Pk codfish, bblslO Telegrh mtl.cs529 Blacking, bxs .12 Wickiug, pkgs.33 Guano, bags. .280 Agl implts,pkg 4fi Nails, kegs.. .13.2 WoodwTare,'pkg50 Books, cs 1 Machinery, cs. .12 Hoop skirts, cs.l Sewr much, cs..27 Cheese, lbs .5,874 Hardware, cs.,67 Pork, bxs 25 Eggs, bbls 50 Carriages 2 Photo mtls, cs. .1 Effects, cs 2 Corn, bush..1,080 153 130 Vinegar, bbls. .12 69 845 15 Hardware, cs ..47 Beef, bbls 50 Bacon, lbs .2,183 Stationery, bxs. 2 ... 1,118 444 . 54 97 70 56 71 2,625 88 2 Tobacco, cs Hats, cs 1 Butter, lbs. .4,244 Blacking, pkgs.18 D’d fruit, pkg.100 Mf tobacco,lbs828 75 289 391 Woodware, pkl31 Tea, pkgs 2 651 Confectionery,cs2 Paper, reams .200 Lard, lbs 562 Lumber, ft. 10,000 497 280 125 615 $25,505 HAVRE. 447 27 153,262 350 Whaleb, lbs 12431 15,848 Oil 5,000 paintings, cs2 Oars i Effects, cs Skins, pkgs 3,081 31 3,650 250 4 2 Books, cs Carriage Jew’yrashes.bls44 Fir* aoparatus.. 100 1 208 Miscellaneous.... $207,750 BRITISH EAST INDIES. 4 9:35 2,000 255 Hams, lbs , 1,040 Hardware, cs..71 Cotton gins, cs .2 Tallow, bxs...491 180 198 1,607 165 5,000 $20,150 Coffee, bags! 1,400 Staves 13,400 NEW GRANADA 6S 10,>26 1,178 Dry goods, cs. .70 54,800 galls .89 Shoes, cs Paper, cs 1,950 23.642 100 $116,309 Zinc, cks... 36 Miscellaneous.... 6 2 Miscellaneous.... 2,345 Clothing, cs .. 137 89 Boots and shoes, cs...' 44 11,283 92 9,490 25 1,372 Books, cs 100 Sew mach, cs. .27 7,626 200 2 69 Exps pkgs 567 325 Lumber, pcs. .143 1,239 4 562 Anchors 298 Lard oil, galls 1,026 3,693 2,268 2,436 Butter, lbs..4,283 309 4S0 Perfumery, bxs25 2,250 ITPYTrfl $39,586 gls.2,4«) Bread, pkgs.... 79 20,234 Hardware, cs.208 Furniture, cs..l4 Druas, cs 474 MALAGA. Staves 9S,700 CUBA. . Coal oil, 15,147 82,000 Hoops Empty hhds..700 9 Clay retorts Gas flxt, pkgs.246 Hay, bales ..2,676 Perfumery, pklS8 Leather, CS.....6 Oysters, cs .100 Drugs, pkgs ..142 Furniture, cs..46 Leath hose, cs. .4 4,150 909 389 180 4,fi[)0 6.312 1,308 450 2,569 Stearine, bbls.500 Domestics, bals 4 Coal oil, glsl7,730 158 1,018 Billiard tables..2 8,796 Silver ware, cs.. 1 .. 1,291 250 6 Fancy goods, cs.3 Paint, pkgs... 137 Boiled oil, galls 800 13,343 433 Cond milk, cs. .57 .1 10,989 Twine, bale 2 281 Rope, pkgs... .9 5,562 Shooks 3,000 1,902 $13,831 129 50 Nutmegs, cs... .2 Sew mach 1 Lard oil, Shooks 115 Books, cs. Paper, bxs 31 Sad irons, bbl.. .4 Alcohol, cs 1 Lamps, pkgs... .9 Sew mach, cs..61 Flour, bbls....540 Paper, rms 200 Candles, bxs... 47 2,059 Preserves,, cs. .42 2,025 Stationery, cs.. .1 Matches, cs.. ..8 ... 919 204 100 562 3,637 7,425 1*14 869 444 91 Machinery, cs. 103 Sew mach, cs.. .3 Punips, cs 1 Lard, lbs.. 116,887 2,695 Ammonia 10 Arrow Roots..37 562 176 112 SPECIE) AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE 1 lTH, 1866. in packages when not otherwise 549 specified.] Value 8,734 Gums Copal 261 4,106 copaiva..2 58 Magnesia Oilf * 560 111 23,386 Iron, pig, 42,274 Paints 2,1S4 Potash hyd...20 Potash Pruss. 12 1,460 2,101 Phosphorous..44 Reg anti’ny..H0 .. Iron, hoop, 187 ...69 84,586 212 1,892 14,805 518 Bananas Citron Currants Dried fruit 2,472 Figs Nuts PrepM ginger... Pine apples. Prunes Plums Raisins 15,024 1,189 Instruments— Mathematical.. 4 Mhsical 41 2 3,876 Gunny cloth-100 19,330 Hair 18 Haircloth... .10 4,827 4,399 2,136 4,274 681 625 3,552 456 36,393 120 3,663 Hemp Hops Honey.; 70 4,303 Saddlery Steel . Maccaroni Molasses.. .2,274 Oil paintings.. 14 30,486 42,540 14,136 60 5,918 8,693 1,423 669 2,431 7 3,144 5,673 113,175 Spelter, lbs 111,582 Silver ware 1 5,172 Tin,bxs... 14.392 Tin, 1,269 slabs, 89,149 lbs 99,770 469 , 64,469 6,241 138 8,144 3,659 Paper hang... 1 Perfumery, .83 Pipes 52 Rope Salt 2,662 207 345 Stationary. Starch Seeds Linseed... 11,069 7,449 47,379 Soap 303 Sugar, hhds, bbls - Toys Stationery, <fec.— Books 106 16,994 Other 26 7,024 .660 38,041 1,685 andtcs.. .9,880 503,011 Sugar, boxes & bgs ..9,180 103,118 Tapioca 30 253 Trees and plants 1,061 Tea 16,157 249,243 1,873 Twine 13 12— 1,496 €)8 * 1,619 1,081 Waste ... 123 3.769 954 425 5,740 1,140 Potatoes........ Provisions. .326 Hags 224 \ Tobacco Pimento Engravings 7,188 .. . Paper 3,132 .. 10,372 Ginger Pepper 372 Feathers Fire crackers 17 Flax Fish Furniture ..2 1,634 15,402 Zinc,.bs..583,685 36,843 3,979 Spices— 1,578 2,951 Cloves..'...* 610 7,215 731 Coffee,bgs.24,972 392,943 Emery .. 560 Fancy goods.... 72,718 Cocoa, bags...50 9,854 Metal goods.. .62 Nails 15 Needles 8 Nickel 23 Old metal Plated ware 4 Per. caps 14 1,094 serves. 2,778 2,675 1,815 232 Sauces and pre¬ 17 Clocks 4,500 100 tons 4,298 43,022 722 59,164 .. Fruits, &c Cigars Coal, tons....206 Cotton, bales.31 892 tons :.553 Lead, pigs. .8,109 14,108 Saltpeter... 14,110 Ivory 172 Machinery.. ..147 Iron, other, 10.953 6,808 17,121 343 63 76 Ind. rubber tons Iron R. R., bars Iron sheet, 753 1,025 6,117 120 tns. 7,726 3,488 nitrate.... Optical Copper 5,393 Sofia, hi car¬ bonate.. .1,846 576 do sal do ash 283 do can8tic.265 Furs 9,573 236 2,455 1,347 27 Oils, ess 32 Oils, linseed. .38 Oil, olive... ..169 do Chains and an¬ chors orn. 83 Boxes Buttons Cheese.... 608 358 100 ;.. 10 4,036 Bags 1,317 136 Beer Porter. Rum 3,017 3,816 6,591 63 LacDve Furs, &c— 10,288 Alabaster 82 16,791 Cutlery 215 90,486 Gas fixtures .2 260 Guns 166 11,089 Hardware... .193 30,286 15,645 1,500 3,310 51 30 10 Indiiro 2,800 1,193 963 104 227 Other 870 11,665 Brandy 3,456 13,557 Miscellaneous— ... Safflower 1,ISO- Hides, dress¬ 157 9,657 10,308 Whiskey .21,330 86,346 6,879 Wines Chalk 334 Champagne, bask 2,146 18,442 Cream Tartar..5 1,259 Chickory 61 1,089 Metals, &c.— 880 Cubbear 32 2,346 Brass goods.. :.8 1,124 Bronzes .! 3 Gums, crude. .82 2,990 Brimstone.. .346 700 Castor oil 380 531 23,173 1,732 Beef, bbls 64 Sugar, bbls.. .264 10,228' Woodware, 396 pkgs 60 107 Svrup, bbls 3 1,037 899 Cheese, lbs. .3,645 720 120 Butter, lbs.. 1,420 347 Drugs, pkgs.. 164 2,937 Bricks Grand total.... $3,738,972 ed 129 57,833 Hides, undrs’ed. 92,531 870 Pat. leather....3 470 856 Liquors, Wines, &c.— 206 1,934 1,891 Ale Arsenic Anoline colors.. Alumn Acids 25 Madder 59 Miscellaneous.... Drugs, pkgs ... 20 Pepper, bags -.25 3,200 5,683 64 tubs, 126 gl98 Tobacco, hhds. .2 MARSEILLES. Iron boiler 2,720 23,284 Drugs, &c.— 102 145 82 78 250 cs :..6 Glassware, cs...2 Coal, tons . ...25 53,279 $64,817 20,328 2,044 7,136 1,970 Leather, Hides, <fcc.— 85 20,922 4,968 Bristles Earth’nw’e... .74 Glass 3,042 Glassware.. ..108 Glass plate.. .180 65 412 124 152 78 7S0 Spices, Coal oil, galsl,138 Beef, bbls 38 DM codfish,bxOGO 11,53S Domestics, cs 288 Pkgs. Value! Pkgs. Pk; s. Value. I Other 7i China, Glass & 1. ware— Jewelry, &c.— 658 Jewelry 26 81,280 Woods— Bo ties..., Lignum vit®.... 22 31,533 T5 196 9,431 Watches China Rattan Barytes 1 4 2 500 Paint, pkgs 94 Furniture, CS....4 1,250 Perfumery, cs.,17 $215 777 Coal, tons....1282 gals 1,411 ENDING MAY [The quantity is given 110 120 120 6 Rum, bbls GOODS AND WEEK 100 152 2,958 Books, cs 4,7 0 Matches, cs Pk codfish, bbl230 Tobacco, bdls.176 Coal oil, 310 1,093 CHINA. 300 102 Lamps, pkg....1 Drugs,, pkgs..748 Perfumery, cs.418 300 tOTHER THAN DRY. 186 Alcohol, bbls.. 17 582 3 3,107 3,1S4 IMPORTS 136 318 160 199 161 210 14 pkgs 177 137 207 4 bdls 2,566 244 3,480 Miscellaneous— 2,400 25 Gunny bags, 200 175 Boats 104 82 Shooks, bxs. ..184 811 Shoe nails, bxs.6 575 1,121 Tobacco, bales. .8 Preserves, cs..24 Wooden ware, 151 :....l 544 247 195 71 112 8 Wine, pkgs Irons, cs Fire bricks, bxs Malt, bbls 110 1,384 258 Shingles.. .20,000 Cement, bbls. 100 .. 2 Hats, cs Hops, bales 3 Piano 1,085 15 cs... 495 5,846 6,108 Trunks, pkgs. .10 Quer bark, hhd75 Peanuts, bags 733 399 588 270 269 Blacking, cks. .74 365 Gin, cs Combs, cs 16 36 3,250 Nails, kegs 1,363 Cutlery, cs....82 Soap, bxs...1,050 BRAZIL. 88 3 Brandy, bbls..18 Leather, roll.... 1 Agl implts.pkg.20 Gunny bags, bls4 Cutlery, cs, 4 Salt, bbls 10 Pork, bbls Boots and shoes, 167 179 4,117 Trunks, pkgs. .20 Woodware, pkg30 3,269 . Lighter 1 Mfd wood, pkgs.9 Mfd iron, pkgs. .5 . 7,883 Tobacco, hhds 23 2.773 200 350 Shingles.. .27,000 1,811 Lumber, ft.20,866 Lumber. ft271,579 Drugs, cs 288 Perfumery, cs .60 30 150 600 2,104 650 $82,606 2,070 CENTRAL AMERICA 1,003 98 3 5,505 Sugar, bbls 125 1,S54 Sew mach, cs.. .1 550 Linseed oils, Oats, bbls 1,970 Rosin, bbls .1,004 1,0-14 Miscellaneous. ..2 1/63 Drugs, cs 650 214 Hay, bales....300 Mahogany, bxs33 Mf tobac, lbs3,655 Petro, gals. 10,000 148 1 Effects, cs 175 .2,062 Bread, pkgs .. .20 4,740 Tobacco, cs... .50 2,275 120 11,000 1 Staves 2,000 944 2,454 Lumber, ft.115,239 3,185 Nails, kegs ,...70 8,300 Soap, bx*...4,500 1,450 Co&fish, qtls..949 Potashes, bbls.61 Tallow, lbs.27,995 .2 2,228 Hardware, cs .7 Fancy goods, cs.l 7 $263,121 Ale, bbls Flour, bbls... .99 HATTI. Sugar, bxs 59 2,124 Liquor, bbls — 8 2,449 Nails, kegs....42 Furniture, bxs.83 Rice, bags....375 4,641 Butter, lbs... .379 Pork, bbls 1,080 29.449 Cheese, lbs...753 Lard, lbs...21.113 5,882 Stationery, cs.-..2 6 Butter, lbs..5,089 1,9S7 Pork, bbls 6 Cheese, lbs..2,107 556 Beef, bbls Flour, bbls 3,417 31,257 Vinegar, bbls.. .5 2 Candles, bxs .3S5 1,006 Cutlery, cs Linseed oil,gls.50 75 Linseed oil, galls 82 Paint, pkgs.. .199 550 6,111 Dry goods, cs. ..2 ... .. Glassware.es.. 9 Cinnamon, rls.10 Tea, pkgs 31 1.400 900 317 144 Cotton, bals. 1,005 Machinery, cs.. .1 Harness, bxs 859 960 cs 450 411 120 Spikes, kegs...50 7 240 Miscellaneous.... 12,102 Glassware, cs..60 Wine, pkgs 16 Miscellaneous.... Oil dot 91 227 Champagne, cs.15 Tobacco, hhds..1 Tobacco, bales.20 Cheese, lbs. 1,425 Bark, ccr 500 36,800 cks.. 30 Stone, tons.... 80 Starch, bxs.. .100 Groceries, pkgs22 21 Cutlerv, cs Flour, bbls ....10 Sand, bbls 95 404 5,358 369 312 Matches, cs.... 61 Trunks, pkgs..20 Furniture, C8..10 Soap, bxs 16 Oars ' 1,089 Hoops, bdls ..400 Perfumery, CS..95 .. 1 85 Nails, cks $179,868 Flour, bbls .. .470 Bread, pkgs ...85 400 Piano 800 577 174 ... Lumber, feetB.000 Billiard mtls, cs.l Tobacco, cs 3 Paper, bdls.. *400 Provisions, pk.51 7,127 bxs Quan. Valne. Quan. Value. Quan. Value. Lig. vitae, pkgl36 986 Pkd codfish, 150 Pepper, bags... 30 300 6,800 Iron, bars Pepper, bgs 20 180 40 bbls 1,180 Kerosene, Hams,lbs. ..4,790 93,326 Powder, kegs.300 1,260 J,360 Potatoes, bbls.440 4,846 2,706 Miscellaneous.... galls 170 162 Sptstnrp, bbls. .5 2.477 Iron, bdls 108 2,040 4,710 Machinery, cs..38 150 666 $218,091 Potatoes, bbls.50 Furniture, cs...41 1,797 Butter, lbs..1,711 4,328 Oakum, pkgs..32 204 VENEZUELA. 200 Mfd iron,pkgs.512 1,362 9,377 Paint, pkgs.... 10 775 Coal oil, galls.976 499 Lard, lbs...24,117 5.372 Nails, kgs 114 Crockery, pkgs. .2 110 2,560 4,738 315 233 Hoop skirts, csl3 Lumber, it.33,112 1,1S2 Glassware, cs..47 125 Cheese, lbs..1,628 5,261 141 Rosin, bbls.. 1318 8,404 Bread, pkgs... .50 240 Potatoes, bbls..70 590 Ptg inti, pkgs. .19 Maizena, bxs.220 1,097 165 slO Soap, bxs. ...602 2,212 Sew machB, cs.14 1,342 Book-*, ce 2,400 Tin,b xs 5 1,219 ...10 1,755 9,599 Cutlery, bxs...27 1,364 Hardware, cs..90 3,558 Shoes, cs Leather, cs .1 103346 Trunks, pkgs. .40 Nails, kegs....3» 249 Quicksilver, 130 Iron safe 150 110 1 pkgs 11 694 Mouldings, cs..l Lard oil 40 65 326 257 844 627 Matches, cs.... 21 Ale. bbls 12 204 Tobacco, cs.... 42 6,748 Stationery, bxe.15 97 404 275 712 Hams, lbs Caudles, bxs. .520 3,088 Bread, pkgs. ..25 1,064 1 R goods, cs....2 662 168 2,581 Paint, pkgs ...29 .1 Preserves, cs ..50 557 Drugs, pkgs.. 116 115 Combs, box Tortoise shell, 707 50 Trunks, pkgs..96 973 Butter, lbs..5343 2,416 410 Gin, bxs 1 box. 413 313 624 Tobacco, cs.. .,42 Cocoa, bxs.... 15 1,764 Hardware, cs..25 224 142 300 Lard, lbs... 17.7-O 3,816 Dry goods, cs... 1 Cotton gins Cinnamon, rls..2 2 800 230 5,959 186 150 Hardware, cs.202 Steel, bdls 9 283 Lumber, ft..5,000 Pistols, bxs 1 166 47 1,985 bbls.. 1663 13,019 Clocks, cs Stationery, 550 Machinery, cs..S6 4,535 Mat hes, cs...2 * 482 Flour, 346 224 Machinery,pcs240 6,873 Trunks, pkgs. .40 135. Perfumery, cs.75 cs... .10 466 Flour, bbls... .364 4,204' Tobacco, hhds. 10 4,204 Flour, bbls.6,039 71,649 4,240 Linseed bil, 223 535 Agl implements, galls... 2,286 Hams, lbs.. .2,129 162 Fuse,bxs ....211 453 943 pkgs 686 29,837 227 Dental mtl, cs..l 231 Lamps, pkgs... .5 4,201 Photo mtl, cs.. 9 752 105 6 88 Pkansh, bxs..69 Perfumery, cs..80 971 Paper, pkgs...20 600 Bells Iron retorts....9 160 153 Cotton gins, cs.6 461 12 ' 96 Confection'y, cs.2 2,010 Ale, cks 400 537 Cotton gins,cs279 19,108 Oakum, bales.150 1 Hams, lbs...3297 846 210 Carriage 978 240 Lamps, pkgs..21 876 204 Rosin, bbls....43 190 •2,562 Bacon, lbs 1.200 Soap, bxs 120 192 Pumps, cks.....2 R. goods, cs 4 10 722 Mfd tobacco, 1,200 Oysters, cs 300 lbs 3,557 1,6-6 Trunks, pkgs.. 13 812 6,173 Hoop skirts, cs..5 1,150 Tallow, lbs...911 200 168 Spts turp, bxs.20 148 Matting, pcs....8 Agl implem’ts, Whiskey, bbls..5 438 11 374 5 200 liats, cs 382 1,986 Shot, kegs 50, 1,894 Wine, cs 8«0 pkgs 375 140 Soap, bxs .50 217 Tobacco, eg....2 Fire crackers, 2,5! 8 Oil cloth, cs ....2 176 1 81 Corn starch, 100 bxs 104 182 Hops, bale Tobacco, bbls.. .7 1,000 bxs 233 1U0 1,471 1 Hoop skirts, cs.3 - 912 Rope, pkgs....64 320 Steel, cs 267 230 Nails, kegs... 29 222 Fancy goods, cs.l Lard, lb9 —1,406 300 Saddlery, bxs...2 370 3 280 Furniture, cs..27 1,106 771 Cutlery, cs Alcohol, bbls..32 220 Woodware, Matting, rolls.. 20 400 100 132 484 Preserves, cs.. .12 pkgs 12 Glassware, cs. .37 1,505 540 Miscellaneous.... 1,207 Furniture, CS..21 Mfd tobacco, Photo. mat,l,csl4 3,902 120 Bread, cs 136 L985 331 lbs ...509 Shoes, cs 1 500 250 672 323 $40,729 Paper, rms.,1250 Pictures, cs 2 Tobacco,balesl07 1,480 Quan. Value Quan. Value Quan. Valne. Wine, cs [May 19,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 628 Wool,bis ..1,011 Total....:.. 99,149 1,TI8 $3,258,368 4 THE CHRONICLE. May 19,1866.] Native Ceylon Maracaibo CURRENT. PRICES 629 21 © 23 19 ' © 22 20 Laguayra 18* © 17* 171© Copper-—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 21; old coppery 2 cents $ lb; manufactured, 30 $ cent ad val.; sheath¬ ing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 © 34 oz. % square foot, 31 cents $ lb. All cash. There is only a light bu iness, but holders ask full St,Domingo WHOLESALE. All goods deposited in pnblie stores or bonded warehouses must be withdrawn therefrom, or the duties thereon paid within one year from the date of the originnl importation, but may be withdrawn by the owner for exportation to Foreign Countries, or may be transhipped to any port of the Pacific, or West¬ _ ern Coast of the United States, at any time before the expiration of three years from the date of the original importation, such goods on arrival at a Pacific or be subject to the Western port, to same rules and regulations as if originally imported there; any goods remaining in public store or bonded warehouse be¬ yond three years shall be regarded as abandoned to and sold under such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Mer¬ chandise upon which duties have been paid may re¬ main in warehouse in custody of the officers of the customs at the expense and risk of the owners of said merchandise, and if exported directly from said cus¬ tody to a Foreign Country within three years, shall be entitled to return duties, proper evidence of such merchandise having been landed abroad to be furnish¬ ed to the collector by the importer, one per centum of said duties to be retained by the Government. the Government, In addition to the duties noted below, a discrim¬ inating duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. pg" On all goods, wares, and merchandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Hope, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Oood Hope, a duty of 10 par cent, ad val. is levied in addition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place or places of their growth o* production ; Raw Cotton and Raw Oood Silk cxcep*ed. The tor in all eases to be 2,240 ft. Asltes—Duty: 15. $1 cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort. $ 100 lb 6 874® 7 00 Pearl, 1st sort © Anchor*—Duty: Scents $ lb. Oi 209 lb and upward $ ft © 10 Beeswax—Duty, 20 $ cent ad val. American yellow $ 2> 38 © 40 Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ cent. shin $ ton 80 00 Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. © 61 @ ® 5* © Crackers 10 Breadsttif fs—See special report. Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair, 1 $ ft. American, gray and white... $ ft 70 ,© 2 50 t Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. of butver are still quite.liberal, wh!le for local [consumption only and prices steadily declining. Batter and The receipts the demand is aTe Butter— N. Y., do Welch tubs, strictly fine. 40 © 38 do Western, Pa.,common to m dium do firkiDS, finer kinds, yellow West. Re erve, do 42 © © © © 42 36 h8 © © 35 © © © 85 .. .. . good to fine, yel. com. © 35 85 © strictly fine good to choice © 4j Firkins, * fir. tubs, 42 4) fair to good do do 30 to medium Southern Ohio Canada, uniform and fine .. 83 do ordinary, mixed Mich ,Ill.,Ind. A Wis., g. to f. yel. do do com. tomed. Cheese- .. 32 U'i 40 8d 30 © © 23 18 8 © © 24 16 © English dairy.. Vermont dairy .. . Sperm do ,patent, Refined sperm, .. 40 city 21 Cement—Rosendale.. ...$ bbl Cfiains—Duty, 2* cents $ ft. One inch and upward $ ft wax, , 50 i (rh Q © 22 175, 8* © 8* Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels, 80 lb to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28 bushels of 80 lb $ bushel. LiverpoolOrrel..$ ton of 2,240 ft @ 10 00 Liverpool House Cannel 12 50 © 13 00 8 50 Anthracite Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ lb. Caracas (gold).(In bond).. $1 lb . .. Maracaibo .(gold).. Guayaquil .(gold) . do do ...... 21 © © ..© l.i © 9 00 26 ■.. .. Coffee—Duty: When imported direct in Ameri¬ can or equalized vessels from the place of its growth or production; also, tho growth of countiies this side the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents $ lb; all other 10 ^ cent ad valorem in addition. Coffee has been steady for the better qualities but only moderately active, poo. er grades are dull and lower. Rio, prhne, duty paid 20 © gold 201 do good gold 19 © 191 do fair.... gold 17* © 18 do ordinary gold 15 © 16 |>do fair to good cargoes.... .gold 17 © 19 Java, mats and baga.^ .^.^gold 25* © 26 30 29 29* .. © 43 29 Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; untarred Manila, 21 other nntarred, 31 cents $ lb. Manila, $ ft 20 Tarred Russia. Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia. , Short Tapers Mineral Phial. © © # © $ 21 . . 19 26 55 gross . © ® © © . 45 12 70 . . 50 40 Cotton—See special report. Dr lies and Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, 40 cents $ gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ lb; Alum, 60 cents $ 100 lb; Argols, 6 cents $ ft; Arsenic and Assafeetida, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus, 10; Arrowroot, 80 $ cent ad Balsam ad val.; val.; Balsam Capivi, 29; Balsam Tolu, 30; Peru, 50 cents $ ft; Calisaya Bark, 80 $ cent Bi Carb. Soda, l*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3cents $ ft; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100 ft ; Refined Borax, 10 cents $ ft; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 $ ton; Flor Sulphur, $20 $ ton, an$ 15 $ cent ad val.; Crude camphor, 30; Refined Cam¬ phor, 40 cents $ ft.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents $ ft; Castor Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlorate Potash, 6; Caustic Soda,l*; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, *; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft; Cutch, 10; chamomile Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent $ ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gam¬ boge, 10 $ cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin,Gum Kowrie, and Gum Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Bergamot, $1 $ ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 $ cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $1 ft; Phos¬ phorus, 20 $ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yellow, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents $ ft: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad val.; Sal JEratus, 1* cents $ ft; Sal Soda, * cent $ ft; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; r'oda Ash, *; Sugar Lead, 20 cents $ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45$ cent ad val.; Sulph. Mor¬ phine, $2 50 $ oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents $ ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vitriol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Preparations and Extracts, $ I $ ft; all others quoted below, free. Mo;t of the articles under this head are now sold for cash. (All nominal.) Drugs are Acid. Citric Alconol in steady but moderate demand. Aloes, Cape Aloes, Socotrine (gold) $ gall. $ ft .. 28$ 3 4 55 Antimony, Regulus of Argols, Crude 12* Argols, Refined 24 (geld) 624 4 42 26 @ 25 Annato, fair to prime Assafeetida Balsam Capivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru © © © © @ © © @ © .. 85 Arsenic, Powdered 25 Bark, Calisaya Berries, Persian Bi Carb. Soda, Newcastle © © 85 @ © 7f @ 40 © @ © 1-i 25 29 85 82 .. 90 00 .. Bi Chromate Potash .. Peppers — African, Sierra Leon, bags — (gold) Bird Peppers—Zanzibar., Bleaching Powder (gold) Borax, Refined Brimstone, Crude $ ton. Brimstone, Am. Roll $ ft Brimstone, Flor Sulphur Camphor, Crude, (in bond).(gold) Camphor, Refined. Cantharides : Carbonate Ammonia, in bulk.... $ gallon $ ft (gold) (go d) Cobalt, Cryst&ls.. .in kegs. 112 fts Cochineal, Honduras (gold) Cochineal, Mexican (gold) Copperas, American Cream Tartar, prime (gold) Cubebs, East India. Cutch Cuttlefish Bone Logwood Gambier $ oz. bales $ ft Gamboge Ginger, Jamaica, bl'd, in bbls .... Ginseng, Southern and Western.. Gum Arabic, Picked (gold) Gum Arabic, Sorts Gum Benzoin Gum Copal Cow Gem Gedda Gum Damar Gum Myrrh, East India (gold) Gum Tragacanth, 8orts Gum Tragacanth, white 85 85 8 39 5 50 © © © © 7* © 1 75 © 46 © Madder, Dutch (gold) Madder, French, E. X. F. F. do Manna, large flake Nutgalls Blue Aleppo 4 4 6 8 8 6 (gold) Opium, Turkey (gold) Oxalic Acid 00 75 50 00 50 70 42 . 8 21 82 © 84 6 5f © 50 90 4 30* © 55 00 ® © @ © © 1 75 18* © © 2 65 © 3 50 2 70 1 15 50 86 80 11 60 55 6* 4* 5* m 60 © 36* un 40 SO do do do do do do do Caraway Coriander do English, white 24 85 Seneca Root Shell Lac Soda Ash (80 81 70 $ cent) Sugar Lead, White Sulphate Quinine, Am Sulphate Morphine Tartaric Acid (gold) Valerian, English do (gold) T.... $ oz. $ ft 2* 50 Verdigris, dry and extra dry Vitriol, Blue Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val Ravens, Light $pce 13 00 Ravens, Heavy 22 00 Scotch, Gourock, No. 1 per yard. Cotton, No. 1 $ yard 85 Dye Woods—Duty free. (gold). ,.$ton Fustic, Cuba Fustic, Tampico Fustic, Savanilla (gold) Fustic, Maracaibo do Logwood, Campeachy Logwood, Hood.... (gold) Logwood, Tabasco Logwood, St. Domingo Logwood, Jamaica (gold) Limawood Barwood .. .. 80 00 16* 16 17* © © © © © 12 15 80 45 8* © 41 © © 2 40 © 54 19 1*3 © © © © 72 © .. 19 00 16 00 ... @ 20 00 © 26 00 © 27 CO 24 00 © 25)1 20 00 ©21)3 2» 00 © 22 00 110 00 80 00 Tennessee 85 .. @ © © 85 00 Feathers—Duty: 30 $ cent ad val. Prime Western $ ft 90 © do .. © 35 10 © © (goldj *. „ . 26 4 75 60 © © 54 © 11 © Camwood . 16 11 2* © 40 2 25 9 00 56 Dutch 105 © Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 $ bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smoked, or Dried, in smaller pkgs. than bar¬ rels, 50 cents $ 1U0 ft. The Fish market is more active and firm for Dry Mackerel and a lvancing 4 50 $ cwt. © Dry Scale $ bbl. © Pickled Scale $ bbl. © Pickled Cod 7 09 © $ bbl. Mackerel, No. I, Mass, shore © Mackerel, No. 1, Halifax © Mackerel, No. 1, Bay © Mackerel, No. 2, Mass, j-hore © Mackerel, No. 2, Bay © Mackerel, No. 2, Halifax.... s © Mackerel, No. 3, Mass, large © Mackerel, No. 3. Halifax © Mac kerel, No. 8, Mass © Salmon, Pickledr No. 1 © Shad, Connecticut,No. 1. $ hf. bbl. © Shad, Connect cut, No. 2 © Herring, Scaled $ box 6*® Herring, No. 1 52j © 5 00 © Herring, pickled $ bbl. are scarce Dry Cod . ... .... 6 00 .. 4 25 7 50 23 50 £0 00 .... .... .... .... . . .. 19 00 19 €0 •-» * .. . .. .. 38 00 ... 96 85 31. 46 14 4* Flax—Duty: $15 Jersey .. 7 00 12 demand i-c still 80 Raisins, Seedless 25 75 7 ton. 17 © 23 Fruit—Doty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes, 5; Shelled Almonds, 10; Almonds, 6; other nuts, 2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filbera and Walnuts, 3 cents $ ft ; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25 $ cent ad val. There is no par icular c^argj in the market. The do do ligli i. Layer $ * cask $ box Bunch Currants © © © 60 © # 85 5 50 © 40 $ ft Prunes, Turkish © 22 87 ... Senna, Alexandria... Senna, East India 88 1 00 75 44 55 85 28 88 80 © 55 © 42 © © © © © © © © © California, brown. do OK , ... Citron, Leghorn © 4 $ ft Mustard, brown, Trieste © I 35 (gold) $ ft $ bush. Canary Hemp 8 1 so 50 4 50 5 00 7 00 8 25 4 00 6 75 48 90 . . (gold) (gold) . 8* © © © 10J © 2* © © 30 © 24 © 25 © © © © , Sarsaparilla, Hond Sarsaparilla, Mex Seed, Anise . 5 00 (gold) Rose Leaves Salaratus Sal Ammoniac, Refined Sal Soda, Newcastle 38 6 2* © © © © © © @ © © 85 * $ © © 95 @ 80 © Phosphorus Quicksilver Rhubarb, China , 24 23 3.3 30 S Sicily Licorice Paste, Spanish Solid Licorice Paste, Greek Oil Anise Oil Cassia Oil Bergamot Oil Lemon ..' Oil Peppermint, pure , , , Licorice Paste, Calabria Liccorice, Paste, 60 24 40 1 00 3 60 i © © © © © 4 25 2 20 © 2 25 5 4 © 55 25 © 84 © fiakey... Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng.. .(gold) Iodine, Resublimed Ipecacuanna, Brazil Jalap 1 Juniper Berries La«» Dye Cod. 50 © 2 ‘t © ft Epsom Salts Flowers, Benzoin Flowers, Arnica Folia, Buchu .. .. Chamomile Flowers Chlorate Potash Caustic Soda Extract 28 .. Cardamoms, Malabar Castor Oil, Cases 60 Senegal Sapan Wood, Manila 70 .. .(gold) (gold) Gum Prussiate Potash •• Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val. Regular, quarts © . , . © SO Adamantine © © © 2H © Portage Lake © © m © .. Bird © Candles—Duty, tallow, 3$; spermaceti and .. 82 43 Bolts Braziers' Baltimore Detroit Alum 19 Factory made dairies Farm dairies common.. do do .. 24 Hyd. Potash and Resublimed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and •• Navy 21’* © © per ft: Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 $ cent ad val.; •• $ Pilot 40 $ ft Damar, 10 cents © Rio Grande prices. Sheathing, new Sheathing, Ac., old Sheathing, yellow Gum, Myrrh, Turkey Dates Almonds, Languedoc do do do Sardines do do Provence Sicily, Soft Shell Shelled $ box $ h£ box qr. box , , 3 85 8 70 18 23 15 10 82 23 26 43 80 34 © © © © © 80 © 15* © 15 85 80 28 45 © © © © © 18* © *82 86 19* [May 19, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 630 19 8 Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, French Dried Fruit— N. State Apples Blackberries Black Raspberries Pared Peaches Unpealed do Cherries, pitted, . © © 22 12 12 ...$ ft> Figs, Smyrna Brazil Nuts © 18 14 © 16 80- ..19 23 12 new... - •• 9 1ft 10 ft) gold. do do i... do .. Chili Wet Salted HidesBuenos Avres.. Rio Grande ft) 10 11 @ © © 10$© 19 © 11 @ ... 17 45 30 13 50 © .. Dry Salted Hides— Pernambuco © © © © © © . . ... 9 - 11 . 8$ @ 8$@ © © © © 8* 8* .. Furs — Du*y, 10 39 cent. Oold Prices—Add premium on gold for Pale Bear, Black .. brown Badger Cat, Wild . ft) 1 *0 @ 2 1 25 @ 1 00 50 $ skin 5 00 @15 00 4 00 @ 8 06. 90 @ 1 50 90 @ 1 10 @ 5 00 @10 JO 00 @70 3 00 @l<» I 00 @ 2 do House Fisher, Fox, Silver do Cross do Red... do Grey . Marten, Hark do pal-5 .. .. .. 50 20 00 00 00 25 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 5 50 @10 00 Mink, dark Muskrat, .. 1 50 @ 8 »>0 3 00 @ 6 00 10 @ 85 Otter . .. 60 @ l 25 1 25 @ 3 50 Lynx 5 00 @ 8 00 /. .... .. .. .. 20 @ 8() @ 1 00 75 @ 1 09 40 @ 50 10 @ 12 Opossum .. 70 Raccoon Skunk, Black do Striped do White .. 1 1 5 4 25 @ 1 5ft 00 @ 1 25 00 @10 oft 00 @ 7 00 40 @ 1 00 40 @ 1 00 10 @ 20 3 00 @ 5 00 6 00 @50 (K) 3 00 © 6 00 no 00 1 50 4 00 1 00 @ 2 50 3 Oft @ 4 00 10 @ 25 8 00 @ 5 00 80 20 @ 90 65 @ 75 @ 1 00 @2 50 @ 1 00 @ 2 50 @ 8 1 00 85 @ 8 @ .. .. 50 10 Ulass—Duty,Cylinder or Window Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches. 2$ cents ^ square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $ square foot; arger and not over 24x39 inches 6 cents ^9 square oftt; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents ^ square oot; on unpolished cylinder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding 10x15 inches square, I$; over hat, and not over 10x24,2; over that, and not over 34x30, 21; all over that, 8 cents $ ft>. American 6x 8 to 8x 1 lx to to 12x19 to 18x22 to 20x31 to 24x31 to 25x36 to 80x46 to 32x50 to ) Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th qualities. 8x10 10x15 12X18 16x24 20x30 24x30 24x36 30x44 32xi8 32x56 50 6 00 6 50 7 00 50 9 00 lo HO 11 (to 12 00 .... .... © © © © Oft © 16x24 24x30 24x36 30x44. 82 x4S. to 32x56 7 12 18 15 16 18 to to to to to .. 50 00 00 00 00 00 @ @ @ @ @ @ Gunny Baj?®—Duty, valued at 10 cents square yard, 3 ; over 10, 4 cents $ ft) Calcutta, light and heavy .. $ 10 15 16 IS 20 24 or 19$ @ pee Oft 18 00 20 00 24 00 English and French Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and qualities. (Single Thick)—Disoount 25 @ 30 per cent. 6x8 to 8x10 $ 50 feet G 4)0 @7 6 50 @ S 8x11 to 10xi5 11x14 to 12x18 7 00 @9 9 • 4th 75 50 50 50 00 50 00 less, 2> Gunny C.loth—Duty, valued at 10 cents yard. 3; over 10,4 cents tt>. Calcutta, standard yard 27$ @ or iess 2s Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or less # ft), 6 cents $ ft), and 20 ^ cent ad val,; over 20 $ ft), 10 cents $ ft) and 20 ^ cent ad val. $ keg of 25 ft) Blasting (A) © 5 00 © 5 50 Shipping and Mining oents Rifle 7 50 @ Sporting, in 1 ft) canisters... $ ft) 4ft © Hair—Duty free. Rio Grande, mixed.. (cash).. Buenos Ayres, mixed 29 1 io © 2H © Hi © Hog, Western, unwashed 30 70 © Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $25; Tnte. $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 t**r; and Tampico, 1 cent $ ft). American, Dressed $ ton 310 00 @32'. 00 do 200 00 Russia, Clean Jute. Manila Sisal (gold) (gold) @210 00 340 oo 120 00 ‘Undressed @ @160 00 @ 9$ @ ft) .. 10 Hide#—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salted, and Skins, ^ cent ad val. Hides are in limited request but holders are firm. 10 Drv Hides— Buenos Ayres Montevideo Rio Grande Orinoco California California, Mexican Porto Cabello Vera Cruz , , . . . . do do do do do do . . . Maraeelbo B®fola . . do do % ‘ 20 17 do do do San Juan and Cent. Arner... do x'amplco Matainoras 18 © $ ft gold 17f © 15,® © 16 15 16$© 16 © 12 © 11 © 14 @ 13j@ © @ 17$ .. 13 .. - © .. 25 do of 1864 Horn®—Duty, Maple and Birch Indin , $ C @ @ East India . Cartbagena, etc Guayaquil .. 77$ 70 @ © © .. 65 55 60 . 1 20 95 $ ft) Kurpah @ 2 00 @ 7ft 85 85 70 (gold) (gold) Caraocaa 1 25 @ @ @ @ 1 25 1 35 1 1)5 85 Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1$ cents # ft); Railroad, $ 100 ft); Boiler and Plate, 1$ cents $ ft); Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1$ to If cents ft); Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents ^ lb. 70 cents There is but little animation in the market and prices are not very firm. 41 10 40 00 95 00 Pig, Scotch, Best,No l(cash) $ ton Pig, American, No. 1 Bar, Swedes,assortedsizes (in gold) @ 45 00 @ 42 no @205 00 r-STORE Prices—, 155 Swedes, assortedsizes Bar, English and American,Refined 110 Bar Common Scroll, Ovals and Half Round Band Horse Shoe 00 00 Hoop Rod $ ft) 27 6 Sheet, Russia Sheet,Single,Double and Treble.. $ ton Rails, English., .(gold) 56 0 i 90 00 American Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. India, Prime $ ft) @ @ @ @190 @142 @14-) @145 @170 .... .... 100 00 140 00 182 tO 181 00 112 60 14j 00 Rods, 5-8 @ 3-16 inch...c. , 00 50 00 00 00 @210 00 @ 10 @ 28 @ 8 @ @ S5 00 @ 3 50 8 50 @ 4 50 2 75 @ 3 00 2 00 @ 2 50 African, West Coast, Prime African, Serivellos, West Coast.. Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 ft); Old Lead, 1$ cents $ ft); Pipe and Sheet, 2-J cents $ ft>. Galena $ 100 ft)' Spanish 8 5' .. German * English... 8 50 8 «0 Bar $ ft) .. .. @ @ @ @ @ @ 8 75 h 75 8 75 9 11$ Leather-Duty: sole 35,upper 30 $ cent ad val. both in better demand at full rates. cash. 39 ft) heavy.... do light Cropped do do do middle bel ies 81 37 38 >’o do do @ @ 34 42 47 15 middle... do do do do d • do @ @ @ @ 43 45 50 31 3i © © 27 80 30 26 28 26 © © @ © © © 81 27 29 27 28 16 26 28 34 © © © © © 27 21 29 82 40 Hemlock, B. Ayres,&c..l’t do do do do do do do do do do d.» do middle, do ..... heavy .do California,light, do do do middle do heavy, do Orinoco,etc. l’t. do do middle do do heavy., do do & B. A, dam’gd all weights do do poor all do do Slaughter in rough, .cash. Oak, Slauf?hter in rough, light.. do do do mid. & h’vy do clo Lime—Duty: 10 $ Rockland, common do ad val. $ bbl. 42 18 29 32 83 28 81 50 00 00 00 00 00 00 oe 00 00 @ 75 20 17 Port-au-Platt, crotches. Port-au-Platt, logs 14$ @ 20 Mansanilla 18 18 @ 25 23 17 @ 25 @ @ @ @ @ © 60 @ 18 15 15 il Nuevitas Mexican Honduras do do do @ (American 15 12 12 10 Mansanilla Mexican Florida. .. Rosewood, Rio Janeiro 2 Bahia. 8 5 00 The market is fairlv active and prices firm. New Orleans... $ gall. ?-5 Porto R(co 60 Cuba Muscovado 43 do Clayed 88 English Islands .. .. @ @ Spruce, Eastern 160 2 00 ad'vaL; free. ...$ M feet 45 , Nails—Duty: out 1$; wrought 2$; horse shoe $ ft) Cutj 4d. @ 60d Clinch Hors© shoe, Copper # 100 ft) forged (8d).^ ft) T Yellow metal Zinc 6 50 8 0ft 28 50 .. . ... @ .... @ .... @ @ @ @ 82 35 20 Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30 $1 gallon; crude turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 $ cent ad val. Turpentine is quite drmly held. Rosin is unsettled. Turpentine, N. C $ 280 ft) © 5 25 2 25 © 2 50 Tar, American $ bbl. do foreign © 3 75 © 4 00 Pitch 8 50 8 75 Rosin, common cents - strained and No. 2 No. 1 Pale and Extra (280 do do do 4 00 lbs.) Spirits turpentine, Am.... $ gall. Oakum—Duty free .. 6 00 7 00 9 00 97 © 9 00 @ 11 50 © 1 00 7? ft). 10f @ 12* Cake—Duty: 20 79 cent ad val. City thin oblong, in bbls.... 79 ton ... Oil do Western thin Oils- in bags oblong, in bags .... 46 00 Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and @ @ 48 50 .... @ 47 00 rape seed, 28 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1: burning fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal, und cocos nut, 10 $1 cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish (foreign fisheries,) 20 79 cent ad valorem. 5 15 @ Olive, 13 bottle^baskets 1 75 do in casks $ gall. 11 Palm $ ft) 1 55 © Linseed, city 79 gall 1 12$ @ Whale do refined winter., Sperm, crude do . winter, bleached unbleached do do Lard oil Red oil, city distilled— .' do saponified Straits Paraffine, 28 — 80 gr... Kerosene (free).. 2 25 © 2 50 1 95 82 1 20 61 © © © © © © © © 5 20 1 4 1 tl ■ 1 .5 2 0 2 56 3 00 83 58 62 Paint®—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ ft); Paris white and whiting, 1 cent $ ft); dry ochres, 56 cents 39 lftft ft): oxide's of zinc, 1* cents 79 ft); ochre, ground in oil, $ I 5ft $ lOft ft); Spanish brown 25 79 cent ad val.; China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red and vermilion, 25 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 $ ton. 12 © Lithrage, American 79 ft) 12 Lead, red, American © 16 do white, American, pure, in oil © do white, American,puie, dry. 14$ @ 9 @ 10 Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1. 10 do white, American, No. 1, in oil 9$ @ 2 25 @ 2 75 Qc^re, yellow,French,dry 79 100 fl> > 19 do n © groan; in oil $ ft) .. .. . do • • Southern Pine..... ' Domingo, ordinary Spanish brow.1 dry Lumber, Woods, Staves, Etc*—Duty Cedar, 00 04 00 00 .. cent heavy Rosewood and 0ft .. 8 00 East India, Billiard Ball do 00 Rosewood—Duty wood)...' Cedar, Nuevitas cents are o$k. hhd. logs do nominal. Madras Manila do 00 molasses-Duty: 8 cents $ gallon. Oude Nail 00 “ ..' free. do St. do do do do do do © .. do @125 @100 @176 @150 @110 @ 70 @110 @100 @150 $foot.. do 45 cent ad val. Rubber—Duty, 10 $ ^ ft) do @°00 @250 @200 @120 @250 00 00 @200 00 mahogany, Cedar, 18 00 @ 18 00 @ 15 00 Para, Fine Para, Medium Pnra, Coarse Indigo—Duty Bengal $ M. free. $ cent ad val. Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent 4 a- Oak and Asn 65 © © 20 Ox, Rio Grande. ! Ox, Buenos Ayres .. Mahogany, St. Domingo, crotches, Hops—Duty: 5 cents $ ft). Crop of 1865 $ ft) 10 86 85 @ 14 .. . STAVES White oak, pipe, ext. a do pipe, heavy do pipe, light do pipe, culls do hhd., extra do hhd., heavy do hhd., light do hhd., culls do bbl., extra do bbl., heavy do bbl., light. do bbl., culls Red oak, hhd., heavy do hhd., light @ 8ft 00 00 00 @ 83 ,80 00 @100 4 00 @ 55 Oft @ 65 8ft 00 @ 90 65 00 @ 70 85 00 @ 40 100 00 @125 ;. # M Laths, Eastern Poplar and W. wood B’ds & Pl’k. Cherry Boaads and Plank ........ HEADING—white Oak, Slaughter,light Hay—North River, in bales $ 100 lbs, for shipping 16 buflalo Oak and H. mlock 18$ 21 .. Pipe and.Sheet $ ft) @ ., East W square 25 16 14 Honey—Duty, 20 cents $1 gallon. Cuba..(duty paid).(gold).$ gall. do 75 25 @ @ @ 19 $ ft) cash. dead green.. black, dry 28 20 24 14 do do Calcutta, city sl’ter do do do • @ @ 9 @ Sierra Leone Gambia and Bissau East India Stock— Guatemala 7 25 7 10 9 25 9 50 11 75 14 5ft 16 00 @ @ © © © @ 17 00 Above. 12x19 20x31 21x31 24x36 80x45 82x50 Coutry sl’ter trim. & cured, do do City do do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip ..$ $ cash. . do do currency Western. No. 1. North, and Ea*t. No 1. Beaver, Dark.. .. .. prices. 25 00 29 00 Black Walnut 8 goid. . 11* White Pine Box Boards White Pine Merchant. Box Boards Clear Pine 20 00 @ 24 00 50 00 @ 65 00 Paris do ..$ 100 ft) ground in oiL# ft) white, No. I $} 100 lbs do Am $ 100 Ota Whiting, American. Vermilion, Chinese { do Trieste do do California Sc AmOrioan Venetian red, (N. C.) $ft) 50 8 3 75 2| © @ 1 30 English.. 93 1 20 V owt. 3 75 ;.. .. © © . 9 4 00 l 35 95 ©» 1 25 80 THE CHRONICLE. May 19,1866.] Carmine, oity China clayChalk Chalk, block Chrome ...tf ft made . . . yellow $ *on .39 bbl 39 ton ...# ft 16 00 32 00 5 00 15 @ 20 00 @ busines* Cassia, in mats (linger, race and Mace 49 ft Planter '20 40 39 bbl. @ 41- 5 50 @ Paris—Duty: lump, free; calcined, 39 cent ad val. $ ton. Blue Nova Scotia Scotia Calcined, eastern Calcined, city mills © © © @ .. White Nova ,. $ bbl. '.. . •tea 39 bbl. 16 00 extra mesa do do 21 50 do new do India mesa Pork, mess, new do prime mess 29 90 2n 00 Old prime, do Lard, In bbls do kettle rendered do do mess, Hams, 39 lb © © @ @ © @ © @ 21 00 .. 24 50 . 30 25 .... v9 25 24 50 19 22$ © © 1H © 17* © 12$ © © © 14$ © .. pickled dry salted Shoulders, pickled do dry salted Beethams.. .......39 bbl. do 19 18$ .. 15$ Rags—^Domestic). 10 Seconds City colored Canvas Country 10$ @ 4$ @ $ © White, city hi 1 li mixed © 4$ © : Rice—Duty: cleaned 2$ cents cents, and unoleaned 2 cents $ lb. Carolina ■ 39 190 lb. East India, dressed n* 5$ ft.; paddy 10 @ 18 50 @ 9 25 ** Cadiz , 1 2 2 2 ..(mid) fine, Worthington’s.... fine, Jeffreys & Darcy’s do do do fine, Marshall’s Onondaga, com. fine. ..210 ft bgs. do do do do . 5U 75 75 75 , , 2 25 1 65 38 Solar coarse Fine screened do F. F . . 45 3 75 do (lo - © © 8 gold © . . 14$ © H* © © 15$ © 15$ @ 15$ © . .. .. © 15 15$ 16$ 2 85 2 85 © © © © , © © © © © .. @ ^5) 9 39 bush. Timothy, reaped Flaxseed, Amer. rough Linseed, American, clean...39 tee do American,rough.39 bush 6 0> 2 70 # . .... Calcutta 8 65 Bombay .... do do • • do do do do _ Sup’rtofine.. Ex f. to finest. Com. to fair ... Sup’rtofine.. Ex f. to finest. ... Oolong, Common to fair do Superior to fine . do © 10$ © 6 50 © 8 00 © 21 00 © © © • &Twankay,Oom, to fair, Uncolored Japan, 8$ 4 @ 1 1 1 1 1 ... do Ex. f. to finest do do 46 S 00 3 OO . 70 ... Ex fine to finest... do , . 1 85 Young Hyson, Common to fair do Superior to fine H. Skin 2 50 1 75 40 © Ex fine to finest • • Ex fine to finest •*-. Souchong & Congou, Com. to fair, do do Sup’rtofine. do do 90 10 1 Ex f. to finest t 10 40 10 14$ © © © © © © © © 50 © 55 © 65 © 75 © 80 © 90 © 1 00 © 70 © 85 © 1 20 © 60 © 80 © 1 00 © 30 1 00 1 25 1 50 90 1 80 1 70 1 20 1 45 1 R0 60 70, 80 85 95 1 10 75 1 10 1 65 70 90 1 50 Tin -Duty: pig,bars,and block,15 39 centad val. Plate and sheetsandterne plates, 2$ cents 39 lb. Banca 21 (grold) 39 * @ Straits (gold) 19$ @ 20 20 @ (gold) English 20 ] " Plates, charcoal I. C do do do ‘ “ 39 box 12 75 1. C. Coke T> rne Charcoal Terne Coke 10 00 11 75 9 25 39 fi> North west coast Ochotsk @ 1 15 .. @ @ l 23 @ l 80 .. 1 27 Polar ; 1 28 Wines and Liquors- Liquors - Duty: Brandy, first proof, $3 per gallon, other liquors, $2.50 Wines—Duty: value set over 50 cents 39 gallon 20 cents 39 gallon and 25 39 cent ad valorem; over 80 50 cents 39 gallon and 25 39 coo* $1 39 gallon, $1 $ gallon and 25 3? and not over 100, ad valorem; over oentad val. Brandy—J. & F. Martell ...(gold) Hennessv .(gold) Otard, Dupuy & Co (gold) Pinet, Castiliion & Co. .(gold) Renault & Co (gold) Jules Robin (gold) Marrette & Co .(gold) United Vineyard Propr...(gold) Vine Growers Co (gold) L^ger freres ' (gold) Other brands Cognac.... .(gold) Pellevolsin freres (gold) A. Seignette *.... (gold) Hivert Pellevoisen (gold) Alex. Seignette (gold) Arzao Seignette (gold) Other brands Rochelle... .(gold) Rum—Jamaica (gold) St. Croix .(gold) Gin-Different brands (gold) W^hisky—Scotch and Irish .(gold) Domestic—N. E. Rum (cur.) Bourbon Whisky (* ur.) Corn Whisky...., (cur.) Wines—Port. \ (gold) Burgundy Port (gold) Sherry .! (gold) @ 18 50 © i2 00 @ 12 00 © 9 50 Tobacco—Duty: leaf 38 cents 39 lb ; and manu¬ factured, 50 cents 39 lb. Cigars valued at $15 or less per M., 15 cents per lb., and 24 per cent ad valorem; over $15 and not over $3l), $1.25 per jb. and 30 per centad valorem; over $ 10, and not over $45, $2 per lb. and 50 per cent ad valorem; over $45, $8 per pound and 60 per cent ad valorem. 6 5 5 5 5 .. Madeira do Marseilles do in cases Champagne ......... ...... 45 @ @ @ @ 10 00 .. 5 80 5 50 5 0)) 00 @ 10 00 00 15 10 © •>0 95 Oti 00 75 00 8 60 10 10 10 00 00 75 50 90 60 00 © © © © © 6 © 3 2 90 © 8 4 00 © 4 2 45 © 2 2 50 © 6 2t> © 2 no © 8 85 © 1 25 © 8 00 © 8 85 © 1 90 © 1 1 25 © 1 1 25 © 1 85 00 @150 2 60 @ 30 12 00 @ 25 (gold) dry.:.. Claret, in hhds @ 10 50 @ 10 50 @ 10 50 @ 10 00 @ 10 50 .. (gold) do 00 50 40 80 .. .(gold) Pherry d • Malaga, sweet Smuac—Duty: 10 39 cent ad val. Sicily... 39 ton $110 00 @195 00 Tallow—Duty: 1 cent $ lb. American, prime,country and city 39 » 11$ @ 12$ Tea—Duty: 25 cents per lb. T) e market ha3 been active with a slight ad- do $ cent ad val. do do 19 to 20 do white Loaf Granulated Crushed and powdered WThite coffee, A Yellow coffee „ Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cents; hemp, $ cent 39 lb; canary,SI 39 bushel of 60 ft; and grass seeds, Clover do Gunpow. & Imper., Com. to fair do do Sup. to fine, . . 1 70 .. 30 do Hyson, Common to fair do Superior to fine Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2$ cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent 39 ft. Refined, pure 39 55 @ 18 Crude Nitrate soda 20 . do . African Whalebone—Duty: foreign fishery, 0p.cad val South Sea @ vance 12 00 9 01) Salt—Duty: sack, 24 cents 39 190 ft; bulk, 18 cents 39 BMl lb. Turks islands © 42$ Liverpool .ground... do fin e Ashton’s 45 @ 22$ ..(gold) 90 @ Nutmegs, No. 1 (gold) 87$ © 90 Pepper,... ..(gold) 22$ © Pimento, Jamaica .20? @ (gold) Cloves (gold) 27$ @ Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents $ lb or under, 2$cents; over 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cents 39 lb; over 11 cents, 3$ cents 39 ft and 10 ^ cent ad val. (Store prices.) 22 English, cast, ^ lb 17 @ German ^ 14$ © lfi$ 12 American, spring, 10 @ 12 ring English, spring 11 @ Sugar—Duty : on raw or brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 8; on white or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refin¬ ed, 84; above 15 and not over 20,4; on refined,5; and on Molado, 2$ cents 39 lb. Sugar has been fairl, active during the week, but with no material change in p ices, closing steady. Porto Rico 9$ © # ft 18$ Cuba, inf to common refining 9$ 9$ @ do fair to good do 10$ 10$ @ do fair to good grocery 10$ @ 1H do prime to choice do Hi © 12* do centrifugal 18 9$ © do Alelado 8 H © Havana, Boxes D. S Nos. 7 to 9 10§ i0$ @ do do do 10 to 12 10$ © 11* do do do 18 to 15 11$ © 12$ do do do 16 to 18 l;H © 14$ l'i .. Bacon gold 39 ft) . 5 00 2 40 2 50 Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 cent lb. hams, bacon, and lard, 2 ct-nts 3 Pork ba« been very irregular and unsettled. Beef !y. Beef, plain mess do new do mace, 40 cents; nutmegs, 50 cloves, 20; pepper and pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 cents 59 lb. Spices are very quiet with only: a light jobbing cassia and — Naptha, refined .Spices—Duty: © @ 5 50 @ 25 «H) Petroleum—Duty: orude, 20 cents; refined, 46 cents 39 galloh. © 27 Crude, 40 @ 47 gravity .. 39 gall. Refined, free © 60 in bond do 42 @ Residuum 631 (gold) (gold) (co d) ..(gold) (g.dd) Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered, 39 100 lb, and 15 39 cent ad val. No. 0 to 1* 5@I0 39 No. 19 to 26 20 39 No. 27 to 36 25 39 Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain.39 ft 8 26$ 00 45 00 00 20 25 75 50 00 00 00 $2 to $3 5C ct off list. ct. off list ct off list @ Wool—Duty: costing 12 cents or less 39 1b, 8 39 lb; over 12 and not more than 24, 6 cents ; over 24 and not over 82,10, and 10 39 cent ad valorem ; over 82,12 cents 39 lb, and 10 39 cent ad valorem; on the skin, 29 39 cent ad val. 1 cents There is prices a fair demand steady. American, Saxony fleece from manufacturers and are ^do do .... full blood Merino 60 50 $ ft $ and $ Merino Extra, pulled Superfine No. 1, pulled California, unwashed... do do Texas 42 common pulled Peruvian, unwashed Valparaiso, unwashed. - S. American Mestiza, unwashed.. do common, unwashed.. Entre Rios, washed do unwashed ...’ 8. American Cordova Donskoi, washed 3 18 22 43 42 25 15 . Persian African, unwashed ....' do washed Mexican, unwashed 85 20 : Srnvrna, unwashed ao 52 45 08 S8 2o 80 15 32 27 82 22 washed 85 Zinc—Duty; pig 2$ cents 39 ®>. or Sheet block, $1 50 10S .......39 12 © 65 © © © © © © © © 57 45 57 50 45 88 25 45 25 83 © © © © © © © © © © © © © © © 80 87 28 , , 24 46 45 80 25 45 25 25 45 ft; sheet @ 18 . Shot—Duty: 2$ cents $ lb. Drop and Back $ lb Tob ccois inactive for both leaf and manufactured 9$© Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk. 35 Tsatlees, No. 1 © 3 $ lb ‘ 10 50 Taysaams, superior, No. 1 @ 2 ... 9 50 do medium, No. 3 @ 4.... 8 50 Canton, re-reeled, No. 1 @ 2..... 8 50 Japan, superior 10 00 No. I @ 8.. * do 8*0 China thrown Italian thrown 14 50 ... .. Skins—Doty: 10 39 cent ad val. Goat, Curacoa 39 (cash) do do do do do do do Buenos Ayres Vera Cruz do do do do do do .. .. Tampico gold.;.. gold... Matamoras .. ... Cape * Honduras Sisal Para VeraCruz 35 50 3> 67$ 52* 52$ 67$ £2* 45 gold f ft .... Bolivar gold ...gold gold gold Chagres do. Puerto Cabello @ @ . gold gold ...gold do fair wrappers . .: do fillers New York running lots Ohio do New York and Ohio fillers Yara 50 Havana, fillers 63$ © 52$ 54 Manufactured On bond)— 10s and 12s—Best Virginia & N.Y* 0 00 9 00 52$ @ @ 40 do 52* 40 60 5 55 60 65 50 $ lb. • 16$ @ Spel ter—Duty: In pigs, bars, and plates, $150 39 lb Plates, foreign 39 ft 9 © 9$ do _domestic 10$ @ 11 , do do 1 do Medium Common 28 26 © @ 80 20 Medium X E>s—(dark) Best Virginia 50 @ © @ @ @ @ @ @ @ do do do do prime wrappers do Soap—Duty: 1 cent 39 lb, and 25 39 cent ad val. Castile do @ 9 50 @ 16 00 @ @ prices are nominal. Lugs (light and heavy) $ 39 (gold) do Common leaf do Medium do do Good do do do do Fine Selections do do Conn, selected wrappers @ 12 00 © © l an 4$ © 6 © 7$ © 9' © 12 © 14 © 45 © 40 © 80 © 10 © 8 © © © © 39 cent. @ 11 00 @ 10 00 52* @ 52* @ Payta Madras, each Deer, San Juan .. 10$ © © © © © @ .... fibs do (Western.)—Ex. fine, bright... tbs (Virginia)—Ex. fine, bright... Fine..I do do do do .... Fine Medium Common do do do Navy tbs—Best Virginia & N.Y.. do do Medium Common 75 @ © 32$ @ 82$ © 28 @ 25 @ .. 7$ 9 1H 14$ CommonCigara 55 00 80 <K» 25 00 20 00 18 00 18 00 @ 80 @105 @ 45 @ 80 : Corn, bulk and bags Wheat, bulk and bags 7 105 80 27 85 28 85 .. 85 85 30 26 00 00 00 00 @ 25 GO @8500 39 bush. .. . 39 tce* .. bbl. .. $ Heavy goods 1 6 © 15 © © © 1 © 1 0 0 3* 8$ 6 0 15 0 ..39 ton @17 6 @20 0 ..@16 .. 39 bbl. - ..@56 39 l-ce39 bbl. '.. .39 bush. 0 0 5 © © © v.. 4* : 39 bbl. 39 bush. Corn, bulk and bags •• d. 8. @ © 7*6 @ 10 .. Beef Pork To London: Oil Flour Petroleum Beef Pork ' Wheat Corn To Glasgow Flour Wheat .. 39 ton 20 60 45 12 15 5-82 0 Heavy goods Oil..* 35 d. 8. ^ lb $ bbl. 17 Cigars (domestic). 8eed and Havana, per M Clear Havana. do d • Codnecticut Seed , New*York Seed, Conn. Wrapper. Penn. do do do. I'reights- To Liverpool Cotton Flour Petroleum 0 4* 4 Petroleum., 39 bbl. f) ton Heavy goods Oil Beef Pork > 15 0 .. $ tee. $ bbl. To Havre: Cotton.. . .. $c. 39 lb @5 0 © 25 0 @85 0 @ 4 0 @ 8 0 $c. Hops Beef and pork. Measurement goods 39 bbl. w ton 1 10 Wheat, in shipper’s bags.. 39 bush. Flour Petroleum .39 bbl. * ..... Lard, tallow, out meats, eto 39 to11 Ashes, pot and pearl,, * 5 6 % 0 io * % Quarter for issue; which though somewhat modifying the results as here tofore shown, exhibit the principal features of the improvement noted in our last. These compare with the earnings for the same month in 1865, as follows :— last $393,870 258,480 Chicago and Alton Chicago and Great Eastern $338,480 370,889 102,801 75.514 5 468,358 Chicago and Northwestern Chicago and Rock Island 186,172 8,736 516,608 197,886 1,153,295 406,773 33,237 37,558 83,184 337,240 82,722 1,538,314 Erie Illinois Central Housatonic Marietta and Cincinnati Michigan Central Michigan Southern 144,001 32,972 409,427 121,904 277,423 606,073 270,309 43,333 $5,551,859 $5,331,341 106,269 271.527 733,806 Pittsburg,?. Wayne and Chicago. Toledo, Wabash and Western Western Union Total ending, March 31 June 30 expenses. 15,035 Increase.. 127.788 125,299 Decrease. 9,361 $220,618 thus to have occurred in the great through line, as the Erie, the Atlantic and Great Western, the Pittsburg, Foit Wayne and Chicago and the Central Illinois. In all others noted above, there, has been more or les3 increase. It may, however, be observed that in the case of the Toledo, Wabash and Western, the mileage operated this year is double that of last year, which con¬ verts the apparent increase into a decrease. . f has entered into 100 miles of additional road, 1,074,905 $5,811,233 797,047 $3,686,033 . $2,125,200 Up to the end of June, 322 miles were in operation ; for the 490 miles, The earnings per mile were as remainder of the year follows;— Miles. “ “ “ $9,800 15,280 8 774 $3,479 2,233 5,774 6,506 11,150 7,548 13,383 13,322 322 490 ... The several Profits. Expenses. $13,279 Quarter 2nd 3rd 4th Earnings. 322 490 1st companies in New York, Pennsylvania and Ohio The earnings from all sources for the were consolidated October 1. year 1865, before and after this date were as Jan. Earnings of 1S64, received in 1865. Freight earnings Railway Car service “ follows:— Total Oct. Dec. Sept. $14,112 00 3,956,771 18 1,758,008 47 1,211,950 80 612,956 35 2,744,820 38 1,145,052 12 “ 46,571 36 43.113 69 2,8:7 12 3,930 89 89,685 06 6,768 01 $9,053,392 93 $1,871,951 73 $5,825,344 79 $3,611,128 16 $1,064,905 1 5 $3,686,033 36 204, S04 00 69,423 00 5E9,475 00 274,227 00 559,475 00 $2,815,932 16 $’,763,803 00 $4,519,735 16 $1,137,460 82 $163,148 73 Rents, &c The decrease appears North Missouri Railroad.—This company 707,255 1,871,952 5,8% Decrease.. Increase.. Increase.. $2S0,182 840,766 924,692 1,631.947 Year Nett $788,866 897,571 $1,068,997 1,238,337 ^. September 30 536 6,496 43,182 and December 31.... 4,321 Increase.. Increase.. Increase.. Increase.. Increase.. 343,736 366.245 Milwaukee and St. Haul Ohio and Mississippi Difference. Decrease.. $11,390 Increase.. 112,400 Increase... 27,287 Increase.. 50,378 Increase.. 11,714 Decrease.. 385,010 Decreasel. 109,835 1866 1865 Railroads. Atlantic and Great Western earnings and of this road in 1865, were as follows :■— Gross lxpense of earnings. operating. expenses Afril.—We this week give a more extensive list of railroad returns for April, than appeared in our Railroad Earnings Great Western Railroad.—The Atlantic ®f)e Rati wag Jttonttor. • [May 19,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 632 Total earuiDgs...’ Working expenses Rent of Cleveland and Mahoning Railroad Interest of three months Total disbursements Balance to 7 capital Maryland and $1,805,609 55 Delaware Railroad.—Sufficient iron, with spikes, has been purchased to lay the track of this road to HiIlboro’? junction with the Delaware Railroad, and we learn a contract for the construction of over that it will be completed to that point by August 1st, at furthest being that portion of the main line north of Macon City and so much of its west branch as is east of Brunswick. These extensions with a prospect of completing it to Oxford, before the end of the current year. . ' are to be completed by next winter. COMPARATIVE —Atlantic & Great Western.-^ 1864. (322 m.) (466 in.) $319,711 $207,393 229,011 226,733 197,269 314^679 314,521 332^098 $504,992...Jan. 347,648 399,670 406,680 388,480.. .I?Iar... ...April.. ..ITIay — . 396,847 331,>10 — .. 6,568,068 XillC XWa.il W Hj 1864. 1865. — — 934.133 - 1,114,508 1,099,507 3,072,293 1,041,975 • 994,317 1,105,364 1,801,005 1,222,568 1,224,909 1,334,217 ‘447,146 3,840,091 iillUUlo 565,145 480,710 747.942 702.692 519.306 767,508 669,605 729,759 946,707 ...Oct.... 716,378 — .. 6,114,566 ...sep— 1864. (708 m.) $571,536 (708 m.) 528,972 616,665 516,608 460,573 (251 m.) $77,010 74,409 89,901 617,682 578,403 641,589 618,887 518,088 6,329,447 7,181,208 $582,828...Jan. 512.027...Feb. 516,822...mar... 4(M5,773.. April.. -. — — — ..June.. — ...July.. ...Aug... ..Sep... — — — ....Oct.... ...Nov... Dec... — — — lit Year 3,095,470 .. (285 m.) $252,435 278,818 348,802 338,276 271,553 265,780 2658,244 346,781 408,445 410, S02 405,510 376,470 $306,324 279,137 344,228 337,240 401,456 365,663 329,105 413,501 460,661 490, G93 3,966,946 - . — — — 104,587 I860. (285 m.) — 114.512 246,3581 289,403 186,172 227,260-311,ISO 2582,728 288,095 384,290 300,707 261,141 190,227 — — — 174,164 226,261 197,886 — — — — — — — — — JU.il/IlAlncUl vuiiuXd'It (251 m.) i(251 m.) $98,112 $90,125.. Jan.. 84,264.. .Feb 86,626 82,910... mar.., 958,5058 82,722.. April. 82,186 ...may.. 73,842 ..June. 110,186 ...July. 108,652 ...Aug.. 112,156 ..Sep.. 120,051 117,604 (182 m.) 1864. — . 3,223,0S8 r i 1866. (182 m.) $5805,554 $237,555 4,504,546 1866. .. 95,4558 .. . . „ . 72,5889 858,993 78,697 91,809 94,375 93,078 90,576 96,908 ...may — 1865. ....Oct.. ..Nov.. ....Dec,. — IKLdi lUbbtl OllVl 1/lUUIUUcl 1866. 603,402 ...Oct— ...Nov.... ...Dec.... — 7,960,981 OoIlurcs/iL 747,469 739,736 — 546,609 ..Year.. ...July ...Aug.. ....Sep.. — 749,191 563,401 ..June.. — 923.886 ...Nov... ....Dec... — . ...may. — 1865. (182 m.) $158,735 175,482 243,150 185,013 198,679 243,178 224,980 271,140 3581,494 324,865 3586,617 321,037 518,736. .April 585,623 1865. 423,578 586,964 799,236 661,391 657r141 .. — — 468.5858 466.8580 510,100 — — 421,363 416,588 459,762 423,797 406,373 .. — — — 499,296 (708 in.) $327,900 983,855...Feb... — — 1864. (679 m.) $523,566... Jan.. 405,6:84... Feb.. 523,744...mar. 1864. 1866. — 1,522,472 1,429,765 357,956 2,770,4S4 1,256,567 1,(.70,434...Mar... 1,453.455 1,153,295..April.. ...may.. 1,333,461 ..June... 1,177,372 j uly... 1,202,180 ...Aug 1,331,046 1,336,615 1,438,6 9 $541,005 482,164 317,839 390,5855 — Year.. (797 m.) (657 m.) (657 in.) $984,837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188...Jan $273,875 — 252,015 ~ (609 in.) — 307,919 236,824 ' • (609 in.) (280 m.) 1866. 1865. — 307,803 .. 1864. — 4 /—Chicago and Rock Island.—* ^-Chicago & Northwestern.-* 1866. $280,503 $210,171...Jan... 207,913 ..Feb... 275,282 304,885...mar... 299,063 370,889..April.. 258,480 ...may... 822,277 ..June.. 355,270 ..July.. 335,985 ...Aug... 409,250 ....Sep... 401,280 ...Oct... ...Nov... ...Dec... — 699,752 3,709,970 — 731,270 357,556 ...July... ...Aug... —Sep — 719,911 .. ...June.. — 695.523 446 044 195,803 162,723 178,786 206,090 224,257 312,165 354,554 320,879 — 460,422 521,174 (280 m.) $100,991 154,418 .. ...Feb... — 1865. (257 m.) (490 #».) 738,527 677,625 406,076 1364. RAILROADS. OF PRINCIPAL EARNINGS Chicago and Alton.—r-% . 1866. 1865. MONTHLY 34 miles from its ....Oct.. ...Nov.. ...Dec.. 1866. (2S5 in \ $2S2,4&5 265,7™ 3587,153 343,736 — — ' «*-»• — ■ — 447,669 — 328,869 — — 13,429,643 15,434,775 Year.. — (524 m.) $256,600 1865. (524 m.) $363,996 366,361 413,322 366,245 353,194 402,122 309,083 424,206 484,173 521,636 498,421 366,192 4,110,154 r 304,445 338,454 330,651 267,126 315,258 278,891 358,862 402,219 404,568 448,934 411,806 4,868,951 1864. 1866. — ...may... ..June.. — (463 m.) $290,676 457,227 611,297 588,066 625,751 632,911 606.640 625,547 075,350 701,3» 691,55 914,08 1865. 74,283 70,740 10(5,689 146,943 224,838 177,159 170,555 139,547 ....Sep... — 168,218 178,526 228.020 149,099 117,013 226.840 — 113,399 ....Oct.... ..Nov... — — ...Dec... — — (234 in.) $98,183 ...July...’ ...Aug*.. — .,.,Year 1,711,281 .. 310,594 110,664 1,985,571 1864. 1866. (234 in.) $121,776. ..Jan... 34.897.. .Feb... 72,135... mar... - — — — — — — — — — — . — — . — — . .. — 1865. 95.905 124.175...mar.. 106,269 121,904.. April. ...may.. 203.018 2:87,562 126,970 99,662 . ...July... ...Aug... ....Sep... 251,9 6 241,370 86,4 2 ....Oct.... ...Nov.-. ...Dec.--. .-Year.. 1,402,106 3 164,710 221,6583 198,135 129,227 2,535,001 1865. 1864. (242 m.) $144,084 (242 m.) $178,119... Jan... 155,893... Feb... 95.843 202,771 169,299 192,138...mar... ..April.. ...may.-- 132,896 123,487 127,010 ...June.. 156,338 ...July.. 139,6? 3 244,1x4 375,534 221,570 162,570 218,236 269,459 222,924 208,098 162,694 $79.7585 — — — — — ..Aug... Sept... . — — — 0,841 395,579 346,717 171,125 . 269,443 224,957 223,242 — ..June. — — — — ..Year. . .Oct ..Nov:... ..Dec.... ' 139,171 155,758 144,001 138 738 ' 194,521 f 271,725 4-374.534 ^379,981 375,534 220.209 f361,610 265,154 1247,023 (140 m.) $30,840 37.488 42 038 256,407.. m *.i r.. 270,300. April — ..June — 284,319 68,180 59,862 75,677 92,715 54,942 61,770 42,195 326.236 277,423 — — — — — — — — — Sept.. .. \ 18(56. (177m.) 45,102 36,006 39,299 43,333 — — • . 37,830 49.903 60.565 ..Aug.. ..Oct— ..NOV..’; ..Dec... 1865. (157 m.) $43,716 37,265 32,378 33,972 658,862 82,147 66,871 -July . — 41,450 48,359 68,118 50,308 ..may., — — 372,618 412,553 246,109 Western Union 194,167...Feb. — 304.463 349.285 3,793,005 1864. (484 m.) $226,059... Jan. — 239,139 313,914 271,527. 290,916 3,311,070 1866. — * 1866. $259,223 $267,541 344,700 350,848 ...De<*i.. — 1865. (340 m.) (340 m.) 302,596 332,400 278,006 346,243 275,950 ....Oct.. ...Not.. — — 268,176 ...July. ...Aug.. ....Sep.. — /-Toledo, Wab. & Western.-* 153,903 173,722 (340 m.) $210,329 260,466 309,261 (234 m.) 64,993 83,702 131,648 ...may... ..June 1864. 86,523 ..April.. (210 m.) (210 m.) 177.625 /—-Ohio & Mississippi 1866. 46.474 160,497 — . $131,707... Jan.. 122,621... Feb.. 1S66. — ..Year. (234 m.) $98,181 $170,078 157,786 149, &55 155,730 144,942 218,236 234,194 203,785 202,966 204,726 — (234 m.) $51,965 147,485 — 1,222,017 1864. (210 m.) $100,872 (468 m.) (468 m.) $690,144 $555,488... Jan... 474,738... Feb... 678,504 654,890... mar... 857,583 606,078. .April.. 733,866 ...may.. 637,186 ..June.. 646,995 July584,523 Aug. . 712,495 -.Sept 795,933 ..oct.,.. 858,500 Nov 712,362 ...Dec 580,963 . 1865. 1,038,105 1866. /-St. L„ Alton A T. Hante.-* t—Pittsb-. Ft.W. ,& Chicago.-* 1864. (234 m.) $102,749 115,135 88,221 140,418 186,747 212,209 (524 m.) ran. . $314,598. 283,177. .Feb... 412,393. .mar... 409,427.. April.. 1865. . ^-Milwaukee & St. Paul.-* /-Mil. and Prairie dn Chien.-> ^-Mich. So. & N. Indiana.-* 1864. ..Year- — — — — -- — a 7,180,43 8,489,062 — ..*Ycar.. , 2,084,074 >>2,290,696 — ~Year.. 2,050,323 2,926,678 — ..Year. 587,078 689,383 19,1866.] May MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. RAILROAD, CANAL, AND and have Atlantic & St. Periods. 153,000 11,522,15' 1,919,000 2,494,900 Quarterly. Apr. .1% Apr. ..4 100 100 100 50 100 500 100 100 100 100 and Corning* . Boston, Hartford and Boston and Lowell Boston and Maine Erie and Providence Boston and Worcester Boston 8,500,000 1,830,000 4,076,974 3,160,000 4,500,000 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. and July and July and July and July do Alton 50 100 100 preferred . . 120% pref. .100 do Chicago and Rock Island loO Cincinnati and Chicago Air LinelOO Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 Cincinnati and Zanesville 100 Cleveland, Columbus, & Cincin.100 .. 50 Cleveland & Mahoning* Cleveland, Painesville & Ashta.100 50 Cleveland and Pittsburg Cleveland and Toledo 50 Columbus & Indianapolis Cent.100 Columbus and Xenia* 50 50 100 100 Connecticut and Passumpsic.. 100 Concord Concord and Portsmouth Coney Island and Brooklyn pref.100 do do " ' Connecticut River Covington and Lexington Dayton and Michigan Delaware*.^ Delaware, Lacka., & Western Des Moines Valley Detroit and Milwaukee Dubuque and Sioux do do Eastern, 100 100 50 50 100 .100 .. Jan. ..3}$ Fe*'. .5 130 Feb .10 Jan...3% 52% §'‘1,000 1,783,200 Mar and Sep. Mar. .5 2,425,400 Mar and Sep. Mar. .5 8,376,510 May & Nov. May .5 " Erie preferred Northeast* 6,000.000 April and Oct Apr. ..5 1,106,125 3,000,000 Apr and Oct. Apr .4 100 100 . 100 Forty-sec’d St. & Grand St. F’y.100 Fitchburg Feb. and 67% 28% 58% 28% 58% 93% 93% . 952,350 500.000 Feb. and Aug 500.000 Jan. and July 500,000 Jan. and July 16,570,100 Feb. & Aug. 8,5.35.700 Feb. & Aug. 600,000 Feb. & Aug. 3,540,000 Jan. and July . 60 Jan. ..3% Feb..4 Feb.. 3% Feb..5 Jan.. .4 750,000 April and Oct Apr ..5 4.395.800 Feb. and Aug Feb..6 N©w Tondon Northern— 700,000 ..100 788,047 New York and Boston Air Line.100 New York Central 100 24,386,000 Feb. and Aug Feb..3 New York and New Haven 100 5,000,000, Quarterly. 104 May..6 5,085,050 1,500,004) 1,508,000 795,360 Jan. and Bid. Ask Last p’d July Jan,..4 Quarterly. Apr...3 102* 3,068,400 May and Nov May3&4a Quarterly. 4,518,900 3,150,150 2,338,600 Jan. and .100 3,077,000 100 19,822,85: 3,609,600 Apr. .2 Jan.. .5 100 7,000.000 102 July 110 30 Aug Feb.. 4 Quarterly. Apr ..6 May and Nov May. .5 Feb. and 984,704* preferred. 50 do1 do 125,000 607,111 274,404) 100 100 100 Tioga.* Troy and Boston Troy and Greenbush* 811,560 100 Utica and Black River. Vermont and Canada*..........100 Vermont and Massachusetts... .100 50 Warren* Western (Mass) 100 Western Union (Wis. & M.) Worcester and Nashua 75 2,860,000 2,860,4KK 1,408,300 5,627,700 1,141,650 317,050 Wrightsville,York& Gettysh'g* 60 Canal. Delaware Delaware Delaware Lancaster Jan. and June and Dec Jan. and July June and Dec Jan. and July Jan. and July Jan. and July Jail, and Dec ..3% Jan ..4 Dec ..4 Jan...2 Jan.. .3 Jan.. .6 2,787.0(0 50 Susquehanna.100 1,100,000 750,040 50 American Coal 25 1,5G0,000 120% 76 100 4,OCO,OOG 50 2,SCO,000 City . 120 112 75 70 74 Gas Consolidation Coal, Md Cumberland Coal, preferred Farmers Loan and Trust Harlem Gas ..100 6,000,(XX 100 5,000,004 25 1,000,00( 54) 644.00) 22 110 •04X 109% 79% 80 60 so" 9-i 85 55 70 99 02 70 110 90 130 85 preferred Metropolitan Gas 94% 94% i ... • • 44 • -• . . ^ 65 1,000,004 4,000,0(X 50 June..2%' 128 ISO Nicaragua Transit 100 1,000,00) 104 35% 180 61% 61J8 , 17 43 44 47% 47% Jan. and July Jan.. .4 120 170 Jan. and July Jan...5 145 Nov.... 4,000,000 Quarterly. June.5 25 Saginaw Land, Salt and Mm Tan. and July Jan. ’65.5 1,000,00) Jan. and July 25 54% 54% 2,500,OCX ...100 .. 213 Quarterly. June. 5 Quarterly. Apr.. 5 25 1,000,004 100 10,000,004 Rutland Marble 11% 43 2i% 21% 1,000,00) Feb. and Aug F.S&lO&r 100 3,4(00,000 50 3,200,00) Quartz Hill Quicksilver Williamsburg Gas Valley Coal Feb. and Aug Feb. 10 1,000,(XX 100 1,200,001 50 1,000,00) May and Nov Scrip (50 paid) Pennsylvania Coal Wyoming 35 1,090,00( 100 Spruce Hill Coal Spring Mountain Coal Quarterly. 500,004) Minnesota New Jersey Consolidated New Jersey Zinc New York Gas Light New York Life and Trust ...100 2,500,004 Jan. and July Union Steamship : Union Trust 100 United States Telegraph 100 United States Trust 100 Western Union Telegraph loo Western Union (Russian Cexten)10 Wilkesbarre (Consolidated )CoaU00 127 • 6!) 60 Feb. and Aug 100 5,097,604. 100 5,774,40i 100 2,800,04K Pacific Mail 56 140* .... 50 1,000,(XX do 106% 109' . „ Hampshire and Baltimore Coal. 100 Mariposa Gold 40% 1)8% July Jan.. .5 Apr and Oct. Apr .4 ’... 10( 4,000,004 .10(5 2,000.004 •Tan. and July Jan...5 2C -1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...4 Jersey City and Hoboken Gas.. 20 Manhattan Gas 50 39% 90 143 .... Tan. and 600,(KK' 100 International Coal 10 142 33 104 5,040,004 Improvement Cary Improvement Central American Trans Central Coal Citizens (Brooklyn) 100 25 2,000.000 Brooklyn Gas Canton 70 18 32 2 Boston Water Power Brunswick 95 90 48 100 Atlantic Mail 98% 100 Jan...2 50 5,104,050 May and Nov May. .5 Monongahela Navigation 5 0 726,800 Feb. and Aug Feb..6 Morris (consolidated) 14 0 1,025,000 Feb. and Au Feb.. 5 do preferred 1(0 1,175,0C0 Pennsylvania and New York... 54) 138,086 Feb.. 6s. Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 1,908,207 Feb. and Aug Feb. .6 do preferred. 5P 2.888,8(5 Feb. and Aug Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 2,051,000 American Telegraph Ashburton Coal 120 70 )09% 110 July Jan...5| January Feb..3 50 1,633,350 Feb. and Aug Division Feb. and Aug Feb.10 and Hudson... ICO 10,000,000 ICO 2,528,240 Feb. and Aug Feb.10 and Raritan and Susquehanna.... £0 200,(KM Miscellaneous. 11IX 255 July Jan, ..3% 25 1,550,363 25 8,228,595 Wyoming Valley. 111 S8X 78 105 76 Pennsylvania 50 20,04*0. Oou Philadelphia and lialtimoreCentlUO 218,100 64 66 Jan...3 Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5,069,450 Ja .andJuly De.'tiS 10 107X 107% Philadelphia and Reading 50 20,240,673 110 Apr. .4 Phila., Germant’n, & Norrist’n* 50 1,476,300 Apr. and Oct Apr. .5 119% 120 Apr. and Oct Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore oO 3,973,300 Pittsburg and Connellsville 50 1,774,623 Quarterly. Apr ..2% .9Sj 98% Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolOO 9,307,4)00 June and Dec Dec. .4 100 Portland, Saco, & Portsmouth. 100 1,500,000 123 Jan. and July Jan...4 Providence and Worcester 100 1,700,000 Raritan and Delaware Bay 100 2,360,700 Rensselaer & Saratoga consol. .100 800,000 April and Oct Apr...4% April Saratoga and Whitehall 104) 500,000 April and Oct Apr.. .3 and Oct Troy, Salem & Rutland .... 100 800,000 Jan. and July Apr... 3 Jan...5 Rome, Watertown &Ogdensb'glOC 1,774,175 Rutland and Burlington— ... .100 2,233,370 37 34) St. Louis, Alton, AfTerreHautelOC 2.300,00004 6i May. .7 do do pref.100 1,700,000 Annually. St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chic. 100 Sandusky, Dayton, and Cincin. .100 2,989,094* Feb. and Aug Feb. .3 do do pref.100 35-1,8GC 862,571 Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO Jan. ..2% Schuylkill Valley*. 50 576,050 Jan. and July 75 Apr. and Oct Second Avenue (N. Y.) 650,000 Feb. and ,.. .100 Aug Feb.. 2 135 150* Sliamokin Valiev &Pottsville*. 50 869,450 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)...., 100 750,000 Quarterly. South Carolina 100 5,819,275 Syracuse. Binghamton & N. Y.100 1,200,130 Jan.. .6 Terre Haute & Indianapolis.... 50 1,900,150 Jan. and July 197 Third Avenue (N. Y.) 100 1,170,00(1 Quarterly. Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw.. .100 1,700,000 do 1st pref.100 1,700,00< do do do 2d pref.100 1,000,000 38 40 Juneand Dec June. 3 Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 2,442,350 June and Dec Dec. 3% 55 62 Union West Branch and 42 169 39” ■8% 2S% Lehigh Navigation 74 % 78 93 90 84 89 Jau ..7 January. Jan. and July Jan.. .4 482.400 50 Chesapeake and Delaware Chesapeake and Ohio Feb.. 2% Northampton..100 1,010,000 New Jersey ’62% ” 115 111 Aug May & Nov. May. .4 155 Jan. and July Jan .5 863 86% Jan. and J uly Apr ’66 April and Oct Apr. ..8 104% WAX Quarterly. Mar. .2% 1,490,800 Jqn. and July Jan.. .5 134 1,500,000 vi ay and N ov May..4 350,000 Jan. and July Jan... 3% 600,000 392,900 70 1,255,200 Jan. and July Jan...3 104 1,591,100 Jan. and July Jan...4 1,582,169 2,316,705 406,132 Jan. and July Jan. .3 140 10,247,050 Jan. and July Jan. .5 1,550,050 6,000,000 1,036,000 5,000,000 5,403,910 4,654,S00 Hannibal and St. Joseph 100 1,900,000 do do pref... 100 5,253,836 Hartford and New Haven. 100 3,000,000 Quarterly. April. 3 Housatonic 100 820,000 do preferred 100 1,180,(KM) Jan. and July Jan.. .4 Hudson River .100 6,563,250 April and Oct Apr.. 5 494,380 Huntingdon and Broad Top *... 190,750 Jan. and July Jan. ..3% do do pref. 50 100 23,374,400 Feb. and Aug Feb..5 Illinois Central Mar. .4 Mar. & Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50 1,689,900 Jan, and Sep Jan.. .3 July 412,000 100 Indianapolis and Madison 407,900 Jam and July Jan...4 do do pref.. 100 Jeffersonville 50 1,015,907 Joliet and Chicago* 100 1,500,000 Quarterly. Apr.-..1% Kennebec and Portland (new).. 100 835,000 Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50 500,000 do do pref. 50 Quarterly. Apr.. 2% Lehigh Valley 50 6,632,250 Feb. and Aug Feb. ..2 516, 573 Lexington and Frankfort 50 Little Miami 50 8,572, 436 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 Little Schuylkill* 50 2,646, 100 Jan. and July Jan... 3 715 Quarterly. Feb..2 Long Island 50 1,852, Loaisville and Frankfort 50 1,109, 594 Feo. and Aug Feb..2 .100 5,527, 871 Feb. and Aug Feb..3% Louisville and Nashville ,000 Louisville,New Albany & Chic. 100 2,800,' Macon and Western 100 1,500,000 Apr and Oct April.3 McGregor Western* 100 Maine Central 100 1,447,060 Marietta and Cincinnati 50 2,022,484 do 1st pref. 50 6,205,404 Feb. and Aug Feb .3s do do 2d pref.. 50 3,819,771 Feb. and Aug Feb .3s do Manchester and Lawrence 100 1,000,000 May and Nov May. .4 •lan.. 5 Jan. and 100 6,491,386 Feb. and July Michigui Central Michigan Southern and N. Ind..l00 9.381.800 Feb. and Aug Aug. .3% Aug Feb. .5 do do guaran.100 1,089,700 Milwaukee and Prairie Du ChienlOO 3,014,000 do 1st pref.100 3,082,000 Feb. and Aug Feb. .4 do do 2d pref.100 1,014,000 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 8% do Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug do ..100 2,400,000 Jan. and July Aug. 3% preferred •Jan...4 Mine Hill & Schuylkill Haven.. 50 3,708,200 Morris and Essex 50 3,000,000 Feb. and Aug *usr..3*. 600,009 May and Nov May. .4 Nashua and Lowell 100 Feu.. 7 Feb. Naugatuck 100 1,100,000 June and Aug Dec..4 and Dec 600,000 New Bedford and Taunton 100 738,538 Now Haven, N. Lond., & Ston .100 New Haven and 97 10o% 103 116 116% Feb..5 — , .... 48 . 2,000,000 1,751,577 Mar 7s. pref..... 100 1,982,180 March Jan.. .4 100 3,155,000 Jan. and July 100 1,000,000 Quarterly. Apr Eighth Avenue, N. Y* Elmira, Jefferson, & CanandagualOO Elmira and Williamsport* 50 do do pref... 50 do- 117 UiV __ 100 City (Mass) Erie and 136 149 Periods. standing. and Newport100 Panama (and Steamship) Feb.’. 3% Apr... 2% Jan...2% out¬ preferred. .100 2,950,54X1 Oswego and Svracuse .... pref. ....100 1,500,000 do do 100 [ .5% . Chicago Burlington and Quincy.100 100 Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*.. .100 1,000,000 2,250,000 100 13,160,927 Chicago and Milwaukee* Chicago and Northwestern 100 12,994,719 June & Dec June.. 3% do Old Colony 98 .4 .4 .5 . Mississippi do 492.150 . Valley* Jan Jan Jan Jan Oliiaand Friday. Dividend. Stock roads, Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. 907,112 600,000 Quarterly. Apr...l% 250,000 June &> Dec. L»ec. .2% Brooklyn Central : Feb. and Aug Brooklyn City 10 1,000,000 366,000 Brooklyn City and Newtown.. .100 850,000 Jan. and July Buffalo, New York, and Erie*.. 100 & Buffalo and State Line 100 2,200,000 Feb. andAug. Aug 4.988,180 Feb. 100 378,455 Camden an£ Amboy Camden and Atlantic 50 682,600 do do preferred.. 50 681,665 Jan. and July Cape Cod 60 1,150.000 Catawissa* 50 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug do preferred 50 11,500,000 Quarterly. 100 Central of New Jersey Jan. and July Cheshire (preferred) 100 2,085,925 Chicago and 128 Aug 4,434,250 Companies. * Marked thus (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. New York and Haslem 50 New York nreferred 50 New York Prevalence & BostonlOO 100 Ninth Avenue Northern of New Hampshire.. .100 50 Northern Central North Pennsylvania 50 Norwich and Worcester........ 100 55 113 50 112 100 and Branch*.. .100 1,650,000 Apriland Oct Apr. ..5 Feb..3 Feb. Bellefontaine Line Belvidere, Delaware.... Berkshire* Chester Bid. Askd Last p’d 100 50 50 100 13,18S,902iApril and Oct Lawrence* Baltimore and Ohio Washington Blossburg standing. ' preferred do out¬ leased roads, fixed incomes. Railroad. Alton and St Louis* Atlantic & Great Western Friday. Dividend. Stock Companies. Marked thus (*) are 633 THE CHRONICLE Jan...5 45% 97 1,000,000 3,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 4 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...5 parsed. 22,000,000 Quarterly. Feb 2,175,000 Apr. and Oct 45% 170 61% 61% 108% 109 45 Jan...5 60 750.000 Tan. and July 100^ 1,250,000 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 55 634 THE CHRONICLE. [May 19,1866. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS INTEREST. FRIDAY. Amount DESCRIPTION. mtstand Princpal payble. 6 ing. «-» & Payable. Railroad: Atlantic and Great Western 1st 2d do do do Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio, do do do do Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex) do S’k’g Fund(Silv.Creek) Consolidated Bonds Atlantic and St. Lawrence : Dollar Bonds do do 1855 1850 1853 1st 2d 1st 2d do do extended... do do do (1. P. & C.) do do Belvidere hemware; 1st Mort. (guar. C. and A. 2d Mort. do 3d Mort. do - Blossburg and Coming: Mortgage Bonds Mortgage Mortgage Bonds Buffalo, New York and Erie. 1st Mortgage Buffalo and State Line-. 1st Mortgage Income Erie and Northeast Camden and Amboy: Dollar Loans Dollar Loan (£5,000,000) Loan..... ' do 116,000 650,000 347,000 Mortgage W. Div do do Moitfgage Bonds Chicago and Alton: 1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref do inconvert.. Bonds, (dated Sept. 20, 1860) Chicago and Great Eastern: 1st Mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee: Mortgage (consolidated) Chicago and Northwestern: Preferred Sinking Fund 1st Mortgage Interest Bonds. Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. till 1870 Extension Bonds Chicago and Rock Island : 1st Mortgage Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton: 1st Mortgage 2d do Cincinnati and Zanesville : 1st Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati: 1st Mortgage Cleveland and Mahoning : 1st Mortgage. 2d do ... do 3d... Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula. Mortgage . . . Dividend Bonds Snnbury apd Erie Bonds Pittsburg; 2d Mortgage 3d do convertible 4th do Cleveland and Toledo: Sinking Fund Mortgage Con lecticut River: Mortgage Connecticut and Passumpsic River ; 1st Mortgage Cumberland Valley: 1st Mortgage Bonds 2d do do Dayton and Michigan: 1st Mortgage 2d do 8d do Toledo Depot Delaware: l»t Bonds Mortgage, guaranteed ^ sinking fand ® (r * • » . Wto*m* m Wfw tm,,, • /, f, • 83 90 ... Mortgage 34 0D £ 734,000 PQ ◄ do East 98* .... 93 420,000 5 JJan. tfc.July 1872 730,200 6 Feb. & Aug 1874 do Pennsylvania : Sinking Fund Bonds Elmira arul Williamsport: 1st Erie 1st 2d 3d 598,000 Mortgage 4th 5th 3,000,000 4,000,000 6,000,000 4,441,600 Mortgage, tinkiug fund do Grand Junction: 1865 1865 1870 1870 1889 Great Western, (111.): do Jan. & July do do Jan. & Aug 1 7 7 July Mortgage 1st , . ... . 1.700,000 6 Feb. & Aug 1883 867,000 6 May & Nov. 1889 4,269,400 6 J’ne & Dec. 1893 .... 7 7 Feb. & Ang 1870 1st 2d 100 100 Feb. & Aug 1890 May & Nov 1890 M’ch & Sep 1865 600,000 Jan. & 1st 1st 80 80 ... 519,000 7 July *75-’80 Mayr <fe Nov. 1877 1,100,000 7 467,000 3,167,000 680,000 8 9 7 95* Jan. & Julv 1893 Ap’l & Oct. 1S83 Jan. & July 1883 do 1883 M’ch& Sep 1890 95 86 112 Y . 1st . — .. 1st 5,000,000 7 Ap’l & Oct. 1895 ... 2,000,000 7 Jan. & July 1898 1,250,000 484,001) 7 1,397,000 7 Jan. & 756,<XH); 7 2.000,000 7 379,000 7 1,249,000 7 July 1870' May & Nov. 91 85 81 76 76 1867 1880 do 1,300,000 7 7 Jan. & 244,200 648^200 7 8 900,000 7 500,000 7 1,129,(XX) 7 7 Sep April & Oct 1873 Mortgitge, sinking fund 500,000 Jan. & July 1882 99 mortgage 800,000 Jan. & 1874 99 100 800,000 April & Oct 1870 90 100 La tension Bonds Louis< U'Is and Nashville: 1st 1st 1,108,124 6 78 80 2,205,000 7 Jan. & 99 100 1,619.500 July . 18S5 250,000 M’ch & 800,000 J’ne & Dec 1876 Sep ... 161,000 8 Ap’l & Oct. 1964 do 109,500 8 1904 *•' '642,(XX 162,501 7 7 do do 18— 18— .... .... 100 .. Hocking Valley .. ... mort. 1,500,000 7 Jan. A Jnli 71875 600,000 7 MVb * Sei>1881 98 moo u 7 A Joii Mississippi and Missouri River: 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d do sinking fund.. 1st do Oskaloos^. too • trr - . ? ft f nt* 1st Land Grant 2d do do Mortgage - I Morris and Essex : do May & Nov. 1873 May & April & Oct Jan. & July 1870 May &Nov. 1877 : 72 1890 Feb. & Aug 1883 2,691,293 Feb. & 300,000 .. .. 93 Nov 1883 1,804,000 300,560 Memphis Branch Mortgage ^ 500,001 ) 6 Jan. & Julj 1875 1872 1869 225,000 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien: 1st Mortgage, sinking fund. Milwaukee and St. Paul; 1st Mortgage 2d do 91 May & Nov. July 500,000 Sinking F’nd do Michigan South. & North. Indiana 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 1878 Jan. & .' .. M’ch & Sep 1873 do 1875 Jan. &■ July 1892 1861 1862 960,000 $1,1 0,000 Loan Bonds $ I00.0(X) Loan Bonds 1st Mortgage (P.& K.RR ) Bonds.. 2d do ( do ) Bonds.. Michigan Central: Dollar, convertible .... do do 1,000,000 fund McGregor Western:—1st Mortgage Maine 'Central: Feb. & Aug 1880 do 1874 903,000 July 1,300,000 Mortgage Scioto arid 230,000 250,000 7 1,465,000 Marietta and Cincinnati: 1st Mortgage, 1864 1875 103 11890 187,000 Mortgage Aug 1873 850,000 7 102 1881 Long Island: .... 1875 1875 May & Nov. Little Miami: 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill: 1st Mortgage, sinking .... do do 685,000 .... July 1890 Feb. & M’ch & do 100 April &■ Oct 80 Feb. & Aug 1875 1866 Lehigh Valley: 1st. Mortgage — 1870 7 July 1st Mortgage 2d do 3d do La Crosse and Milwaukee: 1st Mortgage, Eastern Division.... 2d do do SO May & Nov 108 93 95 Jan. & Kennebec and Portland: . May & Nov 1893 491,500 .. 90 Feb. & Aug 1885 do 1885 May & Nov. 1863 Quarterly. 1915 Feb. & Aug 1885 7 3,600,000 7 .. 1867 102>; 103 500,000 : Joliet and Northern Indiana: . 1877 Jan. & July 1866 do 1870 112* Joliet and Chicago: - July do 600.000; Indianapolis and Madison: 1st Mortgage Jeffersonville; 2d Mortgage S7 Jau. & 1876 364,000 10 do Indianajrolis arid Cincinnati 1st Mortgage 92* .... 6 do 2-,563,000 Indiana Central: 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d G ^ 2,85)6,500 : 90 Jan. & July 1876 6,837,000 • 97 Aug;1863 n 500,000 Mortgage, convertible. do Sterling 94* July 1883 500,000 Redemption bonds . & 523,000; do 93* 1865 7 Feb. & Aug 1870 do 1869 110,000, A 1,907,000 7 J’ne & Dec. 18S5 192,000! $ May & Nov. 1875 Mortgage. 98*' 93 |Jan. & July 1883 jJan. & July 3,890,GOoi Illinois Central: — April & Oct;18Sl 7 191,000 ' Huntington and Broad Top; 1882 7 1,000,000: sinking fund. 99 *7* Oct 1868 rj 1,037,500 fund. 99* 106 Jan. & July 1870 927,000; 6 Feb. & River: do 2d do 3d do Convertible 6 700,000 j G Jan. 1st .... 1882 1875 633,600; and Fishkill: 1st Mortgage 2d do sinking Ho u salon ie: 1st Mortgage Hudson Feb. & Aug l May &Nov. 3,437,750; 1st .... „ 7 : New Dollar Bonds Mortgage Hartford, Providence 1870 1,350,000; Hartford and New Haven: Ap’l & Oct. Jan. & July 1.000,000'10 April & do Harrisburg and Lancaster 98 7 : Convertible Bonds. 9S J'ne & Dec. 1877 May & Nov 1872 141 000 Mortgage West. Division .... tS79 6 927,000* do" East. Hannibal and St. Joseph , 7 7 7 1868 1879 I do 1883 April & Oct 1880 I June & Dec 1888 iM’ch & Sep 1875 1,963,000 1,086,000; do Feb. & May & Nov. M’ch & Sep 149,000 Mortgage.,... 96 1873 July 926,500 convertible do Galena and Chicago Union: 1st 2d 7 7 3,816,582 convertible Sterling convertible Erie and Northeast: .... Ap’l & Oct. .... 1888 Jan. & 1,000,000 Railway: Mortgage do do do do Jan. & July 1803 do 1894 600,000 Mortgage, convertible . Feb. & Aug 1876 300,000 1st do 2d section Eastern (Mass.): .... 283,00(1H 8 Jan. & July 1867 do 2,655,50C i 8 1881 Deux oare. Lackawanna and Western 1st Mortgage, W • Dubuque and Sioux City : 1st Mortgage, 1st section 1871 . l»t • .... May & Nov. 2.400.000 7 income Chicago, Burlington and Quincy: Trust Mortgage (S. F.) convert Cleveland and . . 150,000 0 ■ do T3 ? 2,500,000 7 May & Nov. 1875 do 1864 1,000,000 8 do Detroit. Monroe and Toledo: 1866 ‘70-’79 1870 1870 800,000 7 800,000 7 : ‘ • 1,000,000 « J’ne & Dec. 1867 500,000 6 M'ch & Sep 1885 589,500 6 Feb. & Aug 1877 450.000 7 E. Div do do Jan. & Julv do do do do • S5 . 1st 600,000 71 May & Nov. 1875 Central Ohio: 1st 7 7 7 7 7 900,000 Mortgage 1st 2d 368,000 . • 1867 1875 1880 1885 422^000 - 490,000 7 Jan. & Julv 1873 493,000 7 Ap’l & Oct. 1879 of New Jersey: « $1,740,000 8 Ap'l & Oct. 1S87 348,000 7 J’ne & Dec. 1874 Income Bonds Detroit and Milwaukee: 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d' • ! Catawissa: Cheshire 1,000,000 6 Ja Ap JuOc 1,128.500 If Jan. & July do 700,000 6 2,500'000 6 Ap’l & Oct. Mortgage Bonds 85 1866 200.000 7 1 Jan. & July ’69-’72 do 400,000 7 1870 Mortgage Central a *C a. Des Moines Volley: .... 1866 1878 500,000 7 Camden and Atlantic: 1st Mortgage 2d do 1st 1st 2d Ap’l & Oct. May <fc Nov. 6 2,000,000 380,000 Mortgage 1st o Payable. K So do ' 1882 do 1882 do 1879 do 1881 do 1876 Jan. & Juh 1883 Ap’l & Oct. 1884 do 1884 do 1895 400,000 6 Sinking Fund Bonds Boston and Lowell: 1st 2d 300,001 Ap’l & Oct. 1377 7 200,000 .6 250.000 7 100,000 6 200,000 6 do do do Consoldated < AY r..~ ing. %i 300,000 Boston, Concord and Montreal : 2d 7 7 7 484,000 Beliefontaine Line: 1st Mortgage (B. & I.) convertible. 1st 1st 2d 2d 7 988,000 6 Storting Bonds do do do 1,014,000 800,001 4,000,(XX 4,000,000 2,000,000 13,858,000' Baltimore and Ohio : Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834 <30 7 7 7 7 528,001 Mortgage, sinking fund, (A7. Y:< lat 1st DESCRIPTION. Jst S FRID Amount !outstand-: Railroad: £2,500,001 7 1,000,000 7 1st 2d 2d 1st 'd INTEREST. : Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) Franklin Branch BOND LIST. 1,000,000 do Aug May & Nov. 1883 185)2 1888 1885 1,092,900 314,100 681,000 35)9,000 Feb. & Aug. June & Dec. Apr. & Oct. Feb. & Aug. 2,230,500 Feb. & Ang 69-72 April & Oct 1882 4,328,001 4 -79^ 80 60 ’90-*»0 75 ‘70-’71 74-’75 80 1874 855,000 2,253^0) 6 1,00 1885 do 1877 Feb. & Aug 1868 402,00C Jan. & July 1891 4,600,000 1,500,000 Jan. & July 1893 April & Oct 1893 1,000,000 400,(XX 108 Jan. & Juh 1875 590,000 8,612,000 695,000 May & Nov. May & Nov. 88 72 1888 \ 1 ih- do 95 99 96* 100 1876 1876 1877 do 94 87 96 90 59 tycoon - 635 THE CHRONICLE May 19,1866.] RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued). I FRIDAY. INTEREST. Amount outstand¬ Description. ►> j t} p. Payable. ; w i Railroad: 1 st 300,000; Jan. 450,0001 aoo.oco i Mortgage 2d do New Haven and Northampton : , i .... ) l; 2d .... Aug 3 5 Feb. & ... do 6 May & Nov. Feb. *fe Aug 2 97 3 94 912.000 7 June & Dec 6 5 165,000 May & Nov. 663,000 do Feb. & Aug 1,398,000 601,000 Bonds of August, 1859, convert.... Bonds of 1865 New York and Harlem: 1st General Mortgage ...'.. 3,000,000 1,000.000 Consolidated Mortgage 3d Mortgage New York and New Haven Plain Bonds " do, June A Dec do 1,000,000 93 1 1st ....j 1st 99# Terre Haute 1,068,000 6 April & Oct Mortgage Bonds York, Providence and Boston: 1st Mortgage Northern Central: 232,000 6 Feb. & Aug State Loans 2d Mortgage Sinking Fund Baltimore and Susq. S’k’g Fund... 150,000 G North Pennsylvania: Mortgage Bonds . Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore) do (guar, by B. & O. RR.) do (do do do ) (not. guaranteed) do Norwich and Worcester: General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage Ogdensburg and L. Champlain : 2d 3d 3d Mortgage Ohio and Mississippi; 1st Mortgage 2d do ( W.D.) Oswego and Syracuse: 1st 1st'Mortgage 1,494,000 7 April & Oct 1869 do do sterling Philadelphia and Baltimore Central: 7 Philadelphia and Reading: Sterling Bonds of 1836 95 April & Oct do Sterling Bonds of 1843 Dollar Bonds, convertible Lebanon Valley7 Bonds, convertible Philadelphia and Trenton: 1st Jan. & July 1876 April & Oct 1877 April & Oct 1881 April & Oct 1901 1,521,0001“ 6 976,800) 6 do do do do 564,000 6 60,000 1880 1880 1886 1886 186S May A Nov. Mortgage Loan Pittsburg and ConnellsviUe: 692,000 400,000 Feb. & 2d 1st 92 .Saratoga Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg: 1st Mortgage (Potsdam A Watert. do do ( do Rutland and Burlington: l8tMortgageln0int preferred Sept July • c • Y. V. .... Feb. A 7 Aug • • • • .... . ... . • 94" Y.W .... 7 Jan. & July 8 April & Oct • . • • • • « •• • ... • .... or# 5 .... .... | ••• ♦ • ••c • • .... .... April A Oct • • .... .... ’68-’71 do 1875 i,666’6o6 6 Jan. & July ’66-’76 150 000 6 Juno A Dec D’m’d 4,319,520 850,000 .... 29 1873 1878 .... 6 200,000 596.000 6 Jan. A ,uly do 6 6 May & Nov 25,000 6 Jah. & Julv do ‘ 500,000 6 • • • • • 1886 175,000 • . 77 1870 1871 1877 Jan. A July7 • 1890 1890 2,382,109 96 .... * * * • .... 91 .... 1st Mortgage LDelaware and Hudson: .... Tah. Hr. -• .... 94 84 - V ♦ Mortgage, sinking fund. 641,000 7 Mch & Sept • • ' • • • • • 752,(XX) 7 Jan. & July 1865 do 1863 161,000 6 E L Unsecured Bonds Altonongafield Navigation; 2,778,341 6 P ”(?nnsylvania & New York: 1st Mortgage (North Branch) Sc chuylkill Navigation : 1st Mortgage 2d do Improvement Mch & Sept 1870 .... • 1884 750,000 6 May A Nov. 6 .... .... 1876 1,764,330 6 1Mch A Sept 1872 980,670 6 « ran. & Jutv 1882 586,500 6 JHay A Nov. 1870 3 90 ... April A Oct 1876 690,000 -v .... 182,000 6 Jah. A July 1876 } ilbrrris. . • July 1878 Mortgage Bonds .... • 1885 g 800,000 Mortgage Bonds .... 6 2,000,000 6 Ja Ap Jn Oc 1870 do 1890 4,375,000 5 1,699,500' D 91 • ••• 94 • 76 • • . ^ .... 76 • ••♦ s> do Sterling Loan, converted Coupon Bonds 200,000 5 »,l! >0,000 6 325,000 6 Jran. & July do do ds 1865 1865 1878 1864 .... 1 00 62# 63 96 .... ... May & Nov. 1890 340,000 500,000 do do 1890 200,000 123,000 2,500,000 do 400,000 329,000 2,200,000 2,800,000 700,000 Jan. A Feb. A Aug 1863 1863 July Aug w 450,000 6 J an. A July 1878 750,0(K Jan. A July 1878 Jan. A July • • . 1884 1,500,000 2,000,000 Jan. & July 13— April & Oci ’8 600 006 .... Feb. & Aug 1871 500,(XX June A Dec Jam, A July 1878 79 80 miscellaneous: .... .... «... .... • 85 38 .... 38 W 1875 1881 Semi an’ally 1804 do 1804 4J .... w Jnn. A Dec. 1874 do 1862 Mch A Sept 1871 do 1880 937,600 1!Jay A Nov. ' 1883 • .1880 1,800,000 6 .... .... • a Ait 1 9 do ”■ 81 2 80 * 74 ... \ tit - Pe V1 do Wit i • 75 - .... 1875 1st Mortgage Bonds Interest ltbnds .... • .... 65 188'* 1885 1S75 1882 399,300 554,908 .. Preferred Bonds .... 1 .,,, Jan. & 600,000 Mortgage Bonds. 1379 | Mortgage do 800,000 Mch A Feb. & St, Louis, Alton and Terre Haute: jjd 1912 1888 1888 1876 800,000 paidl868 1st Mortgage • 90 75 1884 1875 1875 1865 1874 550,600 6 Jan. & July 1883 Sterling Bonds, guaranteed July 1875 do ‘ Sacramento Valley: 1st do Mch A Sept do do 800.000 1 (Watertown A Rome 2d 90* Aug 1865 2,000,000 7 June A Dec ! 1861 1,135,000 7 Jan. <fc July | 1867 Maryland Loan an’ally 1912 102# 105 400,000 Mortg&ge 1st Mort. Saratoga &'Whit'hall..., 1st Mort. Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.) 1st Jan. A 1,000,600 250,000 140,000 Rtnsselaer & Saratoga consolidated: (do • u Mortgage, sinking fund do do • : Mortgage C Feb. & Aug 1881 do 1881 1,4:38,000 Mortgage Reading and Columbia : 2d 7 7 6 do It I Mort. Rensselaer & April & Oct 1912 Jan. & July 1884 1,000,000 500,000 Hi do Convertible Bonds 1st Semi 200,000 mortgage Raritan andJDelaware Bay: . 1st 91# 1889 2,000,000 Racine and Mississippi : 1st Aug 6,200,000 6,160,000 Pittsburg and Steubenville: 1st Mortgage • 500,000 6 Jan. & July i 1863 do 1867 180,000 6 Hudson and Bpston Mortgage .... Western Mainland,; 1st Mortgage 1st do , guaranteed 3 York <£• Cumberland (North. Cent.): 1st Mortgage 2d do ;;;; Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds 98 Tan. & July 1884 2d do 3d do Akron Branch: 1st ... . .... Jan. & July 1865 do 1885 258,000 (Turtle Cr. Div.) Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago : 1st Mortgage •» • • Canal Mortgage Philadel., n timing. & Baltimore: 1st Mort. .... .... 408,000; 5 Jan. & July 1867 do 1880 182,400; 5 2,856,600: 6 April A Oct 1870 106,000 6 Ian. & J uly 1871 do do do Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1861 do do 1843-1-8-9 . 102 .... C 1,000,000 5,000,000 4,000,000 119,800 292,500 : — .... ..... .... 1894 650,000 7 May & Nov. 200,000 7 Mar. & Sep. Sterling (£899,900) Bonds 73 •.. .... • .... Sept 1866 300,000 7 Jan. & July 300,000 7 Apr. & Oct Dollar Ponds .... Julj7 Mch & 600,000 2d do (no interest). Vermont and Massachusetts. 1st Mortgage Warren : 1st Mortgage (guaranteed) Westchester and Philadelphia: 1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon 2d do , registered Western (Mass.): 75 do Feb & Aug. 1884 7 152 355 Albany and W. Stockbridge Bonds. Jan. A Philadel.. Germant. & Norristown: . .... .... Sept 2,283,840! .... .... April & Oct Mch & 675,000 Mortgage Philadelphia and Erie: 1st Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie).... 1st do (general) 2d do (general)... 87 .... July 4,980,000 2,621,000 Consolidated Loan Convertible Loan J87 Jan. & 1,029,000 , • ... 93# » April A Oci 1876 • : (Toledo & Wabash) (extended) (Toledo and Wabash)... (Wabash and Western). do Vermont Central .... .... • • 1871 July Feb. & TT abash Troy Union: Mortgage Bonds 95# 93 July 1,150,000 Mortgage Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage 98 .... Jan. & 7 94,U0C 2d do 3d .do Convertible .... Jan. & July do Jan. A Indianapolis: Troy and Boston: 1st Mortgage 17# ) 416,000! 346,000; 1st 1st July Aug 7 1,400,(XX and do 1,139,000; 6 Mortgage, sterling 200,(XX .. Sinking Fund Bonds Equipment bonds 97 05 .... 1866 68-74 7 ... > Various. 900,(XK 90* 225,000, 7 Panama: do do Jan. & Feb. A 1,070,(XX )\ 5 . do 2,500,000 7 1,000,000 7 May & Nov. do 1,500,(XX 7 1st 100,000; 300,000| 2,000, OCX) 5 Jan. A July . ... June A Dec .... 3 3 do 500,000! 6 2,900,000! 750,000: Pacific, (S. W. Branch): Mortgage, guar, by Mo 2d 2d 1,500,000! 6 Jan. A July do 1,000,000 6 500.000 6 do Aug 7 .... 3 7 2,500.000 6 April & Oct do 300,000 10 Chat tel Mortga ge Aorth- Western Virginia: do do Peninsula: t> 4 220,700: 6 April & Oct 1874 Plain Bonds 1st 1st 2d Quarterly . ... Feb. A 1.391, (XX 86 .. • 1872 7 700, (XX 1,180,00(1 7 Jan. & July 1870 .... d 5 1,500.000 6 Jan. & July 2.500,000 6 Jan. & July Northern New Hampshire: 1st 78 • .... ... Toledo and 1st Mort. 1st do 2d do 2d do .... • 1867 Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw r 1st Mortgage New 75 .. 1875 1st Mortgage, convertible Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage .... . 500,(XX> 7 June & Dec Mortgage • 1894 and Pottsville: Mortgage •.. April & Oct : Sterling Loan ... A « t,290,00(> 7 Jan. A July Domestic Bonds Staten Island: 102 102 ££ 1,000,(XX) 7 Feb. A Aug7| 1900 201.5<M May & Nov J475 . IstMortgage ... Payable. 1,700,00( > 7 May & Nov . ... South Carolina ; .-.. 7 7 do 1st Mortgage Second Aven ue: 1st Mortgage Shamokin Va .... ! 92 3 7 3 3 6 6 May & Nov 6,917,598 2,925,000 Ciicago: Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: .j I Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks). Sink. Fund B'ds (assumed debts).. St. Louis, Jacksonville <£ 1st Mortgage 2d do 2d do Income & : iandusky, Dayton and Cincinnati: let Mortgage (extended) .9 300,000 6 Jan. & July Bonds Railroad 82# - outstand ing. | 485,000, 6 Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal).. Real Estate Bonds Aj sk’d M’ch & Sep •Tan. & July &Jnly|1876 $500,000 7 Jan. A July Mortgage. New Jersey: 1st Fei rv Bonds of 1853 New London Northern: 1st General Mortgage New York Central: Premium Sinking Fund l Description. I-RIBAY. ■5® Amounl ing. Naugatuck: 1st Mort£fme,(c6uvertibie) ... N. Haven, N London db S'/minglon: INTEREST. . 3,000,000 lff?Q > f t if** ■***. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST—Friday. Alining Journal. insurance anb [May 19,1866. THE CHRONICLE 636 Adamantine Oil INSURANCE STOCK LIST. COMPANIES. Marked thus (*) Dec. are participating, and thus (t) write Marine Capital. Risks. Joint S’ck Fire: Adriatic 25 ./Etna* 50 200,000 5 Albany Albany City 30 100 150,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 50 American * Amcricau|Exeh’e.. 100 Atlantic Baltic Beckman .. Broadway Brooklyn (L. L) ... Capital City (Al’y).lOO Central Park Citizens’ 100 20 70 City Clinton Columbia* 178.264 Jan. 100 100 500,000 200,000 100 Commerce( Albany) 100 Commercial 50 Commerce 400,000 200,000 250,000 500,000 400,000 Commonwealth... 100 100 Continental * Corn Exchange... 50 Croton 100 Eagle Empire City 200.000 30 Gebhard Germania Glenn's Falls Globe Greenwich Grocers’ Guardian Hamilton Hanover 50,000 Jan. ’66,10 F.3% p. sh. July’65 5 July'64.3% 90 .. 106,255 278.483 jam and July, Jan. '66 .5 do Jan’66..3# 194,223 do July ’65 .5 137,573 do 305.956 162,281 May aud Nov. 250,002 Jan. and July, do 707,073 241,448 237,551 Jan. and July. 283,331 Feb. and Aug. . 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 224,508 April and Oct. 180,759 Jan. and July, do 198,860 do 556.304 400,000 3(H),000 do do do do do do do 503,880 233,893 200.000 50 100 2,000.000 3,598,694 50 200,000 50 100 200.000 90 . 200,000 15 50 1 5 238,031 424,017 300,000 240,339 *214,320 Jan. ’66 120 90 100 115 .5 100 . 6 May 60 Jam ’66 ..6 Jan. ’66 .5 . July ’65 HamiltonMcClintock Hammond ’. .5 . Feb. ’66..5 Hard Pan Apr. ’65.. 5 Jan. ’66.3.% .4 .5 Heydrick Heydrick Brothers Hickory Farm High Gate .5 Home Jan. ’66 . jan. • ’66 Jan. ’66 ’66 . .5 n?’06 .5 125 Jan. ’65 .5 Jan. ’06’. .6 . . 90 130 . July ’65 .5 July'65 ..6 . 200,000 150,000 223.484 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’65 ..5 80 do Feb.’66.3% International 100 1,000,000 1,848,518 do Aug. ’65..5 Irving 25 200,000 262,048 200,000 Jefferson 30 281,929 March aud Sep Mar. '66 .6 King's Co’y (Brk’n) 20 150,000 108,359 Jau. and July, June’63.3% do 330.621 July '65 .5 280,000 Knickerbocker.... 40 Jan. ’66 .5 do 150,000 198,198 Lafayette (Brkl n). 50 Jan, ’66 ..5 do 407.389 300,000 100 Lamar Import’ & Trade’.. 50 Indemnity 100 Forest City Fountain Oil Fountain Petroleum Fulton Oil Germania Great Republic G’t Western Consol... Guild Farm SO &5 84 Knickerbocker Lamb’s Fartas Latonia & Sage Lenox 150,000 200.000 25 Long Isl. (Brkl’n). 60 Inly ’65 .4 Jan,’66 ..5 do do 192,048 284,157 . ioo" Lorillard* 25 1,000,000 1.402,681 Jan. and July, Jan. '66 .5 Jan. ’66 .10 do 500,000 1,078,577 Manhattan 100 Jan. ’66 3% do 390,432 ...100 200,000 Market* do July’65 ..5 Mechanics (Brkl’n) 50 180,152 150,000 do 200.000 Meehan’ & Trade'". 25 July’65 . .6 229,653 Jan. ’66 4 do 200,000 237.069 Mercantile loo do 200.000 July ’65 .10 50 Merchants’ 297,611 . do July '65 .5 Metropolitan * t.. .100 1,000,000 1,645,984 do 150,000 July '65 ..5 Montauk (Brkl’n). 50 186.957 150.000 Nassau (Brkl’n)... 50 243,107 Jan. and July, Jam’66 .7 . National 7% New Amsterdam.. 25 N. Y. Accidental... N. Y. Central 100 N. Y. E suitable 3 35 N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100 - 200,000 300,000 Jan.’66 do do 269,992 359,325 140 125’ . North American*. 50 North River 25 Northwestern 50 Paciffc 25 Bark ......100 Peter Cooper 20 150.000 200,000 Phoenix t Relict Republic* Resolute* Rntgers’* St. Mark’s St. Nicholast Security*! Standard Star Sterling * Stuyvesant. Tradesmen's United States 25 26 Washington* 50 Western (Buffalo). 100 Williamsburg 50 .... Yonkers and N. Y.100 do do do J m Evergreen Excelsior ’66 ..5 July’64 ..5 Jan.’66 ..5 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66.. 4 Jan. and July, July’65 ..5 1'0 July ’65 Feb, and .5 . 115 ios’ Jan.’66.3% do Jan. and Feb. and Hudson Huron July July ’63 Aug Feb.’66.3% jam and July Jan ’66 .5 .. Indiana. Isle Royale . 79 Feb. and Ang. Feh. ’66..4 200,901 Jau. and July, July ’65.. 5 Jan. ’66 .5 do 372.809 688,391 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’66.. 6 115 250,000 400,000 300,000 100,000 500,000 125 377,077 191,733 150,000 120* . 621,301 jan. . and July, Jan. ’66.. .5 do 100 Jan. ’66.. .5 , 581,689^ Feb. and Aug. 100 95 .T7. i"6o 33 4 80 2 05 9 60 35 5 00 2 50 9 65 38 3 25 • • Mount Pleasant Coal : British American, 1 00 75 100 50 pref.. 7 25 10 * * * Express: Saginaw, L. S. & M • • • 7 CO 1 00 1 00 2 00 ; United States; 45% 46 00 Well®, Fargo & Co Miscellaneous. 5 00 8*66 Rutland Marble . - • * Schuylkill.... 3 25 3*66 50 par 50 Co.ambian.. Adams • • • 97 Lake Superior.., - t • P • Copake. 3 00 i . - Iron : 4 25 1 00 4 50 45 7 50 Redwood Wallkill 8% ....10 ioo .... 10 5 10 25 Lead and Zinc: Bucks County par Denbo Manhan Phenix 13 00 3 50 — Superior, 40 3 25 1 75 ... . Virginia City Waadingham - Portage Lake Quincy ..10 Sheldon and Columbian Rockland 18 5 (0 .. - Providence 95 25 4 0* 36 2 85 1 70 Smith & Parmelee Texas 1 - "‘90 ioo .25 %ocky Mountain 1% 11 . uartzHill... 2 2 25 2% Princeton .10011,000,000 3,177,437 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66.3% Jan. ’66.3% Mercantile Mut’l*. 100 C40,000 1,302.469 do Feb. ’66...2 Washington * 100 287 400 - Lake Superior 2 Manhattan . 5% 5 Mendota Merrimac 6% New Jersey Consol...;.10 — 5 Manhattan Montana New York 8% 43 0) 33 — Liebig - Ontonagon Pewabic Great Western*.. Liberty - 19 10 495 5*66 2 05 2 15 5 1 50 1 60 2 £0 3 00 4 40 .100 18 50 13 £5 1 50 1 75 , 25 42 43 2 10 — .' Hope 10 00 Kip & Buell 9% Ogima J4 lnt St’ckMar. . 3 00 2 05 — Holman 5% Lafayette Norwich — Gunnell Gunnell Central. 3% 8 New York Corydon 2 75 2 0) par .— Eagle 41 50 2% Knowlton Jan. ’66 ..5 do Franklin Grand Portage Great Western Hamilton Hartford Hope Feb.’66..5 Feb.’65.. - 24% 1 - Bluff Bid. Askd Downieville Gold Hill 5 Hilton Jan.’66.3% Aug 75 - Flint Steel River Forest City • do do do - Eagle River . 200,000 233,603 187,612 150,000 150,000 188,056 20 50 1,000,000 1,698,292 50 200,000 289,628 300,000 558.647 100 100 273.647 200,000 25 200,000 244,606 170.026 25 150,000 182,845 25 150,000 50 1,000,0(H) 1,548,964 275,036 50 200,000 247,281 100 200,000 204.037 200,000 100 25 200,000 243,711 People’s 115 April and Oct. Aj)r. ’06.,4 221,607 Jan. and July, july ’65 .5 280,206 17% Dover 100; American Flag Atlantic & Pacific Bates & Baxter Benton Bob Tail : Bullion 10 00 Consolidated Gregory.. 3 4% Dacotah Jan.’66 ..5 do 751,653 400.218 350,000 26 Canada Central . 30 5j 101 Gold: — Copper Creek Copper Falls Copper Harbor .... 10 5 Companies. Ada Elmore Altona 2% 155,156 1,000,000 Annita Aztec 25 7 50 STOCK LIST—Friday. 13% 108 281,838 Tan. and July. Jan.’66 .4 200,000 283,56 Feb. and Aug. Feb.'66.3% 50 1,000,000 1.294,030 Jan. and July, Jau. ’66.. .6 100 Niagara Algomah. .... . W.Virg. Oil and Coal Woods & Wright paid 3 lio’ July '05 .5 Vesta Watson Petroleum Webster Bid. Ask. 140 ’ 210.000 Albany & Boston 3 00 23 10 10 Venango (N. Y.) Venango & Pit Hole 2 00 1 Bohemian Boston Caledonia . "i(H),000 Copper s 3 Union. 10 United Pe’tl’m F’ms.... 2 United States 10 5 Bay State 90 .8 . Tygart’s Creek MINING Adventure... 10 Titus Oil Titus Estate 1 Companies. 5 Terragenta 20 :.. 10 Tarr Farm 5 10 2 5 10 60 40 41 Standard Petroleum.;... 5 Story & McClintock 10 Success ...10 Sugar Creek 5 Tack Petr’m of N.Y 5 Talman 10 10 10 R 05 120 100 2 50 20 Island Ivanhoe Ken. Nat, Pet &Min . . 5 5 00 16 3 2 15 10 .. Second National Shade River 5 Sherman & Barnsdale..2% Sherman Oil Southard 10 10 '*75 65 205 Rynd Farm 10 5 1 65 15 15 Revenue "ii .100 10 300 3 5 50 ’... Homowaek Inexhaustible ""30 2% RawsonFarm. 90 70 .: Liberty Lily Run . Petroleum Consol Pit Hole C. No. 2 Pit Hole Creek Pith ole Farms Plumer President 1 . 22 Pennsylvania Oil' Pepper Well Petroleum... 50 36 ; Emp’e City Petrol’m.... 5 Empire and Pit Hole .... 2i Enniskillen .10 10 Enterprise. Equitable '.. ..5 10 Everett Eureka.' 5 5 Excelsior Fee Simple 2 First National 5 80 . 1 50 1 Eclectic . 403,468 April and Oct. Apr. '66, .5 252,225 Jan. and July, Jan. ’66 .5 .5 Jan '66 do 306,424 50 180,044 Feb. aud Aug. 100.000 — De Kalb Devon 100 4 50 3 30 8 Noble & Delancter Noble Well of N. Y 25 North American 10 Northern Light 10 Oak Shade 10 Oceanic .....100 Oil City Petroleum 10 20 Oil Creek of N. Y Pacific -.... 5 10 Palmer Petroleum 1 20 100 10 10 20 1 N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons 20 10 50 Commercial'. Commonwealth. Consolidated of N. Y 10 5 Montana Mount Vernon.. 3 National 5 New England 10 New York. N. Y. & Alleghany ; New York& Kenry Oil.100 New York& Kent’vPet.. 5 New York & Newark... N. Y. & Philadel 90 10 10 Columbia (Pbg) . 150,000 200,000 500,000 50 25 50 Clifton Clinton 100 . 200.000 100 50 10 Hope Howard Humboldt do Feb. and Aug. 266,277 Jan. and July, do 538,473 do 227,336 eb. and Aug. 404,704 270,681 Jan. and July. 10 2 Cherry Run & Shenango. 5 July ’64 .4 204.000 150,000 150,000 Harmony (F.&M.)t 50 Hoffman Home Central Cherry Run Oil Cherry Run Petrol’m Jan. ’66 .5 83 Feb. ’66..5 Jan.’66 ..5 310,563 April and Oct. Oct. '65...5 1,532 888 Jan. and July. Jan. '66 .7 448.260 March aud Sep Mar. ’64..5 240,133 Jan. and July. July'64 . .5 200,000 Far .Joint Stock.. .100 Firemen’s 17 Firemen’s Fund... 10 Firemens Trust.. 10 25 Fulton 50 Gallatin and July 348,08 200,000 150,000 50 Exchange 548,380 300,000 40 100 Excelsior Cascade 216.662 150,000 300,000 210,000 250,000 300,000 200.000 25 17 California 100 10 5 Monongahela & Kan.... 42 10 5 100 5 100 2 85 Buchanan Farm Bunker Hill. 10 Mingo 2 50 80 5 ioo" Aug. Feb.;66...5 March and Sep Mar. ’66. .5 75 May and Nov. Feb. and Aug. Aug! '65. !4 June and Dec. Dec. ’65.. .5 Feb. and Aug. Feb. '66. .5 do Aug. '65.10 420,000 244,270 227,632 353,311 26S.5S2 278,386 200,000 25 5 10 140 Jau. ’66... 125 Jan. ’66 3% Jan. 65.. .5 287,373 Feb. and 200.000 25 25 Bowery 486,042 Jan. and July. 238.026 Jan. and July. 614,101 Jan. and July. 153.000 (Brkl’n).. 50 ....... 5 Marietta Mercantile Mineral Point *‘ic 25 16 2 .- Maple Shade of N. Y 1 00 20 Brooklyn 264.355 250,000 300,000 200,000 25 Astor. 5 Bradley Oil... 10 5 Maple Grove Brevoort 180,480 500.000 50 Arctic 7o 10 Manhattan 10 Black Creek. Bliven Blood Farm , 100.000 Agricultural paid. July. 313.775 Jan. and do 233.304 250.250 $300,000 Last Periods. par McElhenny McKinley 10 Bennehoff & Pi thole..... 2 Bennehoff Run ...10 12 90 12 95 Bennehoff Run Oil 5 8 25 Bergen Coal and Oil 10 4* Net Assets. McClintockviUe 10 100 10 Anderson Beech Hi 11... Beekman T3 DIVIDEND. 31,1865. par Alleghany Allen Wright Bid. Ask. Companies. Bid. Ask. Companies. 25 26 1 10 1 15 2 40 ,,,, • »*r • I *• CHRONICLE. THE May 19, 1866.] 637 Miscellaneous. Marsh Glenn, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR POLICIES- PERMANENT AT LAW. Strand Street, Galveston, Texas, Is prepared to attend to, and collect promptly, Claims or other business committed to his charge Middle or Southern Texas. Wardwell, 1 Burtis, French & Woodward, vNew J. H. Brower & Co., ) J. M. COMPANY, BROADWAY, 110 AND 108 Campbell & Strong, York City. [ Ncw 0rlean9’ La- Reagan, Palestine, Texas. Judge G. F. More, Austin, Texas. Hon. J. H. J.- YORK. NEW in REFERENCES .* METROPOLITAN INSURANCE all Sfl's“rc&o.GUbert’ (Galveston,Texas. Gillian, Houston, Texas. J. W. & T. P. Counting Houses and Offices best style, and at short notice, with CARPET, COCOA MATTING, CHINA MATTING Fitted up in L __ Cash Capital, Jan. Assets, - 1866, i, AND OIL CLOTHS. $1,000,000 oo 15645,984 98 - DORKMUS & NIXON, 45 WARREN STEET, N. Y. S. Thackston, E. Tobacco, Note and Exchange and of Metropolitan Insurance Company of New York, being convinced of the great convenience Deposit Insurance, so long and successfully practised in Europe, in some the other States of the Union, has decided to adopt the same in its own\business, whenever it may desired by the party seeking insurance. The and safety of the system of Tills mode of confined to dwelling houses Insuring will be No. 12 OLD The assured is required, the foliowing plan on , be agreed on, not to exceed the aggregate REGAINS so with the Company such sum as may be PERMANENT A Whenever the the policy. cent, which, with per the assured will be entitled to receive the same shall be terminated by sale back the whole sum. deposited, less five the interest, constitutes the premium reserved by the cancel any risk, on due notice, in which case the assured. This right can be waived by against change. example of the practical working of assured desires to abondon the insurance, he applies to the Company If the Company elects to cancel he receives nis whole $125, and the When th6 property is sold, or the and receives back $118 75 of the $125. bargain is at an end. The advantages of this method of insuring, in the case of dwellings, where permanent security is especially desirable, rendering unnecessary the constant watchfulness now required, in order to prevent a policy from lapsing, at an unlucky moment, cannot fail to be perceived and appreciated here, even more than elsewhere. The immense amount of dwelling property in this city, forming, in many cases, the bulk of great estates, must find this system especially valuable for its permanency and safety. renewed fmm year to year, the best memories may* sometimes fail, and then families depend for their sole support may disappear in an hour—once made, insurance deposit need never to be remembered again' except where circumstances call for its discontinuance. property on which by ' 1 • • keeps alive without watching. Insurance by this method is obviously cheaper as well as more secure. Thus,$5,000 costs,say $1250 per annum, on a first class dwelling; while on|$125 (the amount to be the interest at seven per cent, is but $875. If the risk runs in this way ten*years, the Company gets $8 75 per annum for insuring $5,000, and at the end $6 25 more, being five per cent, retained when the deposit is reclaimed—making the average annual premium $9 37. It deposited) We have no doubt that as fast as this simple and convenient commend itself to all insurers of dwellings that few will think explanations of the working of this plan, under every application to the Company. Full on Office, No. 29. promptly and carefully attended to. Consignments of Cotton, Tobacco, and other pro¬ duce solicited. Steamship and Express Co’s. PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP To COMPANY’S California, And Carrying: tbe United Status Mail. LEAVE PIER NO. 4-1 NORTH RIV¬ - _ 36 NEW STREET THROUGH LINE to insure for $5,000, the annual premium ou that sum $12 50, deposited with the Company, makes the insurance perpetual, with¬ When insurance must be NOS. 38 BROAD STREET AND this system is here presented : Mr. Smith has a house which he desires ten years’ premium is $125 ; this sum, out further payment of any kind. MERCHANTS. Company. The Company reserves to itself, as heretofore, the right to the whole deposit, without any deduction, will be returned to the Company when parties going abroad desire to secure An and Orders assured shall elect to terminate the insurance, or above mentioned, as EXCHANGE DEPOSIT and the party desires to continue the insurance. If the property be sold, it insurance shall still hold good for sixty days longer in order to give time to make the ORLEANS.) AND STOCK BROKER, COMMISSION long as the property stands is provided that the necessary change in (FORMERLY OF NEW of ten annual premiums, which AS Davis, R. M. exclusively, ; the issuing of the policy, to deposit NEW YORK. 1 . And will be conducted on Broker. SLIP, cor. WATER ST. understood, it will so of protecting them on any other plan. system becomes fully ER, FOOT af Canal street, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 1st, lltb, and list of every month (except when those dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. MAY: C 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City. 10th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis connecting with Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports • 1st and 11th for Central American Ports. Those of 1st touch at Man¬ 21st—New York, zanillo. Baggage thecked through. One hundred pounds allowed each adult. An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and attendance free. For passage tickets or farther information, apply at the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of Canal street, North River, New York. F. W. G. BELLOWS, Agent. variety of circumstances, will be furnished Empire Line FOR SAVANNAH, GA., Every Saturday. Elegant Side-Wheel Steamships SAN SALVADOR, Commander, Joshua Atkins, and DIRECTORS : The JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, WILLIAM K STRONG, ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, JOHN C. HENDERSON, STANSBURY, JOSEPH B. VARNUM, GUSTAVUS A. CONOVER, B0W2S R. MoILVAINE, PASCHAL W. TURNEY, WOLCOTT, HENRY PARISH, DUDLEY B. FULLER, JOHN A. GRAHAM, GILBERT L. BEECKMAN, CHARLES P. KIRKLAND, JOSEPH B. VARNUM, Jr., FRANKLIN H, DELANO, EDWARD A. WATSON E. CASE, LORRAIN FREEMAN, MACOMBER, GRAHAM, Jr. SAMUEL D. BRADFORD, EDWARD J. LORIMER President, Vice-President, LORIMER GRAHAM, Jr, 2d Vice-Pres. JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, JAMES PORTER, Secretary. WM. R. WADSWORTH, Ass’t Secretary. 1,500 Tons Bnrthen each. MARTIN BATES, FREDERICK H. H. H. SAN JACINTO, Commander, Winslow Loveland, route to Savannah by Company of New York, and are intended to be run by them in a manner to meet the first-class requirements of the trade. The Cabin accommodations of these ships are not excelled by any Steamers on the coast, and although their carrying capacity is large, their draught of wa¬ ter enables them to insure a passage without deten¬ Have been placed on the he Atlantic Mail Steamship tion in the riverSan Jacinto, Sat.-April San San 28 I San Salvador, Sat.May 19 “ 26 12 | San Salvador, “ June 2 May 5 l San Jacinto, Salvador, “ Jacinto., “ “ Returning, Leave Savannah, every Saturday, at 3 , o’clock, P. M. Bills of Lading furnished and signed on For farther particulars, engagement of the Pier. Freight or Passage, apply to GARRISON & ALLEN, Agents. 5 Bowling Green, N. Y. Agent at Savannah, B. H. Hardee. 638 THE CHRONICLE. [May 19, 1866. Miscellaneous. Miscellaneous. Insurance. Bankers, Merchants, To Capitalists. Hope And others should send HARNDEN EXPRESS, by the 65 Broad way, Fire Insurance Attention is called to the they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and safe forwarding of GOLD .SILVER, JEWELRY, & MERCHANDISE of every description. Aleo for ihe collection of notes drafts «Dd bills, bills accompanying poods, etc. as SEVEN PER CENT. cash FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS capital- Total JL1 ibilltii s Losses Paid i 1865 OF THE ESTATE AND M Bureau. ining S. HASTINGS 70 BROADWAY, GRANT, Agent for the sale of Landed Estates, Mines, Tobacco and Cotton Lands in Virginia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, Georgia, &c., now offers properties of great value, many of which cover Gold, Copper, Plumbago, Iron, and Coal Mines, waterpower, and Mineral Springs. The fullest informa¬ tion with regard to the aboye may be obtained through tills office. RAILROAD ROME - References: Messrs. Gilman, Son & Co.. M. K. Commercial & Financial Is ROAD in the COMPANY, City of New York, First on the Days of May and November. These Bonds are a strictly FIRST-CLASS news up to Friday night. Thirst—Exclusively devoted in its topics. Second—Furnishes the most accurate information to the Merchant and Banker on all matters relating to their occupations—by means of thor¬ ough and well prepared reports and full statistical tables. Third—Affords a weekly record, of conveni¬ form to be kept on file, and bound at the end of each volume, (half-yearly) and furnish a complete history of Commer¬ so cial and Financial transactions. Further information on paper (TRINITY BUILDING,) application to Just Published. ^~The MERCANTILE AGENCY of R. G. DUN & Co. have just issued a new* and closely revised edition of THE REFERENCE BOOK. names of nearly two hundred thous¬ and merchants and traders in the United States, with an Estimate of the Capital containing the The Mercantile Mutual INSURANCE OFFICE No. 35 WALL de¬ are as follows: 1st. EDITORIAL ARTICCES-p’epare with great care by competent writers, upon sub jects relating to Finance, Commerce, and other questions of general interest to busi¬ ness men. 2d. UITERATC RE-Notices of new books. 3d. FOREIGN NEWS—It is with great plea sure we are able to announce that we have se¬ cured the services of one of the editors of the lead¬ ing London journal— The Economist—who will, in a weekly letter, report the foreign markets specially forTHfl CHRONICLE, furnishing the freshest and most reliable information with regard to commercial and financial affairs. 4th. COMMERCIAL & MISCELLANE¬ OUS NEWS. 5th. THE BANKERS GAZETTE-Givng a list of all Dividends Declared and Bonds lost or stolen for the week: a review of the Money Market, Stock, Go d, and Foreign Exchange Markets for the week; ■Rank Statements for the week, with compara¬ tive statements; progress and condition of Na¬ tional Banks, Foreign Bank Stock List. Banking, and a COMPANY. STREET, NEW YORK. AND Cl I Y SECURI 1‘tES. 8th. THE COMMERCIAL TI RES—Con¬ taining an epitome of the movements of trade for the week; complete tables of t e Total Receipts of Domestic Produce for the week and since EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS. For the past nine years the cash dividends paid to Stockholders, made from ONE-THIRD of tne net profits, have amounted in the aggregate tqu. One Hundre l and Twenty-one and a half per cent. Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based on the principle that all classes of risks are equally profitable, this Company will hereafter make such cash abatement or discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬ maining at the close of the year, will be divided to the stockholders. This Company continues to make Insurance on Marine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Jan. 1. Also, of Exports and Imports lor the week and year of all leading articles of commerce, with a comparative statement of the pre¬ vious year. A special Report on Cotton, acknowl¬ in the United States. PRICES CUR¬ . Aaron L. Reid, Ellwood Walter, D. Colden Murray, E. Haydock White, N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, Henry Eyre, L. Edgerton, Cornelius Grinnell, Henry R. Knnhardt. E. E. Morgan, John S. Williams, Her. A. Schleicher, William Nelson, Jr., Joseph Slagg, Charles Dimon, Jas. D. Fish, A. William Heye, Geo. W. Hennings, Harold Dollner, Francis Hathaway, Paul N. SpoiTord. ELLWOOD WALTER, President, C1IAS. NEWCOMB, Vipe-Prest. Despard, Secretary. Hanover Fire Insurance No. New York Market. Uth. A TABLE OF RAILWAY, CA¬ NAL AND MI*CELLANEOCS itONLS. 12th. A TABLE OF RAILWAY, CA¬ NAL AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCKS. lSthJ THE INSURANCE AND MINING OURNAL. Total profit for eleven years previous to 1863 have been redeemed in cash.., $1,896,334 The certificates $1,107,24 York, Feb. 20,1866. ALFRED EDWARD. President. WM. LECONEY, Vice-President. THOMAS HALE, Secretary. Morris Fire and Inland INSURANCE NO. 31 PINE 45 WALL STREET. capital Surplus $400,000 00 156,303 98 Gross Assets $556,303 98 Total Liabilities 24,560 00 DORAS L. STONE, President. Benj. S. Walcott, Secretary. Capital A Surplus, $781,000 00. Insures Buildings, Merchandise, Furniture, Ves¬ sels in Port and tneir Cargoes, Leases, Rents, and other insurable Property, AGAINST LOSS OR DAMAGE BY FIRE, at the lowest rates charged by responsible Compa¬ nies. DIRECTORS: William Mackay, Ezra Nye, Edward Rowe, Albert G. Lee, George Milu, . J. C. Morris, Robert Bowne, John D. Bates, Edward C. -Bates, Joseph Morrison, Daniel W. Teller, Ilenry J. Cammamf, Charles Hickox. E. A. STANSBURY, ABRAM M. KIRBY, President, Vice-President. # ELLIS R. THOMAS, Secretary. G. M. Harwood, General Agent. Marine & Fire Insurance. (METROPOLITAN INSURANCE CO., NO. 108 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Cash Capital Assets Nov. 1, 1865, over $1,000,000 1,600,000 This Company insures at customary rates of pre¬ mium against all Marine and Inland Navigation Risks on Cargo or Fire. Freight; also against loss or damage by will be paid percent of the net January 1st 1866. Cash "" o. Cask COMPANY-, STREET, NEW YORK. If Premiums are paid in Gold, Losses in Gold. ; The Assured receive twenty-five COMPANY, Friday, of all leading articles of Commerce in the 189,024 a Joseph Walker, James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, William T. F'rost, William Watt, RENT, containing full quotations of the prices, 10th. THE RAILWAY MONITOR. $1,707,310 profits from January 1, 1865, January 1,1866 to TRUSTEES. C. J. A special Report on Breadstuff's. A Dry Goods Report. on 1S65, for which certificates were issued Currency, at the Office in^New York, or in Sterling, Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬ pool. edged to be the best and most complete published 9th. WHOLESALE profits of the Company ascertained *from January 10, 1855, to January 1, at the Office of ~ and freight. hulls of vessels ar $1,366,699 present time, Losses amounting to over PRICES on York Stock Ex¬ change of Stocks and Securities sold. 7th. A TABLE OF NATIONAL,S TATE risks upon or taken. ffhe ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. The. Company has paid to its Customers, up to the 6th. A TABLE OF SALE each day of the week, at the New insures against MARINE and IN LAND NAVIGATION Risks, on cargo New or partments, under which the contents of each num¬ They This company Additional CONTENTS. arranged. DIVIDEND TWENTY PER CENT. amount to Insurance. Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866 ber are Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866—.. $1,164,380 No time risks published in this country. THE CHRONICLE is divided into heads 111 BROADWAY. HOPKINS, 70 Beaver Street. ent To accomplish these objects THE CHRONICLE is modeled after the well known English paper “ The Economist '' and is essentially unlike any other Pacific Mutual Insurance COMPANY, It is Editorial Damage by responsible JACOB REE^E, President. HARTSHORNE, Secretary. DESIRABLE INVESTMENT. E. A. & S. W. Columns to the discussion of subjects relating to the interests of Finance anti Commerce, to theexclusion of politics and other general 26,S50 00 HENRY M. TABER, THOS. P. CUMMINGS, JOSEPH FOULKE, ROBERT SCHELL, STEP. CAMBRELENG, WILLIAM H. TERRY, THEODORE W. RILEY, FRED. SCHUCHARDT. JACOB REESE, JOSEPH GRAFTON, JNO. W. MERSEREAU, L. B. WARD, D. LYDIG SUYDAM, JOSEPH BRITTON, WILLIAM REMSEN, AMOs ROBBINS, HENRY S. LEVERIC1I. CHAS. D. SECURITY, and will be sold on terms that render them a very published early every Saturday momin g contain the latest 201.588 14 Board of Directors: ROME, WATERTOWN & OGDENSBURG RAIL¬ Chronicle ng - - ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS SOLICITED. cheap and THE 252.55*9 22 - - This Company Insures against Loss or Fire on as favorable terms as anyothar guaranteed and payable by the Lead, Jesup & Co., Phelps., Dodge & Co.. A. R. Wet more & COj Sat ter lee « Co., Lathrop, Ludington & Co., Wilson G. Hunt, Esq., John Torrey, M. D., U. S. Assay Office. - - Company. COMPANY. Interest NEW YORK. AND OSWEGO $200,000 OO ----- Assets, March 9, 1866 . REAL Company, OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. profits, without incurring any liability, or, in lieu thereof, at their option, a liberal discount upon the premium. equitably adjust^! and promptly paid. Scrip Dividend declared Jan. 10,1855, All losses FIFTY PER CENT. JAMES LORIMEEFgRAHAM. President, ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice President. JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, Jbm 2d V. P. Hxnry H. Porter, Secretary. May 19,1866.] THE CHRONICLE. Insurance. Bankers. Sun Mutual Insurance 639 The Tradesmens COMPANY. NATIONAL (insurance buildings,) 291 CAPITAL* 49 WALL STREET. ASSETS, Dee. 31, 1865 - JAY H. D BANK. $1,000,00c RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. Navigation Risks. to a return Nassau, D. L. J. H. STOUT, Cashier. ROSS, Presiden 1 Eastern Bankers. corner of Wall houses in Philadelphia and an office at No. Street, in this city. Washing¬ House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, all issues; government securities ol to orders for purchase and ale of stocks, and gold, and to all business of National bonds GOLD, STOCK, AND BOND BROKERS. equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Chartered 1850. Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, our sale, and exchange of Personal attention given to the purchase and sale of Stocks and Bonds at the Boston Brokers’ Board. Losses DODGE, PITT COOKE. Ve shall give particular attention to the purchase, BANKERS, BOSTON. $1,000,000 270,353 SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 ( will be resident partners. COMPANY. NO. 12 WALL STREET. FAHNESTOCK, Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our ton Niagara Fire Insurance Burnett, Drake & Co., CASH CAPITAL, ) Washington we have this day opened Designated Depository of the Government. MOSES H. GRINNELL, Pres't. EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres’i Isaac H. Walker, Sec'y. H. C. BANKERS., Bank,. No. 240 BROADWAY. premium in gold. ' , In connection with Tenth National Company insures against Marine Risks on Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland This paicfm gold will be entitled COOKE, ( J EDWARD Jay Cooke & Co., DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT. Premiums 1 MOORHEAD, V COOKE, WM. G. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. $2,716,424 32 - Bankers and Brokers. Banks. JAY COOKE & CO. March 1, 1866. *>53 per cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, President. P. Page, Richardson & Co NOTMAN, Secretary. Corn, Tweedie & Co., , BANKERS Sc 114 STATE STREET, BOSTON, BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONRON The Mutual Life Insu- ALSO fo^oa Secretaries, j ISAAC ABBATT, fTHE0 w MORRIS. Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS. a Street. Co., The New issues of UNITER STATES Corn J. W. First j Capital. 1865 1 $500,000 Exchange BANK, 2d, & 3d series, Bank, BICHMONR, VA., Government. Collections made in this city and all accessible points in the South. H. G. S. A. Glover, Cashier. , BANKERS, Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., 108 Sc STREET, NEW YORK, 110 West Fourlh Sircetj CINCINNATI, OHIO. Issue Circular Letters of Cred I tor Travelers in a partsof Europe, etc., etc. Alsu C< unrercial <’redits Bank, NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, and remitted for Has for sale all descriptions of Government BondsCity and Country accounts received on terms mos favorable to our Correspondents. Checks on on day of payment. UNION BANK OF LONDON for sale. Collections made in all parts of the United State Dana, AND EXCHANGE No. 30 PINE BROKER, STREET, ROOM 4. London and Paris bought and sold Commission—also Gold Stocks, Bonds, and Gold. on on Gray, Mcllvaine Bro’s, Washington Murray, Esq* New York. Dupee, Beck & Sayles, STOCK No. 22 STATE DUPEE, BROKERS, STREET, BOSTON. JAMES BECK, HENRY SAYVE8 Culver, Penn & Co., BANKERS, HENRY A. 3MYTHE, President FOSTER, Cashier. B. Hutchings Badger, BANKING Sc EXCHANGE 36 DEARBORN Lawrence Collections made OFFICE, St., CHICAGO, ILL. on all parts of the Northwest. Stocks, Bonds, Gold, and Government Securities bought and sold on commission, either in New York or Chicago, and carried on margins when desired. New York correspondent, and reference, Brothers & BANKERS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, AND OTHER STOCKS, BONDS, &c., bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only. Depostts received subject to check at sight, with Banks. DEWITT C. LAWRENCE, Messrs. L. S. LAWRENCE & CO. Co., L. A. NO. 16 WALL STREET, N. Y. Receive STREET, NEW YORK, Deposits from Ranks, Rank ers and otliers. Orders for the Purchase and Sale of Government Securities receive partic¬ ular attention. Special attention is given to the tranv action of all business connected with the Tre astir? Department. Bankers and Brokers. and Canadas. Green, L. A. A. L. Mowry, Green C. A. Boynton. & Co. Galwey, Kirkland & Co., 49 EXCHANGE PLACE, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Railway Shares, Ronds, and Govern¬ ment Seenrities bought and sold. W. T. Galwey, J. L. Kirkland, W. B. Dinsmore, Jr J. C. Morris, NO. 5 WILLIAM STREET, Broker in BANKERS. as Member-New York Stock Exchang CYRUS J. LAWRENCE, JOHN R. CECIL, late Butler, Cecil, Rawson & C< WM. A. HALSTISD. STOCK W., 19 & 21 NASSAU $3,000,000. . S. GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible points W. H. Columbus Powell, I. F. Green, Chs. M. McGhee JAMES A. Dealers in 318 BROADWAY. Capital Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought and told exclusively on Commission. & SCRIBE, PARIS National STREET, NEW YORK. REFERENCES AND SECURITIES. AND Central MERCHANTS, as BROAD Messrs. Ward & Co., Wm. & John O. Brien, Weston John Munroe & Co No. 8 WALL & Commission % Western Bankers. Bought and Sold. 7 RUE Bankers FANT, President. VERMILYE Sc CO. NO. POWELL, GREE\ Sc CO. Exchange Interest Not^s of 1864 Sc AMERICAN C. Designated Depository and Financial Agent of the 3 Bounty Loan. TORREY, Cashier. National OF LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN¬ MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS. Compound COMMISSION. EDWIN D. FOSTER, Member of the New York Stock Exchange. Attends to business of Banks Sc Bankers on liberal terms. INCLUDING New Y6rk State 7 per cent. Securities, on ADOLPHUS M. CORN, DAVID TWEEDIE, Members of the New York Gold PHILADELPHIA. a STOCKS 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 PerCent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, 6 •“ “ 1864, 6 “ “ 1865, 5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, 6 Per Cent Currency Certificates. SOLD NATIONAL York, Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery and Exchange. f No. 44 Wall OUGHT So ithern Bankers. IJMU A. G. CATTELL, Pres’t. ) A. WHILLDIN, V. Pres’t BANKERS. Government abroad. Bankers. & locks,Bonds,Gnld, Foreign Exchange and CO., PARIS. ISSUE Commercial Credits for fhe purchase of Merchan¬ dise in England and the Continent. Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers' FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President. R. A. McCURDY, Vice-President, Vermilye BROKERS, STREET, NEW YORK. AND JOHN MTJNROE Sc RANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1865, over $13,500,000 00 mm No. 30 BROAD No. 15 WEST THIRD STREET, Cincinnati, Ohio. REFERENCES: David Gibson, Cincinnati, 4 Ninth National Bank, New York, Wilson, Gibson & Co, New York, Runyan, St. Louis, Mo. B. M. PETROLEUM AND MINING STOCKS, RAILWAY SHARES, GOVERNMENTS, &c^ At all the Stock Boards. REFERENCES .* B. C. Morris, Harheckt & Co., ; G&lwey, Casado & Teller. Caldwell & Morris. . Importers’ and Traders’ Dealers’ accounts solicited. the mercantile public, the have organized a special COLLECTION DEPARTMENT, which, it is believed, supplies a want not hitherto adequately met by banks or brokers. Returns are obtained in the quickest time, and at the lowest rates possible, upon accessible places in the United States and the Canadas. The proceeds, as soon as received, are credited, and notices sent at once of amount of are sent to owner of the fact, necessity of calling one or more whether or not a note has been protest, notice is at once paid. E. H. Perkins, JAMES BUELL, President. Jr., Cashier. Lj. L. Morton & Co., COTTON FACTOR AND For the accomodation of officers of this institution ections made. to the parties for whom under firoceeds so credited,When notes are returnedthe col¬ CHINA SILKS, EUROPEAN AND and Manufacturers HANDKERCHIEFS, SILK AND COTTON Advances made on consignments bacco, Wool and other produce. Agent for the purchase, sale, or Silk, Oiled Imitation Oiled Silk. Our '‘'•Imitation'" has a very costs but superior finish, and silk, which it equals in half as much as real and durability. appearance 35 Agents for the sale of the the most economical collar ever machinery of description—steam engines, saw mills, grist mills, brick making machines, &c., &c., of latest style and improvement. , A. P. MERRILL, Jr,, 36 New Street and 38 Broad Street. every London, suit purchasers ; and also to .ssue Circular Letters of Credit, on this Bank, for Travellers* use. l. Government Securities, Stocks anc sums n Bonds to bought and sold on Orders for OF DRESS RANKERS, CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., NEW DUPLEX ELLIPTIC. AND CIRCULAR LETTERS WESTS, BRADLEY Jb CARY, 97 COMMERCIAL CREDITS, Hope, Jeremiah M. Ward well, Wardwell & Co.) and of 8AM’L and sold Best of references given if solicited. B. CALDWELL. No. 94 BANKERS, BROADWAY AND No. 6 WALL ST. Se¬ Government and other curities. Interest allowed upon subject to check at and bankers upon deposits of gold and currency sight, i^old loaned to merchants favorable terms. Drake Kleinwort &Cohen LIVERPOOL. The subscriber, their representative and Attorney, in the United States, is prepared to make advances on shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen Loudon and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile credits upon them for use in China, the East and West Indies, South America, &c. Marginal credits of the London Honse issued for the same purposes. B. C. MOKRIS, JR. Brewer & Caldwell, COTTON LONDON AND New York. Co., Germania Fire Ins. NO. 175 CASH BROADWAY, N. CAPITAL, All orders for the prompt attention. ST., NEW YORK. consignments of Cotton, in New REFER TO Mechanics’ National Bank, N. Y. Messrs. Gilman, Son & Co., Bankers. N. Y. Messrs. Brown & Ives, Providence, E. I. Catlin & Satterthwaite, LATE SATTERTHWAITE BROTHERS, ADJUSTERS OF AVERAGES AND . No. 61 Brokers, WILLIAM ST W.STUTYESANT CATLIN, . JAS. 8. SATTERTHWAITE. Co., Insurance INCORPORATED 1819. $3,000,000 Capital LUCIUS J. HENDEE, J. President. GOODNOW, Secretary. DIRECTORS. Joseph Church Robert Bukle, Ebknezkr Flower, Euphalkt A. Bulkeley, Roland Mather, Samuel S. Ward, Drayton Hillykr, Thos. A. Alexander, Walter Keney, Chas. H. Hrainard, F. Tuttle, George Roberts, Thomas K. Bkaoe, Austin Dunham, Era8tu8 Collins, Gustavu* F. Davi?, Edwin D. Morgan, of New York. Assets, Jan. i, 1866, William 2*M91 48 Liabilities, NEW YORK Insurance President Hartford, Conn.' & Co., Wool, Hides and Naval Stores, by our friends Orleans, Mobile and Galveston, $705,989 83 JOHN E. KAHL, Secretary. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Cash advances made on 205,989 83 TOTAL ASSETS iETNA NO. 24 WHITEHALL $500,000 0 RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, < purchase of Goods will receive Hoffman . SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866 AND SIMON DE VISSER, 53 Exchan e Place, Fire Insurance. FACTORS General Commission Merchants, 20 OLD SLIP, NEW YORK. Lockwood & Co., Dealers in . required. Caldwell & Morris, HENRY W. POTTER. CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW, (Late Secretary of State.) Speed, Louisville. Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, &c., Successors to promptly on all points. Merchant, Commission STREET, NEW YORK. All orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬ tention. on Smith Dealer in Hardware, 45 CLIFF STREET, NEW YORK, Allow interest at the rate of FOUR PER CENT PER ANNUM ON DEPOSITS, which may be checked for at sight. Special attention given to the purchase and sale NO. 11 BROAD AND Commercial Agents. NOS. 38 BROAD AND 36 NEW STREETS. G. N. CARLETON, A. M. FOUTE, New York. R. B. SPEED, A. M. SUMMERS, New Orleans. J. H. SPEED, W, B. DONOHO, Memphis. W. M. COZART, J. J. STOCKARD,* Mobile. Consignments and orders solicited. carleton, foute & co. New Yokk, Feb. 1,1866. References—Duncan, Sherman & Co., Bankers, New York; I. B. Kirtland, Hill & Co., Bankers, New York; Third National Bank, St. Louis, Mo.; Hon. Thos. H. Yeatman, Cincinnati, Ohio; Hon. James Speed, Attorney General U. S., Washington; J. (of the late firm of Neilson Importer and Depew & Potter, RANKERS, commission. Collections made N. V. the For nse in Europe, east of the Cape of Good West Indies, South America, and the United States. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. Miscellaneous stocks and bonds bought Chambers Street. 79 & 81 Reade Street, United all the principal cities of 1866. SKIRT, J . W . Bradley’s OF CRKDIT, world; also, COMMISSION MERCHANTS GOODS. Manufactured solely >v ISSUE States, available in Carleton, Foute & Co., GOODS, General Co ec Duncan, Sherman & Co., REMOVED FROM 83 JOHN STREET TO 45 CLIFF STREET. AND lion of Travelers abroad and in the Goods,' including a superb stock of GREENWICH STREET. J. M. Wardwell, IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS Foreign and Domestic Dry & SON, R. P. GETTV BROADWAY, HOSIERY and WHITE CIRCULAR NOTES and Tracy, Irwin & Co., Deposits, subject tc Prompt attention given to the Dividends, Drafts. &c Greenwich Street. 115 NO. 400 WAREHOUSES, 119, 121, Sc 123, 115, 117, BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO. Commission. Cheques at sight For the use of Nos. SARATOGA Securities executed abroad Interest allowed on IN FIRST-CLASS HILLS, Victory Manufacturing Co.* Taken, No Cotton Chicopee Manufacturing Co., prepared to draw Sterling Bills of Exchange, at sight, or sixty days, on the Union Bank of FOR AGENTS City STORAGE, invented. PLACE, N. Y., No. 35 & 37 PARK Are lease of Southern Lands., Will act as fiscal agent for the negotiation of Southern Railroad Bonds, and the purchase of rail¬ road iron and railroad equipments Will purchase and ship plantation Paper Collars, E. R. Mudge, Sawyer&Co. NEW YORK. of Cotton, To¬ New York Patent Reversible WASHINGTON Merchant, General Commission of « Bankers, WALL STREET, Merrill, Goodman & Importers of SI,500,OOO Banka, Bankers, and Formerly of Mississippi. SUCCESSOR TO BROADWAY, No. 353 Jr., Merrill P. A. H. Pearce & Co., S. Bank. .CAPITAL. thus saving .the times to inquire Miscellaneous. Commercial Cards. Bankers. National [May 19, 1866. CHRONICLE. THE 640 AGENCY, . No. 62 Wall Street. JAMES A. ALEXANDER, Agent