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TUB fimmmjaj & Mil iattto’ teftte, $0mmwmt Wim$, fattwajj Panitot, amt Insurant frontal A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER,- representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states. VOL. 5. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1867. Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Taussig, Fisher & Co., Vermilye K BANKERS AND BROKERS, Mo. 32 Broad Street, New York. Bankers and Brokers. Co., R A N E R S • No. 44 Wall Street. Now York, Keep constantly <?n hand lor immediate delivery all issues of UNITED Bay and Sell at Market Rates, & STATES STOCKS INCLUDING all united states securities. Solicit account* from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and others, and allow interest on dally balances, subject to fight Draft. Hake Collections on ffevorable terms, promptly execute orders for the Purchase or sale and of Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad leemritlee. Rodman, Fisk & Co., 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 Per Cent 5-20 bonds of 1862, 6 41 44 1864, 6 44 •• 1865, Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, tPer Cent 81a Per Cent. Bonds of 1881, Ten Forties, Gold and Silver Coin. NASSAU STREET. Government Securities of all issues, Gold and Stocks bought and sold upon commission on]}’, and advances made upon the same on the most favorable terms. accounts of Banks and Bankers. Interest allowed upon Gold and Currency De Dosits at sight, at the best rates. A. W. DIMOCK A CO. subject to check Edward Stephens & Co., Compound Interest Notes of 1864 JTOCK BROKERS Sl 50 BROAD VERMILYE Sc CO. Jay Cooke & Co., BANKERS. Corner Wall and Nassau Registered Interest collected and Coupons cashed Sc BANKERS. STREET. Buy and Sell Railroad and Mining Stocks, Bonds CH. C. FAHNE9TOCK < EDWARD DODGE, ( PITT COOKE. Government Sacurities and Gold, only. r ’ .i on Commission „ Orders by MfilJ or Telegraph will receive prompt attention* Deposits received subject to ohee^t at sight and Four Per Cent. Interest allowed thereon. * Sts., New York. without charge. Nates, all series, taken In exchange forth* new Consolidated 5-30 Bonds, on terms advantageous to hmdsrs of 7-10’s. Merchants and Importers supplied with Coin for sustoms duties at lowest market rates. Orders for purchase and sale of all miscellaneous securities promptly executed. Mall and telegraph order* will receive our personal attention. Deposits received, and Interest allowed on balances. Collec¬ tions made on all points with quick returns. RODMAN, FISK A CO. 16 LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS. JAY COOKE, WM. G. MOORHXAD, H. D. COOKS, Pive»Tw«nty Bonds, all issues ; Seven-Thirty Notes, all series; Compound Interest Notes, and NO. Special Attention 1st, 2d, & 3d aeries* Currency Certificates. securities, Bay and sail at market rates : Co., RANKERS, given to the 1865 Bought and Sold. NO. 18 NASSAU STREET, W. Dimock & A. .7ew York State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan. BANKERS AND DEALERS IN government NO. 127. 7*30 No. 114 South 3d Fifteenth BANKERS, In connection with onr houses in Philadelphia and have this day opened an office at No 1 Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.’ DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBIL* AND NKW ORLEANS, lane Circular Letter* of Credit for Travellers, avail¬ able in all parte Interest Allowed of Europe. Washington give particular attention to the purchase, sale, and exchange of government securities of all issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, bonds and gold, and to all business of National Banks. JAY COOKE & CO. March. 1,1866 BANKERS AND BROKERS. STREET, NEAR WALL, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold exclusively on Commission. Special John Munroe & Co., AMERICAN RANKERS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS, ajtd NO. S WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Circular Letters of Credit for Traveller* In all parts of Europe, etc., etc. Also Commercial Credits, Frank & Gans, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN U. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. Georgia WlNTHROP & • No. 14 WALL STREET u - Riker & Co.. f i: c*x brokers a j ■ .• .. * *. * „1 in mining i New btrnet : - C.- a*s stocks, to broadway. Farnham, ' COMMERCIAL F A P E R Foreign Exchange, Gold, Government Securities, &c., on commission. Eugene Winthcop, J. Roosevelt Batlxt, Late of Late of Grenville WintuYop & Co. Henry Clews & Co, Jackson Bros. , STOCKS, RONDS, GOLD AND ERNMENT SECURITIES, ftc., NO. 19 BROAD Wm. GOV¬ STREET, NEW YORK. Henry Jackson. Fred. Wendell Jackson Warren, Kidder & Co., BANKERS, , also, STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD. &c., BOUGHT AND ISOLD ON COMMISSION. 48 Pine BaYLEY, 49 EXCHANGE PLACE. dealers in DEALERS IN Liverpool. George given to orders gold. Money received upon deposit and interest allowed npou current balances. T. A. Hoyt. James Gaudneb. Vice-Pres’t. Gold Exchange STREET, NEW YORK Government Securities, Stocks, bonds and Gold bought «nd sold on the must liberal terms. Mer¬ chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco. <fcc., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents, Messrs. K. UILLIAi' & CO., (Late of G. S. Robbins & Son,) S attention In Bankers and Commission Merchants NO. 41 BROAD Gardner, NO. 5 NEW Wilson, Callaway & Co., Deposits. on New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our We shall Hoyt & we House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will be resident partners. IT ft *9 Pile Street, New York. * Street, Opposite Treas. Department, Washington. Washington Winslow, Lanier & Co., Street, Philadelphia. No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Order* for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬ cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLOWED on deposit*, subject to check at Bight. Street, New York. Temple & Marsh, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Dtalers in Government Securities, Ac. on Commission, No. 9 Wall Street, cor. New. Murray & « ; NO. Cheney, BANKERS AND BROKERS,' 27 B. MURRAY, Jr. WALL STREET, "" P. D. CBXVXT. THE CHRONICLE Eastern Bankers. So. tt STATS JAMS* A. DUPB, BROKERS, Cash JAMES WOT, HENRY 8ATLXS Page, Richardson & Co, BOSTON, 114 STATS Conner & Na. | Broad STREET, BOSTON. STREET, Western Bankers. Southern Bankers. . Dupee, Beck & Sayles, STOCK [November 80, 1867.] Wilson, s Street, Charleston, S. €., BANKERS Sc DEALERS IN FOREIGN* DOMESTIC EXCHANGKSPECIE, , BANK NOTES, STOCKS. AND BONDS, Bspeelal attention paid to Collections. - BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON Jos. F. Larkin &. Co.,, BANKERS, J JohnM.Phlliina IJohn Gates Burke & The Marine 64 CAMP Draw of rp STREET, Its on Services Banks to and Liberal Terms. and Collections promptly attended to. Established 1848. promptly attended to. t t \ q Exchange. $1,000,000 Capital General Banking Liverpool, England. COMMISSION MERCHANTS and Dealers in Domestle and Foreign ' GALVESTON, TEXAS. Special attention given to Collections of a£ kinds, having prompt and reliable correspondents at al ac¬ cessible points in the State, and REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURI r CURRENT RATES, M * H A S K E L L Joseph T. Bailey, Edward B. Orne, Nathan Hillesl William Benjamin Rowland, Jr., Samuel A. Bispham, Ervi®n, Osgood Welsh, Frederic A. Hoyt National Park Bank. Howes * Macy, and Spofford, Tiles ton * Con New York. Second National Bank and J. W. Beaver, Esq., Boston. Drezel * Co. and D. 8. Stetson * Co- Philadelphia. T. F. Thirkield A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and Job. E. Elder St Goodwin, St Louis. Fowler, •tMUtfd A Co, Mobile. Pike, Tap eyre A Bro., New Orleans. Drake, Kleinwcrthm Cohen, Lon4m and Liverpool. William H. Rhawn, ^ William H. Rhawx, President, Late Cashier of the Central National Bank. Joseph P. Mumfobd, Cashier, Late o£ the Philadelphia 0,4 * ST. LOUIS, MO Dealers in Government Securities, Gold and Er change. Collections made on all accessible points and promptly remitted for at current rates of er- 'hange. L. A. Benoist & Co., BANKERS, ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI, Bay and Sell Exchange on all the principal cities of the United States and Canadas. London and Paris for sale. , Second Also, drafts oi ■- National Bank. Western Bankers. National Bank. Sc C ..^rrs. BANKERS, mm to DIRECTORS .* President Manager. ’ ; Merchants National Bank, New York, and on Collections and remittances PHILADELPHIA. Offers J. Young Scammon Robert Reid \ / Republic, T. H." McMahan & Co. the 809 & 811 CHESTNUT Bankers Co., STREET, NEW ORLEANS, Bank of National Company OF CHICAGO. BANKERS, Southern Bankers. Bank J j Thos. Sham 1 * u, CO., PARIS, COMMERCIAL CUDITI tot til* pU^M* Of Merelift* dtss In England and tks Continent. Teas Credits for ths tut of TrarMlers i>»n4 fThoraaTFox Jos. F. Larkin, 1 John Cochnower, I general Adam Poe, f partnership, Richmond, Ya, Charles D. Carr * Co. Augusts, Ga. ALSO EMUS . CINCINNATI. AND JOHN SIUNROE * Real Capital, $1,000,000. Harvey Decamp, Refer Drezel and Johnston Bros., w» Capital, $150,000. ST. LOUIS, MO. Capital..$200,000 | Surplus..$150,568 Washington. FIRST NATIONAL BAN OF National Trust Company 423 PENN WASHINGTON, H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke A Co.), Pbes’t. WM. 8. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Government Depository and Financial Agent of tne United States. We bny and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and give STREET, PITTSBURGH, Financial. PA. Capital $100,000 Particular attention given ceeds promptly remitted. attention to business connected with the several departments of the to collections, and pro J. F. Stark & Co., BANKERS & BROKERS, H. MAUET. 7AS. L. MAURY. BOB’T T. BROOK* Do a VJv • V>U» {"in j DJle$ ST., fhAVXIJULUilJLl| RICHMOND, VA. f At City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ac., bought and sold on commission. tight Deposit* received and Collection* made ea auaeeeaaiDlepoints in the United States. N. Y. Correspondent, VrauLTS A Oa. Correspondents .'—National Bank North The P. Hayden. To the persons or parties, or to their legal representa¬ tives, in whose names Trustees’ Certificates shall be Company. No. 52 St. Francis St., Mobile, Ala. riaolova ovirl Dealers in Foreign and DattiIT’v'nhQnnro HaVDomestic Exchange, Government Securities, Bonds, Gold and Silver JPi >rompt attention given to Collections. in “ * ‘ ' Hayden,Hutcheson & Co NO. 13 S. HIGH STREET, COLUMBUS, a OHIO, General Banking, Collection, Business. and Exchange A 108 Sc 110 West Fourth RAILROAD COMPANY. Street, $600,000 : ..-tt Geo. D. H. CINCINNATI, OHIO.a Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK York. Gillespie, late Wold & Gillespie. Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & Hurlbert. Home Insurance Company ot New York. ew York Life Insurance Company. Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford. Underwriters Agency New York, COLLECTIONS MADE at all ind remitted for on accessible points day of payment.! Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Soathern Bank of Ala. Checks on UNION BANK OF LONDON. Charles D. Carr‘& Co., AND BBOKBBI, AUGUSTA, OA. ~ COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED FOB. Carrington, LAW. ATTORNEYS AT +* cute • s». V* ST?Mr- Mortgage For Sale. Bonds These Bonds are part of a series of One Million of Dollars secured by Mortgage on 290 miles of Railroad, made, and Its condition will compare favorably with that of leading lines of Western Rail¬ way. The profits of the Company from 1&>8 to 1862 large, and after paying Interest on Bonded Debt yielded over 15 per cent, to the shareholders, those of the fiscal year ending 30th jRne, 1867, were $547,187 76, being more than double of the liability for annual in¬ terest, including the issue of the 2d Mortgage Bonds, and earned during a most unfavorable season owing were FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Cincinnati, Ohio. Lewis Worthington, V.Pres. Theodore Stanwood. Cashier. CAPITAL $1,000,000 SURPLUS $814,852 89 Collections made on all accessible points and promptly remitted for at best rates. Directors? John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L. B. Harrison, Jas. A. Frazer, R. M. Bishop, Robt. Mitchell. William TYoyOs, A. - - Jos.JUwa. - Dening Duer and James Robb are I They have 20 years to run with 7 per cent.1 interest coupons, payable semi-annually in New York. Jibe liens on the Railroad having priority, amount to $2,889,580, making the total incumbrance $3,889,530, and its estimated value exceeds 10 millions of dollars. Since the conclusion of the war extensive Improve¬ Trustees. ments have been FOR SALE. John W. Ellis, Pres. ■Quid & Second of which Messrs. NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, Charles Walsh. President Bank of Mobile. BANKERS Stock (full paid) for Preferred Certificates, and Com¬ mon Stock (full paid) for Common Certificates, at the rate of one share for every one hundred dollars of Trus¬ tees’ Certificates, and Scrip for fractional parts of such share. Interest on Preferred Certificates from January 1st, 1867, to the day fixed for conversion, to be paid In cash. By order of the Trustees. Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Memphis and Charleston Co., Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Dnrand, Bankers, New York. w v/V., registered on said Thirtieth day of November, and upon the surrender and cancellation of the same, Cer¬ tificates of Stock will he issued as followsPreferred ALLAN CAMPBELL, Chairman. Babcock Bros. & jiuMwu) W. B Hayden * . Reverences Jos. Hutcheson. BANKING HOUSE OF Do Jas. M. Muldon & Sons, reorganized and corporation, to be called Ohio and Mississippi Railway New York America; Knautn, Nacliod & Kuhne. Sterling Exchanj Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notea, Stat ite, STREET. consolidated BANKERS AND BROKERS No. 1014 iULAIil Os 1UJL*I MAIN 88 WALL general Banking, Exchange and Collection basines RT-T AVAAU ix I A A* \/f ATTDV Mississippi R.R. COMPANY, EASTERN DIVISION New York, October 17,1857. The Transfer Books of this Trust will be finally closed PITTSBURGH. mon'T OFFICE OF THE TRUSTEES OF CREDITORS AND STOCKHOLDERS OF THE Ohio & especial Government. Full information with regard to Government loans nt all times cheerfully furnished. Prompt attention given to the business of corret E. D. JONES, Cashier. pondents. to the failure of Southern crops. prepared to receive bids for the above Bonds in whole or in part, and recommend them to the pub lie as unquestionable security.» - * *: * - *:jWe are . WINSLOW. LANIER * CO,, THE CHRONICLE. Uovember£80,1867.] Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. —"(Bankers and Brokers. 1 & Co., Duncan, Sherman & Co., Garth, Fisher P. Morton L. 675 BANKERS, CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., bankers, 188 UK 80 BROAD STREET, CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United NEW YORK. STERLING exchange, Days; also, Circular Notes and wrg 0f credit for Travellers' Use, on at ** sight or Sixty B* Let- States, available in all the principal cities of the world: also, COMMERCIAL CREDITS. For in Europe, east of the Cape or Good Hope West Indies, South America, and the United States use & Hardy, BANKERS, No. 18 NEW STREET, Harrison, Garth <Sb Co. and Henry Hardy). Government Securities, Stocks,Bonds, Gold, etc.: bought and sold at the M regular” Board of Broker and at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis¬ /Successors to sion only. Foreign and Domestic Exchange bought, sold and collected. HORTON, BURNS & CO., L. P# Broad Street, London.) (56 Old and ELLERS. SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW. STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. of LONDON. the principal towns and Europe and the East. James G. King’s Sons, cities of 54 William Street. Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and Stocks and Bonds In London and New York. Chaelxs 56 WALL Wall Street, N.Y., No. 2# (PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.) BANKERS AND BROKERS. Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com- mparttc*ular attention given to the Purchase and Sale of all Southern and Miscellaneous Securities.;, Collections made on all accessible points. Interest allowed on Balances Lockwood & Co., GOVERNMENT IN OTHER SECURITIES. AND Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency, mblect to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Buikers upon favorable terms. McKim, Bros. & Co., BANKERS, 62 WALL STREET, Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft at sight, and special attention given to orders from osner shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile credits upon them for nse in China, the East and West Indies, South America, &c. Marginal credits TURNER per annum on for at sight. only 63,000,000 No. 16 BROAD WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President. William H. Sanford, Cashier. NATIONAL RANK. 291 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. CAPITAL SURPLUS KETCHUM, PHIPPS 6c BELKNAP, Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Orders Promptly Executed Hatch, Foote & Co.., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 24 Broad Street, New York. Governmeift securities, railroad and other bonds, railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and exchange bought and sold on commission. Mercantile paper and loans in currency or gold negotiated. Interest allowed on deposits. ADAMS, KIMBALL 6c MOORE, BANKERS, No. 14 Wall Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securities, of all issues, and execute orders for the purchase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency subject to check at sight. ■ J. L. Brownell & Bro., BANKERS 6c BROKERS, .28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. owttks. Bonds, Government Securities and Gold sought and 8old exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received on favorable terms. References: IF* X?in>Av?re8* National Mech. Banking Ass., N.Y. Pres’t Blair, Merchants* Nat. Bank, Chicago. Tyler, Wrenn & Co., RANKERS, -NO. 18 WALL STREET tttmttS? sue or IF'berarratestGOYERNMENT Orders for purchase and stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed. TYLER, ULLMANN * CO» Chicago. $1,000,000. and Dealers’ Accounts solicited. D. L. J. H. Stout, Cashier. Washington M. Smith. Smith & i;OSS, Preside ues of SEVEN-THIRTY the new FIVE-TWENTY NOTE&exehanged for BONDS, on the most llberai terms, and without delay. IMPORTERS and others supplied with GOLD at mar ket rates, aud Coin on hand for immediate delivery. No. 12 WALL STREET. Soutter & Co., BANKERS, No. 53 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. Dealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds. Stocks, Geld, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable Securities. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Draft or Check. Advances made on approved securities. Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper. Collect’ vnsboth inland and foreign promptly made. Foreign und Domestic Loans Negotiated. John McGinnib, Jr. McGinnis, Gilliss, Harney & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS. NO. 4 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Government SECURITIES, GOLD, &c. Tenth National Bank. No. 29 BROAD STREET. Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers BANKERS, STREET, NEW YORK, Draft. $1,000,000 450,000 RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. Capital Brothers, Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securitiea Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds. Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum and* Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to 0 orders for Purchase and Sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold on Commission. TURNER BROTHERS. George Phipps. Fbanklin M. Ketchum. Thos. Belknap, Jr. Commission. STOCK BROKERS AND Has for sale all descriptions of Government BondsCity and County accounts received on terms most fa vorable to our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of the United States an BROTHERS, Opposite U. S. Treasury. We receive Deposits and make Collections, the same at an Incorporated Bank. Government Securities Bought and Sold at Market Rates. We also execute on Drake VISSER, 318 BROADWAY. Capital daily balances which may be checked Will purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks strictly and Exchange Place, New York. Central National Bank, NO. 14 NASSAU STREET, o and allow Interest at the rate of FOUR PER CENT of the London House issued for the same purposes. The Tradesmen’s Corner of Pine, P.B. STREET, NEW YORK. Receive Deposits In Currency and Gold, on SIMON DE Jambs D. Smith, of the late firm of Jamas Low A Co., New York and Louisville, Ky. BANKERS, All or Jamkson, Cotting, NOS. 14 & 16 WALL places. BANKING HOUSE - Amos Jameson,Smith &Cotting STREET, BOSTON. The subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys In the United States, is prepared to make advances Robt..McKim. Jno. A. McKim. Hablett McKim. Bails, Locomotives, COMPANY, Joskph A. LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. 26 Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Exchange, Commercial Paper and Gold, Purchased or Sold on Commission. Deposits received and Interest allowed same as with an Incorporated Bank. Bonds and Loans negotiated for Railroad Companies. BANKERS, NO. 24 BROAD STREET. Bay and Sell at Market Rates. ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS and others^ and allow interest on dally balances, subject to Hake collections on favorable John Bloodgood & Co., 22 WILLIAM DEALERS GOVERNMENT Heath & AND Cnrren IN GOVERNMENT AND DEALERS IN BULLION, SPECIE, AND UNITED STATES SECURITIES. No. 1 Wall Street. SECURITIES, AND GOLD, RAILROAD AND MINING STOCKS,: Hagen, BANKERS, Hughes, RANKERS ^COMMISSION BROKERS cy, subject to check at sight, and particular atten tfoh given to accounts of country banks and banker Cohen & terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. STREET, NEW YORK. OTHER SECURITIES. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and IN Cos., Of Jameson, Cotting & Co. St. Louis. for BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. DEALERS « Contract for Iron or Steel all business connected with Railways Drake Kleinwort&Cohen RANKERS. No. 94 12 PINE STREET. STREET, NEW YORK, 28 STATE MERCHANTS, Negotiate Ronds and Loans for Railroad. Cars, etc., N. P. BouletT' D.IRoddey & Co., BANKERS AND Ward, BARING BROTHERS 6c R. P. Sawyers. P. D. KODDEY, J. N. Petty, P. agents E. Milnob. H. Cbugex Oakliy. J esup & Company, and undertake S. G. & G. C. gale of Hvi P. Morton. Waltxb H. Burns. M. K. EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS. ths union BANK AvaM»W» in all LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬ 13 Broad Street, New York* Deposits received, subject to Check, and Interest al¬ lowed. A HAWLEY HEATH. _ T. W. B. HUGHES, . Member of N. Y. Stock Ex 676 TRE CHRONICLE. Financial. {November. 30, 1867' 5 2 5 MILES TUB National Trust Company OF THE CITY OF NEW NO. 336 BROADWAY. Capital, One million CHARTERER Darlas R, _ _ BY YORK, UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Hollars* THE Mangham, President. (Of the old firm OF THE STATE. of Garner & Co.) Hxjtby C. Caster, First Vice-President. Barnet L. Solomon, Second Vice-President. James Merrill, Secretary. Running West from Omaha Across the Continent THE NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY RECEIVES the accounts of Banks, Bankers, Corporations) and Individuals, AND ARE NOW COMPLETED. ALLOWS FOUR PFRCE*'i\ on daily INTEREST balances. Check as Sight. Certificates payable on demand are issued at the Subject to same rate. Special Deppsits for one year or more may be made at live per cent. The National Tiiust Company discharges all the various duties of similar institutions, it acts as Trus¬ tee lor Corporations and Individuals, and .Mortgagee for Railroads, and as Financial Agent of tetate and City Governments, and foreign and domestic corpora¬ tions, banks and bankers. It will act as administrator or executor of estates, and as guardian lor minors and as receiver in litigated cases. The Company is also constituted by its charter a legal depository for Thi9 brings the line to the eastern base of tke Rocky Mountains, and it is expected that the track will be thirty miles further, to Evans Pass, the highest point on the road, by January. The maximum grads from the foot of the mountains to the summit is but eighty feet to the mile, while that of many eastern roads is over one hundred. Work in the rock-cuttings on the western siope will continue through the winter, and there is now* no reason to doubt that the entire grand line to the Pacific will be open for business in 1870. laid money paid iato Court. The SECURITYOF THE COMPANY. The Capital stock of One Million Dollars is di¬ over live hundred Shareholders compris¬ ing many gentlemen of large wealth and financial ex¬ perience, who are aiso personally liable to depositors for all obligations of the Company to double the amount of their capital stock. By its charter, no loan can be made, directly or in¬ directly, to any trustee, officer or employe ox the Coinp&Dy • The Trustees are compelled to exhibit annually a full statement oi their affairs to the Supreme Court, and It is made the duty of the Court to see that they are vided among properly conducted. 1 he charter restricts the Investment of its Capital to united Mates Government btocks, or New lork State Stocks, or Bonds of Incorporated Cities of this St.ite; or on Loans oil Bond and Mortgage on uniucumbered Real Estate in this State, worth double the amount loaned. The Company will make loans from its Deposits and Trust Funds on Government and City stocks of this State Securities, State Stocks ; but it is not permitted to discount or deal in coemekcial ok BUbiXL&s paper. Ihe above provisions constitute this Company a very secure Depository for Money and lor trusts committed to its provided for the construction means grants Its Six P , of this Great National Work are ample. The United States Cent Bonds at the rate of frarn $16,000 to $1S,(W0 per mile, for which it takes a second liek er security, and receives payment to as issued are as each a large If not to the full extent of its claim in These Bonds sioners and pronounced to be in all respects a first-class road, thoroughly supplied with depots, repair-shops stations, and all the necessary rolling stock and other equipments. The United States also makes large revenue to and other the Company. large portions a donation of 12,800 acres of land to the mile, which will be and of, covered with heavy pine lorests and abound in.coal of the best quality. are own First Mortgaga Bonds to an amouflt equal to the issue oi Hon. E. D. Morgan and Hon. Oakes Ames are Trustees for the Bondholders no more. and deliver the Bonds to the a source Much of this land in the Platte Valley is among the most fertile in the world The Company is also authorized to issue it* the Government and Company only as the work progresses, so that they always represent an actua| productive value. charge. * O' advantages to depositors. The authorized capital of the Company is One Hundred Million Dollars, of winch over five millions have Aa the National Trust Company receives deposits large or small amounts, and permits them to be drawn as a whole or in part by Check at Sight and without notice, allow ing interest on all daily bal¬ ances, parties can keep accounts in this institution already been paid iu upon fin with special advantages of security, convenience pVoflt. the work already done. « EARNINGS OF THE COMPANY. and At present the profits of the TllJbl New services. twenty-mile section is finished, and after it has been examined by United States Commis¬ Company are derived only from Its local sufficient to pay the interest on all the Bonds the Company can It it not doubted that when the road is completed the through traffic more than built. York, Housatonic Atlantic and Pacific States will be large beyond precedent, and, as be done at profitable rates. AND traffic, but this is already mu^h issue, if not another mile were of the only line connecting the there will be no competition, it can always NORTHERN RAILROAD COMPANY. $150,000 of First Mortgage Sale. It will be noticed that the Bonds for Union Pacific Railroad is, in fact, a Government Work, built; under the pervislon of Government officers, and to large extent with Government money, and that it? bonds ure issuefi no similar security is so carefully guarded, and certainly no valuuble property. As the Company’s a under Government direction. It is believed that other is based upon a These Bonds are part of a series of *1,000,000, secur¬ ed by mortgage on forty miles of railroad, completed Or in course oi construction. They have twenty years more larger or to run, with 7 per cent, semi-annualiy interest coupons, payable in New York City, and are of the de¬ nominations of $500 to $1,IMJ0. The Company nas no bonds outstanding, nor is nny greater amount than one hundred and fifty thousand dollars oflered lor sale. Bids wUi be received until December 1, 1867. for the whole or any part of the above Bonds to this amount at the office of the Company, No. 137 B. oadway, New York, where lull infuinaiion in regard to the securities may be obtained. FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS offered for the present at NINETY CENTS ON THE DOLLAR, they market, being more than 15 per cent, lower than U. S. Stocks. They pay are SSBGEAHT, Treasurer. Kovember 15, 1867. the cheapest security iuth« SIX PER CENT. IN GOLD, Jacquelin & De Coppet, or over NINE PER CENT, upon the Investment. pany’s Office, No. 20 Naesau Street, and by HO. SO HEW AUUliroad are STREET, N.Y. Stocks, Bonds, Subscriptions will be received iu New York at the Com 3 CONTINENTAL NATIONAL BANK, No, 7 Nassau Street. CLARK, DODGE Sc CO., Bankers, No. 51 Wall Street. Gold, and Government Securities, JOHN JT. CISCO Sc SON, BOUGHT AND BOLD OH COMMISSION. Sma H. Jaoqcxlol Hxert Ds Corm. Gibson,Beadleston & Co., HENRY CLEWS Sc CO., Bankers, No. 32 Wall Street. REDDEN, WINCHESTER Sc CO., Bankers, No. 60 Broadway. . and by the Company’s advertised Agents throughout the United States. drafts BANKERS, Bankers, No. 33 Wall Street. or other funds par Remittances should be made i* in New Y"ork, and the bonds will be sent free of charge by return express. W EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold, ONLY" on Commission, at the Stock, Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem¬ bers. Interest allowed on Deposits. Dividends, Coupons ana Interest collected. Liberal advances on Government and other Securities Information cheerfolly given to Professional men, Executors, etc., desiring to invest. co. A NEW PAMPHLET AND MAP showing the Progress of the Work, Resources for Construction, and Value of Bonds, may be obtained at Company’s Offices or of its advertised Agents, or will be sent free on application. JOHN J. CISCO, Treasurer. November 28,1867. NEW YORK. th* fecttc, Commercial auto’ A §ailmag Monitor, anti §ttjstmuw foumal. WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, ^ REPRESENTING T1IE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1867. VOL. 5. CONTENTS. NO. 127. in the gold room, and oftener in call loans. Should a sudden change in the financial situation abroad cause any larger part 6^1 The Financial Outlook. @*7 J States for 1806-7 of these foreign 681 balances to be withdrawn and sent home, i Alahama State Debt C ntfaction and the Chamber of 678 j Latest Monetary and Commercial Commerce we 679 } might have a temporary flurry, and the monetary move¬ English News 681 The Cold Movement. Since 1360. 680 I Commercial and Miscellaneous The Impeachment. Project.... ments here would be disturbed. But as this contingency News 683 Foreign Commerce of the United does not seem THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. likely soon to occur, the aspect of the loan Commercial Epitome 689 market is Money Market, Railway Stocks, Cotton promising so far as it is influenced by the pressure 690 U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Tobacco 692 ofia Foreign Exchange, New York supply of capital amply adequate, and more than ade¬ Breadstuffs ...; 692 City Ranks. Philadelphia Banks 6S4 Groceries 69 i National Banks, etc. quate to meet the present and prospective demands. 687 f. Dry Goods ale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange 694 sale Prices N.Y. St j Prices Current and Tone of the A second reason is found in the National. State and Municipal supplies of currency. 701-702 securities List 688 | Market. Long experience has proved that in its existing sensitive and THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. 698 Railway News 696 ; ors Bond List expanded condition, the money market is more liable to be 697 ! Insurance and Mining Journal 699 Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List | Advertisements... 673-6, 700, 703-4 disquieted from currency perturbations than even from a Railroad, Canal, and Miscellaneslight falling off in the supplies of idle floating capital. It is, indeed, surprising how much stringency at a crisis has OrI)c I hr Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur- been produced by the locking up of a few millions of green¬ "'day -morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants* Magazine, backs. At present, however, there is no probability of any with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. spasm from such a cause, and, moreover, the currency re¬ TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. serve in our city banks is augmenting. In regard to the For The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier to city subscribers, anu mailod to all others, (exclusive of postage,) supply of National bank notes this is especially noteworthy, For One Year $10 00 THE CHRONICLE. ......... . ■: - • * - . . . ClironicU. / ’ For Six Months 6 00 . By an arrangement with the publishers of the Daily Bulletin we are enabled to furnish our subscribers with that paper at the reduced price of #4 per annum making the price of Bulletin,-j gj sixSto'mhi:'."'.'.'.'.:"'::: *8 00 Chronicle with Im.lt Postage is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office. It is, on, the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. will am B dana, | WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publisher*, john o. floyd, jr. 60 William Street, New York. ) JKC?* Remittances should Office Money Orders. invariably be made by drafts or Post Soliciting Agents make no collections. THE FINANCIAL OUTLOOK. Unless appearances are very untrustworthy we have safe¬ ly escaped the last monetary troubles of the year 1867? and we may with more confidence hope that for several weeks to come the money market will work steadily at i moderate rates of interest. There are numerous reasons for this opinion, which is held by some of our shrewdest bankers and financial observers. In the first place, there is a vast amount of idle banking centres. prefer to lend it capital here and in all the Eastern It is true that the owners of that capital call short dates, and that there is indisposition to invest it in 60 or 90 days paper. In this respect, though in a less degree, our money market shows some analogy w ith that of London where, from the prevailing distrust, there is such an accu¬ mulation of floating capital unemployed that the rates of in¬ terest on call loans are pressed down to a point almost with¬ out precedent. This stagnation in the British money markets has its effects here, and one consequence is that we havesueh immense amounts of foreign capital competing with our own American capital for employment, and finding it in Wall street sometimes in the foreign exchange market, so metimes to too great on an extent or an at as there is than an accumulation which is more favorable to ease agreeable to the institutions to whose vaults it is flow ing from the interior and from the West. Whether, in the immediate future, this state of our bank reserves of notes and greenbacks is likely to suffer much from the agitation of the various bills in Congress, may be doubtful. For it is currently believed that there will be no legislation matured for some months to come on any of the measures affecting the banks, and that the greenback circulation will probably not be meddled with till later in the session, except for the purpose of effecting the temporary stoppage of contraction* which is so loudly clamored for in some quarters. A third reason for believing that the money market will be exempt for a time from any serious spasms is in the state of confidence which we are told is on the increase, although the symptoms are certainly not so decisive as might be In consequence ot the recent failures some three or wished. four millions of suspended paper must be in somebody’s hands. The embarrassments of over weighted firms must be pressing heavily and may cause unexpected failures. Those persons who have launched out too far are of course liable at any time to be “ brought up with a round turn,” as the Wall street phrase has it. But from all that can be discerned it is probable that, making allowances for the ex¬ ceptional disasters that may happen from such causes, we need not fear any wide-spread trouble among our merchants, but, on the contrary, should confidently look for a season of greater quiet and prosperity than has for some time past been enjoyed. Of course it is not to be wished or expected that there will be such a plethora in the money market as that the rate [November 30, 1367. THE CHRONICLE. 678 ernment bonds, to relieve the depression in business, or un¬ for loans on call. Such a state of things would be unwholsome and ominous. der any other pretext whatsoever. The practical part of the report is contained in the fol¬ It is enough for the interests of business if at current rates good borrowers can get on sound securities all the accom¬ lowing paragraph, which is preceded by the statement That the year 1869 is regarded by the Chamber of Commerce as modation they want for legitimate enterprises.' the time when specie payments may safely be resumed: of interest will sink below 6@7 per cent place, as a preliminary to the resumption of specie payments, that all the floating debt of the govern¬ ment, except that known as ‘legal tender’ must be funded. Second, that gold and greenbacks may be made of equal value if Congress will enact that the latter shall be received in part, say to the extent of ten per cent for duties * at the custom house,’ and the notes thus received cauceled, until the desired end is reached ; any further curtailment being in that case suspended. To this extent the necessity would be obviated of selling gold which, under the existing tariff, is received in excess of the amount required to pay interest on the public deb . Third —That whenever the value of gold and greenbacks approximates under the conditions already suggested, the Treasury Department may safely undertake t3 redeem greenbacks with gold, provided there is no material falling off in the customs’ revenue or m the amount of gold in the Treasury. Fourth^-That resumption by the Treasury Depart¬ ment necessarily involves resumption by the banks, and that the Treasury Department, the banks and the community will have a com¬ mon interest in sustaining each other, if the attempt be not prematurely “ CONTRACTION AND THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE. A Your committee assume in the first lengthy report has just been issued by our New York Chamber of Commerce, ostensibly on the subject of specie payments. The document treats chiefly of the general man agement of the finances of the Government, and of the effects of that management upon the material prosperity of the country. We are glad to find that in several respects the views here presented are more broad, sound and thoughtful than the public has been accustomed to receive from similar sources. Indeed, there is room for profound regret that during the past two or three years our Chambers of Com¬ merce here and elsewhere have not given more attention to made.” the analysis and arrangement of those numberless facts illus¬ If the committee had contented themselves with discus¬ trative of the evils of financial jurisprudence and Treasury sing in detail, each of these, four propositions, and had in¬ administration, which must have been continually forced cluded their other less important matter in a paper on some upon the thoughts of men so intelligent and shrewd, so expe¬ other subject than specie payments, they would have con¬ rienced and active in commercial and financial pursuits. ferred more value upon their report. The project of pay¬ The first point of importance which is raised in the report ing ten per cent, of the customs duties would be, for obvious before us, is the large range of discretion, w hich, under ex¬ reasons, unpopular and premature. We trust that the isting laws, has been confided to the Secretary of the Chamber of Commerce will return to the discussion of the Treasury. Whether or not this discretion has been abused; contraction question, and that similar bodies in other cities how future abuses may be prevented; for what reasons, and will follow’ their example, as far at least as to assume the to what extent so anomalous a discretionary power should be same uncompromising attitude of opposition to expansion * permitted to continue ; these and many other vital questions of the currency in any and every form. the Chamber could have illustrated for us from their exten¬ New aspects of the currency question are continually , sive business knowledge, and from their constant association offering themselves, which these gentlemen might with great with merchants, bankers, farmers, manufacturers and other advantage investigate. Not to mention others there is the persons who are ready enough—perhaps are over-ready, to one suggested in the bill which on Thursday last was intro¬ trace much of the loss that overtakes them day by day duced into Congress by Mr. Broomall, of Pensylvania, and to some blunders in financial legislation or Treasury manage¬ referred to the Committee on Banking and Currency. This ment. These gentlemen have no word to say suggesting a measure is entitled, “ A bill to fix the value of legal tender remedy for the trouble arising out of the secrecy with notes and to provide for their redemption/5 It enacts, first, which bonds have been sold, or the w’ant of publicity with that the Secretary of the Treasury shall cause to be re¬ which other operations of the Treasury more closely con¬ deemed, in gold, at the U. S. Treasury, at specified rates, all nected with contraction have sometimes been conducted. sums not less-than $100 each;” secondly, “that such re¬ The mischiefs of the arbitrary discretion of the Secretary demption shall begin on the first day of the month following have no doubt been exaggerated. But those evils wTould un¬ the passage of the law, and during that month shall be at the questionably have been very much lessened, if the publicity rate of $140 in greenbacks for $100 in gold, and that the which in most modern nations is shed around the finan¬ amount of greenbacks shall be diminished 25 cents per month cial doings ot every goverment officer, had been adopted for every $100 in gold until it shall be reduced to $100.” by us. We do not endorse this plan as worthy of adoption, or A considerable part of the report is taken up with some¬ as capable of being carried out in practice. No such method what vague and declamatory statement of the evils of an has ever been submitted to Congress before. It seems to rest unstable currency, the desiableness of resumption, and other on the same principles as were found effective by the Brit¬ kindred matters about which the public mind is agitrted by ish government for . resuming specie payments alter their little Or no difference of opinion. What wre should have long suspension at the beginning of this century. Mr. preferred to sec is a clear statement of facts shedding light Ilieardo, the eminent political economist and statesman, first on the progress the country has made during the past two suggested the plan in 1816, when gold was at 5 per cent, years in the path to specie payments, what difficulties are* premium, and specie payments had been stopped nearly 20 still in that path, how these obstacles may be surmounted, years. FI is “ Proposals for an .Economical and Secure Cur¬ arid whether the methods we have been employing are too rency,” argued that the difference between paper and gold costly, too harsh, or are otherwise capable of improvement. was reduced to so narrow a margin that the transition to gold Still we must do the Chamber of Commerce the jus¬ payments could not be very violent, and might be facilitated tice to acknowledge that, on several points,* their views are by a gradual descent. With a view thereto he proposed unmistakeably sound. First, they maintain the necessity to supersede for a time the use of gold coin altogether, and of persisting in a settled financial policy ; secondly, they to require the Bank of England to redeem its notes by the contend, in common with all sound financial reasoners, that payment not of specie, but of gold bars or bullion, of the contraction of the currency should be regarded as an indis standard purity, at the mint price of gold, £3 17s. lffj-d. per pensable preliminary to resumption of specie payments; ounce, or at such other form as Parliament should determine. and, thirdly, they oppose the plausible absurd schemes for He claimed that these gold bars or ingots, not being fitted issuing greenbacks or other currency, whether to pay off Gov for circulation as currency, would not be drawn out ot the u November 30, 1807.] >THE CHRONICLE. 679 bank except when needed for exportation. Whenever the the new mining regions of Colorado and Montana there is no aggregate of bank notes outstanding become excessive, the actual record. The yield in those districts is sent direct to resulting depreciation of the currency would cause gold to the Atlantic; and during the last two years a considerable be needed for export. The bank would then have to pay out portion of the yield of Idaho also has taken this route. It gold for notes, the issue would be checked, and the outstand¬ is difficult to estimate the amount of treasure coming over ing circulation would pour back into the bank. Such were land from these regions. During the last three years the the general features of this well known proposition for re¬ product of Colorado and Montana has been quite important. storing specie payments, and making the depreciated British The amount of gold from those territories, deposited at the currency at par with gold. mint and its branches, last year was $6,523,000; and yet it With some modifications, the scheme was embodied in the is known that of the whole product less than one half finds act passed by Parliament for this purpose in 1819. It is its way to the mint. It is estimated by those most familiar commonly known as Peel’s bill, and required the bank from with the treasure movement of these regions that the annual 1st Feb., 1820 to 10th, 1820, to pay its notes in bullion of product is about $15,000,000. Deeming this estimate standard firmness at the rate of £4 Is. Od. per ounce. From somewhat sanguine, it may yet be very safely estimated that 1st Oct., J820, to 1st May, 1821, it was to pay bullion at the receipts from Colorado, Montana and other mining dis¬ the rate of £3 19s. 6d. per ounce, and after that date at the tricts at other points than San Francisco, since 1860, aggre¬ old mint price of £3 17s. 10^d. per ounce. Two years after¬ gate fully $50,000,000, and this we adopt as an estimate safe wards it was to begin to pay coin at the same price, the re¬ beyond all dispute. * sumption being complete. With these explanations we subjoiu a statement of the The success which attended this legislation is well known. domestic production, the imports and the exports for each The Bank of England was ready for resuming coin payments of the last seven years ; the home yield being for the calen¬ and petitioned to be allowed to do so before the time ap¬ dar year, ending December 31st, and the imports and ex¬ pointed. It is true that the transition was signalised by ports for the fiscal year ending June 30th : commercial distress, derangement of prices, and stringency IMPORT?. of money to an extent that was not 1 $46,300,000 1862 anticipated, and has 16,400.000 never been .* 9,500,000 satisfactorily explained. How far Mr. Broomall’s 1864 13,100,000 7,200,000 scheme, if passed, could be worked without similar trouble5 10,300,000 and whether it would be safe to 22,200,000 adopt it at all until our Total imports, 7years... Treasury has paid off its floating debt and withdrawn a con¬ $125,003,000 DOMESTIC PRODUCTION—PRODUCT RECEIVED AT FRANCISCO. siderable amount of the outstanding circulation, will deserve 1861. $48,100,000 the most patient and 54,800,000 thorough examination. 58,2< 0,000 1681 681 81 523562436 . SAN 61,800,000 62,0 C,000 57,000,000 60,000,000 1865 THE GOLD MOVEMENT SINCE 1860. To a country, with desirous of no an a depreciated early return to a 1867 and matter of paper currency, specie basis, it is small consequence to ascertain what is its a (partly estimated) Total receipts at San Francisco Estimated total receipts at other points, 7 Total domestic production, 7 years years $402,600,000 50,000,000 $452,600,000 supply of the precious metals. A priori, it might be considered highly 1861 $28,100,000 36,S00,000 64,100,000 probable that during the last six years we should have 1864 69,300,000 parted with a considerable portion of our accumulation of 54,300,000 86,000,000 1S67 gold. Our production of commodities was materially cur¬ 55,100,000 tailed by the Total exports, 7 years $393,700,000 war; and the consequent advance in prices RECAPITULATION. (beyond what was due to currency derangements) naturally Imports for seven years $125,000,000 Domestic production for seven years 452,600,000 opened our market to the products of foreign countries. Total eupply for seven years We were $577,600,000 deprived of the principal staple by which we Exports for seven years 393,700,000 have been wont to pay for our imports, and had not the Gain in supply for seven years $183,900,000 usual It thus appears that, within the last seven supply of breadstuff's for exportation. With such a years, our sup¬ radical derangement in our foreign commerce, it would ply of gold has exceeded our importations by $184,000,000. seem very natural to conclude that we should have to draw We must acknowledge considerable surprise at this result, largely upon our accumulation of specie for liquidating the but can conceive of no way in which its substantial accuracy excess of imports over exports. A very general impression can be impugned. There are considerations which justify exists among our people that such has been the actual course the expectation that the precious metals would have accu¬ of affairs, that we have thus lost a large amount of specie mulated during the period under review. Our gross expor¬ since 1860, and that consequently we have not at present an tation of coin and bullion, during the last seven years, has adequate basis for the resumption of specie payments, and been almost exactly the same as for the preceding seven cannot have until, by some legislative expedient, the efflux years; the- shipments being for the respective periods of specie from the country is checked. $393,700,000 and $395,500,000; but we have received from The principal movements of the precious metals in the foreign countries, during the seven years since 1860, $125,country are indicated in recorded returns, with sufficient 000,000, while during the preceding seven years we im¬ precision to enable us to form a reliable estimate of the cor¬ ported only $62,500,000.. It thus appears that, since 1860, rectness of this opinion- The imports and exports of coin our net exports have been $64,300,000 below the amount and bullion are officially recorded. The product in Califor¬ for the tike number of years next previous. Concurrently nia, Arizona, Idaho and Oregon is represented by the regis¬ with this decline in the ratio of our net exports, we have had tered receipts at San Francisco by Wells, Fargo & Co.; an increase in the domestic production. As the record of but to the recorded arrivals by that medium it is customary recei^fs at San Francisco was not kept with much precision to add 10 per cent, to the receipts from the interior and 30 previous to 1860, we cannot compare the movement since per cent, to the coastwise receipts for amounts brought per¬ that year with that of the preceding seven yeais with strict sonally by miners; and in giving below the product received accuracy. From a comparison of estimate?, we take it to at San Francisco we make that addition. Of tbe product in be quite safe to conclude that the receipts at that point for EXPORTS. , * 680 the last in excess THE CHRONICLE. years average fully $5,000,000 per annum of those for the seven years ending with 1860. seven The overland receipts at the Atlantic ports [November 30,1867. the report will not result in a real impeachment of the President, but probably in an angry, exciting discussion which will be almost as damaging to the interests of the from the new gold fields, which we have estimated at $50,000,000 for the country. ' seven This being the state of the case, we repeat that the years, also form an important item in accounting for great the large increase of supply. commercial communities of the Union owe it to themselves Putting together these several items—the decrease in net exports, the enlarged receipts at ami their country to^takc action upon the subject. For San Francisco, and the product of the new mines arriving at what is the first and most obvious effect of an angry Con¬ other points—we are enabled, from these considerations gressional agitation of the question of impeachment? alone, to account for $150,000,000 of the $184,000,000 gain Clearly and directly to derange and check all business, and above exhibited. to put a stop to the transaction by Congress of the necessary The taxation upon the assays of bullion afford an im¬ business now before it, or proper to be brought before it at portant criterion of the current production of the precious this session. At any time, and under any circumstances, this metals in the country. It is to be assumed that in would be a disaster, but it is peculiarly so at the present this, as in other departments of taxation, a portion of the moment. If the President had really been found deserving duty (upon private assays) fails of being reported to the of impeachment, and if the report of the committee on the revenue officers; so that the official returns cannot be taken subject had laid before the Legislature and the nation in a as representing fully the production. It appears, however, grave, earnest and temperate spirit, full and convincing rea¬ from the last Report on the Finances, p. 266, that, for the sons for taking so solemn a step, we should have only to fiscal year 1866, $488,337 of tax was collected upon assays acquiesce with all good citizens in the painful national duty of $81,389,541 of bullion. Allowing for a certain amount imposed by a national calamity, and calling upon us pll for assayed without paying the tax, it is scarcely supDcsable that the sacrifice of all things else to the national justice and the the product of that year was less than $85,000,000, which national honor. It would have been a sore trial certainly to is $9,000,000 in excess of the net exports of the year (a all Americans justly proud of their past history, thus to be year of much the largest specie shipments in the history of exposed before mankind as suffering under the burden of the country), and $47,000,000 in excess of the average net shame imposed upon them by an unworthy ruler of their exports for the last seven years. This fact shows that we own choice. But the trial might have been, and we believe are producing the precious metals at a rate vastly in excess would have been, resolutely borne.* In the actual aspect of of our exportation, and taken together, with other consider¬ the affair, however, we see the nation compromised in its re¬ ations previously adduced, confirms the credibility of the putation abroad, and threatened m its interests at home with¬ result to which the above statistics have led us. out any valid excuse. The bold statement that an American These facts show that so far from the supply of gold having Congress has demanded the impeachment of an American been lessened during the war, it has been largely increased. President, will be carried into every country with which wc It cannot, therefore, be urged against the resumption of have business relations, or which looks up to us as the ex¬ specie payments that we have not an adequate metallic emplar of freedom and self government, the standard beared basis. Precisely where, or in what condition, this large and the hope of human progress in matters political. It amount of the precious metals is held it is not pertinent to will afflict all who most truly sympathize with our political our present purpose to enquire. The proof is incontestable ideas, and most intelligently admire our political system. that it is in the country; and it is reasonable to suppose that It will become a weapon in the hands of all those who wish upon gold being again brought into regular use, a consider¬ to depreciate our national reputation and to counteract our able portion of this increased stock would find its way into national influence. It will destroy all confidence in business to supply the monetary wants of the circles, alarm the centres of finance, and still further unsettle circulation, so as country. the already fluctuating and uncertain relations of our trade with foreign countries. . THE IMPEACHMENT PROJECT. It seems to the duty of the great commercial Meanwhile the disturbed and demoralized industries of will knock in vain for attention and relief at the Congress occupied with passionate debates over a extraordinary result which has question which, being deprived in advance of its most se been reached by the Committee of the House of Representa¬ rious aspects, can lead to nothing but a general and lament¬ tives, charged with the task of examining and reporting upon able recurrence of all the worst evils under which we have the official conduct of President Johnson. During the past suffered during the past six years of civil war, and disorder. week Congress and the country were electrified by the in. Political philosophers may find food in all this for speculations telligence that this Committee, of which most people had for more or less useful upon the inherent dangers of the democratic some time past begun to lose sight altogether, was about to form of government, and upon the remedies which should present a report calling for the impeachment of the Chief be applied to meet those dangers. But upon the great com¬ Magistrate of the nation. Such a report has in fact been mercial classes, that is as much as to say, upon the nation presented, but under circumstances and conditions which at large, the effects of the unsubstantial and undignified make it almost a moral certainty that no such action will be shape in which the Impeachment question now presents it¬ taken upon it by the House as will lead to a formal im. self to. the public mind, followed b^ long intemperate dis¬ peachment and trial. For not only is the report of the ma¬ cussion, will be hardly, if at all, less damaging and deplorable jority of the committee accompanied by a dissenting report than would have been an actual Impeachment resulting in of the minority, but this dissenting report, is which the ma¬ the condemnation and removal from office of the President. There is but one way in which the country can be saved jority report is stigmatised, pretty clearly, as an unstates¬ manlike, intemperate and partisan composition, is signed by from the unhappy consequences of this most unwise course the Chairman of the Committee himself. Besides the jour¬ of action. The people of the United States must make their nals of both political parties do not hesitate to express determination to have this agitation stopped, known and felt unfavorable opinions upon the character and value of the among their representatives in Congress. Never has this document; and it is tacitly acknowledged on all hands that nation been in such need as now of a high order of state*us commu¬ nities of this country, each in its own way, to protest at once and with emphasis against the the country doors of a November 30, 1867.] manship in the national council—never in such need as now of a practical business temper in the administration of public alfairs. of Great as Five per cent, eix “ 681 due in London, 1866—principal $648,000 ; 4 coupons “ 1870— “ 688,000 ; 4 “ Principal is the prostration at this moment of many $64,800 82,560 1,336,000 Four coupons. $147,360 leading interests, he knows but little of the resources $1,483,860 a 55,500 comparatively brief season of Total funded debt Not. 1,1867 $4,175,110 political quiet, accompanied by sound fiscal legislation and The State is also in debt to the sixteenth section trust fund $1,710,000 a wise econpmy in the public finances, would rapidly restore And to the University trust fand 800,000 1,010,000 the body politic to health, and put us in the direct way of Which, added to the funded debt, makes a total indebtedness of $6,185,110 The bonds which fell due in 1863, 1865 and shaking off the worst evils under winch we now labor. 1866 were twenty year bonds. These, under the agreement of 1866 with the What the country needs is peace, and rest, and our bondholders, legislators were extended for a further term of twenty years, and will be due re¬ greatly mistake the temper of the people if they think they spectively in the years 1888, 1885 and 18^6. The coupons funded will will much longer endure unnecessary agitation. be due at the same dates aB the our Total principal and coupons, London bonds Eight pei cent, bonds of 1865 of America who doubts that principal to which they were attached. Owing to defects in the State revenue law9, and also, ia a measure, FOREIGN COMMERCE OF THE UNITED STATES FOR 1866-7. to the prostrate condition of the country the usual sources of revenue were found almost We have received from the director of the Statistical Bureau ad¬ unproductive, and in view of an indefinate continu¬ ance of this state of affairs the last vanced sheets of his report to be delivered to Congress at the Legislature authorized the issue of open¬ anticipation notes, or certificates of indebtednfss to the amount of ing of the December session, from which we hive prepared the follow¬ ing. The total foreign commerce of the United States during the $400,000. These are now being issued by the State for Government twelve mouths ending June SOtli, 1867, appears to have been larger expenditnrej. They are receivable for taxes, and will form‘in the shape than in any previous year. Below we give the specie value in millions of 5s, 10s, 50s and 100s, a ready circulating medium throughout the State. Under the ruling of Mr. McCulloch these notes art of dollars of the combined exports and imports for a series of exempt frcm years: the tax of 10 per cent., ordered to be levied Fiscal year. Fiscal year. by the act of Congress of Fiscal year. ..609 1860 1856 1864 March 28, 1867, on ....519 municipal notes, <kc. We have, as yet, no informa¬ 676 1857 1861 633 1865 .421 tion as to the amount of these certificates ...545 1858 1862 1866 ....839 already issued. The action ...654 1859 1863 ..459 1867 ....726 which will be taken by the State Convention, now in session, affecting For the last two years the comparative exports and imports (gold these obligations is indicated perhaps by the following resolution value in millions of dollars) are stated as follows : adopted on the 13th inst.: . . . . . .. . Exports. Imports. Total. 414.1 334.4 432.2 391.5 726 79.7 40.7 120 Difference As a matter of special interest, we give the table below, indicating foreign commerce has been carried on in fore go during the past, two years : to what extent vessels our Fiscal Iu American vessels. year. 1866 1867..: Per Foreign Per cent. 263.0 229.4 vessels. 583.0 cent. Total. 69.0 68.4 846 726 31.0 31.6 496.6 Besolved, That it is the determination of this Convention to recegnize all 1® gitimate indebtedness of the State of Alabama, and we hold that said indebted 846 should ever be held sacred. In this list of obligations we enumerate: let. The entire bonded debt due January 10th, 1861. 2d. The bonded debt created since 1865, in fhnding coupons due and unpaid. 8d. Bonds issued in extending matured debts of 1866. 4th. Bonded or other indebtedness created during the last two years, together with “ tax receipts,” or “certificates,” by autho.ity kof law for paying legiti¬ mate expenses of the Provisional Government. ness Provided, However, that no indebtedness (bonded or otherwise) created by during the late rebellion, or indebtedness created during the last two years for the benefit, directly or remotely, of any interest ot the rebel State or Confederate Government shall in any manner he recognized by this Convention. the State of Alabama It appears from this report also that nearly seven-tenths of the en¬ exports of the past year were Southern products, as may be seen the following statement: tire EXPORTS OF SOUTHERN PRODUCTS FROM NORTHERN PORTS. Rice Cotton/: Tobacco Naval stores $117,000 3 - Total Southern "exports from Northern ports Exports of Southern products from Southern ports, more including Balti¬ EXCHANGE AT LONDON— NOY. 15. LATEST $328,407,000 exports of domestic products during the year reached in currency $471,608,000, the proportion which was made up of Southern products was about 70 per cent. TIME. ON— $82,874,000 At the total Amsterdam Antwerp. Hamburg - ... •... Paris Paris Vienna Berlin Milan ALABAMA STATE DEBT. as Genoa January, 1861, the debt of the State of Alabama stood follows: Five per cent, dollar bonds, due in New York May 1, 1863 “ “ “ “ “ “ Five per cent, Six “ “ “ $1,889,000 52,000 168,000 648,000 688,000 May, 1, 1865 May, 1, 1872 sterling bonds, due in London July 1, 1866. “ “ “ June 1,1870 Total outstanding Jan. 7,1861 $3,445,000 During the war growing out of the act of secession, the State issued other debts chiefly for war purposes to the amount of $3,844,500. This debt under the advice of President Johnson, was Convention of 1865, and of course remains invalid. war debt proper was paid regularly; on repudiated in the Iuterest on Naples BATE. 4 4 44 — 60 — 44 4*. r-xd. 4s. 5Xd. 2ip. c. dis. l*lljd@ — U llld@ — l«lli d@ — 44 - 44 44 »4 SO 1 p. c. days. TFrom the New York bonds up to and dis. our own — — 3 mo’s. -- BATS. 11.93 @ — 25.17X@25.20 13. 8X@ - 25.12X@ 25.32X@ — — — — 33 _ 53X — -H, — — days. 8 mo’s. Nov. 12. 80 days. -- — Madras Calcutta the — Nov. 15. — Valparaiso.... Pernambuco.. Sydney — — — 44 44 14 — — 44 44 — — short. 44 49 @49X 90 days. 51X@ 51X 3 months. 28.35 @28.45 44 28.35 @28.45 44 28.35 @28.45 — TIME. Nov. 15. 6.26X® 6.27 31X@S2 % New York.... Jamaica Havana Rio de Janeiro Buenos Ayres. Singapore Hong Kong... Ceylon Bombay DATE. short. 11.18X@11.19X 3 months. 25.35 @25.40 13. 9X@13.10X 25.30 @25.85 short. 25.15X@25.20 3 months. 12.57X@12.62X St. Petersburg Cadiz Lisbon On the 7th EXCHANGE ON LONDON. - 245,533,000 Total exports of Southern products JHonetarjj antr (Hammerrial dfnglial) JJ/ua. RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON. AND ON LONDON AT LATEST DATES. 63,000,000 17,146,000 1,436,000 757,000 Spirits turpentine • Catcst , in r 76 81 THE CHRONICLE. 1 — Nov. 15. 60 days. 109X Oct. 23. 90 days. 1 p. c, Nov. 1. 60 days. 15 p. c. pm. 44 Oct. 24. 20X@ 21 4» Oct. 12. 48X@ 44 Oct. 4. 45X@ — 44 Nov. 1. 21X@ Oct. 11. 6 mos. 4*. 4Xd.@ — 44 Oct. 15. 4*. 4Xd.@ — 44 Oct. 8. IX P-c. 44 Nov. 9. la. 11 44 Nov. 7. la. 11 Xd 4$ Nov. 6. la. 11X<* Oct. 7. 80 days. IX P- c. Correspondent.] London, Saturday, November 16, 1867. including November 1, 1861, and on the London bonds up to and includ¬ Business remains extremely quiet, there being no activity in any de¬ ing January 1, 1865. Subsequently (in 1866) both classes of bond¬ partment of trade. We are now approaching the period of the year holders agreed to fund all the coupons past due, and those to beeome when transactions are not likely to be on a very extended scale, and due up to and including January 1, 1867. Including these funded cou¬ hence the trade of the pons and a few 8 per cent, bonds ($55,500) issued under an act of legis¬ lature, approved December 15, 1865, the total present (Nov. 1, 1867) funded debt of the State amounts to the sum total of $4,175,110. This debt is described iu the Five p c., due In , Ten coupons summary : New. York, 1863—principal $1,889,000; 10 “ “ . following 18651672— “ “ 52,000; 10 16fc,00G; 10 $2,109,000 TeUl principal and conponi, New lork bonis coupeus “ “ $472,250 13,000 42,000 country will probably remain quiet until, at the least, the commencement of 1868. It must, however, be observed that on the whole, a steady legitimate business is doing; and the Board of Trade returns show that the export movement is good, more especially in cotton manufactures. But, at the same time, there is a great want of commercial enterprise buyers continue chiefly to operate from hand mouth; and, at present, no circumstances appear likely to arise by which our heavy surplus capital is to be profitably employed. There 527,250 are many undertakings in want of money, but these being chiefly rail¬ 2,636,250 way companies, there is no disposition to lend, Investments are efly to ; made in Consols, Indian Government, Colonial Government, [November 30, 1867. CHRONICLE. THE 682 and Indian large suop1ie9 to be brought forward, it might have been inferred that a heavy fall in pr'ces was inevitable. Large supplies of South American wool having lately been offered at Antwerp aud at as well as from the railway securities, and these continue to rule at a high point. Bank, financial and many other similar kinds of securities are still neglected, other Continental markets, any considerable export demand could and in many respects prices are greatly depressed. With regard to railways, however, in which there has been great excitement during the scarcely have been anticipated. Hence, home buyers have bid much lower prices, and the sales are progressing in a most unsatisfactory present week, it is noticed that the general public are Operating only manner. As compared with last series, Austrdian wool shows a fall to a very limited extent, and that the heavy fluctuations which have of Id. to l£d., and Cape of 2d. to 2£d. per lb. In some cases the bids lately taken place, have their connection with and origin in the large have been so low that the brokers have withdrawn a portion of their speculations in the Stock Exchange. supplies. The wheat trade during the present week has been extremely quiet, The money market remains without a feature of very special import¬ and'prices have declined to the extent of 2s. per quarter. Our imports ance. Considering the period of the year, there is a great want of have lately been very large, and since the commencement of Septem¬ ber have exceeded those of last year by as much as 8,800,000 cwt. activity in.the demand for accommodation, but, at the same time, money is more readily employed than it was several weeks since. The This rate of importation would seem to lead ns to the conclusion that best commercial paper has been taken at as low a figure as 1^ and at the close of the year, our stocks at the outposts will be considera¬ 1 1-6 per cent., but no such quotations are current now. With the ble—that is, much larger than had been anticipated, and if it can only close of October, the demand for money usually commences to increase, be kept up, a fall in the value of cereal produce seems inevitable. and that movement, as a rule, continues until the turn of the year. The There cun be uo doubt that our prospects in regard to a supply of augmentation in the demand in the prese t instance, however, is com¬ breadstuffs compares favorably with last year ; indeed, it, seems mani¬ fest, notwithstanding many assertions to the contrary, that the supply paratively trifling. There is, as I have stated, more demand for money, of wheat in the world is greater than at this period m I860. If, then, but there is no animation apparent, and although the open market rates have lately risen about one fourth,they are still one-half per cent, be¬ with shorter supplies, and with a less favorable prospect, wheat during neath those of the Bank of England. With such an important differ¬ the last season was kept at a comparatively moderate point, it may ence, amounting to 25 per cent., there is at present no likelihood of a with fairness be argued that the present quotations are too high rise in the bank minimum. In fact, the question of a change in the Maoy assert that millers are short of stock, but at the present quota¬ bink rate ot discount is never thought of now. The following are 'the tions, and in a market with a tendency to lower prices, there is no rates of discount, so far as regards the best descriptions of paper •: occasion for them to purchase beyond their actual wants. Their policy Percent r'er Cent manifestly to act with the greatest caution, and to restrict their pur f» months’bank bills 1 30 to 60 days’ bills chases to their actual at:d immediate requirements. This policy they 3 mouths’bills 1%@1 XA 4 & 6 months’trade bills.... 2 @3 1 have now pursued for many months, and they will undoubtedly con¬ 4 months’ bank bills tinue to pursue the same course uutil they are enabled to make more The changes in the value of money on the continent have been tinceitaiu calculations. We may anticipate, therefore, a series of slow important since S iturday last. The discount markets at the mere trades, with much caution on the part of millers, but at the same time important cities are much in the same condition as our own ; the sup¬ Lolders are likely to keep their produce with muc-i tenacity, so that, if ply of money beirg large, and the means for its employment con & fall takes place, it is likely to be very gradual, and not to any im¬ tracted. The supply of bullion held by the Bank of France amounts to portant extent. £37,813,180, wi ile disc unts are at £il,5S0,424. The rates of disThe annexed statement shows the extent of our importations since count at the leading cities, compared with last year, are subjoined : ihe commencement of September, compared with the corresponding /—B’k rate—. /—Op. m’kt /—B’k rate— /-Op. m’kt-> is 1866. 1867. 1866. 1867. period in 1866. As the season progresses the figures show more important 5 Turin 6 2 234 1 %-'2'4 At Paris 3 results. The imports have already been alluded to,but, in regard to Brussels 3 2% %% 2%-2% 4 Vienna 5 5# 4 5 Madrid 8 4 4 22* Berlin \)4 our exports, it may be noticed that notwithstanding all the recent talk 4 2 2^ Hamburg Frankfort. 3>j" 10 8-9 7 St. Petb’g. 7 5 3 -3% 3^ Amst’ru’m 5 respecting the French demand, they have reached only 290,087 cwt^ while in the corresponding period last year they were 211,988 cwt. The following statement presents many features of interest. It com¬ The only question, then, is as to the extent ol the French purchases in pares the present position of th/ Bank of England with that at the the markets of Eastern Europe and in the United States. These are corresponding.period in the four preceding years, and also shows the bank acknowledged to have been considerable, aud, if the demand continues rate of discount, the price of consols, wheat, m ddltng upland cotton* we must, of course, bid a higher price than the French in order to secure and No. 40 mule yarn at this day since 1863 : what we require. So far we have obtained a very large supply, 1367. * 1866. 1865. 1864. 1863. £23,869,584 £24,148,650 £21,661,131 and the quantity on passage to this country is still very large. Circulation.... £21,778.354 £20.750,500 The 3 5,14\103 5,145,772 1866 1867. 1866. 1867. 5 - .. ... . - ... . - — , statement is as follows Public depos.. Private ** 6.451,850 13,403,442 5,142,368 14,416.234 Gov. serurit’a. : 10.3'0.330 Other “ R serve 20,499,915 6,972,132 10,734.542 19,305.211 .. F LOU it. WHEAT. /-Imports.-x 1866. 1867. cwts. cwts. /—Export?.—x 1866. 1867. /—Imports.—, 1306. cwts. 1867. CWL'S. cwts. 100.959 213,315 cut*, 154.14 a 171,332 ^-Exports.—v 1866. cwt a. 1,563 1,410 2,894 68,3:} 1 51,399 1,823 1(6 2.9 459,670 445,201 4.920 5,423 6 s. D 6 9." 2.34,045 942,284 22’,254 G.54S 77,130 2 IS 1,867. CvVtS. 2 124 < .... 'oip aud bul’n Bank rate..... 13,419.602 8,307.970 13,852,355 6 % 40*. Ud. Price of wheat Mid. Up. cot’n 40 mu e yarn, fair 2d quality 27d. 2s. lid. 91 38s. lid. 2t^d. 2s. 4d. 18.691,673 16,687.127 12,3o4,391 19.061,233 8,8117,762 1*000,605 13,677,098 17,144,607 22,2138.806 8 91 ('onsols 5,690,148 12,275,016 9,741,10 5 19'308,s82 7,174,973 7 89X 16.6S2.616 2 4 89X 45s. 3d. 12,319,203 I9%d. 2s. 31(d. , 57s. 2d. I4d. Is. 7d. 94& to 94% 70s. Id. 8%d. ♦Is. 0%d. There has been less activity in the demand for gold during the pres¬ early part of the week there was a fair demand for cotton; ent week. The sums withdrawn from the bank for export have been but during the last few days the trade has been in a most inactive state^ and prices have given way. As compared with the close of last week unimportant, nevertheless, all the arrivals, amounting to £234,140, have been purchased for that purpose. Silver has been very q liet. Bars American produce shows a decline of ^d@}d, per lb., and Eist India is As regards dollars, the principal transacrather lower in price. The total sales of the week amount to 60,37 0 remain at 60fd. per ounce. ti m h in the supply brought by the Louisiana, which arrived at St. bales, of which 2,240 bales are on speculation, 9,590 bales for export* Nazaire from Vera Cruz a short time since with £160,000 on English leaving 48,540 bales to the trade. At Manchester much flatness has account at 58 15-16 per ounce. The prices current for bullion are as prevailed, and prices have failed to maintain their grouud. There has under : not, however, been any actual pressure on the part of sellers, but a duU GOLD. d. 8. d. s. tone has pervaded the trade, both for cotton yarn and cotton cloth, and 9* @77 Bar Gold per oz. standard. the quotations are rather lower. 9% 9 @77 77 do Fine do 0 78 @The public sales of colonial wool were commenced in London on do Retinable do 0 75 @76 per oz. last price. 9 @73 7 73 Thursday last, and are announced to be continued until the 19th of De Spanish Doubloons South American Doubloons... do 3 76 @76 4 do last price. cember. An impression, however, prevails that they will not be con¬ United States Gold Coin SILVER. tinued beyond the 14th. The arrivals are very large, and are much d. 8. d. 0. 5 0% 0i— per oz. standard. greater than in any corresponding sales in former years. They amount Bar Silver 5 0% @do containing 5 grs. gold do last price 5 to 87,430 bales, of which 19,146 bales are from New South Walts ani @5 . Fine Cake Silver per oz. ~ peroz, last price. 4 10 15-lb@— Queensland, 8,778 bales from Victoria, 742 bales Tasmania, 2,830 bales Mcxican Dollars Quicksilver, £6 17s. per bottle; discount 3 per cent. South Australian, 108 West Australian, 7,526 bales New Zealand, and During the earlier days of the week the Consol market wa9 48,802 bales from the Cape of Good Hope. In addition to these sup firm, with an upward tendency in the quotations ; but during the plies from 36,(00 to 20,000 bales, which were undisposed of at the last series of sales, will be offered on the present occasion. Judging from ing days there has been less firmness, and prices have given way. very *h« unsatisfactory state of the trade of the West Ridipg of Yorkshire, market presents no feature of interest, and the business doiog In the ' — .. — — — — — decidedly, clos¬ is The The highest and lowest moderate. prices on each day of the week are subjoined: Weekending Congolfl for money 94%-94%i94%-94% ing at la. 4d. Petroleum Spirits, Sugar, tallow, and cloverseed are 94%-94% 91%-94% 94%-94% 94%-91% regards American securities, the principal leature is a firmer mar ket for Illinois Central Railway shares, in the value of which there has been a steady rise, on a considerable demand for investment. During the earlier days of the week United States Five-Twenty bonds firm, but there has lately been less firmness in this department. Erie Railway shares are steady ; but Atlantic and Great Western Railway ruled bonds close this Western Railway deben¬ bonds, 18$ to 19£ ; Erie, Central, 85 to 86. The highest the principal American securities on each day of dull. United States Five-Twenty evening at 70f to 7C$ ; Atlantic and Great tures, 20 to 20$ ; do. Consolidated Mortgage Railway shares, 47$ to 48and Illinois and lowest the week are "Week TT prices of Atlantic & O’t West¬ ern conFOl’d bonds 19% -20 Erie Shares has been ($100).. ($100) Illinois shares 19 -19% 19 -20 -47% 47 -43 46%-47% 82%-.... 83%-.... 83%-81 19 47 47 84 say, serious injury. The treaty was shown in .... • 0 27 6 1 4 11 0 27 6 1 4 2 0 26 6 44 0 39 0 6 0 0 2 0 26 6 44 0 39 0 11 0 11 0 27 0 1 4 2 0 26 6 44 0 39 0 Tu Wd. Tli. £3 8 6 £ £ 11 6 0 11 5 0 11 5 40 10 0 39 0 0 39 0 0 39 0 112 0 0 111 0 0 112 0 0 112 0 39 0 0 39 0 0 39 0 0 39 0 0 0 0 0 November 2a. looted up 57.000 baies, including speculation. The stock of American cot. decreasing, and stands now at 92,000 bales ouly out of a total af 469,0U0 bales. The cotton market to-day opened heavy, but with unchanged quota¬ tions, and so continued to the close. Bre.adstuffs are also heavy. Corn declined to 47s. 91. ; Peas to 49s. 6d., nd Wheat, California White, to 16s. 3d.,and No. 2 Western Red to 13s. 2d. Barley and Oats unchanged. Lard has declined to 49s. 9d., and bacon to 45s. 6d. Beef and cheese are steady at yesterday’s quotations. Refined petroleum has declined jd., closing at Is. 3$d. There is no change in the London produce market. Consols and United States securities are weak, but without quotable change* Shares are stronger ; Illinois Central closed 86$, and Erie at 47$. ton signed in 1860, and Reports—Per Cable. and Liver pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as daily casing The • d. 79 0 £3 8 6 11 5 0 Friday Evening, 7,000 for export and 2,000 on will terminate in 1870. Eu^lisli market • 11 Mon. sat. The sales of cotton for the week manufacturers of Amiens in France are about to agitate termination of the commercial treaty with England, which, they has done them no 4* |l9%- .. 26 44 39 • 8 Til. s. produce market change in prices has occurred, except in lin¬ Fri. 19%-.... -47% 47 -47% 47%-4S -84% 8t%-84% 85 -.... - 11 0 11 0 27 6 1 4 2 0 12 0 27 6 1 4% 1 4 2 0 2 0 26 6 26 6 44 0 44 0 39 0 39 0 0 6 (Calcutta) p. qr... £3 8 6 £3 8 6 Linseed caKe (obl’g).p ton 11 5 0 11 5 0 oil “4010O 40 10 0 Sperm oil “112 0 0 112 0 0 Whale oil p. 252 gals.39 0 0 c9 0 0 jSat’rday. 8 0 0 Linseed The cotton for the steady, and s. which is £2 10s. lower, closing at £39 per ton. seed oil, 70%-70% 70%-70%|70%-70% 70%-71% 70%-71 12 12 27 Wed. e. d. Tu. d. 8 0 Mon p. d. Sat. d. 8 3 s. Oil Markets.—The London Produce, and London Latest: 70%-71 5-2! )’s 8 unchanged. 3 44 subjoined : VVed’day Thu’day. Friday. uncling Nov. 16 Monday. Tuesday. 8 Wilm) .per 112 lbs middling.... “ tine pale “ Sp tnrpeutme 44 1 etroleum (std white).p. 8 lbs spirits per 8 lbs Sugar (No.12 Dchstd) p. 112 lbs. Tallow (American) .p 112 lbs. Clover seed (Am. red) 44 Rosin (com As debentures are very however, retain their old quotation Fri. s. d. Sat. Friday. Tbur. “ionday.| Tuesday Wed’y. Nov. 16 683 THE CHRONICLE. 1867.] November 30, quotations in the markets of London the following summary ; continues Market.—The bullion reserve of the bank continues to decrease, and has lost £177,000 in the week.. Consols have been HAVANA MARKETS-PER TELEGRAPH. steady at 94f@94$, closing at the latter quotation. In American Se¬ The following sta'ement presents the latest quotations for produce em ities there has been considerable buoyancy. U. S. 6’s (5.20’s) have exchange and freights as reported by telegraph : Dollars. ranged from 70$@ 70$, opening and closing at 70f. Illinois Central Reals. per cwt. 15%@17% shares have advanced to 86$, aud Erie ehares to 48,closing at 47. The Sugar (10 to 12 D P) per arob 8%@ 8% Lard, in tierces 44 in 25 lb. tin**. 18 @18% London Money 9%@10 “ market closed (15 t" 20 D.S) “ Molasses, Muscovado 44 steady. |. 94%' 94%^ Wed. Tues. Mon. 94 7-16 94% Sat,. Fri. 94% 7*>% Thu. 94% Consols for money U S. »’s (5 20’S) 1862... 70% 70 11 16 70% 70% C.S 5'8 (10-40'8) 1864.. llli oie Central shares.. Erie Railway shares.... 85% 46% 85% 85% 46% 85% 86** 86% 47 48 Homy per gal. Petroleum, in barrels 4* 47 ' 47 70% 44 cous. Apples .... .... daily closing quotations for Fri. Bale* sold Prij^ Miad. 4* i Uplds. Orleans 10,000 10,000 7 13-16 8 1-16 S 8 8% Wed. 8,000 10,000 6,% 8% cl. 8%d. Tne3. Mon. Sat. 10,000 8% [8%d. Thu lorouo 7%d. 7%d. Market.—During the first half of the week established quotations, but on Tues¬ day became irregular and easier. Western wheat receded 3d. and corn 6d., and at this decline closed. Barley and oats are without change. Peas have advanced 6d., closing at 50s.6d., at latest advices the market Liverpool Breadstuff's breadstuffs continued firm at the was quiet and steady. 9 Sat. 8. d. 13 6 16 9 43 9 4 5 3 11 60 0 4 5 3 11 60 0 Fri 8. Wheat “ 13 16 48 (No.2 Wes Red) p. ctl ( aliforaia white) 44 nix’d) p. 480lbs Barley(American) per 60 lbs Outs (Am. & Can.) per 45 lbs Peas..(Canadian) pr504 lbs Corn (West, Liverpool Provisions our last report. In pork has fallen from 71s. cwt.; and laid from 51s. and heavy. since Beef (ex. pr. d. 6 9 Mon' d. 13 6 16 9 48 9 8. 5 4 3 11 50 0 Tues. e. d. 13 3 Wed. 8. dI. Vi 3 Thu. d. 8. 13 3 9 16 6 48 6 5 4 3 11 50 6 16 6 48 3 4 5 3 11 60 6 16 48 5 3 4 3 11 60 6 Market,.—Beef and cheese have not changied . alt other articles of the list a decline is noted: mesa) p. 304 lbs Pork(Etn. pr. mess) p 2(H) lbs Bacon (Cumb. cm) p. 112 lbs Lard (American) 44 44 Cheese (fine) 44 44 to 70s. per 1bbl. ; bacon Sal Fri. 8. d. 112 6 112 0 71 6 0 0 48 0 6 0 51 52 71 49 51 52 9. d. from 49s to 468. per The mark et closed dul 6d. to 60s. per cwt. Mon. 8. d. 112 6 71 0 48 0 Tues. Wed. d. 112 6 71 0 48 0 51 0 52 0 dL 112 6 0 •s> 70 47 0 50 0 62 0 9. @ 4% s. Thu. s. d H2 6 70 46 50 52 0 0 0 0 8 bbl. @,lu 7%© 8 ©U% @ 3% Brooms per do*. Butter (prime)....per cwt. 27 @23 44 (brown).. (while) (lower) Cabbages Per Cent. cwt. London 44 New Yerk (gold) long prem @24 16* 44 (siuar cured). per 44 (short) 1000 22 45 36 44 ©•••• @24 “ short @14 1%@ 1 2 @ 2% 4 @ 4% (cur.) longdis.. 25%@26 “ short dis @24% 44' @17 @50 @10 prem. 14 Paris 44 bbl. 14 @14% per cwt. 15%@16 (ordinary Hoops (long) 44 100. per per Fl<>nr exchange;. 22 44 per Cheese “ 44 U 3 44 44 Hams 44 Lumbe'(white pine)pl,0C0 ft. 21 @22 *4 (pilch pine) 28 @32 Onioos per bbl. 4%@ 6 Pitch per t<m. 32 @33 P. tatoes per bbl. 4 @4% Tallow per cwt. 12 @13 per cwt. 14%@15 .. U. 8. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort were — Frankl.ut 75% 75% 75% “ 75 7-16 75% 76% Liverpool Cotton Market.—Cotton continues the downward tendency losing day by day, and on the week on all American descriptions fully |d. per lb. The low prices, however, appear to have stimulated sales* which foot up 58,000 bal *s, against 60,000 the previous week. At the close the market became more auimated, but without change in quota¬ tion, closing at 7fd. for Uplands, and 7$ for Orleans. The per Bacon Beeswax 44 bends 4 Hollars. Atlantic & Great West¬ ern 3%@ 3% 44 in tins @ 4% @ 4% 4 4 44 FREIGHTS. New York....cts. per box. 44 $ per hhd.. COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS 62 @75 4%© 4% NEWS. Week.—The imports this week show a considerable decrease both in dry goods and in general merchan¬ dise, the total beingonly $3,197,684 against $3,649,482 last week, and $5, 102,722 the previous week. The exports are $4,4S4,0S3 this week, against $5,137,914 last week, and $4,663,445 the previous week. The exportsiof cotton the past week were 14,628 bales, against 10,569 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) Nov. 22, aud for the week ending (for general merchandise) Nov. 23 : Imports and Exports for the FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. Total for the week..,\. Since Jim. 1 our 1,461,315 .... 1866. $2,316,729 $1,830,791 $5,807,725 192,499,231 177,797,750 $183,605,475 report of the dry-goods trade 1867. $831,595 2,810,324 3,491,005 $194,330,022 Previously reported In $369,476 $1,694,708 1865. 1864. Drygoods General merchandise... * $4,535,092 2,366,089 $3,197,6S4 258,503,099 218.476,362 $263,038,191 $221,674,046 will be found the imports of dry goods for one week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive ofspecie)frora the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Nov. 26 : EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 1864. For the week 1865. 1866. $4,845,105 $5,022,750 191,738,402 151,942,898 $3,466,611 168,436,426 1867. $4,4849 83 lb6,6U9,530 Since Jan 1 $196,633,566 $156,965,648 ,$171,903,037 $111,093,613 Liverpool Produce Market.—Rosins and turpentine have beenhtavy, The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive throughout the week. Common Wilmington rosin has lost 5d per cwt., of specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the fol¬ and the grades from medium to fine Is. per cwt. spirit Turpentine is 6d. lower. Petroleum has been steady at last Saturday’s decline, clos- lowing table; 0 0 51 52 0 0 Previously reported 684 This To Great Britain... France Holland & Belg. 223——Ssot.uih Since Jan. 1,1867 week. This week. 9,295,634 Hayti 6,755,484 Other W. I 18,844,573 Mexico 1,385,116 New Granada... 1,409,583 Venezuela 6,653,748 Br. Guiana Since Jan: 1. $125,507 40,465 To Cuba $2,179,067 $91,646,860 Ib7,317 247,422 THE CHRONICLE. $6,426,740 1,330,440 6,584,647 1,957,580 120,578 [November 30,1867. Assuming that Congress will adhere to the policy of contraction so hith¬ steadily pursued, neither listening to the call for more tion nor to circula¬ interpretations of law that tend to dishonor, the erto committee why a resumption of epecie payments may not take place 1869, provided, in the meantime, the 31,578 2,858,296 Spain temporary debt of the 40,347 Government shall haae been funded. It is 79,874 6:34,658 Other S. Europe 486,706 pot to be supposed, o 2*, 855 1,018,473 course, that so East Indies great a difference as now exists in the value of 11,331 Brazil 185,376 2,813,229 China & Japan gold and 1,300 Other S.A. ports 2,069,755 17,137 8,308,576 currency can be at once bridged over, aud that one will be made to Australia 156,099 2,657,701 All other ports pais 37,460 3,042,503 instantaneously with the same freedom as the other Br.N A Colonies ; nor is it to be 67,769 3,386,983 ex¬ pected that we can return immediately, or for The following will ehow the specie standard. * * * The committee many years, to a purely exports of specie from the port of New assume, in the first as a Fork for the week place, preliminary to the resumption of specie payments, that all ending Nov. 23, 1867 : the floating debt of the Government, except that known as Not. 21—St. Deutchland, Bremen— “legal tender," must be funded; Hammonia, Ham¬ second, that gold and greenbacks may be Foreign silver $8,750 burg— made of 21—St. Deutchland, South¬ equal value, if Congress will enact that the latter shall be Gold bars...-. 117,500 received Germany Other N. Europe 12.—NSaecuornitls .... 387,066 . “ ampton— Foreign silver Foreign gold 25,000 Foreign gold Gold bars cfog “ British gold $57,931,877 The imports of bpecie at follows: Nor. 16—Brig Emma Curacoa— e ’* this port 3,72) 837 “ 1,000 “ White 36,490,437 £4,756,S53 26,555,801 36,791,378 22,949,537 23,743,951 -. Gold Silver 21— Steam er Moro HavanaGold 400 Castle, 6,447 Previously reported $34,501 2,898,117 .... . $2,932,618 National Treasury.—The . following forms present a summ try of cer¬ weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom Houses1 held by the U.S. Treasurer in trust for National banks * tain Date. Nov. 2 “ ~ 16 23 Weekly. “ For U. S. Deposits. $340,700,250 9 “ 6 . $38,170,450 38,030,450 38,030,450 38,001,950 340,684,260 340,682,760 340,6S2,750 amount lation issued (weekly and rggregate), and the (including worn-out notes) returned, with the amount in circu¬ at date: Week ending Nov. Notes issued. s Current week. Aggregate. 2 9 16 23 132,600 80,330 118,580 49,120 S.—Fractional currency Treasurer and distributed Week Nov. 2 “ 9... 5“ ending. Notes 1 304,535,671 Circulation. $5,048,796 5,084,745 5,133,025 5,237,595 804,367 971 804,486,551 $299,235,796 299,283,230 299,353,556 299,298,076 received from the Currency Bureau by U. S. weekly ; also the amount destroyed : Received. Distributed. $259,602 755,952 404,884 814,970 $521,500 317,100 ..... 457,000 544,000 Destroyed. $351,100 416,400 407,600 512,846 4.—Receipts on account of Internal Revenue weekly, and the frem July 1 to date : Week ending. Nov. 2 “ 9 16 23 in returned. $304,287,641 16 23 Notes Current week. $6,013,000 4,031 000 2,050,000 2,114,000 total Total to date. ' 6.—Receipts from Customs at the specified ports weekly , $78,802,000 77,833,000 79,883,000 81,997,000 the redeem to Treasury in Custom -ireenbacka ab Department with may gold, provided safely there . If, mate. the other hand, the issue of m >re bank increase of legal tender, it will but currency is author¬ hasten the crash, through which, perhaps, sooner or later, it is destined the country shall pass, after much temporizing to avoid a cn an calamity that is certain to re¬ sult from injudicious legislation. The committee feel that the Chamber should protest against any further debasement of our national currency; against the initiation of the novel mode suggeste « of pay ing the public debt, and lift up its voice in favor of a speedy resumption of specie unworthy payments, which will consign to oblivion all adverse and financial expedients. Bankers’ ©alette. Friday, Nov. 29, 1867, P. M. The Money Market.—The last bank statement showed a fur¬ ther loss of $4,700,000 in currency deposits, and of $3,200,000 in legal tenders; while the loan3 were up $900,000. This had the appearance of being a very unfavorable exhibit; but as the changes were apparently the result of artificial operations intended to pro¬ duce a temporary stringency for speculative purposes, the statement was not regarded as at all indicating the actual condition of the banks at the^commencemeut of this week. The funds withdrawn factitiously returned toward the close of last week ; and this week there lias been an easier market, were at the close at 7 per cent. money being in good supply cent., while round balances are offered at 6 per The stringency of last week, however, has left injurious effects upon the discount market. The banks appear to have done their best toward meeting the pressing wants of their customers; but have had to refuse many : good but not strictly Phiia. Baltimore. s.Franc’o. I where buyers are applications; and a large amount of paper prime, has been thrown into the open market i^. York. Boston. N ov. l to »S-. very timid and discriminating. The fears ofdist299’o2i $ | counters have been further excited by the failure of Harris 4 SSS:;:::::-.":-.:::: 1’.7r2.’ •’ "I" I DayBTbi New York Chamber of Commerce and the Resumption of too, sugar refiners, and of Sherwiu & Co., large dry goods retailers, Union Square. A stock firm, with considerable liabilities has Specie Payments.—The following is from the New York Times of the also failed. Outside the banks, 27th inet: therefore, rates continue firm at 7£ w “ ‘to The Chamber of Commerce met yesterday, and considered the report of a select committee on the subject of a return to specie payments. In the absence of the President, Mr. Opdyke occupied the chair. On behalf of the committee, Mr. A. A. Low, the Chairman, submitted the report which shows the inconvenience of a depreciated currency, that there is but one correction, and that is, a speedy return to a specie basis. It also says it haB been the aim of the Secretary oi the Treasury to retrace the steps so reluctantly taken, to steadily with¬ draw from circulation a portion of the legal tender notes, and thus approximate the value of the dollar, whether in gold or in Government paper. To this policy Congress has hitherto rendered loyal support, I ana to this it is to be hoped, despite all efforts to the coutrary, it will I continue to be true. The malign influence that is relied on to plunge * the country once more into the abyss from which it is just escaping, is •aid to be most strongly developed in the West; but the record made by Western men, in all the years of the war, affords w warrant for attacking to that section so unworthy a purpose. and suggests un¬ falling off in the customs revenue or in the amount ia of gold in the Treasury. Fourth, that resumption by the Treasury De¬ partment necessarily involves resumption by the banks, Treasury Department, the banks, and the community will and that the have a com¬ mon interest in sustaining each other, if the attempt be not made. Two propositions will be made in divers prematurely forms to Congress: First, to increase the “ legal tender” by "a substitution of for our present bank Treasury notes circulation, as understood by your committee, the proposition being to pay bondsfoearing interest with notes that do not. increase the amount of bank circulation Second, to by fifty or one hun¬ dred millions. Should the first be adopted, confidence in the faith will receive a shock, the injurious effects of which none canpublic esti¬ material Total. $378,870,700 378,714,710 378,713,200 378,684,700 bank currency “ — 6,447 Total for week 14,442 suggested, ized wi.hout 200 Since Jan. 1 “ as 1,000 Silver Wing, Porto Cabello— Gold 20—Steamer Arizona, Aa- ** $24,057,984 ... during the week have been 8 ready no Gold Gold 20—Bark $43,757,614 22--SteamerPallas, Belize men— ** $346,075 pin wall— 17—Steamer Rising StarGold 17—Steamer Bremen, Bre¬ “ Same time in 1858 1857 1856 1865 1854 1853 Dean, Gold Silver at the dertake Total for week 27,218,619 44,023,130 41,093,105 54,967,049 3,332,237 41,960,886 1852 67,088,091 | 1864 1863 1862... 1861 I860 1859 to the extent of ten per cent, for duties *• House,”’ and the notes thus received canceled, until the sav Total since Jan. 1 6,400 4,500 British Gold 6,807 Same time in part, Previously reported.... 43,411,539 — Spanish Gold Liverpool— BfiS see no reason in the year desired end is reached ; any further curtailment being in that case suspended. To this extent the necessity would be obviated of selling gold, which, under the existing tariff, is received in excess of the amount required to pay terest 'em the public debt. Third, that whenever the value iD. of gold and greenbacks approximates under the conditions America, ltio Janeiro gp* Foreign silver 23— St. Denmark, Liverp’l— Gold bars 58,000 23—St. city of Baltimore, ft‘* 18,700 11,660 American coin....... 10,400 64,494 69,'174 24,100 . Silver bars 74,271 @10 per cent. There has beenjno tendency in currency movements with the in¬ terior to affect the markets The banks have been in receipt of funds from Chicago, but have also remitted to Cincinnati; so that the one current has about set off the other. The amouut sent South has been nominal. The purchase* of cotton are very light; anticipated that the repeal of the cotton tax will early in¬ duce much more activity in this branch of trade, calling for shipments of currency to the South. but it is P ,, owin=> aie Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 2 months P , T^&tions for loans of various classes Per cent. 7 .. <& 7 Good endorsed bills, 8 & 4 months do 7mj single names Lower grades : Per cent. 8 11 If is November 30, 1867.] THE CHRONICLE. States United Securities.—Government Securities have Bank shares steady improvement during the week, in sympathy with Railroad “ Coal “ the steadier tone of the money market. There has been no large Mining “ investment demand ; but holders have been less anxious to sell, in Improv’t ** Telegraph41 hope that the full decline in prices has been already realised and Steamship4* that, ere long, there will be a demand for the employment of bal¬ Express 44 At ances. Conversion operations have indirectly tended to put up the At Exchange shown Sat. several millions behind in its deliveries active demand on the street for the new Sevens, with a ; and this has caused 48,720 27,276 for Seven-Thirties 33,928 the Seven-Thirties following are the closing prices of leading securities, pared with preceding weeks : Oct. 25. 112 D. 8. 6’b, 1881 coup. U. S. 5-20’s, 1862 cot U. S. 5-20’8,1864 ‘ U. 8.5-20’s, 1865 “ ms. 109* .. 109* s... .. .... •••• Railroad 112* .. tJ. S. 6-20’s, 1867, c.... U. S. 10-40’b, “ 0. S. 7-80’s 2d Series 107 107 100* 105* 105* . Nov. 1. Nov. 8. Nov. 15. Nov. 22 112* xclOS* xcl05* xcl06* 107* 107* 100* 105* 105* Miscellaneous and 3,637 3,400 8,590 4,287 2,542 7,347 5,204 29,355 37,242 17,045 27,562 21,328 30,497 66,597 56,181 44,607 76,338 51,826 68,049 112* H8* 105* 106* 107* 107* 101* 105* 105* com¬ Nov. 29. ' 113 108* 106* 106* 107* 107* 102* 105* 105* 113 108 105 108 106* 107* 107* 101* 105* 105* 105* 107* 107* 102* 105* 105* Stocks.--The stock . i market, 21,353 a 43,318 57,148 .... 500 .... ... 2,250 ... 11*305 11,305 . 88 600 500 . 100 160,215 394 .... 1,200 M a 5,175 5,000 900 Ja 1,800 4,240 17,607 10,852 6,426 42,379 23,762 24,539 19,556 20,578 116,029 135,435 45,117 91,975 251,464 404,775 4,285 3,519 H 55,084 day of the past week „ „ . J. S. Bonds... U. S. Notes exchange January coupon, interest upon to January 1st. The prospect The Fri. Wesk. 146 996 23,078 following is a summary of the amount of Government bonds and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds sold at the Regular Board on each an being allowed up change has caused an immense amount of Seven-Thirties to be presented for conversion within the last two or three days, the probability being that the transactions of to-day and to-morrow will aggregate about ten millions.' To-day, bonds advanced at Loudon to 71, which with moderate orders on foreign account, caused an advance of J per cent, and a generally improved tone in the market. To-day’s advices from Washington reported that it is the pur¬ pose of Mr. McCulloch to recommend the authorization of a 5 per cent, loan, the principal and interest of which shall be payable iD Europe. of this 28,933 2,400 .... .... The government will give in bond minus the Thurs. 213 306 800 300 „r a Wed. 304 Total current week. Total Previous w’k. Sixty-Fives and for Sixtyconsequent slight advance in the price, a stronger Monday next, the Tnes. 148 _ Board Open Board... generally. On and after Mon. 185 a price of bonds. The conversions have recently been in excess of the supply of bonds from the Treasury, the Department' being market 685 State & Mon. .$216,000 $354,150 Wed. 100,700 43,000 60,000 18,000 276,500 $1,635,350 121,000 293,250 102,000 491,000 77,000 220,500 222,700 576,500 2,639,100 497,500 3,517,200 49.250 687,000 67,000 OS^K) 27,000 24,000 w’k...$475,500 523,400 City b’ds Previous week.. 486,200 1,003,000 : Tues. 12,000 173,(XX) 74,500 Company B’nde. Total Cur. Sat. 63,000 841,000 443,500 The Gold Market. Thur. 468,700 618,300 Fri. Week. The predominant tendency of the gold premium has been toward lower quotations. The report of a ma¬ jority of the Judiciary Committee in favor of impeachment had a merely nominal effect upon the market, it being deemed altogether improbable that the House would adopt the Committee’s recom¬ mendation. The resolution of the House, instructing the Committee on Banking and Currency, by a large majority, to report a bill for the substitution of the bank circulation by a new issue of green¬ backs, also failed to affect the premium, it being taken for granted that the Senate would reject such a proposal. The report of the Committee on Ways aud Means in favor of the repeal of the cotton tax, induces an expectation of an early large export of cotton, and has so far tended to depress the pre¬ mium. It appears, however, that the consideration at present most sensibly affecting the value of gold is the prospect of the payment of nearly thirty millions of coin by the Treasury in January, on account of coupons, and in redemption of United States bonds of 1867. This prospective supply, with the amount payable this month on coupons, makes a total supply within two months of about fifty-five millions of coin; which it appears to be considered will outweigh any inflation tendencies that may be developed in the dis¬ week, although prices have been steadily sustained. The clique in cussions of Congress. Erie and New York Central have been quiet. The combination on The fluctuations in the gold market during the week closing with Northwestern have been active, and the common stock has been Friday are shown in the following table : advanced £, and the preferred 3f. The chief interest has centered OpenHighClos¬ in Pacific Mail. The ing. Lowest, est. Range, ing. Clearing. legal fight between the present direction and Saturday, Nov.23 139* 139* 140* 0* 14ff $23,646,000 the opposition caused a 140* 139* 140* 1* 140 85,199,000 heavy fall in the price of the stock, the quo¬ Monday, 44 25 Tuesday, 44 26 139* 139* 140 0* 139* 66,371.000 tation at one time being 116. Parties holding the stock as collat¬ WedWay, “ 27 139& 1392 139X OX 139X 70.918,000 eral called in their loans, which induced a large amount of realizing* <w»,oqq and weakened the price beyond ils generally estimated value ; and one brokers firm failed in !§* i£g i£ ?§* KooS ’consequence. To-day, however, a com¬ Jan. 1 to date * 132* 132* 146* 14* 138* promise was agreed upon by the contestants for the control of the The movement of coin and bullion at this port for the week company, three members of the opposition beihg placed upon the ticket for directors, and this morniDg the price bounded up to 129, ending on Saturday, Nov. 23, was as shown in the following formula Treasure receipts from California •' subsequently reacting to 128. Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports 34,501 tSSST'W • Express stocks have been excited and firm. It appears to be generally anticipated that the companies will soon agree upon a common tariff* of rates, placing their operations again upon a payiug basis, and causing a large advance in the stocks ; and there is consequently an active competition for the shares. Merchants Union at one time touched 44, but to-day closed at 39£@40£. * There is still but little outside interest in the tions are confined to a few market, and opera¬ large professional speculator and brokers. The following were the closing quotations at the regular board, those of the six preceding weeks : Cumberland Coal Quicksilver Oct. 18. - Canton Co Mariposa pref.... New York Central1 Erie Hudson River.... Raiding Mich. Southern.. ; Michigan .... 21 ‘ .... 17 112 71* 100* 80* 121* following 16* 42* 14 112 . ..... 81* 102 mm. 72 125* 97 78* .... • • • 104* 47* . 24* 1* 43* 112* . . 96* 77* . Nov. 1. Nov. S. Nov. 15. Nov. 22. Nov. 29. • 72* . Central1 Clev. and Pittsb. 84 Clev. and Toledo. x.dlOO Northwestern.... 46* ‘‘ preferredl 67 Bock Island....*. 97* 99* The Oct 25. . 95 95 .... 47* 65* 24* lb* 42* • • 16* 45* 112* 72* 125 112* 73* 126* 96* 98 79 81* 109 81* 102* 84* 103* 48 53 96* 63* 95* 96* 125* 65* 96* 98* 126* 96 27* 16* 15 45* .... 130 113* 71* 123* 96* 86 113* 71* .... 57* 64* 96 97* 68 67* 96 97* 181 statement shows the volume of transactions in on each day of $2,267,940 $346,075 1,466,212- 1,812,287 $ new • • • •• • $13,734,064 15,499,110 Increase of specie in banks Decrease of specie in banks $1,764,146— Actual excess of reported supply: balance retained in private hands Actual deficit in reported supply: balance made up from unreponed 1,764,146 $ sources 1,303,493 Foreign Exchange.—Bankers complain of a dull demand for to be gaining slightly, and rates are bills ; the below the supply appears figures of last week. The further fall in cotton at Liver¬ pool has weakened cotton bills, and prime commercial paper is scarce. The of following are the closing quotations for the several classes foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : 83* 102* market excess of reported new supply supply in excess of withdrawals Specie in banks on Saturday, Nov. 16 Specie in banks on Saturday, Nov. 23 Reported 95* .... 2.047,000 Withdrawals in 125* 80 paid from U. 8. Treasury Reported new supply thrown on Withdrawn for export. Withdrawn for customs Nov. 8. London Comm’l. do do bkrs’ Ing do shrt Paris, long do Shoit. Antwerp Swiss shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, the week, closing with this day’s business : • Com interest Hamburg Amsterdam Frankfort Bremen Berlin... Nov. 15. Nov. 22. 108 108 @ 108* 108 @ 108* 109*@109* 109*® 109* 109*® 109* 109*@ 110 5.17*@5.16* 5.17*@5.15 5 16*@5.15 5.15 @5.13* 5.15 @5.13* 6.13*@o.l2* 5.20 @5.17* 5.20 @5.17* 5.20 @5.17* 5.20 @5.17* 5.2i> @5.17* 6.20 @5.17* 35*@ 36 S5*@ 36 85*® 36 40*@ 41 40*@ 41 40*@ 41 40*@ 40* 40*@ 40* 40*@ 40* 78*@ 78* 78*@ 78* 78*@ 78* 71*@ 72 71*@ 72 71*@ 72 @108* 109*@ 109* 109*® 109* , Nov. 29. 108*@109 109*® 109* 109*® 109* 5.17*@5.16* 6.15 5.20 5.20 @5.13* g>517* @5.17* 35*® 85 40*@ 41 40*@ 40* 78*@ 78* 71*@ 72 House aud Sub* The transactions for the week at the Custom Treasury have been as follows : Custom House Sub-Treasury- , Receipts. Payments. Receipts. $9/4S.-64 06 $9.*>92,9?9 05 Nov. y71.333 17 Ik 795.125 U2 1,632,029 R,Oi4,030 16 *>,G3 1,511) 02 1,344,913 63 1,457,557 58 $1,466,212 28 $24,237,081 SS Sub-Treasury morning of Nov. 18 . 21 22 li 44 253,59914 ........ 190,723 25 23 Total Balance in 248,439 814 249,343,649 15,499,110 247,S33,133 2.7.553 911 12. 19 t-ct. 26. Nov 2 Nov. 9. Nov 16 Nov. 23. 8,141,78*0' 37 1,660,800 56 l,(Jti4.553 67 216,310,718 217.227,488 247,719.175 Philadelphia Banks lor last and previoug leading items oi the ; * 110,2'. 5,076 64 VftOitai Loans .. "•* $133,169,763 90 24,237,034 8& Balance Saturday evening $108,932,729 02 Decrease during ttie week.' 1,352,347 62 1 otal amount of Gold Certificates issued, §21s,ti00. Included in the receipts of customs were §1()G 000 in gold, and §1.360,Deduct payments - during the week on following toble shows the aggregate transactions at Treasury since Sept 7 : The Weeks Ending Sept 7.... . 14.... 21.... 28.... 4 4 44 Oct. M 5.... 12 19.... 26.... .. 44 Nov. 2..., Custom House. Sub-Treasury , , 15,473/07 1(5,927.214 20.619.823 22.910.965 119.381, *’87 118.686,822 16,552,079 18.199,966 114.9-9,43 105.754,210 14,805,589 12,659,117 18,251,348 109,200,019 16,432,809 17,287,948 22,525,094 40,771,789 23,595,430 20,259,418 27.433,239 1.(.70.942 LOS 5,123 1,923.857 35.904,751 16.... 1,732.655 28..,. «( 44 1,466,212 21,237.034 ... 113,779,144 114,634.221 101,254 567 17.238 242 36,595,769 14.063,338 9 Die Dec. Dec. Dec. Inc. Inc. Inc. Dec.. Inc. Inc. Dec. 105.430.587 19.827,827 22,874.687 110,295.076°108,932,729 5,166*620 684,465 3,707.338 11,235.273 3,4 05 809 4,570,125 AVERAGE Capital. Merchants’.. Mechanics’ Union America J’haenix 1,500,000 3,000.000 1,800.000 City 1.000.000 Tradesmen’s... 1,000,000 600,000 300,0(0 Fulton Chemical.... Merchants’ Exchange.... 1,235,000 National 1,500,000 Butchers’ 800,000 Mechanics and Traders’. 600,000 Greenwich 200.000 Leather Mailin'. National 600,000 Seventh Ward, National. 500,000 State of New York.., 2,000,000 American Exchange... 5,000.000 Commerce 10.000,000 Broadway 1.000,000 1,000,000 Ocean Mercantile Pacilie 1,000,000 422,700 2,000,000 Republic Chatham 450,060 412,500 People’s North American Hanover 1,060,000 1,000,600 .. Irving 500.000 Metropolitan 4,060,000 400,000 Citizens Nassau Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather... Corn Exchange. Continental Commonwealth Oriental Marine Atlantic 1.000.600 1.600,000 1,000,000 1.500,000 1.000.000 2,06(1.1.00 750.000 ... 300,000 IIXJ.UOO 306,000 Importers and Traders’.. Park Mechanics’ Banking Ass. Grocers’ North River East River Manuiacturers A Mer Fourth National Central National.. Second National Ninth National.... First National Third National.. New York N. Exchange. Tenth National Bull's Head ; National Currency Bowerv National 1,500,000 2,000.000 500,000 300,000 statement shows Net Legal 195,720 -3,812 2,414,214 6,776,797 2,500,164 2,528,730 1,449/84 1,672,950 4,694,824 2,267,716 764,772 1,714.200 1.540,286 687,455 352,592 267,135 1,68.1,S'.K) 82.370 402,115 178,662 328,000 453,640 992,970 794,200 3,494,610 5,301,283 241.550 1.714,221 303,775 3,901,723 7,740,890 3,821,980 3,128,233 2,-55,162 2,211,533 1,069,730 21.017 493.931 1 ,8^5 290,685 797,807 88,774 372,843 5.131,603 34.655 192,9 '2 3,202,058 2,032,953 2,484,000 2.032,243 1,030,644 2,671,487 1,219,232 4,715,410 10,039,757 24,00)5.813 ti,960.301 2,953,219 3,088,263 1,715,014 4,21 0,729 1,718,4-6 1.441,762 2.053,617 2.365,098 1,539,000 11,332.121 1,353.329 2,170,975 2,7(15,934 2,441.253 4.536,600 2,‘>52,309 4,059,263 9,112.593 25,400 14,443 452,056 497,706 261,200 429,186 73,217 858,750 6,443,998 5,120,992 1,674,580 2,390,100 1,316.615 2,928,202 131,962 1,624,032 11,818 103,583 113,132 6,512 333,0(10 290,536 1,157,172 1.759,543 28,000 192.926 1,2S«,000 892,851 5,976,055 102,896 900,000 78,022 797,150 481,4 ',2 00,567 1-39,842 14,288 1.319,733 535,584 2,173,183 5,712,199 17,910 131,800 1,270,501 59,477 4,180 1.737,399 132.093 583,117 1,708,267 35,167 848,451 751,409 2,260,100 22,990 941,816 26.973 7,510 1,671,288 138,718 2,251.089 554,573 45,926 1,926,552 242,127 10.475 7.726 971,287 70.899 3*'-0,()i)0 1,250.1 S3 917,213 25,995 9',119 500.882 • 5,340,173 85,13;) 759.853 992,440 14.102,588 06 -)s 5:8 7 3,052 1,031.1596,354 77,000 731,564 1.254,379 1,9t-,250 1,202,203 6.113,181 1! tion. ,570,978 1,101,002 809,328 587,803 347,983 516.076 600.809 1,6-27.408 081/75 106,524 454,500 501,360 138,753 592,528 325,259 1.078,359 1,675,314 4,274,635 1,487,589 524.501 623,759 368,801 1,132,771 414,209 224,571 477,319 330,433 409,(00 1,119,977 387.102 315,060 590.910 406,026 803,300 201,000 461.235 269,887 25o,411 15,997 836 S71.691 12,327,516 293,520 2,902,355 93,655 1,693,550 12,867,107 11,S41,752 8,40 4/28 1.139,101 270.000 860,872 208,,.),- 939,:’. 13 413,634 796,084 2-68,216 903,61 0 5,939.673 1.891.869 1.085,228 824/73 239,277 623,500 2,680,700 200.000 1,. & 1,527 100,600 2.58,599 679,114 420,110 465,058 817,648 856,667 82,520,200 249,343,649 8.946 1,054.220 2.857.374 2,3.38,747 680,181 1,630.700 1,508.697 90,000 225,000 305.968 7,08.8 368,978 249,200 95,058 39)1,741 367,3(5 372,649 717,634 42 180,133 71,376 258,234 650,195 15,499,11034,129,911 174,721,683 51/21,911 The deviations from the returns of the .$495,217,127 77 580,005,803 11 Is,64',147 87 19,113,340 61 previous week are as fol¬ lows: Inc. - $903,835 Inc. 1,764,164 Specie Dec. Circulation following are Deposits Legal Tenders Loans. 7. 259,221,560 Sept. 14. 254,! 1)0,581 Sep\ 21. 254,794,0(37 Sept. 24. 251,918,751 5. 247,931,309 Oct. .Dec. $3,021,170 Dec. 3,207,739 4,455 the totals for a series of weeks past: Cireula- Sept. ... tion. Deposits. Specie. 7,967.019 33,708,172 195.182,114 8,184,940 31,015,228 193,086.775 8,017,498 31,051),442 185,(503,939 9,490,103 34,147,269 181,439.410 9,303,(31)3 31,025,531 178,447,422 Aggregate Tenders. Clearings 69,657.415 441,707.387 65,176.903 514.038.737 57,709,385 592,142,360 55,991,526 600,688,710 SO,853,585 070,187,624 Legal 13,307,920 13,7(34,542 743,72^ 14,493,89; 13.343,52: 37,38 4,90S 37,584,26? 24,712/35 232,434 24/22,210 220,088 .. 96,531,56.) 15,870,887 12,935,254 12,558,859 38,392,425 Deposits BANK (Marked thus * are not National.) 24,662 437 S25,»lJ ' of Share. HH)! (Jer. City) . 3,000,(XX Atlantic (Brooklyn). Brooklyn Bull’s ilead* Butchers & Drovers Central Central (Brooklyn). Chatham 300,00b 800,(XHi 10) 3,(XX),000 r>< 25 2<M),(KK; 450,(HH) 3(H).(HH4(H).00C 10( Chemical Citizens’ City City (Brooklyn) 25 1001 1,000.00c Commerce 5( ! ' 3(H),)XHi 1(H) 10,(X)0,000 Commonwealth 1001 750.000 10t)j 2 (H)0 (Kill Corn Exchange* Croton . .. 100! L (XX),000 200.000 l(H).()(Hi 2(H),(XH) 1(R 1(X 3( Dry Dock 1(X) Eighth Fifth 100 First First 100 (Brooklyn). ... Fulton Far. <fc Cit.(Wni’bg). 1(H) 50 LeatherManufact’rs. Long Isl (Brook.) .. Manhattan* Manufacturers’ Manufac. *& Merch.*. Marine Market Mechanics’ Mechanics’ (Brook.). Meeh. Baiik. Asso... Meehan. & Traders’. Mercantile Merchants’ Exch.... Metropolitan Nassau*... Nassau (Brooklyn) . National (Gallatin) New York New York County.. NewYorkExchange. North America. North River* loo 1(H) 50 50 50 50 30 1(H) 1(H) 1(H) 25, 50 50 25) 1(H) 50 50 100 100 100 50 100 100 100 100 1(H) 50 Oceau 50 50 Oriental* Pacific Park 100 25 20 Peoples’* St. Nicholas’ Seventh Ward Second Shoe & Leather State of New .... York. 10)) 100 100 1(H) 100 100 100 inn Tenth. T hird . ....... 100 100 Diiion 40 50 Wdliamaburg City*. 50 Tradesmen’s. .. .. .. .... no . . .. ■ - * .... • •. 164“ 161 ... bio' «... . *jo .... ..... 110 . .... • • • • litij* l.Oatf 105 120* .... .... .... . ... 4 5 150,(HH) Jan. and July.. July ’67. 500.000 May and Nov... May ’07. 500,(X)( -Jan. and July... JulV ’07. 10 if .... ... ...» •... 261" .... * .... f - .... ... .... .... .... lis" 1,5(H).(HH) Jan. and July... Julv’07. .... no .. ;o6 5 150 5 10 5 5 5 July... July’67 . Nov... Nov. ’07. July... July’07 2(M).(HH, May and Nov.. Nov. ’07 300/KM> Jan. and July... J ly ’07. LOOO.(KH) Jan. and July... Jmy ’07. 100 5,(HH).tMH) Jan. and 30 6(X),(HH) May and 20 l(i0.(MHI Jan. and 25 . .. . . 141 .. 350,0(H) 250,(XX) -Jan. and July... Julv ’07 5( East ltiver 5 July... July ’67 5 July ’07. 4 Ian. and July... Julv ’07. May and Nov... Nov.’67 .......5 5 •Jan. and July... July 67. 6 Jan. and July... July ’67 5 Jan. and July.. July ’67. 12 Jan. and July... July ’67. 5 Jan. and July... July ’67. ) >ct. ’67 4 Quarterly 5 Jan. and July July ’67 5 Jan. and Ju y July ’07 <; Jan. and July July ’07. s Ju y ‘07. -fan. and July 0 Nov. ’07. .Quarterly 5 •Tan. and July... July *07. 0 May and Nov... Nov. ’67 5 Jan. and July... Julv ’07. 5 Jan. and July. July ’07. (i Jan. and July... July ’67. 5 Jan. and July... July ’07. 5 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’07. Mi-penden < ct. L 1807. 10 Jan. ’07. .Quarterly .34* Jan. and July... Jan. ’07. ry Jan. and July... July ’07. 75 5( 1 K 25 51 5( 25 1,<KKUMM 3(H),0(H) 200, (XX) Bid. Ask Jan. and 190,()(K Jan. and July 500.(HH 25't.lHHl Frieay. Last Paid. Periods. 251 1001 500,000 American Exchange. 100. 5,000,(XX LIST. DIVIDEND. Par 1 Amount. America* America STOCK Capital. Companies. Phoenix Loans Nov. lx $iL9)*0,UOO 15,631,104 Circulation (National) Circulation (State).. Importers & Trad... 3:16,680 255,46 :i 1.115,980 2,827.014 1,197,711 16,739,526 300,000 1,000.000 Nov. 18 $41,'.« K).(H (0 95,997,845 755,007 13,000,184 Due to other banks— Hanover 506,000 5,000,600 3,000,600 300,1)00 1,(K)U,000 500,000 19,2)18 173,917 051,250 Loans Specie Legal tender notes.... Due from other banks 200.100 183.847 ] 66.488 104,207 13,018 28,700 6,867 6,007 292,4(55 2,885,565 Increase. $11,900,000 y5,9l8,5l0 469.513 515,660 1,0)10,000 . Increase. 1 crease. following are the footings of the Boston Capital Greenwich* Grocers’ 283,500 119,529 10,663.298 31,009,962 13,00a 294,ti7-j 89/3h 22.3liU ’ compared with those of the two previous statements : Bonks 626,000 5.223 5,323.497 2,710,103 3,226,37 L 995,678 5 719 4.673.5:6 Increase. 6,741,242 Decrease. 2711.618 411.520 26,559 Clearings for Mie week ending Nov. 16, 1867 Clearings lor the week ending Nov. 23, 1867 Balances for the week ending Nov. 16, 1267 Balances lor the week ending Nov. 23, 1867 The Uewrings 1,559,456 991.57 4 250,000 Total Specie. 1,330,954 Eighth National New York Gold Excli’ge iu.640.998 30 816.597 AMOUNT OF Cireula- Loans and Discounts. 575,165 33V29730 34,019,268 Iucrease Deposits Circulation 4,86 MSS 1,352 347 400.600 35t),0i M) Eleventh 4\ aril. banks Due to 15,229.173 Increase. 4 666.443 6 035 914 Due liom banks 4.176,020 11,571 Stuyvesant Tender^ 14,6.54,098 $754,524 13,379.657 Deposits. Tenders. $3,000,000 $7,087,371 $3,733,0:13 $879,155 $5,980,302 $1,980,599 950,4'. 6 3,787,932 11,511 378,584 5,511,430 2,050,000 5,209,645 1,566,307 803,801 897,507 7.182,694 3.000,000 744,653 58 7,.500 215.949 3.4.6,193 5.190,411 2,000,000 Banks. New Fork Manhattan ;v: Decrease. Deere tse. 855,077 the condition of the Associated Bauks of New York City tor *he week ending at the commencement of business on November 23, 1867 : Kew York City Banks.—The following Nov. 16. Nov. 23. $16,017,150 $16,017,150 51 914 013 51.159.4x9 *^>8 013 222.324 Nov. 25. Balances. Inc. 1, *48,640 11V214,666 15 453,207 the Sub- Changes in . Balances. Receipts. Pa vrn ruts. 2,894.219 2,605,971 2,990,8-76 2,858,3 4 2,106,282 2,219.155 2,087,259 Legal Boston Banks.—The 212 in Gold Certificates. 34,129,911 54,345.832 588,162.700 56,381.943 511,792,657 57,396,(67 481.356,278 55,540,883 515,391.<i50 54,329,659 41)5,217,127 174,721,683 51,121,911 5b0,U05,8lJ3 Banks.—The following shows the totals of the Philadelphia weeks 56,114,922 585,542,277 9.603,771 36,006,041 177,135.634 7,319.010 34,057.450 173.438,375 6,161,164 33.959,OsO 173,064.128 8.974.535 34,037,t-76 178,209,724 12,816,9.84 34,069,9(3 177,849,.-09 13,734,964 31,134,366 177.142,853 Oct. Oct. $22,874.(87 26 239.731 06 20 4* [November 30,1867, THE CHRONICLE. 686 .... 4 106 5(H).(HHI Jan. and July... July ’07. 0 ()IH).(H)0 Feb. and Aug... A:;g. ’07. 40 ),(KXi Feb. and Aug... Aug ’07. 5 135 2,050.(HH) Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’07. 5 25,2,<HM! Ian. and July.. July ’07. 5 5(M),(H)0 Jan. and July... July ’07. 0 4(K),(HH! Jan. and July... July ’07. 5 1,00(1,000 Jan. and July... July ’67. 2,(HH),0)K> Jan. and July... July ’67. .......5 (i 5(H).(XH< Jau. and July...'July 07. 5 5(H),(XH1 May and Nov,.. Nov. ’67. ' 5 ov. ’67. 6(H).(XM, May and >ov.. 5 1,(XHJ.(XH) May and Nov... Nov. ’67. 9 nnn nne Jan. and 'uly.. 1,235.000 Jan. and July... July ’07. .......b m" 0 4,0(X).(XH) Jan. and July... July 07. 5 G4A 106 May and Nov Nov. ’07. ... .... .... .... .... .... .... ... .... .... . .... .... .... .... ... .... .. .... J ... • LOOO.CHH) 3(H),(HH) Jan and July.. July ’07. 1',500,000 April and Oct... ,Oct. 67. 3,(XK).(HK Ian. and July... July ’07. . - ■is* .. 5 . 5 9 0 6 5 108” 30 K 135” .... 2(X),(XH) Jan. and July... July ’6-. 3(X),(HH) Ian. and July... July ’07. :i*3' ’ :04” 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. /« Julv ’67. 110 Jan. and July...1*July ’67. 1,000,0) X) 5 Jan. and July... July 67. 400,(MX) 5 103)4 iui” 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’07. 3(X),(XX) 422,700 Feb. and Aug.. 'Feb. 5& May’67.5 142” .45” 2.000.000 Jan. and July. ..July 67.. 412,500 Ian. and July.. . July ’67.. 4 1,S00,000 Jau. and July... July ’67.. * 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug.. .1 ug. 67. ..C&r5 02 1,0(H), 000 Feb. and Aug.< \ug. ’67 115 ' ,5 no 500,000. Tan. and July..iJuly 67.. .5 300,000 Jan. and July.. July ’67.. .11” iIT 1,500.000-Jan. and July...July ’67.. .... .... .... .... • '*•* ... ..... ...» 200 0(X) May and Nov...! 2,000,000 May and om nnn 1.000, (XX).Ian. and 1,000,(XX) Jan. and Nov...jNov. ’67 July...jJu y ’67 July...'.July (m LOOO.OOO!Jan. and July...jJuly ’67 1.500.0) )May and Nov...|nov. ’67 50o JOAJan. and July... Wfuly ’67 ... .5 105 tC7 5 . 5 7H 33 ’* 3 33* . . - •. . ..-5| 3*1 ....j .... .... November 30, 1867.] THE CHRONICLE. 687 SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, REPRESENTED 3Y THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY NOVEMBER 29 TOGETHE WITH THB AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF SHARE8 SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK. STOCKS AND Satur.i Alon. SECURITIES. ITues. (140 Gold Coin (G du llooin).. 140 National: Cnited States 6s, 1867..registered. do do Be, 1868.... .coupon. do Bs, 1868. .registered. do American 139% 149% do do do do do do do 6s, 1881. 6s, 5-20s (’02) CO upon. ltk-% 108% 6s, 5-208 dnregisfd do do do do d> 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 Bs, 5-26s(’6-1)coupon. 113 A'l ’Eh ; Ja ,113 I - .registered. 112%! i ; — j 108 il07%i jl1 C% j.»llG% ! —i —; {it H08 '104% z a JZ 1 I Lu8 ! J02% "o% 23,OU() 207,3 t 84,950 ;lo5% 105% i 98 95 91% 95 ; 82 94% 95 - 87,(h;o 1.000 • 21,000! 100 53 A ) 53 ) — 61 1 j 63%1 I llQ2 53 64 01% 63% 61A 02% 1,000i 38,000 249,000 42 12,000 $11,000 100 112 '03% 104 116 100 11 10 1 06 lu5% ,100 10b%• 119 300 iu;i 104 112 lOl 116 105% 100 100 >05%;( i 05 107 jl02% 100 ro 248 67 333 3(h; 18 25 *03%| 115 ..100 ..100 .300 -10 i 50 144 1. 4% .. 100 60 1U0 102 57 15 U4 112 : ..10U 30 147 50 50 Spring Mountain Wilkeebarre Wyoming Valiev 6 88 170 100 Metropolitan 50 .... t 50 /ra?W/( Mail S2-/a 17% 100 115 1 !6 119 Lire & Trust * State8 express.—a dams 45% 33% 1 9 128 7"0 17,007 3,350 S9,0»9 preferred 11,26'0 39 39% 41 42% 42 61% 68% 62% 4,7£0 6,550 113% 113% 113% 113% 16,200 25% 26% 75 75 8,060 00% 15 113% 91 to 25 25% 26% 295 97 97% 100 76 100 51 78%, 19 79% 79 75 78% 78' 70% 42% 40 78% 2,1721 52 79 53 6,0451 50% 2,1401 33 13% OX! 4u% 78 I 80 52% 100 100 *.”.’,!! 100 33 17% & 1G 1 15% 96% | 6,760 9i% 11,8.0 08 38% 38 3,0(J0 7,00C 28,(X0 94 10.000 97 84 , do 94 , 11,987 728 2,(00 conv. 4th mortgage.. 73% Cleveland and Toledo, Sink’g Fund rto, do new 7s Delaw e. Lackawran. & West, 2d m.. Dni-uque and Sioux City 1st moit h.rie, 1st mortgage, 1868 102 2.000 _ 187!).'.V..;!!! 102% 6,900 98% 91% .!.!!!!!"! Great 10.000 102% do 2d mortgage, do 3d mortgage. 1883 do 4tb mortgage, 1880 !!’!!! do 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended (^° 91% 2,000 12,000 91% do 2d mortgage *. Western, 1st mortgage „r .. do ... 2d mortgage Ijannibal1st St. Joseph. 1st Mort. and Harlem, mortgage, 156!)-72 do 71 2,000 lLU% Cons’lidated & Sink Fund 3d mortgage, 1868.. 5,000 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869. do 2d mort, (S. F.).’$5 do 3d mortgage, 1875.. , 1867.!. — McGregor Western, 1st mortgage.. Marietta and Cincinnati, 2d mort. Michigan Central Ss, 1869-72 ,d.° do 8s, new, 1S82.!!! Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund. d° do 103% 97% Goshen 97 86 — 104% 2d mort.. do Essex, 1st mortgage... do 2rl mortgage 1,000 2,000 1,000 14 000 — 3,000 — — 85% 85% 10.000 t? 95 d<vD^i° and Mississippi. 1st mortgage Pittsb — 2,000 — — New _ York Central 6s, 18S3"...... do do 6s, 1887.!!! do do 7s, 1876 . — 2d mort.,7s... 91 93 93 — 1 7w’ conv’le, 1876 New Turk and New Haven 1,000 14,000 — xr L t. Wayne & Chic., 1st g, Tdo do . Loins, m. do — 89 2d mort. 3d mort. Alton & Terre IT, 1st rn do do 2d, prel do do 2rl, inc. 97% do 2d mortgage. 1,000 1,5(0 88 ' 81% 76 Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mort Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort.. ext*, do 3,000 — — do do . 81 - — 89 77 d0rdo equipment.. Troy, Salem and Rutland. 1st mort l 3,( 00 2,000 8,000 2,000 77% , Lorg Dock Mariposa, 1st mortgage (new) 3,500i \Yestern Union, 75! 99 1,590 15 97% 96 97 84 S2 do i oo! 7rt 64 5 14 COO do 100! 11 82% St. 100! ^mted^t;Uep F:lrS° & Co mni^^—Mariposa Gold Mariposa 33% 1,100 Tru.t.lOOl Trust 80 do Extension do 10 p. equipment d° do 1st mort do do cousolid’ted Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort Chicago, R. I. and Pac, 7 1 ercent.. Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort.. do do 3d mort do American .....!!!!!!!!!'.500' 73% Merchants’ Union $35 p’dlOO ?5 Quicksilver 18 U7% 118% .21% ,123 American... 1001 irust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust 25i £ew York Union 18 32% 44 32 100,1221* j,flc Mail Centra] 80% d° xrdo . ammstap .—Atlantic 79% Chicago & Northwest., Sink. Fund d° Mnirion a Moms and 50 Improvement,.—Bust. Wat. Pow. 20 Canton 100 fdearnp/i.—'westeni Umcm 100 rr 79% 2,(00 .do 50 100 Williamsburg.... 79% 1st mortgage... Line,’68 Milw kee & JJr. du Chien, 1st mort Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mort.. 25 Citizen8 (Brooklyn).:... 20 .... 30 350 90% do do do 1 New York 17 — 109% (110 „ 100 * 3,51 0 1,060 _ rn* Cumberland ...100 De'aware and Hudson. ..100 Pennsylvania 125% 131 and Western. .300 do pref.100 • convertible, IllinoisT? Central 7s, 1875 Joliet & Chicago, 8b 100 50 Harlem... Manhattan 125% Income Chicago, Burl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c. Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mort do do 100 -Brooklyn 60 505 1,0 do ,10 i 108 Ashburton Central 29,500 61% do _ No. Stocks | Railroad Honda: Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie, 1st mort., ’77 Central ol N w Jersey, 1st. mort 36.000; Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund! 22,000 do 100 miscellaneous Coal.—American 200 pref.100 Toledo, Wabash _ loo Union— 71% ’..Yon 7,0001 Stomngton : .1!.. 5,31 0 8,730 114 — Ron e and Watertown ’.*’.! St, Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100 do do do do . 146 83% 102% Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic! 100 97 Reading r)() 95% New York 7s do 6s 5s do 8t. Nicholas Suite of New York.: 08% 32,803 31,154 9,645 511 ]Q0 ]qq New York Central ; !ifx) Ne\v York and New ITaven ..! .300 Norwich and Worcester ICO Ohio and ton Mississippi Certifl do do do pref.100 Panama 4,000 95% j .. | j 15 100 New .jersey Jersey 6s, Public Park Loan Be, Improvement Stock Jersey City 6s, Water Loan Republic 96% new do do Park: Phoenix ; 58 67% . Niioh Nor'h American !120%| too „ 44 t 65 , do 7s, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s. Missouri 6s, with 7 coupons 94% do Bs, (Han. & St. Jos. RR.) 95 do 6s. (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 1003 do 6s,1867-77 do 5s, 1-868-76 do 7s, State B’y B’ds(( onp) do do do (leg.) North Carolina 6s (old) 53A53 6s, (new) do Ohio 6s, 1870-75 do Bs, 1681-86 Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 5s 95 do Hs (old) 62 d<» 6s. (new) Gas. ? .. 2.(HKi Michigan Bs ocean U (scrip) — hkV 70 Lehigh Valley Louisiana 0s Metropolitan 119 100 5oj and West do Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preilOO Michigan Central 10O Michigan So. and N. Indiana .1(H) do do guar.lOO Milwaukee & P. du Ch. 1st preilOO do do do 2d preilOO Milwaukee and St. Paul... 100 do do pref.. .100 Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 r u c Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 100 1,000 83% No.— tc do do pref...l00 Harlem 50 do preferred 50 Hartford and New Haven 1(H) Hudson River. 10O 124% <124% Illinois Central 30O *29% 110 531,0 C 71 do Registered, I860.. do 6s, cou., ’79,aft.’60-62-65-70 do do 1877 do do do 1879 do War Loan. do Indiana 6s, War Loan do 5s: M 100 100 do preferred Hannibal and St. Joseph 1,< 00 \\ eek’s Jjule* cii. ^ hura. 100 Erie 2,000 ;ii7 do _ |$- Impor'crs and Traders Y\ ; Jersey Delaware, Lackawana 15.100 301. foo 69, 00( State : .. , Cleveland. Columbus and Cin...lOO 71.000! Cleveland.Pa nesv.*& Ashtabula. 100 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 229.5<K > Cleveland and Toledo.. 50'*01 107.; ■ Rank Stocks Arnoricin Lxch mge Centra! Commerce Contimntal Fourth j'luw, . 1L95% -_-;ic5%! j Muu. .do do preferred 100 Chicago, Burlington and QuineylOO 6,500 Chicago and Great Eastern 300 2S3.9 0 Chicago and Northwestern 3(H) 7.5- 0 do do pref.100 30,0001 Chicago. Rock Island and Pac 100 H . Virginia 6s. (old) do 6s. (new) municipal : Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan Oacui 13,500 5.20s do regisCd io5 %; 5.20s (’65) coupon j!U0 1106 i 5.20s do reqisCd 7% 07% 5.20s (’65 n.) c up. 107% 107% 197% 107-’*1 6s, 5.20s do re gist d 6s, 5.2os (1867) er»/p 107^1 1107^,101% i --:lo7% |H*b j 6s, 5.20s do regie d 6s, Oregon Wa. 1881 Bs, do. (hy'r/i; ! 1121 5s, 1871 coupon. 5s, 1871. registered 5s, 1874 coupon. 5s, 1874. .registered. 5s, 10-40s ...coupon. lul% 102% 102 |102% 100% i 5s. registered , j 7-30s T. Notes, id se 105% 105%, 105% i 105% :iu< % jlt.6% U05% do do 3d serie; 6s, Bs, 6s, 6s, California 7s Conned icut Bs Georgia Bs do 7s (new) Illinois Canal Bonds. 1860 JM'iL LniriLO. Railroad Stocks Boston, Uartfore and Eiie > 6s. 1881 do do do 151% i JJ Chicago and Alton do • £>lUVKj> A-TN Central of New do coupon. Eli. I Week’s Sales i;uib| !’| If 55,000 — J . 2*009 4681 I DENOMINATIONS. are in default for interest. Outstanding. ; Princi INTEREST. Amount Rata. registered. Bonds of 1847 do 1848 do do do 1860 do do do 1858 do do do 1861 do do 6,417,300 j j Jan. & July 1868- 7,022,000 5 j Jan. & July [Jan. & July 1871 registered, j coupon. [ registered, i coupon. , } 5 20,000,000 registered. S coupon A Jan. & ..registered. ! 283,746,350 July 1881 1881 May & Nov. 1882 108 196 May & Nov.; 1885 , ,1 ^ j Jan. & 610,000 ; 6 899,000 6 July! 1,548,000' 7 j I !' I Jan. & July,72-,84 ' 99* i i April &Oct.;"74-'84; 99*! I 8,000,000 6 2,000,000 ; 6 2,000,000 6 I 1885 ! do I var. do Georgia ($5,706,500): State Bonds do do (funding, etc.) Illinois) $7,795,995) : Canal Bonds do do registered ; ! ! j ! I ! 01 84 945,200; 101*; 1879 101*1 do 1,514,489 ... Jail Stock I i iJan. & 98,9751 500,000 i do j 569,000: 6 1,000,000 6 409,800 ; 6 1,992,000 : 6 do (currency) do (currency) » do do do do do I ! Soldiers1 Aid Fund Bonds Chicago ($5,397,464): Municipal (old issues) & school (new issue) do j I 475,000 j .... 2,S32,500 6 1 Various. Quarterly do do do 3,000,000 6 5 1,0 0| 6 525,000, 6 ' 798.000 5 541,000, 6 U,826,196 : | j ; 1,688,000 , 5 8,376,372 5 ! 3,000,000 : 6 ! 2,113,000 6 i : . Minnesota ($2,525,000): State Loan Bonds State Buildings Loans. Missouri ($35,404,515): ♦State Loans (old). ♦Railroad Loans (various) do do (Pacific) ! do do (H. & St. Jo) .. I New Hampshire ($3,791,327): i State Bonds (war) 1861 ; do do (war) 1864 ! do do (war) 1866 do do (war) 1S66 J Jersey ($3,395,200) War Bonds, act May 10, ’61 (free); 11 act Mar. 24, ’63(free) - April 14, 1864...! 1,966,000 6 10 ',000 7 1,100,000 453,001' 7 i 250,000; 8 100,000 7 |100*i 1874 i’89-’90! 'May & Nov.: 1S94 j New York City ($33,326,524): Water Stock do do Croton Water Stock do do do Water Stock July!'71-’76;" [Mar. & Sep. '71-’86 ' do do | May & Nov. ! 1879 1886 1890 Floating Debt Fund Stock Central Park Fand Stock do do Impr. Fund Jan. & July! 1867 1877 do do i Jan. & Julv '62-’83 !! do * *74- 91 94*: 95 ! do !’72-’891 95 95*! | 83 [85 jj do l’73-,87 622.000; 11,132,000' ... 7,000,000; 3,900,0001 l,194,100j jj I IJan. & July 1*67-78 6 6 8 .... |Mar. & Sep.i’84 '89 Apr. ife Oct.;’67-'77 Jan. & July 1S69 1,798,900 6 1,002,900 6 r93,400! 6 1 — Jan. & July 167-’84i do iWfiO '97-’02 do 600,000 1,387,6 0 500,000 New York ($5!,75J3,082): General Fund Loans j 700,600, ao do do ; 2,489,78 b do do do ! 412.96*.; do do do j 2,609,607 i 2,559,000 Bounty Fund Loan, coupon do do do , registered..: 21,726,500 Canal Loans '12,700,000 do i 5,466,.XX) do 7 6 5 5 7 7 6 5 107*1 .... j •'68-* 74 91 j ..i .... . *| ••f • ....j . .... • • j '75 ’93! • • .... ....! • '67 ’901 94 1887 Various. • • • • • • • • .... .... j • .... j .... May &Nov. 1887 i ..... June &Dec. »-*• GO CO * • • • . t 96 1 do do do do do do do do do 6 .... j ! 1800 1883 1875 1878 1887 1876 1887 1873 ; • ! .... ! ..... ;100 i 100 |’73’751 Jan. & do do do do ... '75 W ’73 ’7H| '77’82: '91 ’97i ; Railroad Bonde | ...... July ’67’85; 1- .... 93* 'c*/ R2 do do 1100 ... ’70 ’88! do .... 167 ’82! ..•• ’67 ’95! 97* 97* 67 ’04; 101* 101* 94 ’95 83* r J ••• Jan. & July 67 ’85; ’71 '06| do 982,0001 6 1,H)4,000 6 • ••• Jan. & July 1913 .88 '98 do 6 . ... - 1.062.000! 6 902.000 ' 6 . '83’90 100 1.138,OOO' ; Real Estate and Improv. Bonds Water and Sew'erage Bonds Harbor and Wharf Bonds • • • ••• 1,800,000 ; 5 1,516,000! 6 ' j • ... • do do do do do do 4,097,383 0 18,109,955 ; 6 11,650,000i 6 1 ... IMay & Nov 69’72; 5 • I ' 5 # • 100 .... ... 1,620,000! 6 1,122,400 7 829,886 478,397 i 1880j | 2,000,000j 6 Fund Bonds.. ($5,644.000): Municipal Bonds 6 6 1,800 OOn! 6 4,000,000 ! 6 ($35,165,621): 1870 F/M.A.&N 2,000,000 ! 5 1,500,000 ! 6 Riot Damages Bonds -. j ’67’84! Apr. & Oct. ’82 ’93l 2,083.200 6 1,133,437 6 Substit. & Relief B’ds St. Louis ,.j |M# July 1871 I May & Nov. ' .. IS acr a m ento—City Bonds :107*;107*i Quarterly t,72-177 100*; 100*! do do j Railroad Bonds ... '68 '861 Various. 650,000 2,500.000 Stock do do (new’) do do (old) do do (newr) War and Bounty Loan Bonds... ! PlTTSEURG ($ ): .. 92 '901 do 3.066,071 .... .... Soldiers1 Bounty Fund Bonds Soldiers1 Bounty 94* .... Various. 2,748,0001 Court House Stock do 1894 '15’16 94 '81-’99 96 ’85 ’90 Jan. & 1,878,9001 fi do do do '67191 July ’72 May & Nov. ’TO ’97’ April & Oct. '95 ’00 900,000 5 1,800.000 6 Real Estate Bond? do t • ’67 ’95 Jan. & 3,000,200 2,147,000 j Municipal Bonds (old) Quarterly I 1870 10 i* July:’68’78 100 May & Nov.; 1868 — i Jan. & Julv‘,74-'78 91 i 1877 i 1877 do • I Sold. Family Aid Fund Bonds.. Philadelphia Jan. & do do ji I do • 861,500 [Milwaukee ($911.500): I Municipal (re-adjust.) Bonds.. 3* .... 1,231,000 1,975,000 851,000 Water Loan Bonds Jan. & IJan. & July173-’83 * I i,67-,93! ’76 July 167 ’95 689,900 Municipal Loan Bonds Railroad Loan Bonds i .... ’87 '78 ’76 ’79 '67 ’67 ’74 '70 '75 561,254 Water Loan Bonds Louisville ($4,118,000); Various, !’68-,74! do !168-,77‘ do i’GT-’Tl do IJan. & July;^-^ ' Municipal Loan Bonde Water Loan Bonds I! Jersey City ($1,953.596): |j City and War Bonds ... i do do do — 1 ■ j | ’S9-190 100* 101 1870 I * I 99* 98* 469,968 7 650,000 7 ^Detroit ($1,109,968): ! 96* ! .. . Jan. & July ’73 ’76 Various. ’72 '96 Jan. & July ’81 ’90 1876 do 1886 j do 896.000 i 81 j 98 99 575,000 do do Water Works Bonds ! 9,178,800 j.... .. 93 1.083,000 Municipal Bonds 'Feb. & Aug.! 1880 j June & Dec. i 1889 t 98* Jan. & do do do do do do 291,000 Sewerage & River Improvem’t. Water Bonds do do Cincinnati ($3,203,000): !Mar.& Septj 1883 ; 6 Various. do 1870 1870 1873 1875 1886 1890 1890 1893 1895 1,062,500 1,435,000 1,030,000 790,000 , j: ’67-’78!! 1871 j Mar. &Sept. 345,000 6 800,000 6 525,000' 6 do Mar.&Sept. 6,188,000 615,000 ... 1 May &.Nov. Jan. & July J.,A..J.&0. 589,000 —. i Water Loan Bonds .... do Jan. & July 622,000 893,840 850,0C0 1,217,000 do do J.,A.,J.&0. 336,000 .. Prospect Park Loan Bonds Feb. & Aug.’GS-'SG; Various. ,67-’72i Feb. & Aug.! 1886 j do I" 86-’87; Various. 140 yrsl 4,838,933 6 Jnly ’gs-’ss; ;. i 6,088,200 1,000,060 1,800,000 1,058,000 ...... iBrooklyn ($10,023,419): Municipal Bonds (various) Improvement Lean Bonds 1875 j j'76-’81 jJan. & July.’OT-^S do ;’68-,72j5. ..} | 3,316,000 do j —I i 271,000 5 Jan. & 723,966 Water Loan Bonds July! . do do do do 1868 1881 do 02* '71-178! ... 2,192,168 225,000 Defense Loan - |Jan. & July 62 ! ($12,845,376): Municipal Bonds | 1866 iMay&Nov-! 186S 848,000 55 Jan. & July 'S6-'95i do 'S4-’95j 31* do ’6J-’99 41 do '68-’99i 845,422 4.1?5,399 250,000 4,335,034 1,000,000 5,000,000 j Floating Debt Stock ... ... long. 63* 63* 1882 Jun. & Dec. 406,100; 6 do do ! .... |Jan. & July pleas. do do Jan. & July do 11,108,000 21,896,298 494,000 1,450,949 ; 6 Boston 4,578,017 1868 1868 Apr. & Oct. 2,347,340 2,175,400 13,911,900 :i Water Stock j 11879 do do 184,000: 300,000' do do do do (currency) Michigan ($3,97<\921): State Loan Bonds Canal do War Loan do 1,210,803 ....lj Pittsb. & Connellsv. RR. Loan. i’69’70il91*i ‘j Baltimore & Ohio RR. Loan ... ’76 ’77! 101*1 h Park and Park Improve. Stock. ; f6 J 500,000 1,775,000 — 94* 90* Quarterly. 1870 Jan. & July '75-'79 ,71-181‘ do ‘77-'90 do 1887 do 318,159 Baltimore ($21,928,656): ! Internal Improvement Stock.., t I 101 !....! j 171-’94 94 Municipal Securities p60 ’65,101* U,663,254; ! Massachusetts ($25,555,747): State Bonds do do Railroad Loans do do War Loans do do act 1,229,667 6 .... { 82* i 1 1886 iJan. & JulyilS70 1870 do 6 ... July!,72-*86| i ! 1,157,222 j'j Bounty Loan Bonds do j 3,030,000 7 Coupon Bonds do do War Loan Bond Indiana ($7,009,092): State Bonds do do War Bonds, coupon Iowa ($84,000): State Stock War Loan Bonds Kansas ($604,475;: State Bonds do do Kentucky ($5,324,652): State Bonds do do Louisiana ($13,357,999): Bank Loan Bonds State Bonds Levee Loan Bonds Funded Coupon Bonds . Railroad Loans of 153-66 Maine ($5,127,500): State Bonds (civil) do do (war) of *61 do do (war) of ’63 do do (bounty) of ’63 do do (war) of '61 Maryland ($13,549,766): State Bonds do do do do , bounty do do ;Jan. & 1,269,500 ; 6 ! Various. 1,000,000 WiscoNSiN ($2,248,191): i War Bonds ! var. mM\l ;Jan. & July Var. Var. 1871 1,567,500 6 War Loan Bonds Virginia ($43,166,286): State Bonds (coupon) do do (registered) do (Funding) coupon do ( do ) registered West Virginia ($ ): State Bonds ! Various. do Feb. & Aug, 3,626,500 Funding Bonds (new) Vermont ($1,650,000): Jan. & July!'77-'80 127 i do j’83-’84j ..... 3,774,000 ; 7 ($3,626,000): do Bonds (Funding) Tennessee ($51,143^497): Internal Improvement Bonds.. do do do ... Railroad Loan Bonds 186S 1861 Apr. & Oct. I 6,168,090 ' May & Nov! 1872 i 1883 do * do | 1887 168,000! 1,941,000; 5 437,850 ; 5 Jan. & July 29,209,000 3,000,00'. Military Loan Bonds Rhode Island do .registered, f j ’ ’ 1!7.30:Feb. & 1 1 Aug. 1867 Treasury Notes (let series), 511,939,525;7.30 Jun. &Dec.:1868 do do (2d series), 7.30 Jan. & July! 1868 do do (3d series). State Securities. Alabama ($4,066,210): State Bonds. do do (extended) .j do do (funding) ; Arkansas (incl. int. $3,252,401): | ♦State Bank Loan i ♦Real Estate Bank Loan I California ($5,322,000): State Bonds of ’57 and ’60 I War Bonds | Connecticut ($10,030,000): State Bonds (war) I — do (war) ; do (war) tax exempt.. j Florida ($370,617): 218,574 War Loan Bonds 102* 102* South Carolina ($5,205,227): 100* 101 State Stock (Fire Loan) do Bonds (Blue Ridge RR.). 105* 105* do do (State House).... ! 105* 105* do Stock ( do do ) .... !Mar.&Sept.! 1904 .coupon. ) 171 409 350 5 ($- State Bonds Pennsylvania ($38,377,000): State Bonds, coupon — do do transmissable ... 106* hoi'*i 2,400,000 679,213 Bounty and Relief Bonds 107*'108 July;1886 { Jan. & , Oregon , j Jan. & July I860 do 1868 ! 18?U j do do 1875 do issc I .;. 1881 iinoU; do do *68-’71 j 444,022 379,866 2,183,532 1,600,000 4,C95,309 (domestic) 104*; 104* 105* 105* iMay & Nov.|1884 .. ;i !l™;;' 08* do '77-'86 ’87 ’96 do Jan. & July 1900 1,425,000 U3*! 167-’76 Various. 477,000 3874,000 5,514,500 108* 113 113 July Jan. & coupon. do .registered. > 1865 ...coupon. do .registered. | 1855 (new).coupon. J do do registered. J .. 117 HI* July OregonWar Bds (yearly) j f do do a yearly) j couPt j Bonds (5-20s) or 1862....coupon. 1 do .registered. 1864 140 Payable. ■tat* North Carolina ($11,290,500): State Loan Bonds (ex coupon).. do do do do do do Funded Coupons Ohio ($11,814,768): State Bonds do do (Union Loan) 139 |Jan. & July 1867 8,908,342 coupon, Oata landing DENOMINATIONS. Marked thu« * are in dofault for interest. Atked Bid .!...... National Securities. Amo uni FRIDAY. Payable. American Gold Coin s) SECURITIES LIST. NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL Mft/ked thui * “ [November 30, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 688 > 1 i’Tl ’S' ’77 .. THE CHRONICLE. November 30,1867.J Export* of Leading Article* from New York* &!}c Commercial ®imes. The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York since January 1, 1867. The export of each article to the several ports for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount ?n the laet ^ COMMERCIAL EPITOME. ** • number of Friday Night, November 29. close holiday and other causes, have dull week in business circles. Rumors important failures have been current, and confidence is a good deal unsettled. The probable action of Congress respecting the currency, has as yet very little influence. Cotton and Breadstuff’s have declined in sympathy with English markets. Groceries have been unsettled, and Coffee OQ occurrence united to make of a I SC TP ' a S £ X H SO rH rH OO so r- o»—« IH f xS si © cu ‘crj ‘s* t-4 ©©©©TPt-r-(_ VT^t'tp' :8! : : TP © © © ■ •© • rSc>ec;© -r-4 ss> ©_ ;o * ■ si «0 3A US «tpct" CQ sc© 5 ^’t- O tp us ' tp ' •©© * t- • • • so US TH T4 • • * as * > >© • V © (C © US • J- cj -^OO © a «^ S -4 quiet, and nearly B >5 • © us © ■ • ■ ; ec ff. us eo *~i © t- © -rT TP Cl US rH © US ^ « • : 0 • « 5 £ < . . Malt : ^ < • .tc© . • r- tp^*< ’t-TocT • ©( ci and bbls ... Naval Stores— Crude trp,bbl Spirits turp.. Lard, pkgs.... Lard, kegs 79.G94 Rice, pkgs , 237 15,663 579,60S Starch 16,540! Steanne 6,381; Spelter, slabs... 19,390.Sugar, hhds & 6,308 bbls.... 2,894 Tallow, pkgs... 342,914jTobacco, pkgs.. >, pkes 18,830 “ ‘ Tobacco, hhds.. 2,137,840 Whiskey, bbls.. 6,819 Wool, bales Dressed Hogs, 17,632 No Rice, 467 12,205 58,618 35,952 55,268 bush ■ P- © © y-4 t t- it © ec © T-4 toiO • ' of • • * sf * to ®ec«TPt-T-ieco»s HXt-l.Ht.9S5 © © pH © »h CC US C 9t (71 n^frlC^ w cl - s © © • ■ • eo oo . ® n J a • w©2i©u • ▼H * CO Nf eo <-• • —^ h-4 ’ v-T cb hh eo Tf c c T-T t r4 :g t- • : : • t-7 f • o ^ t- H Orn • « . ;© . ; ; cf CO cf •00 Tf* © us © « -C* • T*1 ■ © t- TP 03 XJ : ’•o' • US MO ■t-S * • : • T-4 . © >© I us : : . • • :8 s ^ . w CCt-trr-t Si • o • • • © • • . . •H4JCt« •g . r - * "ec w ;t CO ■ ►© • V—* o CQ •_ £ •» ® Q, 5 ■ -r3 • f-T *C » 7/ ~ » i o xj* C? rs © t- TP rH r4 ’ CC fC SC I O H . .©O : . • . 8 5 *4 O. ♦J :S :8 : : o Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’62, 4,997 332,557 368,456 350 21,326 43,794 31 5,353 2,837 2,975 86,0*48 98,673 150 3,918 4,130 S : ;eo • . • v • • ■ © , • • © o * * «H • 5 S3 since :s=§ i CO iS Tp • 4 ec . : : i in -8 i : o w as follows : ec • •< © . IKSO Tf . * c8 x1 * w © 0 00 ’ rJ !2. r- ec Q X a o eI ^ r cc .. c c p t. htp_©j (Ntr©^pus^t«©ecic •TP : •: • • ©OO^'w © © • • OC Tp •TP© ^-1 :SS ■ Cl t-' US T# © •.. • . > Tf t-4 < : .* © us |A yt I OrH »-<_ w • * IN TT © iHSirt CO . - * “ssssf ©©<© J>> ^ © © ri pq r-( ■W ■ <0 » T3 a ' .4 • CO * fl ■ _. US . . c«us e. © © 80 »© SO •ioc»35c'*t-'®© •©©T-(5J«OOSC ' l^© ec ust-T©»-7 . 03 22,276 974,267 980,220 433 16,286 13,785 .... Molasses, hhds • TP oc t- CO T-4 .... • a •S Week, and since 12,800 428.536 457,613 Provisions Barley 39,670 2,008,397 3,719,729 Butter, pkgs.. 16,596 505,173 Grass seed... 3.182 70,215 132,912 Cheese.. 42,914 1 ,170,393 Flaxseed 65,202 Cut meats.... 2,122 145,622 2,415 88,621 Beane 45,398 2,144 38 541 Eggs 2,677 213,0'il Peas 238,794 Pork 21,276 658,431 4,237 130,688 C. meal,bbls. 190,967 962 64,025 Beef, pkgs. ... 10,284 82,013 C. meal,bags. 4,731 251,449 252,148, 14,437 WTf w • oc_«n rT^-T T-t * a* This Ashes, pkgs... Rot-in Breadstuff's— Tar.... Flour, bbls. 77,8302,392.295 2,453,725! Pitch.... Wheat,bu.. .111,8.49,012,722 4,227,954;Oil cake, pkgs Corn 68,05214,426,375 20,956,6S2 Oil, lard Cats 65,350 7,585,912 7,404,158 Oil, Petroleum. Rye 17,915 726,305 954,142 Peanuts, bags _ ® V tp" © so TT ■ .©©«©©' u5 © t-© < : • © rp si . «/ . . * O W -.-O c, H This Lead, pigs • * S 8 O «tp' * * v time in 1866, have been 5,220 297,283 266 18,325 CC t— Cv 71 . © Cl <1.2 fc M receipts of domestic produce for the week ending Nov. 29, • ' QD • ua Hides, No Hops, bales. , • »— • CM® o* © • 1 Q ma January 1. Lea tier, BIU' sides 32,841 2,152,765 us tm -t-3 t-4 i Receipt* of Domestic Produce for tlie 840 *c TP « ♦ .©< . D* m Grease, pkge... Hemp, bales... t- 8 © Driedfruit,pkgs • *tt©© » V' . 11,102 16,211 30,850 10,642 . . ’ *c jn us qtpjtic-^; — t-e ec ec CC-Or4ClCt-« — © t-i -r to' a 97 593 707 256 36 -r cn to - • ©TP-^o©©ecec ©UStPttSIoJtP©! • ‘si- •3! © 08 .. us • t- rP it 05 rates. Cotton, bales tp © t- XT •**><* rH shipowners to sustain rates. There is a great scarcity of shipping in port, but any consider¬ able increase seeking employment would cause a decline in Copper, bbls. Copper, plates. • • cocoth t-' 00 O* Tp Q CO • <T? © © .co the berth has enabled 18,345 22,305 583,501 * ' a H fortnight, but this being asked. Re¬ ceipts are light and stocks somewhat reduced. Freights have been inactive but the limited amount of 849 • ‘ ■•crxiscj * in o dull. Wool is not so active as in the previous is partly in consequence of higher prices flour, bg «rHM©S*©rH©© ' i© 07 •2g£SoCi— © CO : © © t# © cc © a o© 73 si t-h COUSrH jci Building materials are firm and active. Hops rule dull heavy, except for the finer qualities. Hay is dull, and drooping. Fish has been dull, and fruits favor buyers. Whiskey remains nearly nominal. Tallow’ is held firm but B. W. (-7 T-l -h • • • ; sit'if cthwi-ps:©i-i© ■ i I© :c§H ;S88» : ' r-> Tl ^7 ; ^ £ IS I” ^ and Buckwheat & ’ .iTlMOOOHwOiOt-*lTPt■ tp"© X Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66 39 5,184 5,306 • © © t- © ce © ?o m © © t-1-» • © p.ffl'cwajft iiof-toSH t-4 us Sg? 25c. for standard refined in bond. same tp eo —4 a ec eo • O Wd week firmer, but there was a semi¬ panic in Philadelphia on Wednesday, when Standard White sold from 27c. down to 22c., in bond, recovering to-day to 23c., and this market closed at 11c. for Crude in bulk, and Jan. 1, and for the . * © © PA • ‘ 8©tpcc© 00 US fc 2 I » © ** oj 9 CX KS B» •f -rJ vH T—< -• . ;hh © jgg * O’ ®«ec o © © ■ ; ;— ' si sfo>in ©t-2 i .©us© ' tp ec co . OC too* • CT ec :SB i © © © . t-7 ' © .©us aj 8 *> —1 T-t ,—4 > us os § © © © gj ” t-T ec ec , but Linseed Oil is firmer. Petroleum opened the The * :SSS so ® * 't-Th7 ' ' ■ : .«t;^ • ‘a* ) TP , on .SSSgggS ;?! : '8 .©©©r-ii^© si ’ cc weights, but heavy are still depressed, dry Buenos Ayres 19@ 20c. gold. Leather is also doing somewhat better. Metals have been quiet except some movement in Ingot Copper and Straits Tin early in the week at slightly better prices. Naval Stores have been inactive, but generally firm, closing at 5^4-c. for Spirits Turpentine free, and 48c. in bond, and Rosins $3@i3 12£c. for Common. Oils have been quiet, have been < rH i-icO •co 00 t. o the British markets, but at rather easier prices, say 14@14£c. for whole lots of factory made. Hides have been doing rather better for light and medium room :8 ■*-> freely for shipment to East India Goods of all kinds nominal. co «rt £ more ©HnO» TP Tf © ~ ► +* n Cheese is moving © rH a regular trade. ©O fl The mild weather has had a depressing influence the markets for live stock, but the close is more steady. Butter meets with Si C* -P rH <55 Si ( s 1-H^OC «-l ■S Tobacco has also been dull. Provisions have been without essential change, The busi¬ ness of the week in hog products has been quite limited, but efforts to further depress prices do not seem to have been successful. New Mess Pork is selling for January delivery at $22. Cumberland Bacon 10£c. Prime Lard on the spot firm and in demand. c*tp ©©© to OOt-4 sc < v is lower, upon Beef has been ;£ C* ICtPi *-l of other 13-Jc. >© TP C-Tp< 11 3 a very the Chronicle from that here given: eo ec t-< < 0> The 689 £,159 133,178 45 12,870 282 3,288 3,449 206,587 168 737 2,350 299 1,621 611 317 • o • • S • © « 6 : SI © 416,371 8,580 100 147 147,032 119,f*84 61,798 99,223 7,781 3,267 71,697 8,489 7,654 eu i '■ L C3 -0 ecssfr©ec©io©© cl ec © i— t- o tp ^ ec ^ US TP^©TPt-t*^ cc ©'^-'©'©'o JSst1!3 x? © 23 c* ©^tt© 00rT©3O us t- « ® X3x3©x3x:x! Bam®®«B«BSDaQB®»®aaaDacD®*acao®ej®® •“^'“iRauaDttJSioQ. H fl 2i^>c’0'Q'c'Q fctrojaxixa X)JQ — — 3,967 1,759 5,163 5,361 5,922 160,491 158,230 90,894 61.792 136,024 88,895 86,308 117,727 81,038 rough, 81,769 3,964 3 H *- : Si - * Bg* ►» • AX O r. ^ * ® M >xo5 at » ■_..••• al O.C3 0*> : . 4J « u 05 ^ • 03 g £ ® ^ • ■ a 9 .oJS •'£03Otil>i3 “ flop r'S^a t: os C*d 3 • s -P © >3 £3 ©> aq< o . eS B o.t>* , •Sa £ S CJ s-'3;^£ o3 O O O OO c*. i S3 S3 eg o55oQQt3ttft5 * ■icon *-4 o 03-0 : b ki o rj 3*2 £5 03 • Tis a m : ~ S3 T3 .... • *22 • ,,c, : o a «-4 2,8C1 .... o •s 5 THE CHRONICLE. 690 Imports of Leading Articles. table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port for the week ending Nov. 23, since Jan. 1, 1867, and for the correspond ing period in 1866: The following present 215,962 bales, against 415,029 bales at the same time in 1866. Below we give our usual table of the movement of Cotton the total [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] la) 200 5,500 165, (MX) 5.5M3 2*21,121 17 313 15.790 876,450 643,8- i0 1,096 Buttons Coal, tone Cocoa, bags... 18,500 Coffee, bags Cotton, bales. .... .. Blea p’wd’rs Brimst. tuB. 1*2.084 Cochineal... ‘"o Cr Tartar Gainbier.... 10 ... 1.200 48 i0 £6 40 987 Indigo Oils, ess 3,183 14,35*2 11,351 Gums, crudo Gum, Arabic ... ... Oil, Olive... 4,082 2,4'-7 Lead, pigs.. Spelter, lbs. 4.332 Steel .... 191.8S.5 002 Champ, bkts 77.756 131.312 853 134,386 22,715 ('5.084 1 L764 4,056 34,765 133 5.018 105,394 24.4331 PORTS. • Jewelry, Ac. 1.803 070 Hides,dres’d 34.782 • • 0,5-3 N.Orleans, Nov. 22. Mobile, Nov. 22... 5,000 Linseed 428,309 137,937 9*27 2,443 Moiasses Metals, Ac. Cutlery 630,782 879.175 11,902 Charleston, Nov. 22. 64,500 Savannah, Nov. 22. Texas,- Nov. 15 New York, Nov. 29* 118,' 05 6,905 10,774 472 52,334 2,155 N. Carolina, Nov. 29 6,7(57 1(5,*209 Virginia. Nov. 29 .. • • 29,931 14,555 11,247] 0,255 • .... 472 .... 2,320 14,059 1,575 41.2.30 50 • • • • • .... • • • a .... .... .... • • • Pepper Saltpetre 420 .... ..... 75,056 507 399,054 08.108 .... Same time last year 396,01!! 114,1 0-4 15,382 620 31,092 7,929 0,(580 139,870 16*2.4' 6 215,002 137,315 179,163 415,029 .... tlj+MO 4e,166 230,386 144,159 5,212 Logwood... Alahogany.. i 2.620 33.315 6,601 54,094 199.816 145,930 118,491 Fustic 122,750 of marked depression prices. By reason of onr lower quotations, shippers have been able to buy here and sell by cable to arrive at Liverpool at a protit, and parties holding orders have also executed them one in 139,774 48,373 178,747 47,134 .... 558 6,767 15,660 118 3.015 The market this week lias been 5,174 68,713 .... .... j 38,215 1S,< 72 68,021 40,3.31 . 10,774 .... .... stock. 35,481 . • Tu north. PORTS. Total. for’gn. 5,207 15,060 600 2,153 2,260 Other ports. Nov *29 Total this year.. 115,289 with facilitv. tivity. 7d/for Consequently there has been considerable ac¬ Private telegrams by cable to day, however, bid only middling Upland, to arrive. The receipts at the ports have'been liberal, and in the carrying the staple sales ing prices. There is also absence of money facilities for have been pressed at steadily declin¬ general belief that Congress will a take off the tax, P. M., Nov. 29, 1S67. this week bales last week, 62,403 bales the previous week, and 45,883 bales three w*eeks since), making the aggregate receipts sincejSepteniber 1, this year, 390,054 bales, against 396,919 bales for the same period in 1865-6. The details of the receipts- for the past week, and the corresponding week of 1866, are as fol¬ receipts of cotton show a large increase reaching 78,ST9 bales (against 61,987 and this, in part, has caused the decline. Spinners have bought very sparingly. The sales of the week foot up 14,086 bales, of which 1,678 bales were taken hy spin¬ ners, 12,148 bales for export, and 60 bales on speculation. The following are the closing quotations: Upland. $ lb 13 Ordinarv Good Ordinary Low* Aliddling N. Orlear a A Texhs Florida. Mobile. 13 14 15 16 17 18 14 15 16 Middling 15 16 17 Good Middling : 14 15 16 17 19 ' Telegraph,—The above figures for the ports named be¬ are made up from the latest mail returns, as we cannot telegrams and ensure, accuracy in our tables. But that ’eaders may possess the latest information we furnish By Receipts.-^ j Received this week at*— 1867. I860. | bales 20,530 27,703 | New Orleans Mobile 15,188 19,193 | 9,0i8 5,3s8 Charleston Savannah 21,((81 7.047 | 1,226 Texafc 4,9611 Tennessee, Ac 4,702 3,010 | It 4,955 17,351 Florida, Nov. 22+.... total lows Britain 15.214 904.411 230,163 Woods. 3,510 06 7.403 75.495 .... Friday the France Other 8'1,95(1 COT TON. The 1. 75,556 482,61*2 208,397 839,722 Nuts Raisins 723 1.078 1,211 Watches.... 720 -451.550 668.011 22,811 Spices, Ac. Cassia 1,301 Ginger 2,134 • 67 2*2 Jewelry siiir- m’nts Great SINCE SEPT. 2,379 Ilides,andrsd. 60,904 *■ ,441,184 6 ,044,750 431,266 730,418 10,602 Rice 5 217 India rubber.. ivory 4,069 Oranges 106,8691 1 Bristles 1 TO— EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 781,468 Lemons 4,737| 7,331 Hair Hemp, bales.. Hides, Ac. 570,254 glance a at Date* Mentioned. rec'd 177,12' 32,177 0,3*20 Fish 4.4*27 j Fruits, Ac. 1,550 . h —M 0 92 Gunny cloth since Sept. 1, showing at receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: Stock 40!) Flax Furs all the ports 1866. 12.413 218.651 363,078 3,125 3.006j Wines 36,707 5b,*,2' 6t>,8i7|Wool, bales... 104 785 Articles reported by value. 133,1"1 Cigars $27,032 $410,SOS 1,224,370 35,582'Corks 220.781 156.954 41,601 at Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept. 1, and 366,165 468,5s9 3 ,774 584 9,445.415 2.551 7,547 5.074 30;3 Soda, sal.... 8.500 381,100 3,330]Wines. Ac. 3,052 80 Opium Soda, bi-carb 1867. 141 8,-1851 10.754 23.3s9 100 week. Hardware... Irou.RR b’rs Same time 749,230 Tin, boxes.. 20,885 714,121 Tin slabs,lbs 31.l’-»2 3,057,305 0.315,1 S3 200 50,027 40,014 21,811! Rage. 14,850] Sugar, hhde, 002 272.7' 6 304.120 1,0061 tee A bbls.. 24 i,l 03 1.114 Su gar. bxs A bg 2,125 355,341 270 24.00*' j'rea. 070,80 l 735,201 005 2-4.101 2‘»,0 2 13,636 Tobacco 8 4,870 13,877 4,110, Waste Brut's. Ac. Bark, Peruv Since Jan. 1, the 1866. 734 .... Madder. For Same time week. .Since Jan. 1, 1867. For the [November 80, 1867. will be seen ^-Receipts.—, Received this week at— 1867. 186» Florida bales l,i9l l,»ol low , North Carolina Virginia 804 3,089 - use 1 ,*277 2,252 our 73,819 63,485 Total receipts Increase this year them the 15,394 following telegrams received by brin^r down by the above table t >at the receipts at our ments from Exported this week to , From N- w York 0,0)4 79 Philadelphia 250 .. Boston New Orleaus 5,293 .. Mob le bavannah Charleston 1,367 3,118 4,835 626 The show .. 2,715 . ... .... ... It 2,o45 525 2,303 600 - 79 4,022 2,260 526 652 2,515 525 2,303 Total. *50 1 12,880 j 500 { 3,'li8! 1,835 i 1 corresponding week of 1*866 the shipments' the ports amounted to 27,162 bales. The total the 16.650 .... 5,330 7,380 * 2,870 » .... 5,510 .... Price Aliddling. , Stock. 13,031 mi 1,710 84,2-57 3(5,100 18,-180 (No report received.) None None ■ .... 7.550 exports of Cotton this week from New York increase, the total shipments reaching 14,628 an To Liverpo 1, per steamers—City of Baltimore, 483 Denmark. 1,759 Chicago, 2.883—Sidou, 77*2 ..per ships Constitution, 708 14,628 33,212 . Total Exports, bales, against 10.569 bales last wreek. The particulars of these shipments are as follows : , 652 . Total this week.. .20, »U0 For 2,260 lor week. 21 756 CHROMCLE. TO—* Great Britain Continent. Receipt* all the ports : Liver-Lon- Bre- Hair- Ant- Ge-Btree- Ala- Vera pool. dan. men. barg. werp.noa. loan. laga. Cruz. TELEGliAMS TO THE -EXPORTS From — New Orleans Mobile Oh lrleston Savannah Gal vet ton.. to-night, which figures.one week later; SPECIAL tinus as large as they were for that the week's total is 15,394 bales iu excess of the figures for the c.r espon.ling seven days of 1866. Iu the exports this week there is also a large in¬ crease, the total reaching 33,212 ba'es, against 22,u2o bales bales last week and 31,813 bales the previous week. The following table furnishes the particulars of the week’s ship¬ Savannah this year are th>e± the same week last year, and us Royal Arthur, 918... .William F. Storer, 3o*2 Total bales .. Constellation, 1,899. To London, per sb'p—E. II. Taylor, 70. Total bales To Antwerp, per steamer—City of Cork, 526. Total bales :... To Bremen, p r steamer—Deiuschlaii'J, 954 per ship Magdalene, 353. Total bales To Hamburg, per steamer—Hummonia, 765 per bark Washington, 1,495. Total bale-* To Genoa, per brig—Guiscppa Rocca, 652. Total bales. ... 9,8'4 79 626 1.307 2,260 652 give our table showing the exports of Cotton foreign exports from the United States since September from New York, and their direction for each of the last four 1, 1867, now reach 139,870 bales, against 137,315 bales for weeks; also the total exports and direction since September the same period last year, and the stocks at all the ports are at 1, 1867 ; and in the last column the total for the same period of the previous year : from all * In this table, as well as in our general table of receipts, Ac., we deduct from the receipts at each port lor the week all received at such port from other Southern ports. For instance, each a from Flor da to Savannah, which in estimating the total receipts must be ded icted as the Bame shipment appears in the Florida return. We are thus parlieu iar in the statement ol' this Jact as some of our readers fail to understand it. t To Faval. week there is certain amount shipped Below we * The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee, Kentucky, Ac., not otherwise enumerated. t Tnese are the receipts at Apalachicola to Nov, 16th, and at a’l the other ports of Florida to Nov. 22. ; Lstimatto. November 30, 1867.] Exports of Cotton THE CHRONICLE. (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1867 Total EXTORTED TO Not. Nov. 5. 12. 9,416 5,304 6,557 9,804 499 984 5,803 7,541 Liverpool Other British Ports .... 'Total to Gt. KBrltain.. 9,416 Nov. i6. to prev. date. year. 50,8'2 1,462 59,884 79 9,833 52,334 60,068 2,320 Nov. 19. dling (Liverpool classification) being quoted at 16£c., and Low Mid¬ dling at 16@l6£c., against 17^ for middling and 16£(<rl7c. for Low Mid¬ dling last week. Freights have improved ; to Liverpool, Id. by steam and 9-16 by sail; to New York/ by steam, £c., and to Phil¬ adelphia and Buston lc. Sterling Exchange closed at I49@150 for bill of lading bills, and lSi^l 53 for bank. Exchange, sight, on New York. per cent, premium for bank and 1-16<@£ premium for com¬ Same time WEEK ENDING 691 1,501 184 mercial. . 135 French ports 135 and Hanover 1 353 991 555 1,541 267 Hamburg Other ports Total to N. Europe 1,811 .. Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar 7,111 2,795 4,820 1,459 526 020 203 4,093 12,557 4,457 652 1,502 .... 1,675 .... '. Total | Spain, etc Grand Total .... 7,349 12,212 ! .... Week .... 1,502 652 14,028 68,713 /—Receipts—, ending. Sept. 6. 795 “ 10,509 decrease in the a 795 .... 850 13. 20. “ 60,842 1867. 339 578 848 . . . From New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile Florida Total lor the week Total since Sept. 1 Since Sept. 1. Bales. 10,836 3,208 Iiale?, 1,978 .... .. This week. Bales. 1,089 8,633 From Sou th Carolina.... 950 1,014 1,361 1,519 2,8-9 1.076 4,871 4,081 6,177 6,259 10,026 8,713 2,066 1,599 5.854 4,135 2.632 29,743 874 5.874 Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.. 4,111 15,602 4,017 16,720 .. j North Caroliua 60.9*'0 Per Railroad 1,968 . 20 =. " following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬ tember 1, 1867: The Receipts from— 1,531 857 1.476 Texas Savannah,... Mobile Florida South Carolina. t.. o . • • 029 3.355 697 6,5G5 hales. • 15,768 2,534 38,310 Tennessee, Kentucky, &c... 3,553 1,036 681 ▼“1 CO 24 • 3,967 <7* 540 2,976 58 • 481 2,306 11,470 • 493 .., •• 1,059 no,531 Reshipmeuts. + These do not include the railroad There have been the past except as follows receipts at Philadelphia. week Making in Sen Island. Stained 15 10 18 .. 7#@3 7# @8# ' N. Orleans Texas. 7!«@S# ' 7#@S# . .. Upland 2,715 2,045 2,302 521 500 3,. 18 1804. 1805. 341. Mobile... Orleans.. 23.—The mail 18,333 for returns the week Nov. mar¬ follows :* ending —1866Mid. Fair. Good 25 29 50 16 18 21 11 15# .. 9# 9# 8# . 66 .. .. . 10 10 14# U# 14# . . , . - 15# 10# .. .. 16# prices current of middling quali¬ 1866. 1807. 1 1804 1805. 1806. 1807 25(1. 18d. 1 Mid. Pein'imb. 24#d. I9#d. 14#d. 8 24# . 80 19# 14 25 19# 25# 20 14# 11# 8# 8# 1 8# | Egyptiau.. 2i Broach.... 14# Dhollerah. 14# 18 14 14 11 0# 9 6 9 6 Tne stocks of cotton in Liverpool ;-n<l London, including the supplie8 of American and Indian produce afloat to those ports, are now as under : Stock in “ Liverpoo Bales London American cotton alloat Indian “ I860. 70S.710 9’ ,821 1807 528,040 110,664 10,000 108 647 Since the commencement of the year United Kingdom have been : 8,000 212,231 924,178 Total. 1,835 Total exports this week from Southern ports 8# 8# 8# 25 Annexed is a statement showing the ties of cottou at this date 6ince 1864 : Upland... 5.293 20 13 12 .. Upland.... Total bales ship Pocahontas, 3,591 per bark Mauldslie, 1.702 To Bremen, ship G<»rginn, 2.590 per ba-k Alert, 125 To Barcelona, per barks Linda, 710 quediia, 9 5 per brig Acrfncia, 430 To Vera Cruz, p'*r brig D iphnie, 890 bales and 680 half bake per bark J. E. Ward, 1.910 hull bales To Malaga, per bark Carmen, 525 Mobile—To Barcelona, per brig Neuva Casimira, 500 Savannah—T » Li verpool, per ship New England, 3,118 Upland Charleston—To Liverpool, bark Hector, 9 bags Sea Island and 1,826 New Orleans, Nov. as Ordin'y & Mid. Fair <te G’d lair. G’d & Fine. Mid. Sea Island 42d. : New Orleans—To Liverpoo, per 7.429 9,880 10,105 @32 18,072 -1807 251 given above the vessels Exported this week from— 3,673 5,001 2,608 7,409 10,618 in Mobile.... which the foreign shipments for the week were made from the Northern ports; we now add the same information with regard to the Southern ports @17# 30 86 30 32 31 2,300 2,285 3,148 2,620 during the earlier days of the week good deman 1, and prices ruled firm ; but since Tuesday there has beeu much l"ss activity in the trade, and prices now show a decline as compared with those current at the close of last week. The amount <f business transacted is but moderate, viz.. 60,370 bales; of which the trade have taken 43,540 bales, exporters 9,590 bales, and specula¬ tors 2,240 bales. American cotton has declined £(1. to id., and East Indian about £d. per pound, while Brz liau and Egyptian are rather lower in price. For Sea Island cotton, however, there has been an ac¬ tive demand, at an advance « f fully Id. per lb. The prices curreut of American cotton, compared with last year, are subjoined: was 55 bak’B. have @.. @17# 10#©1G#@— 16# @16# correspondent iu London writes ... Bombay brig A. J. Ross total for the week of 17 17 38 34 38 35 5,105 2,872 Indian Cotton Markets.— In reference to these and exports from these cities : Shipping News.—We bales our Middling— From Philadelphia—To Liverpool, per ship From Boston—io Fayal and a market, per a no 16 17 723 @31 754 @32 587 @ @.. 1,169 @39 2,553 @36 4,754 @.. 6,504 @-- 7,752 @30410,208 ©3t 415.643 @- 17,399 31 Li erpool, Nov. 16.—Cotton 1,125 .... 4^) kets Sep, 1. 6,819 . . .... receipts week. 1,953 2,283 .... Virginia * Sep. 1. European Since .... 50 601 North Carolina. Total Last 3,593 • -—Baltimore.--, Since 11,725 480 Last wreek. 9,086 . 3.851 30 /—Stc »cb—» 1867. 1866. During ihe m-st of the week the demand lias been quite active, and Wednesday there wan an improvement in prices, but subsequently the improvement was lost and the market closed irregular at 16£c.@ 16£c. for (Liverpool) Middling, and 16c. for Low Middling. Freights to Liverpool we quote, -|d, to New York, i er steam lc, to Boston ic. per lb., to Philadelphia £c., and Baltimore ^o. Exchange closed for ster¬ ling 60 day’s bills at 150@150-|, and tor sight checks ou New York, banks are paying ^ d s., and selling at par. 144,871 r-Philad’phia.—, 0,832 5, "338 @19# 17#@l8 19 1806. on 22,305 ,—Boston.—, Last Since week. Sep. 1. 22. 22#@.... ,22 @22# 3.176 520 . Bales. 794 4,607 6.056 . 1807. 24 @24# 1.683 5,395 . Sept. 1. I860. 2,096 2,603 2.9S6 “ Since 1807. 814 51? 1,431 27. 1,111 Oct. 4. 2,903 11. 5,090 “ IS 6,181 “ 25. 5.869 Nov. 1 8,593 “ 8 1 i ,634 “ 15. .11,782 Keceipts of cotton at the port of New York for the week and since Sept. 1 : ,—Shipments—, ,—Price Mi Idling—, 1860. 480 . This week. returns for the week ending Nov. 22 receipts, the total being 9,386 bales, (9,028 Uplands and 858 Sea Island) agam-fc 1 1,782 bales last week, and 11,684 hale- the previous week. Shipments this week amount to S,7l3 bales of which 1,885 bales weie to Liverpool. 5,776 bales New York, 425 bales to Philadelphia, 675 to Baltimore, and 2 bales' to Savannah. The receipts and shipments for a series of week3 this year, and the corresponding weeks of 1S66, also the stock uni price of middling (Liverpool classification) at the close of each week were as follows : 1 504 1,307 2,200 GUO 1,546 850 2,320 1,069 .... All others Charleston, Nov. 23.—The mail show .... - French Bremen .... 1 Other 1,353 .... 858,835 the exports of cotton irom the 22, show a large increase in the receipts, the total for the To date To date For year To date To date For year being 20.530 bales, against 11,180 bales last week, a rid 13,154 1867. 1866. 1866. 1867. 1860. 1866. bales the previous ween. The biles, bales. b.los. bales. bales. bales. shipments fur the last week were 15.582 213,4-1 195,982 773,141 bales, of which 5,293 bales were to Liverpool, 2,715 bales to Bremen, American 208,015 East Iud., &c 437,059 489,930 82,410 104,208 1.693 111.683 China...'. 6,082 9,387 2,045 bales to Barcelona* 625 bales to Malaga, 2,302 bales to Vera Brazil Egyptian, &e. 12,098 18,098 19,521 Cruz, 128 bales to Philadelphia, and 2,674 bales to New York. Stock West ind.,&c. 12,891 Total ......760,262 821,391 1,136,565 8,091 14,813 on hand Nov. 23 was 60,216 bales. The receipts and shipments for I he following are the particular* of sales and imports for the week a series of weeks this year, and the corresponding weeks of 1866, and also the stock and price of middli; g (Liverpool classification) at the withyear, and also of stocks on ihe evening of ihursday last, compared last year: close of each week were as follows ; week Week ending ■—Receipts--, 1867. 1866. Sept. 6 1,075 1,547 “ Oct. Nov. 13 26 27 r-^hipm’ts-^ /—Price of Middl'g—. 1867. 1866. 479 4,082 9,6o5 3,311 848 2,402 1.771 1,796 4 2 013 2,643 4,163 493 2,207 4,612 1,294 1 ,009 2,073 3,103 3,262 7,^66 4,423 12,662 6,804 ] 6,560 3,789 7,373 21,500 4,911 9,384 22,019 769 8 13,154 25,662 17,593 15 .....11,180 24,968 4,878 11 18 25 1 22 .. . 1867. 26 25 23 @26# @— @23# -@21 —@19 lS#@l9 11,731 @19 10,443 1*#@19 8,592 19 @19# 16,145 18 @... 17,457 17#@ 20,530 27,703 15,582 10, 67 16#@... 1866. 34 35 36 37 40 40 @35 @36 @37 @38 @— <a— nom. 3? @38 37 @38 nominal 34 @.. The demand during the past week kas been quite business done liberal, and yet prices have given way, at -Stock , 1867. 1866. 1;),896 14,719 91.S04 17,018 91,628 17,095 92,00S 19 512 83,839 23,397 93,398 28,043 99,991 33,182 112,521 43,889 126, 715 41,328 137,561 49,373 147,328 60,216 166,022 active and the tbf close Mid¬ SALES, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. —Sales this week. Total Same Ex- Speculathis period Trade. port. 1866. tion. Total. year. American. ...bales. 13,260 1,680 160 20,100 l,2is,170 1,172,210 Brazilian 580 20 5,990 6,590 353,7 0 338,900 40 90 Egyptian 3,770 3,900 163,080 180,470 4(0 West Indian SO 3 890 101.110 3,469 S2.940 East Indian 17,060 6,890 1,940 25,890 1,230,790 1,439,690 China and Japan 4,190 10,790 , Total * 48,540 9,500 2,2i0 GO,370 3,071,C403,225,000 Average weekly sales. 1867. 20,240 5,630 3,190 1,810 15,610 20 46,500 1806. 17,830 5,510 3,560 1,460 15,99* 14* 44*490 For latest newTs respecting the Liverpool cotton market seo Telegraph dis patches at the close of our London letter in a previous part oi this paper.—[Ay, Commercial & Financial Chronicle. 692 THE CHRONICLE. -StocksSame date Dec. 31. 1866. 1866. -lmports- To this date 1867. This week. American ItnThis Total, j orts. 1866. 1866. day. 117,410 69,230 25,310 4,2a 1,108,1161,081,004 1,156,130 1,390 374,299 381,022 404,865 2,755 159,066 165,868 200,083 587 93,859 82,913 90,274 9,7491,150,0421,482,553 1,544,675 894 11,032 12,993 Brazilian Egyptian West Indian East Indian Chinaand Japan 17,860 11,620 270,100 2,840 516,770 708,710' Of .the present stock of cotton in Liverpool 20 1 5 per cent, is American produce, against nearly 29^ per cent, last year London, Nor. 16.—The market closes with a flat appearance, and prices are ^d. to ^d. per lb lower. The annexed particulars relate to Eastlnd'a, Chinaand Japan produce : 1865. 1866. 1 to Nov. 14 Deliveries Stocks, Nov. 14. Bales. 307,755 245,805 96,821 236,847 37,487 trade is very cotton From quiet. Ohio, &c Other. The for the . a further tobacco, the total reaching 4,216 lihds., 516 cases 1,058 bales, 3 tierces, against 4,150 hhds., 672 cases, 406 bales, 36 tierces for the previous seven days. Of these exports 2,462 hhds. were from New York, 1,4 19 hhds. were from Baltimore, 89 hhds. from Boston and were from New Orleans, and the direction of these exports was as follows : 299 hhds. were to Great Britain, 1,558 hhds. were to France, 1,040 hhds. were to Bremen, 885 hhds. were to Gibraltar, and the balance to various ports. The following table furnishes the particulars of the week’s shipments from all the ports: Export’d this week from Hhds New York Baltimore Boston Case. Bales. 426 775 2,462 1,419 ... .. .... 89 . Philadelphia • New (Means San Francisco • • 125 2 516 672 403 again this week • • . # ‘io .... 49 « .... • • lbs, 155,994 ' .... .... .... .... • • • 2,350 .... 1,058 3 86 55 406 1,164 151 200 ".... 69 4:30 .... 166,239 153,981 96,814 1,038 our 182,420 84,810 OF TOBACCO FROM 6,464 463 40,480 184,770 NEW YORK.* ft>s. Hhds. Cases. Bales. Tierces. Pkgs. Mart. 2 275 .. 20.645 .. 24 634 451 94 .. 95 429 221 353 15 61 Genoa Gibraltar 13 \ 8S5 Melbourne 4 2 40 118,656 .. Cuba 8,252 125 Hayti British N. A. Colonies Mexico Venezue’a Brazil Total 'll T| 201 3,207 2 2,462 14 712 426 95 775 * The direction of the 155,994 from mani¬ The exports in this table to European ports are made up fests, vended and corrected by an inspection of the cargo. other 3,321 .. 10 export for week foreign exports for the week, from the ports, has been as follows : hhds. leaf, 56 hhds. stems and 10 bbls..,.To Marseilles, 473 hhds. leaf. From Boston.... To Batavia, 50 cases....To Cape Verdes and a market, 41 hhds. and 20 boxes... .To Africa, 12 hhds To Grand Cayman, 6 casss and 4 boxes... 'io &t. Pierre Miquelon, 17 cases, 2 bales and 25 boxes To Hayti, 270 half bales.... To British Provinces, 36 hhds, 5 cases and From Baltimore—To Bremen, 946 .... 19 bales. From Philadelphia—To Havana, 3,588 lbs. manfd....To Matanzae, 6,657 lbs. manfd. From San Francisco—To Callao, 5 cases—To To Honolulu, 4 cases. From New Orleans—To Bremen, Maryland and ^ .... 871 .... 427 following are the exports of tobacco from New Yc:-k past week : EXPORT8 10,2L .... usual export tables, and hope able to give our readers our annual issue to be next • .... 12 We omit our « 246 Total this week 4,216 Total last week 4,150 Total previous week.. 1,686 in 156 Man’f. Pkge. . .... .... .... 78 -Stems— hhds. bales 95 56 Tcs. 3 266 84,511 399 Antwerp of crude 871 6,374 4,191 64,572 Hamburg slight increase this week in the exports pkgg 266 4,816 Bordeaux Fkiday, F. M., Nov. 29, 1867. hhds. 40,031 90 299 .... .—Previously-^, 136.492 36 .... Total 1. 1866. 10,697 4,842 4,285 64,720 1,825 26 94 118 New Orleans. 110,56^ Liverpool London Dhollerah, 168 Havre TOBACCO. NOVEMBER r-TT sin.! Nov. 1—, hhds. pkgs 134.667 10,666 31 Bremen We have YORK SINCE 218,003 171,199 • Bomb\t, Nov. 9.—The rupees per candy. NEW This week—, hhds. pkgs. 1867. 165,268 _ Imports, Jan. AT 23,180 4,670 528,040 RECEIPTS 41,760 401,130 1,380 18,721 2,891,2763,207,392 8,409,020 receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since Nov. 1, have been as follows: 167,270 18,000 296,620 .... Total 208,240 61,940 14,870 The [November 30 1867 , , Mexico, 3 cases and 2 hale*... 246 hhds. of leaf and 125 bales. Ohio.—At Baltimore receipts continue light, and market for all descriptions firm. There has been quite an active specu¬ lative demand for common Maryland leaf, based on the anticipated short crops, both of Maryland and Western growth. We report sales of 800 hhds, frosted Maryland at $2 75@3 50, and at the close we hear the market has been cleared of all this description offered by factors. In Ohio leaf we report sales of 200 hhds. at full former prices. The stock remaining in factors’ hands is reduced to 500 hhds. leaf, with some and stems. Kentucky is held firmer, with small sales at full Tobacco Review for the year ending November 1st. The market this week has been very dull. In Kentucky leaf the sales are limited to about 300 hbds., of which about one half are for export, including 80 hhds. for Great Britain. scraps tial change. Seed leaf tobacco is also quiet. The onlv transactions of moment for the week are 72 cases State at 7£c", and 60 cases Ohio on private terms, with some small lots in a retail way. Spanish and manufactured tobaccos have been New Orleans.—The movement in this market, since our last semiweekly review, has been of a limited character, operations having been restricted by the small supply offering. There is however, a very good export demand for the poorer classifications, while other grades are in request by the trade for cutting and manufacturing purposes. The stock on sale from fir^t hands embraces about 600 hhds, which consist of a general assortment of all descriptions. Stock in warehouses and on shipboard not cleared on the 22d inst., 1,106 hhds. Week’s sales 104 hhds. Receipts 23. Exports 340. prices. 31 Inspections this week, 613 hhds Maryland, (39 reinspected); Ohio, 48 Kentucky, (38 reinspected)—total, 692 hhds. Kentucky.— At Louisville receipts have been light, and prices show particular chauge. The sales of the week amount to only 340 hhds. A portion of the receipts from the West have also We quote Lugs, common, light to heavy, 5|@6 ; do good, light to gone for¬ heavy, 6£@7-£ ; Leaf, common, light to heavy, 8@10 ; do medium, light ward to Great Britain—ship-owners reporting considerable to heavy* 11@13 ; do fair to good, 13$@17 ; do cutting, 18@28$. tobacco offering for those markets. Prices are without essen¬ quiet and unchanged. QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCY. KENTUCKY LEAP Light. 5X Common Lags 6 Good do 7 @ 7 Common Leaf.. 7 vm : 9 M.oium do. 19 @12 12 Light. “ “ “ Ohio “ 20 “ Wrappers. “ 1865 Running lots ©25 @35 10 ©15 5 @ 7 20 @48 lo @18 8 @16 SO @32 16 @25 10 @14 3)tf@ 6 4 @6 15 Fillers, 1865 and 1866 Wrappers Running lots .'. N. Y. State i “ Running lots Ohio and Pennsylvania New York State @45 16 running lots Pennsylvania prime wrappers Wrapper lots 41 _ Fillers FOREIGN. Havana.—Fillers—Common. “ Good Fine “ 60@ 70 75@ 85 90@1 05 Havana.—Wrappers 1 2C@2 55@1 60® 70 Yara. Yara, average lots manufactured. Black work—com., tax paid. 30 good “ 45 @35c Black work,common, in bond 15 “ 60 @60c @70c Bright work—common “ 35 @45c Bright work, medium,.. “ 50 @75c good & fine “ fine good me, “ 80 @1 25 Friday, Nov. 39, 1867, F. M. The market this week has been (CA9E8). Wrappers, crop of 1866 Running lots, BREADSTUFFS. 14#@16 16X@19 20 @23 | @14 SEED LEAP “ Heavy. Good Leaf..... 12>£@14c. @ 8% I Fine do 15 @17 @11 I Selections 18 @20 ... Connecticut (HHDS.). Heavy. no food ne ** IS 25 “ 25 50 ®20v @30c @45c @35, generally dull and prices drooping. The ice and low water in the Erie canal have kept back supplies for which buyers have waited. ' Business has consequently been very quiet for the season. Flour has con¬ tinued to arrive sparingly, and is generally held with firmness; generally at lower and the cost of production, at irregular prices, considerably below but the limited business done has been present rates of transportation and prices of wheat. The Eng¬ lish orders have been mainly at lower prices, and at the close good lines of extra State are not saleable at over $9 50. Wheat has been dull and drooping, but prices have given way but little. The export demand has been limited, and the chief strength of the market has been in the limited supplies. There are not much less than three million bushels of wheat afloat between this port and the great lakes dependent upon good weather for getting forward. The prospect is now good, but the work seems to be going on very slowly. Corn has moved more freely for export at $1 35@1 36 for November 30, 1867.] THE CHRONICLE. 693 prime mixed afloat, with freight to Liverpool Liverpool, Nov. 15th.—Home grown 8j@10£d., But shippers have been able to execute at tion, causing a difficulty in the sale of wheats have again lost condi¬ them, their orders. Oats have been irregular and mand upon the ports ; there has however not and throwing more de¬ been much activity in any market. The floating trade has also unsettled, subject to speculative manipulation. been Rye and bar¬ nent prices have quiet. generally advanced a little. We had On the conti¬ ley have been scarce and firmer. Canada peas have been attendance a moderate to-day, and the business transacted was firmer, with an upward tendency, and a good Choice red American and white very limited. export demand descriptions of wheat maintained at $1 40@1 41 in bond. and gold 139£. these figures all The following are closing quotations Flour, Superfine..$ bbl. $7 75® 8 60 Extra State 9 10® 9 65 gapping R. hoop Ohio. 9 5U®10 00 rates, but low class spring Flour : Indian Wheat, Chicago go corn 48s. 9d. per Spring were neglected, and late at least Id. lower. nominally unaltered, good extra State offered at S7s. was 6d. lower, with fresh arrivals from the United States dull and 480 lbs. was accepted. $3 13® 3 8 Week’s deliveries from 2 14® 3 80 Extra Western, com¬ farmers.. Red Winter 67.671 ars, at 70s Id. 2 50® 2 60 Corresponding week last year..... mon to good 9 00®10 50 Amber do 66,9c6 “ “57 1 2 65® 2 70 Double Extra Western White 2 70® 3 and St. Louis 10 75®15 00 foreign import this Corn, Western Mixed....' 1 32® 1 00 were. Southern supers 9 5G®10 40 Western Yellow ® Southern, fancy and ex¬ Southern White Wheat, I. corn, O. G. FI. A M’l, 1 40® 1 45 tra 10 50® 14 00 cwt. cwt. Rye cwt. 1 67® 1 cwt. California ~ 11 00® 14 00 139,447 Oats, Western cargoes... 9,337 4,106 Rye Flour, fine and super4,253 79® * 12S,163 II,615 Jersey and State 6,601 fine 15,030 ® 7 00® 8 75 Barley 1 50® 1 70 Corn meal, Jersey aud Malt 367,609 20,952 1 55® 1 80 10,707 Since 1st Brandywine 19,292 6 00® 0 65 Sept., Peas Canada 4 1,158 1 40® 1 56 1,926,009 Same time I860 356,291 180,992 348,037 ' 501,771 . per bushel Milwaukee Club . f . . .... . Comparative stocks of grain in warehouse, New York Brooklyn, November 25 : 1867. Wheat, bush 1866. 1,518,664 1,049,300 2,052,849 3,930,900 Corn hush Oats’ bush Rye, bush Barley, bush Total, bush AT NEW Com meal, bbls Wheat, bush Rye, bush Com, bush Barley, &c., busn.. 124,020 103,730 847,255 253,665 Oats, bush FOREIGN EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE Flour, C. meal, Wheat, bbls To --1867For week. 8’e Jan.l. bbls. 100,255 WEEK AND .... Since Jan. Boston 348,441 207,500 l,from 171,005 Philadelphia 47,904 Baltimore EXPORTS OF BREADSTUFF8 TO Oats, 1,897 ... . 43.696 GREAT BRITAIN AND Nov. 22, 1867.. 192,835 “ 15, 1867.. 253 “ 15, 1867.. 5,461 “ 16, 1867.. 846 Baltimore California Other ports ...Oct. 28, 1867. ....Nov. 15' 1867.. Total To about same do do Flour bbls. Date. Philadelphia 4,0C0 .. 29,493 27,822 1865. 1864. 33,816 TO THE 1. Corn bush 31,443 123,104 116,066 5,135 142.6107,274,271 1,131,406 10,840,540 TEA. The tea market has been exceedingly quiet, but with no concession inquiry. The only sal* we have Oolongs. The following table shows the shipments of Tea from China and Japan to the United States-from June 1, 1867, to the date of latest vice<4 by admail, and importations at New York and Boston since 1867: the part of holders, and but little noticed is 1*500 half chests 2,758 284,008 7,414 10,118 763,360 3,910 726,202 IRELAND FROM SEPT Wheat, 3,550,781 Flour, Rye, bbls. New Ysrk, to Nov. 22,1867. Other ports, to latest dates. 19,389 2,098 /—SHIPMENTS 945,927 80,884 Congou 3,879,857 PROM 5,961,522 699,375 June 1 to Sept. 1. & Sou, lbs.... 30,476 Pouchong 564,054 1,200,343 3,349,064 2,188,748 78,259 bush. 304,123 bush. Hyson Hyson skin 174,450 26,188 Junel to bush. 7,000 Total, lbs.... Sep. 1 to Sept. 1. Sept. 37. 460 New York. 1,448,639 267,498 10,571,209 At Boston. 54,000 "312; 666 729,053 .‘ 66,465 3,048,981 8,239 34,951 33,489 . 7,289,656 6,000 695,785 733,033 381,251 1,114,810 738,490 381,251 .... Total v IMPORTS AT N. Y. A BOSTON SINCE JAN. 1, 1867’ At 12,078 Young Hyson Japans Corn, 1867. , Twankay Imperial Gunpowder Wheat, JAPAN SINCE 200,670 106,200 Fekoe 990,272 CHINA AND JUNE 1,- 18‘i6. 44,345 CONTINENT. From Jan. 14 Corn bush bush. Oolong &Ning 212,739 period, 1866. do do require, and holders do not seem willing to stimu¬ reducing prices. In some instances stocks are large and prices are a trifle lower, but this is the case in late business by .... 1, 1867. From New York New Orleans tual wants 729,635 2,343,420 7,794,400 on 24,473 22,978 40,911 U9,64Q 188,680 9,411,695 14,838,350 SINCE JAN. Barley. .... . Evening, Nov. 29. tone and less improved few instances. only a bush. The imports of the week at bush. bush, New York have included a of Japan teas cargo 6,515 861,973 116,406 115,286 (433,813 lbs.), and 50 packages from 6,916,745 —of Liverpool coflee, 20,377 bags of Rio and 1,452 Laguayra ; of sugar, 1,750 93,499 3,634 boxes and 1,109 hhd9; of molasses, 1,127 hogsheads of 5,125 880 foreign and 204 bbls. of Ne w Orleans. 63 Rye, bush. 21,056 240,463 267,523 33 3,758,497 If. A. Col. week.. 3,886 1,810 sinceJan. 1 152,219 84,442 We»t Ind. week. 4,898 751 since Jan. 1 232,539 9G,190 1,765 Total exp’t, week 41,994 2.823 279,974 15,128 80 since Jan. 1, 1867 785,241 188,735 3,982,807 432,712 886,893 same time, 1866 845,243 137,378 Gt. Brit, week lince Jan. 1 2,330,615 4,805 319,450 116,430 25,465 64,950 803,050 Friday an week, but the uncertainty of what do in relation to the currency has kept buyers out of the market, and the occurrence of Thanksgiving tended to curtail business at the close, and we have a very light week’s business to report.- In fact nothing can be said ex¬ cept that buye’. s will not take any more goods than their ac¬ follows: as The grocery trade opened with of uneasiness early in the Congress will YORK. 2,433,555 243,965 4,138,850 20,356,650 909,945 4,301,975 7,131,365 ‘ 3,045 64,000 7,4S9,057 7,938,300 -1686For week. S’e Jan.l. Flour, bbls— 1866. 68,155 10,824 TLe movement in breadstuff’s at this port has been RECEIPTS GROCERIES. 1867. Malt, bush Peas, bush 3,165,450 1,934,000 171,764 395,500 501,350 1,513,500 anc 1,743.424 1,946,689 50,600 6,293,118 32,416,775 ®The above table includes all 304,123 shipments to the United States, 200,638 To about same 7,000 12,869 packages to San period, 1866. except Francisco. The indirect 5,300 do 25,422 do 1 has been at New York 172 1865 importation since Jan. 2,409 do 63,012 164,310 packages, and at Boston do 43,333 100 1864. 8,338 Hong Kong, 1,715 pkgs. 68,012 Sept. 27.—The feverish and Weekly Receipts at Lake the tea market remains is unhealthy state in which Ports.—The following strikingly illustrated at the following lake ports for the week ending Nov. shows the receipts purchases, “ actually at London rates,” made by the fact that some 16 ; during the fortnight at Shanghai, are noticed as Flour. Wheat. extraordinarily Com. Oats. From Barley. buyers, aud as showing a great concession advantageous operations for Rye. bbls. bush. on the bush. bush. bush. part of bush. This concession, 41,615 414,393 335,330 189,246 however, was not permanent, and ratesthe Chinese. 80,466 13,881 above the London 14,047 390,449 Toledo. 8,192 10,250 3,464 level, the momentary impulse in the again rose 4,375 16,999 17,550 106,449 direction of 8,957 prudence, which foreign merchants 1,680 540 23,018 13,345 5,351 may have experienced, 6,777 plainly been of very brief duration. having 35,431 9,957 12,000 471 4,063 . . . • ~ . 92,117 869,831 118,196 1,041,546 • . . 472.273 225,804 43,758 23,759 COFFEE. 258,307 46.661 39,025 There has been a moderate week,’66. 149,864 783,396 177,383 business done in Coffee, but at some 1,1867 67,142 65,620 Sum time, 1866 con cession in prices, and our 3,413,07827,872,10529,890,10513,697,176 3,740,853 26,574,498 37,525,06713,315,629 5,784,1951,641,942 quotations of Rio ars reduced J of a 3,113,862 3,256,674 The cent.. stock of Rio on hand Eastward Movement of Grain by to-day is over 109,000 bags, which, with the Canal.—The following statement will show about the ight demand prevailing, depresses amount of grain on canals destined for tide water : prices. The sales are 14,140 bags fromBuflhlo, closing very quiet. Wheat, Correspond’g Sines Jan. 50T- 25 *>0T-18 adding S*10,14 days 9 . Corn, bush. 162,030 1,106,690 464,856 389,256 360,519 195,540 730,950 506,020 138,348 926,490 132,040 9,800 373,830 w»Wego, days jettons, week 1,604,213 3,089,984 " 1,301,315 1,467,337 Barley, bush. 145,520 - 1,268,720 336,493 Porrtip’di’gvrwk’W Oats, bush. bush. 46,080 85,960 644,368 986,390 404,870 804,741 1,381,610 418,135 v,Ey£ bush. The imports of the week have iucluded 20,877 bags of Rio as fbl9,077 per “Guiding Star,” 4,000 per“Campaneio,” 8,500 35.170 Norma,” 8,800 per u Alliance ”; in addition to per the foregoing there lave been received 36.170 1,452 bags of Laguayra. At Galveston 37,539 of Rio have been received. At 2,000 bags New Orleans 7,000 also come to hand. bags of Rio havs 72/709 ows: “ The 84,444 773,115 843,863 193,391 as imports since January 1, and follows; stock in first hands Nov. 26, ar* [November 30, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 694 “ Baltimore New Orleans 41 Galveston “ Mobile 44 Savannah “ At New Stock. Import. .697,013 bags.. Philadelphia “ .. New York, 1,800 22.0; 0 21.000 ..231,641 93,397 .. . i ., 3,200 .. .. St. 25,763 Domingo,44 New Orleans 230 3,301 Cuba. ♦hhds. At 6,250 New York, stock.. N. Y imp’ts since Jan. 1. 82,038 44 44 37,8 1 6 Portland .. 150,155 1,063,005 48,8S1 213,397 21,857 Total rs. bags per day, and consisted mostly qualities. We estimate sales in all since 24th ult. at: for the United States, 84,000 bags ; for California, 4,000 bag9 ; lor Europe, etc., 91,000 bags Supplies averaged abmt 9,000 The Bags. VESSELS “ “ Total 5,022 5,006 . VESSELS CLEARED 5,500 Jarlen I-aac R Davis.. 4,000 5,000 ,—Cuba * hh'ls. 1,013 St. Fiauciseo bags. At— Phil ad* 1 Baltimore New Orleans Boston Philadelphia New Orleaus — Cuba. , For’gu, Total 61,179 17,956 . 6,713 40,955 6,200 - .... 4,056 24,475 212,701 83,157 1,264 119,812 6.520 3.080 2,064 April 288.340 141.913 159 150,066 338,151 268,624 467,652 188,261 122,190,259 72,336.641 7,317 131,222 1,650,678 717,' 06,081 $253,034 $29,514,984 l,2i.8 July August Quantity, lbs . Value 154,045,498 115,321,175 »••• .... Year. 1867.. 1866.. 1865.. 511 869 . 1,810 6,555 855,273 404,350 418,162 72,229 197,213 87,288 800 bbls. 71,196 The do do do do Ceylon ....gold 24#^, 25 2) Maracaibo 16)© 58 Laguayra 17 @ 17 St Domingo....... (ax .. do do 1 ’| $ lb 11 refining llj@ 11* good do ... llj© is# fair to fair to good grocery... do ... pr. to choice Melado LLav’a, Box. D. do do do do do do do de 13 to 15 do 16 to 18 12)© 13 I*1#© J84 63© 84 S Nos. 7 to 9 11 © 13$ do 10 to 12 11 j© 12t 12#© 134 13*© 14J do 19 to 2U white do Loaf Granulated Crushed and powdered White coffee, A Yellow coffee 12#© 12# centrifugal Doty : 8 cents 14* & 154 14#© 15# .... icq ut .. © It# ^ 16# © K| 154© .. $ gallon. gall.1 10(2,1 20 48 © 65 45 © 62 New Orleans Porto liieo Cuba Museovado 1,069,129 13,581 7,984,004 671,214 $14,527 $542,040 $85,583 50; 38 lb. mace, 40 cents; nutmegs, 15 ; and ginger root, 5 cents pimento and Ma- r±—Total export * Since Jan.l. week. 1,337.000 15,923 1,314,333 12,757 1,424,741 8,683 lb Cassia, in mats gold Ginger,race and Af(gold) (gold) Mace Nutmogs, 87,813 54,172 molasses mnrket. Some sold at auction, and 70Q hhds. .... ..... 39 © 42 53 © 54 61 50 ©1 1'4© 90 © No.l....(gold)* 8J © 111 924 cassia and cloves, 20; Pepper, (gold) Pimento, Jamaica, (gold) Cloves..,.. (gold) pepper and 221 2’#© 19;@ PH 264 iff © 9u Fruit. Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almond?, Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 14, Filbertoand Walnuts, 3 cents $ lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits,25 Duty: Stocks boxes 71.122 do Clayed,... B*i badots...... Spices. Duty private sale. imports of molasses at all the ports for the week have been 1,946 hhds., against 2,035 last week, aud the stock od hand at New York is 8,128 hhds., against 8,619 last week. The details are as follows : Cuba and Porto Rico at Tava. mats and bases Native gold 12#© 18$ gold 18j© 16 22 573 but little to report in the of New Orleans molasses were addition. gold 14 © 144 175,373 MOLASSES. There ha9 been 65 © 70 75 © 80 Cuba,inf. to oom. 89,543 23.—Receipts, exports and stocks at Havana have been us follows ; Rec’d this /-Expts to U. S.—, week. Since Jan. 1. week. 25 @1 45 55 @1 8> 70 © 90 85 ©l 10 '!!> ©1 60 65 © 80 9" @105 25 ©1 55 brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on white clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 31 not over 20,4 ; on refined,5 ; and on Melado, 24 cents $ lb. above 15 a* 172,763 Havana, Nov. do Superior to fine... do Ex fine to finest ..1 Souc & Cong., Com. to fair •do Sup’rtoflne. do Ex £. to finest l Duty : on raw or 14,4G 1,3?6,020 489 396 578 $14,331 Juue tanzas 80 7,397 - 214 May Oolong, Common to fair.. or Brown 2,120,721 1,308,511 1,640,803 150,390 64,140,963 180,559.009 Sup’rtoflne. 90 @1 05 Ex f. to flnestl 10 ©l 20 Molasses* 116 30,730,231 © 90 8a© shi Sugar. domestic sugar ex Refined 7,682,305 March do do 00 @1 15 72,070 imported—» /—For’n re-expt’dRefined. Biown. 85 Unool. Japan, Com. to fair. lu $ cent ad valorem in do fair do ordinary ...... do fair to g.cargoes do of the current year. Refiucd. do Ex f. tofln’st do Rio, prime, duty paid ...gold 17)© 17# do good...^ gold 16 © 16# Porto Rico 440,877 imported and re-exported, and of Brown. /—Duty r aid—> — Coffee. .... .... 13,253 91,422 ✓—Domestic exnt'd-x /—For’gn lb. .... .... 69,497 44,916 27,-37 1,113 364.35 4 349,455 light nominal business in foreign dried fruits a Sup. to fine .1 do do do Ex. r. to finest. 1 H. 8k. &. Tw’kay,C, to fair. do Sun. to fine do reduced to hogsheads. compile fiotn the monthly reports of Director Delmar of the Bureau of Statistics the following table showing the amounts (in pounds) 1867. only & Imp., Com. to fairl unp. We January February , light trade demand for spices. a Ex fine to finest.. .1 85 ©l 5 > Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair ... 7i@I<5 do Super, to fine. .1 1*> @1 35 do Ex fine to finest 1 40 @i 70 99.030 1,495 60.095 ported in the first eight mouts $9,798 fair ... 90 @1 05 Superior to fine.... I 10 ©1 80 do do 17,903 15,219 8.572 9,492 do of foreign sugar 169 583 #30,265 Duty pa’d ♦hhds. 265.543 32.383 32,346 import 121.715 Hyson, Common to Includes barrels and tierces * 1,742,502 $40,929 but prices are steady. ^ ft); all other 42,903 .... .... 46.119,732 $9,584,356 the growth of countiies this 46,588 55,990 ....188,804 222,635 2,854 5.218 " 66.31)9 $45,912 28,033 17.560 Tea. Brazil, Manila Total bags. bags.&c .... do do do 17,515 Domestic fruits are quiet. anuex ruling quotations of goods in first hands : We follows : .... Portland 25.564 Duty: When imported direct in American or equalized vessels from the plaoe of its growth or production; also, side the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents 16 4C3 boxes. *hhds. ♦hhds. 1866 Imports since Jan. 1 4',352 673,046 14,858 29 Other Same date 141,500 8,788,868 2,536,758 only There has been Other hhds. Cuba * boxes, hhds. , and imports since Jan. 1, are as At— 11.730,016 5 870,384 2-2.974 ... .... Duty: 25cents per Brazil, , 30,259 21,333 3,361 ,.. although stocks quite steadily liald. The sales are 332 Stocks Nov. 26, 228,5 3 887,898 161 this week, Portland Boston. 1,723 144.087 6,123 FRUITS. .5,800 Wilhelmiue... .6,500 Music ha9 also been below the average, Other hills, 96 4.995,541 12,305,538 5,000 Silvan ne “ New Or eans large and prices are 8,646 hhds. and 1,795 boxes. The imports for the week at all the po-ts have been 5.760 boxes against 6,503 last week, and 1,457 hhds. against 1.178 last week. The stock at New York is 35,131 boxes against 33.60u, and 17,956 hhds. against 19,053 last week. The details aie as follows : At— boxes, N. York 3,634 122,158 28,927 2,263 ... There has been Private bills 20f—20ftl. 6d.@ 52s. Gd. Soathern ports uomiaal not very are 123,600 SPICES. SUGAR. The trade in sugar 5:85,376 2,821 2.000 ... 4,0G0 5,000 Wavelet Sirene 9,755 die current year: 4,296,672 5,900 Aquineck 984 reduced to hogsheads. 6,973 .... Value London, bank bills 20|d. Exchange. 842,149 ... Quantity James Welsh.. .5,000 3,000 Freights. Northern ports 27s. 4S,750 i,m “ AND RSADY FOR PEA. Terpsichore 27,370 August Hampton Roads.Teesdale 5,500 Abbie Clifford..,5,5oO Mary A Rich.. ..7.0 0 New Orleans New York 81.551 ... Fidelia..... “ 127,571 ... March •July . 10 ... 4,709 “ 175 Fcbrtfary Astrea Baltimore 2,500 4419—Baltimore. ..R-dwiKg "“19— “ Lapwing “ 23—New York...Azelia 31,366 1,470 1,135 350 January .inne 41 49,347 18,364 7,049 , 1867. 9,900 44 3,237 ••• imported—, <—Foreign re-exp’d-, molasses Molasses, Melado, Jcc Molas’j}, Melado, lbs. gals. gals. lbs. exported. “ Agues 1,757 3,516 • Domestic ,—Foreign ■ “ 4,363 Contest ... 6.000 Look Out.. .3,924 razlleira.. .4,600 44 “ 4414—Baltimore “ 15—H. Ro ids “13“13— 38.442 64.437 imported and re-expo ted in the first eight months of Bags • 527 6.214 99 0^ bbl8. following,compiled from the monthly reports of the Hon. Alex Gui ling Star 4 36,975 20,975 N. hhds. 8,1-23 139,988 266,029 . April May ...••• New York .... “ UNITED THE FOR LOAD t MO STATES. 9—Sandyhook.. Henrietta. ..2,90 » 9—U. Ro\dUe'u Kanger4,200 10—New Yor .M irmion... 6.026 12— “ Lt PI ta ...4,650 Oct. Total, Delmar, Director of the Bureau of Statistics, shows the quantity of do¬ mestic molasses exported, and of foreign molasses and melado, (fee, Baled for the United States since our last; following vessels have 44 44 .—P. Rico.- -y~0 th. Fo’gn—, ♦hhds. ♦hhds. 943 930 51,697 46,120 18,992 Includes barrels and tierces of inferior and ordinary The 44 Total Import.. full values, about —total, 179,000 bags. 44 44 Baltimore 44 New Orleai s 44 44 <<- 44 Philadelphia 44 United States, which consequently have maintained their whilst the lower ones have gradually declined, on the whole, 400 44 Boston, * Rio de Jankiro, 25th October, 1867.—Bojo <fc Co.’s Market Report states : Oar Coffee Market exhibited a fair degree of activity during the month under review, eapecidly throughout the last fortnight. The demand, however, ex^ende 1 chiefly to good colory sort-* for the pockets reduced to bags. Inclndes * since January 1 are as follow*: Stocks, November 26, and imports 11.562 2.027 .... 23.562 44 Other, Toial Porto 44 323 .. .. Cuba. Rico. Other Philadelphia, .hhds. .. 69 Baltimore 520 At— .... Portland Boston 44 2,000 2,0.0 13,662 . At Bost. York, import Stock, Import. 23,810 bags* 46,104 3,427 Java, 9,110 3,700 Ceylon llj-442 .... Singapore, “ *20,962 44 Maracaibo, 44 55.301 14,975 44 454 Laguayra 44 82.590 101,375 23,770 .. Porto New Cuba. Rico. Other.Orl’na At— 283 204 N. York hhds 844 OTHER SORTS. OF BIO COFFKK. $ cent Raisins, Currants, ad val. Raisins,Seedless..$ 4cask 9 25 @9 60 do Layer box .... @4 10 do Bunch © Currants $ lb 12)©... 32 © Citron, Leghorn Prunes, Turkish Dates Almonds, Languedoc Provence do do do Sardines do Sicily, Soft Shell Shelled $ box ht. box Sardines . # qr. hox $ lb Pigs, Smyrna Brazil Nuts. Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, 17 © 171 Pearl Sago 9© 10 Tapioca 3- ©...t. Macaroni, Italian L)RikU Fruit— 28 © 2< Apples 21 © 22 Blackberries 86 © 37 © 804© 81 .. pi/VI WVU Raspberries JAWW © $ lb •• 16 © £0 9 © 94 114© 1H 11 © W © •- © •••••••■*••• Par<.d Peache* 184© - *1 64© lty 11 © B4 © -* 83 @ ** THE CHRONICLE. November 30, 1867.] maker 16-17, Everett 12, Massabesic 6-8 22*, Boston 13*-14*, THE DRY GOODS TRADE. J The rid ay, P. M„ November 29, 1867. been moderately active during the entire week* The occurence of Thanksgiving has interrupted business dur¬ ing the closing days ot the week, while there is a growing im¬ pression that with lower cotton and a small accumulation of goods there will be some further reduction soon. In some goods have prices ot goods have been guaranteed to the first of month, and holders of goods are consequently holding instances, the Prints have been sold in this market during the week at 12 J- cents, but resold in Western cities at 12£ cents at re¬ tail in many instances. Tuere are numerous reports from the South that the lower price for cotton will prevent large amounts from coming forward, and that planters are already beginning to hold for a rise. The export demand is less than last week. The exports of dry goods for the past week and since January 1, 1867, and the total for the same time in 1S6G and 1860 steady. are following table shown in the : PROM NEW TORK.- , Domestics.D, Goods, pkgs. Vah packages. Exports to 1 840 Smyrna Brazil 9,771 3,000 105 16 7 3 Honolulu Fayal Grand Cayman British Provinces.. We annex a 811 $44,149 11,98*1,551,960 101 5,394 $17,128 1,192,332 in only moderate demand at unchanged rates. Park 18, Lanark 9x2 29 inch 13, Lanark Fur 13, Union 50 4x2 25, do 50 2x2 25, do 20 4x2 22*, do 20 2x2 22*. Kennebeck 22*, Star No. 600 11, do No 800 2x2 17, do No 900 4x2 20, Mintrs and Mech 21. Denims are rather more active, and prices are Haymaker 28 steady. Amoskeag 27 *, inch 16, do brown 16, York' 28 inch 25, Boston Manufacturing Co. 29 inch 13*, Union 16, Monitor 13, Manchester Co 17, Columbian XXX 28, do blue 27*, Arlington 17) Otis AXA 26*. do BB 24, Mount Vernon 24, Pawnee 12*, Northfield i2*. Webster 10,, Brown Drills are less active both for export and home trade. Winthrop 13*, A moskeag 16, Laconia 16*, Pepperell 16*. do fine jean 16. Stark A 16, Massabesic 14*, Woodward duck bag 21, Natioual bags 31, Stark A do 90, Liberty do 81. Print Cloths are firm at 16i@16| cents for 64x64, square cloth. Prints are fairly active,-and prices have been steadily held during the week, but with s^me accumulations there American rates. are indications of lower 12*. Amoskeag dark 11*, do purple 12*, do shirting 11*, (Jo palm leaf 12*, Merrimac D 13*. do purple 13*, do W dark 15, do purple 15, do pink 15. Sprague’s 12*, do purple 13, do shirting 13*, do pink 13, do turkey red 12*, do blue check 12*, do solid 12, do indigo blue 12*, do Swiss ruby 12*, Loudon Mourning 12, Simpson Mourning 12, Amoskeag Mourning 11. Dunnell’s 12*, Allen pink 12*, Arnolds 11, Gloucester 12*, Wamsutta 9*, Pacific 12*, Cocheco 13*, Lowell 10*, Hamilton Purple 12*, Victory 10*, Home 9, Empire State 7, Lancaster 15-17*, Atlantic 7*. Ginghams are only moderately active at nominal rates. Lancaster 16 cents, Hartford 12, Hampden 12, Caledonia 12*. Glasgow 15, Clyde H*. Berkshire 14, German 14, Roanoke 11*, Hadley 12*, Manchester 23, Stillwater do 18, Granite State do 20, 84 191 84 7,640 256 4,267 83,620 8,707 81,-106 are Canton Flannels are more active for prime grades. Ellerton N biown 27, do O do 23, do P do 21, do S do 18, do T do 16*, Laconia do 19, Slaterville do 15*, Hamilton do 20, Naumkeag do 18, Nashua A 20, Tremonts 17, Ellerton N Blea 29, do O do 27*, do P do 150 . Cheoks Red Mills 15 cents. 1,105 Mexico Total this week. Since Jan. 1 Same time 1866... “ “ 1860... cases. 215 • • • • Granada.. pkgs. > DryGoode 8,437 Hayti New PROM BOSTON Domestics. $150 43,999 Liverpool• British W. Indies Cuba Val? American 18-14, Eagle 12*-13*, Hamilton 22*, Jewett City 13*-14*, Sheridan G 18*. trade has continued steady, and domestic dry goods 695 Naumkeag do 21. Corset Jeans are steady. Androscoggin 11, Bates colored 11, do bleached 11, Naumkeag 13*, Pepperell 15, Naumkeag satteen 17*, Laconia 13*, Amoskeag 13.), Newmarket 12, Indian Orchard 11*, Ward 16. Cambrics and Silesias are rather ’quiet, but prices show but little decided variation. Washington glazed cambrics sell at 9*c, Victory H few particulars of leading articles of domestic 8*, do manufacture, our prices quoted being those of the leading jobbers: A 9, Superior 7, Pequot 9*, Waverly 11, Wauregan 9*, and S. cambrics 82 inch at 11*, do high colors 12*, White Rock 11, Masonville 11*, Warren 12* and Lonsdale Silesias 28 inch at 20, Victory J 14, Indian Orchard 16, Ward 16. Muslin Delaines attract less attention than last week. Lowell IT, Hamilton Co. 17, Manchester 16, Pacific dark 16, Pekin 28, Armures dark 17, Pacific Merinos A 30, Mourning 17, Spragues 14, Skirt¬ S. & Sons paper Bbown Sheetings and Shirtings have been moderately active, and prices show but little change. Standards are eold at 14*@15* cents. Atlantic N 8-4 8*, Massachusetts C do 9, Lawrence H do 10, Indian Orchard L do 9, Commonwealth O do 7, Knox E do 9, Union ings 30, Alpacas 28. Flannels and Linseys are quite active at steady rates. do 10, Pepperell N do 10*, Indian Head do 12, Atlantic V 7-8 Belknap 12*, Atlantic E do 11*, Pacific E do 11*, Tremont E do 10. Bed¬ shirting flainels sells at 42*, Washington do 50, Rob Roy rolled 6-4 70 ford R do 8*, Boott O do 11, Indian Orchard W do 10, Massa¬ Rob Roy 3-4 35, Cocheco black and white check 44, Franklin shirting chusetts E do 10*, Lawrence G do 1H, Pepperell O do 11*, Indian 42*, Caledonia shirting 35, Pequa, douole fold 42*, Bay State Opera Head 4-4 15, Appleton A do 14, Wachusetts do 14, Pacific extra do 50, Gilbert's do 60, Fianklin do 57. 15, do H do 14, do L do 12*, Atlantic A do 15*, do H do 14*, Cottonades are quiet aud nominal. New York Mills d * t 52*r do L do 12, Lawrence E do 12*. do O do 14*, do F do 12*, Farmer’s and Mechanics’ 40, Pemberton d <fc t 40, Great Western 33, Stark A do 14, Amoskeag A do 14*, do B do 14, Medford do 13*, Plow, Loom <4; Anv. 37*, Uncle Sam 40, Farmars’ Union A 87*, Per¬ Kennebeck do 9, Roxbury do 13*, Indian Orchard BB do 10*, Nashua sian Plaid 36. D do 11*, Pepperell E do 13*, Great Falls M do 12*, do S lo 10*, American Linen continues steady and fairly active. Dwight W do 12*, Standard do 11, Shawmut. E do 11*, Pepperell It Foreign Goods are less active, and there is less willingne99 to ex¬ do 12*, Laconia E do 11*, do B do 12*, do O 9-8 12*, Pequot do 17*, Po tend credits. Cash purchases are ac very low rates. casset do 13*, Saranac Edo 18, Indian Orchard A 40 inch 13*, do O 37 inch 11*, Nashua 5-4 22*, Indian Head do 22*, Utica do 27*, do 7-4 32*, Pepperell 9-4 35, Pepperell 10-4 40, Utica do 60, do 11-4 55 IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are quiet at the close. Prices The importations of dry goods at this port for the week are steady. eudiug Nov. Mechanics 3 4 7*, Globe do 8, Kingston do J*, Boott It do 9, 28, 1867, and the corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866, have been as Globe A 7-8 8*. Washington do 9, Strafford S do 10, Putnam B do 9*, Eii. Harris do 10*, Great Falls M do 11*, do S do 10*, do A do 12*, follows : do J do 12*, Lyman Cambric do 15*, Strafford M do 11, Lawrence ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK ENDING NOV. 28, 1867. L do 12, Hill’s Semp Idem do 14, James 31 inch 14,„ Bartlett 31 do 1865.— r 1867. ^ 1SG6.——> 11*, Greene G 4 4 11, Putnam A do 11, Newmarket C do 18*, Great Falls Value. Value. Pkgs. Pkgs. Pkgs. Value K do 12*, Burtlettsdd 14*, James Steam do 14, Indian River XX do 11*, Manufactures of wool... 1,244 $488,435 216 297 $83,419 $105,586do 191 cotton.. 1.0 i 6 324,492 2:38 64,510 70,793 Attawaugan XX do 12*, Hope do 12*, Tip Top do 16, Blackstoue do do silk..". 112 2->3 250,295 265 175*546 117,076 14, Amoskeag Ado 16, Boot B do 14. Forestdale do 16, Masonville 146 do flax.... 1,817 463 272,522 93,0o6 35,404 do 17, Androscoggin Ldo 18, Lonsdale do 17, Bates XX do 20 Lyman J Miscellaneous dry gooas. 496 135 125,619 2:2 71,742 78,706 do 17*. Wamsutta H do 22* do O do 22*, Mystic Lake do 20, Atlantic Total 800 1,510 4,806 $1,461,363 $3<2,151 Cambric do 25, Lonsdale Cambric do 25, New York Mills do 27*, Hill $523,637 do 16*, Dwight 9 8 22, Wamsutta do 26*, Amoskeag 42 inch 16*, WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN INTO THE MARKET DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Waltham do 16*, Chickopee 44 in. 20, Naumkeag W 5-4 20, Boot W do Manutactures of wool... 126 236 293 $49,292 $93,243 $117,592 17*, Nashua do 22*, Bates do 20, Wamsutta do 30, Utica do 27*, Wal¬ do 101 cotton.. 79 19.933 129 30,232 32,6 0 tham 6-4 25. Mutlawamkeag do 25, Pepperell do 26, Allendale do 62 do silk.... 37 89.246 36 71,135 85,215 24, Utica do 32*, Waltham 8-4 82*, Pepperell do 37*, Mattawamkeag do tlax 233 Iv6 213 83,833 61,861 54,739 253 8,98-5 9-4 40, Pepperell do 42*, Utica do 60, Waltham do 40, Phoenix 10-4 Miscellaneous dry goods. 1,34.7 15,995 31 20,913 35, Monadnock do 37*, Bates do 42*, Waltham do 47*. Allendale do Total 399 924 $151,339 1,999 $272,466 $261,109 45, Pepperell do 46*, Utica do 55, Pepperell 11-4 66. 800 Add ent’d forcousumpt’n4,S06 1,46:,363 372,151 1,540 523,637 Ticks are less active, but steady. Amoskeag A C* A 32 inch 40, 2,799 $644,617 2,464 $784,746 do A 32 inch 28, do B 32 inch 25, do D 80 inch 19, do C 30 inch Totalth’wnnpon mak’t. 5,205 $1,612,702 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. * .... ' 22, Brunswick 15, Blackstone River 16, Hamilton 26, Somerset 13*, Thorndike 17, Pearl River 85, Housewife ex. 28, do AAA 25, do AA 22, Pittsfield 9*. Housewife A 19, York 32 inch 32*. do 30 inch 25, Cordis A A A 32 inch 27*, do 4-4 27*, Everett 27*. do A 32 inch 27*, Boston A A 24, Lehigh 15, Albany 9. Stripes twton AA Valley B 13*, Swift River 16* Browns AAA rather nominal at this time. Amoskeag 22-23*, Whit, 22*, do 3-8 20, do BB 17, do 0 14, Pittsfield 8 8 9*, Hay¬ are Manufactures of wool... 319 do cotton.. 595 do silk 100 do flax .4S6 Miscellaneous dry goods. 5 425 88 133 622 79 $128,535 380,271 108,420 112,628 .... ' 2.807 1 consumpt’n4,80G $532,661 1,461,363 Total entered at the port 6,311 $1,994,024 2,147 1,505 $78,053 673 29,144 110,887 179,939 lo,641 1,540 $180,124 583,637 2,118 $703,76* 32,078 21,445 46,922 1,626 , vl 50 w* r800 Total Add ent’d for £04 173 26 166 9 $194,077 $530,688 872,151 $903,839 > 696 THE CHRONICLE Council Bluffs Utailtoag Jttonitor. Railroad Earnings (weekly).—Iu the following table we com¬ the reported weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of the leading pare railroads iu 1866 and 1867 : Week. Miles of Railroads. Atlantic & Gt. Western.3d. 44 “ . 44 “ 3d, “ “ “ 1 1st,Nov. f 2d, “ ) 507 81,188 383.973 “ 44 “ Detroit and Milwaukee.4tb, Oct. 44 44 44 “ 1 st, 2d, 44 8d 44 Nov 44 Marietta and Cincinnati 3d, 44 44 44 44 Michigan Central 44 44 " 44 1st, Noy. ! 44 “ - 4 2d, 3d, St. Louis, Alton & T. H. “ 44 “ “ “ 44 “ Oct.) 4th, “ I 1866. (466 m.) (507 m.) $504,992 408,864 t 614,849 475,723 888,480 394,533 1865. 85,614 87,414 188,411 101,693 104,883 97,135 823 98 190 98 196 42 189 85 359 194 200 185 56 07 210 50.911 47,738 242 43 227 32 241 01 239 18 247 216 200 180 07 30 27 22 177 60,223 33,690 20,656 5\S86 45,423 42,056 37,847 41,0:18 21,571 18.911 19,181 16,833 19,650 190 116 106 95 231 85 12187 108 14 111 02 524 44 f 50,613 J Jan..., .Feb.... .inarch April.. 400,116. July... 475,257. .Aug... 483,857 .Sept... Bailway 477,528. .Oct — . 011,735 331,124 538,813 425,120 $906,759 ...Jan 917,639. ..Feb.. 1,637,59251,416,001 ([418,575 * '486,808 418,024 384,684 838,858 ..Nov.. ..Dec... 884,401 - . 304,232. .June. 312,879. ..July.. 428,762. ..Aug*. 487,867. ...Sep.. 539,435. ...Oct... /! 851,799 852,218 — .Nov.. ..Dec.. 4,826,722 4,650,828 - .Year. — . Fittsb.. Ft. W. , ft Chic lgO.-> 1865. 1866. 1690,144 (468 m.) J468 m.) $559,982 678,504 480,986 857,583 783,866 687,186 646,995 684,523 712,495 795,938 868,500 712,869 660,968 662,163 699,806 682,510 633,667 652,378 648,201 654,926 757,441 479,935 556,222 1867. 307,919 236,824 , (708 in.) $571,536 528,972 616,665 616,608 460,673 617,682 678,403 8* 7X 7)4 7* seen 3,408,759 2,906,859 1863 £2,817,877 446,440 408,215 . 1864 1865 1866 Value. 400,765 . . 15 38 3,550,663 747,469 739,736 641,589 643,887 518,088 on account —Fifteen hundred laborers $121,776 84,897 72,135 108,082 267,488 262,172 170,795 116,224 150,989 245,701 244,854 98,787 106,689 146,943 224,*838 217,159 170,555 228,020 810,594 226,840 110,664 1,985,713 1,943,900 L., Alton ft T. 1866. (210 m.) (210 m.) $170,078 153,903 202,771 169,299 177,625 173,722 $178,119 155,893 218,236 216,783 222,924 208,098 Dec...* 162,694 ..May.. July*. Aug*.. [162,570 ~Yt*r~ M40,744 3,851,5* 1866. .... . — Year.,. : ..Year., 1865. 1866. (234 m.) $98,181 ..Feb... ..Mar.. 86,528 95,905 .April.. •May... 106,269 203,018 287,562 251,906 241,870 ^300,841 .June * ..July... ..Aug... 277,836. ...Sep... ...Oct.... S 395,579 .Nov.* .Dec.** §2171,125 — - Year.. - *. Haute.-* £346,717 2,535,001 1865/ (210 m.) $149,658.. .Jan... 149.342.. .Feb... 174.152.. Mar.., 188.162.. April. 171,736.. .May... 156,065 .June. 172,933 July.. 220,788 .Aug.. 219,160. .Sept.. 230,340. .Oct.... . (242 m.) $144,084 189,171 156,753 144,001 138 738 $226,059 194,167 256,407 270,300 316,433 1865. 1867. (521 m.) $237,674 ...Jan... 200,793 ...Feb... 270,630 ..Mar... 317,062 April.. 829,078 ..May... . 304,810 ..June.. 309,591 364,728 882,996 406,766 July.. ..Aug... ..Sept... [247,028 */*#«■*, 8,936,678 9,004,975 f361,610 „ 283,66 375,210 862,783 883,962 284,977 318,021 898,993 464,778 506,295 - - Mississippi 1866. 1867. - (340 m.) $242,7% 219,067 279,641 284,729 282,989 240,185 284,688 822,521 365,371 379.367 - Western Union. 825 691 .Nov:,. .Dee... $804,095 3,793,005 3,880,583 304,917 396,248 849,117 486,065 854,880 264,741 -•375,534 * 186T. (285 m. 308,649 Year. — 194,524 * - ~~ 337,158 343,736 365,196 385,082 824,986 859,645 429,166 493,649 414,604 - 1,101,600. ...Oct.. f 271,798 £374,534 2379,981 .. - ' 265,796 ..Nor.. .Dec..., . 276,416 ^403,658. ...Sep.. 1866. (521 m.) 517,70! 558,20 (285 m.) $282,438 — . 2,538,800 404,60 (840 m.) (340 m.) $259,223 $267,541 289,189 246,109 813,914 326,236 271,527 277,428 290,916 283,130 804,463 253,924 247,262 849,286 844,700 305,454 278,701 850,348 310,762 872,618 412,553 302,425 284,319 281,613 r-Toledo. Wab. ft Western.— 1867. . 1865. . 328,539 261,48 274,80 1866. —Ohio ft 123,404 180,000. .Feb. 123,957 134,900. ..Mar.. 121,533 192,548. .April. 245,598 230,497. ..May.. 244,376 ^221,690. .June. 208,736 5193,000. ..July. 188,815 $205,436. ..Aug.. 129,287 251,911 4,504,546 4,260,125 (370 m.) $146,800. .Jan.. 416,859 224,62 272$ 280 28: 0345,027 S 260,268 ..Year.* 1867. (275 m.) $131,707 $292,04' ‘Q'400.941 S 428,474 ...Nov,. ...Dec.. .. — 1867. (410m. 806,693 238,926 317,977 (285 w.) $3W,i 279,13 344,228 837,240 401,456 865,663 329,105 418,601 460,661 490,693 447,669 328,869 84,652. ..Mar.. 72,768. .April. 90,526. ..May.. 96,535. .June. K'6,594. ..July. 114,716. ..Aug.. 121,217 Sep.. 142,823.. ..Oct.. — 821,818 244,121 806,231 389,489 307,523 270,073 201,779 1865. 78,976.. .Feb.. — 1866. Michigan Central. 1867. (251 m.) $94,136.. .Jan.. 1,224,058 1,201,239 over the 3,313,514 3,466,922 .—Milwaukee & St. Paul-* <235 m.) $143,000. ..Jan... - 1866. (251 m.) (251 m.) $96,672 $90,411 87,791 85,447 93,763 84,857 78,607 81,181 76,248 96,388 107,525 103,373 104,608 98,043 115,184 106,921 126,252 104,866 116,495 113,604 116,146 112,952 105,767 123,802 the the Iron Mountain and 1865. .. 9,424,450 Adrian, ■(228m.) (228m.) $305,654 $241,395 246,331 183,385 289,403 257,230 196,580 209,099 234,612 277,505 .. 7,976,491 anniversary of r^-Chic*, Bock Is. and Pacific - 1867. ... 1865. 86,000. 72,000. 87,610. 119,104. 114,579. 130,000. 113,404. iu opera¬ RAILROADS. . .Nov... .Dec... 177,864 .April.. PRINCIPAL on .. 1867. 74,283 70,740 OF -Marietta and Cincinnati.—* 1866. now Mississippi County, Mo. (860 m.) (1,032 m.)(l,145 m.) $541,005 $590,767 $696,147 .Jan... 482,164 459,007 574,664 Feb... 499,296 613,974 765,398 ..Mar... 468,358 624,174 774,280 April.. 585,623 880,993 895,712 ...May... 747,942 925,983 898,357 ..June... 702,692 808,524 880,324.. .July 767,508 797,476 1,03',824 .Aug... 946,707 1,000,086 1,461,234 Sep... 932,683 1,200,216 1,508,883 ....Oct..* 754,671 1,010,892 — ..Nov... 547,842 712,369 — ...Dec... ..Year.. _ $98,183 ■ engaged -Chicago* Northwestern^ - (235 m.) are Belmont Railroad within the limits of 554,201. ..Feb. 417,352. ..Mar... 420,007. April.. 477,607. .May.-. 496,616. June.. 497,521. .July.. 684,377., .Aug... 705,259 ..Sep... 761,499. ..Oet.... (235 m.) the 31st was passage of the first locomotive from Toledo to old Erie and Kalamazoo Railroad. $660,438. 588,219 504,066 8* that the value of the railroad iron exported in Miscellaneous.—November 2 1867. 605,266 506,465 411,605 569,250 567,679 480,626 578,253 571,348 661,971 3* 4,166i419 Philadelphia to Pittsburg. South Side (L. I.) Railroad.—Is now open from Jamaica to Babylon, 27£ miles. The section between Jamaica and Brooklyn is expected to be completed during the coming winter. (708 m.) $603,053 i* 3,805^080 tion from 1865. — £7 3,278,384 434,431 498,595 . . Aver through the decade of the Indian guaranteed railroads, and in the last year they were still further augmented by the demand on American account. The average price per ton in the meanwhile has ranged from £7 to £8 15s. by the demand 283,951.. April. 338,691... May.. 343,678.. June. 1866. Nov.... c 3,565,224 4,124,208 Tons. 1862 was larger than in any former year; the quantity, however below the mark of 1859, but still larger than in any other year of the series. The exports were increased all 238,363...Mar., (708 m.) 192,138 167,801 168,699 167,099 166,015 222,953 198,884 244,834 212,226 685,067 Sept.*. 765,568. .Oct.... —2' $,mm 7,407,818 .Jan... .Feb... ..Mar... 506,586. .June.. 602,069 £8^ was (280 rn.) $240,238...Jan.. 142,947 ..Feb.. 8,840,091 3,695,153 1865. 534,733 Aver. 186G 422,164. ...Sep.. 430,108.. .Oct... — ...Nov.. ...Dec.. r-St. (468 m.) $560,115. 522,821. 678,349. 575,287. 578,242. Value. £4,000,615 ,It will be 322,638 360,323 823,030 271,246 1865. 624,760 495,072 ; 1859 I860 1561 401,280 357,956 . 1867. (524 m.) $305,857, fan. 811,088. .Feb.. 379,761 Mar.. 391,168- April. 358,601. ..May.. 429,177 496,655 429,548 * Tons. 457,660 433,250 428,927 453,445 377,565 1857 1853 * - ‘ - 1867. ..Year.. 7,181,208 6,546,741 * — 6,501,063 14,596,413 * -Mil. and Prairie du Chien.-* Mich. So. ft N. Indiana.-^ 1866. is 387,269 1865. . (524 m.) $312,846 277,234 412,715 413,970 quantity and value of railroad exported from English port9 in the ten years euding with I860 officially stated to have been as follows: 856,142..July. 421,484... Aug.. 1867. (775 in.) 1,580,317^1,476,244 1,498,716. ..Oct... 1865. English Railroad Iron.—The iron 409,250 . (524 m.) $363,996 (866,361 1-413,974 £65,180 4 661,489 887,095 | $01,613 connection with Omaha and the Union Pacific Railroad. —Illinois Central, l,524,917g: 1,041,115 additional twelve miles to an Hamburg, Iowa, wag to be completed. The Missouri division is also in rapid progress, and it is thought that by the 4th of July next St. Joseph will be in full EARNINGS 1866. (280 in.) (280 m.) $280,503 $226,152 275,282 222,241 299,063 290,111 258,480 269,249 322,277 329,851 355,270 871,543 321,697 335,985 .Nov... .Dec.... . — . 987,936 1,070,917 1,139,528. ..Mar.. 1,153,441 1,217,143. .April. 1,101,632 1,122,140. ..May 262,370 1,343,636 1,118,731. .June.. 1,274,558 1,208,244 1,071,812 .July.. 1 418,742 1,295,400 1,239,024. ..Aug 1,485,285 1,416,101 1,444,745 ..Sep... 1 1 1 1 1 MONTHLY 1865. (507 m.) $361,137. 377,852. 438,046 443,029 34 70 74 39 Chicago and Alton. , 462,674 528,618 526,959 541,491 497,250 368,581 1866. 43 08 68 169,776 190,076 102,927 99,482 94,046 459,370 .May... 380,796. June.. (798 rn.) $1,070,890$1,185,746 03 59 39 St. Joseph Railroad —The Omaha Re- and Pennsylvania.—The second track of this line is 451,477 474,441 (T98 m.) 339 79 805 05 306 71 53 340 85 329 98 300 40 3,548,359 5,476,276 3,050,340. .Year.. Erie 135 195 121 120 67 157 40 89 90 103 94 96,842 86,938 1867. 1865. 343,408 999,864 429,669 472,483 696,583 640,637 587,121 101 &5 97/42 -Atlantic & Great Western.-* f827,269 1899,870 80 98 83 89 285 COMPARATIVE $289,400 257 222 225 206 34,093 49,054 30,391 34,29 i J 4th, 9 ds.) 1st, Nov. 1 2d, 44 f 3d, “ J 44 “ 72 56 99 02 25,439 39,508 23,566 26,100 3d, 2d, 44 “ f 44 44 1st, Nov. Western Union 44 240 212 211 191 251 Oct.) 53 820 2® 297 5® 224 8* 271 22 48,467 42,909 394 262 244 256 vember 56 232 91 254 63 202 89 194 8C 42,457 39,009 4th, 9ds.) Michigan Southern •* 45,256 06 70 59 36 29 40 372 238 244 218 39,962 3*9,854 35.911 188 J 1st, Nov. i 2d, 44 | 3d, “ J 44 44 83,185 79,864 { 401 370 320 360 1367, publican says that the Council Bluffs and St. Joseph Railroad is now running to Nebraska City; and that before the close of No¬ 4th, Oct. 1 44 44 . j 4th, 44 1st, Nov. I 2d, 44 J 44 44 *i 104,400 410 85015 324 28 276 16 300 07 228,95 131,300 122,000 92,200 111,200 95,495 “ 44 272 51 1867. 241 09 243 75 205 97 242 69 451,744 300,021280,029 293,529 246,343 252,416 225,355 “ p. m 112,361 103,712 89,753 100,949 93,041 44 1866. 288 37 266 91 122,232 123,581 104,431 122,890 90,800 77,325 230 44 44 1667. 133,166 Chclago and N. West’n.4th,9ds. ) T‘ 1,145 1st,Nov. 44 (in’66-1 2d, “ “ 1,032.) 3d, “ l Chic., R. I. and Pacific, ,4th, Oct. ) 1st, Nov. [ 2d, 44 f 3d, “ J earn’gs—, r-Earn’gs 146,104 135,326 116,078 Oct.) 4th, “ “ : lst,Noy 2d, “ J Chicago and Alton T‘ “ Oct 4th,7 ds “ “ Gross 1860. road. [November 23, ** ..Oct.... ..Nov,. . Dee.. -Year,* - * 1867. 1866. (167 m.) (177 m) (177 m.) $43,716 45,102 $39,679 37,265 36,006 27.666 82,878 38,892 89,299 33,972 43,338 40,710 63.862 86,913 57,85* 60,553 82,147 102,686 68,180 50.862 75,677 92,715 61,770 $7,880 85,508 60,698 84,462 100,308 75,248 54,478 089,388 814,001 4 58,269 ?3,«5 126, 119,667 — THE CHRONICLE. November 30,1867.] 697 RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. gntncrlbers will confer a arrest favor by clrlttff ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In onr Tables. uivmenu. tue N. ik. —The ngure* after the r ,|. Dividend i'ue jtfurus alter and Stock FRIDAY. vol. name refer to FRIDAY. the vol. and Stock name, refer to the out¬ Last paid. Last paid out¬ of Chronicle containing page of Chronicle containing Iasi report. * means il leased. standing. Date. rate Bid. Ask Periods. Qtreport. * means “leased standing. Periods. Date, rate Bid. Ask. — Railroad. A July July ’67 2 4 5 3 <v Oct Oct. ’67 1,650,000 April A Oct Ocr. ’67 16,151,962 April and Ohio... ]° Branch*...... I K Ang. Bellefontaine Line JJJ 4,42 \00ft Feb. A Aug Oct. ’67 ’67 Quarterly. Berkshire* •••••.•• l’,, 60(>,(KKi -June A Dec Jnne ’67 250,OOn Blosshnn; and Oormu" 5JJ 11,877,000 Boston, fiartford and Erie... .100 Boston and t,owell... - • • • - - • -JW 1,830,000) Jan. A July July ’67 Boston and Maine, 3, p. 35o.. .10t 4,076,974 Jan. A July July ’67 Baltimore Washington Boston ana Boston and 3,360,000 Ian. A July 4,500,000 Jan. A July 2,100,000 Jan. A July 1,000,00ft1 Feb. A Aug 850,000 June A Dec 2,300,000 Feb. A Aug 100 Providence 100 1 Worcester Broadway A 7th Avenue Boriin^ton A "1 ssoiiri p. 100 River. namden and 4, July July July Aug. 115 do North „ 2% 4 Carolina 14 i25 5 ’67 5 ’67 5 147 ’07 5 ’67 3* June’67 — 5 preferred Cedar Rapids A Missouri RivJOO Central Georgia A Bank’g Co.lOo 4.666.800 Tnne A Dec jnne ’67 5 Central of New Jersey 100 13,000,(KM) Quarterly. Ct. ’67 2% do 50 - preferred >o 2,600.00400, OK' | April. 970.000 Central Park, E. A N. River. .100 Chicago and Alton, 4, p. 339.. 100 3,836,5001 Mar A Sep. do preferred.. IOC 2,425,‘KX) Mar A Sep. Chic.Bur. and Quincy, 3, p 361.10 12,500,000 Mar. A Sep. Chicago aud Great Eastern... 100 4,390,000 Chicago, Iowa A Nebraska*.. .100 1,0)0,0001 Jan. A July Chicago and Milwaukee* —100 2,227,000 Chicago and Northwestern .. .100 13,232,496 Apr." ’67 Cincin.,Richra’d A Chicago...100 Oct. ’61 2* ’67 Sep. ’67 5 5 Sep. b>7 25 "ep. do do scrip. 100 Detroit and Milwaukee 100 do do pref. ..100 Dry Dock, E. B’ way A Bat... 100 Dnbnqne and Sioux City 100 do do pref. ..100 100 Eastern, (Mass) Bast Tennessee A Georgia.. .100 Bast Tennessee A Virginia . 100 Mghth avenue 100 Btmira and Williamsport*.. 50 do do pref. 60 Erie, 4, p.599 100 do preferred 100 100 Fitchburg Georgia 100 Hanmbal and St. Joseph 100 do do pref. 1001 . .. • 1,786,8001 Jan. A July 1.500,000 viay A Nov 350,000 Jan. A July 1,514,300 Jan. A July 1,650,000 Jan. A July 1,316,900 Apr. A Oct 2,38 %063 ct. ’67 5 5 406,132|Jan. A July July ’67 11,288,550 Jan. A July July ’67 43 50 100 50 50 Portland, Saco, A Portsm’th.100 )• 797,320 135 ... 5omei Watert. A Ogdensb’g..l00 h .0, . 3,068,400 June A Dec jnne ’67 4,518,900 Quarterly. j Aug. ’67 113 S5% 86 2.469,30? Feb. ’67 3,150,150 2,363,600 Jan. A JnlyjJuly ’67 3,077,000, Feb A Augj Aug. ’67 356,400: Apr, A Oct Oct. *67 20,226,6* )4i 3,353,18!) January. jan. ’67 4,848,306 Jan. A July July ’67 2,063,655 482,400 Feb. A Ang Aug. ’67 7,000.000 Quarterly. Oct. ’67 20,000.0UO May A Nov Nov. ’67 5,091,400 Jan. A July July ’67 22,742,867 J»n. A Jnly July *67 I,507,8^0 Apr. A Oct Oct. ’67 9,019,300 Jim. A Jnly July ’67 1,776,129 II,440,987 Quarterly. Oct’ *67 Feb. A Aug. Aug. ’67 1,500,000 June A Dec Jnne’67 1,750,000 Jan. A July July ’67 2,530,700 800,000 April A Oct Apr." ’67 500,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67 800,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67 65 26* 26* 73 4* 6 98* do 8' 61 5 5 96* 96* M* 133 138* 106* 106* ** 97* 97* 3 3 4 luo 2 2 2 2,385,500 Jan. A Jnly July ’67 50 pref.100 1,700,000 Annually. May ’67 St. Lonis, Jacksonv. A Chic.*lC0 1,469,429 Sandusky, and Cincinnati 50 2,989,090 393,0T3 May A Nov Nov. ’67 a do do pref. 60 Sandusky, Mansf. A Newark.100 900,236 Saratoga and Hudson River.. 100 1,020,000 Savannah A Charleston 83* 88% ff 01| 102 10< Schuylkill Valley* 60 Shamokin Val. APottsviile*! 50 Shore Line Railway 100 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) .100 South Carolina., 50 South Side (P. A L.) 4, p. 52i.’.100 70* South 1,000,000 A July July ’67 A Aug Aug. ’67 Jan. & Jnly Jan. ’67 Quarterly Nov. ’67 576,050 Jan. 869,450 Feb. 635,200 750,000 5,819,275| 2* 3 3 5 135 1,360,000 West.Georgia, 8, p. 816.100 2,203,400 Feb. A Ang Aug. ’67 Syracuse, Bingh’ton A N. Y..100 1,200,130 Terre Haute A Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,loOjJanfA July July ’67 Third Avenue (N. Y.). 100 1,170,000 Quarterly. 4 118* Toledo, Peoria, A Warsaw... .100 776,200' do do lstprei.100 1,651,314 do 2d pref.100 908,424 ?o> Toledo, Wabash A Western.. 100 5,700,000 d° do preferred.100 l,000,000|May A Nov Utica and Black River ,, * 114 100 100 Vermont aud Massachusetts. .100 Virginia Central, 3, p. 678 ..100 . 40 39 Nov. ’67 834,400 Jan. A Jnly July ’67 2,250,000 J one A Dec June’67 2,860,000 jan. A Jnly Jnly ’67 L12 3,353,679 Virgtnia and Tennessee ..100 2,94 ,791 do do pref.100 555,500 4 Western (Mass), 4, p. 247 .100 8,710,8001Jan. A Jnly Jnly ’67 Western (N. Carolina) '0 2* 100 1,SH0,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’64 Western Union (Wis. A Ill) 3v 2,687,237 Worcester and Nashua C 7’-* .*.* 76 1,141.000 Jan. A jnly Jnly ’67 79 78 7 Canal. 126 4 ; Chesapeake and Del. (5 p.183) 25 1,818,963 June A Dec June ’67 ! Chesapeake and Ohio 6 25 8,228,595 | Delaware Division 1,633,3501 Feb. A Aug Aug, ’67 6.’* Delaware and Hudson 100 10,000,000 Feb. A Aug Aug, ’6 190 Delaware & Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 2,521,300 Feb. & Aug A ng. ’67 Lehigh Coal and Navigation 50 6,968,146 May A Nov Nov. ’67 124 125 Monongaliela Navigation Co 60 728,100 Jan. A Jnly luly ’67 Morris (consolidated),4, p.631.100 1,025,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67 do preferred 3* 100 1,175,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 5 131* 132 jl Schuylkill Naviga. (consol,).. 50 1,908,207 Feb. A Aug Ang. ’67 'do 4 prefer.. 60 2,888,805 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’t>7 Susquehanna A Tide-Water. 50 2,052,08:3 Union, preferred 5(1 2,907,850 i* West Branch & Susquehanna. 50 4 l,100,00ol Jan. A Jnly Jan. ’65 Vermont and Canada* 2,141,970 1,902.000 295 99* 106 do T Mar. 17 1,983,170| March. 3,573,300 Jan. A July Jnly ’67 290 58*!! Rutland and Burlington .100 2,233,376 : St. Lonis, Alton, A Terre H... 100 2.300,000 67% 96% 1,500,000 1,673,952 76 83* m 1,200.0001, 135 95 12S fcO July ’67 Providence and Worcester... .100 Raritan and Delaware Bay 100 Rensselaer A Saratoga consol 100 Saratoga and Whitehall.... 100 Troy, Salem A Rutland .100 Richmond aud Dan.. 4, p.45*i.l00 2,000,000 Richmond A Petersb.,1,p.488.100 1,008,600 121 134’ 100 Portland A Kennebec (new). .100 32* 452.350 65 3* 4 4 • • • v 94* 95 56 55* 530* __ 1,000,000) Quarterly Ju'y’ 67 500,000 May A Nov 500,000 Jan. A Jnly 16,574,300 Feb. A Aug 8.536.900 January. 3,540,000 Jan. A July 4,156,000 Apr. A Oct. 1,900,000 do preferred. 100 andMiss.certif., 4,p. 831.100 do preferred.. 100 Colony and Newport 100 Penns}ivania Philadelphia and Erie* Phila. and Reading, 4, p. 89.. 50 Phila., Germant. A Norrist’n* 50 Phila., Wilming. A Baltimore. 50 Pittsbun: and Connellsville. 50 Pittsb.,Ft.W. A Chic.,4,p.471.100 July 67 8% July ’67 3 July ’67 4 Oct. ’67 100 Panama 2* Jnly ’67 50 Oswego and Syracuse 126 98 Nov.’67 100 * Old 6.000,000 Jan. A July 1,755.281 jan. A July;July ’67 85)8,950 155,000 May A Nov Ma.y ’67 100 4,000,000 Ohio X964 Oct Oct. ’67 j 26 Quarterly. 32>k 57* 87* 6,000,00) | Feb. A Aug Aug, 67 2,044,600 May A Nov Nov. ’67 5,000,000 Jan. A Jnly Jnly ’67 5,391,575 Sep. ’67 pref. Ogdensb. A L. Champ(5 p.J19)IOO July ’67 862,950 1,600,250 6,250,0001 April A 141 6 do do pref. .100 14,789,1251 Annually, Dec. ’66 Chicago, Rock Isl. A Pacific..100 9,100.000 April &5cf Uct. ’67 Cine., Ham. A Dayton(5 p.87)100 3.200.800 April A Oct Oct. ’6t Cincinnati and Zanesville 50 Cleveland, Columbus, A Cm.. 100 Cleveland A Mahoning* 50 Cleveland, Painesr. A Ashta.100 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 Cleveland and Toledo,3, p. 151 50 Columbus A Indianap. Cent.lOO Columbus and Xenia* 60 Concord 50 Concord and Portsmouth 100 Conn. A Passump. 3,p.216 pref.100 Connecticut River 100 Cumberland Valley 50 100 Dayton and Michigan Delaware*. 50 Delaware, Lacka., A Western 50 138" 119 * Central Ohio p. c., Orange and Alexandria 6,936,625 Feb A Aui Aug. 67| 522,351 60),000 721,926) Jan. A July Jnly ’67 3% ™ 1,150.000 50 2,200,0091 April A Oct Oct. *’67 *8% 42 do 8 North Migsonri North Pennsylvania Norwich and Worcester 3* Aug. ’67 15 5 699.100 Camden and Atlantic.... — - 50 do do preferred 50 Cape cod Amboy. Cata'vissa*... N. V. and New Haven (5 p.55)100 New York, Prov. A Boston.. .100 Ninth Avonne luo Northern of New Hampshire. 100 Northern Central, 4, p. 568.. 50 North Ea-tern (S. Car.) par and Susquehanna... .1(K» 1,675.139 Jan. 2,494,900 Atlantic A St Lawrence*.. .IK llbanv N >v.’67 July 67 F«b. ’6s Jan. ’67 July 67 Apr. ’67 , ... 5 145 4 116 6* _ .. 90 149 146 5,253,83f Hartford and New Haven. 10) 3,000,0001 Quarterly. Oct. ’67 Honsatonic preferred 1001 1,180,000 May A Nov Nov. ’67 60* Hudson River .100 13.937.400 April A Oct Ct. ’67 Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50 494,380 do do 89 pref. 50 190,750| Jan. A July July ’07 Illinois Central, 4, p. 311 36 100 23,386,450 Jan. A July July ’67 Indianajiolis, Cin. A Lafayette 50 1.689.900 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’67 44 Jetl'ersonv., Mad. A ludiaiiap.100 2,000,000 Jan. A July Jau. ’66 Joliet and Chicago* ioo 300,000 Quarterly Oct. ’67 Joliet and N. Indiana too 300,000 Jan. A Jiil July ’67 Lackawanna and Bloomsburg 50 1,335,000 Wyoming Valley to 72 50 800,000 Irregular. Sept.’6<: Lehigh Valley 50 10,734,100) Quarterly, Get. ’67 2% 102* 103 miscellaneous. Lexington and Frankfort 100 Coal.—American 514,646 May A Nov Nov. ’67 3 ^ 1,500,000 Mar. A Sep. Mar. ’67 3* 42* Little Miami Ashburton 50 3.572.400 June A Dec June ’67 4 50 2,500,000 Little Schuylkill* Bmier 50 ;;;;;; ? 50 2,646,100 Jan. A July Jnly ’67 2 500,0001Jun. A Dec. June ’67 Long Island 50 3,000,0)0 Quarterly. Ang. ’07 2 Consolidation mo 5,000,000 Louisville and Frankfort Central 50 1,109,594 Jan. A July Jnly ’67 3 !... 100 2,000,0001Jan. A July Jan. ’67 Louisville and Nashville !l00 5,500,000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 4 j Cumberland ...!.*>!! 100 5,000,000 26* 39 Louisville, New Alb. A Chic. .100 2,800,000 ‘ “ * ’ go 3,200,000 Quarterly. Ang. ’67 Pennsylvania and Western Macon 100 1,500,000 May A Nov May ’67 44 Spring Mountain. go 1,250,000 Jan. A Jnly Jan. ’67 Maine Central ( *100 1,600,860 Spruce Hill j, 1,000,000 Jan. A Jnlv Marietta A Cincinnati,1st pref 50 6,586,135 Mar. A 17 Wllkesbarrc i ’ ! 100 3,400,000 \pr. A Oci Sep Sep. ’66 3s. 16 * joo 1,250.0001 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’66 Wyoming Valley..!] do 2d Pref.. 50 4,051,7441 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’66 3s. Manchester anp Lawr ence 100 1.00o,000 May A Nov Nov. ’67 5 Brooklyn.... “ 25 2,000,000 Feb. A Aug Ang. ’6? Citizens (Brookl vn)...! ‘ 20 Mar. ’62 Memphis A Chariest., 3p. 487.100 5,312,720 1,200,000 Jan. A Jnl\ July ’67 Michig ia Central, 5, p. 151.. .100 7,502,8601Jan. A July Inly ’67 Harlem * * ’ * 50 109% lio* 166 170 644,000 Michigan Southern A N. Ind.,100 9,813,500 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’65 80 Jersey City A Hoboken! 20 80* 386,000 Jan- * Jnly July ’67 do do guar. 100 Manhattan 160* 787,7lM Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 g, 4,000,000 Jan. A.Jnlv July '87 Milwaukee A P. du Chien 40 100 Metropolitan ....!!., 100 2,800,000 *. do do 1st pref.100 8,204,296 February... Feb. ’67 93 New YoiiC 95 6n 1,000,000 May A Nov Nov. ’67 do do 3d pref 100 80 86 William burg * 60 841,400 February... Feb. ’67 750.0001Jan. A July July ’67 Milwaukee and St. Paul. 100 3,627,000 Jan. A July 42* 42% Impimiement. Canton 10o!(i<jipd) 4,500,000 45 45* do preferred ! ! 100 7,371,000 January. Jan. ’67 Boston \vater Power 62* 63* 100 4,000,000 17* 17* Tnly "’66 30 Mine Hill A Sohuylkill Haven 50 Jan. A July July ’67 114 3,775,600 Telegraph.— Western Union! 100 28,450,000 Jan. A Julv Ju y ’67 3 33* 84 Mississippi A Tenn. 4, p. 489.100 Transit.—Central America. ,.10o 825,399 17 Mobile and Ohio joq 3,588,300 Express.—Adams ..!!. 100 10,000,000 Quarterly. NoV* ’66 Vh 80 Montgomery and WestPolnt.100 1,644,104 American 77 ’500 9,000,0001 Quarterly. Nov. *66 77* Morris and Essex 50 3,500,000 Mar. A Sep Mar. ’67 3*« 40 60 Merchants’ Union (30 p’d) 10ft 20,000,000 Nashua and Lowell. ” jqq 720,009 May A Nov Nfov. ’67 5 128 39* 40 do do (35 p’d) 00 Nashville A Chattanooga inn 2,056,544 United States *iou 6.000,0001 Quarterly. Dec. ’66 8 79 79* Naugatuck .100 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 5* 54 Wells, Fargo A Co.. .,.100 0,u00,000 Oct. ’67 54* New Bedford and Taunton .*! 100 .1,408,600 500.000 Jan. A July July ’67 4 Steamship.—Atlantic MaL 100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Sept.’67 2* 119* 120 New Haven A Northampton. 10 1,224,100 Jan. A July July ’67 3 Pacific Mail 123 joo 20,000,000 Quarterly. Sept. ’67, 28* 188 -ioo 6,250,000 Feb. A Ang Aug. ’67 5 132 iai* Trust.—Farmers’ L. A Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. A July Jnly ’67 5 130 New London Northern.. mo 895.000 Mar A Sep Sep. ’67 4 New York Life A Trust..100 1,000,000 Feb. A Aug Ang. ’67il0 ®p!®an®» Opel. A Gt WeatlOO 4,093,425 Union Trust ...100 1,000,000 Jan. A July July *671 4 iio* 4,p.134100 4,697,457 United States Trust 100 1,500,0001Jan. A July Jnly 67* 5 26,590 000 Feb, A Aug Ang. ’67 9 113* l!8*\ Mining.—Mariposa Gold.... ..100 5,097,600 1 1)0 5,285,CSC Jan. A July jnlv ’67 11 15 Mariposa Gold Preferred. 300 5,774,400 Preferred go Man, A JttJyJjn)j ’ft 100 Feb ) 14*1 15 1^)10,000,000) .. . , ' .. iv . • • • • • . _ ,. . • • • *■ 698 THE CHRONICLE. [November 30, 1867. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.—Page Bond LUt Page 1 will appear In title place next Description. N. B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount is not Riven in detail in the 2d col- outstand¬ INTEREST. omn it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co’s name. Description. TBJUJiT. . AV H Payable. ing. 5 umn B Railroad: Morris and Essex: 2d do Naugatuck: 1st Mortgage (convert.) New Bedford d Taunton ... N. Haven d Northampton : Bonds. Hampshire & Hamden R.R. do . New Jersey ($856,000): Bonds of 1853 . New London Northern: 1st Mortgag* New Orleans, Jackson d Gt. North.: 1st Mortgage Sinking Fund 2d Mortgage New Orleans, Opelou. d Gt. West.: 1st Mortgage Construction Bonds . New York Central: Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ... Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal). Real Estate Bonds (assumed stocks) ..... } ; ......... 180,0001 450,0001 200,000 485,000! 140,0001 New York and Harlem ($6,098,045) 1st General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage :3d Mortgage N iork and New Haven: Mort.Bo’ds N. Y., Prov. and Boston : 1st Mort. Improvement Bonds Mortgage, State (Md.) Loan.... do 3d do Northern New Hampshire : Bonds... North Eastern: let Mortgage 2d do North Cajo/ina: Loan 2,741,000 8 Jan. & July 423,000 8 april & Oci 1,730,000 Apr. & Oct, May & Nov June & Dec May & Nov. 606,000 do Feb. A Aug do do 1,398,000 460,000 3,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,068,500 250,000 100,<XK May & Nov, Feb. A Aug do April & Oct Feb. & Aug Tan. A Juty 1,500,000 2,500,000 724,500 Quarterly. Jan. A 149.400 1869 1872 do 223,000 var. do 1,458,000 var. 3d or (guar, by R. W. A O.) Oswego and Syracuse ($311,500); 1st Mortgage Pacific, guaranteed by Missouri do Peninsula : 1st - ;Jan. A July Mortgage i 86’ 4,980,000 4,904,840 Jan. A April A Oct 1880 1875 1st 675,000 Jan. & 1st 1,000,000 6,000,000 Mortgage do Pfiila. and Balt. Centred ($800,000): Mortgage Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000) ; 1st Mortgage (Sunbury A Erie).... do do (general) (general) Philadel., Germant. & Norristown : 2d July July April & Oct 1877 April A Oct 1881 April & Oct 1901 4,000,000 143.800 Convertible Loan Philadelphia d Reading ($6,900,663); Sterling Bonds of 1836 Jan. A July do do do Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1861 do 1843-4-8-9 do 2,661,6001 182,400' 106,000' April & Oct Jan. A July Sterling Bonds of 1843 Dollar inds, convertible 1,521,000.' 976.800 228,500 do do do PhUaddi lia d Trenton : let Mort.. Vttming. d Baltimore: Bonds Pittsburg db Connellsvide ($1,500,000): 1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.) mpons rb'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500; Mortgage do do Bridge O. A P. RR Akron Branch: 1st mortgage. .. Pittsburg and Steubenville: 1st Mortgage 2d 89 : 1st Mortgage.. mortgage bonds, ext Mortgage, sinking fund 1,000,900 250,000 80 Beading and Columbia: 1st Mort... - Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.) Bichmond d Danville 4thMortgage Bonds ($1,717^500): . an’ally 1912 do 1912 April A Oct 1912 ;May & Nov 1876 Jan. & July 1884 Feb.’ & Aug do Bichmond db Petersburg ($319,0001: coupon & registered ..!... General Mortgage 1881 1881 1890 do 1883 1895 ■Mch A Sept 1888 April A Oct 6 6 do do 800,000 Mch A Sept 1888 1876 1879 i 400,000 840,000 500,000 May & Nov. 1890 I do 140,547 7 j 130,500| 175,000! 1890 1880 do 826,000 7 'Feb. A Interest 99* 93* 99* 1st 2d do Guaranteed Ang| ’73 ’75 do 7 June A Dec 8 Mar. & »ep. ’69 ’76 1875 1870 .... ... .... .... .... 1875 1875 1867 .... > . .... .... - ^ * r • in Ml • • • 2,000,000 Jan. & July .... 200,000 7 Jan. & July 1886 600,000 1876 1870 1894 7 7 7 7 7 7 1890 1890 1878 1878 1883 1871 Feb. & Aug do May & Nov. do Apr. & Oct. do - Jan. & July Apr. & Oct. May & Nov. Mar. & Sep. 8 7 7 6 188”' 1885 1875 1882 June & Dec Jan. & July Jan. & July 1861 1867 1883 7 Jan. & July 8 April & Oct 500,C 1,000,( . ... 5 4,319,52. 6 6 6 6 7 689,OOt 986,50( 596,0(K . • »(, • • • . •• ♦ IK 88* 90 z77* 78 „ • • 67 96 • • 90 « • 4 ^ • • • 63' 61 30 .... t • • » 1884 1865 1875 .... • • as 1873 1878 • • • • • • • • • • • .-# • • M* 1872 April & Oct ’68-’71 Jan. & July ’70-’76 April & Oct 1875 Jan. & >uly 1890 do “ 1890 Feb. & Aug 1896 1870 1871 1877 3 6 6 5 6 6 7 7 1890 1885 1878 1870 1865 Quarterly. 3 6 6 6 6 tan. (Baltimore) Bonds.... .... .. .... 6 May & Nov. 6 Jan. & July 6 do 175,OOt * ICO* June & Dec do do 7 Feb. <fc Aug 550, oa - 1871 7 April & Oct 7 Jan. & July 7 June & Dec , Mortgage 76 7 (guaranteed).. Dollar Bonds 100 Mil 7 Mortgage (convert.) Coupon do registered ! Western (Mass.) (6,269,520): Sterling (£899,900) Bonds Albany City Bonds 94 -... .81* 82 6 Jan. & July ‘70 ’75 6 do ’70 ’72 6 do ’65’68 7 7 7 Western Maryland; 1st Mortgage.... 1st do , guaranteed .. Western Union: 1st Mortgage York d Cumberland (North. Cent.): 90 Jan. & July Jan. & July June & Dec 7 Feb. & Ang 1872 7 Mar. & Sept 1870 5 Jan. & July 1886 6 68-74 Various. Westchester d Philadelphia : • • • • • .... ♦M • ... Ml • M.l • • • • • • IM • • • • «* • • • • Canal Chesapeake and Delaware : 1st Mort. Chesapeake and Ohio : Maryl’d Loan Sterling Bonds, guaranteed Preferred Bonds Delaware Division : 1st Mortgage.. Delaware and Hudson. * Bonds (coup) Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage. 3 Jan. & July 1886 JaAp JuOc 1870 do • « • • Jan. & Mch & Jan. & Lehigh Coal and Navigation : Loan of 1870 Loan of 1884 1st mort. (RR. below M. Chunk)... Monongahela Navigation: Mortgage Morris t Mortgage Bonds Aug 1889 I Semi 208,000 Rensselaer d Saratoga consolidated: lit Mort. Rensselaer & Saratoga . 1st Mort Saratoga A Whitehall.... 5,250,000 5,160,000 2,000,000 158,500 200,000 230,000 300,000 2d do Convertible Bonds Bonds, I 6 i Feb. & 500,000 Consolidated bonds Baritan and Delaware Bay: 1st Mort. 400,000 7 7 7 2d do 3d do Convertible 1st 2d .... .... Vt. Central d Y& Canada: 1st mort Vermont Central: 1st Mort. (consol.) 96 55 9S1,000 6 Feb. & Aug Iroy ana Boston ($1,452,000); 1st Mortgage do 3d Income Mortgage Warren : 1st Mortgage 40 1900 Mortgage (guar, by Petei eburg) Virginia d Tennessee ($2,177,000) ; 1st Mortgage 139* 142 .... Mortgage 2d do Vermont and Massachusetts 1st Mort ... 1S92 1892 Sinking Fund (T. W. & W. R’way) 94 f 7 Jan. & July 7 June & Dec 1st Mortgage Equipment (Tol. & Wab. Railway) May & Nov. 1S94 1S94 1894 . 1900 iShore Line Railway: 1st Mort . bonds South Carolina: Sterling Loan Domestic Bonds South Side ($1,631,900) : Toledo Vabash d Western .-(13,300,00) 1st Mort. (Tol. A Illinois RK). i 1st Mort. (L Krie,Wab AStL. RR.) 2d Mort. (Tol. A Wab. RR) 2d Mort. (Wab. A West. Railway). an’ally do , J. A. J.&O. 1st Mortgage Funded Bonds Second Avenue: 1st Mort ! Shamokin Valley d Pottsvi Special Mortgage W. Pacific, Railroad: Bonds guar, hy At. A Pacific R.R.. Semi 8 1st Land Grant Mortgage (tax free) Sandusky and Cincinnati: Mortgage bonds Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: , ... 1,372,000 7 April & Oct. 1S94 Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,505,191): 1st Mortgage Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage Toledo,Peoria and Warsaw :1st Mort 450,000 6 ! Jan. & July 1884 1,000,000 6 April A Oct 600,000 Quincy and Toledo 1st May & Nov 1,000,0)0 do Portland d Kennebec ($1,394,661); let 200,000j 7 7 7 Southeiu Minnesota: Land Grant B’d Staten Island: let Mortgage 1867 1880 1870 1871 1880 1880 1886 1868 Jan. & July do 1st 2d 3d B 1875 1881 income do 1882 408,000 )10 Jan & July »10 Fel>. & Auy ...' 1st Mortgage . 1876 1st 2d -o 3d T3 7 Jun. & Dec. ’69-’72 7 Jun. & Dec. 1891 1863 1863 St. Paul d Chicago ($4,000,000) .* 1st Mort. land grant. S. F. guar— St. Paul d Pacific of Minn : (1st Div) ! 1st Mortgage (tax free) 1st 3d Feb A 1,150,000 1,075,000 Pennsylvania ($18,209,040): 85 April A Oct j ’70-’75 Aug. 1872 Mch & Sept 1884 762,000 do \ j May & Nov. 1916 Feb. A Aug 1=91 350,000 200,000 7 Mortgage, sterling 99 May A Nov. 1866 July 1875 May A Nov. 1873 Panama: 1st 2d 96 67-’84 75-’76 198,500 7 ] Jan. & July '70-’80 1885 189,000 7 j do. do 2d Princpal payble. 7 Feb. & Aug 7 do ) — St.-Louis, Jacksonville d Chicago: ; Jan. A Oswego db Rome ($657,000). let Mortgage Income 93 93 April & Oct ’67-’60 400,000 1,110,500 670,000 .... 93 1874 180,000 let Bxtension 2d Extension 91 ■ 1874 1870 do or 2d 1880 1887 April A Oct Jan. A July ) i St. Louis, Alton d Terre Haute: 1st Mortgage 2<1 Mortgage preferred iried. 1885 1900 1874 July Aug - do 1872 1893 1868 1875 '73-’78 1881 Jul) Jan. A Feb. A 100,000 300,000 Orange d Alexandria ($2,928,004): 1st Mortgage 1883 1887 1883 1S83 1876 1876 1876 July April A Oct 1,494,000 2,900,000 750,000 I 1896 Bonds do do Payable. 709,500 7 Jan. & July 1880 Mortgage Valley: 1st Mortgage 1S69 1863 1867 Jan. & 360,000 Ogdensburg and L. C/iamplain: 1st Mortgage Ohio and Mississippi: 1st Mortgage. 2d Mortgage Old Colony d Newport R.R.: 2d Rate. mg. do Sacramento 1889 Jan. A 2,500,000 1st 1=86 1890 Mar. A Sep. do do 50,000 7 General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage Jul} April & Oct April A Oci 700,000 145,000l 339,000 North Missouri: let General Mortgage ($6,000,000) North Pennsylvania ($3,124,737) .* Mortgage Bonds .: Chattel Mortgage 3 Aorioich and Worcester ($580,000); . Sinking Fund (Wat. & Rome)..... Potsdam A Watertown, guar ! R. W. & O., sinking fund ; R utland and Burlington: Jan. A July! 1876 1S81 do Jan. & July 1869 April & Oct 1874 6 Feb. & Aug 1878 6 I Jan. A July 18S5 Northern Central ($5,424,500): 1st 2d j Rome, Watert. d Ogdens. ($1,848,000) May A Nov. 1915 165.000 Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts).. Bonds of August, 1859, convert.. ) Bonds of 1865 5.030,000 676,000 224,000 6,450,438 2,925,000 ' Snbecrip. Bonds outstand- nr*i>at. Railroad: Mortgage, sinking fund 1st Debt) Amount is not given in detail in the 2d colit is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co’s name. "d u INTEREST. N.B.—Where the total Funded 'O « - 73 2. week. Boat Loan 105 98 87 106 * do do July 6 April & Orl < 0 do 1S70 1884 1897 1887 1876 1S76 .... • • « * .... • • .... • « M • . • • • • • « • .... • • • • .... .... ... . Pennsylvania d Nero York: 1st Mortgage (North Branch)—... Schuylkill Navigation : 90*’ 1st Mortgage.'. ^ ' do 2d Improvement 7G July Sept July Susquehanna and Tide- Water: Maryland Loan Coupon Bonds Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bonds Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage West Branch and Susq. :1st Mortgage Wyoming Valley : 1st Mortgage., Miscellaneous: American Dock d Improvement: Bonds Consolid. CoalCo.iMd.): Mort.( conv.) Cumberland Coal: 1st Mortgage.. Mariposa Mining: 1st Mortgage .. do Pennsylvania Coal: Mortgage Bonds Quicksilver Mining : 1st 2d 1876 D D D 6 Mch & Sept 6 Jan. & July 6 May & Nov. 1872 1882 1870 1 6 6 Jan. & July do 1865 1878 9 3 6 May &> Nov. 0 6 Jan. & July 3 6 Jan & July ... - 1883 1878 1878 0 Mort.,prin.*:int.payable In gold do Western Union 1st Mortgage do Telegraph: convertible 0 6 0 7 Jan. & July ’74-’84 Jan. "A July 1885 0... J&n. & July 1879 0 7 Jan. At July 18' 7 April A Oci 18 • i» 7 Feb. A Aug 1881 10 7 10 7 June A Dec Jan. A July 1873 1879 0 ! 2,000,000) 7 / May A Nov. 1867 • » • t .... 71* .... •• • * 57* • IM a M* 0 (guar. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) 2,000,000 7 Jan. A July 1883 Covington and Cincinnati Bridge : 1st Morteage Bonds 2d & 590,00C 6 May & Nov. >• - f M « • •• * |M’ l . • • • •• • • • • * • • • • * • • .... t 4 ■r- Mm ’t-.-srt i * INSURANCE-STOCK LIST. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Marked thus (*) Bid.! Askd Companies. Bergen Manhattan Mountain Oil.. Gin ton Oil. National Germania Great Republic G’t Western Consol • - • . . • . Bowery (N. Y.) Broadway 90 , • . • • • .... • • Brooklyn • • • • . 1 75 2 10, ! Bid. (Askd 70 .... .... 100 Croton Adventure. ./Etna Algomah American 17 Amygdaloid 2 4% Atlas Aztec ....13% Ray State 17% 2% Bohemian Boston Caledonia — Calumet Canada Charter Oak Central ; Copper Creek Copper Falls Copper Harbor — .... 24% 1 2% 3%: ...— i 20%; 1 | l%i Dacotah.... .* Dana Davidson Delaware Dev'n Dorchester.. 5 6% 8 1% 18% 5% 2 1 Ogima Pennsylvania * 88; 65, Grocers’ Guardian Hamilton Hanover Hoffman Home 7 50 5% 3% 9 7* 50. Petherick 70; Pewabic Phoenix Princeton. Providence lincyt Evergreen Bluff Ridge 5% Excelsior Flint Steel River Franklin Gardiner Hill Girard Great Western Hamilton..: Hancock Hanover Hilton Rockland — 12 St. Clair 9% 8%|13 00’14 50 13 00 20 00 4 50 4 88 3 1 St. Louis 1 25 St. Mary’s 5% Salem... 5 % Seneca 2 1 Sharon 2 % J.. .17% 13 63*14 00 Sheldon to Colnmfcian.21 South Pewabic 1 1% 68, South Side 2 2% Star 11% 1% — Superior 8 Toltec 21 % Tremont.... 1% — .... Hec.a Hulbert Humboldt Victoria Vulcan 1 Hungarian 19 10 *. 1 2% Winthrop 5 8 Knowlton 1% Washington 4% 3 GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. Bid. Ada Elmore par Askd/] ! Hamilton G. & S.b’ds par— 2 Holman ‘*25 ‘*75 Alameda Silver Bid. !Askd Companies. 70 Hope Harmon E. & S Ayres Mill & Mining. i •••• 25 5 Benton Bob Tail Boscobel Silver Bullion Consolidated Burroughs 45j 10 — —.... Central — 2 "im Lacrosse — - —< Columbia G. tfc S Combination Silver.... Consolidated Gregory.. .100 87 10 2. 25 | Kipp & Buell Atlantic & Pacific 40 45 35 — Liberty 4 — Manhattan Silver I Midas Silver Montana New York New York & Eldorado 100 100 — 5 £ 10 j . Nye -.... Owyhee People’s G. to S. of Cal. 50 16 70 50 4 10 00 i — 5 Ite6!l867 . 25 151,002!Jan. and July. 825,133! Jan. and July.! 515,890 Jan. and July. 222,073 Jan. and July.; J’e’64.,5 36,51S 424,295 (April and Oct. 203,990 Jan. and July, do 229,276 134,065 Feb. and Aug. 241,840 Jan. and July, do 122,46S do 165,933 do 200,766 149,689 May and Nov. 227,954.Feb. and Aug. 525,762;Jan. and July. 200,015; Jan. and July. 2,385,657'Jan. and July. 255,657;Feb. and Aug. 170,225! April and Oct. 177,173!Jan. and July. do do 162,571 419,952' 152,2291. 2,271,387' 135,793 646,522j 195,926; i67,833 S00'604 Feb. 206,179! do do do and Ang. 802,741! ij’ywno* |J,y’67 . 5 Jan. 65.5 io Ajtg.’67.5 Sep. ’67.6 io Ang-; Dec.’t 5 12 20 5 12 20 12 20 JV67..10 20 SO 20 July’64.4 1JV67 10 104 12$ 10 10 141 Aug’67 7* 12 July >67.6 io io io July’67.5 10 10 5 14 10 10 10 14 io io io 14 5 12i 10 io J’ne,64.5 Oct. ’67.5 14 10 July *67.7 "uly^.B 14 10 10 io *8 5 20 10 6 5 Aug.h.7.5 July’67.5 July ’67.5 July’67.7 i>ept’67.5 Jnly’67 5 J’y'66.8* July ’65.5 ; 10 July’67 5 May ’65.6 10 Aug.’67.5 12 July’67.7 10 July’67.5 7 J’y 167.3* Aug ’66.5 Apr ’65.5 io io io io 7 16 *7 7 10 10 JV67.3* 8 10 10 10 July’67 5 July’67.5 July’66.5 io Joly’CT.5 i2 io July’67.5 Jan.’65 5 7 30 14 io io io 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 July 65’. 5 July’65.6 Aug’663* Aog.’67.5 Sept.’67.6 July ’67.5 July’67.5 (July’67.5 5 10 do 141,434 10 10 I 10 July’67.5 do 863,006 9 10 i io July’67 5 do 121,607 18 16 , 1-4 July’677 do 284,605 10 July’67 5 10 10 Lorillard* do 25 1,000,000 1,118,664 35 15 | 10 July’675 Manhattan 100 do 610,930 500,000 J’ys67.3* 13* Market* do .100 8, 200,000 288,917! 11 10 ) 10 July ’67.5 Meehan’ & Trade’ 25 do 200,000 222,921; 10 10 ! io July W.S Mechanics (B’kly) 50 do 150,000 146,692' 5 8 l io July’67.5 Mercantile do 1QO 200,000 195,546: 20 J*y’67.10 20 20 Merchants’ 50 do 200,000 245,169; 16 July ’65.5 do ' Metropolitan * t. .ICO 300,000 616,936! 10 io io July ’67 5 Montank (B’klyn) 50 do 150,000 161,748 18 J’y’67 10 14 15 Nassau (B’klyn).. 50 do 259,270 150,000 12 July’67.6 16 14 National do 7% 200,000 228,62S 10 July ’67.6 5 8 New Amsterdam. 35! 300,000 do 319,870 10 July’67.5 8 10 N. Y. Equitable.3 35; 210,000 264,703 Jan. and July. 0 Aug.’67.5 N.Y.Fire and MarK)o 247,895 Feb. and Aug. 12 8i 200,000 10 Ju-y’67.5 10 Jan. and July, 11 Niagara 50' 1,000,000 1,053,825 10 July’6'.5 10 10 North American* 50; 500,000 do 511,631 10 Oct. ’67.5 8 8 North River 25 850,000 379,509 April and Oct. 12 Pacific 25i 200,000 244,293 Jan. and July. 12 12 10 July '67.6 July ’67.5 10 Park »lo 1001 200,000 212,621 10 Peter Cooper 20 150,000 185,365 Feb. and Aug. 5 1- 10 Aug.’67 5 July ’67 5 8 People’s 26! 150,000 14*,208( Jan. and July, 35 8 ! 10 July’67.5 Phoenix + Br’klyn 50 1,000,000 1,077,288 do 30 10 I 10 July’67.5 Reliei. do 50, 200,000 190,167 11 J’y’67.6* 9* Republic* 100! 300,000 453,233 i do J’y’66.8* Resolute* 185,952! do lOOj 200.000 7 10 I li Aug.’67 6 Rutgers’ 25 200,000 216,879 Feb. and Ang. 5 Feb.’67.5 St. Mark’s 25 j 150,000 ,5 140,379 ? -do 10 Aug *67.5 St. Nicholast 25| 150 000 156,220 Jan. and July, F’b ’66.3* Security + 50; 1,000,000: 962,181 Feb. and Ang. io July ’67 5 Standard 50, 200,000 226,756 Jan. and July. 12; 10 : 10 July’67 5 Star 100 do 200,000 195,780 Aug.'67.5 Sterling * K0 200,000 206,731 Feb. and Aug. 5 Ang.’66.5 25 200,000 198,182 Feb. avd Ang. Stuyvesant 11 July *67.6 10 Tradesmen’s 25 150,000 168,733 Jan. and July, 10 July’67.5 10 do United States.... 26! 250,000 836,691 10 Aug.’67.5 10 Washington 50! 400,000 630,814 Feb. and Ang. 8 5 Feb. ’67 5 Washington *t...l00! 398,700 190,206 Feb. and Aug. 10 July ’67.5 7 WilliamsburgCity 50; 150,000; 179,008 Jan. and July, do 10 July 67 5 10 ITonkers to N. Y.lOff 500,000' 501,2441 “ " ~~ ?l SI The ease action to of Levi Steinway V3. recover , the Erie Railway Company—an $2,600, the estimated value of property belonging plaintiff, and destroyed by fire while in transit to Cincinnati charge of defendants—was heard before Judge Brady, in New 1 10 **20 *23 Eagle Seaver York, on the 8th inst. A paper or contract was presented to prove Senaenderfer 8 00 — Edgehill Fall River that according to its terras the railroad company was not liable for Smith & Parmelee..... 20 2 60 2 70 First National 1 00 Symohds Forks — Gold Hill..! The court, charged the jury that if the railroad com¬ 100 60 00:85 00 losses by fire. Twin River'Silver Gunnell 10 Vanderburg —j pany could employ locomotives that consume their own smoke and Gunnell Union..... —I Yellow Jacket —1 20 Fparks. and failed to do so, then the company would be responsible MISCELLANEOUS stock list. for losses through such failure. The jury found in full for the claim Corydon 25 Des Moines Dbwnieville Quartz Hill Reynolds .. Rocky Mountain — 25 1 20 1 *5 — — to the n — .. — — — — Companies. Copake Iron.... pas’ Foster Iron..... Bid. Askd - • »v Saginaw, L. 8. to M. . XlVil I IJenboLead Kanban Lead Phenix Lead. Tank tutorage.. ...5 .... •• .... .... ..... . ... — “5Id7 Askd CO ttPANIKB. Tudor Lead 5 — Bucks County Lead 1 WallkillLead.. Wallace Nickel •toltlqrwl "Marble Long Island Peat Rnaae. Fi e 8avon do Terre .par . .. — 25 ... * *41 .... . .. 25 • • • « !... 45 .... ... 5 ... .... 8* 10 7 5 10 6 5 10 10 7 14 6 Aug.’67.6 J’y*64 14 10 i6 do 238,808iMarch and Sep 176,678 Jan. and July. 10 7, *9 12 do do do J’e’85.3* ?* 16 5 282,127 Jan. and July. 1 5 257*758 Feb. and Aug.! 10 336,470;March and Sep! 10 204,790;Mayand Nov.. 170,171!Feb. and Aug. 345,7491June and Dec. I 266,368'Feb. and Aug.; 238,506! Jan. and July. 92,6S3j 884,266!Jafi. and July. 83S,S78,Feb. and Aug. 275,531 Jan. and July. 309,622! do 214,147 do 424,189; Feb. and Ang. 228,696; Jan. and July. 234,872;Jan. and July. 1,289,037 Jan. and July. 404,178 March and Sep Last paid .... t Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares. Capital $200,000, in 20,000 shares. Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares Companies. jlS65 v 25 6 West Minnesota Winona 33 Isle Royale* Keweenaw..:. Period^. ....... —, Hope Huron Indiana 10 6% 8 isolute 1 .100 2,000,000 150,000 Howard 50, 500,000 Humboldt iroi 200,000 Import’&Traders 25 200,000 International 100 1,000,000 Irving '. 25 200,000 Jefferson.... 30 200,010 King’s Co’ty(Bkln 20| 150,000 Knickerbocker... 40 280,000 Lafayette (B’klyn) 50 150,000 Lamar 10() 800,000 Lenox!.,. 2o 150,000 LongIsland(B’kly) 50 200,000 1 50 25 00 — 10 Empire Everett . 15 50 50 300,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 204,000 150,000 150,000 200,000 150,000 200,000 600,000 200,000 1,000,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 400,000 200,000 . — 1% Edwards.. 25 50 Hope 10% j Portage Lake 3% Eagle River 1 00 15 Pittsburg to Boston... 5%' Pontiac 30 Greenwich 1% Dudley Exchange „ 5 4 50 Firemen’s 17 Firemen’s Fund.. 10 Firemen s Trust. 10 Fulton 25 Gallatin 50 Gebhard 100 Germania 50; Globe 50 Great Western**. 100 New Jersey Consol.. ..10 New York — 3 75! 4 00 North Cliff 4 North western 11% 26 00126 50 Norwich 11 — 100 Excelsior 4% 5% 4% 1% Naumkeag — Concord t 135 00 — «... 40 Empire City 6 Manhattan Mass Medora Mendotat Merrimac Mesnard Milton Minnesota National Native 100 Eagle 2 Mandan 1% 1 Alionez paid 1 Lake Superior Madison 25% 3 Albany <fc Boston * Lafayette... paid 3 11 . 306*666 210,000 250,000 Columbia* 100 500,000 Commerce (N. Y.).100 200,000 Commerce (Alb’y)lOO ’400,000 Commercial 50 200,000 Commonwealth ..100 250,000 Continental * 100 600,000 Corn Exchange.. 50 400,000 Bid. Askd Companies. • 300,000 200,000 153,000 — 20 City COPPER MINING STOCK LIST. Companies. .... Clinton 12 — ... 25 25 17 .. Central Park Citizens’ 12 8 .... . . • • # - . • , .... • • . 2 50 3 50 • « . 10 15 . 2 00 2 50 • Capital. Netas’ts Adriatic 25 $300,000 A£tna 50 300,000 American * 50 200,000 American Exch’e.100 200,000 Arctic 50 500,000 Astor. 25 250,000 Atlantic (Br’klyn) 50 800,000 Baltic 25 200,000 Beekman 25 200,000 .... • . 5 5 5 10 Excelsior write Marine Risks • .... . 10; 6 Empire City • • ........ 10 100 Petrol’m.... ^ special 5 Farm Buchanan Central Cherry Run Cherry Run • dividends. Jan. 1,1S67. are participating, & (t) -- 5 National 5 50 N. Y. to Alleghany New York & Newark... 5 5 N. Y. & Philadel....... 40, 1 10; N Y Ph &Balt Cons Oceanic Pit Hole Creek .25 1 25 1 50 Rathbone Oil Tract .10 Rynd Farm Shade River 5 .10 Union United Pe’tl’m F’ms.... 2 United States 1 Union 5 10 5 • .... 2 2 2105 ...— Bradley Oil Brevoort Brooklyn • .— 10 Coal and Oil Bliven First Hammond par 20 HamiltonMcClintock... 5 10 Bennehoff Run. : Bid. Askd Companies. par 10 Allen Wright Itemis Heights 699 THE CHRONICLE. 80,1867.) November ant, $2,600. Grading on the Eldora (Iowa) Railroad has been completed, and laying the iron commenced. work in The Tehuantepec Railroad must, according to its charter, be a year, and constructed at the rate of not less commenced within j5 leagues in each year. - M'-n 700 - United LIFE North British COMPANY, ot New York. NO. 40 WALL STREET. Mercantile .Insurance Co OF LONDON tyNew and important plana of Life Insurance have by this Company. See new Prospectus. AND been ad opted JOHN EADIE, President. Sun Mutual Insurance COMPANY. $1,014,540 78 This Company having recently added to its previous assets a paid up cash capital of $500,000, and subscrip¬ tion notes in advance of premiums of $300,000. continues to Issue policies of Insurance against Marine and In¬ land Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected MOSES H. Dealers are en¬ GRINNELL, President. JOHN P. PAULISON, Vice-President. Walker, Secretary. The Mercantile Mutual INSURANCE COMPANY. Assets, January 1st, 1867 $1,261,349 IN CASH, a rebatement on premiums in lieu of scrip, in value to an average scrip dividend of PER equivalent CENT. Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based the F.H of AY MAR CART L R, Esq principle that all classes of risks are Esq r*bb"4 SHEPPARD GANDY, Esq. .of Sheppard Gaudy, & Co. equally Hartford CASH CAPITAL $1,000,000 SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1867 278,000 Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid. CharJusted nait ieredl850. Cash dividends paid in 15 years,253 per cent. ,253 JONATHAN D. STEELE, President Pre Notman, Secretary. Hope Fire Insurance Cask Capital ------ Assets, Jane 1, 18G7 • - $150,000 - - - 222,433 This Company insure* against Loss or Damage by Fire on terms as favorable as any other responsible Com¬ pany. Board of Directors: Henry M. Taber. Theodore W. Riley, Steph. Cambreleng, Joseph Foulke, Cyrus H. Loutrel, Jacob Reese, Lebbeus B. Ward. Henry S. Leverlch. Robert Schell, William H. Terry, Joseph Grafton, Amos Robbins, Thos. P. Cummings, Jno. W. Mersereau, David L. Eigenbrodt, William Renaen, Stephen HyaQ, JACOB Jams* X. Moons, Secretary, REESE, President. INSURANCE. Exchange COMPANY Danger of Inland Navigation- 104 BROADWAY. Assets, Jan. 1, ’67.. $501,207 Secretary. Germania Fire Ins. INSURANCE CO., HARTFORD, CONN. Capital and surplus $1,000 OOO. B. Clakk, Sec’y. H. Kellogg, Pres t OF No. 175 SPRINGFIELD FIRE AND MAUIISE INSURANCE COMPANY, SPRINGFIELD, MASS. CASH CAPITAL, $500,000 SURPLUS, July 1st, 1867 Capital and Surplus $700,000. E. Fbeeman, Pres Capital $2 7 . f TOTAL ASSETS 00 15,074 73 $81 5,074 73 RUDOLPH GARRIGI <5, President. JOHN E. KAHL, Vice ^resident. 5,000. J. B. Elpbedge, Pres’t. Hugo Losses promptly adjusted by the Agents here, and paid Schumann, Secretary. iu current monuy. WHITE, ALCYN Ac CO, NO. 74 WALL STREET. Ayents, Hanover Fire Insurance .^Etna Insurance Company, OF COMPANY, No. 45 WALL STREET. July 1st, 1867. HARTFORD. Incorporated 1819 Charter CAPITA L Cash capital Perpetual. $587,205 98 33,480 09 BENJ. S. WALCOTT, Prosldent, HENDEE, Fresi-leut. July 1, 1867..... Remsbn Lane, >S5j$,U4NDOIP#<f (jn TianUerSi " sr NEW YORK AGENCY 62 JAS. A. FIRE WALL Secretary. Bankers* $4,650,938 27 37 7,668 4 6 Liabilities NO. 187,205 93 Gross Assets.-. Total Liabilities $3,000,000. L. J. Assets $400,000 00 Surplus GOODXOW, Secretary. STREET. ~tb Jfc. Sc*. | ^ YvvVcvX tv. ALEXANDER, Agent. j ^aAAatt > Ti t vv-X ov\s, . (ZfieaLctSc. in flL. ^ccilLl tteA and J3tcd.ela.n $ 'icftanae, and rn.cm.Lie.LA. af £J\ccLz and ^.aLd INSURANCE. American Fire LpzLcfi-CLnQeA in bcJ.Lt cities. Jdzccn.u.ntA af /$.a.nLe.A and Insurance Co., I3$.anLe.eLA OFFICE 114 . INCORPORATED 1823. - Cash Capital. Capital and Surplus, January 1, Foute 1867, 6755,057 77., Insures Property against Loss Company, or at its or 33 BROAD JAMES W. OTIS, President. R. W. BLEECKER, Vice Pres’t. Secretary. LibetaL S\LecvcvWvy W. W. Losing. , & STREET Lobing, BROKERS, AND 36 NEW STREET. Government Securities of all kinds, Gold, State, Hank, and Railroad Stocks and ponds Bought and Sold. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to check at sight, Collections cities in the United States. Carter, a BANKERS AND Damage by Fire at paid at the office of the various Agencies in the principal J. GBJSW9LP, General Agent, c.n Memphis, Teun. 255 057 77 the usual rates. Policies issued and Losses ft. T&owiis A. M. Foute, Late Pres. Gayoso Bank, $500,000 00 Surplus...: teceiuLed teLrnA. BROADWAY, BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE, THIRD AVENUE. Cash Co., BROADWAY. N. V J, N. Dunham, Sec’y. J. 54 MASON, President. ROBERTS, Vice-Pres Geo. L. Chase, Pres’t FIRE Company, North OFFICE, No. 92 BROADWAY. The Corn George A. Dresser, NSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DA I AGE BY FIRE. No. 12 WALL STREET. 48 A. F. WILLMARTH, Vice-President WASHBURN, Secretary. J. H. R. F. J. S. COMPANY HARTFORD, CONN. M. COMPANY. *114,849 CHAS. J. MARTIN, FreekNtt. Ca«h the year, will be divided to the stockholders. This Company continues to make Insurance on Ma¬ rine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Mer¬ chandise of all kinds. Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Cur¬ rency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Rathbone. Bros. A Co., in Liverpool. Niagara Fire Insurance 00 3,439,120 FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE Bennett, Jr„ Sec’y. Co., $2,000*000 1* 1867 NO. CONNECTICUT FI REINSURANCE CO OF HARTFORD, CONN. TRUSTEES. D. Coklen Murray, James Freeland, Samuel WTllets, E. Hay dear White, Robert L. Taylor, N. L. McC'ready, William T. Frost, Daniel T. Willets, William Watt, L. Edgarton, Henry Eyre, Henry XL Kunhardt, Cornelius Grlnnell, John S. Williams, William Nelson, Jr., Joseph Slagg, Jas. D. Flsfi, Cnarles Dlmon, A. William Heye, Geo. W. Hennings, Francis Hathaway, Harold Dollner, Aaron L. Reid, Paul N. Spofford. Ellwood Walter. ELLWOOD WALTER, President. CHAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-President. J. Dbspard, Secretary. Capital A»set«* Jan. Liabilities OF NEW YORK, Insures against Loss by Fire and the LORD, DAY & LORD, Solicitors. DABNEY, MORGAN & Co., Bankers. Srofltable, this the current rates, when premiums are isconnt from Company makes such cash abatement or paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits remaining at the close of *** 4803^20 $l,4iK,3iO BROADWAY. INSURANCE WHITE, Assistant Manager. PHOENIX W. 185 T^C^ALUrNf ’ | Associate Managers OF £2.000,000 Stir Ch8UnCey' of S. B. Chittenden & Co. CHAS. E. LONDON. Home Insurance Dabney, Morgan & Co of E. D. Morgan & Co. of Ayniar & Co. of David Dows <fe Co. Geo. M. Coit, Sec’y. this Company has paid to it* TWENTY $10,000,000 12,095 OOO 4,260*635 or , Co YORK. (IN GOLD): Capital and Surplus *1,500,600. ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. year Subscribed Capital Accumulated tun da Annual Income FIRE No. 35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. During the past Policy-holders, NEW Currency at option of Ap¬ Losses promptly adjusted and paid in this Country. New Yoke Boasd of Management : ClIAS. H. DABNEY, Esq., Chairman. Incorporated 1841. from Marine taken by the Company. titled to participate in the profits. STREET, CAPITAL AND ASSETS plicant. STREET. Capital and Assets, WALL Policies issued in Gold (INSURANCE BUILDINGS) 1809. UNITED STATES BRANCH, 74 OF LIVERPOOL AND Authorized Capital... Subscribed c apital Paid-up Capital and Surplus Special Fund of $200,000 * Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany. United States Branch, No. 117 Broadway. N Y* GEORGE ADLARD, Manager William II. Ross, Secretary. EDINBURGH. established in run one year, Nicholas De Groot, Secretary. 49 WALL Queen Fire Insurance AND $2,300,000 Protits available after policies have and annually thereafter. Insurance. THE ity ASSETS r [November 30, 1867. Insurance. States INSURANCE In the C on - THE CHRONICLE. Insurance. Isaac H. irr ir} * ; made in all the State* and Canada*, ' November 80,1867.] THE CHRONICLE ; « discriminating duty of 10 cent, ad val. ttnder hags is levied on all imports that have this duty ad val. is levied in ad¬ ef 10 p4r cent, duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place or places of their growth OT produc¬ dition to the Row Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The tor i" all cases to be 2,240 lb. Ancli«r«—Duty: 2$ oents * lb. 8j@ Ashes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. lot, 1st sort.. * 100 ft 8 50 @ 8 75 pearl, 1st sort 11 0u @ Beeswax—Duty*20 1? cent ad val* American yellow.* ft 4• @ Roues-Duty : on invoice 10 * ct. fctio Grande shin $ ton48 00 @ .... Bread—Duty. 30 * cent ad val. ®> * •• ® Navy pi 10* 8j @ Crackers Breadstuff ffs—ISee special report Brick*# Common Crot *0 @*23 00 Philadelphia Fronts...40 oO @45 0) Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair ft. 1 & A.mer’n,gray &wh. *lb others quoted below, 50 @1 75 Alcohol, 95 cents. 40 @ 40 @ 3d @ 4' @ ^8 @ Common St tte, 20 @ We tern Bui tor, 18 @ Grease bu ter, ark. * ft @ lb ... 50 .. Hi-fi km tubs $ lb.... Welsh, tub* * lb Fine to ^xtra Sta e,... G<>od io Sn6 8tat.-, .... 45 42 45 40 30 87 .. . Arsenic, Powdered.... do Common Farm Dairies do Common.... 11 @ .. Candles—Duty, tallow, 2$; Bark Petayo Berries, Persian, gold. Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ sperma¬ castle gold ceti and wax e; uearine and ada Bi Chromate Potash... mantine, 5 cents $ ft. Sperm, patent,. . .* ft Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined Refined sperm, Stearic Adamantine c 53 45 city... 30 Brimstone .. Crude Brimstone, Am. Brimstone. Chains- Duty, 2* cents * lb. One Inch A upward* tb 8@ phur Camphor, CT.de, (in bond) (gold) Camphor, Refined .... .. .... Anthracite. 0 50 @ 7 0) @ .... Liverpool Gas Cannel @15 I'O Newcastle Gas 9 50 @10 CO Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents * lb. Caracas (In bond)(gold) * lb 16 @ 17 Maracaibo do ..(gold) @ Guayaquil do ...(gold) 11 @ 12 St Domingo.. ..(gold) 8|@ 9 Cardiff steam 2J; old copper long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. * square foot, Gum Gum Gum Gum Gnm 3 cents * lb. Bolts Braziers’.. Baltimore Detroit Portage Lake .... S3 > 35 23 @ Bolt @ 181 50 12 Phial.. @ @ 22 Lae Dye 7... . Licorice Paste,Calabria 43 56 @ @ 85 @ 25 25 @ 31 @ 24 @ Licorice Paste Spanish 70 40 Solid Licorice Paste, Greek. Madder,Dutch. .(gold) do, French, EXF.F.do Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft; Oil Anil Oil Cassia.. ( Oil . 40 31 @ Manna,large flake.... 1 Manna, small flake.... Mustard Seed, Cal.... Mustard Seed, Trieste. Nutgalla Blue Aleppo Alum, 60 cents * 100 1>; Argols, 6 tents V lb ; Arsenic and Assafcadati, Antimony, Crude and Regains. 10; Arrowroot, 80 * oent ad val 65 38 25 84 @ Licorice, Paste, Sioily. and @ @ 90 Cotton—See special report. S 60 per 21 Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3 85 @ 8 91 Corks—Duty, 50 * cent ad val. Regular, quarts* gross 65 @ TO Mineral @ Tragacanth, w. 60 @ 1 10 (gold) Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng (gold) 8 60 @ 8 75 Iodine, Resnblimed... 6 50 @ @ Rope, Russia. @ @ flakey Manila, 2$ other untarred, 31 cents * lb. Manila, * lb 23J@ 24* Tarred Russia Opossum 78 40 85 86 58 @ palo Otter @ So 84 20 £8 ... Narruw Loose Joint.. Its, 5 8 75 @ 4 00 • 50 4$ •••• .. Raccoon Skurk, Black.... .. f . Locks—Cabinet, Eagle List 44 List 25 £ dis List 65 % dis * ft 20 @ 22 Framing Chisela.NewList87$ att j<di§ {firmer 00 insets. List 40 $adv . 40 20 10 '5i 45 8*> @ or i aft’s do in sets oo 60 handled, . List 40 *ady . Augur Bitts List 20<fc 10 % dis Short Augurs,per dz.NewList 30 dis 22$ Ring 00 00 00 06 60 60 20 00 00 60 75 Hay—North River, in bales* 100 fts for shipping @ 80 Hemp-Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, fift; Juts, $15; Italian, $40; Sum and Sisal, $15 * ton; and Tampico. 1 cent * ft. Amer.Dressed.* ton 350 00@860 00 00 00 do 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 24x30 ,2£; all over that, 3 cents V &• American Window- -1st,2d, 3d, and 4th over qualities. Subject to a discount of 35@40 $ cent. 6x 8 to 8x10..$ 50 ft 6 26 @ 4 75 tol0xl6 6 75 @ 5 00 to 12x18 7 60 @ 5 50 8xli 11x14 18x16 to 16x24 8 50 @ 6 18x22 to 20x30 10 00 @ 7 20x30 to 24x30 12 50 @ 8 24x31 to 24x36 ..14 00 @ 9 25x36 to 26x40 16 00 @10 2.*x40 to 3UX48 .......18 00 @14 24x54 to 82x56 20 50 @16 82x55 to 34x60 24 00 @18 34X62 to 40X6 • 25 00 @4 00 00 00 00 00 ' 00 00 00 00 Fr&r.ch Window—1st. 2d, 3d, and 4th (81 igleThick) NewI4»$ ot Sept, 25 Discount 2C@25 f) cent. «x e to8x10.*50 fast 6 25 @ 4 85 08 Undressed.. 230 Oo@240 0$ Russia, Clean @350 09 Jute (gold) 110 00@122 50 Manila..* ft..(gold) 12 @ m Sisal 15 @ Hi (lea-Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt* ed and Skins 10 * cent ad val. ... Dry Hides— Buenos Ayres*'ftg’d Window above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents $4 square foot; on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, ana Common Window, not exceeding lOx 15 inches square, II; over that, and do Tacks List 80 % dis List 75 % dis Cut Brads List 60 % dis Rivet', Iron List c5&40 % dis Screws American...List 87 *dis do List 40@45 % dia English Shovels and spades... List 5 jtdla Horse Shoes 6i@7 Plaues List 30@35 %adv Cut 18 Montevideo..... do Rio Grande 19 gold California, Mex. do Porto Cabello VeraCruz Tampico .. 19 18$ 14 17 do do 15 do 17 car ...... Texas " 20 19 do do GHnoco California square foot ; larger and not over 24 X39 inches 6 cents square foot; qualities. ..... Stacks and Diet Screw Wrenones—Coe’s Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches, 21 cents ^ square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $ not 15 % ois List 15 £ die List 85 4 dia . Trunk do 5 00 @ 8 0u 10 @ 13 60 80 @ 6j fiilaMM—Duty, Cylinder List. List 12* % dia Cast Bbl L'st 25@30 % dis Carriage and Tire do List 65 % die Door L ck s and Latches List 7$ dis Door Knobs—Mineral. List 7$ % dia 44 Pore lain List 7* % dia Pa 'locks N*w List 25*7$ % dis @ .. List 5 % fiU Joint. List 10 Jfldr Hlnge^WroUiht, Door B( ** @ *]** $8@t leas 20 ^ Wrought Butts *4 'Hsu % @ Smiths’ Vis-1* 40 @ 50 @ 5 00 @20 1 00 @ 3 3 00 @ 6 Mink, dark Muskrat, Gum Cordage—Duty, tarred,8; unv-rred Tarred American do Benzoin Kowrie Gedda... Gum Grey Liat2(@25 Hopper . Cast Butts—Fast . 3 00 @ 5 00 75 @ 1 00 Marten, Dark 60 @ Bri .... . do Red do 10}@ Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. Senegal (gold) GumTragacanth, Sorts 23 j do do Wood Bacz...r Cotton Gins, per saw... .... Beaver, Dark..skin 1 00 @ 8 do Pale 50 @ 2 Bear, Black 5 00 @i2 Jo brown 2 00 @ 8 Badger c0 @ Cat, Wild 40 @ do House 10 @ Fisher, 4 00 Q 8 Fox, Silver 5 0k @50 Lynx „ India 1 to3 8 00 do ordinary 6 17 Broad Hatch’s 8to3 bstJ2 00 do «idi ]$ <0 @ ary Coffee Milis Furs—Du.y, 10 $ oent. dc Cross Arabic, Picked.. Arabic, Sorts... ordinary fcteel, best br’ds, Nos. Frnlt#—See special report. , 17 Gum Damar Gnm Myrrh,Bast. H kled, p. to. . Flowers,Benzoin.$ oz. 80 @ eo Gambier gold Gamboge 1 75 @ 2 00 Ginseng, South&West. 65 @ 70 inches _ .... Cutch factured, 35 * cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 .. @ 281 15 @ 1 7u @ 1 75 Soda be d do 12 24 £1 Shingling Hatchets, CTt . .. Feuneli @ 26 @ <g) 35 @ 22$@ 23 @ @ f$ Coriander Seed...... pig, bar, and ingot, 2 cents $ lb; manu¬ 8heatbing, new..* lb Sheathing, yellow @ Cochineal, lion (gold) Cochineal, Mexic’u(g’d) Copperas, American Cream Tartar, pr.(gold Cubebs, East India...* Coffee.—See special report. do ordinary Carpe-ter’s Adzes,.... .... Herring, Scaled^ box. Herring, No. 1... Herring,pickled$bbl. 6 Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. Jersey $ ft Ammonia, Epsom Salts Extract Logwood Hardw are— A\es—Cast steel, best brand' perdoz .... 8a inon, @ A 1 01 Buenos Ayres,mixed. .... @31 • 86 .... 36 canis¬ * ft Hog. Western, unwaah. Mackerel, Mackerel, No. 2,Ha ax @ Mac’el,No.3,Ma.ss. 1’gelO 00 @lu 25 Mackerel, No. 8. H’fox @ Mackerel,No.3, Mass. @ Salmon,Pickled, No.1.37 00 @ 19| 6 50 Hair—Duty free. RioGrande,mixed* ft 80 No. 2, Bay..11 60 @12 U0 19|@ 20 Cardamoms, Malabar @ 3 25 Castor Oil Cases * gal 2 lo @ 2 17{ Chamomile Flow’s*ft 15 @ 60 Chlorate Potash (gold) Caustic ters 14 25 @14 50 .... Sul¬ Cantharides Carbonate in bulk 4J@ @ 6j@ 85 @ .. Sporting, in 1 ft .... 19 ft, .. .... 80 @ 80$@ valued at 80 6 oents tt ft, aad Eifle Mackerel,No.l,Halifax @ Mackerel,No. 1, Bay..16 00 @16 Carraway Seed .. Copper—Dtfty, I lor shore .... Roll Cement—Rosendale*bl— @ 1 75 Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels Su lb to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents * 28 bushels of 80 lb $ bushel. Liverpool Orrel. ton of8,240 ft @ @21 03 LIverp’l House Caunel ou ,a* * (gold).39 00 @40 00 ton _ 22 @ leas « .... Mackerel, No. 1, Mass If at 1C * cent ad val.: over 20 o«nta V ft, 10 cents * 1b and 20 * centad vaT Blasting(A) * 25ft keg @4 00 Shipping and Mining.. @4 50 .. . ft 20 .... Piokled 8onle...$ bbl @ Pickled Cod $ bbl. 4 5u @ 87$| i 10 14 16 13 12 @ 14 @ 1 w Gunpowder—Duty, sents or $1 -Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 $ bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬ rels, 50 cents $ loo ft. Dry Cod $ cwt. 4 75 @ 6 00 18 ) 20 b2 (2i 33 2«<3 ) 3 25 ) 40 ) 90 140 ) 1 50 ) 8 75 00 l.,<laMe 7"d> Fisli—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, 85 *t@ 75 @ 1 5J § .. 15 @ 75 Annato, good to prime. Antimony, Kegulus of Argols, Crude @ 88 @ 4 25 ] 00 50 Calcutta, standard, y’d ... .... oo to to, 4 oents .... . 50 00 50 00 Calcutta, light &h’y % 18 @ Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued .... .... 60 40x60.(3 qlts).26 00 English sells at 15 * ct. off above rates. Groceries—See special report. Ouuny Rags—Duty, valued at li cents or less, « square yard, 3; ov#i ogwood, Hon (gold).19 OU @ Logwood, Laguna (gold) @ Logwood, St. Dnmin @16 00 Logwood, Cam.(gold) @ Logwood,Jamaica < o 15 0 .* @ Limawood @122 50 Barwood (gold) @ Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val. Prime Western...$ 1b 85 @ 90 Tennessee ' 85 @ 20 Alum Cheese— Factory Dairies . Aloes, Cape...... * ft Aloes, Socotrine Butter- Fresh pnll, $ per cent. 00 @ J free. Acid, Citric Cheese.—Duty: 4 Butter and Fustic,Maracaibo,gold>2 10; Soda Ash, I; Sugar Lead, 20 cents $ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 * cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 * oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents $ ft; Sal Ammoniac, 2o; Blue Vit¬ riol, 25 cent ad val.; Etlierial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $1 * ft; all hard..per M.10 50 @11 50 >n $4x62 ... .... Pilot . Phosphorus . tion • 01209fl> and upward#lb Acid 75 11x14 13x18 18x28 20x30 * ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 * ton, and Prussia te Potash $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, Quicksilver 30; Refined Camphor, 40cents * ft.; Rhubarb, China Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent advaL.; Sago, Pea* led Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents SalaratuB * 1b; Caster Oil, $1 * gallon ; Chlo¬ SalAm'n ac, Ref (gold) rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda* 11; Sal Soda. Newcastle41 Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, 4; Cream Sarsaparilla, Hond 44 Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents * ft; Sarsaparilla, Mex 44 Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 Seneca Root. * cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent Senna, Alexandria.... * ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Senna, Eastlndia Benzola and Gamboge, 10 * cent.; She’l Lac Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 * cent Soda Ash (80#o.)(g’ld) ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum KowSugar L’d, W’e(goid).. rie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per ft; Sulp Quinine, Amf oz 2 Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Sulphate Morphine.... 6 Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 * Tart’c Acid..(g’ld)$ft cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub' Tapioc* :. limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, Verdigris, dry .v ex dry 60; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25- Oil Vitriol, Blue Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ Duck—Duty, 30 $ oent ad val. mot, $1 * ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 Ravens,Light. pee 16 00 @ $ cent ad val.: Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Ravens, Heavy i8 0u @ Acid, 4 cents $1 n>; Phosphorus, 20 Scotch, G’ck,No.l $y 72 @ * cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ Cotton,No. 1... $} y. 52 @ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents * fl>: Quicksilver, 15 * cent ad Dye Woods—Duty free. val.; Sal JBratus, 1$ cents * ft; Sal Camwood..(gold)$ t'n @ Fustio,Cuba 44 ....40 00 @ Soda, $ cent $ ft; Sarsaparilla and Fustic, Skvanilla44 Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac, @ 32 00 treaties with the United States. rsgf On all goods, wares% and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places side of the Cape of Good Hope, a 8x11 to 10x15 6 to 12x18... 7 to 16x24 8 to 18x80 10 to 24x80 12 24x31 to 24x86. 14 25x36 to 26x40 1$ 28x40 to 30x48.(3 qlte).18 84x54 to 82x66.(3 q ts).20 82x58 to 34x60.(3 qlts).24 Peppermint, pure. Opium, Turkey.(gold) Oxalic 15 reciprocal no Oil Lemon Oil Brimstone, $6; Boll Brimstone, $10 per 701 > *. Refined Borax, 10 cents * ft ; Crude duties noted Kjy- jn addition to the *•'* * Bark, 80 * cent ad vaL; B1 Carb. Soda, ii; Bi Chromate Potash, 9 cents * 1b; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 1001b ; PRICES CURRENT. bJoK, v • i 18 21 151 19 11 12 11 11$ 11* Dry Salted Hides— Chli (gold) c>llfornia... .do Tamp co .do South & Wes^. do Wet Salted Hides— Bue Ayres.* ft g’d. Rio Grande do California do .... Hi 11 Western 1 Coutrysl’ter trim. <h cured. City do do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip * St gold Sierra Leone.... cash Gambia &3issi.u do 12$ 2x$ 18 18 , 23 @ C~6 @ 27 @ 80 Honey—Duty, 2 cent * galloft, Cuba (in bond) (gr' Hops—Duty: 5 Crop of 1867 do of 18(6 Foreign *gall. 60 @ ct at* * ft. * ft 40 50 ■».. »■* I TO 70 THE CHRONICLE. 702 # lb 63 @@ @ East India - ..... Oude Madras Manila v 70 do do do (gold) ...(gold) Guatemala (gold) Caracoas (gold) Iron—Daty,Bara, 1 to 1* cents # lb. Railroad, 70 cents # 100 lb; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents # lb; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and 8croll, If to If cents # lb; Pig, $9 # ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents # lb. Pig, Scotch,No 1. # ton 33 01® 40 (H) Pig, American,No. 1.. 42 00® .... Bar, Red’d tng&Amer 85 0.® 90 0 Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold) 92 50® 105 00 00 0 do do ’ do do do do do 88 @ 33 @ 40 @ 42 @ 43 @ Slaughter, light . middle do heavy, do light Cropped.... middle do .... @ @ 23 @ 23 @ 26f@ 27 @ 27 @ 26 @ 26 @ 26 @ bellies .. Hemi’k, B. do do do do do middle, do heavy. do do do Orlno,, etc.l’t do middle do heavy, do & B. A, do do do • Oak, jo middle, heavy . Califor., light do do do 27 A.,<ko.,l t, # ton.55 75 @r6 00 do in bags. 53 00@54 00 West, thin obl’g, do 5100® Oils - Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1: burning fluid,50 oents $4 gallon; palm,seal, and cocoa nut, 10 $4 cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val. Olive, qs(gold per case 4 00 ® do in casks.$4 gall.. 1 65 ® 1 75 Palm. $ ft 111® Linseed,city...$4 gall. 1 00 @ 1 03 Whale 68® 74 do refined winter.. 85® .... Sperm, crude 2 10 ® 2 15 do do unbleach @ 2 40 Lard oil 1 20 ® Red oil, city distilled 65 ® 70 .... 24 @ 20 @ dam’gdall w’g’s do poor do 87 @ 42 @ Slaugh.inrough Slaugh.in rou., I’t do do mid. 40 *9 gnd heavy @ —Duty: . 28 30 82 27* 28* 27f 28 2G 23 89 45 4i 100 ft do gr’d ... Black Walnut taves— White oak, pipe, heavy pipe, light, do do do do do pipe, oulls .110 00 do do do do bbl., extra, hhd.,extra. hhiL, heavy hhd., light, hhd., culls, bbl.,heavy, bbl., light.. bbl., oulls.. Red oak, hhd.,h’vy. do khd., light.. HEADING —White oak* hhd * Mahogany St, Domin¬ ® 60 00 @ 80 00 crotchet #ft.» 9 @ .... ~ @ 60 00 ® 40 00 Barytes. ~ ~ 34 @ S170 00 ®175 . . do in bond Naptha,refined Residuum Plaster over 11 00 @12 25 8 50 @10 00 12 l0 @18 00 Skills—Duty: 10 # cent Goat,Curaooa# 1b cur. do do do do do do do 10 ... #ft. 16® domestio do 10 @ 14 @ 16 12 @ 21 @ 10 @ Ilf® 15 23 12* 20 Amerio m cast English, spring English blister do common, w Entre Rios, washed S. American Cordova.. do llf@ 80 @ 40 17 @ 26 ® washed....... 19 80 85® 45 Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 # 100 fts.; sheets 2* cento # ft. Sheet # ft 11*@ Uf Ireights- To Liverpool : Cotton # ft Flour Dbl. Petroleum Heavy goods.. .# ton Oil Corn,b’k&bags#bug. Wheat, bulk ana bags Beef # toe. Pork # bbl. 111 Heavy goods...# ton Teas.—See special report Tin—Duty: cent ad Oil Flour Petroleum Beef pigjbara, and block, 15# and Plate vat sheets and plates, 25 per oent ad val. Banca # ft (gold) 26*@ terne Straits (gold) 21 @ Pork d. a. a. *@ @2 9 @56 .. @30 0 80 @40 0 .. ., .. @ @ 8* 9 ..@58 .. @4 0 English -....(gold) 22f@ Plates,char. I.C.# boxll 50 @12 50 do do do —Duty: Brandy, first proofj$8 per gallon, other liquors, $2.60. Wmxa— Duty: value net over 50 cents # gal¬ lon 20 eents # gallon and 25 # cent ad valorem: over 50 and not over 100, 50 oents # gallon and 25 # cent ad valorem: over $1 # gallon, $1 # gal* Ion and 95 # cent ad val. Corn,hulk and bags.. Petroleum(sall)#Dbl. Heavy goods..# ton. Wines and Llauors—Liquois @ 2 50. i hbl. @3 3 .. # tee. .. @5 6 .. .. @6 0 @40 .. I. C.Coke 9 75 @11 25 Terne Charcoalll 25 @12 00 Terne Coke.... 9 50 @10 00 @ 2 40 # bbl. 30 @32 6 @40 0 Wheat. # bush. @ 10 Corn @ •• 19f To Glasgow (By Steam): Flour bbl. @4 6 Wheat # bush. .. @ 12 24* @ 4 21 do extra mess..«..**18 50 @21 00 87 19 14 ® .... washed .... Tobacco.—See special report. Pork,m*90 76 @01 00 ® ® To London : .... Beef,plain mess# bbl.. 18 00 @19 00 80 82 34 @ Mexican,unwashed.... Smyrna, unwashed do ou 28 @ 28 @ S. Amer. Mestlza, unw.. Tallow—Duty :1 cent # lb. American,prime, coun¬ try and city# 1b... oc 20 ® Valparaiso,unwashed.. 7 cents and not above American, spring 24® *, African, unwashed 4o 82 16® 15 ® common.... Peruvian, unwashed 10* German 45 27 @ California, unwashed... do Texas SS 45 40 Superfine... No. 1, pulled.. 17 ^ @ 45 @ 87 @ full bl’d Merino. * and4 Merino.. Extra, pulled . Pr# visions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ct; isms, bacon, andlard,2 ts # lb. # cent, ad val.; when imported do do gold Puerto Cab .gold Chagres 11, 3 cts # ft; over 11 oents, 3* cents # ft and 10 # cent ad val. (Store prices.) 23 English, cast, # ft . 18 @ Paris—Duty: lump,free; . - and Honduras..gold Sisal gold Para gold Vera Cruz .gold Castile 27f @ 32 # bbl. 8 00 @ 3 25 .. k, val 0th\]. whanSf £ Madras ....each .... .... ft # ft and 11 # cent, ad # ft, 12 cents # 32 cents Class 3.—Carpet Wools and similar Wools-^he value the last place whence exported to the oent ad val. .. , Uni tin 58 cits or Soap—Duty: 1 cent # ft, and 25 # 14* less washed, double these ratos prlaa 2.- Combing Wools-The value wh«e. of at the last place whence exnort^ to the United States is 32 Tampico...gold Matamoras.gold Payta gold do do do do do do 24 @ Calcined, eastern# bbl Calcined cltT mills.. ^ cencs or Buenos A... gold Vera Cruz .gold White Nova Scotia . States is 32 cents Cape Deer,San J uan# ft gold do Bolivar ...gold over lai? Wooti—The value whereof at the place whence exported to the calcined, 20 # cent ad vaL Blue Nova Scotia# tox 3 87*@ 4 00 Rose* -v •I Telegraph, No. 7 tc tl # ft qj 91® SOper cent) 47 @ * do 57 @ Copper ’* Wool—Duty: Imparted in the “or dinary condition as now and fore practiced.” Class 1 —Clot/iinn Sugar*—See special report 46 @ t<- Plain Brass (less Ilf® lzf@ superior, do Medium China thrown. 15 @ 85 39 00 @42 75 v 7 70® Japan, superior 12 2|@ 5: @28 03 9 on 8 60® 10 00 @10 25 do medium,No3@4. 9 00 @ 9 fO Canton,re-reel.Nol@2. 8 CO @ 8 50 .... @140 00 K 2 50 2 10 English machinery.... 16 18f@ Sumac—Duty: 10 # oent ad val. Sicily # ton.. 125 00 @220 00 Refined,free 245 00 ISO Taysaams, No. 1 @ 9f 00 00 @90 00 (0 @34 90 do do val. a No. 0 to 18. .17*®22*# ct. off H3t No. 19 to 26.... 30 #ct. off i8t No.27 to 86.... 35 #ct.6ff list Steel—Duty: bars and Ingots, valued at 7 cents # ft or under, 2* cents; 1 .J ? 85® 1 26® . Petroleum—Duty: ©rude, 20 cents; refined, 40 :ents # gallon. Crude,40@47grav.#gal. 17*@ 80 06 §120 00 ~ 8 @ "a\ 3 Wire—Duty: No.Oto 18, uncovers $2 to $3 5i # 100 ft, and 15 # cent ad Spieee. —See special report. 12 @ Venet.red(N.C.)#cwt 8 Carmine,city made# lbl6 China clay # ton32 Chalk # lb. Chalk, block.... # ton« 00 @11 > 00 @100 00 @150 00 @115 00 @ 90 00 ® 60 00 lalioffany* Cedar, wood— Duty free. go .... ®275 00 ®225 00 ®175 09 ,. • Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk, 35 # oent. Tsatlees, No.l®3.#lbi0 50 @11 50 . Chromeyellow...# ft pipe, • 14 Trieste 1 05 Cal. & Eng.. 1 30 American.... 25 do do do 90 00 ®100 00 -W M. extia do do . • 11 11 . 69 00 ® 70 00 Wni‘e wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 Oharry B’ds & Plank 75 00 Oak and Ash 55 00 Maple and Birch 85 00 .. in oil.$4 ft Pariswh., No.l#l00ft Whiting, Amer Vermilion,Chinese# ft 1 29 00 ® 80 00 Laths,Eastern.# M 8 00 ® # ft Buck Ochre,yellow, French, $4 100 ft 2 25 @ 3 00 dry do gr’a in oil.# ft Spanish brown, dry # East. # M it 18 09 ® 20 00 Southern Pine 85 00 ® 40 00 White Pine Box B’ds £4 00 ® 29 CO Poplar and ■ • @ @ .. do white, American, No. 1,in oil do white, Frenoh, in oil Spruce, Boards Clear Pine i i @ Litharge, City #ft Lead,red,City do white, American, pure, in oil do white, American, puie, dry Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1 ,u Sherry do do ....® J Malaga,sweet do 90® i‘J-o do dry.... do 9(® j j6 Claret, In hhds. do 85 00® eo 00 do in cases. do 2 65® 9 on Champagne.... do ® Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and plates, $1 50 # 100 fts. Plates,foreign # ft gold 6*@ 6* white ohalk, $10 $4 ton. Lumber, 20 # cent ad val.; ad val.; Rosewood Box .... 12* Shot—Duty: 2f cents # ft. — ft ; Spanish brown 25 $4 cekfcad val: China clay, $5 $ ton ; Venetian red and vermilion 25 $4 cent ad val.; 29 27 i’Ai . 2 75 5 62* # bus 5 8 f .... .... 80 gr.. 35 @ 40 (free). 49 @ Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ ft; Parie white and whiting, 1 cent # ft; dry ochres, 56 centt $4100 ft: oxidesof zinc-, if cents *4 ft ; ochre, ground in oil, | 50 $4100 Staves, 10 $ cent and Cedar, PE**. Merch. Vf 11*( Linseed,Am.clean#tce do Am. rough # bus 2 40 Kerosene 43 45 ® 1 Woods? Staves?etc. White Pine 70 @ 75 @ Paraffine, 28 46 heavy .umber* #ft Timothy,reaped # bus 2 50 do do Madeira do Marweilles # cent # ft; canary, $1 # bushel of ft; and grass seeds, 30 # cent Drop ““ 3 60® 8 50® 3 00® .. Burgundy Port, Sherry 60 . Bank Straits jlme—Duty; 10 # ceutad val. 50 .. & J Rockland, eon), $1 bbl. 85 de 9*® 8f® ...gold *"* ... gold Calcutta * 75® 4 75® 4 75® 4 75® D<»m c—N.E.Rum.car. ....® BourbonWhisky.our. .i..@ Whisky (in bond) 34® Wines—Port (gold) 2 0< @ Seed*—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, do 75® 4 76® do do St. Croix d> Gin-Differ, brands do ..m ,°2 Z 7 S 9 4 P Romieux Rum—Jamaica .... 42 46 # g. do . **’* ® ...?® Alex.Seignette. do ArzacSeignette de .. Crude Canary.. 4 do Seignette Sj JS 5 0(1® in Hiv. Peilevoisln do .. 6 00 ® 7 60 55® 57 90® A. Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2* cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent # ft. Refined, pure # ft @ ' 15 ad val. Clover 4 Pellevolsln..... Vorthlngt’s 2_85 Onondaga,com.fine bis. do do 210 1b bgs Nitrate soda do 90® ... 49 do do # bush. Solar coarse Fine screened do #pkg. F. F.... ...240 ft bgs 4 ... L**ger freres do Cog. do do fine, ® 3 75 Oakum—Duty fr.,# ft 8® 11 Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val. City thin obl’g, in bbls. # /— Oak, bush. o ig 13 17 ..^8 16 00 do do do Other br’ds Liverpool,gr’nd# sack 1 95 do flne,AshtonTs(g’d) 2 60 80 Oil ® 6 55 ® 6 75 ®10 50 ®12 00 J. Vassal A Co,, Jules Robin.... Marrette & Co. Vine Grow.Co. . ... .net U eat tier—Duty: sole 35, upper 80 $ oent ad vaL ^ ft.-> ■cash. 4* Turks Islands # Cadiz No. 1 3 75 ® 4 25 Pale and Extra (280lbs.) ....... Spirits turp., Am. $ • Salt—Duty: sack, 24 cents bulk, 18 oents # 100 ft. 7 25 27 ® (gold) 4 90@ Hennessy...... (gold) 4 9(® Otard, Dup. ACo.do 4 80® Plnet, Castil.&Co.do 4 75® Renault & Co.. do 5 00® 18 10 Carolina ....*.# 100 ft 8 75 ® 9 50 East India,dressed.... 6 00 @ 6 50 . 7 00 ® do strainedandNo 2. ..3 25 .. net 4 @ Bahia ... .... Pipe and Sheet... 8 @ 25 @ 5 @ 20 12 12 19 50 8 6 19*® 8*® , J. & F. Martell # ft. 15 @ 42 @ Yellow meta) 26® Zinc 18 @ Naval Stores—Duty: spirits oi turpentine 30cents # gallon; crude Turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 # cent ad val. Turpent’e, soft.$280ft 4 25 ® 4 50 bbl 2 ,/5 @ 3 CO Tar, Am rlci Pi cli 3 75 ® 3 87* Rosin, common...... 3 00 ® Bods,5-8®3-16inch.. 110 00®165 00 Hoop 187 50® 190 00 Nail Rod # lb 9 ® 10f 17 ® 18 Sheet, Russia Sheet, Single, Double and Treble.. 5® 7 Bails, Eng. (g’d) # ton 52 50® 53 00 do American. 79 00® 82 50 lvorv—Duty, 10 # cent ad val. East India, Prime #ft 2 87® 8 f>0 East Ind , Billiard Ball 8 00® 8 25 African, Prime.. .. 2 87® 3 00 African, 8crlvel.,W.C. 1 CO® 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 # 100 lb; Old Lead, If cents $ lb; Pipe and Sheet, 2* oents # ft. ® Galena V 100 lb (sold] 6 37*@ 6 50 Spanish. Bar 8 @ ?■hoe, pressed... Copper @132 60 127 50® ... 6 50 6 87 8 @ Mansanilla Mexican Florida. # c. ft. Hurseshoe,f’d(6d)#ft Horse Scroll 132 50®180 00 Ovals and Half Round 130 00®140 00 cten'::;.....(goid; (gold] English 14 @ Olinoh Bar,English and Amer¬ Band Horse Shoe. @ Brandy— @19 CO 13* 12J® # lb Rice—Duty: oleanedS* oents # ft.; paddy 10 eents, and uncleaned 2 cents Nails—Duty: cut If; wrought 2f; horse shoe 2 cents $4 ft>. Out, 4d.@60d. # 100S> 5 6 If® 5 75 ®156 00 ican, Refined 100 00®105 do Common 9 > 00® 95 do do 14 14 14 [tlolastes.—See special report. assorted - ... Rosewood, R. Jan. $ 2) /—Store Prices—. Bar Swedes, sizes Rams, Shoulders,...; 10 @ 11 @ Mexican Honduras do 40 10 .. (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas 85 75 @ *5 65 @ 65 @ 1 DO 95 @ 1 20 75 @ 10) (sold) Lard, 30 @ Nuevitas Mansanilla do do do do @ 18 10 10 @ logs. 50 prime, 7@ do Port-au-Platt, orotohes do Port-au-Platt, .. Carthagena, &c @ Indigo—Duty peek. Bengal (*old)#ft 1 01 @ do ordinary logs ad vaL Para, Fine Para, Medium. 'Para, Coarse St. Domingo, do Horns—Duty, 10 $ oent. ad val. Ox, Rio Grande... ^ C 9 CO® ... Ox, American 7 00® 8 00 India Rubber-Duty, 10 # oent. [November BO, 186?. Beef.'.*.*.**.' Pork.... To Hav»* i ' - #toe. # bbl. - .. .. .. ... ft @ 11 @5 6 |50 0 @9 0 @7 0 _ Cotton..?.* # *> 1 Beef and pork. .# hbl. Measurem. g’dt.# *on 10 06 Petroleum........... 5 • 6 ® LMrd, tallow, ooJP-J ^ ins, pound t » poor!,, $ 00 @1$ 00 • THE 'CHRONICLE. Not# ber 30, 1867.] Commercial Cards. Gilead A. 15 Commercial Cards. Smith, LANGHAM PLACE, LONDON, Commmercial Cards. Norton, Slaughter & Co., W.’ AND BESSEMER RAILS, STEEL TYRES, General Commission AND METALS. Cash Advances made Continent. Consignments solicited on the nanal terms of any of tbe staples. U. S. or forms of Iron and Consignments on ADVANCES CONSIGNMENTS OF COTTON TO OUR Special Counting and Reception Rooms available for London, with the facilities usually found at ths Continental Bankers. Americans in FRIENDS IN LIVER¬ HAMBURG. Neill, Bros., & Co., 134 A. L. and Street Roads, Cummins, COTTON FOR SALE BY MEMPHIS, for family use and ’amlly and i COTTON JOHN STEPHENSON Sc CO., own and other first-class Dis¬ Henry Lawrence 8c Sons. •> "V FOR EXPORT AND DOMEST 1C 192 FRONT STREET, NEW YORK. VSE) V* r: DANNE- 65 Commerce I beg to announce that I have this day entered into contract with Messrs. W. Jessop & Sons, of Sheffield MERCHANTS, Street, Mobile, Ala. Everett 28 State Co., Boston, HEARD & CO V,F CHINA AND JAPAN. CINCINNATI, OHIO. Special attention given to filling orders for Spinners special attentloif of the Street, AUGUSTINE COTTON BROKER, ^^LEUFSTA, W. JESSOP Sc SONS. & AGENTS FOR Burnham Erastus of the above Iron, which And to Which I request the trade. * ■*. England & Co., AND GENERAL COMMISSION; MORA IRON. a J. N. Falls COTTON FACTORS NOTICE TO THE CONSUMERS OF THE for the whole Annual Make in future, will be stamped ' WHISKIES, from their tilleries, Kentucky. BUYERS, J. C. Johnson. MERCHANTS, STREET, NEW YORK, Offer for sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE Co., by permission to Caldwell & Morris, New York. Wm. G. New York. SWEDISH .. MAkUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE MANUFACTURERS. GENUINE ^ AND Memphis, Tenn. Refer , DISTILLERS COMMISSION TENNESSEE. Broadway. G. Falls. SEND J. M. Cummings 8c Co., 58 BROAD Cars, Omnibuses. purposes. Branches . BROKER, G. Falls & Street manufacturing Agencies throughout the civilized world, 6 FOR CIRCULAR. S. W. HOPKINS Sc Co., 69 & 71 NEW YORK. ^Proprietors and Manufacturers of, the world °WS1NGER SEWING MACHINES, PEARL STREET. AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, FOR SingerManufacturingCoa BROADWAY, 458 POOL HAVRE AND Railroad Iron, i THE ON MADE v . . Fire-proof cqustruction. - LIBERAL ENGINEERS, •? i •- Designs and Specifications prepared for Stores, Warehouses, Railway, Mercantile and Banking edi¬ fices generally. Particular attention paid to the most approved Merchants, 40 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. negotiated, and Credit and Exchange provided for Go-,-- 111 BROADWAY, NEW YORK, r ' • Railroad Bonds and U.S. and other Americrn Secnrl* Steam E. :Tv Littell & ARCHITECTS Sc CIVIL COTTON Sc TOBACCO FACTORS RAILROAD IKON, ties 703 Steamship Companies. . Leuftta, In Sweden, 29th April, 1867. CARL EMANUEL DE GEER, Proprietor. WM. JESSOP & SONS, in referring to the above notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers ol, Iron and Steel, that they are prepared to receive orders for this Ikon, and for Blister and Extra Cast Steel made from the Iron, at their establishments. Nos. 91 & 93 John Street, New York, and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed jcjul Street, Boston-. STEAM Daniel H. Carpenter, Commission Merchant,—United States Bouden Warehouse. NOS. 263 & 265 WEST PEARL Morris, Tasker & Co., Pascal Iron N. Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c. STREET, NEW YORK. Thomas 292 PEARL PRODUCE SIA via PANAMA. The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of each month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬ tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the Pacific Mall Steamship Company leaving New-York for COMMISSION . MERCHANT, CINCINNATI. Consignments and Orders So felted. 8c Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ' Cotton, Flour, Grain and Provisions. NO. 27 MAIN STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET ST.V CINCINNATI, Special steamers run to the newly-discovered gold region of Hokitika, New Zealand. Children under three years, free; under eight years, quarter fare ; under twelve years, half-fare: male ser. vants, one-half fare; female do., three-quarters faremen servants berthed forward, women do., in ladies cabin. i ^ t A limited quantity of merchandise will be conveyed under through bill of lading. vFor further information, application to be made to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall st. Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William st. New Y O, NEW YORK PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S ‘ F. & F. A. Dana, FOREIGN Sc AMERICAN RAILROAD IRON, OLD AND NEW, Pig, Scrap Iron and other Metals, Lo¬ comotives, Railroad Chairs Sc Spikes, Old Ralls Re-rolled W WALL or Exchanged for FLOUR, new. COMMISSION STREET, NEW YORK,' A. B. Holabird & CINCINNATI, O., WASHINGTON Particular attention is called ST811T. Chicago, Ilia. SAW MILL. California, And Carri rylngthe United ites Mall States Mall, ■Ik LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIVMBfea ER, FOOT o ) Canal street, at 19 o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and 31st of every month (except when those dates flail on a 4^ 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. NOVEMBER: Co., to our * 1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden City. 11th—Henby Chauncey, connecting with Montana 90th—Arizona, connecting with Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with ENGLISH AND AMERICAN COAL. ENGINE AND MILL MANUFACTURERS. IMPROVED CIRCULAR To MERCHANTS, k THROUGH LINE 8IBDI Blair, Densmore & Co., ESTABLISHED IN 1826. Parmele . Brothers, SUCCESSORS TO H. L. PARMELE & BROS. ?1lothera ln strength, durability and pHay.ty’WU1 cut from 15»000 to 20.000 feet of lumber GRAIN, ▲NR PROVISIONS. lit i NEW- YORK AND AUSTRALA¬ Aspinwall (Colon) on the 11th of each month hirst and second class passengers will be conveyed under through ticket at the rates: From New York to ports in New Zealand, or to Sydney or Melbourne, $346 to $364 for first class, and $218 to $243 for second class. ; : The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward cabins of the Australian steamer: after cabin, latter $25 additional. Fares payable in United States gold coin. J. Chapin, J. Pope 8c Bro. Gano, Wright METALS. COMMUNICA¬ BETWEEN Following Manufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street 15 GOLD STREET* CINCINNATI. Works, Philadelphia. OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES: TION Baggage cnecxed through. COAL, Of all the Best Kinds for . * . V* . Family and Office 3 2s Pine Street* v* t iS eteamere for South Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for Central American Ports. Those or 1st touch at Man¬ zanillo. use, 11 One hundred pounds allowed each adult. ' An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and Attendance free. For passage tickets or further information»fipply gttne Company’s ticket office, on the wharf;'foot Cwua street, North Wtw* New York. F. At pABX , :7 - * ** Age&t, o Commercial Cards. S. H. Pearce & Commercial Co., Cards. Commercial Cards. No. 868 BROADWAY, E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. Importer* of ▲SENT* FOB EUROPEAN AND CHINA SILKS, Oiled CHICOPEE MANUP. MILTON Our41 IMITATION ” ha* a very superior finish, and oat* but half as much as real silk, which it equals in appearance and durability. Agents for the sale of the Patent Reversible Paper Collars. ever Invented. Wm. C. HANDKERCHIEFS, CO., HOSIERY and MILLS, MEN’S FURNISHING Offers if a new GOODS, Stock of the above at 864 BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN Langley Sc Co., COMMISSION | and Lawn Nos. 43 Sc 45 WHITE STREET. „ CRAPES,.;, And importer of Linen Csunbric, Madder, Turkey Red CO., VICTORY MANUF. Imitation Oiled Silk. ecouomloal collar ENGLISH BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO., Slllc9 ? (late of Becar, Napier A Ott.) . SILK AND COTTON HANDKERCHIEFS, Napier Agent for S. Courtauld 4c Co.’s WASHINGTON HILLS, and Manufacturer* of • most Alexander. D. Oscar Delisle MERCHANTS STREET. & IMPORTERS Co., OF FOR George Pearce Sc Co., AMERICAN COTTON AND WOOLEN GOODS. Muslin From Numerous Mills. TO A 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK, 17 & WHITE 19 NEW STREET, Importers of White French Dress Globe Handk’A, YORK. Woolen John O’Neill & Sons, W. W. Co., Real Brussels Imitation W. D. Simowton. Cofftw, Treaa. Fancy Casslmeres. Silk 73 LEONARD Mixtures, Beavers. Embroidery, Organ zinc, and Tram. MILLS AT ST., NEW YORK. IMPORTERS UMBRELLAS AND COMMISSION Smith, Spool Cotton. Goods, Goods, JOHN Irish and Scotch 150 & 15? DUANE SEWING. THOS. KIRK Sc SON, Wm. Thompson & Co., IRISH J. & P. Coats’ BEST SIX-CORD HANDK’FS, AC. Street, New York Large Stock always C. Holt & COMMISSION 59 Co., Broad St HUGH AUCHINCLOSS, SPOOL Also No. 108 Duane Street. SHOE COTTON. STREET, NEW YORK. Mills at Patterson ■— ' GOODS, In fhll assortment for the Jobbing and Clothing Trade* Agents for the sale of CORSETS, SKIRT MATERI¬ ALS, WEBBINGS, BINDINGS BED LACE, COTTON YABrfS, Scc., WILLIAM GIHON & SONS* WHITE LINENS ' or / J .> ^ V DUCK, At ' f ’ - ‘ * t * 4-' •' ' - , , 1 , Son, t MANUFACTURERS OF George Hughes & Co., MACHINE TWIST AND SEWING *ILKS, 3 V ' No. 299 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. , Importers & Commission Merchants, WOBKS ■ PATEKSON, K. LINEN DRILLS, LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS, PATENT LINEN THREAD Sole . r STREET, COTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, SPANISH LINEN. DUCKS, ... Agent* lor GOODS. Malcomson, .IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS Belfast, And V. W. MATES St CO., Hsus bridge - EUROPEAN PASSAGE AND EXCHANGE RISH AND SCOTCH 40 Murray LINENS, Street, New York, . .. — — ■ ' ■ - OFFICE, BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Drafts on England, Ireland ac Scotland Bankers furnished with Sterling Exchange and through tickets from Europe to all parts of the Uaiw« ' United States Petroleum company,;.. . Nd. 88 PIN* S-fRkW*, t New York, November 13, 1867. J NOTICE.—The United States Petroleum CompW have this day declared a Quarterly Dividead of Twv Per Cant., payable oa Saturday, Novemqw 8^. *'**** dosed on Batnr Transfer cooks trlL bar 38, and reopened o ionday Deceml ' ' * By ordar, P. G. PENNING, Secretary > - 73 States. , c Thompson’s Nephew, ~ FOB », L ; . Strachan * & ’ DICKSONS’ FERGUSON St CO, faithfully executed. JOFTAH REDDEN, / ? ISAIAH C. BABCOCK, LOCKE WTWIN CHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN. S. * Adams, American, United States, Wells sale of the Fargo A Co., and Merchants’ union Express Stocks. SUPERIOR 198 Sc 900 CHURCH prparticulalr1attchiti^nWlvehto order* for the purchase STREET. NEW YORK Wm. G. Watson & BURLAPS, BAGGING, FLAX SAIL Stacks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold at market rates, on commission only. Interest allowed on balances. Advance* made on ap- All orders Ac C NEW YORK, Bankers and Brokers. WOVEN 234 CHURCH a NO. 69 BROADWAY, Manufacturer of , IRISH Sc SCOTCH LINEN J. Hedden,Winchester&Co John Graham, 43 & 44 MURRAY STREET. — Financial. .-r Importers Sc Commission Merchants, N. J. pH* Offer to Jobbers only. r -i THREADS, 95 CHAMBERS Agents for MACHINE AND SEWING SILK, BUTTON-HOLE TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C. Gihon, Threads, SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC. BARBOUR BROTUEKS, Agents for the Glasgow Thread Company’s SOLE AGENTS IN NEW YORK. Brand Sc CO Street, corner of Beaver Linen MERCHANTS, 119 CHAMBERS STREET. JOHN on hand. POUHEMUS A THEODORE MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS. CABLED Thread. Church Duck, All Widths and Weights. A 185 No. STREET. N.Y. Cotton LINENS, LINEN CAMB’C BUSSELL, Sole Agent, M CHAMBERS Importers of Linen Manufacturers and Bleachers BELFAST, IRELAND. CO’S. IS UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND XACSDNS STREET, NEW YORK. Agents for <t CLARK, Jr. Sc End, Glasgow. Mile Linens, Ac., At, PLACE, NEW YORK. WILLIAM PARASOLS, Nos. 12 A 14 WARREN STREET, NEW YCfI«. White 88 PARK Hall, And Fancy Dress Anderson & Laees, Manufacturers of MERCHANTS, Staple, British PATERSON, N. J. AND Laces, STREET, NEW YORK. Byrd & Lindsay, Chittick & Co., Machine Twist Goods. Corsets, Ac. MANUFACTURERS OF Sawing Silks, Edgings, Swiss A French White 198 A 200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK. British and Continental. 84 CHAMBERS Draperies, Machine Laces and Emb’s, . Lace Curtains. Goods, Linen Goods, § |