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ante’ fcttte, (Eiamwcmat ^imejs,

§taitwinj pmtitot, m& insurance fmmud.

NEWSPAPER,
representing the industrial and commercial interests of tiie united states.
A WEEKLY

NO. 124.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1867.

VOL. 5.

Bankers

Bankers and Brokers.

Rodman,

Fisk & Co.,

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN

STREET,

RANKERS.
.Street. New York.
Keep constantly on hand lor immediate delivery
issues of

INCLUDING

Compound Interest Notes, and
Gold and Silver Coin.

collected and Coupons cashed
740 Notes, all series, taken in exchange for the new

Registered Interest
without charge.

Consolidated 5-20 Bonds, on terms advantageous to
lolders of 7-80’s.
Merchants and Importers supplied with Coin for
justoms duties at lowest market rates.
Orders for purchase and sale of all miscellaneous
Mail and telegraph
ieourities promptly executed.

personal attention. Deposits
received, and interest allowed on balances. Collecpoints.with
;ions made on all
quick returns.
RODMAN, FISK & CO.
orders will receive our

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
6
“
44
1864,
6
44
*•
1865
Cent
10-40
Per
Bonds,
3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
tPer Cent Currency Certificates.

Sight Draft.

favorable terms,
and promptly execute orders for the Purchase or sale
of Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad
Make Collections on

Securities.

Street, New York.

BANKERS.
Corner Wall and Nassau

2d, & 3d series*

Fifteenth

PARIS, MOBILE AND

able in all parts

Travellers, avail¬

of Europe.

Interest Allowed on

Deposits.

Compound Interest Notes of 1864 &.
1865 Bought and Sold.

1

59

BANKERS Sc BROKERS,
& 61 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,

Buy and Sell Stocks, Honda, Gold
andlGovernment Securities. \ cconnts
of

Bank*, Bankers, and Merchant*

received

on

favorable terms.

AMERICA)* BANKERS,
NO. I
SCRIBE, PARIS
V
„

AND

No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK,

hsae Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers In si
lirtssf Karen*, etc*, eto. Also Commercial Credits.

Temple & Marsh,
BANKERS AND BROKERS.
Dealers in Government Securities, &C., on Commission,
No. 9 Wall Street, cor. New.




Philadelphia and

have this day opened an office at No.

Mr. Edward

Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.,

York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington

House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will

Riker &

Co.,

be resident
We shall

BROKERS IN MINING STOCKS,
NO. 5 NEW STREET and 80

SALE,

BROADWAY.

all

Wilson, Callaway & Co.,

partners.

give particular attention to the purchase,

and EXCHANGE of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Of

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 Commission Merchants
NO. 44 BROAD

STREET, NEW YORK
Stocke. Bonds and Gold

Hoyt 6c

Gardner,

Government Securities,

bought and sold on the most liberal terms.

NO. 5 NEW STREET, NEAR

Brownell & Bro.,

favorable terms.

«T. H. Fonda, Pres.
C. B. Blair, Pres’t

National Mech. Banking Ass., N.Y.
Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago.

Bell, Faris & Co.,
AND
BROKER
12 NEW & 14 BROAD STREETS,
Members of the Stock, Gold and Government Boards,
Dealers In Governments and other

attention given to orders
in

gold.

\

Money received upon deposit and Interest allowed
upon current balances.
T. A. Hoyt,
James Gardner,
Vice-Pres’t. Gold Exchange
Georgia

Thompson’s Nephew,

S.

EUROPEAN

PASSAGE A^D EXCHANGE
78

BANKERS

WALL, NEW YORK.

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
bought and sold exclusively on Commission.

Special

BANKERS Sc BROKERS,
28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.
Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
Bought and Sold exclusively on commission.
Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received
on

BANKERS AND BROKERS.

Mer¬

chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on
deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬
ton, Tobacco. &c., consigned to ourselves o* to our
correspondents, Messrs.
K. GILLIAT & CO.,

OFFICE,

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

Drafts on England, Ireland Sc Scotland
Bankers furnished with Sterling Exchange and
through tickets from Europe to all parts of the United
St at as.

Jackson Bros.,

Gold and Currency

subject to check at sight.

DEALERS IN

George

Farnham,

COMMERCIAL

G ILD AND GOV¬
SECURITIES, Ac.,

STOCKS, RONDS,

(Late of G. S. Robbins & Son,)

ERNMENT

PAPER,

ALSO,

STOCKS, BONDS. GOLD, &c., BOUGHT AND [SOLD

NO. 19 BROAD
Wm.

STREET, NEW YORK.

Fred. Wendell Jackson.

Henry Jackson.

ON COMMISSION.

48 Pine Street,

John Munroe & Co.,

we

Nassau, corner of Wall Street, In this city.

New

VERMILYE Sc CO.

Securities.
Interest allowed on deposits of

Pott, Davidson & Jones,

Street,

In connection with our houses in

NEW ORLEANS.
Issue Circular Letters of Credit for

Street,

Opposite Treas. Department.
Washington.

References :

DRAW ON LONDON AND

Sts.,

Philadelphia.

Washington

Winslow, Lanier & Co., J. L.
ST Sc 29 Pine

DODGE,

Jay Cooke & Co.,
No. 114 South 3d

Liverpool.

BANKERS,

(PITT COOKE.

New York.

Street, New York.

ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and
others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to

< EDWARD

H. D.

LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN
MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS.

Co.,

Buy and Sell at Market Rates,

(H. O. FAHNESTOCK

COOKE,
MOORHEAD,
COOKE,

WM. G.

New York State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan.

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

No. 32 Broad

all

STJO.Ck's

UNITED"STATES

Buy and sell at market rates :
Six Per Ceat. Bonds of 1881, Ten Forties,
Five-Twenty Bonds, all issues ;
Seven-Thirty Notes, all series;

Taussig, Fisher &

JAY

n o

&

Vermilye
No. 44 Wal

government securities,
NO. 18 NASSAU

Bankers and Biokers.

Brokers.

and

B.

New York.

Murray,
BROKER IN

Warren, Kidder & Co.,
BANKERS,
ST., NEW YORK.

Jr.,

No. 4 WALL

Government and other Securities,
27 WALL

Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬
CENT. INTEREST ALLOWED
deposits, subject to check at sight.

Orders for stocks,
cuted. FOUR PER

STREET, NEW YORK.

Gelston &

Bussing,

F
,

BANKERS Sc BROKERS
27 WALL STREET
All orders receive our Personal Attention.
Wm. J. Gelston.
John S. Bussma.

RANK

& GANS,

DEALERS IN U. S
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.

BANKERS AND

No. 14 WALL

STREET

578

THE CHRONICLE

[November 9, 1867.]

Financial.

THE

Garth, Fisher & Hardy, CENTRAL
BANKERS,
No, 18 NEW

STREET,

Successors to Harrison, Garth & Co. and
Henry
Government

Hardy).
Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc.

bought and sold at the “ regular” Board of Broker

and at the Gold
sion only.

Exchange in

person

and

on

commis¬

Foreign and Domestic Exchange bought, sold

collected.

M. K.

MERCHANTS,

Negotiate

Ronds and Loans for Railroad
Contract for
Iron or Steel Rails,

Cos.,

They

and

Locomotives,

Cars, etc.,

Of

Joseph a. Jamesox,
Amos Cottixg,

Jameson, Cotting & Co.
St. Louis.

Railways

James D. Smith,
of the late firm of James
Low & Co., New York
and Louisville, Ky.

Jameson, Smith & Cotting
RANKERS,
NOS. 14 & 1G WALL STREET, NEW YORE.

Receive Deposits In

Currency and Gold,

and allow Interest at the rate of FOUR PER CENT
per annum on daily balances which may be checked
for at

on

Commission.

Drake

Draft.

BANKERS,

Promptly Executed

and

AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT

SECURITIES,

BONDS,

on the most liberal

terms, and without delay.
IMPORTERS and others supplied with GOLD at mar
rates, aud Coin on hand for immediate delivery.
No. 12 WALL STREET.

SOUTTER &

Co.,

BANKERS,
.No. 53 WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK.

Gilliss, Harney & Co.,
BANKERS,
NO. 24 BROAD STREET.
Buy and Sell at Market Rates.
ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS and
others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to
Sight draft.
Make collections on favorable
terms,

as

peculiarly exempt from competition, and

must form the Trunk

the hardest part

■

r-

interest,

revenues

of the road,

are

payable in coin—principal

-

€

This agreement has the sanction of the Act of
Congress, and being made
under the Specific Contract Acts of California and
Nevada, is valid and binding in
law.
As these Securities
possess elements of unusual

safety, stability and profit
they will, without doubt, be actively dealt in by both European and home invest¬
ors, and a marked increase in their value
may be looked for long before the com¬
pletion of the great enterprise.
Conversions of Government
First
now

ADVANTAGE, with the
Bonds

ble

can

be obtained

Descriptive pamphlets,
C. P. R.R.

Hughes,

map9,

13 Broad Street, New York.
Deposits received, subject to Check, and Interest al¬

and information

can

or

through responsi-,

be had at the office of the

&

HATCH,

BANKERS,
AND

DEALERS

IN

GOVERNMENT

SECURITIES,

AND

Financial [Agents of the- Central Pacifio Railroad
Company,

lowed.

A. HAWLEY HEATH*




T. W. B. HUGHES,
Mwabw 01 N» Y, Utook Ex,
„

PER CENT.

of interest.

ANT)

GOLD, RAILROAD AND MINING STOCKS, V

EIGHTEEN

through the subscribers directly,

FISK
SECURITIES,

TO

Co., 64 William Street, New York, and of

BANKERS ^COMMISSION BROKERS
IN GOVERNMENT

Central Pacific

Mortgage Bonds,

same rate

Banking Agencies.

promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale
Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities.

Heath &

Securities into

.realize for the holders from TWELVE

And
of

valuable and productive Railroad line, in

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.
Collections both inland and foreign
promptly made.
Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated.

r

upon a

of the work is now done; what remains is easy
inexpensive, and will be rapidly carried through.*

well

ket

Dealers in Bills of

thej yield nearly

the prior lien

Bonds, like the

as

GOLD, &c.
of SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES exchanged for

the new FIVE-TWENTY

of $1,000 each, with semi-annual gold coupons
attached,
Q5 per cent, and accrued interest jrom July

sums

for the present at

surplus earnings, after the payment of all expenses and interest lia¬
bilities, during the current year, will exceed one million dollars in gold.

BANKERS

ues

in

Line of the North American Continent.

Hatch, Foote & Co..,
All

are

offered

are

STREET, NEW YORK,

Orders

are

road is

Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬

made.

BONDS,

by the Pacific Railroad Act3 of Congress, are issued
only as the work progresses, and to the same extent only as the Bonds granted
by
the Government, and
represent the preferred claim upon the whole valuable prop¬
erty furnished by Subsidies, Donations, Stock subscriptions, etc. They
possess
special assurances and advantages over other corporate assurances, and are des¬
tined to rank among the best securities in the world.

Brothers,

Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities
Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds,
Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum, and
Mining Stocks.
Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to

ments

SIX

'which three times their utmost issue has been invested.

STOCK BROKERS AND
No. 16 BROAD

YEAR

These bonds, authorized

sight.

only

THIRTY

NINE PER CENT. UPON THE INVESTMENT.

Will purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks
strictly
and

SALE, THROUGH US, THEIR

MORTGAGE

1, in currency, at which rate

and undertake

all business connected with

COMPANY

Principal and Interest Payable in Gold Coin, in New York City.

12 PINE STREET.

,

OFFER FOR

RAILROAD

PER CENT. COUPON

Jesup & Company,

BANKERS AND

IIV.—.—TTMheueych

FIRST

an

PACIFIC

NO, 6 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.

November 9,1867.]

THE CHRONICLE.

Bankers and Brokers.

L. P. Morton &

Bankers and Brokers.

use

States,
world; also,

Sight or Sixty Day*; also, Circular Kotos tad
Letters of Credit for Travelers’

OF CREDIT,
of Travelers abroad and in the
United
available in all the principal cities of the

For the

STREET, NEW TORS.

Use, oo

COMMERCIAL CREDITS,
east of the Cape of Good
West Indies, South America, and the United Hope
States
use

in

Europe,

LONDON,

Available In an the principal towns and cities

Tames G.

m

Europe and tbe East.

,

Charms B. Milhom,

H. Cxusxb Ojjclkt.

S. G. & G. C.

BANKERS.

BARING BROTHERS &
56 WALL

IN

GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES.

OTHER

P. D. Roddev,

R. P. Sawyers.
N. P. Boulett

Petty,

P. D. Roddey &
No. 2X Wall Street,

STREET, NEW YORK,

on

Liverpool, and to

grant mercantile
credits npon them for use in
China, the East and
West Indies, South
America, &c, Marginal credits

of the London House issued for the same
purposes.
SIMON DE VISSER,

26

BROKERS.
Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬

mission.
Particular attention griven to the Purchase and
Sale of all Southern and Miscellaneous Securities.
Collections made on all accessible
points.

Balances

Assistant Treasurer
OFFICE OF THE TRUSTEES OF
CREDITORS AND
STOCKHOLDERS OF THE

Ohio &

S3 WALL

Robt. McKim.

Jno. A. McKim.

McKim, Bros. & Co.,
BANKERS,
62 WALL STREET,

Interest allowod on deposits
subject to draft at
sight, and special attention given to orders from

National
BROADWAY.

Tlie

Oliio

and

o;ner

places.

Bank,

.$3,000,000

nas for sale all
descriptions of Government BondsCity and County accounts received on terms most fa
vorable to our Correspondents.
3

WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President.
William H. Sanfobd, Cashier.

The Tradesmen’s

To the persons or
parties, or to their legal representa¬
names Trustees’ Certificates shall
be
registered on said Thirtieth
day of November, and
upon the surrender and cancellation of the
same, Cer¬
tificates of Stock will be issued as
followsPreferred
Stock (full paid) for Preferred

Certificates, and Com¬

Stock (full

paid) for Common Certificates, at the
rate of one share for every one hundred
dollars of Trus¬
tees’ Certificates, and
share.

Interest

BROADWAY, NEWr

ALLAN

$1,000,00
450,000

BEERY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier..

BANKING HOUSE
©F

BROTHERS,

Tenth National Bank.

NO. 14 NASSAU

STREET,
Corner of Pine, Opposite U. S.
Treasury.
receive Deposits and make
Collections, the

We
as

Ca
same

an incorporated
Bank.
Government Securities
Bought and Sold at Market Rates. W'e also
execute
orders for Purchase and Sale
of Stocks, Bonds and

Gold

on

Commission.

TURNER BROTHERS.

$ 1,000,00 O.

No. 29 BROAD STREET.
Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers

and Dealers’ Accounts solicited.
I). L.
T, H. Stout, Cashier.
-

Washington M. Smith.

Fraxklix M. Ketchtjm.

George Phipps.
Belknap, Jr..
PHIPPS &

Thos.

KETCHUM,

pital

BELKNAP,

BANKERS AND BROKERS,
No, 24 Broad Street,

New York,

Government 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. Inte¬
rest allowed on

deposits.

Smith St

paid

CAMPBELL, Chairman.

Memphis and Charleston
RAILROAD COMPANY.

$600,000

Second
For

Mortgage

Sale.

Bonds

“These Bonds

YORK.

CAPITAL

RICHARD

‘

Scrip for fractional parts of such
Preferred Certificates from Janu¬

on

ary 1st, 1867, to the day fixed for
conversion, to be
in cash. By order of the
Trustees.

NATIONAL RANK.

SURPLUS

TURNER

Mississippi Railway

Company.

mon

Capital

291

STREET.

New York, October 1(7,1857.
The Transfer Books of this Trust will
be
closed
on
Saturday, the 30th day of November, finally
1867, at Two
o’clock P.M., preparatory to the
conversion of True
tees’ Certificates into Stock of the
consolidated corporation, to be calledreorganized and

Collections made in all parts of the United States an

Haslett McKim.

Mississippi R.R.

COMPANY, EASTERN DIVISION

Exchange Flace, New York.

31S

C <1 HQ,

Treasury.
H. VAN DYCK,

tives, in whose

Central

BANKERS AND

ou

H.

shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen

London and

for examina¬

tion at the United States

STREET, BOSTON.

subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys
States, is prepared to make advances

Co.,

N.Y.,

(PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.)

Interest allowed

October, 15,1867.
Schedules of (30) Thirty or more 5-20
Coupons, due
November 1, 1867, will now be received

in the United

interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and
Currency,
gubiect to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants
and Bankers upon favorable terms.

J. N.

The

Treasury,

New York,

COMPANY,

LONDON AND LIVERPOOL.

AND

York, October 5th, 1867.

United States

Co., Drake
Kleinwort&Cohen

No. 34 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET.

DEALERS

Ward,

DYCK,

Assistant Treasurer.

United States Treasury,

AOENTS FOR

2S STATE

Lockwood &

H. II. VAN

New

and

Sale of Stocks and Bonds in London and New York.

Waltxb H. Bursts,

King’s Sons,

54 'William Street.

Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase

Lsn P. Mobtoh,

H. M’CULLOCH,
Secretary.
In accordance with the
foregoing notice the Com
pound Interest Notes therein mentioned will
now be
received at this office, and certificates Jfesued
for the
principal thereof. Interest on the notes will be com¬
puted to October 15th, 1SG7, at which time the certifi
cates bear date. Schedules
may be obtained on appli
cation at the office.

STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND
SOLD.
AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.

AND TD

redemption of the Compound Inter
maturing in the months of October and De¬

cember next.
The accrued interest on all notes
presented for such
redemption will be paid in currency.

EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS.
SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH &
GLASGOW.

(58 Old Broad Street, LondoaJ

$5,000

and $10,000 each, in
eet Notes

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬
ELLERS.

MORTON, BURNS * CO.t

UNION BANK OF

September 30th. 1867.
Notice is hereby given that the Assistant 1 reasurer
at New York has been
instructed to issue Three Per
Cent. Certificates as authorized
by Act of Congress,
approved March 2d, 1867, in denominations of

STS.,

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS

For

L. P.

Treasury Department,

BANKERS.

CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU
I 8 S U K

STERLING EXCHANGE
At

Financial.

Duncan, Sherman & Co.,

Co.,

BANKERS,
80 BROAD

579

are part of a series of One
Million of
Dollars secured by
Mortgage on 290 miles of Railroad,
of which Messrs.
Dening Duer and James Robb are
Trustees. They have 20 years to run with
7 per cent,
interest coupons, payable
semi-annually in New York.
The liens on the Railroad
having priority, amount to

$2,8S9,530, making the total incumbrance $3,889,530, and

its estimated value exceeds 10
millions of dollars.
Since the conclusion of the war
extensive improve¬
ments have been made,
and its condition will

compare

favorably with that of leading lines of Western Rail¬

The profits of the Company from 1858 to 1862
large, and after paying interest on Bonded Debt
yielded over 15 per cent, to the shareholders, those oi
way.

i,OSS, Preside

John

'

•

were

-

McGinnis, Jk.

McGinnis,

RANKERS AND BROKERS.
NO. 4 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.
Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds,
Exchange,
GWtennercial 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.

the fiscal year ending
30th June, 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

to the failure of Southern
crops.

We

prepared to receive bids for the above Bonds
part, and recommend them to the pub
unquestionable security.
are

in whole or in

lie

as

WINSLOW. LANIER

&

CO.,

FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS*

ADAMS, KIMBALL

&

BANKERS,

THE

MOORE,

No. 14 Wall
Street, New York.
Buy and Sell at Market Rates
Government Securith
of all

Issues, and

sale of
i

22 WILLIAM

execute orders for the
purchase ai

STOCKS, BONDS,
Interest
allowed

subject to check

John Bloodgood & Co.,

at

on

and GOLD,
deposits of Gold and Currenc

sight.

Tyler, Wrenn

& Co

IN
GOVERNMENT AND
OTHER SECURITIES.
Interest allowed on depoeits'DfGold and Curren
cy, subject to check at sight, ana particular atten
tion given to accounts of
country hanks and banker

Cohen &

NO. 18 WALL
STREET
Bnv and Sell at
most liberal rates.
GOVERN!
GOLD, &c. Orders for purchas
Stocks, Bonds and Gold
„

SECURITIES,
•ale of

promptly execute
ClUca

TYLER, ULLMANN A; CO.




STREET, NEW YORK.

DEALERS

BANKERS,

AND

St.Louis & IronMountain

Hagen,

BANKERS,

DEALERS IN BULLION,
SPECIE, AND
UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
No. 1 Wall Street.

RAILROAD COMPANY.
SEVEN PER CENT.

INTEREST, FEBRUARY AND
AUGUST.
These Bonds cover a Road of 91 miles,
finished from
Saint Louis to Pilot Knob, and in first-class
order, and
an extension of about the. same
length from Pilot

Knob to Belmont, now

rapidly constructing, for which
the proceeds of these bonds are
to be used,
making a
through route from St. Louis to New Orleans
rail.

by
The earnings of the 91 miles are
$600,000 a year, the net
profits now are sufficient to pay the interest on the en¬
tire amount of bonds, were
they all Issued. The basis
of security Is believed to be

bonds

now

beyond that of any other

offered

Apply at the office of the company,No.48Wall street
o
H.
G.

Or to

MARQUAND, Vice President.

CLARK, DODGE

& CO..

Corner Wall & ‘William street*

[November 9, 1867,

THE CHRONICLE.

580
Eastern

Western Bankers.

Bankers.

Southern

Bankers.

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,
BROKERS,
STOCK

ITo. tS STATS
liWM

A.

STREET, BOSTON.

paid to Collections
York ,
Bank,
A Co.,
Charles D. Carr A Co. Augusta, Ga.

Especial attention

Page, Richardson
& Co
BOSTON,
114 STATE

BILLS OF

STREET,

,

ON LONDOM
EXCHANGE
AND

Refer to Duncan, Sherman * Co., New
Drexel A Oo~ Philadelphia; The Franklin
and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. H. Maury

Rtrkmnnd, Va.,

A CO., PARIS.

JOHN nUNROE

CoiofCROiAL Cksdits for fh« parch***
dtto im England and tb* Continent.
Otism for tho bm of Trar^lleri

of Mofelua

TsAiEuaaf

Bankers.

Draw

Republic,

809 A 811

it*

vnen

COMMISSION MERCHANTS
and Dealers In Domestic and Foreign

Exchange.

to

wmcei

Banka

tad

DIBXOTOBS:

Edward B. One,

Joseph T. Bailey,
Nathan Hiilea,

William Erriea,

Benjamin Rowland, Jrn

Osgood Welch,
Frederle A Hoyt,

Samuel A Bispham,

*

Special attention giten to Collections of aY kinds,
&£ ac¬

having prompt and reliable correspondents at

William H. Rhawm

William H. Rhawh, President,
Late Cashier of the Central National

REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT
EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES.
National Park Bank, Howes A Macy, and Spofford.
TUeston A Co., New York.
8econd National
Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel A
Co. and D. 8. Stetson A Co., Philadelphia. T. F.
Thlrkield A Co.,

WASHINGTON,

especial

attention to bnstness

423 PENN

Pbes’T.

BOB’T T. BROOKE

R. H. Maury &

Co.,

BROKERS

BANKERS AND

RICHMOND, TA.
Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notes,
State, City*
Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ac.,
bought and sold on commission.
Deposits received and Collections made SB
No. 1014 HA

ST.

collections, and pro

Second National Bank.
Prompt attention given to the business of corres¬

Bonds,
Gold, and

PITTS HUHGII.
a

general Banking, Exchange

Government

and Collection busi-

Correspondents National Bank
America; Knautn, Nachod & Kuhne.
New York

North

W. B Hayden

Jos. Hutcheson.

P. Hayden.

BANKING HOUSE OF

NO. 13 S. HIGH

STREET,

COLUMBUS,
a

General

Gibson,Beadleston & Co.,
BANKERS,
Government

108

110

A

West Fourth Street,

.

given to Collections.

Babcock Bros & Co., Bankers,

Interest allowed on Deposits.
Dividends, Coupons and Interest collected.
Liberal advances on Government and other Securities
Information cheerfully

New York.

Refer by permission to

BROKER*,
O A

AUGUSTA,

COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY

Ould &

*

-

REMITTED FOB.

Carrington,
LAW,

ATTORNEYS
1113 MAIN

{

Co.
W. W. Loring.

A. M. Foute,
Late Pres. Gayoso Bank,

AT
STREET,

RICHMOND,

’
Vi,

^

;

Foute
jDealere in GOLD,

SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK

NOTES, and all kinds of

GOVERNMENT BONDS,

COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible points
c/

and remitted for on day

Checks

on

of payment.;'

UNION BANK OF LONDON.
FOR SALE.

Charles D. Carr" & Co.,
AND

given to Professional men,

Executors, etc., desiring to invest.

Memphis, Term.
CINCINNATI, OHIO.

Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York.
E. H. Buikly & Co., Brokers, New York.
Byrd & Hali, New York.
Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York.
Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wold & Gillespie.
Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & Hnrlbert.
Home Insnrance Company ot New York.
New York Life Insurance Company.
Aetna Insnrance Company of Hartford.
Underwriters Agency New York,
Ch tries Walsh. President Bank of Mobile.
Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Ala.

BANKERS

Gold

bers.

Francis

References:




PLACE, NEW YORK.
Securities, Stocks, Bonds and

50 EXCHANGE

Exchange

Business.

Heebt De Comrr.

Joke BL Jaoquelzx.

bought and sold, ONLY on Commission, at the Stock,
Mining Stock and Gold Boards’ of which we are mem¬

OHIO,

Banking, Collection, and

Seenrities,

BOUGHT AND SOLD OM COMMISSION.

Hayden,Hutcheson & Co
-

STREET, N.Y.

Stocks,

BANKERS & BROKERS,

A Ce.

Dealer? in Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬
ernment Securities. Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt

"»

E. D. JONES, Cashier.

Jacquelin & De Coppet,

Jas. M. Muldon & Sons, Gilmore, Dunlap & Co.,
St., Mobile, Ala.
attention

LOUIS, MO.

pondents.

JUUroad

J. F. Stark & Co.,

Do

No. 52 St.

LOUIS, MISSOURI,

Buy and Sell Exchange on all the principal cities
of the United States and Canadas. Also, drafts on
London and Paris for sale.

NO. *6 NSW

IN ST.,

•U accessible points in the United States.
N. Y. Correspondent, Vkrmilyh

Co.,

New York Bankers.

$100,000

Particular attention given to
ceeds promptly remitted.

Do

JAB. L. MAUBT.

Benoist &

A.

BANKERS,

PA.

Capital

nes

B0B*T H. MAUBT.

L.

STREET,

PITTSBURGH,

connected

cheerfully furnished.

ex¬

Capital..$200,000 | Surplus..$150,566

the several departments or the
Government.
Full information with regard to Government loans

at all times

promptly remitted for at current rates of

ST.

National Trust Company

Government Depository and Financial
Agent of the United State*.
We bny and sell all classes of Government
securities on the most favorable terms, and mve
with

and

change.

Western Bankers.

NATIONAL BANK

OF

Co.,

BANKERS,
ST. LOUIS, MO
Dealers in Government Securities, Gold and Ex¬
change. Collections made on all accessible points

Thwk,

Washington.
H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.),
WM. 8. HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

CincinnatL Third National Bank

and Jos. K. Elder * Goodwin, SL Louis. Fowler,
Btanard A Co, Mobile. Pike, "Lapeyre A Bro.,
New Orleans. Drake, KleinwcrthJb Cohen, Londm and Liverpool.

Joseph P. Mtr»croiu>, Ch shier,
Late of the Philadelphia National Bank.

FIRST

Established 1848.

points in the State, and

cessible

RETCH TO

Bankers an liberal terms*

Ranking- and Collections

Haskell &

GALVESTON, TEXAS.

$1,000,000

Capital

President.

Manager.

promptly attended to.

promptly attended to.

T. H. McMahan & Co.

CHESTNUT STREET,

PHILADELPHIA.

H General

Liverpool, England.

Collection a and remittances

Company

J. Young Scammon
Robert Reid

ORLEANS,
New York, and

STREET, NEW

general

OF CHICAGO.

Merchant? National Bank,
Bank of

National

Bank of the

on

f Thomas Fox.
I JohnM.Phillips
f partnership. | Thos. Sharp.
l John Gates.
J
)
I

The Marine

RANKERS,
54 CAMP

Southern

Jos. F. Larkin,
,iolm Cochnower,
Adam Poe,
Harvey Decamp,

Co.,

Burke &

ALSO IMDI

BANKERS,

CINCINNATI.

DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE,
NOTES, STOCKS, AND B >NDS.

IN FOREIGN*
BANK

Co.,

F. Larkin &

Tos.

J

Charleston, S. C.t
DEALERS

Broad Street,
BANKERS A

N«. I

EENET SATLES

JAMES BECK,

DUPES,

Wilson, =

Conner &

Real Capital, $1,000,000.

Capital, $150,000.

Cash

FIRST

CAPITAL

fl,000,000

Collections made

on

SURPLUS
accessible

promptly remitted for
at best rates.
Directors:

Lewis Worthington,
John W. Ellis,
Jas. A. Frazer, R. M. Bishop,
William Woods, A. S. Winslow,

and Gold
commission only.

Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities
bought and sold at market rates, on

made on ap¬
Particular attention given to orders for the purchase
$314,852 89
sale of the Adams, American, United States, vveus,
points and
Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks.

Cashier.

all

YORK,
Broker*.

BROADWAY, NEW

Bankers and

Lewis Worthington, V.Pres.

Theodore Stan wood.

NO. 69

BANK OF

NATIONAL

Ellis, Pres.

BROKERS,
3S BROAD STREET AND 36 NEW STREET.
Government Securities of all kinds, Gold,
State, Rank, and Railroad Stock* and
Bonds Bought and Sold.
Interest allowed on
Deposits subject, to check at. sight. Collections
made in all the States and Canadas.
RANKERS AND

Hedden, W inchester&Co

Cincinnati, Ohio.
John W.

& Loring,

Interest allowed on

balances. Advances

proved securities.

_

or

L. B. Harrison,

Robt. Mitchell,
Jos. Rawson.
w *

All orders
TOST AH

faithfully executed.

HEDDEN

LOCKE W.

WINCHESTER,

-

t

BABCCCK,
ROBT. M. HEDDEN.
ISAIAH C.

V

"THE

ibmanria

omiitfrrtaj

isa
tr

■ante’ fcette, (fmumcrriat dime's,
A

|toiUwjj Ptottitor, and fnAtmurt Journal.

WEEKLY NEWSPAPER,

^

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1867.

YOL. 5.

coin.

THE CHRONICLE.

principal

paid in
to the

only $414,000, but more are supposed to
English News...
5S5 have been emitted since; to what extent a further issue
The National Banks
and Miscellaneous
Prospe- ts of the Gold Premium.
583 Commercial
News
587 has been made is not known, as it has been conducted at
Chicago, Burlington and Quincy
Railroad
534
Washington, and not through the usual channels here in the
THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES.
598 Sub-Treasury.
Cotton
The discovery of the facts has caused inqui¬
Monoy Market, Railway Stocks,
Tobacco
595
U g. Securities, Gold Market,
Breadstuffs
596 ries to be made, and we are informed that Mr. McCulloch
Foreign Exchange, New York
Groceries
596
City Banks. Philadelphia Banks
588 Dry Goods
597 has stopped further issues for the present. An evening paper
National Banks, etc
591 Prices Current and Tone of the
bale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange
592 |
Market.,...
605-606 refers to the affair in the following terms: •“
Commercial Epitome
»*.. • • •
Position and
Public Debt

.

as well as the interest shall be
The secret issue of these Ten-Forties, up

that the

CONTENTS.

NO. 124

Prospects of the

Public Debt of the United States
Latest Monetary and Commercial

581
582

534

1st November

was

v

five per cent,
of course be
Railway Newg
601
6>2
Railroad, Canal, and Miscellane¬
interpreted
to
dn
the
only
5 per cent,
be
Ten-Forties,
which
are
the
568 Advertisements... 577-SO, 603-4, 607-8
ous Bond List
government bonds likely to be issued. Our view of the case is strength¬
ened bv the fact that the law of 3d March, 1864, authorized 200 mil¬
lions of the Ten-Forties.
As yet 172 millions only have been issued,
leaving Mr. McCulloch the right to emit 28 millions more should he
Thk Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ deem it best to do so. Perhaps the only ground for dissatisfaction
day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, with the issue at this moment is the secresy with which it has been con¬
ducted. It is well known that the supply on market of any given
with the latest news up to midnight if Friday,
THE RAILWAY

The first item of the debt shows an increase in the
bonds to the amount of $414,000.
This increase must

JOURNAL.
599 I1 Railway,
Canal,
etc.,
Stock List.
Insurance and Mining Journal

MONITOR AND INSURANCE

.

■

<&l)e Cl)ronicU.

description of bonds is

SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier
to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,)

For

an

element of importance in regulating the price

these bonds will fetch in the open market. Hence a secret issue of
of securities gives an advantage to those persons who are in the secret,
and may inflict damage on other holders.
Apart from the want pub¬

TERMS OF

of
$10 00
6 00 licity, the sale of a few millions of these Ten-Forty bonds is probably
to be regarded as one of the least objectionable means of replenishing
By an arrangement with the publishers of the Daily Bulletin we are
enabled to furnish our subscribers with that paper at the reduced price
the depleted coffers of the Treasury.
To raise money by the sale of
of $4 per aunum making the price of
Five Twenties or of gold might disturb ihe money market, even if there
Chronicle with Daily Bulletin,-j
^Months7 7 777.777 7
00 were not other reasons to prevent. What price Mr. McCulloch has
Postage is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ obtained for these Ten-Forties, who has been the purchaser, how much
cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance.
commission has been pairi, and whether any further issues will be made,
WILLTAM B. DANA
»ana,
\
WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers,
are points
respecting which the public at present seeks information with
JOHN O. FLOY d, ju.
j
60 William Street, New York.
no small anxiety.
BafT Remittances should invariably be made by drafts or Post
We are
ForOneY'ear
For Six Months

**8

Office Money Orders.

Soliciting Agents make no collections.

the Chronicle, bound or
price will be paid at this office.

g[ry The first volume of

wanted, for which a fair

unbound, is

POSITION- AND PROSPECTS OF THE PUBLIC 0EBT.
advantages of publicity in the management of the
Treasury have an instructive illustration in some of the
facts revealed in the debt statement for November.
For
The

two or

that

three weeks past

some

secret issue

Wall street rumors have prevailed

of bonds

was

going

on or contem.

Nothing was positively known, and opinions dif¬
widely as to what bonds, if any, were being sold by the

plated.
fered

Some persons contended that it was the Five
Twenties of one of the three later series. This opinion was
Government.

contradicted
an

on

various

issue would arrest

grounds, and especially because such
the work of converting the Seven-

Thirties, which is the most difficult and most important ne¬
gotiation that Mr. McCulloch has to carry forward at pre¬
sent.
All conjectures and surmises are, however, put at
rest by the statement before us, which is interpreted to show
that the secret issue is not one of six per cent, bonds, but of
the five per cents, which are commonly
These bonds have just been introduced
pean

markets, where they

favor in consequence




are

known as Ten-Forties.
into some of the Euro,
expected to be regarded with

of the provision made explicitly by law

scarcely inclined to concede with this writer that
any further issues of Ten Forties are at the present moment
desirable.
If there were no other objections it might be
sufficient to state that, in face of the incipient European de¬
mand, a prejudice might thus be excited, since, if we are not
misinformed it is a rule in the London Stock Exchange not
to admit any securities to dealings until the special loan
they represent has been definitely' closed up.
Another matter of leading importance on which light is
thrown by the debt statement, is that of the contraction of
the currency.
The legal aggregate of four millions has been
withdrawn from the greenback circulation, and 14 millions
of compound legal tenders have also been cancelled.
This
contraction, as has been shown, is rather apparent than real.
So far as it might affect business it is neutralized in two
ways.
First, by the issue of more than 11 millions of the
new three per cent, certificates, of which we speak elsewhere,
and secondly, by depleting the currency balance of the
Treasury, and paying out nine millions of greenbacks which
have been locked up in the Government vaults, and for some
time past have formed no part of the active circulating
medium of the country.
It may also be added that of the
compound notes which have been redeemed a part h^ve come
out of the pockets of private investors, so that the banks
have been

strengthened rather than weakened in their legal

582
tender

THE CHRONICLE.

[November 9,1867.

by the substitution of 11 millions of certi¬ And this redemption must be provided in the metropolitan
ficates for 14 millions of compound notes. We do not wish centres as well as at the counter of the
issuing bank. How
to insist on this view of the case
defective
our
however, and only allude
system is in this repectnone have shown more
to it to show that those w ho
charge Mr. McCulloch with clearly than Mr. Hubbard, the Comptroller of the Currency,
deranging the currency, and disturbing the business of the who will no doubt propose again some adequate remedy in
country by his last month’s contraction movements, are not his forthcoming report for Congress as he did in his
very
sustained by a candid
able report of last year.
interpretation of the facts.
Let us now turn to the most
The National banking system has, however* as we
gratifying and most import¬
said,
ant feature of the
report, namely, the consolidation of the other distinctive features to commend, it unconnected with
debt. The movements in this direction show that the the
security of its notes. And one of these is the light of
Treasury is now quite beyond the reach of embarrassment publicity ^hich it sheds on the business w'hich the banks are
from its short date
obligations. Of the vast mas? of these doing. It may be taken as a fundamental maxim of bank¬
troublesome securities which were
outstanding a few months ing that bad business requires covering up, and can only
ago, all have disappeared except the two last series of Seven
thrive by secrecy.
Now, the banks of this country are so
Thirties which mature in June and
July, 1SG8. And even’ closely united and bound together, that each is as it wrere, a
these are rapidly
diminishing. Of the 530 millions which guardian of the solvency of others, and all the sisterhood
were
originally issued all have been redeemed or converted partake of the general security, to which each contributes.
except 334 millions, and even these are disappearing at the Every member of the organized whole is interested in
keep¬
average rate of a million a day. One great trouble appre¬ ing every other member strong, and in cutting off
and re¬
hended from these notes
lay in the powTer they gave to hold¬ moving the unsound and rotten parts of the system. More¬
ers to demand at
maturity either payment in cash or in a over, the frequent visits of competent inspectors, and the
Five-Twenty bond at par. It was plausibly argued that if monthly and quarterly reports which are sent to Washington
from any cause Five-Twenties should be
selling below’ par, and published in the newspapers ; the discipline which the
the holders of the Seven-Thirties would have the
power to department is empowered to inflict on institutions which are
compel the Government to issue legal tender notes, and guilty of short-comings and financial misdemeanors, and the
would thus bring on our
currency a revival of those evils severe penalties which are denounced against officers who
which wTe have
painfully and at great expense escaped by are convicted of corruption, peculation or fraud; these and
the contraction of the last two
years.
This apprehension, as other provisions with which our readers are familiar, are
we said, is now
effectually silenced. There are few' even of exercising a powerful influence to strengthen the banking
the most inveterate of our
croakers, in their most fretful system, and to keep it strong.
and ingenious dissertations on the
A careful scrutiny of the
gloomy side of our
figures which W'e published last
finances, who fail to show that they have lost their fears and week from the quarterly reports of Mr. Comptroller Hulburd,
are
will show’ to what a
gaining confidence on this point.
gratifying extent these appliances have
We have not space to resume here our examination of succeeded in
furthering the ends for which they vrere devised.
other questions which have been
revived, and are now agitat¬ There is, no doubt, much remaining to be done. Some of
ing the public mind relative to the national debt. We are the old State banks which w’ere in an unsound condition
approaching the limit beyond which it will be injudicious, if for years before they wrere changed into National banks, have
not unsafe, to increase the issue of
gold-bearing bonds. Our not yet succeeded in shaking off their incubus which has long
public credit ought now to be on such a basis that at five per weighed them down.
They are still suffering the effects of
resources

,

,

cent,

or even

lower the Government bonds of a
great repub¬
w'ould absorb at par any amount of domestic

old sins, and

are

laboring to

conquer them with less success
might be desired. Of the 1,200 State institutions which
or
foreign capital. To develop and mature such a financial have been converted, some are in this
struggling condition;
policy as that the six per cent gold bearing bonds of the and of the 400 new banks, a few
may have been drifted by
United States shodld command the
price to which they are ignorant or by speculative officers into troubled w'aters. We
entitled in face of these facts is one of the demands w
hich do not deny or conceal these facts. But what we
claim, is
the country will
that the number of these defaulters is
imperatively urge on Congress.
relatively small—that
that number is diminishing—that it is smallor now
than six
THE NATIONAL BANKS.
months ago—and that, with
very inconsiderable exceptions,
Tt is supposed
by many persons that the special claims of our 1,600 National Banks are at this hour in a sounder, safer
the National banks to
superiority over the State organiza¬ position than ever they have been since this great experi¬
tions which it
superseded rest almost exclusively on the ment ol National banking was fairly established in the United
of
security
the bank notes, which is the most perfect ever States.
devised, consisting as it does of a deposit of Federal bonds,
Perhaps, the most satisfactory showing in the reports be¬
a
guarantee from the Government founded on that deposit, fore us is in the reserves which are
kept up with sedulous
and a reserve of
legal tender money to the amount of 15 or care, and which no bank which values its credit-will allow to
25 per cent, on the liabilities of
every bank in the country. run down, except as a temporary accident.
In reserves of
We should do injustice to the National
system, and overlook the banks we observe that the compound notes amount only
some of its chief merits if w'e were to
ignore the fact tint the to 56 millions, while the greenbacks are 100 millions. Fur¬
safety of the circulating notes is only one of its advantages, ther changes will be made in the reserves
during the current
and by no means the most
perfect, although it may be the quarter by the 50’millions of 3 per cent, certificates, which
most prominent.
The bank note, it is true, is secure of ulti¬ appear for the first time in the November debt statement,
mate payment, because the Government
endorses it, and if the amount of
£11,560,0000 having been issued last month.
the bank fails the
Treasury is liable for the amount, and is These securities are designed to counteract any tendency to
empowered to sell the pledged bonds to obtain funds to meet spasmodic contraction of bank credits and of
general business
lic like

ours

the endorsement and make the dishonored
payment.
But
security for ultimate payment is not the only safeguard
needed by notes which are to
pass as current money.
There
must also be
redemption in




specie

or

other lawful money.

than

which

might arise from the withdrawal of the compound
notes, of which 14£ millions wore cancelled in October.
These certificates, like the compounds, can be held as lawful
reserve,

and

were

authorised for that purpose

by the act o

November 9,

1867.]

THE CHRONICLE

583

March, 1867. As it may be useful to our banking read¬ find ourselves, nine months hence, with the entire short debt
funded into twenty-year obligations, or otherwise perma¬
ers to have on record for easy reference the rules which reg¬
ulate the availability of these certificates in print, the fol' nently disposed of; ?nd that which has always been re¬
lowing official letter covers nearly all the subjects on which garded as the chief obstacle to the resumption of specie pay¬
ments will thus be removed.
The greenback circulation has
information is likely to be required :
2d

Treasury

Department, Office of Comptroller )
Currency, Washington, Oct. 18, 1867. )
Pear Sir—Your letter of the 17th inst. is received, inquiring what
portion of the three per cent, certificates is available as a reserve for
the National Banks. The act of March 2, 1867, authorizing the issue
of three per cent, certificates and their use as a part of the reserve of
National banks, also provides that not less than two-fifths of the entire
reserve of such bank shall consist of lawful money of the United States.
The country banks are required to have a reserve of fifteen per cent, of
circulation and deposits, two-fifths of which must be in lawful money,
and three fifths of which may be iu three per cent, certificates, or in
cash deposits with the redemption agent selected by the bank.
The
hanks of Boston and of the other cities designated in section thirty-one
of the National Currency Act, are required to have a reserve of twentyfive per cent, of their circulation and deposits, two-fifths of which must
be iu lawful money, and three-fifths of which may be in these certifi¬
cates, or, if preferred, one-half of this reserve may be in cash deposits,
with the Redemption Agent in New York, two-fifths in lawful money,
and the remaining one tenth in the three per cent, certificates.
I am, very respectfully,
JNO. JAY KNOX, Deputy and Acting Comptroller.
Charles G. Nazro, President North National Bank, Boston.
of the

We may

add to the foregoing statements that the “lawful
money” required as reserve by law may consist of gold and
silver coin, of greenbacks, or of compound notes at their face
value, while under the designation of country banks are in¬
cluded all those outside of the cities of New York, Boston,
Philadelphia, Chicago Cincinnati, New Orleans, St. Louis,
Louisville, Detroit, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Pittsburg, Balti¬
more, Albany, Leavenworth, San Francisco and Washington.
PROSPECTS OF THE GOLD PREMIUM.
In

our

last issue

we

reviewed the

course

of the

foreign

trade of the country

for the last six fiscal years, and showed
that, although a large adverse balance had accumulated upon
the trading account, yet there was good reason for consider¬
ing that the debt had been set off by the export of securi¬
ties, and that consequently the condition of our foreign
balance gives no countenance to the supposition
that we are
liable to an excessive drain of specie in settlement of our
foreign account. This consideration is chiefly important as
bearing upon the prospective price of gold; and we now
propose to supplement it by a survey of such other circum¬
stances as may he deemed
likely to affect the premium dur
ing the next few months.
The principles mainly regulating the value of
gold, aside
from the currency question, are the
of
standing
the public
credit, the supply of the precious metals and the demand
for them—the supply
and demand not only actual but pros¬
pective or estimated. Let us then scan the future with re¬
gard to these general considerations.
For some time past there has been a concurrence of cir¬
cumstances
tending to elevate the standing of the Govern¬
ment credit.
As the most recent, we may
specify" the result
of the late
elections; which may be viewed not only as
removing the dangers of impeachment, but also as
signalizing a reaction from extreme political meas¬
ures, and as favoring the cultivation of a more harmonious
sentiment toward a late hostile section.
The National
finances also have exhibited an
improvement
in

the

history of

any nation similarly
the close of the last
year of the war
net debt 225
million

unequalled
circumstanced. Since
we

have reduced the

dollars, and we have converted into a
upwards of 500 million dollars of short ob¬
ligations, which have been regarded as the
principal danger
of embarrassment
connected with the finances.
Our reve¬
permanent form

nues

have been

overflowing; and yet, with much depression
the people have shown no impatience under the
public burthens, In the
ordinary course of affairs we shall

in

business,




,

been contracted frem 424 million dollars in

January, 1866,
November, 1867; and the continuance
of the monthly contraction of four millions to the close of
the current fiscal year would reduce the total to 325 million
dollars. This large reduction in the demand obligations has,
of course, a most direct
tendency to inspire confidence in the
ability of the Government to redeem its promises; and the
more so because the reserve of coin in the
Treasury is at the
same time
accumulating, and in July next is quite hkcly to
amount to about 30 per cent, of the
greenback circulation.
The importance of these facts has been lost sight of in the
excitement attending the vicissitudes of foreign and domes¬
tic politics ; and it would seem that the public must soon
wake up to the consciousness that we are being brought to
the resumption of specie payments much more closely than
they" had supposed. From these considerations it is mani¬
fest that the firmness of the premium for some months past
has been in opposition to the course of the public credit.
And next, as to the supply of precious metals.
On the
31st October there was in the Treasury 14 million dollars
of private coin on deposit; and on the 1st inst. 25 million
dollars became due to the holders of ooupons, making, to¬
gether, 39 million dollars in the hands of the public; to
which may be further added, say7, 4 million dollars of coin
proper in the banks.
On the 1st of January about 20 mil¬
lion dollars will become payable on coupons, and 9 million
more in redemption of United
States Sixes of 1867. In
the
view of
large payments on January 1st, it is probable
that the Treasury may not sell gold to the average extent
during the interim; and yet from the low state of the cur¬
rency balance it may be found necessary to sell a portion of
the customs receipts, say six millions for the two months, or
half the average rate.
This being the case, we should have
a total
supply from November 1st to January 1st of about
78 million dollars, an amount in the hands of the public un
equalled at any period within the last four years, and more
than double the average supply for many months past.
What are the prospects of the demand ? The course of
foreign trade is not favorable to the anticipation of any im¬
portant demand for exportation. Last year, our imports at
this season were unusually heavy’, while our exports, except
of cotton, were exceptionally light. This season the imports
are
light, under a reaction from the over-importations for
the Spring trade; and as the results of the Fall trade are
far from satisfactory, and trade is generally depressed, it is
quite likely that the orders for Spring importation will
also be on a strictly moderate scale.
Our harvests have
given us a liberal surplus of breadstuff's, which is likely to
be bought by Europe at high prices; while our surplus of
cotton will be somewhat larger than last year, though ruling
at lower prices.
The exports of flour at New York from the
beginning of August to the close of October were, this year,
320,000 bbls., against 215,000 bbls. for the same period of
last year; and of wheat 2,071,000 bushels, against 171,000
bushels last year.
For the same period the imports at this
port were this year 60 million dollars against 78 million
last year; and the total exports 41 million dollars against
39 million last year.
These facts indicate a very important
change in the course of trade from this period of 1866, and
far indicate a probability that less than the usual amount
of specie will be required for adjusting the excess of imports
over
exports of produce and merchandise. From the moder¬
ation of the imports it follows that the demand for coin for
to 357 million

in




[November 9, 1867,

THE CHRONICLE.

584

These
certainly very favorable, and were thought to
This, how¬
warrant the distribution of stock in September last.
In order to
ever, is not a consideration really affecting materially the
show the effect of the results indicated on the price of shares of the
supply of coin; for if the receipts of the Treasury are dimin¬
company in New York, we append the following statement of the
ished, its sales will also be to a corresponding extent cur¬ monthly range for'the last five years ;
tailed. The position of affairs in Italy has quieted the fears
1S65-66.
1864-65.
1S63-64.
1S36-67.
1862-63.
io i @i:o
113 @117
126 @142
108 @120
of an outbreak of a foreign war, and hence at the financial May
64*® 73
104 @108
116 @121
113 @116
75
Juno
126*@132
® 80
124 @126
centres of
114 @11;* 126 @132
109*@112
78*
74)4®
Juiy
Europe there is a more hopeful feeling than pre¬
129 @13u
111 @113
127 @131
115 @126*
August.... r<8 @ 87
128112= @125
vailed a few weeks ago; facts which are calculated to allay September. 85).;® 90* 120 @123
117 @127
138V
124 @130
111 @15
132*@137
.100 @1 9
October
122*@131
131
the apprehensions of a return of our securities and a calling "N ovember. 83 @116
110*@115
@133*
lib* @124* 115 @120
113 @114
130 @134
115 @117* ii6*<aii8
December..

results

customs duties will fall below the late average.

are

,

it/

...

home of balances which have been excited in

some

quarters

by the unsettled condition of European politics.
From a survey of the whole question, therefore, it would
appear that the gold premium is now freed from a combina¬
tion of influences which for some months have been steadily
fostering its inflation, and that, for the immediate future at
least, it will be more fully regulated by the improving con¬
dition of the finances and the contraction of

redundant

a

currency.

36*© 1-8
99
@111*
105 ®11U

January...
February

..

March

lOli @110
107*@ll2*

Aprii

p. e.

9

Stock distri¬
butions

20

dends,

.

Passenger earnings..
Freight
“

$1,757,387 99
4,20-1,740 82

Miscellaneous
Total gross earnings.
Operating expenses..
Net

The
pany
__

213,424 54

$6,175,553 35
3,020,164 78

$6,083,138 05
3,093,574 07

$3,155,3SS 57

$2,989,563 98

earnings

$92,415 30
$73,409 29

returns

Net revenue
Interest and
Balance from

Chicago li. R

$2,989,563 98
63,723 70

$165,824 55

988,401 03

588,691 58

399,709 48

Total resources.... $4,255,117 83

$3,641,979 23

$613,138 60

—which amounts

were

Kent of tracks and depots..
Transfer office expenses...
Interest on bonds
Prem. on fractional slock
Illinois taxes
National taxes

disbursed

Dividend, May

November

...

btock distribution

Transfer to sinking fund...
Balance to credit of income.

The balance

the

1865-66.

1866-67.

$14,288 14

1,583 33

1,000 00
406,753 31

421,566 34
64 88

169,619 96
323,040 16
6,668 6S
418,825 00
503,300 00
1,675,300 O0
129,0 0 00
588,691 55

Increase,
•

•

•

•

•

000, at which it

583 33

14,808 03
•

•

64 88

...

56,284 32
191,839 12
6,668 68

131,201 04
....

6,350 00

1,675,300 00
79,000 U0

....

50,000 00

Income credit
Total debit

are

(400 miles).$12,777,551 92 $13,246,710
2,956,3c7
2,670,209 80
^
and fu*l, Ac...
459,304
426,805 60

Equipment
Accounts

Increase.
$206,000 00

bills

and

161,335 24
50,600 00

70 $469,158 78
Sc86,117
117 7n i>

52
R*
10

121,257 61

pref. stock (3 mstal'ts).

59,976 59

180,023 22

120,046 63

131,234 18

64,728 74

270,000 00

270,000 00

536,473 68

547,315 78

and con¬

necting roads
Account of North’n Cross
RR. bonds not called for
Dividends No. 11 and 13
and tax
„

Deposits in New York,
Boston and Treasury..
Deposits with Trustees of

.

due Aug.

INTEREST.

$18,042,000 00 $1,296,000 00
$
62,558,940 00
16,280,640 00
334,607,700 00
30 881,400 00
11,560,000 00 11,560,900 00
34,306,040 00

426,768,640 00
PAYMENT.

Temporary loan...

1(54,511 64
54,061 64
959,380 00

.

850 00

868.240 00

91,140 00

4,168,375 55

36,000 00

34,000 00

843,828 00
2,000 00

18,221,256 83

18,237,538 83

16,282 00

DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST.

14,514,400 00

$
$4,000,000 00
841,720 03
......
353,420 00

402,385,677 39

3,511,699 98

$361,164,844 00 $357,164,844 00
29,864,713 37
30.706,433 39

United States notes.
Fractional currency.
Gold certi. of deposit

14,867,820 00
405,S97,377 37

Total

.

RECAPITULATION.

$

$

*

$

1,778,110.991 80 32,914,850 00
Bearingcur'yInterest.. 461,074,680 00 426,768,640 00
Matured debt
16,282 00
18,221,256 83
18,237,538 S3
Bearing no interest.... 405,897,377 37 402,385,677 39
Bearing coin interest..1,745,196,141 80

133,99=, 398 02

34,306,01000
3,511,699 98
4,886,607 98
1,118,61127

cur.2,495,277,446 76 2,491,504,450 00

3,772,996 7b

2,630,389,456 00 2,625,502,848 02

Aggregate
Coin &

cur.

in Treas...

Debt leeg coin and

135,112,009 24

following statement shows the amount of
separately at the dates in the foregoing table :
The

COIN AND CURRENCY IN

October 1.

31,813,349 55
135,112,009 24

Total coin & curre’v.

$

6
6
6
6

cents
“
“
“

67-68

1881.
5-20s

“ N. P. F.

per cents.
7-30 “

Currency—6

.

746,575 13

398,257 42

221,664 86

282,664 86

61,000 00

Total curr’ncy

$17,518,440 57 $18,957,024 01 $1,438,583 44

133,998,398 08

$,

—...

$1,113,61122

payable on the debt as existing October
1, and November 1, 1867, (exclusive of interest on the compound
interest notes.) compares as follows :

Total coin interest

348,317 71

Decrease

Increase.

35$8,241,657 66 $•••••••—
22,458.0=0 67
9,3o5,26S83

The annual interest

Coin—5 per

10,842 10

TREASURY.

November 1.

ANNUAL INTEREST PAYABLE

66,505 44

coin aod currency

$103,298,659 69 $111,540,317

Coin

Currency

$

$878,900 00

5,012,203 55

Certifi. ot indebt'ess

Total

$
1,833,000 00

$3,371.100 00
9,316,160 00
262,0 0 00
163,661 64
54,061 64

$4,250,000 00
7,483,160 00
262,000 00

15,’67

6 p. c. comp. int. n’es
B’ds of Texas ind’ty

32,498 50

203,373 96

Total credit

n.

17,000 00

500 00
00 1,207,898,100 00 32,517,350 00
00
13,000,000 00

461,074,680 00

re¬

82,116 35

biuking Fund

296,155 25

1,316,804 45

ceivable
Burli’u & Mo. River RR.
Due from agents

7-30

Decrease

$

283.676,600 00

00

...:

Total

Decrease.
$

charged the following accounts, viz :

Construction
Materials

$414,000 00

stands.

$17,518,4-10 57 $18,957,024 01 $1,438,583 44

Against which

10

Increase.

November 1.

1,905,496 00 1,316,704.45

April 30,1866. April 30,1S67.
$10,193,010 00 $1U,399,010 00
5,754,405 25
5,458,250 00
204,206 73
365,542 02
778,125 99
828,735 99
588.691 55
1,905,496 00

Sinking fund

20

00 $198,845,950 00
80
14,690,94180

$16,746,0(H) 00
78,839,580 00
365,489,100 00

ct. (RR ) bonds

509,650 00 90,825 00

statement:

Bonded debt
Ope ating accounts

6 per

3-yarscom. iut. u’tes
8-yeara 7-30 notes ...
3 p. cent, certificates

B’ds of Apr. 15, 1842.
Treas. n's of Ma. 3,63

The financial condition of the company, as exhibited on the bal¬
ance sheets of
April 30, 1806 and 1867, is shown in the following

Capital stock

10

DEBT BEARING CURRENCY

Treasury notes (old).

here

now

10

1,745,196,141 80 1,778,110,991 80 32,914,850 00

Total

$3,169 78

given was subject to the April dividend,
amounting to $547,315 78, leaving accumulated earnings at $1 358,180 22. In September, 1807, in addition to the usual dividend, a
stock dividend was made in the proportion of one share to every
five shares at that date outstanding, being 20 p.r cent, of the total
amount.
This distribution made the capital stock about $12,500,as

percent, bonds.... $198,431,350
6
“
’67 & ’68.
14,707,941
1881
6
“
283,676,100
6
“
(5-20’s)
1,235,380,750
13,000,000
Navy Pen. F’d 6 p.c.

Decrease.

•

113.335 74

509,650 00

13

MATURED DEBT NOT PRESENTED TOR

following accounts, viz.:

$17,457 92

.

Improvements

on

@138*

BEARING COIN INTEREST.

October 1.

81,176 06

81,176 06

Balance of income

Decrease.

33,571 53

Quincy &

113

;
DEBT

$165,S24 55

Increase.

1866-67.

@130

from the books and Treasurer’s
Treasury Department, on the 1st October and 1st

in the

.

following statement exhibits the total income of the com¬
years severally and the manner of its disbursement :
1865-66.
as above....
$3,155,388 57
exchange...
30,102 17

102

@135

Abstract statement, as appears

5

in the

A

@142

130

in May was 130@132; in June, 132(^142 ; inJoly,
144@L50; in August, 148@.lo0; iu September, 124@126£, and
in October, 126£@137.

Decrease.

201.3Q6 37

.

100

9

$213,673 84
80,047 83

$1,543,714 15
4,124,692 99
414,730 91

@149

-

November, 1867

:

Increase.

129*@132

PUBLIC DEBT OF THE UNITED STATES.

operating accounts of this company for the years ending
Aprii 30,1806 and 1867, compare as given in the following state¬
1866-67.

113*@U5
115 @117*

@132

@130*

The range

The

lS55-f)6.

129
127

divi¬

Cush

CHICAGO, BURLINGTON AND QUINCY RAILROAD.

ment

108

Year... 64* @119

109 *@>114
112 @112

100
103

@120
@120
@118
@117

1 4
115

118 @129
122 @133.
131 *@146
132 <,’149

DEBT.

ON PUBLIC

October 1.

November 1.

Increase.

Decrease.

$9,921.667 50

$9,942,267 50

$20,700 90

^"i*020 66

882,476 51

17,020,566 00
74,122,845 00
780,000 00

881,456
17,020,596
76,073,886
780,000

51

00
30
60 1,951,041

00

$102,727,455 01 $104,69S,205 01
1,082,520 00
1,004.760 00
26,680,704 30

84,426,382 10

interest $27,6&5,464 30 $25,508,832

Aggregatecoin & currency,excl.comp.
interest notes
$130,412,919 31 $130,207,088

00
00

$1,970,751 00
77,760
00
77,760 UU

10 $
^

11 $.*

0

acVaio

20

$2,176,582 20
2

THE CHRONICLE.

November 9, 18P>7.]

latest fHonetaru anb

EVCIIANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON

OF

KA*.

(ffommmial ©nglisl) Njuil

AT

LATEST

EXeilANGI^AT LONDON-

|j

DATES.

EXCHANGE ON LONDON.

| LATEST
ON—

Amsterdam

...

Antwerp.

••

Hamburg

RATE.

TIME.

-

18<£@11.1S&! 1

11
short.
3 months. rj5.o5
13.

short.
3 months. !
;

■burin*

gt.

* • •

Lisbon
Genoa
ixapn*

•••• • • •

New A

ork....

@25.40

44

44

44

■25.12y@25.22Vc!
12.67K@ii2.72Jf:

u

9K@vi3.10Kj
@25.35 1

•

3 mo’s.

—

6.2f)>;@ 6.27
37% @ 32

I •

j

Oct. 25.

j Oct. 22.

|

—

j

130 days.

|

IT

60

t1

•

It
tt

4 s. 5 )id.
2 p. c. dis..

isi:p7@
isiud@
Is 1H<7@

tt
4 4

30

Oct,
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.

4s. 5 hr A

days.

days.

1 p. C.

[From

Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

—
—

—

(llS.

our own

11.01

@

-

25.17Jk@
13. S?4@
25.15

—

-

@

—

25.32J$ @

- -

—

33 M

53,]4

I

days.
Sept. 24. |90 days.
Sept. 29.. {GO days.
Sept. 24. 1
“
Sept. 24. ;

Sept. 17. j.

RATE.

—

3 mo’s.

Oct. 21. :60

—. •

Sydney

short.

25.30

49 @, Vt hr
90 days.
5I,V@> 51?i
3 mouths. 23.15 @28.25
28.15 @28.25
“
28.15 @28.25

Ceylon..
Madras
Calcutta

!

|

44

44

Valparaiso....

Bombay

Oct. 25.

|

Havana...... •
Rio de Janeiro
Buenos Ayres.

Pernambuco..
Singapore.....
Hons Kong...

TIME.

4 4

t

Petersburg

*\

!

LATE.

„

“

106?i
1 p. c.

19,ii@l0W pm.
21 @21?*
48 @
45vr@
21 @

—
—

1.
“
21 >4
I t. 6 mos. 4s. 4 3@7.@ —
Is.
10. !
“
4Xd.@ —
23. |
“
1>4 p.c.
20.
15.
17.
7.

;

!
|

“
“

“

(30 days.

Is. 11 d
Is. 11 Vtd
Is. \\}&d
1)4 p. c.

Correspondent.]

London. Saturday, October 26, 1SGVwhole, business during the present week has been more
satisfactory, but it would seem to be imprudent to assert that the steadiuess which has prevailed is indicative of a return of thorough com¬
Takeu

as a

and prosperity. There have been so many symptoms
during the last feuT months of reviving trade, that people will not now
believe stagnation is at an end until they actually find business once
more in a state of decided animation.
That period cannot be said to
have yet arrived, but it may be remarked that trade, though com
para*
lively restricted, is of a truly legitimate character, and hence the posi¬
tion of our commerce is becoming daily more sound and more satisfac¬
tory. The continued downward movement in the value of cotton has
had a material influence in delaying any improvement in other branches
of trade. Many persons, believing this heavy decline would have the
effect of producing much distress amongst holders, and that several, if
not very many failures, would inevitably follow.
Such, liowaver, has
Dot yet been the case.
Although the anxiety ha9 been great, the fail¬
ures which have taken place have been few.
Liverpool, indeed, is said
to be rotten ; but this is what is so frequently stated of the trade of
that port that but little attention need be paid to the remark ; the fail¬
ures which have
lately taken place not being by any means numerous
and, with few exceptions, not of a serious nature. Those of Messrs.
Coliu Campbell & Son, and of the Royal Bank of Liverpool are the
most important.
The leading financial feature of the week is the failure of the
Royal
Bank of Liverpool.
This bank was established in May, 1886. The
paid-up capital was £600,000, in shares of .€1,000 each. In 1837, the
house passed through a period of great trial in consequence of the fail¬
ure of the three American houses of
Wildes, Wilson and Wiggin. In
1847 a still greater strain fell upon the resources of the
bank, owing to
the railway panic, and amongst many other banks and mercantile
houses, it was compelled to suspend payment. The bank, however,
was re-established, but
heavy losses lately sustained have, after a lapse
of twenty years,
compelled it to stop payment in 1867. The liabilities
of the institution are not
heavy, viz., about £1,750,000. The company
i9 unlimited, and the shareholders, who are.
mostly wealthy, are liable
for all the debts of the concern. An effort is now
being made to resus¬
citate the bank under the Limited
Liability act of 1862.
On Monday the wheat trade was in a
very depressed state. The
supply of home grain produce on the stands in the London market was
the heaviest since harvest ; and
yet millers, having supplied themselves
to a considerable
extent, showed but little disposition to purchase, ex¬
cept at a considerable decline in prices and hence the amount of busi¬
mercial activity

ness

transacted

tions from the
per
even

quarter,
at this

was

to

a

moderate extent.

very

highest point point lately
and

many

reduction

however, the trade has
perceived that, there is

millers
prices.

in

exhibited

The fall in the quota¬
reached was 8s. to 4s.

indisposed to operate
During the last few days,
more
activity. Millers having
were

no immediate prospect of
any consider¬
prices haye purchased more freely, but, for the most part,
at the late decline in the
quotations. The principal change is in tho
value of produce off the
coast. This description was more than ordi.
aarily depressed, and prices declined as much as 4s
per quarter. On
Thursday and yesterday an improvement of about Is was established

able fall in




585

and hence the fall in the value of
for home grown wheat, or for

produce afloat is about equal to that
foreign produce on the spot. Our stocks
ot old wheat
being small, and there being a deficiency not only in the
yield per acre, but also in the weight per bushel, it seems
impossible
that at present, prices can
give way to any important extent. So far
as the sources of
supply, on which we mainly relied last season, are con'
cerned, our position is superior to last year, and our
imports are very
conclusive cf this fact, being
more than double the figures for this
period in 1866. These imports, however, are only sufficient to check
any upward movement in prices, but if we are to have, as seems
probable, another very material source of supply in the United States
the prospect is, I think, that under the influence of
heavy importations
from New York prices will give
way. Still, I may add that as the
United States are to play an
important part in supplying Europe with
wheat and flour prior to next harvest,
you are best able to calculate
on
your side what is to be the course of the markets in Europe
during
the present season. It seems to me that with
heavy receipts from
eastern Europe, and with the
large arrivals of excellent produce which
we
anticipate from the United States, the value of wheat in this ctuntry
must be at

a more

moderate level than is the

case now
; but it would
cannot expect any very heavy supplies from New York
this year, and hence the value of wheat is
likely to keep at a high
figure for at least two mouths to come.

appear

that

we

Since the commencement of

September our imports of wheat iuto
Kingdom have been 4,502 763 cwt., against 2,163,373 cwt
showing an iucrease of about 2,200,000 cwt. I mentioned to

the United
last year,

you that it was
ward respecting
statement
was

of

again necessary to beware of the statements put for¬
the French demand in this country, and the official
exports shows that the actual extent of the exports

limited.

very

In the

weeks

seven

ending "October

amounted to 270,071 cwt,, against 125,389 cwt. in
1866,
in the seven weeks the
export was about one-half of an

19, they
so that

ordinary
weekly importation.
As regards flour, owing to the small re¬
ceipts from the United States, and the suspension of the trade with
France, there is, compared witli last year, an increase of
only 22,000
cwt.
'I he imports and exports of wheat and flour into and from
the
United Kingdom, since Sept. l,lave been as under:
WHEAT.

Import:s.

,
-

Week ending

1866.

*

CWt 9.

757.2*0

11
21
28

314,855

293,321

701,133
737,175
646,705

Total
October 5
11
12...

1,119,693

2,905,288

“

lk

391,443
350,770

2,103,373

5,792
11.676

8,546
29,424

,

1867.
cwts.

6,136

29,405
92,083
73,160

539,930
515,179

£5,438
28,789
20,503

202,184

612,356

20,659

11,644

4,502,753

125,389

270,071

46,893

1.083

33.379

184
0
235

144
SO

1,362

1,563

2,124

4

G85
410

596
603

1,122

2,662

4,445

J9..

Total

Export:s.

1866.
cwt-!.

cwts.

September 7
“

^

1867.

33 j 139
16,704

FLOUR.

September 7
11

14
21
28

“

Total
October 5
“

“

27,297 *
22,088
28,817

•

29,18-1
44,684

22,727
100,959

12
19

55,282
57,673

154,140
19,246
33,126
48,489

Total

238,423

260,001

24.499

538

The money market remains in the same
stagnant state too frequently
described in these letters. Nor does there seem to be
any prospect of
an immediate or even distant
improvement, the trade of the

country

being so contracted, and, in most respects, so strictly legitimate, that
no
hope can be entertained of an increasing mercantile demand for
money. In some quarters it is a-serted that the demand is reviving
and that the rates of discounts have become firmer

;

but the

inquiries I

have made upon this point does not bear out the assertion.
The fact
seems to be that because a little
gold has gone out of the bank—little

because of the very large supply held by the
establishment—many per.
ions have been led into the impression that the
supply of capital

seek^

iDg investment has been diminished, and that the Bank will shortly have
to raise their minimum rate of discount.
But it is plain that the gold
withdrawn was idle capital, and, therefore, can have had no effect
upon
the supply in the discount market, which in fact, remains as abundant
as ever.
The present state of the discount market seems to be that the
supply seeking employment in this department is he ivy ; that first
class bills, owing to the distrust which still
prevails, are scarce ; and
that, consequently, the open market minimum is at a low figure, owing
to the anxiety shown on the part of the banks and discount houses to
secure the best
discretions of paper. The open market minimum does
not exceed 1£ per cent., and several institutions are
glad to secure the
best descriptions of bills at 1£ per cent. The rates of discouat, so far
as the best
descriptions of paper are concerned, are now as under;

>5

the chronicle.

5 86
jt'er cent

1#<&1 H

80 to 60 days’ bills
8 months’bills
4 months’

^

|

I 6months’bank bills...
\
| 4 & 6 months’trade bills.... 2

Saturday last, the principal change on the Continent is at Amgterdam, at which city, there has been an advance of £ per cent, in the
minimum quotation.
This is believed to have been caused by some
heavy remittances of specie to Russia, but the circumstance is of no very
great importance to Europe at large, the bank of Amsterdam being
quite an insignificant institution, as compared with the Banks of Eng
land and France. At Paris and other Continental cities the rates of
discount have not materially changed. The supply of bullion held by
the Bank of France is now £36,689,620, while discounts are at £21,02 2>
400.
The following statement shows rates of discount at the leading
cities at this date and at this period last year :
Since

B’k rate—
1866. 1867.
At Paris
Vienna
Berlin

...

3
5
6

Fraukfort. 4#
Amst’rd’m 6

2
4
4

2#
8

B’k rate-Op. m’kt
1866 1867.
1866. 1867.
6
5-

,-Op. m’kt—>
1866.

1867.
Turin
Brussels
Madrid

3-3# 2-2#
4
6#
5
2#
4
l#-2
5
2#

3
9

5

Hamburg.

-

—

St.

7

7

..

...

Petb”g.

2#

2#

3#

8-9

At the close of

Thursday the quotation was 94 7*16. American secu¬
buoyant—U. S. Sixes (Five-Twenties) closed at 70$, Illinois
Central Shares at 81£, and Erie shares at 46$. Since the 31st ult. the
bullion in the vaults of the Bank of England has decreased
£364,000
rities

1*@1#
1#@1# I

bank bills

2#-2#
2

8-9

[November 9,1867.

are

The Bank of France in the meanwhile has increased its

reserve

by 100

Sat.
94 7-16
70 1-16

Fri.
94 9-16
u

S. 6’s (1862)
4111 ois Central shares..
Eri Rai i way shares....
Atlantic & Great West¬
ern cons.

The

70

Mon.
941-16

Knds

Toes.

Wed.

81

94#
70#
81#

94#
70#

46#

46#

47

69#

81
47

80#
SO#
47#

Thn.
94 7-18

70#

8115-16

81#
46#

20#

daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort

Frank! oi t

75#

75#

75#

75#

were—

76

766-16

Liverpool Cotton Market.—The dulness reported at the close of last
week continued until
Wednesday, on which day a moderate activity was
apparent, and American cotton advanced 1-16d. per lb, On Thursday the
[ market was firm at a further advance of i-16d, closing for middling up¬
lands at 8$d, and for Orleans at 9d, being in either case a
gain of
from the lowest prices of the week.
Fri.

Sat.

Mon.

Tnes.

'

Wed.

Thu

8,000
8,000
Tuesday the rates of foreign exchange were more favorable to Rales so d
10,000
15,boo
8,000
15,000
Price Miad. Uplds.
8 9-10
&#d.
*#
8#
&Xd.
b#_
this country ; but towards the close of the week bills have been more iu
Orleans
9d.
9
8
15-10
9#
8#d.
9d.
demand, and the quotations are rather lower.
Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—The wheat market is quiet, and all
The whole of our imports t.f gold during the last ten days has been
grades have receded from last week’s closing quotations. * The loss is
taken for export, and in addition to this supply about £760,000—
3d. per cental. Com has also given way to the extent of ttd. per
qr.
nearly £200,000 has been withdrawn from the Bank of England for Oats me dearer by Id.
per 45 lbs. Barley remains at 5s. 4d. and peas
transmission to the continent. This demand for gold for export is, ae
at 51s.
The market closed firai at these quotations :
I stated last week, believed to have been caused by the maturing of A
Fri.
Mon.
Sat.
Tues.
Wed.
Thn.
large amount of sterliLg bills held at Paris, and which, having been
s. d.
s. d.
s. d.
s. d.
e. d.
s. d.
Wheat (No. 1 Mil Red)p. ctl 14 0
14 0
14 0
13 9
13 9
13 9
presented for payment, have not been renewed, nor have other bills
15
9
15
9
15 9
15 6
15 6
(Caif white) “
15 0
been taken to supply their places, as money in the open market is Corn (West, mx’d) p. 480 lbs 49 r
49 9
49 6
49 6
49 6
*49 3
5 4
5 4
5 4
6 4
5 4
5 4
per 60 lbs
one per cent dearer in Paris than
in London. In the silver market barley(American)
"fits (Am. & Can.) per45lbs
3 10
3 10
3 11
3 11
3 11
3 11
51
51 0
61 0
0
51 0
there has been decidedly less animation, and also lees firmness. The Peas..(Canadian) pr504 lbs 51 0
51 0
Flour (extra West.) p. bbl.
principal cause of this flatness arises out of the circumstance that a large
Liverpool Provisions Market.- —Beef fell to 112s. 6d. on Tuesday
supply from the West Indies is expected to be on the market on Mon.
but recovered next day to 116s., but on Thursday sunk suddenly to 105*,
day, while the export demand is confined entirely to the continent. The
at which it closed.
Pork is steady at 72s, and bacon at 52s. Lard
prices of bullion are now as under : Fine bar gold, 77s. 9d.@77s. 9^d.
has been firm, but on Wednesday fell off 3d., and closes at 52s. 6d.
dorefinable, 77s. lld.@78s.; Spanish doubloons,76@76s. ; South Atreri’
Cheese maintains its old quotations, closing at 52s.
can do, 73s. 7d.@73s. 9d.; United States gold coin, 76s.
3d.@76s. 4.
bar silver, 60f d.@60$d.: dore do, 60|d.@61d.; fine cake do, 65d ; and
Mon
Fri.
Sat.
Tues.
Wed.
Thu*

On

..

.....

“

...

Mexican

aB

prevails that the issue of the Roman question will be satisfactory,
all events, that there will be no war, inasmuch as it is quite im
possible that a nation situated like Italy should venture upon hostilities
with so powerful a country as France, the tendency of prices has been
favorable, and at certain periods of the week the quotations have been
at a comparatively high point.
The abundauce of money and the indis¬
position of the public to invest in the shares of railway and other
public companies have led to numerous investments in Consols, and
thes3 two facts have had a material influence upon prices. The following
statement shows the highest and lowest prices of Consols on each day Oj
at

the week

:

Lard (American)
Cheese (mid. Am.)

66

66

66

64

Consols for money

Thur.

Monday.i Tu eday Wed’y.

93#-93#|93#-94#

93#-94# 94

Friday.

Sat.

-94# 94#-94# 93#-91#

In the market for American securities the

•

8.

115
72
52
52
62

■..

d.
0
0
0

9
0

..

s.

115
72

..

d 1.
0
0
9
0

.

d.
6
0
0
9
0

8.

112
72
52
52
62

0

52
52
52

•

...

d.

8.

115
72
52
62
52

0
0
0
6
0

8.

dA

6
0

105
72
52
62
52

0
0

0

Liverpool Produce Market.—Rosin is easier and has lost 9d. on the
middling grades, and also fine pale, are quoted at 12s. Spirits
Turpentine is steady at 27s. Petroleum is weak and has fallen off {d.
but spirits have made a sudden advance from Is. 6d. to 2s. Tallow
continues to decline, and closes at 44s. 6d., being 9d. loss on the weeV.
week ;

Fri.
s.

Ashes—pots

per

Rosin (com Wilm).
“

middling....

“

112 lbs
“

“

9
12

d.
0
0

“

fine

Sp turpentine

“
(std white).p. S lbs
spirits. ...per8 lbs
Tallow (American)..p 112 lbsi etroleum

Clover seed (Am. red)

Sat.
d.

Mon
s. d.

90
12 0

8 3
12 0

s.

....

“

Week ending Oct. 26.

d.
0
0
52 0
5* 6
62 0

115
72

a

sion
or

•

•

s.

dollars, 59d.@59kd. per ounce.

whole, the Consol market has been firmer, but has re¬
mained very sensitive, prices have risen or- fallen upon the slightest
rumors from the Paris Bourse or from Italy.
As, however, an impres¬
Taken

“

27

0

1

6

1
45

6
3

....

27 0
1 6
1 6
45 0

.

•

.

8

3

Wed.
d.

s.

8*8

....

12 0
12 0
0
27 0
27 0
1 5#
1 5#
5#
1 6
2 0
6
44 9
44 6
,9
•

27
1
1
44

....

Tn.
d.

s.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

....

Th.
d.

s.

"8 3
12 0
12 0
27 0
1

5*

2 0
4415
... -

London

Produce, Oil and Metal Markets.—Sugar is firm and has
gained 6d. per 112 lbs. siuce Tuesday. Whale Oil i9 again lower, clos¬
ing at £37 per 252 gallons. Linseed Oil has advanced 10s. per ton*
Linseed and Linseed Cake are steady at former prices. Sperm Oil is
£1 lower, closing at £114.

dealings have been to a
moderate extent. On the whole, prices have ruled firm, but the
changes which have taken place are not important. A meeting lasting
more than four hours was held on Tuesday for the purpose
of consider,
Th.
Wd.
Fri.
Sat.
Mon.
Tn.
the
ing
report of the Committee of Investigation of the Atlantic and
26 6
26 0
26 6
26 0
(No.12 Dch std) p. 112 lbs. 26 0 26 0
Great Western Railway Company. Beyond what has been stated in Sugar
68 6
Linseed (Calcutta)
68 6
68 6
68 6
per qtr. 68 6
68 6
that report, very little of interest transpired, the report of the Com'
Cake and oils were quoted .as follows :
mittee being adopted.
Erie railway shares and Illinois Central are
Th.
Wd.
Tn.
Fri.
Sat.
Mon.
rather firm.
The following figures sh >w the highest aud lowest prices Linseed cake (obl’g).pton£ll 0 0£11 0 0£11 0 0 £11 0 0 £11 0 0£ll 0 0
oil
“ 4010 0 40 10 0
41 0 0
41 0 0 41 0 0
40 10 0
of the principal American securities on each day of the week:
Sperm oil
“115 0 0 115 0 0 115 0 0 115 0 0 115 0 0 114 0 0
Whale oil
p. 252 gals.40 0 0
40 0 0
40 0 0 37 0 0 37 0 0 37 0 0
very

Weeic

ending Oct. 2». Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat'rday.

U. S. 5-20’s
68#-68# 69#-69# 68#-68#
Atlantic & G’t West¬
ern consol’d bonds 19#-20
20#-20# 21 #-21#
-irie Shares ($100).. 43 #-45
45#-45#j 45 #-46
Illinois shares ($100) <7 -78
78-#.... | 78#-78#

j

69#-69# j69#-69# |68#-09
1
(
21#-....I21# 21# 21 -

...

45#- ...146 -.... 45#-....
78#178#—79 |79 -79#

English Market Reports—Per Cable.

The

following

are

the quotations for metals

Iron (Sc. pig mxd nrnn) p. ton.
Tin (Straits & Banca) p. 112 lb.

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.

Imports and Exports for the Week.—The imports this week show
daily losing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬ a decrease in dry goods, but a considerable increase in general merchan¬
pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as dise, the total being 13,497,014 against $2,717,854 last week, and $5,
shown in the following summary ;
281,277 the previous week. The exports are $4,597,028 this week
London Money and Stock Market.—Consols fell to 94 1-16 on Monday. against $4,946,168 last
week, and $4,355,743 the previous week. The

The




.

000 fiancs.

November 9, 1867.]

THE CHRONICLE.

exports of cotton the prist week were 12,212 bales, against 7,413 bales
week. The following are the imports at New York fur week
ending (for dry goods) Nov. 1, and for the week ending (for general
merchandise) Nov. 2 :
last

Week
Oct.
“

1864.

week
Previously reported
Total for the

1866.

1867.

$1,339,840
2,607,216

$1,013,957
2,483,057

$2.129,696

$5,023,870
171,224,587

$3,947,056
245,421,180

$3,497,014
206,227,144

185.771,035

..

$187,910,781

Since Jan. 1

In

our

1865.

$3,187,326
1,886,144

$106,247,957

$249,368,236

$209,724,158

report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry¬

following is

EXPORTS PROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.

$3,391,378

1865.
$6,608,467

182,594,318

132,791,709

$3 093,780
158,268,607

$4,597,023
152,211,148

‘....$1S5,985,09§

$139,400,176

$161,362,447

$156,808,171

1864.

week
Previously reported
For the

Since Jan

1

The value of

....

1866.

1867.

exports from this port to different countries (exclusive

specie) for the past week, and siuce January 1, is shown in thefol
lowing table
of

This
week.

To
Great Britain..

Since

Spain

Australia
Br.N A Colonies

This

,

Jan.1.1867

$2,714,683 $83,264,146
195,680
8,70N,655
166.708
5,248,S17
Holland & Belg.
17,7.3,944
379,596
1,335,116
Other N.Europe
Other S. Europe
East Indies
China & Japan .

Receipts from Customs

Weekeud’g.

To
Cnba

week.

Hayti
Other W. I
Me-ico
New Granada...

61.701

1.2S7,p10

Venezuela

119,522

5,09T,S30

78,000

11,331
1,907,415
2,502,60 i

Br. Guiana
Brazil
Other S.A. ports
All other ports

102,306

2,087,852

Since
Jan. 1.

$265,521
14,426

$5,055,836

175,410

6,171,573
1,794,970
2.651,422

1.223.551

97.091
12.653
37.141

The National Banks

55,992

York

“
“

Columbian
Continental
Eliot
Feneuil Hall
First
Freeman’s
Globe
Hamilton
Howard
Market

“
“

Foreign silver
For Southampton—

$3,200

8i|vpr bar-*

73,282

“

...

National
“

“
“
u
“
“

Massachus’s “
Maverick
Mechanics
Merchants
M’t Vernon
Nat Bank of
“

“
“
41
“

A..
....

....

....

Hamburg—

1—St. France, Liverp’l—
Gold bars
1—St. City of Paris,

tv

1—St. Vil e de
Havre—
Gold bars

20,000
10,000

;....

American gold
a

Foreign silver

“

caibo—

30,600
1,200

Paris,

....

Coni'ce

of N. A
of Kedem.
..

“

“

National
“

ofliepab.

City

E

“

jgle

Exchange..

“

HideJiLeth

“

Revere
Union

....

New England Nat’l..
North
“
Old Boston
“
Second
“
Shaw mat
“
Shoe ifc Leath. *•

....

100,000

263.600

44,400

Total for week

Liverpool—

$579,964

Previously reported.... 44.257,308

Total since Jan. 1
Same time in
1858
1857
1856
1855
1854
1S53
1852

$55,585,777
25,288,218
39,729,572
39,042,834
49.902,205
3,295,652
41,613,419
64,708,213

imports of

bpecie

-

31—St.

State

Suffolk
The Boston

Everett
Third
Traders
Tremont

Washington

Webster

$19,323
36,798

$750,000

$446,620

1,0 0,000
1.000,000
500.000
200,000
1,000,000

795,010
791,915
174,745
797,321
442,966

“
“

“
“

....

....

....

“

....

“

....

“
“

796,000
543.398

1,000,000

360,000

750,000
750,000
8U0,600
800,000

242,450
440,656
351,698
353,844
244,615

....

250,uOO

199,587

3.090,000
200,060

1,841.500
176,785

2,000,000
1,011),000
1,000.000
1,010,000
1,000,000

998.452

696,873
799.400

456,495

l,090,Uu0

3^7,057
798.570

1,000,000
1,000,000
1,600,060

794.401
332,790
546,072
799.398
797,953

i,ooo,ooo
1,000,000
l,000,0u0
900,000
1,000,000
750,600
1,000,000
2,000,000

6,845

34,612,176
21,326,961

23,106,137

200

Castle, Hav—
450

Francisco,

Silver

100

Total for week

1,575

Previously reported
.,

weekly transactions

1.—Securities held

$203,439
2,655.028

..

.

r

at

following forin9 present a sumra iry of cer¬
the National Treasury and Custom House*.

Weekly.

For U. S.

Deposits.
$38,373,950

12

38,318 450
38,270,450

340.628,250

.

38,270,450

38,170,450

banks ;

Total.

$379,015,850
378,961,700
87s,916,700
378,898,700
378,870,700

2.—National bank currency issued
(weekly and aggregate), and the
amount
(including wprn-out notes) returned, with the amouut in circu¬
lation at date:
Week

Notes issued.
Current week.
Aggregate.
,

ending.
5

$43 340

PL...

66.600

“

19
26
Nov. 2....

84,080
24,850
132,600

,

$304,029,311
304.' 95,011

304,12 ,991
304,154,341

801,287,641

Notes
reiurued.

$4,934,645
4,969,345
4,988,245
5,046,895
5,048,796

Note*

ia

Circulation.

$299,094,666
299,126,566
299,141,746
299,107,986

299,235,796

8.—Fractional currency received from the
Currency Bureau by U. S
Treasurer and distributed
weekly ; also the amount destroyed:
Weekending.
Receive J.
Distributed.
Destroyed.

U(£ 5 —

$524,000
643,600
593,000

w
«
-

"ov*

*«

572,320
521,500

*•••••■

^•’“Receipts

from

8

.09*

5
6

.09*

5

.11

4

568,000
275,000
230.300

613,982
626,411
880,130
892,529
938,903
1,534,313
844,324
637,099
5.18,712

87

692.500

1,508,500
1,260,600
510,OuO
400,003
921,000

53
90
06
25
57
20
13
60

174,715

2,060,000

715,043
597,860
495,125

530.320 14
703,722 58
1,021.718 75
672.137 82
839,358 05

•

22*
21*

.27*

5
4
5
5

.25
.19 1-3
.05

6

.12*

4
6

38

5

4*

.07*

4

.17

4

.45*

37U.000

6
7
.32 1—3 6

620,000
900,000

.21 3-5

901.150

972.450

1,018,975 32

•

.05

205,0i 0
1,130.000

as

follows

;

.33 4 5

.27

•20*

535,000
1,140.000

.26 2-3

675.000

.21 4-5

400,000

1,125,000
1,050,IKK)
1,037,000
118,000
374.300
205,000

1,109.000
726,000
656,OUO

.33

.19*
.10 4-5
.08

.28*
.02 7-10 3*
.21
4

.08*
.06 1-6
.2823
.03 2-3

?*
5
6
4

supply of bullion during
'

Imports
Coastwise receipts
From Northern mines...,
From soutueru mines

-

...

.

A

Total'.

I860.

1867.

$1,017,123

$1,655,306

4.699,606
29,775,101
8,418,456

$38,910,168

4,419,556

31,973,874
3,228,353

$41,407,039

July

on account of Internal

l to date




;

$.578,924
606,974
423,757
572,664

259,602

$337,000
497,800

603,800
337,800
351,100

Revenue weekly, and the total

months, 1867

$2,496,803

This does not represent the whole
production, but simply the receipts
from Wells, Fargo
Co. The receipts in October, since the close of
the above table, are about $1,000,000.
The exports in the same period
have been as follows ;
To
New York

England
Panama
.

Total
Honolulu
China

Previously

1S66.

1867.

$928,703 43
10C,7s7 75

$595,256 96
154,984 30
5,000 00

5,0 0 00

Acapulco

$2,858,467

by the U. S. Treasurer in trust for National

Date
Oct. 5

“

.80?*
.30

00

504,535 45
142,019 75

past nine months has been

Increase nine

National Treasury.—The

2

5
6

3,850,000

San Francisco Bullion Movement.—The

as

5,638

Since Jan. 1

*4

59*

the

Gray Town-

50,058

Gold

Nov.

.10

50

524,186
99,930

750,000
1,560,000

772,000

1,871,676
348,840
1,658,394
541.746

750,060
200,000
360,060
600,OuO

173,250

5
5
5

489,000

58
917,052 10

5

.21
.14

510,UOO

11

6

542,000
906,000

653.500

64
70
83
83
191,882 43

.3e*
.25
.11

5
5
5

-12*

1,450.0 0
440,650
400,000

612,497
803,413
777,350
200,105

1,535,844 48
425.747 45
810,323 0t i
1,115,126 43
777,483 09

1,500,000

220,000
900,000

413.746 33

367,000
792,708
594,165
356,311
982,770
754,525

•

615,000

1,298,035 90
1,052,140 29

800,000

.27
.14 3-5

1,122,650
1,010,600

1,163,502 27
836,309 75

793,514
354,261-

400.060

$579,100

775,S61 52
l,3o7,305 47
591,548 92
164,915 86
805,021 70
664,718 47
786,578 OS

444,649

1,000,000
1,000,000
1,000,000

Surplus Last

Gov’s.* p.ct. div. p.c.

deposits.
$541,535 74

$23,692,977
33,560,342
32,686,309
26,482,661

Henry Cbauncey,

Gold
Silver
81—St. Moro
Gold
31—St. San

82,452

28—St. Corsica, Havana—
Gola
30—Baric A. M. Palmer,
Buenos Ayres,

19
26

detailed state¬
the first Mon¬

The Governments include those deposited with the U. S.
Treasurer as secu
rity for circulating notes and deposits, and those held by the banks themselves

Aspinwall—

—

Gold
Silver
2fc—St. Corsica, Nassau—
Gold

Shyer

tain

a

on

$44,837,332

at this port during the week have been

Virginia, Vera
C/TUZ-

“

following is

$....

38,910,286

Oct. 26—St.

“

185,848
S4.608

293,551

follows:

“

$44,626

238,214
160,282

*

Same time in
1866
1865
1864
1863
1862
1861
I860
1859

The

....

“

Foreign coin

$99,912

402.942

Capital. Circulat’n.

400,000

....

Silver bars

Nov. 1—Bark Teresa, Mara-

Specie

34,2S3

:
Phila. Baltimore. N.Orlcans

$193,451

Boston.—The

500,000

“

...

British gold.
1—Ste’er Allemmnia,

73,S02,00q

specified ports weekly

Individual

Boylston
Broadway

2,958,375

following will show the exports of specie from the port of New
for the week euding Nov. 2, 1867 :

67,789,00|)

condition of the National banks of Boston

Atlantic National....
Atlas
Bluckstone “

“

The

63,815,000
65,500,0*,‘o

day of October, 1867, prepared by Messrs. VValley & Bates, bankers, of
Boston:

2,551,286
8,075,533

72,809
14,674

of

$61.315,S6j

Boston.

$1,741,415
2,111,000
2,036,000

ment of the

554,71-4

955,813

at the

N. York.

Oct. 1 to 5
“
5 to 12
“
12 to 19

Name.

statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from
the port oT New York to foreign ports, for the week ending ISLv. 5 :
a

Total to date

$6,571,1397
2,500,000
1,685,000
2,290,892
6,013,000

26
Nov. 2

goods for one week later.
The

Current week.

“

5.-

$721,817
1,417,379

goods
General merchandise.

ending.

5
12
19

“

FOREIQN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK TOR THE WEEK.

Dry

587

:

3,504 00

$1,038,000 18

$755,255 26

40,(00 00
303,9b3 01
32,724,087 05

30,607,453 05

Total since

January 1
$31,107,070 23
$31,362,708 31
Tennessee Railroad Debt.—The Governor of Tennessee has
just
issued the following circular to the Railroad Presidents of
the State ;
Gentlemen—I herewith transmit to you,
individually, a circular which ex
1 have cdled upan tbe Comptroller for a siatement of the indebt¬
edness of the several railroad companies in the
State, on account of interest up
to January next (includ ng
arrearage*), and have received the following:

pla.ns liself.

[Here follows list.]
On page 266 of the Code of Tennessee the three
of law are found, pointing out the

following sections

duty of the Governor:

Section 1,100. It is the duty of such
Company, at least iilteen days before
installment ef interest on the bonds issued to it becomes
due, to deposit
in the bunk of Tennessee, at
Nashville, a sum of money sufficient to pay such
ng
interest, iucHid
exchange and necessary commissions, or furnish satisfacto.y .evidence to the Comptroller that such interest has been paid or pro¬
vided for
enen

ec. 1,101. Upon failure to
comply with the requirement of the preceding
section, the Conipti oiler shall report the fact to the Governor, who shall
forth¬
with appoint a su.table person, at the
expense of the company, to take posses¬
.

sion and control of the road and all the
propeit, and effects of the company,
manage the same, and receive the rents, issues, and profits.
Sec. 1,102. The Governor, if necessary,
may issue nid warrant to the sheriff
of the different counties through which the road
may run,

commanding them to
put the receiver appointed in possession of the road, its property and effects.

Finally, if the interest due the State, or a reasonable portion of it, ia
required by law, I shall certainly appoint receivers
on all defaulting roads.
The interest upon the State debt must be
not met at the time

[November 9.186

THE CHRONICLE.

13588
p'lid, and the credit of the State must be upheld,

and this can only be ports of Mobile, New Orleans, Galveston and Memphis is likely to
dues. I send this be followed by on active movement in cotton, requiring more cur¬
State, that rency ; for which the banks arc holding themselves prepared. The
be given, low balance of $22,400,000 in the Treasury, as shown by the debt

done by those companies paying lip their honest
ciiculur to every railroad President and Receiver in the
each may know what to expect. Further indulgence will not
and ought not to be expected.

W, (J. Frown low, Governor

of Tennessee.

statement

Nashville, Oct. 26, 1867.

uneasiness in banking
by about eight millions than at any

of November 1st, causes some

The balance is lower

circles.

Pacific Mail Steamship Company Reform.—Those Stockholders who
desire to change the direction of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company,
j
at the ensuing election, November 20, that the Company may
man¬

j period of the last two years ; and as the current receipts of Internal

aged for the
either of the

Revenue are light, it is not only impossible That the money market
be
: should receive
any relief from the ''Treasury, but it is probable that
benefit of Stockholders, will please send their proxies to
Undersigned, from whom blank proxies can be obtained. j the Treasury may find it necessary to provide funds by sales of coin
Fred. Butterfield, No. S College place.
| or bonds, thereby withdrawing currency from the banks. Under
Spencf.r Iv. Green. Third A\. Savings Barn..
all the circumstances, therefore,.the banks are inclined to hold their
Geo. B. Hartson, No. 5 Bowling Green.
O. W. Joslyn Sl Co., No. 35 Broad Street
balances under immediate control, and are discounting sparingly

Treasurer’s Statement for Oct.—The following is
official statement of the business of the office of the Assistant
Treasurer of the United States, in New York, for the mouth of
Assistant

and

October, 1867

:
receipts

disbursements.

and

Sept. 31, 1867, by balance
Receipts during the month:

$111,700,853 40

-

,98‘i 27

On account of customs
do
Gold notes

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

Disbursing accounts

do
do

Assav office
Interest accounts

nr>r#.494
1.590,,500
4. 132
40,786.,092
840

16
00
30

The meichants have to resort to the street to an unusual
extent, and the large accumulation of bills in the hands of brokers
causes rates to remain at the late high figures, prime paper being

Percent.

$71,475,203 32

vestors are

808.240 S7

Post-office drafts

Disbursing accounts
A ssa>-Office

3,795,0"!) 50
213,284 14

..

Interest accounts, viz.:
In coin
In currency

is

187,356 75

|

single names

9 (^12
11 (&12

grades,—

15

4 months

,

© 9

7

Good endorsed bills, 3 &’
do

I Lower

a

continue dull.

In¬

and the foreign
comparatively speaking, out of the market. There

doing little in either buying or selling;

houses also are,

v

& 7

|

United States Securities,—Governments

:

...

..

Percent

.

7

6

Loans on bonds & mort..
Prime endorsed bills, 2
months

$106,457 590 33

Payments during the month

cent.

Cajl loans

434 72

Total

these causes continues to work very

closely.

63
48

507,,916 00— 84,697,030 93

Treasury drafts.. i

call.

To-day an old established firm in the dry goods jobbing trade is
reported t) have failed.
The following are the quotation for loans of various classes :

11,560, ,(Ml 00
....

on

taken at 74@10 per

5.054 090 OO
413.,580 37

Internal revenue
Three per cent. Certificates
Post-ollice' Department
Transfers
Patent fees
Miscellaneous

lending freely

The discount market from

an

moderate business in connection

with the conversion of Seven-

transactions consists of specula-$109,871, SOI 69 tive operations between dealers.
Balance.
A moderate amount of TenFort
its
has
recently been shipped to Europe, and there appears to
Ba'ance to C'r. Treasurer United States.
$95,435,699 98
Balance to Ur. disbursing accounts
10,568,333 64
be a prospect of some future demand in London aud Frankfort for
2.712,21577
Assay Office
."
Balance to C'r. interest accounts
A leading dealer purchased from the Treasury
1,350,585 30 - 109,871.861 6!) this class of bunds.
about
$1,000,000 of the bonds (there being.still $28,000,000 of the
Receipts for custom? in Oct, 1867
$9,082,986 27
do
do
do
I860
11.507,097 75
amount authorised unissued).
The Secretary of the Treasury, how¬
Decrease
do
do 1867
$2,424,711 75 ever, on.learning
that the bonds were intended for the European
United States Mint for October.—The following is the official state¬ market declined to make any further sales, probably under a suppo¬
ment of the operations of the United States Mint at Philadelphia for
sition that the price may advance. Statements have been made to,
the mouth of October :
DEPOSITS.
day to the effect that the Treasury is still selling the bonds, which,
Value.
Value.
from the following letter, is evidently incorrect-:
Gold deposits
$32,871 36
$554,609 ll jSilver deposits aud pinch.
Total

106,851 00 — 80,580. 025

64

1 Denomination.

Value.
772,600 00

No. ofpes

38,630

|1

Fine bars

Total

Value.

•No. of pcs.
20

12,050 38

36,650

$784,650 38

5

250 67

57,005

$28,750 67

SILVER.

Hall Dollars

28,500 00 | Fine bars

57,000

Total
One Cent
Two Cent

pieces.

796,0(40

pieces

267,500

Total

$6,360 00
135,850 00

$7,900 00 1 | Three Cent puces 212,000
5,350 00 jI Five Cent pieces 2,717,000

$155,460 00

....

a

Coinage...

Silver

no

...

3s,560
57,005

$7S4,650 38
27,750 67

i

f

Copper coinage. 3,987,500

$155,460 00

4,082,155

$968,861 05

Total

<211)c Bankers’

Messrs. Fiskifc
A “

.

The following Dividends have been declared during the past week:
NAME OP COMPANY.

Banks.
Nassau Bank
Railroads.

PAYABLE.

RATE
p.

o’t.

5

W.Jersey, stock or scrip...
Pennsylvania RR. Co

10
3

Nashua and Lowell
Manchester & Lawrence...

5

„

BOOKS CLOSED.
WHEN.

Nov.

11

WHERE.

|

short,” interest has been made in the bonds, under the sup-"-

position that the Treasury will continue to sell them, which has
caused an advance iu quotations to 101 f.
With the exception of Ten-Forties, prices remain about the same
as

laR week.

following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬
pared with preceding weeks :
U.
U.
U.
U.
U.
U.
U.
U.
U.

S. 6’s, 1S81 coup
S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons.
S. 5-20’s, 1864
4i
S. 5-20’8,1865
“
S. B-aO'B, 1865, N. iss...
S. 5-cO’s, 1867, c.

S. 10-40’s,
S. 7-30’s 2d Series
S 7-30’s 3rd series,..,.

Railroad
!

At Bank.

Nov. 11 Camden, N.J.
Nov. :o ;238 S, 3d stPbil
Boston.
Nov. 1.
Nov. 1.
Manchester.

Hatch,New York.

The

©aictte.

U1V1DEN I> S

in receipt

positions for the sale of the remaining issue of the Ten-Forty bonds.
Very truely yours,
(Signed)
II. MoCulloch, Secretary.

recapitulation.

Gold

am

the

nickel."

COPPER and

Department, Nov. 7, 1867.

of your favor of the 6th hist., but, for
present, can only reply, as I have already done to the telegrams of
other parties, that the Department is not yet prepared to entertain pro- ,
Gentlemen—I

COINAGE EXECUTED—GOLD.

«,

Eagles

Treasury

$5S7,4S0 47

deposits

Denomination.

Thirties; but the bulk of current

Xov 2 to Nov 18
—

stock

and

Oct. 4. Oct. 11. 'Oct. IS. Oct. 25. Nov. 1.
112
111 #
112#
Ill#
110#

111/a
108#
108#
107
107

111#
108#

112#
109
■

90#
105#
105#

109#
108#
108#'
100#
105#
105#

Miscellaneous

108#
100#
106#
100#
104#
104#

112#
109#
109#
107
107

100#
105#
105#

xclOS#
xclOo#
XC106#
107#
107#
100#
105#
105#

J12#
H-S*

105#
loo#
107#
107#
101#

105#
105#

Stocks.—The duluess in the

The protracted depression appears to
considerable “ short ” interest, and to-day there

market continues.

have drawn out

a

loaned stocks, especially of Erie, North¬
Michigan Southern and New York Central. This
Telegraph.
Nov. 15 44 South street Nov 9 to Nov 15
2
NY, NewtPd & London,g’ld
has caused a more active demand for stocks, and prices have ad¬
vanced
per cent. Earlier in the week the market was weak,
Fridat, Nov. 8, 1S67, P. M.
and
The Money Market.—The week opened with an improved con¬
prices fell off about 1 per cent. On the clique stocks falling
dition of the banks, os indicated in the subjoined statement; but » below a certain point the combination are prompt buyers, thereby
notwithstanding, the market has shown less ease than last week,an^ sustaining the market. -The entire stock list is held in suspense by
the rate on call loans has reacted to 7 per cent. There appears to the policy of the combination on Erie, Northwestern common,
have been a partial falling off in the receipts of currency from the Michigan Southern and New York Central; the public aud opera¬
West ; and perhaps at the same time there has been a slight
increase tors being alike disinclined to buy at the prices at which stocks are
in the amount goiDg South. The cessation of yellow fever at the held up.




5

has been

'

.

a

free calling in of

western common,

589

THE CHRONICLE.

November 9,1867.}

and St. Pauls have been

Northwestern preferred and Milwaukee
weak, in consequence of the prospect of a

lawsuit between the two

during the week,

Thr Gold Market.—Gold has been weak

partially in sympathy with the reaction in political opinion indi¬
cated by the elections, and partly from the weight of the increased
supply coming from the payment of the November coupons. To¬
day, the price has ranged at 13S-$@t39$, but closed firm under a
report in the Gold Room that Hon. Tliad. Stevens has written a

companies relative to the right claimed by the Northwestern Com¬
pany to run upon a portion of the track of the Milwaukee and St.
Pauls Company.- The Northwestern Company have bought the
Winona and St. Peters Railroad, with which they can connect ouly
letter supporting the quasi-repudiation doctrine of Gen. Butler.
either by running on a portion of the Milwaukee and St. Paul’s
The defeat of the revolutionary movement in Italy has favored a
road, or by building a-new connecting road at a cost of five to seven
millions of dollars. The Milwaukee and St. Paul’s Company re¬ lower premium ; but there is still a reserve in the minds of some
foreign bankers whether grave events may not grow out of the
fuse the privilege of running on their road, aud the Northwestern
managers have made proposals for consolidation, which we,under¬ complications. Loans have been made to-day at 3©I per cent.
The fluctuations in the gold market during the week closing with
stand are not at all likely to be entertained. It remains, therefore,
for the Northwestern Company to chcose between entering into a Friday are shown in the following table :
Cl osHighOpensuit to establish their claim to the use of the other road, and buildClearings.
ing. Lowest, esr. Range, ing.
lug a connecting line of over 100 miles in length. The “ fix ” in
which the latter company has thus placed itself causes a good deal
of uneasiness among holders of the preferred stock, some of whom
have sold out; the common stock is not affected, being tied upon
the hands of a clique.

following were the closing quotations at the

The

regular board,

compared with those of the six preceding weeks :
Cumberland Coal

Quicksilver

Canton Co
Mariposa prof....

30

29
2ft#

27
25

43#

43#

-13

17

Central

167#
61#

110#

Hudson River —

127 #

128#
101#

New York
Erie

101#
81 #

Reading

Southern..

Mich.

109

Michigan Central
Clev. and Pittsb.
Clev. and

79

Fort Wayne

Illinois Central

...

..

43#

17

14

112

112

71#

43#
67#
102# x .d.97
100#
100#
122#
121#

65#
102#
102#

preferred

.

42#
17

21#
10 #
42#
112#'
72#

112#
72

72#

•

96#

97

96#

77#

78#

79

109

....

81#
102#

81#
102

104#

47#

63#
95#
C6#
126#

96

95
95

99#
121#

-48

47#
65#

...

97#

96#
125#

....

following statement shows the volume of tr,msaetions in
shares, at the reg ular and open boards conjointly, oni each day of
the week, closing with this day’;3 business :
The

Bank shares
Railroad u
Coal
“

“
Improv't “

Mining

165

55

80

30,056

46,410

36,825

48,211

321

425

310

450
2 0
930

400

4,416

550
800
2.400

3,300

2,690

3,715

2%

Gas

44

Trust

44

1.500

1,700
4,009

.

.

•

•

•

•

•

.

.

•

•

•

28,981

1,850

300
600

i

•

-

.

....

850
2.2-0

7,781
■2,500
2,339

44

7

44

8—

Regular Board
Open Board...

,

,

,

,

Total current week.
Total Previous w’k.

,

20,181

33,443

19,558

17,680

26,918

26,850

....

....

....

....

37.861
57,301

60,361
45,285

shares

The transactions in
the

46,408

48,490

21,916

21.919

24,100

14,642

several weeks

for

39,561
31,639

46,016
41,590

62,614
49,266

are

ending- Bank.

Week

0

Aug.

9
16
24.....’..
44
30
6~.
Sept
“
13
44
20

359,786

99)
6t)3

277,709

U

u

.

it

198

27
4

11

205
320
371
707

.

44

IS
25
Nov. 8

.

f “

.

1,'G1

.

The

1,855
1,590

following is
the

at

Tele-

ing. pro#. graph.
6,400 5,000 10,269
5,550 3,000 8,108

Mon.

U.S. Bonds... .$531*000'$884,500
U. 8. Notes...;.
22,000
7,000
State* City bMs 193,500
210,0' iO

Tries.

Wed.

211,000 174,500
44,()09 14,000

10,000

4,000

131.000
17.500

Total Car. Vk.. .$807,100
Previous week.. 913,500

591,500
820,000

436,500
296,500

Company B’nds.

The totals for several

lation
Week

ending

,

Aug.

Sept.
Sept.
Sept.
Sept.

i\.....
1320.
27

Aug.

Oct.
Oct.
uct.

Oct,

Nov.

137,000

21,000

2-1,500

374,000 698,000
622,1001,031,500

Governments
Bonds.
Notes.
,

4,020.500

2,921,900
4.210,650

.

...

.

.

3,282,100

.

5,i66,850
4,137,650

.

..

4

823,000
820,500

11.,..,.
13
25
S




276,350
1,366,850
449,100
1,823,400
196,000
592,350
279,500
83,100
483,7 0

of

a,-k
no

htva'/rirt
OKIB (//(/

do

do shit

Paris, long

Bremen
Berlin...

..

.

*...

3,021,900

2,497,450

1,005,100
305,100
297,000

@ 109#

is very
at the

classes

Nov. 8.

108#@ 108#

ioa?-'
luvj;8

hv.ia;

109#® 109#

109# @ 109#

5.20 @5.18#

5 20 @5.17# 5.17#@5.16#
5.17#@5.16#

5.15 @5.13#

5.22#© 5.20

5.22#@5.20

5.20

5.22#@5.20

40#@ 41
40#© 40#
78#© 78#

71#© 72

71#© 72

@5 17#

5.20 @5.17#

35#© 36

35#© 36

40# @ 41
40#@ 40#
78#© 78#

40#@
40#@
78#©
71#©

41

40#

78#
72

108 @108#
lV.Ka VJ xvvtg

109#® 109#

5.17#©5.16#

5.15 @5.13#

5.20 @5.17#
5 20 @5.17#
35#© 36
40#'@ 41

40#@ 40#
78#@ 78#
71#© 72

the Custom House aad Sub

“

29.

“

30
31
1

44

Nov.
“

281.515

460,583
574; 7S5
422,346
438, S64
439,595

159,500
151,000

441.500

246,200

$1,686,123 33
Sub-Treasury morning of Oct. 28

$35,904,751 37

$22,525,094 23

Saturday evening
during the week

Decrease

Total amount of Gold Certificates

following table shows the aggregate
Treasury since July G :
The

Weeks

Ending
Aug. 3..:.
l w

10....

4 V

-4 rw

44

24

.4

44

...

31

44
44

6,698,600

240,000
131,500

4,117,000

3,865,450

Oct.

...

14....
21....
28....
5....
12
19....
..

44
.44

Nov.

26....
O
/w

.

•

•

Custom
House.

2.447.422
2.685,075
2,978.496
2.992.122

..

Sept. 7

6,770,050
3,954,600
6,609,700
5,104,850
3,383,400

113.500

114,634,224 56

Included

gold, and $1,580,*

123 in Gold Certificates.

.

235,000
178,700

2,S83,490 60

issued, $1.108,000.

receipts of customs were $106,000 in

in the

3,590,850
6,462,350
8,‘957,500

4,530,050
5,774,400
6,480 5i i0

1,22.3,556 68

85,904,751 37
$101,254,567 42
13,379,657 14

Balance on

030,500
131,500

399,500

8,382,933 46

$8,938/426 81

$137,159,318 70

Week.

317.000

4,227,634 5S

payments during the week....

Deduct

bonds

156,000
129,600
216,000

355,?01 35
218,373 34

5,486,349 37
1,284,391 49
2,708,879 28

2

292,821

419,000
457,509
530,000

Receipts.

$9,527,975 01
1,943,715 18
2,489,006 37
9,341,686 77

.'

Total
Balance in

874,440

r

Snb-TreasnryPayments.

Receipts.
$245,587 98
294,334 43
275,96139
296,055 84

28.. A

Oct.

212,445

amount

939,500

of coupons

Nov. 1.

s

Custom House.

360,197
i 02,205

Bonds.
106.500

550,OIK)

$3,932,113

The transactions for the week at

201,8297

456.000

756,000
1,618,000

8,974,535

Treasury have been as follows :

City Bonds.

15,000

$12,906,648

@408#.

108

inss.rtf* auov'4
mss/

109

35 #@ 36

Hamburg

273,571

@108#

5,‘-2#@ 5.20 s’

Amsterdam.....
Frankfort

292,821

10S

5.17#®...,,

Antwerp

151,581
143,440

Total

1

2,266,037

unreporLed sources

Oct. 25.

Oct. 18.

do short

Company

217,500

$579,961

1,680,123—

quotations

London Comm’l.

....

State *

631,000
4S7,500

..

The

955,050 3,SG5,450
822,100 4,605,700

457,500

9,011,571
$15,172,735

are about the same as a week ago.
following are the closing quotations for the several
foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks :

close

past weeks are shown in the following tabu¬

2,752,COO

9
16
23
30

AUg.

98,000

54,500

$510,653
117,318
S,353,600—

appear to have been completed, and the demand for bills
limited. At the beginning of the week rates advanced, but

550,000 603,550 $2,407,450
20,000 100.000
207,000

131,000

....

Foreign Exchange.—The remittances on account

:

r
rraay.
2
AUg.

Aug.

Fri.

138# 451,021,000
140# 405,578,000
138#

coin and bullion at this

Actual excess of reported supply
Deficit iu reported supply, made up from

ship. Other. TotaP
6,537 14.074 405,13
6,76) 5,043 808,75/

Thur.

141# 3
142# 2#
146# 14#

Apparent excess of reported supply for week
Specie in banks on Saturday, Nov. 2

Steam-

3,200
4,450

13-#
140#
132#

Export of coin and bullion to foreign ports
Paid into U. S. Treasury on account of customs

City securities, and railroad and other bonds
Regular Board on each day of the past week :
Sat.

141#
132#

56,770,000

138#

reported supply for week

Total

and notes, State and

sold

.......

receipts* from California
Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports
Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury

shown in

6,356 8.841
1,500 8.SS4
9,260 5.43S
1,600 19,357
8,707 11,580
3,520 2,205 9.125
4,916 17,162
710 3,010 9.489
1,800 1,000 9,978 10,090 11,223
544 4,800 3.344 18,250
417.212
9,32S 6,755
853 3.350 5,400 34.545 13,978 7,903
508,558
9,082 5,775
S,50,048 1,160 2,700 l,7u0 51,676
249 1,300 2,700 25,961
9,838 7,005
391,491
5S5 3,354 1,400 35,229 15,193 7,971
375,293
338 8,200 6,300 20,338
316.106
7,969 14,482
227,961 1,256 4,450 4,050 21,912 14,673 16,858
a
summary of the amount of Government
380
177,061
217,152 2.423
311
166,482
410
178,166
214,602 2,179

516
212
358
633
525

......

Oct.

Coal.

1,202

U

Im-

Min-

Railroad.

*

Treasure

following statement:
-

140# $62,917,000
140# 63,044,900
139# 96,524,000
139#' 93,408,000
138# 78,358,000

138#

0#
1#
0#
0#
0#
0#

port for the week
ending Nov. 2, was as shown in the following formula :
Specie in banks on Saturday, Oct. 26
$6,161,164

4,050
21,912
14,673
30, $58

3,483
1,917

2,100

.

31,364
31,250

...

,

Swiss
At
At

—

Current week
Previous week
Jan. 1 to date

227,961
1,256
4,450

4.055

1,000

....

....

..

..

.

37,4i5
100

700

4v^

1

•

100
900

Thursday,
Friday,

Fri. Week.
225
1.061

Thur s.
361

Wed.

Mon.

...

Telegraph44
Steamship44
Express 44

Tries.

Sat.
175

..

5
6

125

125#

....

....

128

41

Rock Island

.

24#
lA#

2i“

128#
ICO#
101#
80#
33#
109#
81
83#
181#x.dl06
43#
46#
67
67#'

79#

128#

Toledo.

Northwestern....
“•

.

16#

25

114#
7 1#

70

44
44

The'movement ol

Nov. 1. Nov. S.

Oct 25.

Si.pt. 27. [Oct. 4. Oct. 11. Oct. 18.

-

Tuesday,
Wedn’dav,

141#
.141#
340#
139#
139#
139..#

140#
139#
140#' 139#
138# 138#
138# 138#

141#
140#

Saturday, Nov. 2
4....
Monday,
44

•

2,480,567
2,894.219
2,605,971
2,990,876
2,858,3 4
2,106,282
2,219,155
2.037,259
1,670,942

1,686,123

(

!Sub-Treasury

,

*

Balances.

Payments.
13,851,294
18,180,192

Receipts.

18,505,724

129,087,202

17.494.144

23,690,104

135,284,162

28,475,469
43,128,556
15,478, *97
15.453,207
23,595,430
20,259,418
27,433,239
14,805,530

27,640,499

12,659,117

16,432,809
35,901,751

17,416.809 128,761,670

134,449,200
21,445.375 112,766.019
16,927,214 111,214,666
20,019,828 119,381.287
22,910,965 118,686,822
16,552.079 114,989,433
18.199,906 105,754,210
IS,251,318 109,200,019
17,288.242 113,779,114
17,287,943 114,631.221
22,525,094 101,254,567

Changes in
Hah mces.
Inc.
1,434,426
Inc.
325,535
Inc.
6,196,900
884,962
Dec.
Dec.
21,083,181
Inc.
1, *48,640
5.100,620
Inc
Dec.
684,465
Dec.
3,707.338
Dec. 11,2:35.273
Inc.
3,445,809
Inc.
4,579,125
Inc.
855,0»7
Dec.
13,379,651
.

shows tie
of the Associated Banks of New York City lor the wetk

New York City

condition

transactions at the Sub-

Banks.—The following statement

ending at the commencement of business on

November 2, 1867 *«

590
AVERAGE

BaNK8.

"

Mechanics’
Union

...”

America....
Phoenix

city
Tradesmen’s
Fulton

”.

M.hOO.OOO
2.050,000

Tenders.

Specie.
tion. Deposits.
(<7,227,372 $1,030,239 $820,393 $6,100,921 $2,087,829
1,472,213
5.591,598
277,135
11,514
4,144,450

3,000,000
2.000,000
1,500,000

(3,700,381
5,292,502
3,‘*98,700

3,000,000

7.801,043

1,8(H).(X)0
1,000.000
1,000,000
000,000

8,212,232
2,983,504
2,859,1 n
2.201,088
5.2:33,731

469,367

”

Oriental
Marine

Atlantic

Importers and Traders’!!

Park

Mechanics’ Banking
Grocers’
North River .1
East River

Asi!
.”

!!!!!!

Manufacturers*

Mer
Fourth National
Central National
Second National
Ninth National
First National
Third National
!
New York N. Exchange.
Tenth National
Bull’s Head
!
National Currency

Bowery National*
Stuyvesant

Eleventh Ward
Eighth National
New York Gold

””

.’. ”

Exeti’gc

Total

456,5(0

323.000
993.215

900.000
796.693

65,166
31,380
171.671
49,217
10,014

48!
1

261,816 2,200,692
J
132,104

1,238, i 93

867,287

4.184
579,500
752.220

1,756,703

295,415

1,595.828
803,197

462,072

940,725
7,610
56-4,702

2,286,800
1,691.187
1,826,164
2,140.837
995.480
1,815.932
1,084,667
5,131.825
14,081,736
1,011,725

181,806

212,127
7.896
360.000
98,068
501,290

258.0*1
8.096
6.f>08

91*0.000
308,984
77,750

17,905
2,614
11.242

'11,603
282.500
886

2,960.693
*20, i49 1,696,250
84.122

270.000

179.173

60,242
-

174.413
6.141

60,100
6,869

254,764

1,699

093,617

.

481.314
421.417
765,264

1.050

806,750

229,752

82,520,200 247,227,488

927,436
447,301
797,330
269.150
903,400

8,916
90,000
225,000

408,298

7S6.300
244,000
601,000
602.158

760.403

200.100
399,456
825,427
1.400,083
3,603.407
884,077
273,485

955,007
450,727

203,162
222,759

898,430
13,055,905
564,474
897,234
5,196,918

11

2,788,814

240,200

307.703
431,500

i 08', 261

430,293
321.292
659.665

50,477
50,000

181.474

274,762

649,698

8,974,58534,037,076 173,209,724

Clearings for the week ending Oct. 2ft, 1S67
Clearings for the week ending Nov, 2, 1867

57,396,067

$511,792,057 95
481,350.278 74
18.090,890 08

Balances for the week ending Oct. 20.1807
Balances for the week ending Nov.
2, 1867

19,414,424 34

The deviations from the returns of the

previous week

are as

fol¬

lows:
Loans

Inc.
Inc.
Inc.

Specie
Circulation

Ihe

following

are

Loans.
6

July
July
July
Aug.

.

246,361.237

13. 247,913,009

Sept.

20 249,580,255
27. 251.243.S30
3. 254,910,016
10 253,4*27,340
17 253,232,411
24. 250,097,079
31. 247,877,0* 2
7
250,224,560
14 254,100.58 (

Sep*.
Sept.

21. 254.794,067
28. 251.918.751

.

Aug.

.

Aug.
Aug.

.

Aug.

Sept.

.

.

Oct.

Oct.
Oct.

Nov.

77,996

the totals for

Deposits

Ino. $5,145,596

Legal Tenders

Inc.

a

5

.

247,934,369

12. 247,833,133
19. 247.553.911
26. 246,810,718
2. 247,227,488

Specie,

10,853,171

tion.

33,069,397
31,053,809

Deposits

33,574.948

8,738,094

191,524,312
197,872,063
199,435,952

33,590,859

200,608,886

6.401,919
5,311,997

33,559.117
33,505,378

5.920,557
6,028,535

33,609,767

201,153,754
199,408,705
194.046,591

33,736,249

188.744.101

7, *471.595

33,715.128
33,708.172
31,015,228
34,056.442
34,147,2(19
31.025,581
36,006,041
34,057,450

190.892,315

12,715.404
11,197.700

7,967.01:1
8,184,940
8,017,498
9.496.163
9.368,603
9.603,771

7,319,010
6.161.164

8,974.535

Clearings

71.196,472
72,495,708

494.081,990
521,259,463

73,441,301

491,830.952

74,605,840
75.098,762
76,047,431
69,473,793
64.960.030
67.932.571

481,097,226
468,1 21,746
499,868,035

414,239,518

195,182,114

421,:96,655
3'5,591.543
441,707,587

193,086.775

514,088.737

69,657.445
65,176,903
185,603,939 57,7t *9.385
1S1,439.410 55,991,526
178,447,422 56,853.585
177.135,* 31 56,114.922'173.438,375 54,315,832

592,142,360

600,688,710
570,187,624
585,542,270
588,162,707
511,792,657

481,356,278

following shows the totals of the

leading items of .the Philadelphia Banks for last and previous
weeks:
Oct. 29.

Capital

Nov. 2.

$16,017,150 $16,017,150
52,575,552 52,584,077

Loans

Specie

Legal Tenders
Deposits

Circulation.

Increase. "

215,746
273.590
14.947,184 15.049,8 4
33,53.8,405 33 604,001

Increase
Increase
Increase

10,634,907

Increase.

10,640,820

The annexed statement shows the condition of the
Banks for a series of weeks.
Date.

6.
July
July
July 20
July 27....
Aug. 3......
Aug. 10.......
Aug. 17
Aug. 24
Aug. 31

Sept.

7...

Sept.
Sept. 21
Sept. 28

Oct.

12
19
26
Nov. 3




16.022.675

16,234,914

16,608,860
16,862,112
16,733,198
15,909,195
15,767,146
16,882.816

15,717,909
.

16,249,658

16,069,733

53,792,203
63,546,501

Specie.

Circulation.
10,640.201
10,641,770
10,637.651

333,118

10,633,750

37,839.610

302,055
304,979
317,389

10.6.‘45,925

38,094,543
36,861,477

314.242

307,658

279.714
252,691
228,528
272,535

10,627,761
10,628,310
10,628,324
10,626,356

10,62^,794

14,947,184

15,049,854

62,584,077

373,590

10,640,830

14,947,002

5,918

371,744

258,303
246.714
237,125
215,746

15,027,418

.

102,670
65,590

Deposits.
37,077,456
37,>85,226
38,170 418

461,951
419,399

53.655.569
53,041,100
52,987,057
53,020,283
52.575.552

15.513,794
15,557,404
....

Loans.

52.420,272
52.802.552
53.150.569
53,104,475
53,427,840
53,117 569
53,519,449
53,399,090
53,7:34,*587
53,776,452

.

$8,525
57,841

Philadelphia

10,632,737
10,628,744
10,629,976
10,627,’*21
10,628,395
10,635,015
10,634,907

15,845,482

6

Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

Legal Tenders.
.

.

1...

July

.

..

5

..

...

...

12...
t 4

1!)

tfc

...

*6..

...

2
9
Hi...

Sept.

...

!!

it
it

23...

it

30
7...
14...
21.
2.8...
2...
..

Oct.
it
it

.

it

Nov.

97.098.373
96 901,087
96.9J5.4H7
97, 19,818

...

.-

.

95.046.458
95,096,571
95.594,214
96.807,558

..

..

29.!!

it

Aug.

1)4,7 17.773

...

97,726,719
97,922,483

...

...

97,022,167
96,409,055
95,177,b9
94,762,617
95,385,248
95,9 2,146

...

...

.

.

.

...

...

96,188,408

...

36,364,835
36,459,379
36,323,355
33,458,539
36,263.347
35,327,203

35,152,605
36,494,213

33,604,001

34,343,942

84,336,604
33,538,405

Tenders.

Specie.

92,996.703

..

.

8...
15
22

12,648,695

36,830,^09
24,717.584

a

252,773

series of weeks

National.
37,473,337 24.727,383

16 055,141

517.456
915,298

—Circulation.—

Deposits.

15,005,46.0
15,397.828

38,251,040

833,466
650,203 15.427.625
361,878 15.54v.401
472,045 15.511,081
412,217 15.196,701
365,127 14,697,154
3:-6,576 15,175,423
400,680 15.296.583
510,564 14,*74.509
453,029 13,423,822
467,016 12.864,108
452,339 12.987,468
417,073 i 3,046,339
478,161 13 572.652
444, Sll 13,603,881
'389,313 13,908,546
569.128 14,227,413

88.610.-134

38,328,613
38tn 48,722
38.398.S50
38 283,576

36,902.686
35,790,624

24,801,823
21.771,684
24.744.291

24.653,742
24.655,075
24,670 862
24.613.* 21

24,707,736

35.810,808

24,734.146

35,966-160
35,664),869

24,783,967
24,817,759
2 *.801,364

35.198,755

34,933,680 24.860 394
85,294,823 24.855.565
'35,989 155 24,806,269
36,836,809 24,717,584
37,361,818 2-J,678.0S6

37,379,191' 24,598,409

State.
266.353

266,494
264,922
252,(196
256,567
263,253
288,677
262,500
261,943
260.574
252,743

259,729
259,15)
253.524
249 390

253,o7o
252,770

263,323

236,06

=1

BANK

not

STOCK, LIS T-

Capital.

National.)

0

£!

£ *,!

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

Bowery
Broadway
Brooklyn
Bull’s Head*
Butchers & Drovers
Central
Central (Brookhm)..
Chatham

Chemical
Citizens’

35

100

100
75

50
100
50
25
100

Continental
Corn Exchange*
Croton

....

Last Paid.

200,00<
Quarterly
800, (MX* Jan. and July
3,000,0(M Jan. and Ju y

.
.

200,000 Jan. and July

.

25
100

450,OOf Jan. and July

East River

5

.

30.1.004
400. (XH

4

5 110

110

5
6
5
12
5
Oct. ’67........4
July ’67
ft
July ’67
5 104

105

July ’67
•Tu y ’67
.Quarterly
May ’67...
Jan. and July.. July ’67.
May and Nov.. May ’67
Jan. and July.. July ’67
Jan. and July.
July ’67
Jan. and July.. July ’67
Jan. and July.. •i uly ’67
Feb. and Aug.. Aug. ’67
Su-pemle < ct. 1, 1867.

6
8
6

.

100 1,000.00(1
100
200, (MM
100
1(H), 000 .Quarterly
200,000 .Ian. and July..
30

Jan. ’67..
Jan. ’67

.

Dry Dock

Bid. Asfd

:. .5

.

100 10,000,000
100
750,000
100 2,000,00(*

Commerce

I’rieat.

Ian. and July.. July ’67
100,0(H| Jan. and July .July ’67
500,000 Jan. and July.. July’67
5,000,0(H) May and Nov.. Nov.’67
300,000 Jan. and July.. July ’67
500,001* •Ian. and July.. July ’67
25< i.OOO Jan. and Jufy. July ’61
1,000,00(1 Jan. and July.. July ’67
3(H),000 Jan. and July.. July ’67

1 100 1,000.000
300.000
50

Commonwealth

Period*.

Amount.

50
25

City.
City (Brooklyn)

Dividend.

100 3,000,000

25
50

..

Aggregate

J3,608,
Kil
14,062,155

263,323

Legal
Loans.

Currency

Legal
Tenders.

33,959.080 173,064,128 50.381.943
34,037,676 178,209,724 57,396,467

Philadelphia Banks.—The

1,014,124

series of weeks past.:

Circula-

July

Oct.

$410,770
2,813,371

-o444’811

past

(Marked thus * are

962,300

95,885.248

'

2-1.078,086

the comparative totals for

are

COMPANIES.

612.703

1,484.872

following

246,322
4,031.650

1,912,700

37,879,191
' 24,598.409
246,061

..

3,4:15,304
832,614
1,790,743
1.199.61S
915.134
235,097

2,133,635

Deposits....:.

t 4.

316,000

12,921,677

Circulation (National)
Circulation (Stale)..

t'#

191,241

21,56*'

1.175.579

t

14.227,413
13.535,8 5

Due from other banks
Due to other banks

610.152

1,148,453
401,243
123,127
555.184
407,319

notes

Oct. 21.

*,*1,900,000

95,902.146
389,343
14,258.(81
13,908,546
3 2.528,993
37,301,818

669.128

..

The

Oct. 28

$4i,900;000

$11,900,000
96,188,408

:

Legaltender

1562,474
31 *,842

1,152,534
2,01)3,821
1,302.630
1.228,000

S33.000
290,9*13

Loans

2,732,052

6.515

24.250
110,997

16,398,374
12,386.995
1,137,920
5,110.852
2,475.858
3,092,039
945,571
2,855,000
1.340,900

697,549
2s8,608
1.273,788
1,663,174
4.521.182

1,622,966

85.158
80.045

826.544

481.2^6
1:5.8.851

132,321

52.9-18

1,291,224
833,356

4,689.108
8.382,923
r!701 !*> 19
T .788,511
2,57! ,86.6
1,217,472

229.265

2 A13,155

9!.169
72,068
10.000

1,298,890
5,825,0(31
11,146,905
1.079,700

,556
10,023

1,427,111
759,9:35
1.746.793
659,299
3.533.623

698,170

85s.750

10.475
61.778
22.756

300,(XK)

1,599,400

3,850
267,656
178,725

99.885
92.061

1.831.499

1,000.000
200,000
100,000
250,000

511,323
809.184
1,457.692

415,701 5,941.325

1.256,101

1,000,000

1,1(30.029
1.894,603
4,193.435
2.13 3,0; >2
737.859

195.720

30,147

409,000
300.009
1.500.000
2.000.000

51X1.000

798,031

497,f*05
269.900

300,090

350,0* K)

618.166
392.000

152,649
19,800
12,510

26,167

5,090,000
3,000,000
300,000
1,000,(X)0
500,000

1,973,08.8

452,543

156.496

Specie

7.318,074

1,912,974
1,991.490

28,()66

328.157
353.0(36

Capital

1,900

.

]^ov. 4.

1,619,850
1,038,158
883,614

4,580,756

following are the footings of the Boston
compared with those of the two previous statements :

Banks

3.725.793
2,628.929

290.685

256,734
21,753
71,702
397,887

2.753.1.85

809.000
400.000

479.574

114,011
1,151.13,9
i 15.909

750.000

500,000

879,522
587,500

141,264

Chemical
300.000
Merch.ants’ Exchange.'.” 1,235,000
3,053,3 3S
National
1,500.000
2,0 i 8.851
Butchers’
’””
300,000
2,379,000
Mechanics and Traders’.
600,000
1,9*31,185
Greenwich
200.000
1.104,432
Leather Manuf. National
000,000
2.051.577
Seventh Ward, National.
500,000
1.181.108
Slate of New York
2,000.000
4,7VS,707
American Exchange
5.000.000
9.881,921
Commerce
10.000,000 25,803,176
Broadway
l,i>:»o,000
8,488.116
Ocean
””” 1.000.0)0
2.974,450
Mercantile
..!””” 1.000,000 3,090,012
Pacific
402.700
1 ,*109,907
Republic
2,000.000
4,302,092
Chatham
450.000
1,739,8:10
People’s
*!”
412.500
1,459.606
North American
! 1,009.000 2.39*3,250
Hanover
1,000,000
2,315.904
Irving
!””
500.000
1,5*34.000
Metropolitan
4,000.000 10,538,087
Citizens
400,000
1,354,953
Nassau
!. ” 1,000,000 2.213,480
Market
1.0:X),000
2.(355,538
St. Nicholas
!”” 1,000.000 2,378,816
Shoe and Leather
1,500,000
4,520,800
Corn Exchange
1.000.000
2,8132,603
Continental
2,000.000
3.867,339

Commonwealth

Legal

Net

Circula-

[November 9, 1867.

Boston Banks.—The

AMOT'NT OF

Loans and
Diseonnts.

Capital.

New York
Manhattan
Merchants’

14

CHRONICLE.

THE

5
6
5
5 110

205

li7

6 •08J* 100
5 06
ft

109

10

3*

350, (KM) Jan. and
250,(XX) Ian. and
150,000 Ian. and

July:. July ’67
ft
4
July.. July ’67
Fifth
100
July.. ruly *67
5
500. (KX1 May and Nov.. May ’67
First.
100
10
First (Brooklyn). ... 100
50'*,001 Jan. and July.. July ’67
10
Fourth. .1
100 5,000,0(X Jan. and July.. July’67
5 105 103
Fulton
30
600, (MX May and Nov.. May ’67
5 153
Far. A Cit.(Wm’bg).
20
1(!0,00( Jan. and July.. July’67
5
200,(MH May and Not., May ’67
Greenwich*
2510
Grocers’
50
300, (MX Jan. and July.. July ’67
5
Hanover
100 1,000.001 •Tan. and July.. July ’67
:ft 109
Tan.
and
118
1,500.0(X'
July.. (July ‘67
.6
Importers A Trad... 100
500,000 Jan and July.., jJulV ’67
Irving.
50
4
LeatherManufact’rs.
50
600,00( Feb. and Aug... Aug.’67
6
400, m Feb. and Aug... Aug ’67
Long Isl (Brook.) .. 50
6
Manhattan*
50 2,050,(KM) Feb. and Aug... Aug.’67
5 134
Manufacturers’
30
252,(KM Ian. and July.. July ’67
5
Manufac. & Merch.*. 100
500,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
5
Marine
400.000 Ian. and July... July ’67
100
6
Market. ...;
100 1.000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
...5. 115
Mechanics’...
25 2,000, (KM Tan. and July... July ’67
5 110
Mechani cs’ (Brook.).
6
50
500,000 Jan. and July... •July ’67
Mooli. Bank. Asso...
500.00( May and Nov,
50
....6
May ’67
Meehan. & Traders’.
25
....5
600,(KM May and N ov... May ’67
Mercantile
100 1,000,000 May and Nov... May ’67
6
Merchants’
50 3,001),000 Jan. and -luly.. July ’67.
..5
Merchants’ Exch....
60 1.2:45, (XK Jan. and July... July ’67
;
5
Metropolitan
100 4,000,(XX Jan. and July... July ’67
6 130 182
Nassau*...
100 1.000,000 May and Nov
May ’67
5 103
Nassau (Brooklyn)
300,00b Ian. and July... July ’67
100
National (Gallatin)
60 1,500,000 April and Oct... Apr. 67
5 107#
New York...
100 3,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
6 ,20
New York County.. 100
200,000 Tan. and July... July ’67
9
6
300,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
NewYorkExchange. 100
303
Ninth
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
5
North America
llo
100 1,000,000 Ian. and July... July ’67
5 109
North River*
60
400,000 Ian. and July... July ’67....-....5
Ocean
60 1,000,000 Ian. and July... July ’67
5 104 105
Oriental*
60
5 .35
300,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug.’67
Pacific
50
422,700 Feb. and Aug.. Feb.5AMay’07.5
147
Park
100 2.000,000 Tan.and July... July’67
7
Peoples'*
25
412,500 Jan. and July... July ’67
5
Phoenix
20 1,800,0(H> Tan. and July... July ’67
4
114
ft
Republic
100 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’67
St. Nicholas’
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’67 ...BA*5 104 104#
Seventh Ward
5
100
500,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’67
Second
5
100
300,000 Jan. and July.. J ill v ’67
Shoe A Lea-her
100 1,500,(K)C •Tan. and July.. Jaly ’67
5 111 113#
Sixth
100
200,000 May and Nov...
107
State of New York.. 100 2,000,04 a* May and Nov... Nov. ’67
5 105
200 000
100
Stuyvesant*
Tenth.
100 1,000,000 Ian. and July... Ju’y ’67
5
Third
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
O'
Tradesmen’*.*
40 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’67
7)1^0
Union
.5113
60 1,590,00J May and Not... Nov. ’67
50

Eighth

100

...

...

...

..

.

~.

...

....

.

.....

...

WtUlan»btu’g&ty*.l

50

50C 000 Jan. and July.

July ’67

..

*tfi

...

591

THE CHRONICLE.

November 9,1867.]

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE,

REPRESENTED BY THE LAST

SALEOFREPORTED
OFFICIALLY
8, TOGETHER
ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, NOVEMBER
BONDS
NUMBER OF SHARE-J SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN TIIE
WEEK.
SAME

AND

WITH TH8T AMOUNT

Ai I

Coin ( O >lu Boom).. 140#jl40#il89# 139# ,133%,138%
National:

Railroad Stocks :
Boston, Hartf.ro and Erie

American Cold

1807.

gnited States os

1863
coupon.
1868. .registered .\
1881
coupon.', 112#'112
1881. .registered

6s,
6s,
6s,
6s,

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

.registered

5-20s(’6-2)coupon.I"'’""
regist'd]

230,050:

|

156,500:

196# 106# j 106#

555

S 106#

6s, 5.20s (’65) coupon
6s, 5.20s do regist'd
107# 107#
6s, 5.20s (’65 n.) crup. 107%

1*1 107#; 107%

1

—

—

6s, 5.203 do reqist'd
rH Is
6s, 5.20s (1867) coup.
6s, 5.20s do regia'd
6s, Oregon Wa> 1881
1

42,000!

104# 105
105# 105# j 105#

105

—

106# 1 6#
106

do
do

62,5(4
27.(00

6s,
-11 j ’105
I 105
6s, 5-20s do
105
lb-5#
6s, R-20s ('01) coupon.
6s, 5.20s do resist'd
-

$

112#ill2#|

—

07% 107#
107%

—

107%

OiK)1
15.000;

Chicago and A11 on
100
do
do preferred... .100
Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOO
Chicago and Great Eastern
.100
Chicago and Northwestern
100
do
do
pref.100
Chicago, Rock Island and Pac 100
Cincinnati,Kami ton and DaytoulCO
Cleveland, Columbus and Cin...l00
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50

1G7,SMU|'

6s,
5s,
5s,
6s,
5s,
6s,
5s,

do. (* y'rli,)

—

1S71
coupon.
117
1871 ..registered.
i
1874
coupon.
1874. .registered.
101# 101#
100% 101
10-40s ...coupon 100# 1 100#
100#
100# 100# [100#
10-40*.registered.
j
—

—

—

7-30s T. Notes 1*£ se.
105#
do
do 2 d series 105# 105% 105# 105#
do
do 3c? series 105# 10.# 105# 105# 105% 105#
—

State:
—

—

78

73

83

7s (new)
do
Illinots Canal Bonds, 1860
do Registered, 1800
do 6s, cou.,
do
do 1877
do
do
do 1879
do
War Loan
do

10, • 00

907,0 0
57,000j

Kentucky 6s,

—

1868-72

do

93#
1

—

93#

93#

94

94

94

94#

94#

100#

—

491,000;

—

13,000j

5,0001

—

—

—

58,1868-76

North Carolina
do

B’yB’ds (coup)
do

(reg.)l

~50

6s (old).
6s. (new)

107#
49# 49#

—

49#

49#

49#

50

2,000,

—

51
51

49.000

6'
63

Virginia 6s, (old)

40

6s, new

65

61#

64#
61#

65#
62#

65#
62#

37,000!

OO

62#

813,000

7,500

Municipal:
Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan
do’ 6s, Public Park Loan...
do
6s, Improvement Stock
Chicago 7s, Water Loan
—
Jersey City 6s, Water Loan

95#

95#

$5 000
—

—

12,516
38,200

;94#

95%

81#
101#

102#!

j

81#

1

19,440
81

8,200
5,985

114

HI#

300
200

72%

43,010

70%

71#

76#

76

70#

Tl#

77

352

125

1,200
3,597

—

50
—

50
100

.100 ■25#
124# 125
100 126

125

„

125

126#
16

16
109

:,30c
109

772

^8#

78#

21,700

9

40#
02#

7,400
14,750

...

111# HI# 111# HI# U2#

12,875

121

.100

*5

109

122

24

61#

24#

23#

210

i20
23# 24#

6,170

96%
96#

19,450

122

pref.100
50 96#

Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100
do
do
do
pref.100

96#

Sixth Avenue

96#

95# 96

97

96

96#

38#

;

8

3T#

63

62#

9,644

—

100

Toledo, Wabash and Western. .100
do
do
do
pref.100

«—

No.

Stocks :

—

c
—

Butler....
Cameron.,

—

—

Central...
—

25
145

—

25
146

25

23

24

136#

97
456

do
do

do
do

1st mortgage...
Income

—

do
do
do
do

do
do
do
do

•

—

.......

Spring Mountain..

—

—

Wilkesbarre

10

25

—

Wyoming Valley

—

—

Equipmei

83#

1st mort
consolid’ted

91#

Chicago. R. I. and Pac, 7 percent..
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort..
do
do
3d mort, conv.
do

—

.

84

84
81

18,000

94

94#

94

21.000

6,000

■

1,500

'

132

—

7s.
—

11,000
1,000

j 96
—

—

500
—

—

—

—

—

—

—

91#

1,000
7,(00

”69%
«9971

do
Cons’lidated & Sink Fund
do
3d mortgage, 1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869.
do
2d mort, (S. F.). ’85
do
3d mortgage, 1875..
do
convertible, 1867...

118

1,000

—

98

2 0t0

100

7.000

118

12,500

108
97

5,000

Chicago

McGregor Western, 1st mortgage..
Marietta and Cincinnati, 2d mort.
Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72

—

-

—

do
do
2d mortgage^. .
Great Western, 1st mortgage
do
do
2d mortgage
Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mort.

Joliet &

—

8,000
5,U00

74

4th mortgage
new

-

—

Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort

do

96

90

Illinois Central 7s, 1875

■

—

95#

95

Intere

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1569-72

—

150

—

Dni’uque and Sioux City 1st mort.
Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
do 2d mortgage, 1879
do 3d mortgage, 1883
do 4th mortgage, 1880
do 5th mortgage, 1888
Galena and Chicago, extended....

— ——

1,400

Railroad Ronds:

Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie, 1st mort., ’77
Central of N w Jersey, 1st mort...
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund,

—

_

..

48
64

no#

77

100

do

6s
5s

Schuylkill

do

do_

New York 7s

Miscellaneous

5

300

113

72#

Chicago & Northwest., Sink. Fund

Tennessee 5s
do
6s (old)
d<»
6s, (new)

do
do

100
100
..100

15,500: Chicago, Burl’ton &
Quincy, 8 p. c.
Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort
Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mort.

1870-75
1881-86
Rhode Island 6s

Ohio 6s,
do 6s,

do

i 95

35

->

93#

6s,1867-77

7s, State
do

—

—

100

Reading

—

St.

7s, War Loan, 1878 .-.
Minnesota 8s
Missouri os, with 7 coupons
do
6s, (Han. & St. Jos. 11R.)
do
6s, (Pacific RR.)
New York 7s, 1870

63#

900

1

i

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic.100 97# 96#
——

Michigan 6s

do

do

do

—

47#

—

100 112
100

Panama
—

47

62#

bale*

100

New, York and New Haven
Ohio and Mississippi Certifl

Louisiana 6s

do
do
do

Erie.
do preferred
Hannibal and St. Joseph
do
do
pref.
Harlem
do
preferred
Hartford and New Haven
Hudson River
Illinois Central

•

b

■:

20

81
82# si#;
50 103# 100#, 102# 102

(scrip)

do

Morris and Essex
New Jersey
New York Central

—

War Loan

Indiana ns,
do 5s

47# j 46#. 47
65# 6-v%! 63#
96# '■MX! 95

Delaware, Lackawana and West 50
do

—1

133

—

cel

19

*

—

—

v\

r

.

—

—

*

75

-ii

No.

20#
128# 126#

—

—

Hut0.

15#

173,0 0 Indianapolis and Cincinnati....100
16
124, 00; Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st prell(H) 109
108% 108# 108%
Michigan Central
100
77
77
TO#
Michigan So. and N. Indiana .. .100 78#
do
do
guar.100
5,000 Milwaukee & P. du Ch. let prellOO
do
do
do
2d preflOO
10,000!
38# 38#
Milwaukee and St. Paul
100 40# 38
61
59# 59# 59#
do
do
pref... 100

—

’79,aft.’60-62-65-70

......

A

—

—

Dubuque & Sioux City, pr.f...l00

—

California 7s...
Connecticut 6s.
Georgia 6s.

Cleveland and Toledo.....

6U.

—

...

271,500

1
1

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

100 16
100

Central of New Jersey

V*

1 Uee.

Ainu.

t t>A.

.

—

do

—

New York..

——

17

17

16#

17

43

42#

42

42#

43#

30%

30#

31#

21,912|

116#
141#

1,650
13,023

—

43

)

Cary
Telegraph.—Western Union...
West. Union, Rus. Ext’i

1

—

—

33#

32#

32

116
116
116# H6
142# 140# 141# 142# 142

Steamship.—Atlantic Mail

Pacific Mail
1 ransit. Central American...

2,4:01

2,250j

—

Nicaragua

—

)
—

United States Trust

)

65#
1
)

)
)

Wining.—Mariposa

Gold
Mariposa preferred
Minnesota Copper
New Jersey Zinc...
Qnartz Hi!

rutland hlarbte.v




67

66#
—

28#
67#
51#
i

29#

68

68#

67#

68

new, 1882....

28

29
69

68#

50#
9

50

9

68
—

67#
67#

50#

28#
68#
48#

29
—_

43

198

1,7 5
1,485
3,672

1,400

9
—

—

I

18

9,768

400

do
2d mort.,7s...
do
Goshen Line,’68
Milw’kee & Pr. du Chien, let mort
Milwaukee and St. Paul* 1st mort..
do
do
2dmort..
Morris and Essex, 1st
mortgage...
do
do
2d mortgage....
New York Central 6s, 1883
do
do
6s, 1887
do
do
7s, 1876
do
do
7s, conv’le, 1876
New York and New Haven—....
Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage
Pi ninsular, 1st mortgage
do
do

do
do

do
do

85
91

1,000
1,000
103%

do
do

do

do
do

do
do

16

IT#

16#
—

16#
”—

94

do
do

2d, pref
2d, me.
Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mort 82
Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort., ext..
do

2d mortgage,

equipment..

Maripoea, 1st mortgage (new)
Western Union

1,000

2,0 0
97#

2d mort.
3d mort.

Troy, Salem and Rutland. 1st mort
Lorg Dock

17#

500

do
do

St. Louis, Alton & Terre H. 1st m

Kl
\\

8s,

Pittsb’g, Ft. Wayne & Chic., lstm.

1

Express.—A d am s.

do

Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund,

—

2,000
78

8S

5,000

2,000
1,000

5,000

592

THE CHRONICLE.

Exports of Leading Articles from New York.

<£f)c Commercial ®imc0.
v,'

COMMERCIAL

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, 1667. The
export of each article to the several ports
for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount *n the
last

XVwW*1 ^--v

EPITOME.

number of the

Friday Night, November S.

There

are

indications of

following is
o

a

some

statement of the stocks of

Rosin, barrels

Nov. 1.

3,609

Spirits turpentine, barrels.....

Saltpetre, bags

Hemp, bales

Tin, slabs
Spelter, tons
Lead, tons

Cotton lias advanced
are

less

53,297

4,759
29,838

9,200
25,380

•

r

! 1

39,517

'

cent,

3

Stores

C". CS CO C?

.

!

^

rH

:S8

<s^

c® C

D

1.0 LO S) 1(5
10 —
SO

,

Ct

T-<

.

1a

C

•

CO

CD

10 -*11- -0
® CD S'? t—»tO O to

L--r

TT r-t

^

•

*

c5

•

31,260
25.030

8,600
13,800

5,395

46,500

2.750

27.868

25.600

6,800 >
14,000
13.500

7,878
11,000
12,400

44,050
14,292
10,216

S
^ 2

27.300

o

S—

»-*

•no

3 --At* *

20.500
24,400

r^

O

g

r-t

® O ® CD ^
4C *0 to
ot sit

•

®

CO

large sales
vember delivery,

D CO

CO

Cl

*—
es m

o ® t-*
,

c? -7*

TC

without

t—

•“j.1-—

’ Qt

•

•

■

■

■

.

so

■

so

® in a
so

• ■ ® s-*'
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ct Cs r <
.

ill

00

CD O

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t1

,

!

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Cl V. Ci t-.

.

T.

•

.

! t7-

1

O C
VO

C OD
L

-

.

i-

cc es 12

•

T-

$39 50

are

ex

g s

are

doing better.

much

»o

00

2

CC ® OB so

ic

1

i.- S’? S'"1 ct

I

® ct

x c? -1
t- ct

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Ct CD

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rt

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ct xi
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flt"

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cf

so

^

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:d ct x oc o o o m t- cc *f t■CrilOC'JUVHO
.

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ox o

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cc

CC N

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si
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r-t rt* m »n m rr o >s3
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so

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l-

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or o t - so
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of

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of rf C?

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cc*

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AD

tyi

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C:

Standard white

T

p*>
so
3 0
3

ot

a

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• DC?

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•

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*^1

.

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•

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ro

•

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-rfT *

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xf

so
Cl

Ct 3 SO 40
-® Ct O ®. rS
X ® m cr r-l
r-t

rr

to

■

rH

t

C7 o

.

Pig Iron has declined

(?) C h r

71 ~t

CT rH

O

'T

-4

Z)

cc

0 0 0 0

c*

•

•

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T7<

CH-no
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r-t

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*3 of

.

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•

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40 CS ID
L— r-t

®r

cc'

ci ci -o -r t rr CIS C -® r-

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ID

in so

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rf CS

r-t

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x so

in tn

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40

r-

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C.

in

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cf

t-4

of 000

ftt

at

fi

•CStrU
• X)
ct -

-o'

CC *

i

ct

active at $4 15 for

in large supply and drooping. Ilav
h;«s,ruled lirm.
Whalebone lias been in some
export demand.
Tallow has been mure active for
export. Building.materials
are in some ca^es firmer.
Oils have declined for
Linseed, and
are
generally dull. Wool lias been quiet but more steady.
Freights have been Pss active.
Shipments of Grain to
are

Great Britain, and Petrukum to the Continent have
materially
fallen off.
Rates have
consequently declined slightlv, but
close with some recovery, and 100m scarce. The
shipments of
Cotton and rates to

5-10d

Cl

c>

t.- SD O o rr

m

•3

sail, and |-d by steaumr, while there is a demand for vessels
load Cotton at £d from Savannah, and
Jd from Mobile.

7: .Tf

X

tr.

-CO

Liverpool lirnily maintained

^ 7? 'N
»-

.

rr

rH

*«

^

,

TS
c
o

are

ct

o

.2

•

co

in

ship.

Fruits

enoto
rt

•

««

•

K

Vi

C SD

I
.

CD

0

Ct t-t

^

1

te ® 73
tji oc cs

CD O t - o :D h Cl
r-. O O C< ct X

r-t

rf of

t—

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.

cc

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00

.

’

i. -

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«

r-' vf
r»
03

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o

Tit' cf t4

»n

r-l

C/D tcc -*t

.

l- t - CO
d r-4

so so

•
•

Ci

•

t-

rT r-t

Cl

.OS so

CO
40

1

Cl O O

CC
ic

of t—7

C3 03

.r

73 M

CD

cTr-Ts/'o"

o'r-t
o

CD
o

O CD CO CC o
Cl X l - —1 .-1 m l- >r ci so
1— *n in -d co o ct in 1— vc i- o rr m -o
T-1 -D X —. —I
40 Ct X

rt^HO^^C

x t - ct t— CO o
»n ct t- —; l- cc

o t— o so

«

.a

,yold.




rtClH

-

t*

r- ®
t- t-

.

•
•

CO CO

.

N-VO^CCieot
oCl r,
•
■

•

m

To-

the spot, and 31@3l4c. for No

dull and the best Scotch

Hops

.

00

-d tn

-a
k

O

change, closing

East India Goods have remained
quiet, except sales
bales Gunny Cloth in bond at Boston at 74(57 lo.

Layer R iisins.

Og<
3d 5
t-T 00"

>.N

.2

Fish have further declined.

SD
rt

r4

® t- x o

.

TT1

'

■

Metals

X

>

cF *

Ct CD

O

5

<x>

Wednesday, but recovered to-day

on

o) m
ir

:

or

large.

at 30c.

• t-

■

Rosin.

with

0

.

L-p.h)

since

Groceries

been

D co

.-.a

PQ

1,100
2,000

will be produced by severe weather, be¬

have

i- -rf r>

«

CO

OD

cd tri

.

-

sc e?

„

ofl

49

Petroleum lias been excited and unsettled.
in bond declined to 28c. on

t;

® so

.
•

so
so
Tf< “I

*

_

■P

steady at 55(<7y5Ge. for Spirits Turpentine, and $3 50 for Com¬
mon

m
o

CQ rr

161

country.

Naval

cr

Vivo

60.707

Hides and Leather have declined under the extreme dull¬
ness of trade, which is attributed to the
very fine autumn that
we have
experienced throughout the whole
cause

off

-»

•

If? •_£
o o w

by
to

+J

£3

-D CD es 40 so 0 o eo

tn

rt CO SO I’T to —1 -* C> Cl Ct X O m Ct O S» iC^irnC ID t- C» —1
t - C.' ID /j ®. t-WH D Mit- t-t- rr DC —‘ " »
— lC X ®ID
Ot-DO»V *r
.
.r-t -•
-

•

.®_Tt®

.nn

gl V

•
■

gB
CV

—

ID

r-

so -o'
CIO

vr
l—
ct

rf

ef e-

r-«

-,V o o

.-DO£C.t-e

I-

>.-•

CO 00

.-O o ID
o

-

* of

N

prices favor buyers.
activity as the supplies of new
packing come upon the market, but prices have given way
somewhat.
Moss Pork is
unchanged, but Lard is down to
13@13-£e. for prime, and Cumberland Bacon has declined to
1 Ofe. for December and KHc. for
January. The receipts of
Swine at this market have been
very liberal for the season.
Beef at some decline has been
moving more freely, but the
tendency is^' still downward. Butter and Cheese are steady,
with a revival of
shipment? of the latter.

a reaction
stocks are not

1—

es

147

900

Tit

CO

l- £? 5 8* ^ U
*0 Cl

3

—•

6.246

2.700

ri

’

•£-£*

*-n

o <4

161

2,750

-

1

Provisions show increased

thought

1-

rA

rj<

N -t - C s?

ct

- ■

'

Tuesday. Breadstuff's
active, under the cessation of export orders, but are

without material decline.
bacco continues active, but

P

' if

OS'
•

I

s
one

l r-t

9,279

1.090

»C

co

40

©

©

79,000

1,085

rt<

o

•

<

58,140
7,915
49,000
17,739
56,281

78,911
002
4.181

»-

rrco

-c

®f {— r-T

72

49.750
41,324

24,900
44,319
29,877

cc

a] <M

a

27,794
15,000

8,030

to in m t-

x>in

•

oot-r,.,£0

•

ft

4,356
3,625
17,011

—

Jute, bales'

10,834

47,457

174,200

4,223
1,043

Tar, barrels
Rice, E. I., bags
Rice, Carolina, tierces
Gunny Cloth, bales
Gunny Bags, bales
'Linseed, bags

15,109

29,519

323

....

.-

CO o

cjvjhW

ct co in

2 r-T CM —°

Nov. 1.

106,902
23,744
7.245
27,896
47.294

32.50S

Crude turpentine, barrels.

CC Ci o

•

■ ■/ ~r~TT ^
SS

r ID r-l O CVCt
r,CffiS:^r>t-nev

co

O

T—1

1866,

,

30.871

Hides, No..
Petroleum, crude, barrels
Petroleum, refined, barrels....
Cotton, bales

Wh

aToo

1

o

Oct. 1.
514
0-2.79?

40,774
59,094
30,190
8,615
142,100
5,585
3 4,680
50,000

cd~cf of of —'erf of®T-

ct

leading articles

-1867

Manila

c- i-r-t

a>

14,490

'

riTtOOttCCW

conccn

££

63,033
12,910

Ct O' »

m —*

ID Ct I- o
lO rr
S'?
—.SO
rr^ C
•— a
-

—<

A

of merchandise:
Beef, tierces and barrtln
Pork, barrels
Tobacco, foreign, bales
Tobacco, domestic, hogsheads.
Coffee, Rio. hags
Coffee, other, bags
Coffee, Java, mats
Sugar, hogsheads
Sugar, boxes
Sugar, bags
Molasses, hogsheads

ID -* 03 X CO r« ID t- DC

•

t-»ICCOo

S 2n J2 jU 5c"tjT * cc"rfs*fofVVcf-O
-H
O SO
o

^

:

.wsc^Hono

40 C* -+ ©

CO

©

Chronicle from that here given

»*ho

CD

improvement in the general
trade, hut no decided activity. The steadiness of gold, under
circumstances adverse to the maintenance of the
premium?
serves in a measure to restore
confidence. Besides the posi¬
tive requirements of
consumption are increasing.
The

[November 9, 1867.

x^40 Drn
xfcf oVt fp n V rf x'
CS
DIOSH-tfriCtD

X^Ct C'^--i

o

V

sf

Jlt-l-L-

-Net

r-t

Cl
--

D
ct

ST. t

November 9,

1867.]

THE CHRONICLE.

Receipt* of Domestic Produce

for tlie

Week, and since

593

These

receipts are of course made up from the latest mail
dates, as telegrams are so incomplete and uncertain we cannot
The receipts of domestic produce for the week
ending Nov. 9, since
Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1866, have been as follows :
use them and ensure
accuracy in our tables. That our read¬
This
Since
Same!
This
Since Same
ers,
both
home and abroad may have the latest
however,
at
week. Jan. 1. time’6 '<
week. Jau.l. time'60.
Ashes, pkgs...
217
Rot
in
5,! ‘30
information up to the hour we go to
4,950
10,737 314,247 338,647
press, we shall give here¬
Breads tuft's—
Tar.
513 19,980 41,719
Flour, 1)613.133,6652,107,S3S 2.163,0101 Pitch.
8
5,315
2,617
after,
immediately following the above statement, the total re¬
Wheal,bn.. 861,0607,581,001) 3,271,937j<
iOil cake, pkgs
522 71,076 89.824
Corn
503,54313,711,154 20,267,338 Oil, lard
25
3,663
4,030
ceipts
as reported by telegraph, for one week later than those in¬
ats
oats.
,908.672 6,457,373
m “■ 6,560,101
—'
27.104 896,275 906.219
Oil, Petroleum.
Ry<
ye......... 87,072 626,419
In accordance with this
0.<S,(‘42|Peanuts, bags.
13,214 10,675 cluded in our tables.
plan we would
Malt.
alt....
1.510 409,616
436,081;Provisions—
state that our
Barley
19 7,9611 629,279 2,431,309 Butter, pkgs.. 12.197 462,912 376,804
telegrams to-night from the different ports indi¬
912 63,295
Grass seed...
Cheese..
125,682
25,000 1,056,695 602,692
cate
that
Flaxseed
390 133,514
the
Cut meats....
63,541
432 83,546 96,792
aggregate receipts which we give in detail in our
Beans...—
1,350 33,466
41,715
Eggs
2,588 202,747 103,348 next
issue
Peas
will
reach about 53,000 bales, against a total for the
76,216 511,603
Pork
157,057
548 123,762 58,138
C. meal.bbls.
1,698 59,786
188,306
Beef, pkge.
5,570 44.4S5 89,411
same
C. meal,bags. 2,192 237,762
.211,814
period last year of 56,000 bales. Savannah continues to
Lard, pkgs....
3,635 127,004 10,052
Buckwheat A
Lard. kegs....
253 12,125
B.W. ftour,bg 2,269 12,082
77,834 ice, pkgs
354
1,456 (w fu-!
take.- the lead, the telegraph reporting the receipts at that port
519,104
Cotton, bales
16,556 518,818
519,104!Starch
T
January 1.

....

.....

....

...

5,443 198,460

..

389

Copper, bbls...
Copper, plates.
lmedfruit.pkgs
Grease, pkgs..,
Hemp, bales...
Hides, No

478
17
6

10,372
11,551

16,282
6,168

tearnie

28.778

15,070:
6,015
2,694;

agar, khds
bbls

10,386

737
519 273,020
2.006
16,010

206

pelter, slabs

8,282
3,863
2,907

1,759
3,565

5,163
5,270

&>
....

303

309,138I

this week at

«...

478

83.728 113,478

118

80,311

....

the exports
the total reaching

this week there is a very slight increase
15,973 bales, against 15,156 bales last week,
and 6,372 bales the previous week.
In the following tabl
we
give the particulars of the week’s shipments from all tin?
ports:
-

81,769

From—
New York
New Orleans...
Savannah

The

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows
foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this poror the week ending
Nov. 2, since Jan. 1, 186?, and for the correspond¬
ing period in 1 866 :

For

For

time
I860.

the

>

1867.
5,21 2
160,551

5,277
202,231

Cocoa, bags...
Coffee, bags
30,772
Cotton, bales.

16,012
801.915
613

13,S07
611,218
1,970|

Buttons
Coal, tons

5,09

....

..

,

Drugs. Ac.
Bark, Peruv

,

,

,

49

10.531

p’wd’rs
Brimst, tns.

1,148

22.03)

1,280

Cochineal...
Cr Tartar

213
40

12,383
2,771

Blea

...

Gambier....

Lead, pigs..

3,351

14,810-Sugar,
hlids,
1,010
fes A bbls..
1,094; S u gar. bx s Abg

3.154

736
690

2 l.09sj Tea..:
11,813,'Tobacco

11,338

720

3,813 j Waste

4,432
2,897

1-1

2,882 Wines, &c.
7,417
Champ, bkts

4,541
2,810

3,741

40:079
677

269,907
234,0';0
722,337
25,6*9
4,827

409
417
4(4

Wines

time

3866.
11,529

205,768
367,277
i,620,462
157,315
4,148

69

.0(4,413
39,138

22,413
32.942

8

60

Gunny cloth

1,719
3.777

31,806

.

Hair

226
544

Hemp, bales..
Hides, Ac.

4,.89
97.515

Raisins

Bristles

99
186
243

Hides,dres’d

India rubber..

Ivory

2,698

Jewelry, Ac.
Jewelry

42
32

Watches....
Linseod
Moiasses
Metals, Ac.

3,410
1,192

„

Cutlery

GO

Ginger
670
Pepper
1,000 Saltpetre

3,040
83i

377,554
130,779

209,898 Woods.
125,157
Fustic
4,99t

3,288

Mahogany.,

“

Cotton is

since

-

SEPT.

N.

Orleans, Nov. 1.
Mobile, Nov. 1
Charleston, Nov. 1..
Savannah, Nov. 1..
Texas, Oct. 25
New York, Nov. S*
Florida, Nov. It
N. Carolina, Nov. S.

3
>5
9

2
0
9

Virginia. Nov. 8

o

45,8)1

136,919

45,758
176,136
115,455

141,903
113,61|

b
1

1.

850

267

445

Friday, P. M., Not. ?, 1867.

1 TO—

snip-

France Other

Britain

3(1,686
38,501
31,370
60,39!

for’gn.

472

•

.

•

....

«...

•

....

ports, Nov. 8*

Total this year..
Same time last year'

187.393

42,7*26!

2*‘9.367

65,1711

•

•

*

•

•

•

•

•

3,921

•

....

•

•

•

6,093

.

0.542

•

|

....

4,926

....

•

•

6,650

10.78*!

3,968

very

3,431
6,512

«...

112

as

now

follows

112,
51,025!
79,923

j

Upland.

/-Receipts.-^

.

.

?fc>bde
Charleston

7,334
8,531

Savannah

/yxas

lennessee, Ac

..

.¥

Il„s7<)
881

2,213

i860.

22,019
7.393
4,667

8,169
1,996
1,201

Received this week at—
Florida
..bales
North Carolina

1.215

ISO)
9S7
746

Virginia

1,309

2,142

Total rece:pts . ..
Decrease this year

Ordinary

*—Receipts.-^
1867.
146

ducted as the same shipment

estimating the total receipts must be de¬

appears




fact

in the Florida return.

as some

We are thus par
of our readers fail to understand it

...

..

*

*

*

tl5,0t>0
100,332 137,2r9
126,330 351,867
....

dull under liberal

re¬

.

,

Florida.

15
16
16
18
19

15
16
18
19

20

21

Mobile.
16
17
19
20
22

N. Orleans
& Te
16
17
19
20
23

The exports

further

a

ucuiar in the statement
of this

...

..

3,500

In this
table, as well as in our general table of receipts, Ac., we deduer
the receTpts at each
port lor the week all received at such port from other
southern ports. For
instance, each week there is a certain amount shipped
irom Hor da to
Savannah, which in

Eb

Good Ordinary
Low Middling

45,S83 49,3S3

worn

*

ceipts and unfavorable accounts from the British markets,
prices steadily declining, until Tuesday, 18c. was reached for
Middling Upland. Subsequently the foreign advices became
better, the demand revived from spinners, and some old ship¬
ping orders were executed : the sales on Wednesday were
4,974 bales, closing at lS^@19c. for
Middling Upland. Yes¬
the
market
terday
was sustained but less active; to-day, under
a liberal
export demand tin market was strong and prices
were better,
notwithstanding the failure of the Liverpool mar¬
ket to advance further and a continued weakness in gold.
Sales of the week foot up 18,125 bales, of which 3,872 bales
bales were taken by spinners, 12,820 bales for export, and
1,520 bales on speculation. The following are the closing

:

Received tbi 3 week at f— 1SG7.
New Orleans
bales 9,381

5

....

....

....

28,543

«...

«...

1.049

opened

•

STOCK.

13,182 43,889
10,723 18,758
22,473 10,268
42,71S 18,502
1,314
2,324

30,207

.

....

1

•

472

....

967

1,630

5,327

,,,,

....

29,207

The market this wreek

415

682

3,921

1.751

3.431

’

4,200
4,926

6,775
307

NORTH.
PORTS.

Total.

beginning to come forward quite freely, the
receipts this week at all the ports showing a further consid¬
erable increase, the total
reaching 45,883 bales (against
36,129 bales last week, 32,962 bales the
previous week, and
25,075 bales three weeks since), making the aggregate receipts
since
September 1, this year, 187,393 bales, against 209,367
bales for the same
period in 1865-6. The details of the re¬
ceipts for the past week, and the corresponding week of 1866, quotations:
ore

15,973

m’ntsto

Great

...

30,35

COTTON.
<•

1,544

rec’d

PORTS.

9

9

4,266

135

•n

73,056
47,393
178,330

474

44

--

3

588.939

Logwood... 4,230

415

f

3,31

EXPORTED SINCE SEPT.

Other

402
8,262

.

corresponding week of 18(36 the shipments

32

447,08S

20 ,750. Spices. Ac.
761
Cassia

,

Stocks at Dates Mentioned.

)

32,682

.

659.539
39

126,262

9,715| Rice..

„

Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept, 1, and

1.752

8,673

„

357.974

72,-196

41,78S

the

„

....

346,581

85,801 Wool, bales...
34,340
731 Articles reported by value!
118,737 Cigars
$9,787 $ 374,909
33,668-Corks
5,327
221,903
32,SISjFancy goods.. 36,400 2,846,006
9,200 Fish
6,830
526,934
4.233 Fruits, Ac.
23,132j Lemons
4,627 • 425,951
4,325
Oranges.... 1.070 662.978
95,996
Nuts
13 784
593,320

1*1.936

....

3,316

ports amounted to l>,511 bales. The total
foreign exports from the United States since September
1, 1S67, now reach 51,025bales, against 79,9*23 bales for
the same period last year, and the stocks at all the
ports are at
present 137,289’bales, against 334,867 bales at the same time
in 1866.
Below we give oar usual table of the movement
of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1,
showing at a glance
the total receipts, exports, stocks, <kc.:

Same

;

Flax
Furs

Hardware...
Iron.RR b’rs

1867. ’
8.203
3:2.261

311,625
Spelter, lbs
3 ,502.324
Steel
3.715
ISO,7 0
Tin, boxes.. 17.034 6.13,o'.8
0.420
Tin slabs,lbs 47,531 3 635,619
19,966 j Rags
605
47,109

14,352

Gums, crude
36 4
Gum, Arabic
Indigo
*379
Madder.....
16
Oils, ess....
611
Oil, Olive...
60
Opium.
Soda, bi-carb 3,300
50
Soda, sal....
Soda, ash... 1.974

week.
154

Since
Jan. 1,

9,416

from all the

[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]
Same

Liverpool.

Total exp'ts this week. 12,732

the

Since
Jan. 1,

Exported this week to
^
Havre. Bremen.IP mb’gPr; mo BYlona. Tota
135
267
850
1,544
12,21

,

3,964

Imports of Eeatltns Articles.

For
the
week.
74

19,000.

In

4,607 151,170 149,604
90.2 89,157 60,104
2,777 128,284 76,534

Hops, bales. ..
17,299
Leather, sides 59 ,158 2, 017,217 1,996,393
Dead, pigs
11,437
0,530 Wool, bales
Molasses, hlids
Dressed
Hogs,
and bbls
15,370
No
14,131
Naval Stores—
Rice,
rough,
Crude trp,bbl 1,121
31.075
10,926
bush
977 56,88 3
Spirits turp..
50,029
...

8,233
2,8(.l

*

of Cotton this week from New York show
increase, the total shipments reaching 12,218

The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tenness<
e,
Kentucky, Ac., not otherwise enumerated..
t These are the receipts at all the ports of Florida, except Apalachicola, to

Nov. 1st.

X Estimated,

[November 9,1867.

THE CHRONICLE

594

Savannah, Nov. 2.—The receipts for the week ending Nov. 1 were
bales, against 7,413 bales last week. The particulars of these 14,955
bales (of which 80 Sea Islands, 6 Uplands were from Florida.)
shipments are as follows :
against 12,405 bales last week. The shipments this week were 12,467
To

Liverpool,
600

per steamer*—City
Minnesota. 2.700

of Paris, 635

Persia, 1,112

Total bales

merin, 218.
To
To

135.

Aleppo, 686... .p >r

K*e’er, 362...'.Edith, 400.

ships Thornton, 1,197... James R.
Tota' ba e*
To Havre, per ste.imer—Ville rle Paris,
To Bremen, per steamer—Atlantic, 778

bales, of which 3,3IS bales

France, 1,724. .Hecla,

Total hales
Union, 548... per bark Bre.

Hamburg, per steamer—Allemannia. 267. T.,tal bales
Palermo,' per brig Antelope, 850. Total bales

Below

9,416

135
1,544

267
850

give our table showing the exports of Cotton
from New York, and their direction for each of the last foat
weeks; also the total exports and direction since September
1, ISOY ; and in the last column the total for the same period
of the previous year :
we

Exports of Cotton (hales) from New York sluce-Sept. 1,1867
WEEK ENDING

Total
EXPORTED TO

Liverpool
Other British Ports

Havre,
Other French ports

Oct.
29.

Not. 5.
5.

date.

prev.
year.

3,250

3,769

5,739

9,416

29,207

38,6S1

....

3,250

Bremen and Hanover

19

29,207

38,700

132

526

135

967

1,199

....

—

....

132

526

135

967

1,199

6S8

887
161
100

1,544

3,744

1,5 8

267

1,399
100

538
203

1,148

1,811

5,243

2,244

....

648

688

....

850
....

....

...

....

850

795

....

Total

Spain, etc

...

....

3,898

Receipts of cotton
and since Sept. 1:

4,579

at the port

This
Since
week. Sept. 1.
Bales. Bales.
6.098
1,502

From
New Orlef
Texas...,

6,078

2,979
36,726

487

1,908

Florida

850

....

850

20

7,413

12,212

36,267

795

42,938

of New York for the week

From
South Carolina
North Carolina

This
Since
week. Sept. 1.
Bales. Bales.

17,S23

1,2)5
Norfolk, Baltimore, &C.. 1,287
Per Railroad
2,181
....

Total lor the week
Total since Sept. 1

2,951
5,539

6,144
80,248

The

following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬
delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬
1, 1807:
/—Boston.—*
Last
week.

Receipts from—
New Orleans
Texas..
Savannah
Mobile
Florida
South Carolina
North Carolina

Sep. 1.

-Philad’phia.—,

-Baltimore.

Last
week.
561

Sep. 1.

539

4,598

1,392

966
18

2,182

Since

Last
eek.

1,953

Since

Sep. 1.

41

1,681
657

receipts

hales

*24
‘2,157
2,157

8,224
1,318

21,051

1,100

+7,535

185

296

1,424

32

312

328

5,495

Reshipments.

+ These do

not

Oct.
“

44
“

There have been

receipts at Philadelphia.

exports of cotton this week to any for
eign port from either of these cities.
no

1,631
2,296

1.543

1,433

22

3,002

1.799

5,265
4,8 >3

3,274
3,726

19X@
18 @
16 x@n

2,233

4,220

1,237
1,47*

7,137

2,847

9,019
18..10,417
25
12,405

5,939
5,991

5,505

8.858

8,091

4.154
4.614

1 .14,955

8,169

12,467

3,505

Nov.

•

• • •
...

17

@.

17
17

@17X
@

...

...

18665

5,206
4,150
3,'.'53
3,626
3,299
5,500
5.346
9,560

14,224

Early in the week prices improved somewhat, but subsequently they
lower, closing at 17c. for (Liverpool) Middling, and
for Low Middling. Exchange (sight) on New York, buying rate, is
-jRai-fc. dis.,and selling rate at par @^c. discount. Freights to New York,
Philadelphia and Boston have advanced, and are now lc. for square,
and lie. for round bales.
were

Nov. 2.—The mail returns for the week ending
further increase in the receipts, the total for the
week being 9.384 bales, against 7,873 bales last week, and 6,804
New Orleans,

1, show

Nov.

a

bales the previous week. The shipments for the last week were only
769 bales, of which 445 bales were to Barcelona, and 324 bales to
New York.
Stock on hand November 1, was 43,889 bales.
The

receipts and shipments for a series of weeks this year, and the corres¬
ponding weeks of 1866, also the stock and price of middling (Liverp ol
classification) at the close of each week were as follows :
Week

ending

Sept.

6......
13
20
27
4
11....

(4

Oct.
b

4

44

Nor.

18

..

/-Receipts—.
.

1,025

1,547

1S67.
479

848

2,013

2,402

9,605

1.771

2,643
4,163

493

3,311
4,612

1,796

.

.

.

.

25
1

1866.

.

.

.

.

/—^hipm’ts—, ,Price Of Middl’g—*

1867.

3,262 7.566
4,423 12,662

6,804 16,560
7,373 21,500
9,384 22,019

1866.

4,682

1867.
26 @26X
25 @—
23 @23X

2,207
1,294 17,009
2,073 3,103
3,789 11,731

4,911 10,443
769 8,592

—@21
—@19
18X@19
@19
1RX@19
19 @19*

'1866.

34
35
36
37
40
40

Stock—,
1867.

@35
@36
@37
@38
@~
tt—

nom.

37
37

.

@38
@38

1S66.

15,896

14,719
17,018
17,095
19 512

23,397
28,043
33,182
43,889

91.804
91.628*
92,008
y.3,839

93,398
99,991

112,521
120,21

5

During the early part of the week prices of all descriptions of cotton
improved, later, however, the improvement on the lower grades was
lost, but the better qualities remained firm at the advance, middling
(Liverpool classification) being quoted at the close at 19@19^c, and
Ordinary at 16^@l7c. against 18y@19c. for middling and 14@15c. for
ordinary last week. Freights are only moderately active : to Liver¬
pool, $ 1. by steam, and 9 I6ths by sail; to New York, by steam,
£e., and to Philadelphia and Boston lc. Sterling exchange closed at
150@162 for bill of lading bills, and 152(3)153^- for bank. Exchange
sight on New York, £ per cent. dis. for bank and |@| dia. for com¬
mercial.

Mobile, Nov. 2.—Our mail returns show for the week ending Novem¬
an increase in the receipts, the total this week being 7,334
bales, agamst 6,632 bales last week and 6,418 bales the previous week.
The shipments for the last week were in all 3,246 bales, of which 365
were to New York, 771
to Providence, and 2,110 to New Orleans.
ber 1

receipts and shipments for a series of weeks this year and the
corresponding weeks of 1866, also the stock and price of middling
(Liverpool Classification) at the close of each week were as follows :
Week ending
,—Stock—,
"r-'Rec’pts-v— Shipm’ts—> Price of midd iug—,
1867, 1S66. 1S67.
610
248
982
546
479
1,398
772 1,718
2.145
.

6....
bb
13....
44
20....
44
27...
4
Oct.
bb
11,...
4b
IS..
bi
25....
1....
Nov.

Sept.

...

....

....

....

...

.

.

include the railroad

1,782

1867.-

30 @31
S50
30 @31
879
31 @31X 816
34 @34X 2,034
38 @39 3.906
36 @37 8,562
36 @37 11,075
36 ©.. 15,302
35 @35*18,502

24X@25
23 ©....

268

494

,—Stock—,

1866.

1867

The

857

Virginia
New York, &c*
Tennessee, Kentucky, &c.

*

Since

8,249

..

Total

“

/—Price of Middling—,

1866.

1867.

1,660

13..
20.
27..
4..
11..

44

Grand Total

tember

41

44

.

,—Shipments—s

Week
/—Receipts—
1866.
ending.
1867.
1,440
S^pt 6..
485

4b

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar....
All others

....

9,416

402
246

Total to N. Europe..

....

5,739

....

....

....

3,759

....

Hamburg
Other ports

time

Oct.
22.

....

Total French

Same

Oct.
15.

....

Total to Gt. Britain..

to

j

were to Liverpool, 490 were to Baltimore,
Philadelphia, 591 to Boston, and 7,363 to New York. The re¬
ceipts and shipments for a series of weeks this year, and the corres¬
ponding weeks of 1866, also the stock and price of Middling (Liver¬
pool classification) at the close of each week, were as follows :

701 to

....

4,613

1,607 1,152

4,362

3,086 3,846
2,847 1,049

4.623
6.418
6.632

7,366 2,590
8,680 8,210

7,393 3,246

1866.

1867.

1,540

22X@21 @-

122
3.888

21
19

3,802

3, 91
1,927
2,580

@@17X@13

16X@—
16X@17
3,875 17X@4,823 16*@-

1866.

—

30
32
35
37
37
37
35
85

There has been a fair business this week, but
about lc., at the close middling being quoted at

@30
@31
@33
@-

1867.

1866.

4,448 25,817
5,300 24,786
6,697 25,436
9,158 23,155

@-

9,674 •*2,150
@-' 13,250 23,270
©19,071 28,<’56
14,672 32,801
©@18,758 35,431

prices have declined

16^, and low middling

atl6^. Exchange closes, New York sight buying rate £ discount,
Charleston, Nov. 2.—The mail returns for the week ending Nov. 1 aud
selling rate par. In freights there is more doing ; Liverpool ll-16d.
•how a further increase in the receipts, the total being 8,693 bales,
and coastwise lc. steam and £c. sail.
(8,467 Uplands and 126 Sea Island) aganat 6,869 bales last week, and
6,181 bales the previous week. Shipments this week amount to 6,077
European and Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to these mar.
bales, of which 4,507 b iles were to New York, 796 bales to Boston, 3 kets our
correspondent in London writes as follows :*
bales to Savannah, and 771 bales to Baltimore. The
receipts and ship
Liverpool,
October 26.—With the exception of Tuesday, when some
ments for a series of weeks this year, and the corresponding
weeks of
depression
occurred
in consequence of the failure of the Royal Bank of
1866, also the stock an i price of middling (Liverpool classification) at
Liverpool, the Liverpool cotton market has been in a healthy state at
the close of each week were as follows :
advancing prices: The sales of the week have been much larger than
Week
/—Receipts—, /—Shipments—, ,—Price Middling—, /—Stock—^ for many weeks past, an 1 the quotations have experienced conaide able
1866.
1867.
1866.
1867.
1866.
1867. 1866.
ending.
1867.
recovery from the late depression. The total sties of the week are
480
844
794
24 @24# 30 @*31
723
5,105
Sept.
6..
339
lV
13..
578
547
754
1,089
1,683
22X®.-.. 31 @32
2,872 as much as 115,680 bales, of which 11,800 biles are on speculation ;
20..
848
950
22 @22# 33 @
587
1,014
3,176
2,300 28,050 bales for export, while the trade have taken 75,730 bales. In
27.. 1,111
19 @19# 34 @..
530
1,431
2.285
1,361
1,169
American cotton there is an improvement in piice cf £d. to §d., in East
Oct.
4. 2,903
2,096
1,076
1,519
17X@16
38 @39 2,553
3,118
Indian
of -£d. per lb. Brazilian cotton is, in some instances -&d. dearer,
11.. 5,090
2,889
16 @..
2,663
3,851
35 @36 4.754
2,620
IS.. 6,181
2.666
17 ©..
4,371
2,986
©.. 6,564
2,608 but other kinds, though firm, show no material variation. Annexed is a
25.. 5,869
1.599
17 @17X 36
6,395
4,684
.7,752
7,409 statement
showing the price of middling qualities of cotton at this
Nov. 1
17 @17* 36 @36*10,268 10,618
8,593
4,667
6,177
5,864
“

“

44

“

“

date since 1864

The market this week has fluctuated considerably
of the changing aspects of the Liverpool market.

‘

:

under the influence
1864. 1S65. 1866. 1867. I
1864. 1865. 1866. 1867
For the first few Mid. Sea Island 41d. 35d. 26ti. lOd. I Mid. Pe'mmb. 20#d. 221. 15#d. 8
days there was an upward movement; but later prices have fallen off
Upland.... 21# 22
15
8Xl
Egyptian.. 15
:0
12
614Mobile.... 21X 22
Broach.... 12
15
8X1
16
10
6
again, closing at 17@17ic. for (Liverpool) Middling, and 16£c. for Low
Orleans... 22
22& 15*
9
16
10
Dhollerah. 12
6
Middling. Freights to Liverpool we quote, ^d, to New York, \ er steam
fc. to Boston, $e. per lb., and to Philadelphia and Baltimore -Jc. Ex¬
* For latest news
the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph dis.
change closed for sterling 60 day’s bills at 151^, and for sight chocks patches at the closerespecting
of our London letter in a previous part oi this paper.—
99 New York, banks are paying $ dis.,aud selling at par,
UQgxiscufc
FuiA£cu& Chronicle




.November 9,1867.]

THE CHRONICLE.

figures show the present storks of cotton at Liverpool
al*»o the quantities of American and Indian produce
ascertained to be afloat to thuse ports :

The following
and London, and

Stock in Liverpool
“

1866.

1867

792,5*20

678,200

97.819

118,343

3,000
131,86*

15,000

243,265

1,025,207

1,054,808

Bales

London

.

American cotton afloat
“
Indian
Total

Subjoined

Mediterranean
Austria

1,096

Africa, <fec
China, Iudia, &c

2,052

All others

' 871
2,662

f
100
712

SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS.

1,213
97

15

20
194

50

318

1,823

3.3-5

1,411

7,695

24
3

372
76

231

'

902

249
929
7
3

72,605

.

691

178,940
3,142
3,995,437
342,733
702,145

320

...

.

2,714

6,438
973
790

.

4,571

234

58
50

10,513

52,675 32,831

716

6,SOI

92415,276

8,616,142

following table indicates the ports from which the
have been shipped :

above exports

Total
this

period

year.

1866,

Same

Average
weekly sales.
1867.

*

1866.

American....bales. 27,690 3,750 1,560 33.0001,158.6901,125,410 20,410 18,150
12,340 1,450
290 14,080
327.880 323,940
5,530
5,680
350
Egyptian
4.250
280 4,880
151,840 167.880
3,170
3,540
West Indian
8,960
260
4,220
91,640
79,930
1,490
1,740
Fast Indian
27,450 22,240 9,670 59,360 1,135,4701,345,650 15,430 15,940
China and Japan..
40
40
20
140
10.370
4,180

Tcs.&Stems.—, Bxs. <fc

From
New York
Baltimore
Boston
Portland

Hhda.

Cases.

Bales,

crns.

S5.040
68,145
1,618

47,248

28,797

425

34

14

lihd*.

bis.

...

75,730 28,050 11,800 115,580 2,869.700 3,053,180

Total

Imports

-—

To this
date
1867.

This
week.

Total,

This

1866.

1866.

day.

2,668
4,133

924

226.010

93,430

62,720
17,700

36,9S6 1,123,9631,464.101 1,544,675
894
11,032
12,993

364,800

49,234 2,811,5S8 3,129,037

Egyptian
West Indian

30,4^0

22,980

5,575 8,211.548
142
290,981
8,152
4,516

eriean, against

23. ISO

1,460

11,620
270,100
2,840

678,200

792,520

516,770

Light.

Common Lugs
5>£@ 5%
Good
do
6 @ 7
7
Common Leaf.. 7>i(ft 9%
9
M dium
do.10 @12
12

1866.

161.926

296,890

229,SO')

233.942

41,192

97,819

Alexandria, Oct. 10.—Fine parcels of cotton
maneb lull prices, but faulty produce is very dull.
is quoted at 6d., tair to fully fair ; new 8$d.; and

are scarce

Imports, Jan. 1 to Oct. 24

Bales.

Deliveries

Stocks, Oct. 24

118,84^

and

bales.

Previously from Nov. 1 1866

bales.

bales.

50

162,598

1 726

44,426

207,024

1(4,271
154,()(*5
326,248

44,476
29,145
71,126

208,750

32,831

LEAP

716

Same
“

period
1865-6
“

1864-5

183,24n

397,374

Bombay, Oct. 18.—The week’s shipments of cotton have been
3,S00 bales. The market is firm at full quotations.

.

Light.

15
.13

|

LEAP

exports of Crude Tobacco this week from ail the ports
reaches 2,242 hhds., 775 cases, 3,106 bales, against 2,684
hhds., 494 cases, 665 bales for the previous seven days, show¬

Ohio

decrease in the number of hhds. shipped, but a small
increase in cases, and a very large increase in bales—almost
all of the latter being sent to Germany. Of the
exports of
hhds. during the past week, 2,172 hhds. were from New
York,
and the balance, 70 hhds., were from Boston; and the direc¬
tion of the shipments was as follows:
614 hhds. to Great
Britain, 325 hhds. to Bremen, 565 hhds. to Leghorn-, 510 hhds
to Cadiz, 153 hhds. to Lisbon, and the balance to othor
ports
The following table furnishes the particulars of the week’s
shipments from all the ports :
2,172

Baltimore

Bostou

450

.

70

.

825

3,053

*53

20

12

.....

Man’f.
lbs,

46,860

1,405

’hi

....

Philadelphia

12’579

2,242

Below

v

2,684

775
491

3,925

1,226

25
29

3,106

665
156

....

20
191
172

....

....

....

423
341
4s(i

60,814
54,347

117,866

our usual table showing the total exports
of Tobacco from all the
ports of the United States, and their
we

give

direction, since November 1, 1866:

Exports

“

Running lots,
“
Wrappers,
“ 1865....
Running lots.
“
Fillers, 1865 and 1866
Wrappers
Running lots

To

Great Britain....,
Sweden

Germany

Belgium

.

Italy

France

Spain, Gibra’lt ,’&c

24,696
342

.

.7...

Holland




Hhds.

.

!

.

.

.

1, 1866.

Cer’s &,—Stems—, Pkgs.
Cases. Bales, tcs. hhds. bales. &bxs.

2,722
•

-

•

232

614

86
20

8

4,748

*

50,735
6,553
27,310
20,026

38,570 19,642

18,841

891
279
21
25

11,870

1,935

99
20

13

...

2

...

...

•

•

»

924

lbs

1,368,776

735

293,450

18

29

17,276
49,876
18,215

1,029

663,028

70,171

1,774
.

154
..,

Manfd,

1,3(8

...

.

...

.

...

@23

20
16

30

@45
@25
@35
@15
@7
@48
@18
@16
@32

16

@25

10

@14

15
10
5
20
10
8

Wrapper lots

“

Running lots

Ohio and

Pennsylvania Fillers

3>s@ 6
4 @ 6

New York State

FOREIGN.

Havana.—Fillers—Common.
“

60@ 70
75@ 85
90@1 05

Good
Fine

“

Havana.—Wrappers,

1 2C@2

Yara

55@1

Yara, average lots..

70

60@

MANUFACTURED.

Black

work—com., tax paid. 30 @35c
“
good
45 @60c
fine
“
60 @70c
Bright work—common “
35 @45c
good
“
50 @75c
“
80 @1 25
Fine,

The

Black

work,common, in bond 15
g*!od

line

IS

“

25

Bright work, medium,.. “

25
50

good «fc fine “

@20v
@2*2c
@30c
@45c

@S5v

receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since
have been as follows:

From

AT

NEW

YORK

hhds.

„

Virginia

151

Baltimore
New Orleans

36
385

Ohio, &c

390

SINCE

87

4,752

...

442

....

Total

962

.

NOVEMBER

1. 1866.

^Previously—,
hhds.
pkgs
9,972
124,652

pkgs.
4,168

Other

10,123

5,909

128,820
5,996

3.678

427

63,443

38,902

4,788
4,0('3
63,833

266

871

266

871

83,073

175,458

82,111

4,697

/—T’l sin. Nov. 1—,
hhds.
pkgs

170,761

427

39,344

The

for

following are the exports of tobacco from New Ycii
the past week :
EXPORTS

TOBACCO

OF

FROM

YORK.*

NEW

nhls.

Hhds.

Cases. Bales. Tierces,

Liverpool..
Bremen

23
325

..

Hamburg
Leghorn

565
510

..

Cadiz
Lisbon
Cuba

..

•

.

•

.’

.

.

•

.

.

.

2,034

•

.

,

.

.

.

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

....

....

.

export for week.

.

2,172

•

....

450

.

.

20

.

.

.

.

.

....

....

•

....

•

....

.

....

.

....

•

•

....

.

....

.

.

....

....

.

.

.

.

•

.

•

.

,

.

.

.

....

•

•

•

•

25

9,911
....

....

....

....

•

.

•

•

•

•

*

8,094

....

637

4,928
15,062

....

....

211

3,053

lbs.
Alai.?.

..

«...

....

,

13

New Granada

•

.

.

.

3

.

....

....

.

,

.

6
6

....

....

.

.

20

.

....

3

.

....

.

.

Bxs

25

.

117

5

..

.

783

....

Hayti

.

317

....

Danish West Indies
British West Indies..
Br. N. A. Provinces
British Guiana
Central America

Total

•

•

items.

....

....

London

20

12

'500
6,729
46,860

*

The exports in this table to European ports are made up from mani
fests, verified and corrected by aD inspection of the cargo.

The direction of the

other

foreign exports for the week, from the
ports, has been as follows: -

From Baltimore—To St.

Johns, P. R., 1,405 lbs. manfd.
ToHongKoig, 100cases
To Africa,
64 hhds. leaf ...To Hayti, 53 bales
To British Provinces, 6 hhds. leaf,
25 cases and 411 boxes and pkgs.
From Philadelphia—To Havana, 2,725 manfd... .To Barbadoes, 8,837 lbs. manfd
To Liguayra, 1,017 lbs. manfd.
Brom

of Tobacco from the 1/silted States since Novem¬
ber

20

(CASES).

N. Y. State running lots
Pennsylvania
prime wrappers
“

a

hhds. bales. Pkgs.

@17
@20

Nov. 1,

The

Tcs.
25

Heavy.
14^^16
10^@19

12>?(ftil4c.

“

ODly

Friday, P. M., Nov. 8, 1867.

Export’d this week from Hhds. Case. Bales.

15,270 8,646,142

(HHDS.).

| Good Leaf

/—This week—,

New York

924

“

RECEIPTS

,—Stems

.

“

TOBACCO.

ing

.

6.S01

.

Total

.

.

I

@14

com-

1,676

...

222

139,097

369
467

Connecticut Wrappers, crop of 1866

209,01n

154,40„

Old middling cotton
good fair lCd. per lb.
Nov. 1, 1866, were as under :
Great Britain, Continent,
Total,

of cotton siuce

From Oct. 3 to Oct. 10,1867

1867.

...

563
8

(ft 8# I Fine do
(ftll
I Select! <ins

....

per cent,

1865.

...^.

47
65

Heavy.

SEED

3,409,020

last year.
London, Oct. 26.—There has been a good demand for cotton during
the week, and prices have advauced to the extent of ±d(ftpJ.
per lb.
The annexed particulars relate to East India, China and Japau
produce :

The exports

52,675

Virginia

65

263

KENTUCKY

present sfock of cotton at Liverpool about 24 percent, is Am-

Of the

926

Total si nee Nov. 1... 165,500

San Francisco

3,659

...

QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCY.

P-7,270
41,760

16,750
463 680
5,660

....

31

438
29

Philade’phia

4

....

4,783

9,769
28

1866.

165 050

Brazilian

Total

1866.

2,099 1,095.8 01,050,342 1,156,130
8,277 372,900 368,843
404,865
200,083
1,907 152.8*26 156.144
55
95,205
78,575
90.274

American

East Indian
China and Japan

Stocks
,
Same
date
Dec. 81.

<

Iin-

joris.

46,330 44,940

New Orleans

132

Lbs.

pkgs. manf’d.

r
Brazilian

822,762

...

25

.

T’l since Nov. 1.... 165,560

The

51
.

Honolulu, &c

the particulars of sales and imports for the week aw
vear. and also of sti cks on the evening of
Thursday last, together with
a comparison with
the same period in 1866:
,

61

14

Australia &c.
B. N. Am. Prov
South America
West Indies..*
East Indies
Mexico

are

Sales this week.
Ex- SpeculaTrade, port.
tion. Total,

595

Boston—ToBombav, 2U0cases

—

Maryland and Ohio.—At Baltimore, receipts continue small. Sales
of Maryland light and prices steady. Ohio has been in brisk demand,
with sales since our last review of 2,150 hhds., principally for Duisburg,
and the residue for France and on speculation, at prices favoring sellers.
flhe stock in factors’ hands is now reduced to 800 hhds. leaf and several

lundred hhds. scraps.

proved feeling

;

In Kentucky descriptions we notice

a

much im¬

lugs have already advanced from the lowest pointy

596

THE CHRONICLE.

$2@3—and the tendency still upward. Stock of all kinds about 1,000
hhds and held firmly. Sales the past week confined to small lots for
home manufacture. Inspections this week 291 hhds.
Maryland (26
reinspectcd); 122 Ohio, 7 Kentucky, (all reinspected), and 2 Virginia
—(otal

422 hhds.

Stockist

January, ISO?

' ’..

Inspected this week
do

19,595

’44)

previously

59,530

Total
Cleared H>r
foreign ports
Coastwise and reinspected

79,567
-

.

.55,804
s

053

——

to-day in warehouses and shipboard not cleared
15,710
Kentucky.—At Louisville the market opened steady and firm, with
rales of 77 hhds. at £-4 20(5 17 25.
On the following day-the receipts

better, and prices continued firm, with sales 92 hhds., at $4 15@
lbs. The third day, receipts were small, and sales only
05(^17. On the 4th day the receipts were again small,
with very few choice grades ; sales were 61 hhds. at £3 d0(dd4 20.
On the 5th day the market was more active, with better
receipts, and
prices steady : 101 hhds. were offered, and 88 rej ctions, prices ranging
were

16 75 per 1,00
39 hhds. at £5

At the close the market

evidently a little-firmer,
by the improved qualities of the tobacco. Sales 68

hhds. at $1 40(J 25.
Lugs
do

Leaf,
do
«‘o

do

We quote :
Light.
4
5

good
common

7
It

medium
fair to good
fine selections...

Heavy

(To t Ve.

4>'® 5Xc.
.%® 6 C
7 ®11 c.
12 ®14 c.
14lt» c.

® 5>jc.
® 9 e.
(5)13

e.

1c.

15>-@17

16>$®1S c.
7®10
12®17

c.

common

Medium
Hood
Fine to selections

“
“

565,620

2,886,020

195,415

6,223,015

FOREIGN EXPORTS

FROM

18(g,22

25®35

NEW

TOE

bush.

218,880
558,3 i 5

Rye,

Earley,

Oats,

bush.

bush,
*...

33 2,544,099

6.755

216,580

Total exp’t, week 61,123
since Jan. 1, 1867 663,380

time, 1866

805,153

.

1,1'rom

Baltimore..

.

1

Corn,
bush

5 <,201

-•••

1,750

85,8Op

480
1,016
1,072
63
91,078
14,007 -116,925
1,765
480
2,336 541,153
59,573
127,947 2,714,508 333.021 886,863 132,175 6,964093
131,328 318,311 201,500
1,016,322 10,741,049
....

....

*

....

..

39,137

23.082
21,998

130,525

39,684

151,650

Philadelphia

JAN.

861,973 116,4066,623,466
1,000

6,515

139,363 .29,480

We*t Ind. week
since Jan. 1..

SINCE

bush.

975

7.455

AND

WEEK

1.882,580
5,886,005

526.676

....

193,696

since Jan. 1

same

FOR

bbls.

bbls.
42.687

N# A. Col. week,

Since Jail,
Eoston

YORK

Flonr, C. meal, Wheat,

To
Gt. Brit. week...
since Jan. 1

1,897
27,915

2,758

.

..

...

283,751
9,495

2,910

6.774
700.072
711,455

*

Weekly Receipts
at the

was

common

Cutting leaf,

Barley, &c., bush
Oats, busk

..

63.857

Stock

fioin $3 Bop: 10.
caused in part

[November 9, 186

following

at

Lake Ports.—The

lake ports

for

Flour*
bbls.

From

the week
Wheat.
bush.

Chicago

693,531

Milwaukee
Toledo
Cleveland
Detroit

22,409

%.

618,524
29,278
49.582

22,407

.

8,737
142,467

76,266

5.139

30,707
14,125
5,924

20,260
2,917

582,725
755,138-

73,592

40,277

80,206

60,949

11.270

135,905 1,-428,570

463,522
508,977

159.649 1,668,500

..

Oats.
bush.
455.703

2,281

q

Bariev.

Corn.
bush.
318,764

boo

’

Totals.
Previous week

3

following shows the receipts
ending Nov. 2 :
Rye.

bush.’

bush.

41,696

52,577
4,067
1,023

3,580

1,410

Correspond^ week, ’66. 166,985 1,141,036 .401,062 367,699 153,897 77,169
Since Jan. 1, 1867
3,068,550 24,S00,188-28,444,10712,827,425 2,652,6801,559.591
Same time, 1S66
-..3,293,70823,688,37036,104,05111,333,3191,778,7551,989,563
Di-crease in flour, bbls
1 225,158
Decrcuse ia graiu, bush
4.610,067
Eastward Movement of Grain by Canal.—The following statement
will show about the amount of grain on canals destined for tide water
on the 4th inst. :

BREADSTUFFS.
Friday, Nov. 8, 1867, F, M.

From

The market this week lias been

■Wheat,

Corn,

Oats,

Bariev,

bush.

bush.

bush.

bush.

Rye,

bush.

75,070 108,700
696,650 1,573,850
1,290,280
quite variable, and unset¬ Buffalo, 14 days
75,461 458,177
253,044
39,794
32,872
Oswego,
9
days
tled, and so doses. The receipts of Flour are rather moderate
Total
for the season.
Western mills are not running, full time—
736,414 1,649,311 533,448 141,572
1,543,324
909 549
Previous week
1,742,440 423,318 219,449
1,952,328
some are stopped altogether—because Flour does
not pay a Corresp’di’g week ’66..
701,536
425,710 S75,766 107.312
966,348
profit at present prices of Wheat, and money accommodation
Liverpool, Oct. 25.—The country markets have begn largely sup*
is not easy to obtain to permit the storing of large quantities.
plied, and with a smart decline quoted in the ports buyers have sue*
The shipping business of the week has been limited at about ceeded in establishing a lower scale of prices by 2@5s. per quarter1
Arrivals on the coast are numerous, and sales very difficult even at a
$10@§10 2 5 for Extra State, with 2s. fid.(d;3s. freight.
considerable
reduction. Tuesday’s market was poorly attended, and
Wheat has come forward freely, while the shipping orders
even a decline of 3@6d. per cental did not tempt
buyers of wheat to
have been mostly withdrawn. There has been, however, a
operate beyond their immediate requirements Flour l@?s. lower. In¬
very firm feeling among holders, and they have stored freely. dian Corn from scarcity sold rather higher. At to-day’s market we hail
Receipts have fallen otf one half at the principal Western mar¬ a fair attendance, and a steady though not large busiuess passed at
kets.
The quantity on the way to the Eastern markets is also prices showing a recovery since Tuesday of 3@6d. on white, and 8(<Fid.
on
good red wheat. Flour also 6d.@ls. bitter, but not active. Indian
somewhat reduced. But there are slid rather more pressed
Corn is almost exhausted, and mixed American is 3s. dearer, say 60s.
for sale than the market will readily take, and prices show a
per quarter.
decline for the week of
5c. per bushel.
It is. now thought
farmers’ deliveries.
we shall have on hand at the close of
navigation about 3,500,- Week ending Oct. 19, 1867
79.292 qrs. at 6“s.. 6
52s. 2
73,880
“
000 bushels, a quantity not materially exceeding home re¬ Same time I860
FOREIGN IMFORT THIS WEEK.
quirements, unless some should come forward by rail and the
O. G. FI. & M'l,
Wheat, I. corn,
supply of Flour should be very large. The close was dull at
cwt.
cwt.
cwt.
cwt.
18@2 21 for No. 2 Spring.
7.641
123,469
0,588
39,577
585
35,996
2;<%0
Corn has declined.
Liberal receipts, large stocks in store, Europe,
and limited demand have steadily depressed prices, until Si 33
12,448
190,592
40,162
43,637
295,900
80,147
was
421,165
....1,295,717
accepted on ’Change yesterday, at which something was Since 1st Sept., 1867.
753,750
for Liverpool, with freight 8£d.
This was followed by a re¬
newal of speculation, and shippers were obliged to pay as
GROCERIES.
high as 8l 36, and speculative sales were made to-day at
-

..

..

......

•

«.

....

$1

37.
Rye sold down to $1 55 for Western, but

export demand at $1 fiO, is now held at

Friday

with

fio.

quotations is for State Rye. Oats are lower. Barley has
slightly improved with n lair business. It is estimated that
the supply for home consnmptin is nearly two million bushels
less than last year. Canada Teas are dull at $1 38@$1 40
in bond.

The

following

are

closing quotations:

Flonr, Superfine..$ bbl. £3 £5® 9 10
Extra State

9 75® 10 25

Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 10 G0®10 CO
Extra

Western,
mon to good

com¬

9 70®11 00

Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
11 25® 15
Southern supers
10 00® 10
Southern, fancy and ex¬
tra
11 00® 14
California
11 50® 13
Rye Flour, fine and super¬
fine
7 50® 9
Corn meal, Jersey and
Brandywine
6 40® 7

50

Wheat,

Western Y ell o
Southern White

Rye
Oats, Western cargoes...

Jersey and State
Barley

15

Malt
Peas Canada

NEW

81,865
»>ols

Wheat, bush
Corn, hush

Rye, bush




2,345
229,415

1 55® 1 65
1 38® 1 50

YORK.

1867
For week. S’eJan.l
123.990
2,081,720

1S66
,
For week. S’eJan.l.
Corn meal,

...

1 60® 1 70
77®
78
® —
1 40® 1 62

port has been as follows:
,

,

Flour, bbls

1 35® 1 37
® 1 40
1 40® 1 45

25

AT

2 10® 2 27
2 60® 2 65
2 70® 2 75
2 85® 3 20

Corn, Western Mixed....

The movement in breadstuffs at this
RECEIPTS

$2 12® 2 25

per bushel
Milwaukee Club
Red Winter
Amber do
White

85
0 )
50

Spring*

Chicago

2,135,300
236,150
3,2o7,213

188,970

19,643.760

41,325

675,165

.

Evening, Nov. 8.

revival of
Trade was very dull in the early part of the week—the elec¬
Our higher tions
having a material influence in checking business for the
a

2,755

1,122,200
559,935
138,405

178,169
7r-125,7i0
13,852,290
635,500

Latterly, however, with lower gold, and the election
excitement over, a liberal demand for consumption ha* sprung
up, and prices are stronger at the close.
The imports of the
week at New York have been limited to 50 packages' of tea
from Liverpool, 5,731 bags of coffee, none of which was Rio,
7,511 boxes and 1,838 hogsheads of sugar, and 3,10(3 hhds.
time.

of molasses.
TEA.

doing in teas than for several weeks past,
prices are more steady, but there is as yet nothing like activity to
be reported. The sales for the week foot up 966 half chests Greens.
4,150 do Japans, and 100 do Oolongs from first hands, and a sale of
5,000 half cheats Oolongs from second hands, the market closing steady*
There is

a

better business

and

The only imports cf tea have been 50 packages by steamers from
Liverpool. Advices from Hong Kong to September 11 have been re¬
ceived, and we quote as follows from the circular of Messrs. Olyphant
& Co. “ Teas.—We have again to report a small aggregate of trans?
actions during the fortnight, though the export still compares unfavorab‘y with that of last season, but it must be borne in mind that 6,700,000 lbs. of the crop of 1866-7 were shipped prior to the 1st June, 1866^
and do not appear in the season’s export. The export from 1st JaDO...

1867.]

November 9,

THE CHRONICLE.

ar7,

1867, to date shows an excess of about 500,000 lb3. only as com¬
pared with that of 1866,” The buyers for the American market are re
ported as being very conservative in their views, and not inclined to pur¬
chase at high prices, and very little business had been done by them.
No further shipments had been made to theUuited States.

We

ruling quotations of goods iu first hands
Du t

Hyson, Common to fair
do
Superior to lino.... 1

trade has also been quite active.

Early in the week

a

©1
@1
©1
@1
@1
©1
©1
©1
©1
©

Ex line to finest.. .1 35

Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair
7)
do
Super, to fine. .1 15

slight decline was acceded to, but later there is a firmer tone. Th e
sales have been 14,732 bags Rio, and 323 do Santos, chit fly early in
the week, the market closing steady but less active.
The only imports of Rio Coffee have been at Baltimore, where two
caigoes, by the Nora, 4,158 bags ; and by the Iconia, 3,814 bags I ave
been received.. At New York, 3,602 bag9 of Maracaibo; 1,314 of
Laguayra, 644 of St. Domingo and 81 of sundries have come to hand

imports since January 1, and stock in fir.-1 hands Nov. 5,

The

follows

as

are

:
OF RIO COFFEE.

bags
Philadelphia “
New York,

“
"

Mobile
Savannah

Stock.

At New*

101,408

import.
Java,
bags* 46,104
Ceylon
“
9,110
“ *20,962
Singapore,
Maracaibo, “ 55,301
Laguayra
“ 28,934
St. Domingo,1*
25,707
Other,
“ 22,114

3,500
9.000

40,730

Baltimore
“
New Orleans “
Galveston

OTHER SORTS.

Import.
633,3 8

—.

220,951
7*2,293
16,60*2

.

‘2; 500

3*22

“

983,276

Total

York, At Dost,
Stock. Import.
3,427
23,810
3,700

11*44*2

15,899
1,890
11,392

3,959

2,027

20S,292 28.875

48,711

116,-10S
Total.'.

do

d. —

v D ft

90
10

...

The Coffee

:

Tea.

Duty: 25cents per tb.

do

COFFEE.

annex

597

Exfinetofinest.l 40

& Imp., Com. to fairl 00
do
Sup. to fine .1 *25

unp.

do do Ex. f. to finest.l 55
H. Sk. &Tw’kay,C, to fair.
65
do
do Sup. to fine 75

do
do Ex f. tofln’st
Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair.
do
Sup’rtofine.
do
Ex f. to finest 1

35
70
15
45
S'.
JO

Oolong,

do
do
Souc &
do
do

SO

©

/—Duty t &ld-A
85© 90
89© 90
90 ©1 05
10 ©1 20
Common to fair... 70 © 80
Superior to fine... S5 ©l 10
Ex fine to finest
1 25 ©1 60
Cong., Com. to fair 65 © 80
SupTtofine. 9> ©1 05
Exf. toflnestl 25 ©1 55

05
30
5.
(5

..

C’oflee.
Duty: When imported direct in American or equalized vessels from the place
of its growth or production; also, the growth of count! ies this side the
Cape
of Good Hope when imported indirectly iif .Vmerican or
equalized vessels, 5 cents

$ fi>; all other 10 $ cent ad valorem in addition.
lava, mats an 1 bags
Rio, prime, duty paid ...gold 17i© 18
do good
gold 16;-© If’E Native Ceylon
do fair
gold 14}© 14* Maracaibo
do ordinary
gold l v*© 13*
Laguayra
do fair to g. cargoes
St. Domiugo.
.gold 14 © 16
.

gold 2-43 253
: 4© 20
I6i© 18*
17 © 17 f

15*© lb*

.

Sugar,
Duty : on raw or brown sugar, not above No. 1*2 Dutch standard, 8 ; on white
or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch
standard, not refined, 3|;
above J5 a»
not over 20, 4 ; on refined,5 ; and on Melado, 2* cents $} lb.
Porto Rico
do
do
do 18 to 15 12* © 13*
$ ft HI© 1??
do
do
Cuba,inf. to com. refining
do 16-to IS 18J© 14*
11 © 11 j
do fair to good
do
do
\lo 19 to 20 14*© 15*
do
11$© 11*
do fair to good grocery... 121© 12*
do
do
white
14*© 15.
do pr. to choice
Loaf.
do
12£© 13
© 171
do centrifugal
P*© 13* Granulated...
© 16f
do Melado
Crushed
and
8*
ti}©
powdered
© 16t
Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7 to 9 11 © 11 f White coffee, A.
© R
do
do
do 10 to 12 14© 12*
Yellow coffee...,
15©
...

....

pockets reduced to bags.

Includes

*

SUGAR.

—

’A better business has been done in sugar

during the week than for
previous. Prices are firmer in currency, notwithstanding
lower gold.
The sales for the week aie 6,305 lilida. and 9,945 boxes;
the market closing strong, with rather light stocks on hand.
some

time

imports of the week at all the ports have been 10,736 boxes,
against 5,806 last week, and 2,587 hhds. against 1,111 last week. The
stock at New York is 49,287 boxes againet 52,439, and 27,061 hhds.
against 33,451 last week. The details are as follows ;
The

,—

Cuba
hhds.
,

At—
boxes,
N. York 7,591

Portland
Boston

Other
hhds.

326

Brazil,
bags.

1,51*2

203
341

..

...

....

•

119

At,-

N. York stock
Same date lbUG

•

••••••

Philadelphia

do

49,287

....

.

.

.

.

as

2,854
.

.

2,000

,4

.

.

.

.

83

....

Total
♦hhds.
27,061

....

-

-

$ gallon.
$1 gall.

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado

©

.

do

..

55 © 70
47 © 52

..

Clayed

Bfiibaduts

.

44 © ^6
5 2 (© 53

•

•

Spices.
cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and cloves, 26;
pimento, 15 ; and ginger root, 5 cents 33 lb.
Cassia, in mats gold^lb
50©
51 I Pepper,
(gold)
Ginger, race and Affgold)
11; 1 Pimento, Jamaica, (gold)
10*©
Mace
(gold)
90 ©
9*2* | Cloves
(gold)
Nutmegs, No.l....(gold)
8J ©
90 1
Duty: mace, 40

popper

and
.

2.1*©
19;©
26 ©

22119*

26*

Duty:

Brazil, Manila,
bags. bags,&«
V

42,725
1,495

/

r

13,999

6,713

.

.

.

31,575

8.066

39,641

59.764

80,252

17,063
1*2,135

9,463
27,437

69,227
44,500

1,118

13,253

4,056

90,304

436,687

23,255

••••

159

5,200
.

.

,

,

59 cent ad val.

....

72,070

.

Raisius, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds,
Almonds, 6; other nuts,*2; Dates, ‘2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filbert* and
Walnuts, 3 cents <p lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25
Raisins,Seedless.
do Layer

17,903
62,441

46,681

....

—

Fruit.

follows

5,218

311,960 3lG,3S3

.

-

Mola^se*.
Ditty : 8 cents

900

28,886

41,927

.

,

263.353

.lb3,496 220,628

Total import

are

Other
hhds.

»

hhds.

245

Other
Cuba.
,
For’gn,
boxes. ♦hluls. ♦hhds.

.

do
Baltimore
New Orleans, do

boxes.

New Orleans'..

54,835

Imports since Jan. 1.
do
do

.

....

,

Portland
Boston

.

Cuba

,

At—
Philad'l
Baltimore

aod imports since Jan. 1,

Stocks Nov. 5,

*

.

...

.

.

•

•

•

•

i

,

.

.

.

.

do Bunch
Currants

*cask 9 25 ©....
box 4 10 ©....
13 ©...

^ tt>

Citron, Leghorn

32$©....
17 © 17*

Prunes, Turkish

9

Dates

3*
28
21
86

Almonds, Languedoc
72,229

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads.

do
do
do
Sardines
do

Provence

Sicily, Soft Shell
Shelled

$ box
..$ht. box

..

b

$

.

box
^ lb

qr.

igs, Smyrna.

Brazil Nuts

©.-...
.....

Sardines

© 10
©....
© 29
© 2 *2
© 87
©

16 ©
9 ©

..

20

9*
11*© 12*
11 © 1:2
©
©

Filberts, Sicily
Walnuts,
Pearl

18*©

Sago

..

Tapioca
Macaroni, Italian

..

••

© 20

,

Dkikd Fruit—

Apples

$ tt»

Blackberries

Raspberries

©

..

Pai\d Peaches

30*© 81

6 ©
12 ©

20 ©

9
19*
..

21

Havana, Nov. 2.—Receipts, exports and stocks at Havana and Matanzas

have been

as

follows

:

Rec’d this /—Expts to U. S.—,
week. Since Jan. 1.
week.

Year.

6,232

1867
1866
1865

342,679
383,879
423,774

366'

r——Total export

,

Since Jan.l.

week.

15,817
27,458
10,772

1,295,357
l,269,7b7
1,391,948

Stocks
boxes

89,751

MOLASSES.

The trade in mol

isses

has been

an

exception to the articles above ;
and a dull market a1

the trade has been very light, with easier rates
the close. The sales are 750 hhds. of all kinds.
The

imports of molasses at all the ports for the week have been
and the stock on hand at New
is 9,514 hhds. against 7,332 last week.
The details are as fol¬

8,937 hhds. against 1,523 last ’week,
York
lows :

Porto
Cuba. Rico. Other.

At—
New York

hhds. 1,613

Portland
Boston

29

430

1,464
42

Porto
Cuba. Rico. Other.

At—

Philadelphia.. hhds
Baltimore
New Orleans

359

Stocks, November 5, and imports since January 1
Cuba.
♦hhds.

At

New York, stock.
N. Y imp’ts since Jan. 1.79,346

Portland

“

“

Boston,

“

“

“
Philadelphia “
Baltimore
“
New Orlear

s

4‘

“

“

“

“

u

Total import.
♦

“

36,967
53,577

45,660
12,144

31,074

are as

follows:

,—P. Rico. -rOth. Fo’gn—, Total,
hhds.
♦hhds.
♦hhds.

1,790

20,975

2,618
35,394

99

527

3,467
1,401

5,907
1,757

1,064
17*3

3,061

27,181

46,656

10

9,514
135,715
37,593
.

62,951
48,818
16,269 *
31,259

332,605

N.O
bbls.
•

•

•

•

7,377
....

1,122*
984
....

....

9,483

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads.
SPICES.

There is

a

fair trade demand for moat articles under this

head, and

prices rule steady.

gold prices are unsettled, and there is only a light busi.
ness
doing in foreign dried fruits. Domestic are rather easier, but fairly
active. Foreign green fruits are arriving in some quantities.




B riday,

P. M., November 8, 1867.

The

dry goods trade this week opened with the same dull
and unsettled appearance, and so continued during the early
days iu the week. The. anxiety regarding* the election, and
the general wish to be at home kept many buyers away, and
together with the stringency in the money market and general
dulness in mercantile circles, was a sufficient excuse for keep¬
ing out of market. But the election over, and money less
stringent, and gold lower, there sprung up a better feeling,
and considerable disposition to purchase goods has since been
shown.
On Wednesday the jobbers purchased quite liberally,
and on Thursday and to-day have been disposing of their
goods quite freely. Prices of domestic goods have been al .
most nominal until now for all excepting leading brands, but
have recovered tone, and are evidently on a firm basis.
Our prices are revised to » considerable extent, and are now
the actual figures at which goods can be purchased. The ex¬
port demand continues liberal.
The exports of dry goods for the past week and since January
1, 1S67, and the total for the same time in 1SG6 and 1860
are shown in the following table :
—FROM BOSTON.——s

-FROM NEW YORK.

-Domestics.—* D, Goods.
Val. packages.
pkgs.
'

FRUITS.

With lower

THE DRY GOODS TRADE.

108,466
148,138

Exports to
Cuba
New Granada....
Venezuela
Brazil

9
45
18
21

Domestics. DryGoodi

pkgs.

cases.

$800
8,341
975

•

•

« •

•

37

t

.

....

.

.

.

152

4,195
,

15,748

....

....

....

....

1
11

2,777

Hamburg
Bremen

Val.

-

.

.

.

•

•

•

t

.

•

•

*

•

•

.

• •

»

•

•

•

•.

>•-»

•

f*

598

7-8

THE CHRONICLE.

Liverpool

15
2
1

Havre
China

7,132
£,108

donia 12$,
64
3

....

Br. Provinces

Total this week.
91 $12,893
Since Jan. 1
10,368 1,355,317
dame time 1866...
8,283
“
“
1SHO

We

8-3

Brown

few

our

which

Ellerton N brown 27, do 0
do 28, do P do 21, do S do 20, do T do 18, Laconia do
20, Slaterville
do 17, Hamilton do 20,
Naumkeagdo 19, Nashua A 20, Treraonts 17
Ellerton N Blea 29, do O do 25, do P do
23, Stillwater do 18, Granite*
State do 20, Naumkeag do 21.
Corset Jeans are fairly active at
steady prices. Androscoggin 11
Bates colored 11, do bleached

67
7,047

4,233

....

si

unn

particulars of leading articles of domestic
keag eatteen
prices quoted being those of the leading Orchard

ll,Naumkeag 18$, Pepperell 15, Naum18, Laconia 13$, Amoskeag 13$, Newmarket 14, Indian

11$, Ward 16.

Cambrics

Sheetings

general rule, but

cents,

$32,835
1,113,129

7k *79

annex a

manufacture,
jobbers:

67

5,106

Glasgow 15, Clyde 11$, Berkshire 14, German 14, Roan¬

oke 11$, Hadley 12$, Manchester 16 cents.
Canton Flannels are in light deman 1.

500

Houg Kong

[November 9, 1867.

.

on

give rise to

and

Shirtings have

been

no

the contrary are one of the

our

remarks above.

Standards

exception to the
leading branches

are

by jobbers.

s^ld at 14@l5$

Atlantic N 3-4 84, Massachusetts C do 9$, Lawrence
H do 10, Indian Orchard L do 9$,
Commonwealth O do 7$, Knox E do
0$, Union do 10, Pepperell N do 10$, Indian Head do 12, Atlantic Y
12$, Atlantic E do 11Pacific E do 11$, Tremonfc E do 10. Bed¬
ford R do 9, Boott O do 11$, Indian Orchard V do
10$, Massachusetts
E do 11$, Lawrence G do 11
Pepperell O do 11$, Indian Head 4-4 16i,
Appleton A do 14, VVachusetts do 14, Pacific extra do 15, do H do 14,
do L do 12$. Atlantic A do 15$, do H do 14$,
do L do 12$, Law¬
rence Edo 10$. do
C do 15, do F do 12$, Stark A do 14, Amos-1
keag A do 14$, do B do 14, Medford do 14, Kenebeck do 9, Roxbury do 13$, Indian Orchard BB do 11, Nashua D do 11$, Pepperell E
do 13$-, Great Falls M do 12$, do S lo 10$,
Dwight VV do 12$, Stand¬
ard do 11$. Shawmui E do 11$,
Pepperell it do 12$, Laconia Bdo 14$,
Laconia 0 9-8 12$-, Pequot do 20, Saranac E do 18, Indian Orchard
A 40 inch 14, do 0 do 12, Nashua 5-4 25, Indian Head do 24, Utica do
27$-, Pepperell 7 4 27$, do 9-4 35, M< nadnock 10-4 33$, Pepperell
do 40, Utica do 50, do 1 1 4 55, Waltham Bro do 60.

Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings have met with some decline
for aft but primer makes, but are
steady at the close, and fairly active.
Mechanics 3 4 8, Globe do 8, Kingston do 1$, JJooit It do
9$, Globe
A 7-8 8$, Washington do 9, Stratford S do 10$, Putnam
B do 11,
Ed. Harris do 10$, Great Falls M do 11$, do S do 10$, do A do 13,
do J do 12$, Lyman Cambric do 15$, Stratford M do
11, Lawrence
L do 12$, Hill’s Semp Idem do 16, James 31 inch 14, Greene G 4-4

11$, Putnam A 4-4 11$, Newmarket C do 14,Great Falls K do 13$,
Bartletta do 15, James Steam do 15, Attawaugan XX do
14$, Law¬
rence B do 14-$-, Hope do 13$,
Tip Top do lo, Blackstone do 16, Amos
keag A do 16, Boot Bdo 15, Forestdale do 17$, Masou?ilie do 19,
Audroscoggin L do 18, Lousdale do 18, Bates XX do 20. Lyman J
do 21, Wamsutta H do 22$ do O do 22$,
Mystic Lake do 20, Atlautic
Cambric do 27$, Lonsdale Cambric do 26$, New York Mills do
27$,
Hill do 17, Dwight 9 8 22$, Wamsutta do
26$, Amoskeag 42 inch 16$,
Waltham do 16$, Chickopee do 20,
Naumkeag W 6-4 20, Boot W do
18, Nashua do 22$, Bates do 22$, Wamsutta do 30, Utica do 27$, Arnoskeag 46 inch 21$, Waltham 6-4 25, Mattawamkeag do 26, Pepperell
do 26, Allendale do 25, Utica do 32$, Waltham 8-4
82$, Pepperell
do 37$, Mattawamkeag 9-4 40, Pepperell do 42$, Utica do 50, Allen¬
dale do 40, Waltham do 40, Phoenix 10-4 35, Monadnock do
37$,
Waltham do 50, Allendale do 45,
Pepperell do 47$, Utica do 55,
Pepperell 11-4 62$.
Ticks are more steady at the close, with a better demand.
Cones¬
toga extra 32$, do C M 40, Amoskeag A C A 32 inch 37$, do A 82
inch 28, do B 32 inch 25, do D 30 inch 19, do C 30 inch 22, Pem¬
berton A A 30,
Brunswick
15, Blackstone River 16$, Hamil¬
ton '25, Somerset 13$, Thorndike 18, Pearl River 35, Housewife
ex. 28, do AAA 25, do A A 22, Pittsfield
9$, Housewife A 19, York 32
inch 82$, do 80 inch 25, Cordi9 A A A 32 inch
27$, do 4-4 27$,
Everett 27$, do A 32 inch 27, Boston A A 24,
Lehigh Valley B 13$,
Swift River 16$, Browns AAA 16,
Albany 9.
Stripes are but little improved as yet, and
prices are rather nominal.
Amoskeag 22$-23, Uucasville 14$-15$, Whittenton A A 22$, do
20, do BB 17, do C 14, Pittsfield 3 3 9$, Haymaker 16-17,
Everett 14-14$, Massabesic 6-3 22$, Boston 11$-15$, American
14-15,
Eagle 12$-13$, Hamilton 22$, Jewett City 13$-14$, Sheridan G 13$.
Checks have aiso been quiet during the week.
Park Mills Red 18,
Lanark 4x2 217 inch 13, Lanark Fur 13, Union 50 4x2
27$, do 50
2x2 27$. do 20 4x2 25, do 20 2x2 25, Caledonia 16 inch
26, do 11 inch
20, Keunebeck 25, Star No. 600 11, do No 800 2x2 18$, do No 900
4x2 20, Cameron No. 90 15, do No. 80
12$, Miners and Mech 23$.

and Silksias 'are
quiet but steady. Washington glazed
cambrics sell at 9$c,
Victory H 8$, do A 9, Superior 7, Pequot 10, Waverly 11, Wauregan lu$, and S. S. & Sons paper cambrics at 12$, do
high colors 14$, White Rock 12$, Masonville 12$, Warren 13$, and
Lonsdale Sileeias at 20, Victory J 14, Indian Orchard
16, Ward 16.
Muslin Delaines are 6te *dier, but with

only a very light demand
Lowell 17, Hamilton Co. 17, Manchester 17, Pacific dark
17, Pekin 28, Armures dark 22, Pacific Merinos A 40,
Mourning 17,
Spragues 15$, Skirtings 80, Alpacas 28.
Flannels and Linseys are not very active as
yet, but prices show'
no
change. Belknap shirting flannels sells at 45c, Washington do 50,
Rob Roy rolled 6-4 70, Rob
Roy 3-4 35, Cocheco black and white
check 44, Franklin
shirting 45, Caledonia 6hirting 35, Tequa, double
fold 42$, Bay State Opera 55, Gilbert's do
60, Fianklin do do, and Park
Linseys 85 inch at 20 cents, do 45 do 23$, do 50 do 26, do 60 do 3<>,
do 65 do 36, do 75
42$, Wamsutta No 40 22$, do No 50 -25, do No 70
35, White Rock 25, Black Rock 22$, James Nolan
32$.

prevailing.

Cottonades are inactive and prices still more or less
nominal. A
fe.v sales are made for manufacture into
goods
for Spring trade. ’ New
York Mills d <k t 52$. Farmer’s and Mechanics’
40, Pemberton d & t 40,
Great Western 37$-, Plow, Loom & Auv,
37$, Uncle Sam 40, Farmjrs*
Union A 37$, Persian Piaid 86.
American Linen remains in
steady, fair demand.
Foreign Goons have been much
depressed, and the sales at auction
have realized very

ribbons.

In

unsatisfactory prices, with the single exception of
jobbers’ hands there is a very dull market reported

The sales of

foreign goods at auction have been quite unsatisfactory
Messrs. Townsend, Moutant & Co. h *ld a sale ot
French dress goods,
by order of Messrs. L. Maillard tfc Co., which was
very well attended. .We have no great revival of confidence to
report
in this branch of
trade, although there were some desirable styles that
brought better rates than those of the preceeding week.
The prevail¬
ing opinion is that unless gold should still keep falling, that the lowest
point is not yet touched, and the experience of last year would seem to

Wednesday

corroborate that idea.

All

depends

the revival of the retail trade,

on

and with the present seasonable weather
brisk demand to report.
Mousseline de

may have soou a more
lain, assorted colors, brought
56$@60c. Finer 63@66c. 40 inch do

834@35c., 38 iuch Merino cloth do
69@70c. Extra’96c.@$l 02$.
On

we

Thursday Messrs. Kobbe, Corlies &

Co. held

a

sale of Dres

Cloak and Mantilla

Trimmings, Galloons, buttons,- <fcc., by order of
Messrs. Rosenbaum
Josephthal, which was numerously attended;
the bidding also was
spirited on desirable styles to complete assort¬
ments, and in many cases prices were even up to those
brought at pri¬
vate sales.
The offering was a
very large one, and the result satis¬
factory to the owners.

-

Denims have

more

tone and demand at

the close. c

Amoskeag 27$,
Haymaker 28 inch 16, do brown 16, York 28 inch 25, Warren
brown 27 inch 22$, Boston
Manufacturing Co. 29 inch 13$, Pearl River

29, Union 14$, Monitor 13, Manchester Co. 17, Columbian XXX 30, do
blue 27$, Arlington 17, Otis AX A 26, do BB
24$, Mount Vernon 24,
Pawnee 12$, North field 12$. Webster 10.
Brown Drills are in g' od demand in
part for export at unchanged
ratee.
Winthrop 18$, A > oskeag 16$, Laconia 17$, Pepperell 17$. do
fine jean 18, Stark A 16, Massabesic 14$, Woodward duck
bag 24, Na¬
tional bags 31, Stark A do 40, Liberty do 31.
Print Cloths have continued dull

quite nominal in this market.

during the week, and prices

are

A bet er business in prints and a firmer
improve these goods.
Prints have beeu quiet up to the middle of the
week, when a better
demand prevailed, and to-day the market is
quits active. Ameri¬
can
12$, Amoskeag dark 11$, do purple 12$, do shirting 11$,
do palm leaf 12$, Merrimac D 13$,do
purple 13$, do W dark 15, do purple
16,do piuk 16, Sprague’s 12$, 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
Swi38 ruby 12$, Loudon Mourning 12,
Simpson Mourning 12, Amos¬
keag Mourning 11. Dunnell’s 12$, Allen pink 12$, Arnolds 11, Gloucester
12$, Wamsutta 10, Pacific 12$, Freeman 11, Cocheco 13$, Lowell 11,
Hamilton Purple 12$, Victory 10$, Home 9,
Empire State 7, Lancas¬
ter 16-17$, Atlantic 7$.
Ginghams are still inactive, and prices not very firm. Lancaster Do¬
mestic Ginghams sell at 16 cents, Hartford 12$’ Hampden 12$, Cale¬

cotton market will

_




no

doubt

IMPORTATIOxVS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK.
4*.
*

*

The

importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Nov.
7, 1867, and the corresponding weeks of iSG5 and
1866, have been as
follows:

"

entered for consumption for

the

week

-1865.--

Pkgs.

Manufactures of wool...2,082
do
do
do

cotton.. 1.411

silk

$853,088
458,743
4:30,346
353,870
136,878

flax.... 1,152
Miscellaneous dry gooas. 275
Total

-1866.-

Value.

365

...

5,S85 $2,233,425

WITHDRAWN

FROM

WAREHOUSE

AND

ending nov.

Pkgs. r Value.
970
346

$380,977

144

304

3,045

1,281

THROWN

7, 1867.
1867.
Valne

,

Pkgs.

153,314
256, b05
112,763

547
463
427
600
286

$199,573
127,507

$1,015,117

2,323

$849,339

111,253

INTO

THE

MARKET

302,491

116,216
103,552

DURING

THE SAME PERIOD.

Manuiactures of wool...
do
do
do

'

cotton..
silk
....

flax

....

Miscellaneous dry goods.
Total

169
144
29
89

434
916

Total th’wn upon mak’t. 6,801

$68,296
48,032
37,041

27,987
15,997

$197,353
2,2:33,425

$2,433,778
$2,433,773

354
14b
82
'293
297

$145,083

326

53,378

$120,714

72

104,816
79,630
20,316

57
324

23,024
05,940
62,094

735

30,837

1,172

$403,223
1,015,117

1,564

$302,659
849,339

3,045

4,217 $1,418,340

2,323

3,887 $1,151,998

BHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD.

Manufactures of wool...

467

$183,312

cotton..
silk
flax

491
74
304

Miscellaneous dry goods.

15

149,005
91,458
98,173
11,424

do
do
do

Total

....

....

1,351

Add ent’d lor consumpt1n5,885

749
256
146
675
84

$341,372

519

$220,734

80.042

1162

48,215

193,042

189,070
29,440

78
532
512

81,093
146,955
35,626

$533,377
3.238,425

1,910 $836,576
3,045 1,015,117

1,833
2,323

$532,628
849,339

$2,771,802

4,955 $1,851,693

4,156 $1,381,967

Pacific Railroad

®fje Hailroajj monitor.

pany

iiTthTfollowia^taWe we com¬
pare the reported weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of the leading
and 1867 :

railroads in 1866

Week. Miles of

120,160

130,764
143,365

n

and Alton..

..

“

“

Chic

Get.

«

44

3d,’

*i

44

4th,9 ds.

,R. I. and

cnic.,^.

Detroit and
“

**

1,145
(in ’HO
1,032.)

“

2d?
3d,
4th,

44

“

2S0

Pacific..
1st, Oct. ]
„
44

146,104

|

..
44
44

j
J

Milwaukee.lst,
Get.]
44
^d,
I
43d,
44
f
4t->, 44 J

410

188

44

Oct. ]

Marietta and Cincinnati. 1st,
44

44

2d,

«

44

3d,

“

«

44

4th,

44

44

k

44

*<■

44

Michigan
^

.*

44
4

St. Louis,

I

f

i

3d,
44
f
4th, 9 ds. J

^Gct.1
210

245 00
226 *2

37

252 as
241 09

Total

365 03
350 69
413 71
401 29

102,210

00
92
71

98,194

98,041

115,839
112,361

265,033
279,412

356,750
347,549

396 05
270 22

282,236

852,840

274 45

383,973

451,744

372 06

118,191

144,600

282 71
216 01
259 33
232 91

102,110

132,700

106,3*7.
95,495

149,500
131,300

40,124
45,400

47,508

43,906
45,256

45,097
4S,467

24,36f
25,4:33

29,277

25,439

39,508

34,093
49,054

101,191

103,704'

103,802

524

2:37
257
286
288

88.384

99.S57

285

124,211
114,096
127,951
122,232

82,096

105 550

]
1st,
Oct.
2d,
'

Alton & T. H. 1st*

251

J

3d,
4th,

Southern
44

u

44

1st,
Oct.]
2d,

Central

Michigan

1802-8

1807.

117,932
114,700
121,333
188,411

52,186

53,887

50,911
47,738

Net

54
16
53

352 69
821 22
-

364 63
320 25
70
97
06
80

252
257
243
257

97
101
101
157

08
35

116 64
13S 15

35

40

135 67
195 43

355 06
350 38
304 43

363 98
420 51
375 33

201
207
210
323

224
219
231
359

41
31
49
98

41
0

55

20,504

Union.

22,496
23.623

177

33,690

45,423

256 60
247 07
216 30

27,323
25,800
20,046
41,038

115
125
133
190

94
40
46
34

154 36
146 10
14715
231 85

COMPARATIVE MONTHLY
1805.

1800.

(406 m.)

(507 m.)

$289,400 $504,992

$227,598 48 360,553 98 2,110,484 46 400,826 14*

....

408,804

3327,209
899,870
343,408
399,364
429,669
472,483
590,5S3
540,537
587,121
614,849

388,480

394,5313
451,477
474,441
452,674
528,018
520,959

475,723

g~548,359
Erie

—

Jan....
377,852. .Feb...
438,046 tlarch
.

.

April..

443,029

459,370 .May...

3S0,796. J tine..
400,116. .July...
475,257. .Aug...
483,857. .S**pt...

541,491

.Oct

497,250
368,581

.Nov

—

...

Dec

.

5,476,276 3,050,340. .Year..
Railway

1865.

1866.

(798 m.)

(798 in.)

(775 m.)

$906,759. Jan
917,639. ..Feb..
1,1:39,528. ..Mar..

.

.

987,936

1,070,917

1,153,441
1,101,632
1,243,636
1,208,244
1,295,400
1,416,101

641,589

..Nov..

648,887

..Dec...

518,088

7,181,208

6,516,741

Year..

6,501,063 14,596,413

.125
152

.105#....

(524 in.)
$363,996
366,361
413,974
365,180
351,489
887,095
301,613
418,575
480,808
524,760
495,072
351,799

(524 m.)
$312,846

1,826,722

4,650,328

,

.

384,684

.

.

—

.Nov..

.Dec..

..Year..

(468 m.)

(468 m.)
$500,115. .Jan...

480,986

857,583

662163

733,866

599,806
682,510
633,667
552,378
648,201
654,926
757,441
<579,935
665,222

637,186
646,995
584,523
712,495
795,938

858,500
712,362
580,963

8,480,06$ 7,467)213




522,821. .Feb...
678,349. ..Mar...
.

575,287. .April..
c

578,242. ..May..
506,586 .June..

634,733
602,069

685,067

(234 m.)
$121,776

70,740

72,135
108,082
207,488
262,172
170,795
116,224
150,989
245,7<U
244,854
,98,787

106.089

146,943
224,'838
217,159
170,555
228,020
310,594
226,840
110,664

State bonds
Land sales «nd rents

7,000,000
200,358

toort. Constr. bonds —
St. Louis bonds
Bills payable

1,500,000

153,903
202,771
169,299
177,625
173,722

Dec,,..

162,694

~Year~

8^40,744

155,893
192,138
107,301
16S,699
167,099
166,015
222,953

198,884
244,a34
212,226
177,364

8,951,535

Construction

69
06
95
69

22

3,675,874 84

$11,481,794 14

Rollin g st’k & machin’ry
M;ssouri River RR
Ofliee expenses, Ac

Contingencies
Interest account

700,000

Bond discounts
Comissions on purermses.

1,100,323
255,307

Audited accounts

Int, dis. & commissions.
laud grant expenses
Transportation expenses
Balance

$25,458,089 46 1

Total

2,049,674 33
6,51126
173,989 89
75,960 84
1,176,259 77
8,800 00
17,375
1,*238,933 13
6,834 61
8,852 806 *1
432,089 33

$25,458,039 46

of ibis railroad will be found in the Chronicle of
October 27, 1866.

A full history
of

-Chic., Rock Is. and Pacific—*
-Chicago ft Northwestern-^
1860.
1865
1807.
1805.
1800.
1807.
(410 m.)
(228 m.) (228 in.)
(860 in.) (1,032 m.)(1,145 m.)
$292,047
$305,554 $241,395
$541,005
$590,767 $696,147 . ..Jan...
224,621
246,331
183,385
459,0u7 574.604. ..Feb...
482,164

.Nov..

754,671

.Dec..

547,842

.

.

..Mar...

.

.April..

1,‘200,216 1,608,883
—
1,010,892
712,359

.

—

.

►

.

.

—

..Dec,..

554,201. ..Feb.
417,352. ..Mar.
420,007. .April.
477,607. ..May
490,616. .June.
49 *',521. ..J uly.
684,377. ..Aug..
705,25# ..Sep..

78,607

76,248
107,525
104,608
115,184
125,252
116,495
116,146
105,707

...Oet...
.Nov..
.Dec..
.

.

Jan78,976.. .Feb..
84,652. .Mar..

72,768. April.
90,5*6.. .May...
96,535. June.
It 6,594.. .July..
114,716. ..Aug..
Sep..
121,217
..Oct..
.Nov.,
.Dec..,

112,952
123,802

(234 in.)

$143,090. ..Jan..

(234 m.)
$98,181

(275 m.)

.

95.906

.

100,269
203,018
237,562
2ol,9n6
-241,370
^3* 0,841
S 395,579

...Oct...
.Nov..
..Dec..

§.171,125
2,535,00!

ear..

.

.Jan..

131,900. ..Mar..

192,548. .April.

230,497. ..May..
221,090. .Jn,ne.
193,000 ..July.
20)430. ..Aug..
403,658. ...Sep..
...Oct..

Year

—

.

J

1866.

1865.

149.342.. .Feb...
174.152.. Mar...

139,171
155,753

.

144,001
188,162 April..
138 738
171.736.. .May...
194,524
156,065 .June..
172,933
July.. f 271,798
220,788 .Aug... ^374,534
219,160. .Sept... 2379,981
.

.Oct
Nov:...
.Dec....

•

i
“

375,534
361,610
247,023

(521

m.)

$226,059
194,167
256,407
270,300
316,433
325 691

804,917

396,248
349,117
436,065
854,830

264,741

~Year~ 2,996,678 8,604,875

283,66

4,504,546 4,260,125

$237,674

200,793
270, f>30
317,052
329,078
304,810
309,591
364,723
382,996

362,783

333,952
284,977
313,021
398,993
464,778

—

Mississippi.
1806.

*
1867.

(340 in.)

$259,223 $267,541

$242,795

246,109

219,067
279,043
284,729

372,618
412,553
284,319

326,236

277,423
283,130

282,939

253,924
247,262
305,454
278,701
310,762
302,425
281,613

240,135
234,683

3,793,005 3,880,583
1865.

.

(521 m.)

375,210

322,521

365,371
379.367

—

-Western Union.

s-Toledo, Wab. ft Western.
1867.

(242 m.)
(210 m.)
$149,053.. .Jan... $144,084

265,796
337,158
343,736
365,196
335,082
324,986
859,645
429,106
493,64a
414,604
308,649

350,348

..Not..,
..Dec....

2,538,800

(285 m.

$304,095

239,139
813,914
271,527
290,916
304,463
349,285
344,700

130,000. ..Feb.

328,539
129,287

£ 346,717

.

—

$282,438

(340 m.) (340 in.)

$146,800.

276,416
410,359

558,200

(285 m.)

1805.

(370 in.)

188,815

517,702

$sut>,i
279,16

—Ohio ft

1807.

123,404
12^,957
121,533
245,598
244,376
208,785

274.801

(285 m.)

328.869

..Year..

$131,707

86,528

*5,000. .Feb..
72,000. ..Mar
87,510. .April.
119,104. ..May..
114,579. .June
130,000. ..July..
113,404. ..Aug..
277,839. ...Sep..

A

1866.

404,600

©315,027
Si60,208

365,603
829,105
413,501
460,661
490,693
447,669

.

113.504

1865.

306,093

238,926
317,977

^400.941
fe 428,474

344,228
337,240
401,456

-Milwaukee ft St. Paul.

1867.

277,5U5

1865

$94,136.

1,224,058 1,201,239

..Year

-

234,012
821,818
244,121
306,231
389,489
,w„
807,523
270,073
5:01,779

272,454
280,283
251,916
261,480

Michigan1866.
Central. 1867.

(251 m.)

81,181
96.358
103,373
98,043
106,921
104,866

257,250
209,099

8,313,514 3,466,922

..Year..

1867.

1866.

1865.

(251 m.) (251 m.)
$90,411
$96,672
85,447
87,791
84.357
93,703

(708 m.)
$000,438. ..Jan..

289,403
190,580

,

...Oct..
.Nov...

-Marietta and Cincinnati.

1867.

-

.

774,280

895,712 . ..May...
925,983 898,357 . .June...
808,524 880,324. ..July..
797,475 1,03,824 ..Aug...
1,000,080 1,451,2*4 . ...Sep...

..Year.. 7,976,491 9,424,450

-

765,398

880,993

747.942

422,164. ...Sep..
430,108. .Oct...
.

613,974
624,174

499,296
468,358
585,623

702,692
767,508
946,707
932,683

1866.

(210 m.) (210 m.)
$170,078 $178,119

457,183
679,956
906,745
3,097,967
1,794,356

the 1st March, 1867,

company on

Transportation receipts, 11,092,480

238,362. ..Mar.,
283,951. .April.
338,691. ..May..
343,678. .June.
356,142. .July .
421,4S4. ..Aug..

1,943,900
—
Haute.—.
L., Alton ft T.
1867.

.Oct....
Not,,..

Aug,..
Sept,,.

84.S97

the

$683,644 28

EARNINGS

1,985,712

£162,570
218,236
210,783
222,924
208,098

J uly-.

1866.

(234 in.)
$98,183
74,283

1865.

1867.

$690,144 $559,982
678,504

739,736

i—St.

?itt8b., Ft. W., ft Chicago.
(468 m.)

747.409

1865.

(524 in.)
fan.
$305,857311,088. .Feb..
Mar.
379,701
391,163 April.
358,601. ..May..
304,-232. .June.
31 ,879. ..July..
428.7-2. ..Aug*.
487,867. ...Sep. .
5,9,435. ...Oct...

339,858
384,401
429,177
496,055
429,548
352,218

1866.

400,573
617,082
575.408

1807.

277,234
412,715
413,970
418,024

1865.

516,608

1866-67.

$3,609,115

Capital stock

Mil. and Prairie du Chien.

Mich. 8o. ft N. Indiana.
I860.

$003,053

.Oct...

1,444,745 ..Sep...
.

1865.

(708 m.)
605,206
505,465
411,605
509,250
507,079
4K),020
578,253
571,348
601,971
588,219
504,006

1,217,143. .April.
1,122,140. ..May ..
1,118,731. .June..
1,071,312 .July...
1,239,024. ..Aug

1,024,917^71,041,115

(708 m.)
$571,536
528,972
616,665

1866.

074,248 95
648,000 00

97,176 39

174
189
189
194
214
252
—And—
2)3

exhibited in the following condensed statement :

Illinois Central.
1865.

330,222-’3 4
426,285 97
608,346 59

1801-62.
ISO2-63.
1803-61.
1*64- 65.
1805-6).

41.323 29

The financial condition of
is

142,947 ..Feb..

3,840,091 3,695,152

Kansas City (283 miles) was

$108 15. 1860-6t.

6

22
71
81
.125

.

......

(280 m.)
$240,238. ..Jan..

(280 in.) (280 in.)
$280,503 $226,152
222,241
275,282
290,111
299,063
269,249
258,480
329,851
322,277
371,543
355,270
321,597
335,985
387,269
409,250
322,638
401,280
360,323
857,956
323,030
307,919
271,246
236,824

1867.

$1,070,890 $1,185,746
1,011,735
1 331,124
1,538,313
1,425,120
1,252,370
1,274,558
1,418,742
1,435,285

(507 in.)

719,230 00

the commencement:
1852 (3 days)
1853 (year)
1851-55 (14 mo.).
1855-56.
1856-57
18)7-58
1858-59
185# 60

1865.

$301,137.

1866-7

(283 m.)
(252 m.)
41 $831,245 11 $1,160,31 31
14 #24,075 86
1,465,373 25
50
37,996 25
44,183 28
64
1,039 00

brought into operation October 2,1865. The following shows the
average length operated and the gross earnings for each year since

Alton.1867.
Chicago and
1866.

Atlantic Sc Great'Western
1867.

07 $315,79# 41 $453,880
74 500,744 59 609,272
30,487
00
23,350 00
5,127
05
3,800 95

50

248 50
242 43
227 32

5:,880

earnings

1865-5

1864-5

(214 m.)

$079,956 06 906,745 95 1,097,967 091,794,356 22 2,675,874 84
452,557 53 540,16 L 99 836,483 241,393,530 08 1,950,644 84

...

Total
Western

1813-4

(194 ra.)

The whole line from St. Louis to

58

34
49
54
72

119,853
100,970

108,050
113,436
109,776

311
303
308
394

earning*

Operating cost....

245
241
233
240

48,498

34.676

,

of this com¬

The earnings and cost of operation
mileage open for the past five years have been as f

the average
lows :

p. m—,

1806.

Missouri —The fiscal year

closes February 28.

Passenger ear’ngs $253,029
Freight
41
39 -,589
Mail
44
28,35#
Rent*, &c., 44
1,980

<-Eam’gs

1867.

294 74
290 41
315 06
850 15

82,527

.4th,Sept]
1st, Oct. I
2d, 4*
f
3d, “ J

and N. W^ist’n. I^st,

Chciago

Gross earn’gs—*
1666.

44

^

of

(189 m.)

road.
Railroads.
Atlantic & Gt. Western.4th,Sept
1st, Oct
507
“
2d,
“
3d,
J

Chicago

59

THE CHRONICLE.

November 9,1867.]

(157 m.)
..Jan...
...Feb...
..Mar...

April..

.

.May...
.June..

-.July..
.Aug...
.

Sept...

.Oct....
.Not..

Dec..

^Year..

$43,716
37,265
32,378
33,972
63.862
82,147
68,180
50.862

75,677
92,713
61,770
87,830

1866.
1867.
(177 m) (177 m.)
45,102
$39,679
27.666
36,006

39,299
43,333
86,913
102,686
85,508
60,698
84,462
100,303
75,248

54,478

680,883 814,086

36,392
40,710
57.852

60(558
58,262
73,525
126,496
119,667

600

THE CHRONICLE.

[November 9. 1867.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS
Subscribers will confer

a

DESCRIPTION.

NTERKST.

B.—Where the total Funded

Dehtj Amount

is not given in detail in the 2d column it is expressed by the
in brackets after the Co’s name.

:outstand-

dguresj

Railroad:
Atlantic A Gt. Western
1st Mortgage, sinking
Sd
do
1st Mortgage sinking
Id
do
1st Mortgage, sinking
8d
do

jtridat

'€

ing.

£3

Payable.

M

fund, (Pa.)

$2,151,500
I
757,500

do

fund, (AT. Y.)\

{

do

fund, (Ohio)

2d

j

..j

A

do
of 18 >4...
Baltimore and Ohio. Mort (3

F) 18341

Mortgage (S. F.) of 1855
do
do

Billefontaine ($1,745,000):
1st Mortgage
1st

Mort. (guar.

2d Mort.
3d Mort.

880,000!

701,0001

I

8.681,000'

268,900] 0

484,000j
*'»
619,036; 6

C. and A.)

!

|

500,000]
589,500)
,

{ 364,000
1
-j

do

Sinking Fund Bonds
Boston, Hartford and Erie.
Boston and Lowell: Bonds of'Ju y ’53
864

i

t

Dollar Loans

i

do
Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan

Sterling £3S0,555 at $4 J4
1st Mortgage

2d Mortgage
Catawissa : ist Mortgage
Central Georgia: 1st

*444,00

Central of Xew Jersey : 1st Mortgage

Jan. &

Convertible Bonds
Cheshire: Bonds

Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref
income

Mortgage (S. F.)

Chicago and Gt. Easternlst Mort..
Chicago and Milwaukee :

Mortgage (consolidated)

Chicago A Northwest. ($16,251,000):
Preferred Sinking Fund
1st Mortgage
Interest Bonds
Consol. S. F. Bonds,
Extension Bonds

conv.

till 1870

Ejuipment Bonds
Equipment Bonds
Chicago, Rock Island A Pacific:
1st Mortgage (C. & R. I.)
do
1st
(new)
Cine., Ham. A Dayton ($1,629,000)
2d Mortgage

1,180,950!

141,000

Feb. & Aug11882
Mar. & Sep. 1375
Feb. tfe Aug! 1870
I May & Nov. 11875
6 M’ch & Sep; 1890

1,500,000)

6

673,200:

6

1st Mortgage
no
3d
Hubbard Branch

Clev.,Pain. A Ashtabula: IstM. B'ds
2d Mort. Bonds

Cleveland <fe Pittsburg ($3,872,860):
2d Mortgage
convertible

Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280):

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Mortgage Bonds of 1866
Columbus <fe Indianapolis Central:
1st Mortgage
do

Connecticut River: lit Mort

Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000):

Mortgage

iumberland Valley: 1st Mort
do

6 per

cent, bonds

Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430):
1st Mortgage—:
2d

-

ao

8d
do
Toledo Depot Bonds
Qtlawan: 1st Mortgage, guaranteed.

Ctla., Lacka. tfe Western ($3,491,500):
1st

Mortgage, sinking fund

do
2d
La«ka. and West. 1st Mort
Dee Moines Valley : Mortgage Bonds
Detroit and Milwaukee ($5,206,680):
.

1st

"2d

Mortgage, convertible
ao

1st & 2d Funded

Coupon Bonds..

Detroit and Pontiac R.R
do,
do
j

ytroiti Mmoi & 2oh4o; lit Mort.




i
: 59

90

Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600):

Hartford A Xew llaven

i 87 I 92
i 35)*:
93
j 92

!

July11873

j
j

....

1st
2d

..

i’

j
.

1st

I 90

1st
2d
! 92
i
i

July 11883

86

90

1,250,000
3,600,000

Feb. tfe Aug 1885
do
1885

96
SI

96
84

xS5j

756,000

May & Nov. 1863

3,040,000

|F.M A.&N. 1915

81

484,000

jFeb.
tfe Aug 1885
i

82*

Apr. ,<& Oct. 11874

81

do

10'x
94

1st

94

11895

May & Nov ■ 1893
Jan. &

July|lS90

795,000
531,900
121,000

Feb. tfe

Aug 11873

M'ck tfe

iJau. tfe

Sep 1376

1,129,000

!

i 18S0

i
M’ch &

!

Sep 1873

95

do
11875
Jan. & July 11892

84

Jan. & July 1885
do

3,200,000
1,000,000
250,000

Jan. & July! 18—
May tfe Nov.! 18—
M’ch tfe
Sep) 1873

600.000
161,000

J’ne & Dec.-1876

73;$

74

102 S'

Jan. tfe July 1867
do
11831
do
’81-’ 94
Jan. & July 1875

Ap’l & Oct 1887

July

May & Nov.
o

1,005,640

various,

250,000

various.

250,000

Feb. * Aug

1875
1881
1871

1875
1864
1875
1878
1886

Feb, & Aug xm

....

!

96

96*

100
98
98

$1,100,000 Loan Bonds
$400,000 Loan Bonds
1st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds.
2d
do
(P.& K.KR.) Bonds..
Memphis A Charleston: Mort. bonds
Michigan Central, ($7,463,489).

.

April & Oct! 1875

Mississippi A Tennessee ($1,069,600);
1st Mortgage
.

($6,133,243):

\

....

600,000
364,000

•Jan. «fe

500,000

Jan. & July 1S66

do

July

May & Nov.

640,000
897,000
612,50(1
2,000,000

90

....

I 9l*'

117* i*is*

71

1866
1870

1881

April & Oct 1873
Mar&

NovjlSSl

April & Oct 1906
Jan. & July
Jan. tfe July
■Tan. & July
Marchtfc Sep

485,000

y(j0,000

nr/),
ooo
JUo ooo
400,000

April &

1SS2
1874
1S75
1885
Oct 1850

10»

May tfe Nov. 1890

0,000

May & Nov.

1S72

May tfe Nov.
May tfe Nov

1873
1883

1,000,000
1,465,000
1,300,000

Jan. tfe July 1369

886,000!

April A Oct 1877
Jan. & July 1875
Feb. & Aug 1890

500,000
175,000

150,000

May tfe Nov

1,500,000

94

1893

1S97

1,650,000
280,000

Jan. tfe J uly

var.

May & Nov.

var.

2,362,800
4,000,000

Feb. <fe Aug 1892
Jan. & July 1885

1,095,600

Feb. tfe Aug. '90-’91
June tfe Dec. ’70-’71

315,200
060,000

300,000
1,294,000

Apr. tfe Oct.
Feb. <fe Aug.
May & Nov.

1874
1870
1880

2,297,000
4.504.500

March&Sep.

1869

April tfe Oct 1882

108* no

4 863,000
2,693,000
651,000

May & Nov.

*90*

4,269,000
324,000
1.500.500
135.500

1885
do
1S77
Feb. & Aug 1868

103

Jan. tfe July 1891
7
7
7
7

Jan. tfe July 1893

85

April tfe Oct
April tfe Oct
Jan. & July

76*

1893
1884
1875

S6*

600,000 6 Jan. tteJuly 1876
do
1870
297.500 10

Interest bonds

75,343

Mortgage Ronds (hew),.*.,

'

Feb.' & Ang 1882

Sterling bonds
Bondi of 1870

do
do

1875
1890
1875

300,000

831,900
4,187,0(0

.IJ Income Bonds

do

2,523,000
2,563,000
358,000

396,560

Montgomery A TVest Point .-$1,130,700
«

70”

:

Mortgage, sinking fund

Income
Mobile and Ohio
Income bonds

x70

:

Milwaukee and St. Paid:
1st Mortgage
do
(Mil. A Western)...
2d
do
Income Bonds
do
Real Estato

M’ch.feApril|1834

Jan. <fc

....

2d
do
Goshen Air Line Bonds
Milwaukee A Prairie du Chicn

....

1,740,000

Mortgage

Sinking Fund do
Mich. S. A X. Indiana: ($9,135,840)
1st Mortgage, sinking fund

1904

April tfe Oct
M’ch <fc Sep

...

Feb. & Aug 1875

903,000

do

Convertible

Ap’l tfe Oct.:i9(U

1.122.500
1,668 000)
572,000

Mortgage, Eastern Division...

Memphis Branch Mortgage
($3,683,385)
1st Mortgage,
McGregor Western 1st Mortgage
Maine Central: ($2,733,800)

1st

1,000,000

6,668,500

>0

....

11886

do
do

*

j 1867

May & Nov 1870

Exteusin

do

do

500,000
500,000

Mortgage

Marietta A Cincinnati

*

2,021,000
692,000

2d

1st
1st

July! 1S74

do

'

....

Aug!I860' 1102*!
]104R:

Dec.) 1885

'

.:

Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point),
do
do (Glen Cove Br.) ..
Louisville, Cincinnati cfe Lexington:
.1st Mortgage (guarrauteed)
Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000):

) Jau. tfe July 1S75

500,000
1,000,000

...

:

Lehigh Valley: 1st Mortgage
Little Miami: 1st Mortgage
Little Schuylkill ($1,000,000):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
1st Mortgage
Long Island :

May & Nov 1880
JulyllSS5

Jau. &

do

90

1876

May & Nov. 1875

523,000

Mortgage, (interest ceased)
do

Feb. &
J’ne A;

1,907,000
192,000

..

do
Extension
La Crosse A, Milwaukee :

Jan. tfe July 1S70
do
1896

450,000

$2,500,000

Mortgage

Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284)
1st Mortgage
..j
Jeffersonville, Madison tk Indianapolis.
1st Mortgage
Jeffersonville UR., 2d Mort
Indianap. tfe Madison RR., 1st M..
Jeff., Mad. & Indianap., 1st Mort..
Joliet and Chicago :
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Joliet and X. Indiana: 1st Mortgage
Lackawanna A Bloomsbury 1st Mort
2d

May &Nov. ’63-’71

1,250,000
500,000
560,000
1,300,000

500,000

do 6 per cent

Illinois and Southern Iowa

do

3,890,000
.

Redompt ion bonds
Sterling Redemption bonds

July 1898

283,000
2,589,000
642,000
169.500

do

1893
1868
1863
1863

1883
1883
1873

927,000

do

do

..

Jan. tfe

861,000; 7

1

April & Oct 1881

2,<55,000

Mortgage

....
.

Mort..]

Illinois Central:
Construction bonds, 1875

101

,

1st

Huntingdon A Broad Top{§ 1,462,142):

...

.

:

Illartf., Lvov, tfe Fish,kill :
Hudson River ($7,762,840):
1st Mortgage..
2d
do
sinking fund...
3d
do
Convertible

....

j
:

Ap'l & Oct. 1895

5,600,000!

99

91

I

Land Grant

Mortgage
j 3,437,750
j Convertible Bonds.
i
633,600
Lanc'r
:
B’ds!
Harrisburg tfe
New I).
700,000

,1112
63
i 67

109.500
103,100

lS9,000i

388,0U0
Grand Junction : Mortgage
j 927,000!
I!Great West., LI.: 1st Mort., W, Div
1,000,(KM)! 10
i
1st Mortgage Whole Line.
1,455,000] 7. | Feb. & Aug
! 2nd do
“
do
I 2,500,000 7 ; May & Nov.
Greenville A Columbia: 1st
st Mort
| 326,000 7 I
July.
Bonds guaranteed by State
I
700,000 ! 7 [
do
! Bonds unsecured
100,000; 7
■ do
j
:;

;

Ap’l & Oct. 1883

Jan.

103 v

102*

,

iMay & Nov. 1877
Jan. & July 11893 1103

1 3,317,000

1,107,546

200,000!

j

91

1882
101 i*
1S75
97*
1884
do
878
do
70-75
;Jan. & July 1870 *...) April & Oct 1868
90,

i 1,173,001']

Mississippi Fiver Bridge Bonds..

93

1870

1,919,000

\

do

Elgin and State ItU. Bonds

do

149,000

Indiana Central:

1,100,000;

1.619.500

Mortgage, sinking fund
do '

.

18S3

1867
1879
I8S3
1880
1883
1875-

3,000,000;

4,000,000j

H Georgia

:

Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($450,000) :
1st Mort.(payable $25,000 per year)
Cleveland A Mahoning ($1,752,400):

2d

::

jJan. & July ;’75-'S0

1,397,000

..

1st

!!

j

i

'

Ap’l & Oct.! 1879

2d

....

1,000,000, 7 Jan. & Julvj 1880
570,000 5 April & ~ ‘ 1862

6,000,000]
4,441,601
j
926,500;
Sterling convertible (BSOO,000)... .! 3,375,520

.

873

493,000]

Mortgage

|

55

Jan. &

598,000' 7 Ap’l ,& Oct.

;iGal,
A Chic. U. find, in C. AN. Hr.):
I 1st

1889

490,000 i

do

East Pennsylvania:
Sinking Fund Bonds.

j

)Jan. & July; 1870

600,000

do

do

!l
!, Erie a/ul Xortheast ($400,000):
!; Mortgage

j

’

do

87

394,000) 5 Jan. & July ■1872
750,000! 6 Feb. tfe Au« 1874
lSb5
160,900:) 6 j
do

per cent.- Bonds
Erie Rail way ($22,370,932) :
1st Mortgage
2d
do
convertible.
'! 3d
' do
4th
do
■
convertible
5th
do
do

j

i April & Oct:

6,663,000

Cincinnati Richmond & Chicago..
Cincinnati & Zanesville. 1st Mort..

2d

100*

500,000| 7 j Ap’l & Oct. 11866

165,000
2,200,000

do

do
do

99

tfe Dec. 1877
)May & Nov: 1372

483,000
2.400,000

Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,400):!

3d
4th

Juivi

i J’ne

Chicago and Alton:

3d

,

^

1st

1867

2,500,0001
7,336,000 6

Central Pacific of Cal.: 1st mortgage

1st

<i

900,000; 7 Jan. tfe Juh t *S3-’9J

;j

lAp’i tfe Oct.'1879

2,000,000'
330,000;

600,0001

2d Mortgage
Central Ohio: 1st Mort

Trust

»i

-

conv. bonds

Elmira tfe Williamsport

i

!

7S*,000!
900,000

Mortgage

do
do

'

Feb. & Aug 1865
do
11865
do

1j
;

April & Oct 1870
675,000 6 | Feb.»fe Aug.[13S3
!
867,000 6 May tfe Nov.11889
4,437,300) 6 j J’ne & Dec. 11893
!:sso
1,841,962 6 i

Dollar Loan

1st
1st
2d

■

338,040 6

:

5T

•

Mortgage, convertible...

!:
•11

Jan. & July ’70-’79
do
’ 1870

200,000

VU0,0< t

Buffalo, X. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Buffalo and State Line ($1,200,000):
1st Mortgage
Burlington A Missouri ($1,902,110) :
General Mortgage
.
Bonds conv. into pref. stock
K%mden and Amboy ($10,264,463):

Camden and Atlantic

*

-

Eastern, Mass. ($1,843,400)

•

J’ne & Dec., 1867
M’ch & Sep 11885
Feb. tfe Aug ,1877

1,000,000;

..—

do
do

of Oct.

^ >-> '
.n 5

Payable.

;

■

IS ' 4

Ap’l & Oct.
jja Ap JuOc

Dubuque and Sioux City
j | 1st Mori. Sinking F’d,

•

do
I1NT9
do
11881
do
1876
Jan. & July 1883
Ap’l <fc Oct. 1884
do
1895
:S 0
do do
1860
May tfe Nov. 1S78

I

915,280- 6

:

Mortgage

do

,

1,225,000
433,000

boston, Cone, A Montreal ($1,050,000):
1st
1st

•qyj j FRIDAY.

Railroad

Ap’l & Oct..1877
do
11882

! 1,024,750, 6 Jan. & July 1S75
!
do
1880
623,500; 6
1,352,000, 6 iAp’l Sc Oct. 1885

1850
1853

*1
do
Bdvidere held ware

INTEREST.

■

do )j 2,653,000
1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex \ 1,382.000'
Consolidated Bonds
,17,105,000
UanticASLLaw. 1st Moit(Portland)! 1,500,ooo! <;

do
do

Tables.

our

j-

col-outstand-j
figures,1 ing. '

($2VH0,000):|

Mortgage
Sterling Bouds

j

is not pi veil in detail in the 2d
iimn it is expressed by the
in brackets after the Co’s name.

m
S4

!

E-

DESCRIPTION.
1
IV.B.-—Where the total Funded Debt1 Amount
'

i

a

•

.

•

BOND LIST.

great favor by giving ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In

8

IS

100,000
310,000

w}m 7

May & Nov.
do
do

do

1867
'832
1832
1876

Jan. & July 1870
1876
do
1881
do-

•

•• •

November

601

THE CHRONICLE

9,1867.]

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.
J$.M.

—

name,
na>*e

last

The inures after
refer to the vol.

and

containing

of Chronicle

report. * means

'‘'‘leased."

iN. »*•—The hgures after,the
Stock
to the vol. and
name refer
out¬
e of Chronicle containing
Last pi lid.
rate Bid. Ask.
Date.
rep ort. * mean s k 1 leased. ’ ’ standing.

Dividend.

tRe
out¬

standing.

Dividend.
FRIDAY.

FRIDAY.

Stock
Periods.

Last
Date

Periods.

paid.

Ask

rate Bid.

122

N. Y. and New Haven (5 p.55)100 <5,000,000 Jan. A July Julv ’67 5
95
Railroad.
*au
New York, Prov. A Boston.. .100 1,755,281 Jan. & July July ’67 3
Albany and Susquehanna. ...1H)
2
Ninth
Avenue.
100
797,320
112
Atlantic & St. Lawrence*....100 2,494,900 Jan. A July July ’67 4
124* > Northern of New Hampshire.100 3,068,400 J une A Dec J nne ’67 4*‘ 86
16,151,962j Aprils Oct Oct. ’67
87
Baltimore and Ohio.
5
Northern Central, 4, p. 568..
4,518,900 Quarterly. jAng.’67 2
50
1,650,000,
A
April
Oct
:
Oct.
’67
Washington Branch
JJJ.
3
North Eastern (S. Car.)
898,950
Feb.
Aug.
’67
4,429,000
A
Aug
Belle foil tame Line
iXX
do
155,000 May A Nov May ’67
8p. c., pref
600,000j Quarterly Oct. ’67 1%
v • • *
Berkshire*
1
100 4,000,000
North Carolina
250,000 J une A Dec June’67 2*
Blossburg and Coming ....
100 2.469,30?
*5%: i.*; * North Missouri
Boston, Hartford and Erie... .10 11,877,000 Jan.
Feb. ’67 55. 62
North Pennsyl Vania
A July July ’67 4
50 3,150,150
1,830,(XX)
94
91
Boston and Lowed....• ••;• •
Jan.
J*
A
5
Norwich
and
136*1
Worcester
100
Jan.
A
2,363,690
July
July
’67 4
July
’67
July
60
Boston and Maine, 3, p. 35o...1X 4,076.974
3
142
A
Feb.
5
Jan.
Julv
’67
A
3,077,000
Aug
Aug.
’67
Ogdensb. A L. Cliamp(5 p.H9)100
Boston ana Providence
10\ 3,360,000 Jan. A July
do
356.400 Apr. & Oct Oct. ’67 4
July July *67 5 15j
preferred.100
100 4,500,000 Jan.
Boston and Worcester
24* 24*
5
Ohio
A
andMiss.certif., 4,p. 631.100 20,226,604
2,100,000
July July ’67
70
75
Broadway A 7th Avenue
1
’i”
Feb.
A
do
3,353,180
January. jJan. ’67
Aug Aug. ’67 3*
1,000,000
preferred. .100
3
91*
Jan.
A
Old
June
A
Dec
June
*67
July 1 July ’67
3*
Colony and Newport..... 100 4,848,300
850,000
2,200,000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 5
Orange and Alexandria
100 2,063,655
Feb.
A
482.400
Aug Aug. *67| 4* 298 3i 0
Oswego and Syracuse
50
Burlington &
River.100 6,936,625 Feb. A
124
125
Panama
100 7,000.000 Quarterly. (Oct. ’67; 6
Aug.
67
Aug
Camden and Amboy. 4, p. 5.19.100
100* 101*
Pennsylvania
50 20,(XJ0*6l)O May A Nov Nov. ’67 5
522,350
Camden and Atlantic....
• 50
4'* 49*
Jan. A July July ’67 3
5,091,400
600,000
Philadelphia
and
Erie*
50
do
do
preferred 50
96
96*
Jan. A July July ’67 3*
Phila. aud Reading, 4, p. 89.,. 50 22,742,867 Jan. A July July ’67 5
721,926
129
Cape Cod
5
1,507,8-*
0
Apr.
A
Oct
50
Phila.,
Germant.
A
Norrist’ri*
1,150.000
j
Oct.
’67
Carawissa*
105' 106*
Phila., Wilming. A Baltimore. 50 9,019,300 Jan. A July; July ’6? 4
2,200,009 April A Oct Apr. ’67 3 a
do
•
preferred
1,776,129
and
Connellsville.
50
Pittsburg
Cedar Rapids A Missouri
5
Pittsb.,Ft.W. A Chic.,4.p.471-100 11,440,987 Quarterly. iOct. '67 2* 96% 96*
Central Georgia A Bank g Lo.109 4,666, S00 June A Dec June ’67
Feb. A Aug.'Aug. ’67 a
’67
Portland A Kennebec (new)..100
Let.
2*
Central of New Jersey
l»o 13,000,000 Quarterly.
Portland, Saco, A Portsm’th.100 1,500,000 June A Dec!June’67 3 100*
Central Ohio.
*
5 2,600.000
Providence and Worcester... .100 1,750,000 Jan. A July j July '67 4
Apr. ’67 6
400,000
April.
do
preferred
...oO
Rari tan and Delaware Bay.... 100 2,530,700
Apr. ’69 2*
970,000
Central Park, E. & N. River. .100
121
124 || Rensselaer A Saratoga consollOO
Mar A Sep. -mp, *67 5
800,000 April A Octj Apr. ’67
3,886,500
Chicago and Alton, 4, p. 329..m
126*
500,000 April A Oct! Apr. ’67
do
Saratoga and Whitehall... .100
preferred. .1<K) 2,425,000 Mar A Sep. Sep. ’67 5 133
134
800,000 April A Oct j Apr. ’67
11 Troy, Salem A Rutland
.100
Chic.Bur. aud Quincy,3, P■ 261.10. 12,500,000 Mar. A Sep. Sep. '67 25
18
25 I! Richmond and Dan., 4, p.456.100 2,000,000
Chicago and Great Eastern.. .100 4,390,000
Richmond A Petersb.,4,p.488.100 1,008,600
Chicago, Iowa A Nebraska*.. .100 1, (XXI, 000 Jan. A July July ’67
62
Rome, Watert. A Ogdensb’g..l00 2,385,500 Jan. A July;July ’67
Chicago and Milwaukee* —100 2,227,000
47% 47* i Rutland and Burlington
100 2,233,376
Chicago and Northwestern .. .100 13,232,496
50
45
63% 68* j| St. Louis, Alton, A TerreH...100 2.300,000
do
do
pref. .100 14,789,125 Annually. Dec. ’66
66
69*
Z95i
’67
Uct.
95*
May
’67
j
|
do
do
Annually.
Chicago. Rock Tal. A Pacific..100 9,100.000 April A Oct
pref.lOO 1,700,000
1
St. Louis, Jacksonv. A Chic.*lC0 1,469,429
Cine., Ham. & l)ayton(5 p.87)100 3,260,800 April A Oct Oct. ’67
j Sandusky, and Cincinnati
50 2,989,090
362,950
Cincin.,Richm’d A Chrcago...l00
do
L
do
393,073 May A Nov May ’67
Cincinnati and Zanesville..... 50 1,600,250
pref. 50
98
4
98*j I Sandusky, Mansf. A Newark.100
900,236
Cleveland^ Columbus, & Cin.,100 6,000,000 Feb. A Aug Aug, 67
4
Cleveland & Mahoning*
j Saratoga and Hudson River. .100 1,020,000
50 2,014,600 May A Nov May ’67
!
Savannah A Charleston
10e 1,000,000
Cleveland, Painesv. & Ashta.100 5,000,000 Jan. A July July ’67 5
81% 82* jj Schuylkill Valley*
Cleveland and Pittsburg
676,050 Jan. A July July ’67 2*
Sep. ’67 5
50 5,391,575
50
*102 102* |! Shamokin Val. A Pottsville*. 50
899,450 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 3
Cleveland and Toledo,3, p. 15 f 50 6,250,000 April A Oct Oct. ’67 26
Jan. A July Jan. ’67 3
Shore
Line
Ct.
'67
635.200
2*
Railway
Columbus A Indianap. Cent..l00
100
Quarterly.
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
Columbus and Xenia*
50 i,786^800 Jan. A July July '67 5
750,000 Quarterly. May ’67 5
100
91
South Carolina
50 5,819,275
Concord
50 1.500,000 m ay A N ov May '67 5
South Side (P. AL.) 4, p. 521..100 1,360,000
Concord and Portsmouth
100
350,000 Jan. A July July 67 3*
South West.Georgia, 3,
Conn.A Passump.3,p.216 pref.100 1,514,300 Jan. A July July ’67 3
p. 616.100 2,203,400 Feb. A Am Feb. ’66
Syracuse, Bingh’ton A N. Y..100 1,200,130
Connecticut River
10o 1,650,000 Ian. A July July '67 4
Terre Haute A Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,150 Jan. A July July ’67
Cumberland Valley
50 1,316,900 Apr. A Oct Oct. ’67 4
iso
Third Avenue (N. Y.).
100 1,170,000 Quarterly!
Day ton and Michigan
100 2,38 ■>,063 Jan. A
776.200
Toledo, Peoria, A Warsaw.. .100
406,132
July July '67
114
do
do
Istpret.lOO 1,651,314
Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50 11,288,550 Jan. A July July '67
111* 115*i|
do
do
do
do 2d pref.lOO
908,424
scrip. 100
88
38*
Toledo, Wabash A Western.. 100 5,700,000
Detroit and Milwaukee
100
452,350
60
do
do
do
do
pref. ..100 1,500,000
preferred.100 1,000,000 May A Nov j May ’67 3*
Utica and Black River
100
834,400 Jan. A July; July ’67 4
Dry Dock, E.B’ way & Bat... 100 1,200,000
98“
Vermont and Canada*
100 2,250,000 June A Dec (June’67 4
Dubuque and Sioux City
100 1,673,952
56* 58
Vermont
and
Jan.
A
7
8.
do
do
Mar.
<7
1*
March.
Massachusetts..100
July!
2,860,000
’67
July
pref... 100 1,988,170
HI*
Eastern, (Mass)
100 3.573.300 Jan. A July July ’67 4
jj Virginia Central, 3, p. 678. ..100 3,353,679
J j Virginia and Tennessee
530s
Eist Tennessee A Georgia.. .100 2,141,970
.100 2,94 ,791
j!
do
do
555.500
East Tennessee & Virginia .100 1,902.000
pref.lOO
j Western (Mass), 4, p. 247
Eighth avenue
100 1,090,000 Quarter’y. July’ 67 4
100 8,710,800 Jan. A July! July ’67 5”
| Western (N. Carolina)
Elmira and Williamsport*..
500,000 May A Nov May ’67 2* 62
100 1,860,000 Jan. A July, Jan. ’64 4
50
Western Union (Wis. A Ill.)
do
do
500,000 Jan. A July July 67 3* 82
2,687,237
pref. 50
72
4
72%'! Worcester and Nashua
75 1,141.<H)0 Tan. A July July '67 5*
100 16.574.300 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’6
Erie, 4, p. 599
77
77
Canal.
do preferred
-..
100 8.536.900 January. Jan. ’67 7
: Chesapeake and Del.
123*
Fitchburg
100 3,540, (XX) Jan. A July July 67 4
(5 p.183) 25 1,818,963 June A Dec June ’67
: Chesapeake and Ohio
25 8,228,595
Georgia
100 4,156,000 Apr. A Oct. Apr. ’67 6
104
100
57
Delaware Division
50 1,633,350 Feb. A Aug! Aug. ’67
Hannibal and St. Joseph
100 1,900,000
146
03
Delaware
and
Feb.
do
Hudson.
A
do
..100
10,000,000
pref.100 5,253,836
AugjAng. '67
193
i Delaware A Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 2,521,300 Feb. A
Hartford and New Haven.
.100 3,000,000 Quarterly. Oct. ’67
Aug | Ang. ’67
68
! Lehigh Coal and Navigation
Housatonic preferred
100 1,180,000 May A Nov May '07
50 6,968.146 May A Nov Nov. ’67
125
Hudson River.
125* • Monongahela Navigation Co. 50
100 13.937.400 April A Oct )ct. ’O’7
728,100 Jan. A July! July ’67
35
Morris (consolidated),4, p.631.100 1,025,(XX) Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67
Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50
494,380
do
90
do
do
preferred
100 1,175,000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
pref. 50
190,750 Jan. A July July ’67 3*
20
126
5
Illinois Central, 4, p. 311
100 23,386,450 Jan. A July July ’6
l2G*jj Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 60 1,908,207 Feb. A Ang Aug. ’67
46
60
70 i
do
Indianapolis, Cin.A Lafayette 50 1.689.900 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’67 4
prefer.. 50 2,888,805 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’t7
26'
Jedersonv., Mad. A Indianap.100 2,000,000 Tan. A July Jan. ’66
j j Susquehanna A Tide-Water.. 50 2,052,083
95’ 1! Union, preferred
Joliet and Chicago*
50 2,907,850
300,000 Quarterly. Oct. ’67 i* 93 ‘
100
West Branch A Susquehanna. 50
Joliet and N. Indiana
100
300,000 Tan. A Julv July ’67 4
1,100,(XX) Jan. A July Jan. ’65
80
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg 50 1,335,000
Wyoming Valley
50
800,000 Irregular. Sept.’66
let. ’67 2* 102* 103
Miscellaneous.
Lehigh Valley
50 10.734.100 Quarterly.
Coal.—American
3
100
25 1,500,000 Mar. A Sep. Mar. ’67 3*
Lexington and Frankfort
514,646 Way A Nov May '6
Ashburton
Little Miami
50 8.572.400 June A Dec June ’67 4
50 2,500, (XX)
Butler
44
53
Little Schuylkill*
2
50 2,6-46,100 Tan. A July July ’67 2
500,000 Jun. A Dec. June ’67
40
Consolidation
100 5,000,000
Long Island
50 3,000,000 Quarterly. Aug, '67 2
44
Central
41
’67 4*
100 2,000,000 Jan. A Juiy Jan. ’67
Louisv.,Cin &Lex.,9p c. preflOO
48.638
Cumberland
Liouisville and Frankfort
23* *3*
50 1,109,594 Jan. A July July ’67 3
>..100 5,000,000
165
Louisville and Nashville
100 5,5(H), 000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 4
Pennsylvania
50 3,200,000 Quarterly. jAng.'67
Louisville,New Alb. & Chic..100 2,800,000
Spring Mountain
50 1,250,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67
Macon and Western
100 1,500,000 May A Nov May ’67
l(
1(1 1,(XX),000 Jan. A July
Spruce Hill
Maine Ce it rat
Wilkesbarre
25*' 30"
100 1,600,860
100 3,400,000 Apr. A Oct
Marietta & Cincinnati,1st pref 50 6,586,135 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’66 3s. 16* 17 j I
100 1.250.000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’66
Wyoming
Valley
do
i! Gas.—Brooklyn
do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’66 3s.
25 2,000,000 Feb. A Aug Aug. '6
Citizens (Brooklyn)
Manchester and Lawrence... .100 1.000,000 May A Nov May ’67 5
20 1,200,000 Jan. A July;July ’67
Harlem
155“ 170“
Mar. ’62
\
Memphis A Chariest., 3p. 187.100 5,312,72*
50
644,000
Michigan Central, 5. p. 151.. .100 7,502,f* Jan. A July July ’67
Jersey City A Hoboken.. 20
108* 169
386,000 Tan. A July July ’67
Manhattan. ..=
79
Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l0() 9,813,50* Feb. A Aug Feb. ’65
5u 4,000,000 Jan. A July July '87
do
do
102
guar.100
Metropolitan
.100 2,800,(XX,
787,70w Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
Milwaukee AP.du Ch.lst pref.100 3,204,296 February... Feb. ’67
90
New Yorx
60 1,000,000 May A Nov Nov. ’67
do
do
William burg
2d pref.100;
75
750.000 Jan. A July July ’67
50
841,400 February... Feb. ’67
Milwaukee and St. Paul.
100 3,627,000 Jan. A July
42* 42*
40* 40* Improvement. Canton lC0.(16!pd) 4,500,000
do
Boston Water Power...,. 100 4,000,000
.100 7,371,000 January. Jan. ’67
16% 17
preferred
62* 62*
July ’66 20
Mine Hill A Sohuylkill Haven 50 3.775.600 Jan. A
114
115
31* 31*
Telegraph.—Western Union. 100 23,450,000 Jan. A July Ju y ’67 2
July July ’67
Transit.—Central
17
Mississippi A Tenn.4, p. 489.100
825,399
IOC
Mobile and Ohio
100 3,588,300
Express.—A.dam§
67* «T %
‘....100 10.000,000 Quarterly. Nov ’66
American
Montgomery and WestPoint.100 1,644,104
5<X
67* 67*
9,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66
Morris and Essex
50 3,500,000 Mar. A Sep Mar. '67 3*s
Merchants’ Union (30 p'd) 10^ ; >0,000,000
Nashua and Lowell
.100
do
do
29* 29*
720,009 May A Nov Aug ’67 20
125*
(35 p’d) 00
Nashville A Chattanooga
United States
100 2,056,544
1(X
67* 68*
6.000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’66
Naugatuck
100 1.408.600 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
47* 47*
Oct. ’67
Wells, Fargo A Co
100 o,tX)o,ono
New Bedford and Taunton
.100
500.000 Jan. A July July '67
Steamship.—Atlantic MaL... .100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Sept.’67 2* 116 116*
New Haven A Northampton.. 100 1.224.100 Jan. A July July ’67
Pacific Mail
10C 20,000,000 Quarterly. Sent.’67 3
142
142*
New Jersey, 4, p. 183
Trust.—Farmers’ L. A Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. A July July ’67 5
100 6,250,000 Feb. A Aug Aug.’67
New London Northern..
100
895.000 Mar A Sep. Sep. ’67
New York Life A TruBt..l00 1,000,000 Feb. A Aug! Aug. ’67 10
N. Orleans, Opel. A Gt. WestlOO
Union Trust
4,093,425
.....100 1,000,000 Jan. A July July ’67 4
N. O.,Jackson AGt.N.,4,p.l3U00
United States Trust
100 1,500,000 Jan. A July July 67 5
4,697,457
New York Central, 8, p. 769 ..100
112
112* 1| Mining—Mariposa Gold
26,530 000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67
100| 5,097,600
7%
New York and Harlem....... 50 5,285,Off. Jan. A J
osa <5bId Preferred.100
190
Mariposa
14
uiy Julv ’67
jnanpoa
5,774,406J
do
preferred
501 1,500,00) Jan. A July! July ’67
10J
ver
Quickail
.100 10,000,W
16
.(Feb ’65

KNewyVork;ibKnei::iO;J




ii-sonri

R'VjOC

...

...

.

...

...

.

1

..

.

..

.

.

*

•

•

•

•

.

...

.

,

,.

...

..

..

•

••■•

602

THE CHRONICLE.

[November 9, 1867.

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST.
Companies.

Bid. Askd

Allen Wright
Bemis Heights
Bennehoff Run

par

Bergen Coal and Oil

BJiven

Companies.
Hammond

5
10

HarailtonMcClintock....
Ivankoe

10;

Manhattan
Mountain Oil
National

5
10

Brevoort

Brooklyn

10

Central

52

100;

Cherry Run Petrol'm.... 2;
Cherry Run special
6

Clinton Oil

Empire City

6
5
5
5

3 25

Oceanic
Pit Hole Creek

10

Excelsior
First National
Germania
Great Republic
G’t Western Consol

4 00
4 00

2 00

1 30"

Ryud Farm

Brooklyn
Citizens’

"20

City

70

! Bid.1 Askd

Adventure
AStna

11

Algomah
Alfouez

Lake Superior
Madison

.

j

.

...

1

Amygdaloid

j

.

2 00
..!

Canada
Charter Oak
Central
Concord

Copper Creek
Copper Falla
Copper Harbor

!30 00 35 10 ; Native

—

i

—

■

5
4

j

.

j

.

j

8

2

10
—

*... 4

..‘Northwestern

.

11X

24X 23 00 23 50 I Norwich
i
1 1
....jiOgima
I j Pennsylvania *
\ • ...!
3X i
j 1 OO.yPetherick

Dacotah.-

11

—

Dana
Davidson
Delaware
Devn
Dorchester

..

75 *

!

—

84

1

20X!
1

'

IX

Dudley
Eagle River

..

IX j
3X;
IX
10

Edwards

Empire
Everett

Evergreen Bluff
Excelsior

Resolute

5X

Ridge

Franklin

••

8Xil2

•

French Creek
Girard
...
Great Western....

—

5
2
2

17XT1
IX
2X

*

Hilton

Hope

Hec.a

oo'

37

—

Hulbert
Humboldt

%

Hungarian

66

7

66

8

;;

5X

Superior

...

8
21

i

1

5

West Minnesota
Winona..

|

8

Winthrop

4X i

IX;

2%j
3
j

Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.
+ Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares
$200,000. fn 20,000 shares.
Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares
.

GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST.
Bid.

Alameda Silver
American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific

par

Askd;

50
GO

10

Cl'i

■i

1

Ayres Mill & Mining.

,

50

Burroughs
Central

10

5

oo;

2

Hope...

25

i 66

Harmon K. & S

69

....

I

,ih#>vty

...

12

30
17 00
35
52
55
2

—

r

4

100 105GO 11500
1

—
'

5

Church Union
10
Columbia G. «fc S
Combination Silver....
40 O ’ 50 0 T Nye
—
Consolidated Gregory... /00 5 85 5 90 Owyhee
—
25
4S
Corydon
50 People’s G. & S. of Cal. 5
Crozier
Quartz Hill
25
Des Moines
Reynolds
—
Downieville
1
Rocky Mountain
10
.

8/
1G

—

Manhattan Silver
j Midas Silver
i Montana
1
| New York
New’ York & Eldorado

45
ft")

2

LaCrosse

i oo;

—

27

—
—

—

Kipp & Buell

3 00

—

Gunnell Union

par
Hamilton G. A S. bonds

.

2-5
50

Bid. Askd

Holman

—

..

Bates & Baxter
Benton
Bob Tail
Boscobel Silver
Bullion Consolidated

Companies.

70

*•

..

—

.

—

....

—

Edgehill

—

Seave’r

....

Fall River
First National
Gold Hill

3 80

3 95

—

—

1

....

—

....

Gunnell—

101 1 00

..

.

200,000
200,000
Exchange
30 150,000
Firemen’s
17
204,000
Firemen’s Fund... 10
150,000
Firemens Trust.. 10
150,000
Fulton
25
200,000
Gallatin
50
150,000
Gebhard
100
200,000
Germania
50
500,000
Globe
50
200,000
Great Westem*t. .100 1,000,000
Greenwich
25
200,000
Grocers’
50
200,000
Guardian..
200,000
Hamilton
15
150,000
Hanover
50
400,000
Hoffman
50
do
200,000 152.229
July’66 .5'
Home
100 2,000,000 2,271,387
do
July CT .5
do
Hope
25
150,000
135,793
July ’65 .5
Howard
50
do
500,000 646,522
July'67 ..5
Humboldt
100
do
195.926
200,000
July ’65 .6
do
Import’& Traders. 50 200,000 167,833
July ’65 ..6
International... t.. 100 1,000,000
800.604 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’66.3X
do
Irving
25
200,000 206.179
Aug. ’67..5
Jefferson
30
200,010
238,808 March and Sep Sept.'67 .6
King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20 150,000 176.678 Jan', and July. July ’67 5
Knickerbocker.... 40
do
280,000
302,741
July ’67 ..5
do
Lafayette (B’klyn),..50 150,000 141,434
July’67 ,.6
Lamar
100
do
300,000 863,006
July ’67 ..5
Lenox
25
do
150,000 121,007
July’67 ..5
Long Island (B’kly). 50 200,000
do
284.605
July’67..7
Lorillard*
25 1,000,000 1,118,664
do
July’67 ..5
Manhattan
100
500,000
do
610,930
July’67 ..5
Market*
100
do
200,000
July ’67 3X
28S,917
Meehan’ & Trade’. 25
do
200,000 222,921
July’67 ..5
Mechanics (B’klyn). 50
do
150,000 146,692
July’67..5
Mercantile
100
do
200,000 195,546
July'67 5
Merchants’
50
do
200,000 245,169
July’67 .10
Metropolitan * t.. .100 300,000 516,936
do
July ’65 .5
Montank (B’klyn).. 50
150,000
do
161,743
July '67 ..5
Nassau (B’klyn)... .50
do
150,000
259,270
July ’67.10
National
do
200,000 228.628
7X
July'67 .;6
New Amsterdam.. 25
do
300,000 319,870
July’67.. 6
N. Y. Equitable 3 35
210,000
264,703 Jan. and July. July’67 ..5
N.Y.Fire and Mar.100
200,000
247,895 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67..5
50 1,000,000 1,053.825 Jan. and July, Ju'y’67 .5
Niagara
North American*. 50
500,000
do
511,631
July’67 ..5
North River...... 25
350,000
379,509 April and Oct. Oct. ’67..5
Pacific
:— 25
200,000 244,293 Jan. and July. July’67 ..6
Park
100
200,000 212,521
GO
July’67 ..5
Peter Cooper
20
150,000 185,365 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’67 ..5
People’s.....
20
150,000 144,203 Jan. and July, July’67.. 5
Phoenix + Br’klyn. 50 1,000,000 1,077,288
do
July’67.. 5
Reliei.^.,
50
do
200,000 190,167
July’67.. 5
Republic*
100 300,000 45S.233
do
Julv’67.6X
Resolute*
100
do
200,000 185.952
Jnly’66.3X
Rutgers’
25
200,000 216,S79 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67. .6
St. Mark’s....
25
do
150,000 140.679
Feb. ’67. 5
St. Nicholast
25
150,000 156,220 Jan. and July. Aug.’67 .5
Security t
50 1,000,000
962,181 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66.3X
Standard
50
200,000 226,756 Jan. and July, July ’67.. 5
Star
100
do
200,000 195,780
July ’67 ..5
100
Sterling *
200,000 206,731 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67 5
Stuyresant
25
200,000 198,182 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’66 5
Tradesmen's
25
150,000 158,733 Jan. and July, July'67.. 6
United States.26
do
250,000 336,691
j Jan. ’67 ..5
50
Washington
400,000 630,314 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’67... 5
Washington *t....!00 893,700 190,206 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67...5
Williamsburg City.50 150,000 179,008 Jan. and July ;July ’87 ..5
Yonkers & N. Y.. 100
do
500,000 501,244
iJuiy 67 Sr
.

50

15
95

1 65
5
15 00
10
25
1 10 1 15
#

,...

.

2
36

....

31

Stock and Bond Salks at Philadelphia.—Thu
following
taken from Bowen and Fox’s
Monthly Report of the Philadelphia
Stock and Bond Market, shows the
highest and lowe3t prices in
October:
’
•*

Philadelphia, 6’g old
“

6’s,

—

i

Sensenderfer
Smith & Parmelee

I

Symonds Forks

■—

..

20

7 50
3 55

—

4 00 Texas
1 50, Twin River Silver

4

—

100 50 oo;

i6 66
3 65
1 00
12
....

“

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.'
Bid.

Copake Iron

5

Foster Iron
Lake Superior Iron
Bucks County Lean
Denbo Lead
Kanhar Lead
.

...

444

....
...

100

’

--

—

Iren Tank storage

—

Tudor Lead

Sa<rinaw, L. S. A M.

....

u,.

Long Island Peat...
Russe Fi.e
Savon de Terre

...

.

....

25
43

“

25

8 75

9

66

44

44

“

41

41

14

44

44

.scrip...

bonds,
187044

1875.
1883.
1889.
mort.6’sl889.
44

44

95

© 93X

95X© 95X
87
88
86
97

© 87
© 86
© 86
© 96X

*2%@ 50X

1st mort

100

2d mort.J

bonds,
1870.....
14
1880

N, Penn. RR. scrip
••
6’s

76

@ 96y
© 93X
©102
© 75%

126X@12*X

Reading RR
44

...»

103

.

Penn. RR

—

—

44

•

—

...

6's

Cam. & Amb. RR

44

42

102%©100%
89X(2> 89X

Allegheny Co. scrip —
“

Bid. Askd

...

Pennsylvania 5's, tranfc.. 100
“
5’s, coup... 97
41

44

Companies.

Walikill Lend
Wallace Nickel
Rutland Marble

5
—

Pheuix Lead




Askdj

new

98X@ 98

5’s

44

Companies.

50

.

10
80
1 60

—

Eagle

.

.

± Canital

—

204,790 May and Nov.
170,171 Feb. and Aug.!Aug. ’65..4
345,749 June and Dec. !Dec. ’66. .5
266,368 jFeb. and Aug. {Aug, ’67.. .6
238,506 Jan. and July. July’67..10
92,6S3
July’64 ..4
384,266 Jan. and July.
338,878 Feb. and Aug. Aug."'67.7 X
275,591 Jan. and July, July’67. 6
do
309,622
July'64.3X
do
214,147
July’67 .5
424,189 Feb. and Aug. Aug. VJ..6
228,696 Jan. and July. July’67 ..5
234,872 Jan. and July {July '67.,. .5
1,989,037 Jan. and July. Ju-y ’67 ..7
404.178 March and Sep ?ept.’67. .5
36,518
424,295 April and Oct. Oct’.’ ’’67.*.'5
203,990 Jan. and July, July’67 ..7
do
229,276
July'67.. .5
134,065 Feb. and Aug.
241,840 Jan. and July. July'67*’.’.6
do
122,468
July’66.3X
do
165,933
July ’65 .5
do
200,766
Jnly^67 .5
149,689 May and Nov.
Feb.
and
227,954
Aug. Aug.’’67 ”5
525,762 Jan. and July. July’67 ..7
200,015 Jan. arid July. July’67 ..5
2,385,657 Jan. and July. July '67.3X
255,657 Feb. and Aug. Aug ’66..5
170,225 April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5
177.178 Jan. and July, July’67 3X
do
162,571
July '67..5.
do
419.952
July ’67.. 5'

.

..’.’J

Washington

Companies.

July’OT.lO^
July ’67 ..5
Jan. 65...5
Aug. ’67...5
Sep. ’67..5

....

6

33

20 00 25

12
3
1

l%j

19
.10

25*66

•

f>X

Tremont
Victoria
Vulcan

1

Huron
Indiana
Isle Royale*
Keweenaw
Knowlton

.

—

10

...I Toltec
13

oo

.

00

IX

’360,666

40
100

Sale,

.

Seneca
1
Sharon
X
Sheldon & Columfcian.21
South Pewabic
1
South Side
2
Star
11%

25

•O
•

66

•

—

Rockland
St. Clair
G0T4 00 i St. Louis
i
St. Mary’s

9X

ssf

10X
I.—

Quincy $

1

”63
•

& Boston... 5X

Portage Lake

200,000
250,000
500,000
400,000

Jan. and July.
Jan. and July.
Jan. and July.
Jan. and July.
282.127 Jan. and July.
257,753 Feb. and Aug.
336,470 March and Sep

151,002
325,233
515,890
222,073

Bid. Last

.

15

Princeton
Providence

.

—

Flint Steel River

Hamilton
Hancock
Hanover

; I

-

200,000
400,000

Last paid.

Periods.

.

3X 10 00 ii

Pewabic
Phoenix

!!Pittsburg
j Pontiac

..

....

7
50
5X

•

•

.

••••

1

....(JNew Jersey Consol

—MNew York
..! 3 50 j North Cliff

.

5’66

18X
1... 5X

....

500,000

jNetas’ts

.

.'.... 1X|is..

50 jNaumkeag

I

.

.

'

—

...

.

210,000
250,000

dividend.

.

6)

—-Minnesota
TO 00 j National

...

—

....

5

j! Milton

...

2x 1

Empire City

1%

,

Mendotat...
Merrimac...
Mesnard

..i

j

13X!
17Xl

Bohemian
Boston
Caledonia
Calumet

[ Medora

..
....

j

..

4^1

Bay State

Eagle

6

....

soo*, 666

Clinton
100
Columbia*
100
Commerce (N.Y.). .100
Commerce (Alb’y).lOO
Commercial
50
Commonwealth... 100
Continental *
100
Corn Exchange... 50
Croton
100

2

5X
4X

300,000
200,000
200,000
800,000
200,000
153,000

—

Excelsior

Mass

..!

.

—j

;

2

jAskd

.

j

(

17

Atlas
Aztec

*

j
....

paid 1

3
IX j 4 00 4 25, i Manhattan

American

l!

i

25X!

Albany & Boston

Lafayette

Bid.

•

250,(MX)

....17

Central Park

Companies.

!...;.

paid 3

$300,000
300,000
200,000
200,000
500,000

.

Shade River
Union

COPPER MINING STOCK LIST.
Companies.

Adriatic
25
^Etna
50
American*
50
American Exch’e. .100
Arctic
50
Astor
25
Atlantic (Br’kiyn)..60
Baltic
25
Beckman
25
...

United Pe’tl’mF’ms
United States-.
Union

10

Capital.

25
Bowery (N. Y.)
Broadway
;.... 25

SO

Rathbone Oil Tract

10

Jan. 1, 1867.

write Marine Risks
.

10

10' N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons

1

fc*arkecf thus (*) are
participating, and (+)

.par 20

N. Y. & Alleghany
New York & Newark....
N. Y. & Phi lad el

5

Bnchauan Farm

Bid. Askd

10!

-

Bradley Oil

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.

....

.......

© 99

Catawissa RR. pref

Lehigh Valley RR
44

44

6’s, 1870

Norristown RR
Minehill RR
Phila. & Trenton
N. Central RR
Camden & Atlantic, pref.
Phila. & Sun. 7’s
War’n & Frank 7’s
W. Jersey RR. bonds
.

Schuylkill Nav. Co, pref.
bonds, 1872
bends, 1882
Lehigh Nav
6's, ’84
44

44

.

44

,

94X© 93X
51X© 47%
95 ©94

Moms Canal

92

©92

31

© 31

6’s
Delaware Division Canal.

87

©86

44

Sneq. 44Canal

pref

28 @23
55%@ 50%
95X© 94
64X@ 6S%
58X@ 58
124X@122
43X@ 42X
I9%@ 19X
93 © 91X
7SX@ 78
87%@ 87X
27%@ 23%
91X@ 90
74%@ 72X
42 @35
87X© 85
36 @36
95 @85
15 © 15
6"%@ 60
55 @55

,.lA

•

Vis

THE CHRONICLE.

November 9, .1867.]

500

603

MILES OF THE

Insurance.
OFFICE OF THE

Pacific

Union
Running

Railroad,

Atlantic

West from Omaha Across the Continent are now Mutual

Insurance

Completed.

Co.,

NEW YORK, JANUARY 25th, 1S67,

Union Pacific

The

Railroad Company have 'built a

in the last eighteen months
than was ever built by any other company in the same
time, and they will continue the work with the same
energy until it is completed. The Western Division
is being pushed rapidly eastward front Sacramento by
the Central Pacific Company of California, and it is
line of railroad

longer

The

Available Cash

Premiums received

ing Eleven

MORE
XH\N ONE-THIRD OF THE WORK HAS ALREADY
BEEN DONE. MORE THAN ONE-THIRD OF THE

Company have ample facilities for supplying
deficiency that may arise in means for construe
tion. This may be done wholly or in part by additional
subscriptions to capital stock.

ARE NOW EMPLOYED UPON
THAN EVER BEFORE. More than

Million Dollars in Money

offer

already been expended by the two powerful
companies that have undertaken the enterprise, and
there is no lack of funds for its most vigorous prose¬
cution. When the United States Government found
it necessary to secure the construction of the Union
Pacific Railroad, to develop and protect its own inte¬
rests, it gave the companies authorized to build it
such ample aid as should render its speedy completion
beyond a doubt. The-available means ol the Union
Pacific Railroad Company, derived from the Govern¬
have

follows:

a

skeptical have

never expressed a doubt
Union Pacific Railroad is finished the*

competitor it

miles on

rates.

per

can

always charge remunerative

Earnings from Way Business.

result:

Superintendent’s

Report shows the following

EARNINGS.

Total

2.—First Mortgage Bonds.

Morgan, LT. S. Sen¬
York, and the Hon. Oakes Ames, Mem¬
ber of U. 8, House of Representatives, who are res
ponsible for the delivery of these bonds to the Com
pany in strict accordance with the terms oi the law.
3,—The Land Grant*
The Union Pacific Railroad

Company has

a land

grant or absolute donation from the Government ol
1‘2,S00 acres to the mile on the line of the road, which
will not be worth less than $1 50 per acre at the lowest

807,508 03

.-

Total

'

the bondholders are the Hon. E. I).

2,188,325 15

Total amount of Marine Premiums.

No Polices have been issued upon

Risks;

nor upon Fire Risks discon¬
nected with Marine Risks.

Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬

1866 to 31st December, 1866

Losses
same

'....$1,203,038 95

The net operating expenses on the commercial busi¬
ness for the quarter were $237,966 50.
The account for
the commercial business stands as follows :

Earnings for May, June and July
Expenses for May, June and July
Net

,

profit

$723,755 54
237,966 50
$4S5,789 04

The amount of Bonds the

Company can issue on 325
miles, at $16,000 per mile, is $5,200,000. Interest in gold
three months, at 6 per cent., on this sum, is $78,000;
add 40 per cent, premium, to correspond with currency
earnings is $109,200, showing that the net earnings for
this quarter were more than four times
terest on the First Mortgage Bonds on this
road.

First

4.—Tlie Capital Stock.
The authorized

capital of the Union Pacific Railroad

Returns of Premiums and

Expenses
The

$1,194,173 23

Company has the following As-

8ets, viz.:

Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks, $6,771,885
scoured by Stocks, and other¬
wise A
1,129,350
Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages,
221,260
Interest and sundry notes and claims
due the Company, estimated at
141,866

Mean*

Sufficient

to

ITnild

the

Road.

.

Contracts for the entire work of

building 914 miles
Omaha, comprising

much of the most difficult-mountain

work, and

em¬

bracing

every expense except surveying, have been
made with responsible parties ( who have
already fin¬
ished over 500 miles), at the
average rate of

among

the

in¬

length of

and

repairs of cars, depots, stations, and all other in¬
cidental buildings, and also

baegage,
tock, to

and freight cars,
an amount

per mile.

Allowing

locomotives, passenger,
and other requisite rolling-

that shall not be less than
$5,000
the cost of the remaining one

hundred and eighty-six of the eleven hundred
miles
assumed to be built
by the Pacific Company to be

$90,000

per mile.

The Total Cost of
Miles will be
dd discounts

on

Elcvem Hundred
follows:

as

bonds, surveys, &c

Amount,




4,500.000

183,445,012

$12,536,304 46

Six per cent interest on the outstand

ing certificates ol profits will be paid
to the holders thereof, or their
legal representatives,
on and after
Tuesday tlie Fiftli of
February next.
Th« outstanding certificates of the issue of
1864 will be redeemed and paid to the holders

thereof,
after

or their legal representatives, on and
Tuesday the Fifth of February

next, from which date all interest thereon will
cease.

The certificates to be

the

safest

investments.

and

They

A dividend

declared

of

of the

Company, for the year ending 31st
December, 1866, for which certificates will be
issued

on

and after

Tuesday the Second of April

next.

By order of the Board,

IN GOLD,

are

Many parties are taking advantage of the present
high price of Government stocks to exchange for these
Bonds, which are ever 15 per cent. Cheaper, and, at the
current rate of premium on gold, pay
Over Niue Per Cent. Interest.

Henry Coit,
Pickersgill,
Lewis Curtis,
Waa. C.

Charles H. Russell,

Lowell Holbrook,
R. Warren Weston,

Royal Phelps,

and by the

Company’s advertised Agents throughout
States, of whom maps and descriptive
pamphlets may be obtained on application. Remit¬

Jafhes Low

Bryce,

GeorgeS. Stephenson,
Wuliam H. Webb.

Skiddy,

Daniel S. Miller.

Paul

Robert L. Taylor,

Charles P.

Spofford.

Burdctt,

Shephard Gandy.

tances should be made in drafts or

other funds par in
be sent free of charge

JOHN D.

by return express.

JONES, President,

CHARLES

Treasurer.

W. H. H.

NEW YORK
October 28th, 1867.

Howland,

David Lane,
James

the United

B. J.

William E. Dodge
Geo. G. Hobson,

Caleb Bars tow
at the

Sturgis,
Henry K. Bogert,
Joshua J. Henry,
Dennis Perkins,
Joseph Gaillard, Jr.
J. Henry Bnrgy,
Cornelius Grinnell,
C. A. Hand,
Benj. Babcock,
Fletcher Westray,
Robt. B. Minturn, Jr.
Gordon W, Burnham,
Frederick Chauncey,

Francis

JOHN J. CISCO

Wm.

Charles Dennis,
W. H. H. Moore,

A. P. Pillot

Coxtixextal National Bank, No. J Nassau St.
Clark, Dodoe & Co., Bankers, 51 Wall St.
John J. Cisco & Sox, Bankers, No. S3 Wall St.

York, and the bonds will

CHAPMAN,

TRUSTEES:

John D. Jones,

offered for the present at NINETY CENTS ON
DOLLAR, and accrued interest at Six Per Cent,
Currency from July 1.

New

Twenty Per Cent, is

the net earned premiums

on

Secretary.

pay

Subscriptions will be received in New York
Company’s Office, No. 20 Nassau street, and by

produced at the time

payment, and cancelled.

J. H.

THE

sixty-eight

thousand and fll'ty-eight dollars
($68,058) per mile.
This price includes all
necessary shops for construction

00
00

24
3,837,735 41
434,207 81

Premium Notes and Bills Receivable..

whose principal is so amply provided for, and whose
interest is so thoroughly secured must be classed

in
of first-class railroad west from

00

Loans

Mortgage Bonds,

SIX PER CENT.

The

$7,632,236 70

paid during the
period
$5,683,895 05

valuation.

Company is $100,000,000, of which over $5,000,000 have
been paid on the work already done.

.$10;470,346 31
Life

.$1,203,038 95

Net Earnings to balaucc

ator from New

January. 1S60.

EXPENSES.

Fuel, repairs, offices, conductors, trains Ac. $395,530 92

The Trustees for

Policies not marked off

Total Amount of Assets..

Passengers, Freight, Telegraph and Mails.. $723,155 54
Transportation of Contractors’material and
men
479,283 41

claims

progresses;

on

an average of 325
miles of the Union Pacific Railroad was in operation

The

only xs the road

1st

During the quarter ending July 31,

company

By its charter the company is permitted to issue its
own First Mortgage Bonds to the same amount as the
bonds issued by the Government, and xo more, and

Premiums

Cash in Bank

by the

rest.

the 31st

December, 1S6G:
on Marine Risks,
from 1st January, 1866, to 31st De¬
cember, 1866
$8,282,021 26
on

United States and State of New York

BUSINESS*

immense business that must flow over it, as the only
railroad connecting the two grand divisions of the
North American continent, and will be one of the
wonders of railway transportation4 as it will have
no

rent

While their whole value

very

The most

and bearing six per centinterest at the rate of $16,000 per mile for 517
the on the Plains; then at the rate of $ IS,000

The
against the government since April of the cur*
year amount to four and one-half times .his inte¬

a

that when the

currency

finally discharge the whole amount of this lien.

part of them for sale,

FUTURE

1.—United Slates Bonds.

United States Government, which also pays the
one-half the amount of its bills in money for
transporting its freight, troops, mails, &c. The re¬
maining half of tjiese bills is placed to the' com¬
pany's credit, and forms a sinking fund which may

inquiry has already been made for a portion
lands, and arrangements are now proposed to

some years to come, they wil
important source of revenue to the Com'
pany. The lands of the Illinois Central Railroad Com
pany are selling at from $6 to $12 per acre, and other
land-grant companies in the. West are receiving equal
prices for similar properties.

Having thirty years to run,

mile-for 150 miles through the Rocky Mountains;
then at the rate of $32,000 per mile for the remaining
distance, for which the United States takes a second
lies as security.
The interest on these bonds is paid

affairs

will not be available for

retrain

,

and its own stockholders, may be briefly summed

Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the
Company, submit the following Statement of its

ary,
Active
of these

up as

$85,145,750

The

NOW IN RUNNING ORDER, AND

ment

:

any

MORE LABORERS

Forty

Miles

Total

Pacific will be open for business in 1S70.

WHOLE LINE IS

Hundred

for Build¬

$29,328,000
First Mortgage Bonds
29,328,000
Capital stock paid in on the work now done. 5,369,750
Land grant, 11,080,000 acres, at $1 50 per acre. 21.120,000

the entire grand line
^to the

Resources

IT. S. Bonds

expected that

IT

As the U. S. Bonds are equal to money, and the Com
pany’s own First Mortgage Bonds have a ready mar,
ket, we have as the

I

.

DENN1S, Vice-President

MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres

S>. HEWLETT, 83 Vic*Pr** t,

THE CHRONICLE.

604

Insurance.

Insurance.

Authorized Capital
Subscribed Capital
Paid-up Capital and

In the (

"William H. Boss, Secretary.

Home Insurance Co.,
’114,849

Liabilities

(insurance buildings)

$300,000,

President.

GRAHA1R,
Vice-President.
:

F. H. Wolcott,
P. W. Turney,
William T. Blodgett.
Charles P. Kirkland,

Watson E. Case,

John A. Graham,
John C. Henderson,
James L. Graham,
Clinton B. Fisk.
WADSWORTH,Secretary.

Lorrain Freeman,
Edward A Stansbury,
J. Boorman Johnston,
Samuel D. Bradford,
W. R.

•l»s

.ZEtna

Company,

ncorporated 1819

377,668 46

John F. Williams,
William Nelson, Jr.,
Charles Dimon,
A, William Heye,
Harold Dollner,
Paul N. Spofiord.

Jas. D. Fish,
Geo. W. Hennings,

Francis Hathaway,
Aaron L. Reid,
Ellwood Walter.
ELLWOOD WALTER, President. *
CHAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-President.
Secretary.

Niagara Fire Insurance

NSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DA JAGE BY

COMPANY.

FIRE.

No. 12 WALL

NEW YORK AGENCY

JAS. A.

Henr> Jt. Kunhardt,

Eyre,
Cornelius Grlnnell,
Joseph Slagg,

Henry

-$4,650,938 27

WALL

D. Colden Murray,
E. HaydccK White,
N, L. McCready,
Daniel T. VVillets,
L. Edgerton,

Samuel Wlllets,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. J rost,
William Watt,

Secretary.

Liabilities

62

DABNEY, MORGAN & Co., Bankers.

Hartford
INSURANCE

FIDE

COMPANY

HARTFORD, CONN.

Geo. L. Chase, Pres’t

FIRE

PHOENIX
OF

this Company has paid to its

Freeland,

J. Despard,

NO.

Managers

LORD, DAY & LORI). Solicitors

Geo. M. Coit, Sec’y.

of scrip, equivalent
in value to an average scrip dividend of
TWENTY PER CENT.
Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based
on the principle that all classes of risks are equally
profitable, tins Company makes such cash abatement or
discount from the current rates, when premiums are
paid, as the general experience of underwriters will
warrant, and the nett profits remaining at the close of
the vear, will be divided to the stockholders.
Thi« 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 Kathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liverpool.

HENDEE, President.

AssetsMuly 1, 1867

T. C. ALLYN,. J Associate
WHITE, Assistant Manager.

Capital and surplus *1.500,GOO.

IN CASH,
rebatement on premiums in lien

$3,000,000.

CAPITAL

J. GOOD NOW,

CHAS. E.

INSURANCE

CO

HARTFORD, CONN.

Capital and surplus $1,000 000.
Sec’y.
•
H. Kellogg, Pres t

W. B. Clark,

Policy-holders,
J

Charter Pe: petual.

L. J.

An

SPRINGFIELD FIRE AND MAR1ISK
INSURANCE COMPANY,

*

SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

Capital and Surplus $700,000.
J, N.‘ Dunham, Sec’y.
E. Freeman, Pre*
CONNECTICUT FIRR INSURANCE CO
HARTFORD, CONN.

OF

M.

Capital $27 5,600.
Bennett, Jr„ Sec’y.
J. B. Eldredge, Pres’t,

Losses

promptly adjusted by the Agents here, andpaid'
in current mon^y.

WHITE, ALLYN & CO.

A»ents,

NO. 74 WALL STREET.

TRUSTEES.

OF HARTFORD.
I

of

cJ'

OF

$1,261,349

1st, 1867

During the past year

a

Currency at option

Cey*

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844.

James

Insurance

4,260,635
or

promptly adjusted and paid in this Country.

COMPANY.

WALL STREET, NEW* YORK.

Assets, January

12,695 000

Income

of Management:
r
DABNEY, Esq., Chairman.
of Dabney, Morgan & Pn
SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esq
of E. D. Morgan & Cn
AYMAR CARTER, Esq.
of Avmar & Cn
DAVID DOWS, Esq..;
of David Dows &
EGISTO P. FABBRI, Esq
of Fabbri & Chauncev
SIMEON B. CHITTENDEN, Esq..
of S. B. Chittenden & rv*
SHEPPARD GANDY, Esq..of Sheppard Gandy,* Co
EZRA WHITE,) A co/w,Jo. „

The Mercantile Mutual
No. 35

£10,000,000

Secretary.

Isaac H. Walker,

JANIES LORUTIER GRAHAM

Directors

Capital

Accumulated Funds.

JOHN P. PAUL1SON, Vice-President.

INSURANCE

confine its Are business to the city
of New York and vicinity, and will also -write Marine
Risks on Cargo only, at the office in the Metropolitan
Banis Building.

Joseph B. Varnnm,

$1,614,540 78

MOSES H. GRINNELL, President. -

ntends hereafter to

York,

(IN GOLD):

CHAS. H.

This Company having recently added to its previous
asseLs a paid up cash capital
$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
from Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are en¬
titled to participate in the profits.

having reduced its capital according
o law, under the sanction of the Superintendent of the
nsurance Department to the sum of

Martin Bates,
Dudlcv B. Fuller,
Franklin II. Delano,
Gilbert L. Beeckman.

NEW

New York Board

Incorporated 1841.

This Company

i'OBERT M. C.

BRANCH,

STREET,

Subscribed

Losses

49 WALL STREET.

April 16,1867.

NEW YORK,

WALL

1S09.

plicant.

of

BROADWAY.

108

NO.

EDINBURGH.

UNITED STATES

74

Policies issued in Gold

Capital and Assets,

Company,

Insurance

AND

ESTABLISHED IN

Annual

COMPANY.

CHAS. J. MARTIN, President.
A. F. WILLMARTH, Vice-President.

Metropolitan
'

Sun Mutual Insurance

48

WASHBURN, Secretary.

J. H.

OF

LONDON

CAPITAL AND ASSETS

insurance.

fihe and inland

Mercantile Insurance Co

$2,300,000

3,430,120 73

1, 1867

Asetn, Jan.

AND

C3T"New and important plans of Life Insurance have
been adopted by this Company. See new Prospectus.
Profits available after policies have run one year,
and annually thereafter.
JOHN EADIE, President.
Nicholas Be Groot, Secretary.

77777... $2,000,000 00

Capital

Ity 01 New York.

NO. 40 WALL STREET.

BROADWAY.

135

North British

COMPANY,

INSURANCE

ASSETS

Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany.
United States Branch, No. 117 Broadway, N!Y.
GEORGE ADLAIvD, Manager.

*

LIFE

£2,000,000 Stg.
1,81*3,220
$1,432,340

Special Fund of $200,000

States

United

AND

Surplus

Insurance.
THE

Queen Fire Insurance
Co
LONDON.
OF LI VERPOOL

[November 9, 1867,

CASH CAPITAL:

SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st,

STREF/T.

ALEXANDER, Affent.

The Corn

OF NEW

Insures

BROADWAY.

R. F. MASON, President.
J. S. ROBERTS, Vice-Pres

George A. Dresser,

North

Secretary.

INSURANCE.

FIRE

American

Insurance

27S.000

JONATHAN D. STEELE, President

104

Jan. 1, ’67.~$501,207 54

Ca*k Assets,

A........ $1,000,000

Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Char
tered 1850. Cash dividends paid in 15years,253 per cent.

COMPANY
YORK,

against Loss by Fire and the Danger of Inland
NavigationNO.

STREET.

1867

Exchange

INSURANCE

OFFICE

114

Fire

Co.,

BROADWAY,

BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE,
AVENUE.

THIRD

Notman, Secretary.

Germania Fire Ins.
No. 175

CASH

INCORPORATED 1823.

Co.,

Hope

Surplus

BROADWAY, N. 1

SURPLUS, July 1st, 18t>7

.“15,074 73

$815,074 73

RUDOLPH GARRIGI E, President.
JOHN E. KAHL, Vico -'resident.
Hugo Schumann,

terms as

Hanover Fire Insurance
No. 45 WALL STREET.
July 1st,

187,205 93

Gross Assets

Total Liabilities

i


[i


1867.

$400,000 00

capital
Surplus

BENJ. S.

$587,205 93
33,480 09
WALCOTT, President,

Semsbn Lani:, Secretary.

-

------

$150,000

1, 1867 - - - - 222,433

insures against Loss or Damage by Fire
favorable as any other responsible Com¬

'

w

-

Insures Property against Loss or
the usual rates.
Policies issued and Losses paid

Company, or at
cities

Stepli. Camhreleng,
Joseph Foulke, • Cyrus H. Loutrel,
Jacob Reese,
Lebbeus B. Ward.

Lydig Suydam,.
Joseph Britton,
Fred. Scliuchardt,
D.

Joseph Grafton,
Amos Robbins,

Thos. P. Cummings,
Jno. W. Mersereau,
David L. Eigenbrodt,
William Remsen,

Stephen Hyatt,
JACOB

Jambs E.. Moobb, Secretary.

REESE, President.

.

at the office of tn®

its various Agencies in the

in*the United States.

principal
t.

Secretary.
Griswold, General Agent.

F. H. Carter,

J

Standard

Henry S. Lcverich.
Robert Schell,
William H. Terry,

Damage by Fire at

JAMES W. OTIS, President.
R. W. BLEECKEK, Vice Pres

Board of Directors:
Henry M. Taber,
Theodore W. Iiiley,

COMPANY,

1867, $755,057 77.

This Company
pany.

Cash

Capital

Assets, June

on

Secretary.

Cask

OFFICE, No. 92 BROADWAY.

Casli

TOTAL ASSETS

Company,

Fire Insurance

$5 00,000 00

CAPITAL,

$500,000 00
255 057 77
Capital and Surplus, January 1,

Cask Capital

Fire Insurance Company.
Cask Capital
Net

Surplus Oct, 1, ’67 over

...$200,000
... 100,000
$300,000

r

-

/

j

CURRENT.

PRICES

the duties noted
below, a discriminating duty of 10 per
cent, ad val. is levied on all imports
under flags that have no reciprocal
pg* In addition to

treaties with

the United States.

goods, wares, and mer¬
growth or produce of
of the Cape of Good

pg* On all

chandise, of the
Countries East
Hope,

imported from places this

when

of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty
of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in
dition to the duties imposed on any such
articles when imported directly from the
place or places of their
or
tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted.
The tor in all cases to bo 2,240 ft.
side

ad¬

produc¬

growth

Anchor*—Duty: 2* cent? $ ft.
012001b and upward $ ft
8,®
Aslies—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort.. $ 100 ft 10 25 @10 87
Pearl 1st sort..,
li 00 @12 50

Beeswax—Duty,20 $ cent ad val.
American yellow.# ft
4-@ 41*
Bone*—Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct.
Kio Grande shin $ ton48 00 @!....
Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
Pilot
$ ft .. © < 7i
Navy
C*
©
Crackers
8* @ 13*
Breadstuff*—See special report.
Brick*.
Common
Croton

hard, .per M.10 50

@11 50

18 i 0 @22 00
Philadelphia Fronts...40 00 @43 0j

hogs hair
1 $ ft.
Amer’n,gray &wh. $lb 50 @ 1 76
Batter and Cheese.—Duty: 4
Bristles—Duty, 15 cents;

cents.

Butter-

Fresh

pnil, $ lb

. ^.

Sta e,...
Good o fire State, ....
C tnitmm St >t*,

Fine to i-xtra

Wo tern Baiter,
Grease bu ter, ark.
Cheese—

$ ft

Factory Dairies
do Common
Farm Dairies
do Common

50

40

..

Ht-fiikintubs $ lb....
Welsh, tuba $ lb

86 @
34 @
36 ©
18 @
20 ©
18
..

42
4 •
42

88
30
37

@

I*>

16*

14

16

©
12 ©

14

•Acid, Citric
Alcohol, in bond
Aloes, Cape
$ ft
Aloes, Socotrine
Alum

Annato, good to prime.
Antimony, Regulus of
Argols, Crude
Argols, Refined
Assafcetida
Balsam Copivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru
Bark Petayo

3

Brimstone,

Liverpool Oriel. $ ton
of2,240 ft
Llverp’l House Cannel
Anthracite
Cardiff steam

*,

Liverpo 1 Gas Cannel

Newcastle G:.s

....

Carraway Seed
Coriander Seed

9 50 @10 7,0

Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents <g ft.
Caracas (in

bond)(gold)

$ ft
Maracaibo do

..(gold)

Guayaquil do ...(gold)
St Domiugo.. ..(gold)
Coffee.— See

17 ©

©
11*©
9 ©

19
,

.

9*

special report.

$ ft

Sheathing, yellow
Bolts
Braziers’
Baltimore
Detroit

©
26 ©
..

=.

85
22
28;

Portage Lake

22

@
©
©
@
©

33
35

$ ft

23*©
@

24^
18*

@

©

22

Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val.
Regular, quarts$ gross 65 @ 70
Mineral
60@
70
Phial

12

@

40

Cotton—See special report.

***ogg and Dyes—Duty, Alcohol,
60 per

gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft;
Alum,60 cents $ 100 ft; Argols, 6
rente $
ft; Arsenic and Aseafcedati,
w; Antimony, Crude and Regnlne.
10; Arrowroot, 80 $ cent ad val
Balsam Copalvi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30;
Pern, 60 cents $ ft; Calieaya
*




4*

00
70
78
40
85
86

India

.

@
@
@
@
©

65 @

GumTragacanth,Sorts
Gum Tragacanth, w.
flakey
(gold)

i

60 @ 1 00

(gold) 3 60 © 8 75
Iodine, Resnblimed... 6 50 @
85 ©
91
Ipecacuanha, Brazil...
85 ©
X
Ih1 ap, in bond gold..
Eng

25

Solid

.

Licorice Paste, Greek.

Madder,Dutch..(gold)
do, French, EXF.F.do
Manna,large flake.... 1
Manna, small flake....
Mustard Seed, Cal....

Mustard Seed, Trieste.

Nutgalls Blue Aleppo

»

Oil

6 50

Bergamot

1 76
.

12

4 00

tirmer
t,o

New List

Discount 2C@25 $ cent.

to8U0.$50 feet 6 25 © 4 26

List lo

i is
List '-5% dis
List 35 % dis

Hat 25 % dis
Lis' 65 % dia

oo

List 40 $adtr

meets.

do

insets..

handled,
Lit 40 £adv

Augur Bitts
List 2U& 10 % dia
Phort Augurs,per dz.NewList 30 £ dis
do
Ring
List 8() % dis

j

CutTacks
Cut Brads..

List 75

dis

Liettio^dia

Rivet-, Iron

List t5&40 % dis

Screws American.. .List

87

i dis

do

English
List 4(!@45 % dis
Shovels and Spades...
List 5 % dis
HorseShoes
6J@7 $ft
Planes
LLt 3U@35 %udv
Hay—North River, in bales$ 100 lbs
for shipping
7C @
75
Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila
$25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sum
and Sisal, $15 $ ton; and Tampico,
1 cent $ ft.
Amer.Dressed.$ ton 850 00@360 0Q
do

Undressed.. 230 0o@240 00
@350 < 0
Jute
(g^ld) 110 00@122 50
Manila..$ ft..(gold)
12 ©
12*
Sisal
15©
15$

Russia, Clean

Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬
ed and Skins 10 $ centad val.
Dry Hides—
Ruenos Ayres$'ftg’d
21
20©
Montevideo
do
20 ©
20*
Rio Grande
Orinoco

do
do

20 @

20*
19

Porto Cabello ..do
YeraCruz
do

@
i0 ©
@
16 @

17*@

do

17*@

20 @

15
18
23

15*@

16

.......

California

gold
California, Mex. do

i

Tampico

...

...

Texas

cur

..

17

Dry Salted Hides—

(gold)

th li
California...

...

Tampico

.do

do

South & West, do
Wet Salted Hides—
Bue Ayres.$ftg’d.
Rio Grande
do
California
do
Western

Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th

(8»ngleThlck)

List 12j £ dis

ft 20 @ 24
Framing Chisels.NewListjr* -r.ti jgdia

all over that, 3 cents

Subject to a discount of 3"@40 $ cent.
6x 8 to 8x10. .$ 50 ft 6 -5 @ 4 75
8x11 tolOxlS
6 75 @ 5 00
7 50 © 5 50
11x14 to 12x18
18x16 to 16x24
8 50 © 6 00
18x22 to 20x30
1<> 00 @ 7 00
20x30to 24x30
12 50 @ 8 00
24x31 to 24x36
14 00 © 9 00
25x36 to 26x40
16 Oft @10 00
28x40 to 30x18
18 00 @14 00
24x54 to 82 *56
20 50 @16 00
82x5S to 84x60
24 00 @19 00
34X62 to 40x6
.25 00 @ 1 00
Frer.ch Window—lat, 2d, 3d, and 4th
#x o

vv

“
Tiunk
St'-cks and Dies
3crew Wrenches—Coe’s
Paten*
do
l aft’s
Smiths’ Vis -s
...$

Common Window, not exceeding lOx
15 inches square, 1*; over that, and
not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not

un»lit!es.
Of Sept. 25

vv

« **

Locks—Cabinet, Eagle

..

.

.

40
85 ©
50 Gh 5 25

4
8 75

^

8*
7*

©

14 ©

Oil Anis
Oil Cassia..
.

25

40

Hinges,Wrought,

unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and

24x30 ,2*;

vmw,

~

Door Bt Its, Cast Bbl L’St 25@30 % dia
Carriage and Tire do
List 55 % dW
Door L-C'S and Latches List 7* <p dis
Door Knobs—Mineral, list 7* % dis
“
Pore lain
List 7* % dis
Padlocks
N>w List 25&7* % dis

qualities.

23

S4 ©
30 @
8 ©

7
70 ©
95 ©

oo

80 ©

American

55

©
31 ©
24 ©

Licorice, Paste, Sicily.
Lioorice Paste Spanish

5

Skuik, Biack

$ lb.

© 9 00
© 7 50

.

60

Raccoon

over

Hyd. Potash, Fr. and

Lae Dye
Licorice Paste,Calabria

—

50
60

©
© 8 00
10 © 18
60
10 @

on

28

@
85 @
..

8 00
6 17

ndi ary
12 'ft @
Coffee Mil s
List 2 @25 % dis,
do Sri
Hopper
©
do Wood Bacs
© ...
Cotton Gins, per saw... $5©:i less 20 *
Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 $ dis
Cast Butts—Fast Joint. List 10 $aiv
Loose Joint..
List.

20

t>lass—Duty, Cylinder or Window
Polished Plate uot over 10x15 inches,
2* cents $ square foot; larger and
not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $
square foot; larger and not over 24
x39 inches 6 cents $ square foot;
above that, and not exceeding 24x60
inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all
above that, 40 cents $ square foot;

48

25

do

3 00 @ 6 Oo
..

13
27

©
©

.

1

Opossum

4*<j>

60
84
23
88.

.

Otter

60

ordinary..

do

.

50 ©
75
00 @20 00
00 © 3 00

5

Mink, dark
Musk rat,.

17

1 75'@
Ginseng, South&West.
65 @
Gum Arabic, Picked..
60 @
Gum Arabic, Sorts...
88 @
Gum Benzoin
Gum Kowrie
Gum Gedda
Gum Damar
Gum Myrrh,East

40 @

pale

do

24
21

17

Shingling Hatchets, O’t
Steel, best br'ds, Nos.

75 @ 1 X

Marten, Dark

88

Gamboge

Gum,Myrrh, Turkey:
Senegal
(geld)

$ ft.

Manila,

80 @

Gum

Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; unu.rred
Manila, 2* other untarred, 3* cents
Tarred Russia
Tarred American
’Bolt Rope, Russia.

17 @

Flowers,Benzoin.$ oz.
Gambier
gold

do

4 00 © 8 00
5 X @50 00
3 00 © 6 00

Lynx

10*@

Se d

.

do Cross
do Red
dc Grey.

lj

©

Epsom Salts
Extract Logwood
Fennell

Copper—Duty, pig/bar, and ingot,
2*; old copper 2 cents $ lb; manu¬
factured, 35 $ oent ad val.; sheathing
copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42
inches long and 14 Inches wide,
weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square foot,
3 cents $1 ft. Sheathing, new..

Cutch

10 ©

Fisher,
Fox, Silver

95 @ ! 00
9-' @

88*@
83 @
16 @

80 @
40 @

86
12

14 @
12 @

Carpe * ter’s A dzes,....

—

do House

n*

11 @

Axes—Cast steel, best
brand
perd«a
do
ordinary

©

Badger

1 06

Hardware-

16 00 ©

Cat, Wild

15

1*@

Hog, Western, unwash.

10
80

©

-• a.

.

Duoy,10 $ cent.
Beaver,Dark..$ skin 1 X @ 8 00
do
Pale...
50 © 2 00
5 00 @i2 00
Bear, Black
do
2 00 @ 8 U6
brown

ffurs

@ 3 25
2 li @ 2 17*
15 @
60
< 1*@
b2
8*@
8*
19 @
20

Cochineal Hon (gold)
Cochineal.Mexic’n(g’d)
Copperas, American ..
Cream Tartar, pr.(gold
Cubebs, East India....

.

Fruits—See special report.

28*

14 @

..

75 ©

00
50

©
©

....

Mackerel,No. 1, Bay..16 X @16 50
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..il 25 @12 25
Mackerel, No. 2, Ha ax
@
Mac’el,No.3,Mass. l’gelO 00 @10 25
Mackerel, No. 8, H’fax .... © ...
Mackerel, No. 3, Mass
© ....
Salmon, Pickled, No.1.37 00 ©
Sa mon, i i kled. p. tq
@
Herring, Scaled$ box.
40 @ 45
Herring, No. 1
20 @
25
Herring,pickled$bbl. 5 bU @ 7 oj
Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton.
'-5*© 2i*
Jersey
$ ft

f*

$^ft and 20 $ centad va.

Rifle
6 50 ©
Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬
ters $ ft
86 ©
Hair—Duty ruxi!.
87 ©
RioGrande,mixed$ ft
Buenos Ayres,mixed
S5 ©

Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,
$1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50
$ bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬
ed, or Dried, in smaller pkgs.than bar¬
rels, 50 cents $ HiO ft.
Dry Cod
$ cwt. 4 50 © 6 25
Pickled Scale...$ bbl
©
Pickled God.... $ bbl. 6 50 ©
Mackerel, No. 1, Mass

22 @

@15 10

6 50 @ 7 0»
@ ....

ft, 10 cents

Blasting(A) $ 25ft keg
Shipping and Mining..

10

©122 5U

Western...$ ft

@21 00

$ ft, 6 cents $ ft, ami
$ cent ad val.; over 20 cents $

20

50

9j©

00
00
00
00
@18 CO

cents or less

50*

(gold) .... ©
Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val.

1 70 @ 1 75

Castor Oil Cases $ gal
Chamomile K ow’sf 1b
Chlorate Potash (gold)
Caustic Soda

....

5<> ©
»1 ©
47»©

Lima wood
Barwood

Ammonia,

Cardamoms, Malabar

...

ogwood, Hon (gold) J9 00 @
Logwood,Laguna(g.dd) ... @ ....
Logwood, St. D >mln..21 00 @23 00
Logwood, Cam .(gold).
©
Logwood,Jamaica uo 15 0 1 @15 E0

(in

@ ....
@2) 01

2f
....

l

Sul¬

.

.(g’ld)$ft

shore

Cement—Rosendalo$bl..,.@ 1 75
Chains—Duty, 2* cents $ ft.

@
97*@

2*©

(80$c.)(g’ld)

Mackerel,No.l,Halifax

36

,.@

25
<3

84 ©

00
00

(Wiiiiny Dags—Duty, valued at U
cents or less/$ square yard, 3; ove(
10, 4 cents $ ft
Calcutta, light &h’y %
19*@
20
Gunny Cloth—Duty,valued at 1C
cents or less $ square yard, 3; ovei
10,4 cents $ ft.
Calcutta, standard, y’d
20*@
21
Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 2f

40

Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val
Raven3, Light. .$ pee 16 00 ©
Ravens, Heavy
18 Uu ©
Scotch, G’ck, No. 1 $y
©
72
Cotton, No. 1
56 ©
$ y.
Dye Woods-Duty free.
Camwood..(gold)$ t n
©‘ ....
Fustic, Cuba
“
40 00 ©
Fustic,Savanilla"
© 82 00
Fustic,Maracaibo,gold;2 00 © ...

$
ton
(gold).39 00 @40 00
Brimstone, Ain. Roll
@
3]
$ lb

Carbonate
in bulk.

28

Verdigris, dryex dry
Vitriol Blue

Crude

Cantharides

25 ©
20©

00
50
00

Drocerie*—See special report.

....

5 @
85 @

Coal—Duty, bltuminons, $1 25 $ ton
of 28 bushels SO ft to the bushel;
other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28
bushels of80 ft $ bushel.

Senna, Alexandria....

Tapioca

80©

bond)
(gold)
Camphor, Refined.

>7 ©

..

.

Bleaching Powder
Borax, Refined

phur
Camphor, Crude,

Seneca Root.

26
14

..

@ 6
@ 5
© 6
© 7
© 8
© 9
@10
@14
@16

English sells at 15 $ ct. off above rates.

2*

©
©

Tart’c Acid.

33

4?

lor

2@

Sugar L’d, W’e(goid)..
28©
Sulp Quinine, Am$ oz 2 2) ©
Sulphate Morphine
6 75 @

20

191

i

9*©

Sal Soda.Newcastle"

Shell Lac
Soda Ash

3*

40

87
8>

20 @

SalAm’nac, Ref (gold)

Senna, Eastlndia

5j

2j@

95

2 25 @ 2 50
6*©
7

Sarsaparilla, Bond “
Sarsaparilla,Mex
"

85

25 @

....

@

Salaratus

j

....

85©

.

Rhubarb,China
Sago, Pe*.led...

Tennessee.,

4J@

8 @

Quicksilver

65

19 @

i.

@

88

castle
gold
Bi Chromate Potash...

Brimston

Phosphorus
Prusslate Potash

90 @
1 40 @
50
@ 3 75
60 vj

..

*6 ©

@

Candles—Duty, tallow, 2*; sperma
ceti and wax o; c, earine and ada
ruantine, 5 cents $ ft.
Sperm, patent,. . .$ ft
55 © 60
Refined sperm, city
@
45
Stearic
30 @
81
Adamantine
20 ©
24

upward $ ft

Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 65 @

OxallcAcid

60 @
20 @
75 @
3f@
75 @
@
18 @
82 @

Arsenic, Powdered....

8x11 to 10x15
6 75
7 50
11x14 to 12x13
13x18 to 16x24
8 50
18x 2 to 18x80
10 Oft
12 50
20x30 to 24x3<>
24x31 to 24x36.
14 00
25x36 to26x40
16 00
28x40 to 30x48.(3 qlts).18 00
54x54 lo 82x56.(3 q ts).20 50
32x58 to 34x60.(3 qlts).24 00
34x62 to 40x60.(3 qits).25 00

Oil Lemon
3 87 © 4 12*
Oil Peppermint,pure. 5 75 @ ....

Prime

Berries, Persian, gold.
Bi Carb. Soda, New¬

One inch &

'

Bark, 80 $ cent ad val.; Bl Carb. Soda,
i*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ ft;
Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100ft ;
Refined Borax, 10 cents $ ft ; Crude
Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10
$ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and
15 $ cent ad vUl.; Crude Camphor,
30; Refined Camphor, 40cents $ lb.;
Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Cardamoms and Cantharides, 60 cents
$ ft; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon ; Chlo¬
rate
Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, 4;
Citric Acid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream
Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft;
Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
$ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent
$ ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers
Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.;
Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent
ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, lu cents per ft;
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 $
cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resublimed Iodine, 15; Ipecac and Jalap
50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange
50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga
mot, $1 $ lb; Oil Peppermint, 50
$ cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic
Acid, 4 cents $ 2); Phosphorus, 20
$ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents
$ ft: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad
val; Sal JSratus, 1* cents $ 1b ; Sal
Soda, * cent $ lb ; Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 20 $ cent ad val; Shell Lac,
10; Soda Ash, * ; Sugar Lead, 20,cents
$ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
$ lb; Sal Ammoniac, 2u; Blue Vit¬
riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; E4herial Pre¬
parations and Extracts, $1 $ lb; all
others quoted below, FRicr.

13

21 ©

605

THE CHRONICLE

November 9,1867.]

....

Coutry sl’ter trim. <k
,

cured.

,

City
do
do
Upper Leather Stock—

..

©

@

11 ©

12

11 @

11*
11*

11*©
11 @

1 i

@

12*@

1**@

18
IS

B.A. <fc Rio Gr.

Kip
$ It gold

p ©

Sierra Leone.... cash

36 ©

Gambia & Bissau do

27 @

St

Honey—Duty,2 cent $ gallon.

bona) (gr1
$ gall. 60 ©
Hops-Duty: 5 cents $ ft.
40 ©
Crop of 1867 ...... $ *
Cuba (ia

do of 1866

Foreign

60 ©

—

©

62$
70
TO
—

,

606

THE CHRONICLE,

Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val.
Ox, Rio Grande... $ C 9 CO©
Ox, AmerioanA

do

7

do

00© 8 00
India Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent,
$ ft

East India

do

(gold)
(gold)
(gold)
(gold)

75
65
65
95

© 1
©
@ 1
Guatemala
@ 1
Caracoas
(gold)
75 @ i
Iron—Duty,Bars, 1 to 11 cents $

Stoee Prices—,

Bar Swedes, assorted
sizes

©155 00

Yellow metal
Zinc

79 00© 82 50

American

Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime $ft
East Ind, Billiard Ball

2 87© 3 00
3 00© 8 25
African, Prime
2 87© 3 00
African, S«rivel.,W.C. 1 60© 2 50
Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 lb; Old
Lead, 1} cents $ ft; Pipe and Sheet,
21 cents $ lb.
Galena
$ 100 lb
© 9 50
Spanish
(gold) 6 50 © 6 55
Gerinah
(gol i) 6 50 © 6 55
English
(gold) 6 50 © 6 8'J
net
Bar
©10 50
Pipe and Shoot.. ..net
@12 (X)
Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper 30
..

..

..

$ cent ad val.
•cash. $ ft.—,
83 ©
42
Oak, Slaughter, light
middle
do
do
38 ©
46
do
do
46
40 ©
heavy.
do light Cropped....
42 ©
43
do middle do
43 ©
45
do bellies
©
29
Hemi’k, B. A.,&c.,l’t.
274©
do middle.
do
23 ©
30
do heavy .
do
29 @
82
do
27 @
28
Califor., light.
do middle.
do
29
23 @
do
do
SO
heavy. 28 ©
do
Orino., etc. l’t
274
264©
do
middle
do
27 @
28
do
26
do
28
heavy.
©
do & B. A,
do
24 @
dam’gdall w’g’s
264
do poor
do
20 ©
23
do
37 ©
89
do
Slaugh.inrough
42 ©
45
Oak, Slaugh.in rou., rt
do mid.
do
do
©
41
40 ©
and heavy
.

....

.

..

..

.

,

.

.line--Duty: 10 $ centad val.

$ bbl.

..

do

© 1 50
© 1 85

heavy
Lumber; Woods, Staves,etc.
—Duty: Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood
..

and Cedar, keek.

Spruee, East. $ M ft 17 00 © 20 00
Southern Pine
85 00 © 40 00
White Pine Box B’da 21 00 © 39 CO
White Pine Merch.
Box Boards
29 00 @ 80 00
Clear Pine
00 00 © 70 00
Laths, Eastern. $ M 3 25 ©
....

While

wood B’ds <fc Pl’k. 55 00 @ 60 00

Cherry B’ds & Plank 75 00 @ 80 00
Oak and Ash

55 00 @ 60 00

Maple and Birch

...

Black Walnut

85 00 @ 40 00

90 00 ©100 00

BTAVESWhite
exti a.
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

oak,

pipe,
$ M.

.

@275 00
©225 00

pipe, heavy
pipo, light.
©175 00
00 @170 00
pipe, culls. 110
1
hhd.,extra.
@235 00
hhd., heavy
@175 00
©lit' 00
hhd., light.
@100 0 0
hhd., culls.
do
@150 00
bbl., extra.
do
@115 00
bbl., heavy.
do
© 90 00
bbl., light..
do
© 60 00
bbl.,cull8..
Bed oak, hhd., h’?y.
@120 00
do
© 80 00
nhd., light. ►
.

.

.

,

,

,

,

.

,

.

HEADING—White

@140 00

laltograny, Cedar, Rose¬
wood—Duty free.
lUhogtnv St. Domin¬
go erotohao $ ft,.
*5 0 50 *




4

50
8
6

24;
75
25
82

cents

$ ft.

cents $

bulk, 18 cents $ 100 ft.
Turks Islands $ bush.

48 ©

50

1 95 ©
fine, Ashton’s(g’d) 2 60 ©
do fine, .Vorthinct’s 2_85 ©

66

Cadiz

Liverpool,gr’nd$
sack
do
do
do
Solar

do
do

210 ft

bgs.

$ ft

Nitrate soda

@
94-©
Si©

gold

bbl 2 75 @-3
8 75 @ 4
Rosin, common
3 50 ©
do strainedandNo.2.. .3 02 © 3
do
No. 1
4 12 © 4
do
Pale and Extra

75
75

5 00 © 9 00
56
55©

g.

do

60 ft ; and
ad val.
,

Clover..'

$ft

12©

Timothy,reaped $ bus 2
CaD&ry

12}

@

do Am. rough
do Calcutta

$ ton.58 CO @59 00
bags. 52 75©
obl’g, do 51 0d@52 50
Oils - Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and
rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad
oil, in bottles or flasks, $1: burning
fluid, 50 oents $ gallon; palm, seal,
and cocoa nut, 10 $ 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.$ gall.. 1 65
@ 1 75
Palm
$ lb
31 j©
Linseed,city...$ gall. 1 05 @ 1
...

Whale
do refined winter.

7.)

Sperm,crude
do

do

unbleach

Lard oil
Red oil,
Bank
Straits

city distilled

Paraffine, 28
Kerosene

60 @

.

021

" 70 ©
75 @

80 gr..

85©

..(free).

50 ©

—

...;

©

86 ©
87
2 20 © 2 25
@ 2 40
1 SO © 1 35
....

40
..

Paints—Duty: on white lead, red
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in

oil, 3 cents $ lb; Paris white and
whiting, 1 cent $ ft; dry ochres, 56
cents $100 lb: oxidosofzlno,
1} cents
$ ft ; ochre, ground in oil, | 50 $100
ft; Spanish brown 25 $ ceLt ad val:
China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red
and vermilion 25 $ cent ad
val.;
white chalk, $10 $ ton.
Litharge,City... .$ft
©
114
Lead, red, City
© '114
do white, American,
14
pure, in oil
©
..

,

..

.

do

white, American,

124©

••

....

$ bus 2 40 @ 2 50
.gold 2 05 @ 2 10
Sliot—Duty: 2| cents $ 1b.
Drop
$ 1b
H*@

9i@
8

12

©

....

@

....

Whiting, Araer..

2©
24
Vermilion,Chinoso$ ft 1 35 © 1 40
do
do
do

1 0 5 @ 1 15
Trieste
Cal. & Eng.. 1 30 © 1 40
American....
-’5 @
35
Venet.red(N.C.)$cwt 3 00 @ 3 25
Carmine,citymado$ftl6 00 @20 00
China clay
$ ton32 CO @34 00
Chalk
$ lb.
if©
...

Chalk, block....$ ton?2 5. ©23 03
Chromeyellow...$ lb
15 ©
85
Barytes,
39 00 @42 75
.

Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents;
refined, 40 mnts $ gallon.

Crude,40@47grav.$gal.
Refined, free

@
49©
do
in bond
28©
30 @
Naptha, refined
Residuum
$ bbl. 8 25 ©

19}

..

29J
31
....

Paris—Duty: lump,free;

oalcined, 20 $ cent ad val.
Blue Nova Scotia$ ton 8 874© 4 00
White Nova Scotia

Calcined, eastern $ bbl
Calcined city mills..

.

....
..

.

@ 4 23
© 2 40
@ 2 50

Provisions—Duty: beef and pork,
1 ct;

aams,

bacon, andlard,2 ts $ B).

Beef,plainmesa$bbl.. 15 00 ©19

00

do extra meM..^*«19 00 @22 00

00 ©31 00

65©
©

y oO

to

...

18,uncovered

Telegraph, No. 7 tc tl
Plain
.....$ ft
Brass (less 20 per cent)

84©
47©

91

Copper
do
1
57 ©
”
Wool—Duty: Imported in the “or¬
.

Silk—Duty: free.
35

All thrown silk.

$ cent.

dinary condition

Tsatlees, No.l@3.$fti0 50 @11 00
Taysaams,, superior,
No. 1 ©
do

fore

10 00 ©10 25

Canton,re-reel.Nol@2.

8 CO © 8
11 25 ©i2
9 50 @10
..10 5J @16

Japan, superior
do

Medium

China thrown

60
5U
00
CO

VeraCruz .gold

Tampico. ..gold

Matamoras.gold

Payta

gold

Madras ....each

Capo.......

Deer,SanJuan$ftgohl
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

Bolivar

^..gold

Honduras..gold

Sisal
Para
Vera Cruz

gold
gold
.gold
Ohagres ...gold
Puerto Cab.gold

40 ©
45©
37* @
81 @
@
40 @
4 1©
80©
@
474©
@
45 @
45 @
©

10

cents

47*
^2j
82

Class

‘24

6 cents $ ft.
Wool of all classes
imported scoured, three times the
duty as if imported unwashed.

50

Amer., Sax. fieece $ 1b
do
full bl’d Merino.
do 4 and} Merino..
Extra, pulled

50

47}
40

cent

$ ft.

17©

174

do

domestic

common...,

Peruvian, unwashed

64©

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued
$ ft

do

7 cents and not above 11,
$ 1b; over 11 cents, 34 cents
and 10 $ cent ad val. (Store

English, cast, $ 1b
German

.

.

.’

American,spring

Amero

n

cast

English,spring

English Lister
English machinery....

18 @
It @

12 ©
21 @
10 ©

114©
18{@

23
16
15
23

l-'4
20

do

Cotton

,

s.

©
}
Flour
@30
Petroleum
© fi 6
Heavy goods.. .$ ton
@30 0
Oil
80 @40 0
Corn,b’k&bags$bu8. '
8
©
Wheat,bulk and bags
@
8
Beef
$ tee.
@53
Pork
$ bbl.
@4 0
..

..

..

12

..

:

Heavy goods. ..$ ton 31 3 @32 6
Oil.....
40 0 ©40 0
Flour....
$ bbl.
@3 3
Petroleum
@5 0
Beef
..»..$ tee.
..@60
Pork.......... $ bbl.
@40
..

..

2t’4@

..

Wheat
Corn

.©
©

11

(By Steam) :
$ bbl.
@46
@
$ bush.
..
15
@
Corn,hulk and bags..
ly
Petroleum (sail)$Dbl.
..@56
Flour
Wheat

00
00

Heavy goods.. $ ton.

..

OH

Beef..*..*.*.*.*.*.••$to*.

Liquors—Liquors

—Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per
gallon, other liquorB, $2.50. Wines—
Duty: value net over 50 cents $ gal¬
lon 20 cents $ 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¬
lon and 20 $ cent ad v*L •
I

$ bush.

To Glasgow

50
00

Tobacco.—See speoial report.
Wine* and

d.

..

..

Tin— Duty: pig, bars, and
block,15 $
cent ad val.
Plate and sheets and
terne plates, 25 per cent, ad val.

do
do
do

b.

$ ft
$ bbl.

To London

254©
23 ©
75 @13
I. C. Coke
10 62 @12
Terne Charcoall2 75 @13
Terne Coke.... 9 75 @10

....

washed

ToLivbbpool:

16

Tea*.—See special report.

$ ft (gold)
(gold)
English
(gold)
Plates,char. I.C.$ boxl2

..

©
@ 37
© 18
© 40
© 19
© 80
© 45

Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 $
100 fts.; sheets 2} cents
$ 1b.
Sheet...
$ ft
11}© 11}
preights-

Tallow—Duty :1 cent $ ft.

Banca
Straits

...

80
83
..

washed

Smyrna,unwashed

Sugar.—See special report.

114©

20
29

34
14
80
17
26
85

Mexican,unwashed....

Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Sicily
$ ton.. 125 00 @220 00

American,prime, coun¬
try and city $ ft...

16 @
15 ©

28©
©

African, unwashed

under, 24 cents;
3 cts
$ ft
prices.)

or

50

2S ©

.

S. Amer. Mestiza,unw..
do
common, w
Entre Rios, washed
S. American Cordova

6}
104

Spice*.—See special report.

over

60
45

45 ©
87 ©

©

Valparaiso, unwashed..
10 ©

GO

©

40©

Texas

Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and
plates, $1 50 $ 100 fts.
Plates,foreign $ ft gold

65 ©
45

Superfine
40
No. 1, pulled
27© 82
California, unwashed... ’ 24© 23
do

Soap-'Duty: 1 cent $ ft, oml25 $
ad val.
Castile

$ ft, 12
$ ft and 10 $ cent, ad val
3.—Carpet Wools and othei■

similar Wools—The value whereof
at
the last place whence exported to
the
United States is 12 cents or less
$
ft, 3 cents $ ft ; over 12 cents $ ft,

..

.

32 cents $ ft, 12 cents
$ ft and
$ cent, ad val ; when imported

washed, double these rates Class
2.— Combing Wools-The value
where¬
of at the last place whence
exported
to the United States is 32 cents
or
less $ ft, 10 cents $ ft and
11 $
cent, ad val.; over 32 cents

..

..

hereto

over

Skill*—Duty: 10 $ centad va!.
6oat,Curacoa$ ft cur.
42} ©
45
do Buenos
A...gold 80 @
34
do
do
do
do
do
do

as now and

practiced.”

Class 1
Wools—The value whereof—Clothing
at the last
place whence exported to the United
States is 32 cents or less
$ lb, 10
cents $ ft and 11
$ cent, ad val.*

medium,No3©4. 9 0'J @ 9 ?0

at 7 oents

10

oil
14
134©
Ochre.yellow, French,
$ 100 lb 2 25 @ 3 CO
dry
do
gr’.iln oil.$ ft
1)
8©
Spanish brown, dry $
100 lb
1 CO © 1 25
do
gr’dinoil.$ lb
8 ©
9

Plaster

2

....

..

dry
Zinc, white, American,
dry, No. 1
do white, American,
No. 1,in oil
do wrhito, French, In
puie,

Pariswhi,No.I$l00ft

do

do

$2 to

Buck

In

incases,

$3 5i $ 100 ft, and 15 $ cent ad
val.
No. 0 to 18..^ .174@224$ ct off
list
No. 19 to 26....
3‘J $ ct, off list
No. 27 to 86....
35 $ ct off list

..

City thin obl’g, iii bbls.

to

9(© 1 15
do 85 00© (JO 00-

Wire—Duty: No. 0

50 @ 2 75

90© 1

do

Champagne....

$ bus 5 5j © 5 75

Linseed,Am.clean$tce

8
3

do

.

4 cent $ ft ; canary, SI $ bushel of
grass seeds, 30 $ cent

75
25

Oakum—Duty fr.,$ ft - 8© 11
Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ centad val.
do
West, thin

Malaga,sweet
do
dry
Claret, in hhds.

r

Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp,

Turpent’e, soft. $289Tb 4 75 @ 5 00

75©
5(@ 450
50©
00© 4 75

,

15
9}

..

4
3

©
©
n bend)—
34© ”4.7
Wines—Port
.-(gold) 2 0 © 8 50
Burgundy Port, do
85© 1 30
Sherry
do
1 25© 9 00
Madeira
do
8 50© 7 00
do Marseilles do
70©
85
Sherry do
do
...,©

refined and partially
refined, 3 cents;
nitrate soda, 1 cent
$ ft.
pure

75©
75©
75© [j"
4 75© [[['

Whisky (

.Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 24 cents;
Refined,

4
4
4

—

....

Crude

Or© 10 on
759
....© 475

do
do
St. Croix
do
Gin Differ, brands do
D< m c—N.E.Eum.cur
Bourbon Whisky.cur

..

240 ft bgs

5

4 75©

Romieux....
Rum—Jamaica.,

....

••

....©
90© 10 66
4 90© 9
(q
4

do

P

....

$pkg.

....

ArzacSeignette

90

@
@-@
©
©
© ....

$ bush

do
do
do
do

Other br’ds Cog. do
Pellevolsin
do
A. Seignette
.
do
Hiv. Pellevoisin do
Alex. Seignette. do

...

coarse.

.

L°gerfreres

100 ®>;

.©

..

Jules Robin....
Marrette & Co.
\ineGrow. Co.

....-.$ 100 1b 9 to ©10 50
East India,dressed.... 6 00 © 6 871

do
F. F

18

(gold) 4 90© 9 on
Hennessy
(gold) 4 9(@ i« (ib
Otard, Dup. &Co.do 4 8^@ 13 on
Pinet.Castil.&Co.do 4 75© 17 qa
Benav.lt & Co.. do
5 00© 16
00
J* Vassal & Co., do

..

Carolina

Flnescrecued

©
42 ©

124

paddy 10 oents, and uncleaned 2

Onondaga,com.fine bis.

‘.6©
@
Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of
turpentine 30cents $ gallon; crude
Turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20

.

.

oak, hhd

8

...

(2S0 lbs.)
Spirits turp., Am. $

127 50©
Rods,5-8©3-16inch.. 110 00@165 00
Hoop
137 50©190 00
Nail Rod
$ lb
9 ©
lu*
Sheet, Russia
174©
18}
Sheet, Single, Double
and Treble
6 ©
7}
Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 52 50© 53 00

Poplar and

Salt-—Duty: sack, 24

25
5

Horseshoe, pressed...
Copper

HorseShoe...

com.

20
12
12
12

special report.
Nails—Duty: cut 14; wrought
horse shoe 2 cents $ lb.
Cut, 4d.@60d. $ lOuft 5 6’4© 5
Clinch.....
7 K>}@ 7
Horse shoe, f’d (6d)$ft
28©

Pi ch

Rockland,

11 ©

See

105 00@110 00
do
do Common 95 00@100 f0
do
Scroll
132 50@180 00
Ovals and Half Round 130 00@140 00
Band
©132 50

do

Rice—Duty: cleaned 24 cents $ ft.;

©
©
©
©
©
©

J. & F. Martell

17

14
14
14
15

Shoulders,

Brandy—

J3|

©
©
©
©

S

Bahia

12|@
15©
Ill©

10
lo
10
J1

Tar, Am rici

ican, Refined

ii

do

19 50 @19 75

$lb

40

8

Mansanilla
Mexican
Florida. $ c. ft.

Molasses.

prime,

79 cent ad val.

Bar,English and Amer¬

c.

Mexican

Rosewood, It. Jan. $ lb

0)
lb.
Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 ft; Boiler
and Plate, 1J cents $ 5); Sheet,
Band,
Hoop, and Scroll, 1} to If cents $ ft;
Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3
oents $ lb.
Pig, Sootch,No 1.
$ ton 40 01© 43 00
Pig, American, No. 1.. <42 00© 43 00
Bar, Red’d Kng&Amer 85 0 © 90 0
Bar, Swedes, assorted
sizes (in gold)
92 50@I05 00
<—

..

Honduras
(American wood)..
Cedar, Nue vitas

85
15
1)0
20

Lard,

30©

PorJt-au-Platt,
Mansanilla

do
do
do

10

Hams,....

”, Nuevitas....

do
do
do
do

Carthagena, &c.
Indigo—Duty keek.
Bengal
(<old) $lb 1 05 © 1 70
Oude
Madras
Manila

do

7 @

Port-au-Platt,

logs

75 @
@
©
©
©

Domingo,

crotches..........

ad val.

Para, Fine
Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

St.

ordinary logs

....

[November 9,1867,

pork

.

To Havre :

...

©50 0

@63 0
@8 0

@0 0

$bbl.

$,

>

Cotton
.1
$
Beef and pork.. $ bbl.
..
Measurem. g’d*.$ ton 10 00
Petroleum...,
6,0

_

@

@
©
@6

*
-*
..

«•

0

Lard,tallow,outmt /.

Am»*poVini

* W dW 00

-

tttE CHRONICLE.

186?i](

Kove ber

Commercial Cards.

S. H. Pearce 8c

Commercial

Co.,

Importers of

CHINA SILKS,

HANDKERCHIEFS,

VICTORY MANUF.
MILTON

IMITATION ” has a very superior finish, and

costs but

and Lawn

CHICOPEE MANUF, CO.,

Imitation Oiled Silk.

half as much as real silk, which it equals in

CO.,
MILLS,

HOSIERY and
MEN’S FURNISHING

appearance and durability.
Agents for the sale of the

Wm. C.

patent Reversible Paper Collars.
e

most

economical collar ever invented.

Langley & Co.,

COMMISSION

George Pearce 8c

Co.,

Oscar

COTTON AND WOOLEN

French Dress
Muslin

GOODS.
From Numerous Mills.
17 & 19 WHITE STREET, NEW YORK.

70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK,

Globe

Handk’fls,

John O’Neill 8c Sons,

Woolen

W. W.

Coffin, Treas.

machine Twist

Embroidery,
Organzine, and Tram.
CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK.

Co.,

Real Brussels
Imitation

W. D. Simonton.

Fancy Cassimeres,

Silk
Beavers.

Mixtures

Lindsay, Chittick 8c Co.,
IMPORTERS

AND

COMMISSION

Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN

Good*,
Goods,

Smith,

STREET, NEW YORK.

.

SON,

Wm.

Thompson 8c Co.,

irish

No.

185

J. 8c P. Coats’
SIX-CORD

CABLED

Thread.
A

HUGH

St CHAMBERS

SOLE AGENTS IN NEW YORK.

No. 108 Dnane Street.

Church

HANDK’FS, AC.

Street*

New

C. Holt 8c

York

Co.,

A

59

Broad

Gihon,

Importers A Commission Merchants,
42 & 44 MURRAY STREET.

Street,

Linen

corner

of Reaver

Threads,

SHOE

THREADS,

SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC.

Also Agents for

RARROUR

MACHINE AND SEWING SILK, BUTTON-HOLE

CO

MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS.

MERCHANTS,

COTTON.

Wreights.

Large Stock always

on hand.
THEODORE POLHEMUS A

Agents for the Glasgow-Thread Company’s
SPOOL

Duck,

All Widths and

95 CHAMBERS

TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C.

Brand 8c

STREET, N.T.

Cotton

COMMISSION

AUCHINCLOSS,

CO*8.

18 UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE
SEWING.
TH08. RUSSELL, Sole Agent,

119 CHAMBERS STREET.

JOHN

CLARK, Jr. A
End, Glasgow.

Mile

Linens,

LINEN CAMB’C

BEST

PARASOLS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Importers of

Linen Manufacturers and Bleachers

BELFAST, IRELAND.

JOHN

Linens, Ac., A,
150 & 152 DUANE

KIRK &

Hall,

Spool Cotton.

Irish and Scotch

PLACE, NEW YORK.

WILLIAM

STREET, NEW YORK.

UMBRELLAS AND

White

Agents for

Laces,

And Fancy
Press

33 PARK

Laces,

Manufacturers of

MERCHANTS,
Staple,

British

Goods,

Corsets, Ac.
73 LEONARD

Byrd 8c

PATERSON, N. J.

Anderson 8c

Edgings,

Swiss A French White

MANUFACTURERS OF

Sewing* Silks,

MILLS AT

Draperies,

198 A 200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK.

British and Continental.

84

Goods,

Machine

Emb’s,

Linen

Co.,

Lace Cnrtalns.

Goods,

Laces and

8c
OF

.

Importers of
White

Delisle
IMPORTERS

MERCHANTS

F«R

AMERICAN

GOODS,

Offers a new Stock of the above at
364 BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN STREET.

Nos. 43 A 4 5 WHITE STREET.

„

Napier

.

BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO.,

Silk,

D.

(late of Becar, Napier & Co.)
Agent for S. Conrtauld A Co.’s
ENGLISH CRAPES,
4
And importer of
Linen Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red

WASHINGTON MILLS,

SILK AND COTTON HANDKERCHIEFS,

Our “

Commercial Cards.

AGENTS FOE

and Manufacturers of

Oiled

Cards.

E. R. Mudge, Sawy er&Co. Alexander

No. 353 BROADWAY,

EUROPEAN AND

607

BROTHERS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

Mills at Patterson

Offer to Jobbers only.

N. J.

Bankers.

John Graham,
Manufacturer of

IRISH A SCOTCH LINEN

GOODS,

In full assortment for the

Jobbing and Clothing Trade >
Agents for the sale of

WOVEN

CORSETS, SKIRT MATERI¬
ALS, WEBBINGS, BINDINGS BED
LACE, COTTON YARNS, Ac.,
2S4 CHURCH

STREET, NEW YORK

WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’

WHITE

LINENS

A C

BURLAPS, BAGGING,
FLAX SAIL

DUCK, AO

Wm. G. Watson 8c Son,
MANUFACTURERS OF

UPERIOR MACHINE TWIST AND

George Hughes & Co.,
importers A Commission
Merchants,
198 A 200 CHURCH

•

No. 335

SILKS,

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

WORKS PATERSON, N. J.

STREET,

C0TCH AND IRISH LINEN
GOODS,
SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS,

LINEN CHECKS, &c:, WHITE
GOODS,
PATENT LINEN THREAD
Sole Agents lor

DICKSONS* FERGUSON & CO,
*** F. W,BATES*
CO.,




SEWING

LINEN

GOODS.

-“TV.,

YVAWV tv.

>'

^J'fo-AAa.iL lift.,

\ ^evv-XovV.

26ea le t A lh fli, £P.
ecLtiLtLeA
(W.cL
aieiq^n. f^zeefLCLruj-e, a.nxL
m-Em.lxe.is. ajz ^ftaclz cttzcL r^.aLcL

{pxzcficLUQeS. in. Uat/z cLtLeA.

ZfLEcc.uu.tA
/ffasik-A cuucL
/^.cLnkciA iecELULEcL an. LlUeIclL
telmA.

Strachan 8c Malcomson, *C. S,
IIMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS
FOR

Belfast,

Manners,
tb <-fc.

RISH AND SCOTCH

LINENS,

40 Murray Street, New York,

a

%\yeaux\\\^.

Gilead A. Smith,

Railroad Bonds and

Americrn Securi_
Exchange provided for

U.S. and other

negotiated, and Credit and

ties

U. S.

or

40

METALS.

Continent.

Consignments solicited on the nsual terms of any of
the staples.
Special Counting and Reception Rooms available for
Americans in London, with the facilities usually found
at the Continental Bankers.

FOREIGN,

DISTILLERS,
AND

58 BROAD

G. Falls &

MANUFACTURERS.

CONSUMERS OF THE
AND

DANNE-

SWEDISH
MORA IRON.

©

GENERAL

tilleries, Kentucky.

J. N. Falls
Morris, New York.

28 State Street.

.

Burnham

Erastus

^Jleufsta, W, JESSOP & SONS.
of the
trade.

Leufsta, in

special attention

192

Commission

NOS. 263 & 265

Wrought

Manufacturers of

& Co.,

Philadelphia.
Iron Tubes, Lap Welded

Gas Works Castings and Street
Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tool9,

Fitters’ Tools, &c.

OFFICE AND

WAREHOUSES:

15 GOLD

STREE T, NEW

Thomas

YORK

Consignments and

SIA via PANAMA.

each

STREET,

Melbourne, $246 to $864
for second class.

The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus
of Panama, and the first class fares are for
cabins of the Australian steamer; after cabin, latter

forward

MERCHANT,

$25 additional.

Orders So icited.

Co.,

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

NO. 27

BEEKMAN STREET

F. & F. A. Dana,
FOREIGN Sc

RAILROAD
NEW,

AMERICAN

IRON, OLD

AND

Iron and other Metals, Lo¬
comotives, Railroad Chairs & spikes,
Old Rails Re-rolled or Exchanged for new.
Pig, Scrap

67 WALL

STREET, NEW YORK,

& Co

COMMISSION
!«•

WASHINGTON

ENGLISH AND

superior to all others in strength, durability and
simplicity, will cut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumber

SUCCESSORS TO H. L.

made to
Wall st.

PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S
THROUGH LINE

C

ALIFORNIA
And Carrying

tlie

United

Mail.
LEAVE PIERNO. 42 NORTH
ER, FOOT d Canal street,
Slates

8TB1ET.

Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
for SAN

Ilia.

RIV¬

at 12

the 1st, 11th, and
(except when those dates fall on

o’clock noon, on
21st of every month

FRANCISCO, touching at

ACAPULCO.

NOVEMBER:

20th—Arizona,

Brothers,

Kinds for Family and

;

zanillo.

pounds
experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and
attendance free.
For passage tickets or farther Information, apply
cnecsed through. One hundred

An

Office use,

West22d street, near 10th Ayenue, New
and in Brooklyn.

with

allowed each adult.

32 Pine Street.
Yards

connecting with Sacramento.

Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama
eteamers for Sontfc, Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for
Central American Ports. Those of 1st touch at Man¬
Baggage

PARMELE Sc BROS.

COAL,
Of all the Best

PREMIUM

MILLS.
Built of solid French Burr Rock. Particular attentiox




merchandise will be conveyed

Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent,
No. 23 William st. Npw Y

Co.,

AMERICAN COAL.

Parmele

It Is

patronage.

limited quantity of

1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden
11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with Montana

,

MILL MANUFACTURERS.
Particular attention is called to our
IMPROVED CIRCULAR SAW MILL.

glyen to Southern

A

Citt.

ENGINE AND

day.
REED’S PATENT GOLD
WHEAT AND CORN

cabin.

To

MERCHANTS,

Chicago,

CINCINNATI, O.,

per

PROVISIONS.

Blair, Densmore &

ESTABLISHED IN 1S26.

A. B. HOLABTRD

8IEBI

GRAIN,

AND

Special steamers run to the newly-discovered gold
of Hokitika, New Zealand.
Children under three years, free; under eight years,
quarter fare; under twelve years, half-fare; inale ser,'
vants, one-half fare; female do., three-quarters faremen servants berthed forward, women do., in ladie3

region

CINCINNATI, O.

NEW YORK

FLOUR,

United States gold

under through bill of lading.
For further information, application to be
the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59

Provisions.

MAIN ST.,

Fares payable in

coin.

Gano, Wright &
Grain and

month
conveyed
Zealand,
to Sydney
for first class, and $218 to'$243
will

YORK.

Cotton, Flour,

NEW-

AND AUSTRALA¬

The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Roval
Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of
month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬
tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the
Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving New-York
for Aspinwall (Colon) on the 11th of each
First and second class passengers
he
under through ticket at the following rates: From
New York to ports in New
or
or

CINCINNATI.

J. Pope & Bro.

STREET, NEAR

COMMISSION

PRODUCE

METALS.
292 PEARL

WEST PEARL

COMMUNICA¬

BETWEEN

TION

J. Chapin,

N.

Boiler Flues,

Gas and Steam

arehouse.

CINCINNATI.

Works,

Pascal Iron

Steamship Companies.

for Spinners

Merchant,—United States

Bonded W

Boston.

Morris, Tasker

FRONT STREET, NEW YORK.

Daniel H. Carpenter,

& SONS, in

made from the Iron, at their establishments, Nos. 91 &
93 JonN Street, New York, and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed¬
Street,

given to filling orders

AND DOMESTIC USE,

FOR EXPORT

STEAM

Sweden, 29th April, 1S67.
EMANUEL DE GEER, Proprietor.

referring to the above
notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers ot,
Iron and Steel, that they are prepared to receive orders
for this Ikon, and for Blister and Extra Cast Steel
eral.

JAPAN.

Henry Lawrence & Sons,

OHIO.

CINCINNATI,
Special attention

CARL

WM. JESSOP

CO.

AUGUSTINE HEARD &
OF CHINA AND

Mobile, Ala.

Boston?

AGENTS FDR

FACTORS

Street,

Co.,-

&

Everett

COTTON BROKER,

I request the

and other first-class Dis¬

MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

entered into
Sheffield
which

And to which

BOURBON and RYE

IN BOND, fine

WHISKIES, from their own

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

65 Commerce

beg to announce that I have this day
a contract with Messrs. W. Jessop & Sons, of
for the whole Annual Make of the above Iron,
In future, will be stamped
I

Offer for sale,

England & Co.,

Wm. G.

York,

COTTON
THE

MERCHANTS,

STREET* NEW YORK,

Memphis, Tenn.
G'. Falls.
J. C. Johnson.
Refer by permission to Caldwell &

STEPHENSON Sc CO.,
New

Co.,

BUYERS,

COTTON

Omnibuses.

Street Cars,

SENI

J. M. Cummings & Co.,
COMMISSION

Broadway.

Branches

world,

TENNESSEE.

MEMPHIS,

69 & 71

GENUINE

loses.

BROKER,

COTTON

of the world re

SEWING MACHINES,

SINGER

HOPKINS &: Co.,

W.

NOTICE TO

nowned

Cummins,

L.

A.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

STREET.

131 PEARL

FOR SALE BY

JOHN

458

& Co.,

Neill, Bros.,

and Street Roads,

S.

SingerManufacturingCo.
Proprietors and Manufacturers

HAMBURG.

approved

7

THE

CONSIGNMENTS OF COTTON TO
OUR FRIENDS IN LIVER¬
POOL HAVRE AND

FOR

Steam

Particular attention paid to the most
and Fire-proof construction.

forms of Iron

ON

MADE

ADVANCES

LIBERAL

Railroad Iron,
AMERICAN AND

Warehouses. Railway,
fices generally.

made on Consignments

Cash Advances

Specifications prepared for Stores
Mercantile and Banking edi¬

Designs and

Commission Merchants,
BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.

General

,

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

111

AND

RAILROAD IRON,
BESSEMER RAILS.
STEEL TYRES,
AND

ARCHITECTS Sc CIVIL ENGINEERS

TOBACCO FACTORS

COTTON &

Littell & Co,

E. T.

Slaughter & Co.,

Norton,

W.»

PLACE, LONDON,

Commmercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

15 LANGHAM

[November 9, 1867.

CHRONICLE.

THE

608

at the

York,

Company’s ticket office, on

Canal street, North

the wharf, foot o
BABY Agent.

River, New York.
F. B.