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ante’ fectte, (tamwicfat fteitwaij Pmtitot, and Insurant louvnal A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1867. YOL. 5. Bankers and Bankers and Brokers Rodman, Fisk & Co., Brokers. Satterlbe & Co., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN NO. 18 NASSAU Bankers and Brokers. L. P. Morton & TO BROADWAY A 15 NEW STREET. securities, government 80 BROAD Bay and sell at market rates : Six Per Cent. Bonds of 1881, Ten Forties, Five-Twenty Bonds, all issues ; Seven-Thirty Notes, all series; Compound Interest Notes, and STOCKS AND BONDS Silver Coin. Registered Interest collected and Coupons cashed without charge. .1 ' ‘ 7-30 Notes, all series, taken in exchan ge for the new Consolidated 5-20 Bonds, on terms advantageous to holders of 7-SO’s. Merchants and Importers supplied with Coin for customs duties at lowest market rates. Orders for purchase and sale of all miscellaneous GOVERNMENT At Sight or Sixty Taussig, Fisher & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, - No. 32 Broad SECURITIES, L. P. Bankers and Commission Merchants Available la all the NO. 44 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. 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., Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad Winslow, Lanier & Co., 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 favorable terms. References J. H. C. B. Lxvt P. Morton, Chihli* K. Minxes, B. Cxusxx Oaxlxt. * Jackson Bros., DEALERS IN STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD AND GOV¬ ERNMENT SECURITIES, Ac., Blair, Pres’t Merchants’Nat. Bank, Chicago. Bell, Faris & Co., RANKERS AND BROKER 12 NEW & 14 BROAD STREETS, Members of the Stock, Gold and Government NO. 19 BROAD Wm. AND NO. 69 Boards, Temple & Marsh, avail¬ Dealers in Government Securities, &c., on No. 9 Wall on Government Securities. George Deposits. Accounts ef Banks, Bankers, and Merchant* receiv¬ ed on favorable terms. Interest allowed on depos¬ its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬ tions furnished to correspondents. , RnPKiuufois: James Brown, Esq., of Messrs. Brown Brothers A Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬ ident of the Chemical National Commission, .COMMERCIAL Advances made on ap¬ NO. ON COMMISSION. 48 Pine Street, New York. Bussing, Personal Attention. John S. Buss PARIS No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers in all parts ef Europe, eta, etc. Also Oommeidsl Credits. SOUTHERN Murray, Jr., ^ BROKER IN Government and other 27 WALL BANKERS, 7 RUB SCRIBE, AXD STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, &c., BOUGHT AND ISOLD B. AMERICAN PAPER, ALSO, Secnrities, STREET, NEW YORK. Franklin M. Ketchum. George Phipps. Thos. Belknap, BANKERS AND BANKERS Sc BROKERS ^ 27 WALL STREET orders our balances. John Munroe & Co., Edwin BANK N OTBI* Q. Bell, BANKER AND BROKER, In Southern Securities and Bank Bills. •• BROADWAY * 5 NEW STREET, w New York. t Jb. KETCHUM, PHIPPS Sc BELKNAP, , on Particular attention given to orders for the purchase or sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells, Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks. All orders faithfully executed. JOSIAH HEDDEN, ISAIAH C. BABCOCK, LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN. Farnham, Bank; James H. §*£*«> B^fc Yice’FrcBld«nt of the Beak <* Mew reoeive Brokers. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold at market rates, on commission only. of Europe. BANKERS AND BROKERS, (Messrs. Brown Bros. & Co.’s new building), 69 A #1 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Bay and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Gelston, BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Street, cor. New. : a“ wm. J. Fred. Wendell Jackson. Bankers ami Interest allowed BANKERS AND BROKERS. Pott, Davidson & Tones, ... STREET, NEW YORK. „ Hedden,Winchester&Co (Late of G. S. Robbins & Son,) Gelston & Henry Jackson. proved securities. NEW ORLEANS. Interest Allowed principal town* and eitle* at Sale of Stocks end Bonds in London and New York. FoNDA,Pre8. National Mech. Banking Ass., N.Y. subject to check at sight. Street, New York. able in all parts LONDON, Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and RANKERS Sc Dealers in Governments aud other Securities. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency BANKERS, Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers, BANK OF Europe and the Bast, J. L. Brownell & Bro., BROKERS, Securities. DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE AIDTO UNION Waltxb H. Bunxs, promptly execute orders for the Purchase or sale ST A. 29 Pine HORTON, BURNS * CO.t Wilson, Callaway & Co., Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates, of Use, on (58 Old Broad Street, LondoaJ Liverpool. 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, «nd Days; also, Circular Mote* ud Letter* of Credit for Traveler*’ ^ securities promptly executed. Mail and telegraph orders will receive our personal attention. Deposits received, and interest allowed on balances. - Collec¬ tions made on all points with quick returns. RODMAN, FISK & CO. STREET, NEW YORK. STERLING EXCHANGE BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, . Co., BANKERS, STREET, Gold and NO. 120. Frank 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. & Gans, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN U. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. No. 14 WALL STREET A S. Bankers and Eastern Bankers. Brokers. Southern Bankers. Jacquelin & De Coppet, Dupee, Beck & Sayles, STOCK BROKERS, NO. SO NEW STREET) N.Y. Railroad Stocks, Securities, BOUGHT AND SOLD OH Son H. Jaoquxux. COMMISSION. Henry De Coott. HENRY SAYLES JAMES BECK, IAMB A. DCPEX, Bonds, Gold, snd CoToramcnt BOSTON. No. B STATE STREET, Page, Richardson & Co BOSTON, 114 STATE BIliLS OF STREET, , EXCHANGE ON LONDOR Conner & Nb* S Broad Street, BANKERS Sc John McGinnis, Jr. M. Smith. c■ , BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND Richmond. Va., Charles D. Carr A Co. Augusta, CO., PARIS. JOHN IHUNROE Sc Burke & Commxroial Credits for the purchase of Mercha* dUe in England and Ike Continent. Grid its Tor the nee of Trailers ah»t4. Trai et.i.W* Southern Bankers. allowed same ns with Bonds and Loans negotiated Draw on Deposits received and interest Incorporated Bank. an for Railroad Companies. 809 A 811 Drake Kleinwort&Cohen LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. in shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile them f* use iu China, the East and South America, &c Marginal credits London House issued for the same purposes. credits upon West Indies, SIMON DE Banka to eermes IN William Brrisa, Osgood Welsh, Frederie A. Hoyt, Hilles, Benjamin Rowland, Jrn Biipham, William H. Rhawh, President, Late of the A. FIRST New York. and Interest al¬ Member ofN. Y. Stock Ex. BANKERS, 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. deposits, subject to check at sight. ADAMS, KIMBALL Sc Do a BROKERS, general Banking, Exchange and Collection busi¬ ness. Philadelphia National Bank National Bank North Correspondents New York WASHINGTON, H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.), WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. America; Knautu, Nachocl & Kuhne. especial with BANKERS. No. 14 Wall street, New Tyler, Wrenn & Co., Hayden, Hutcheson & Co NO. 13 S. HIGH STREET, COLUMBUS, Do Government loans Business. Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., BANKERS AND West Fourth Street, 110 Sc BOB’! T. BROOKE JAS. L. MAURY. R. H. Maury & CINCINNATI, OHIO. Co., BROKERS RICHMOND, VA. Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ac., bought and sold on commission. Deposits received and Collections made en ill accessible points in the United States. N. X. Correspondent, Vebmilyb A Os. NO. 1014 OHIO, Banking, Collection, and Exchange General a 108 York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securities, of all issues, and execute orders for the purchase and sale of STOCKS. BONDS, and GOLD. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency subject to check at sight. departments of the Government. Full information with regard to at all times cheerfully furnished. ROB’T H. MAURY. MOORE, Prei’T. connected attention to ^business the several W. B Hayden Jos. Hutcheson. BANKING HOUSE OF Government Repository and Financial Agent of the United States. We bny and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and irive Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exp¬ orted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED •a National Bank. NATIONAL BANK OF Warren, Kidder & Co., No. BANKERS & P. Hayden. T. W. B. HUGHES, HAWLEY HEATH. Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK MAIN ST., NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible points and remitted for on day of payment.; t BANKERS, NO. 18 Checks WALL STREET Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, &c. Orders for purchase and sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed. Tyler, ijllmann a co. cnica&ro. Central National Bank, No. 52 St. Francis St., Government Bondsand County accounts received on terms most fa sale all descriptions of City vorable to our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of the Canadas. United States an WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President. William H. Sanford, Cashier, Babcock Bros & Co., Bankers, FOR SALE. FIRST New York. Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York. E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. Bvrd & Hall, New York. Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York. Geo. D. II. Gillespie, late Wolft & Gillespie. Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & Hurlbert. Home Insurance Company ot New York. New York Life Insurance Company. Company of Hartford. Underwriters Agency New York, Charles Walsh. PreMdent Bank of Mobile. Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of BROADWAY, NEW YORK. $1,000,00 450,000 CAPITAL SURPLUS RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. CAPITAL $1,000,000 Collections made on Tenth National Bank. $1,000,00O. Capital BROAO STREET. Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers No. 29 and Dealers’ Accounts J. H. Stout, Cashier. solicited. D. L. ROSS, Preside AND all $314,852 89 accessible points and ■ Directors * L. B. Harrison, Robt. Mitchell, Jos. Rawson. John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, Jas. A. Frazer, R. M. Bishop, William Woods, A. S. Winslow, Cash Real Capital, $1,000,000. Capital, $150,000. Jos. F. Larkin & Co., BROKERS, G A• ~ COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED 70S. * V.Pres. SURPLUS promptly remitted for at best rates. BANKERS, Ala. Charles D. Carr'& Co., BANKERS OF Cincinnati, Ohio. CINCINNATI. NATIONAL BANK. 291 BANK NATIONAL John W. Ellis, Pres. Lewis Worthington, Theodore Stan wood, Cashier. Aetna Insurance The Tradesmen’s UNION BANK OF LONDON. Mobile, Ala. Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬ ernment Securities, Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt attention given to Collections. References : $3,000,000* Capital on Jas. M. Muldon & Sons, 318 BROADWAY. Has for 1 J. F. Stark & Co., Washington. AND MINING STOCKS, Deposits received, subject to Check, lowed. nm BROKERS AND 13 Broad Street, and PITTSBURGH. Late Cashier of the Central Joseph P, Mumtord, C -shier, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, RAILROAD collections, Edward B. Orne, Joseph T. Bailey, ■\ BANKERS ACOIW1TIISSION $100,000 Particular attention given to ceeds promptly remitted. William H. Rhawn. Heath & Hughes, PA. CaP|tal DIRECTORS! Samuel A. Company STREET, PITTSBURGH, and Bankers on liberal terms* Nathan 423 PENN $1,000,000 " , 1U uneri V1SSER, Place, New York. 26 Exchange National Trust PHILADELPHIA. on of the CHESTNUT STREET, Capital their representative ana Attorneys the United States, is prepared to make advances The subscriber, Merchants National Bank, New York and Bank of Liverpool, England. .Western Bankers. Republic, Bank of the STREET, NEW ORLEANS, Collections and remittances promptly attended to. National Sold "on Co., BANKERS, 54 CAMP RROKERS. NO. 4 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Exchange, Gold, Purchased or Qa| AND BANKERS AND Commercial Paper and Commission. BoNDK*1 Brpeelal attention paid to Collections. Refer to Duncan, Sherman * Co., New York* Drexel * Co~ Philadelphia; The Franklin Bank! and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. H. Maury & Cn McGinnis, Smith & Wilson,Charleston, S. c DEALERS ** IN FOREIGN* DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECHt A LAO IS8U* Washington l2, 1867.] [October THE CHRONICLE 450 AUGUSTA, Jos. F. [Thomas Fox. I Larkin, John Cochnower, Adam Poe, Harvey Decamp, , 1 John M. Phillips, f partnership. 1 Thos. Sharp. J [John Gates. 1 general The Marine " Company OF CHICAGO. Ould & Carrington, LAW, ATTORNEYS lli® MAIN AT STREET, BICHkONS, * TA, V J. Young Scammon Robert Reid President. Manager. L General Banking* and Collection* promptly attended to. THE CHRONICLE. 12,1867.] October Western Bankers. Across Established 1848. Sc C E L L A S K O • y BANKERS, LOUIS, ST. Dealers In MO 451 Sierra Nevadas. the THE CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD. Government Securities, Gold and Ex- Collections made on all accessible points rhamre aSdpromptly remitted for at current rates of ex- THE WESTERN HALF OF THE GRFAT NATIONAL TRUNK LINE ACROSS THE CONTINENT, hange. Benoist & Co., L. A. BANKERS, Being constructed with the aid and supervision of the United States Government, is destined to be one of the most important lines of communication in the world ; as it is the sole link between the Pacific Coast and the Great Interior Basin, over which the iinmense!Overland travel must pass, and the LOUIS, MISSOURI, ST. Principal Portion of the Main Stem Line between tlie Two Oceans. all the principal cities of the United States and Canadas. Also, drafts on London and Paris for sale. Bnvand Sell Exchange on , Second National Bank. auu in i uiiuiu^, vpoi avu>u t v/ tuv o umimi i oi uil oivi i a ii o » «uu, »* *v»**^» « 4 w ” miles, now graded, will be added, and the track carried entirely across the mountains to point in the Great Salt Lake Valley, whence further progress will be easy and rapid, Iron, materials and men equipment are ready at hand for THREE HUNDRED miles of road, and TEN THOUSAND men are employed a in the construction. ST. LOUIS, MO. Capital..$200,000 | Surplus..$150,566 The local business upon the ending August 31, given to the business of corres¬ ' E. D. JONES, Cashier. Promnt attention pondents. are as completed portion surpasses all previous estimate. follows, in gold: Gross Earnings. $487,579 Net Earnings. Operating Expenses. 64 $86,548 $401,031 47 at the rate of about two millions per annum, of which more than three-fourths than 100 miles worked. This is upon the actual,legitimate traffic of the road, with JAY COOKE, MOORHEAD COOKE, Q, H. D. Bankers. I •i EDWARD DODGE, RANKERS. Corner Add to this an PITT COOKE. & Co., Cooke Tay H. C. FAHNESTOCK Wall and Nassau Sts., New York. are ever-expanding through traffic and the proportions of the future business become immense. The Company are authorized to continue their line eastward until it shall meet and connect with the roads building east of the Rocky Monutain ranges. Assuming that they will build and control half the entire distance between San Francisco and the Missouri River, as now seems probable, tha United States will have invested in the completion of EIGHT HUNDRED AND SIXTY-FIVE miles TWENTY-EIGHT MILLION FIVE HUNDRED AND NINETY-TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS, or at the aveaage rate of THIRTY-FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS per mile—not including an absolute grant of TEN MILLION acres ot the Public Lands. By becoming a joint idvestor in the magnificent enterprise, and by waiving its first lien in favor of the First Mortgage Bondholders, the general government, in effect, invites the co-operation of pri¬ vate capitalists, and has carefully guarded their interests against all ordinary contingencies. now 114 South 3d Street, Philadelphia. No. The Fifteenth Street, Company offer for sale, through First Opposite Treas. Department, connection with our houses in Philadelphia and Washington we have this day 1 Nassau, corner Mr. Edward House, and Mr. be resident sale, of Wall Street, in this city. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will partners. give particular attention to the purchase, and exchange of government securities of all issues; bonds to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, and gold, and to all business of National Banks. JAY COOKE & CO. March* 1,1866. their Principal and Interest Payable In Gold Coin. in New York City. They are in sums of$l,000 each, with for the present at NINETY-FIVE per cent, and accrued rate they yield nearly semi-annual gold coupons attached, and are selling interest from July 1st added, in currency, at which NINE PER CENT. UPON THE INVESTMENT. Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington New York, We shall opened an office at No. us, Mortgage Thirty Year Six Per Cent. Coupon Bonds, Washington. f In 17 net profit; upon les its terminus in the moun¬ tains, and with only the normal ratio of Government transportation, and is exclusive of the materials carried for the further extension of the road. The Company’s interest liabilities during the same period were less than $125,000. or New York The figures for the quarter These Bonds, authorized by Act of Congress, are issued only as the work progresses, and co the same only as the Bonds granted by the Government; and represent in all cases the first lien upon a com¬ pleted, equipped, and productive railroad, In which have been invested Government subsidies, stock subscrip¬ tions, donations, surplus earnings, etc., and which is worth more than three times the amount of First Mort¬ gage Bonds which can be issued upon it. ramouut The Central Pacific First Mortgage Bonds have all the assurances, sanctions and guarantees of the Pacific Railroad Act of Congress, equally with the Bonds upon the other parts of the through line, and have in addi¬ tion several noticeable advantages over all other classes of railroad bonds.' First.—Beside the fullest benefit of the Government subsidy to the Company from California, worth $3,000,000. they have as subordinate lien also donations Second.—Fully half of the cost of grading is covered in the 150 miles Lockwood & Co., Third.—A local busines payable in coin. BANKERS. No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. GOVERNMENT DEALERS IN OTHER SECURITIES. AND Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon P. D. J. N. favorable terms. the interest of its Bonds being payable in coin, upon a legally binding valuable portion of the through line as a final security ; since it Having carefully investigated the resources, progress and prospects of the road, and the management of others Company’s affairs, we cordially recommend these Bonds to Trustees, Executors, Institutions and oth< an eminently sound, reliable and remunerative form of permanent investment. CONVERSIONS OF GOVERNMEMT SECURITIES INTO Co., PACIFIC FIRST NOW REALIZE FOR THE Twelve to (PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.) BANKERS AND as the N.Y., BROKERS. Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬ well Fifth.—Altogether the most vital and has and can have no competition, CENTRAL No. 2% Wall Street, as agreement. as P. D. Roddey & nearly completed. already yielding three-fold the annual interest liabilities, with advantageous rates Fourth—The principal R. P. Sawyers. N. P. Boulett. Roddey, Petty, now MORTGAGE BONDS HOLDERS FROM Eighteen Per Cent. Advantage, TVITH THE SAME RATE OF INTEREST. mission. Particular attention given to the Purchase and Sale of all Southern and Miscellaneous Securities, Collections made on all accessible points. Interest allowed on Balances The following are the current rates (September 17,) subject, of course, to slight variations from day to day We receive in exchange : U. S. 6s. 1881, Coupon, and pay difference $157 18 I U. S. 5-20s, 1867, new Coupon, and pay difference 117 18 U. S. 5-20s, 1862,'Coupon, “ “ 184 68 i U. S. 10-40s. Coupon, and pay difference 37 18 125 93 134 U. S. 7-30s, U. S. 5-208,18&4, Coupon, “ “ ... 101 67 Tt c canu 2d Series, ** io=; qq 119 98 147 18 U. S. 7-30s, 3d S.ries, U. S. 5-208,1867, Coupon, “ U. S. 5-20s, 1865, new Coupon, 117 18 on each one thousand. “ Haslett McKim. Robt. McKim. The net earnings on interest liabilities Jno. A. McKim. McKim, Bros. & Co., For sale by the completed portion of the road are very large, and are four times the Company’s of whom descriptive Pamphlets and Maps can be obtained, and by Banks and Bankers gene -n BANKERS, FISK 62 WALL STREET. & Interest allowed eight, and on deposits subject to draft at special attention given to orders from ocher places. HATCH, BANKERS, BANKING HOUSE AND or TURNER DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, BROTHERS, NO. 14 NASSAU STREET, Corner of Pine, Opposite U. S. Treasury. AND M^nriS™?ep.°^lt8«an<imake Collections, the same toueht^nd^nu^S Market government Securities Financial Agents of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, Sold at vPavk; Kates. We also 6o1dronfrA^SfiChia8e Sale of st°ck9. Bonds Cand wold on Commission. TURNER BROTHERS. NO, 6 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. . . exeontn [October 12 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 452 Bank Bank Statements. Statements. THE CONDITION QUARTERLY REPORT OF OF THE BANK OF THE MO ft WEALTH. NATIONAL CoM- In the City of New York, in the State of New York, the morning of the first Monday of October, 1807; on RESOURCES. loans and discounts Commercial paper Demand loans Indebtednessot Directors. $1,890,3S0 20 $949,781 12 738,237 35 2u2,411 73 7,9r7 18 Overdrafts 190.001 05 Banking house Current expenses Premiums Cash Rems (inclnd. revenue stamps). Due from National Banks Due from other banks and bankers... U.S bonds deposited with U S. J reas- circulating notes U.S. bonds deposited with U.S. Treas¬ urer to secure deposits nrer to secnre U.S. bonds and securities timid... Other stocks, bonds and mortgages.. Cash on hand in circulating notes of other Nat. B'ks.. $30,247 00 Cash on hand in cii dilating notes of State banks 6,130 00 on 20,086 18 9.734 15 161,'60 86 133,562 66 4.291 21 290,000 01 200.000 00 133.800 00 180,435 97 Legal Tender notes Compound Interest notes $816,698 (10 34,040 00 851,038 00 $4,152,993 64 Loans and discounts Commercial paper $2,133,435 84 379,500 00 Demand loans Indedtedness of directors 20,604 50 Overdrafts U.S. Bonds deposited with Trea¬ surer of the United States... Real Estate (productive) Current expenses $10,756 21 Pr miums 8,025 00Cash items (including revenue stamps) 18,781 33,832 371,011 159,031 clearing-ljohse this A.M. Due from national b thks Due from other banks and bankers.... United States B nds deposited with United States Treasurer to secure Due to National banks Due to other banks and bankers State oank circulation outstand;ng... Discount $21,7S5 68 234,000 2,323,487 88.590 996 00 53 85 70 400,324 74 ITS.137 84 8,127 00 156 03 Exchanges Interest Profit and loss 22.970 70 77.112 88 122,025 29 York.—Sworn to and subscribed belore me, thi- 9th day of October, 1867. R. M. .uki.den, Notary Public. QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE NATIONAL BANK. In the City of New York, in the State of New York, on the morning of the first Monday of Octo¬ ber, 1867: RESOURCES. U. S. Bonds deposited with U. S. secure Treasurer to Circulating Notes U. 8. Bonds deposited with U. S. Treasurer to secure Deposits Cash on hand in Circulating Notes of other National Banks Specie \.... . V. Legal Tenders and Compound Interest Fractional Currency.. $1,728,707 60 10,133 42 3,608 78 15.318 77 17,350 00 84,047 81 6,960,012 24 82,608 *1 1,036,000 00 250,000 00 15,990 00 6»,0i7 22 2,800 00 799,450 00 79',450 00 $6,265 00 $4,800,566 30 Surplus fund Circulating notes received $1,000,000 00 903,7*5 00 including Checks Due to National Banks.. Dividends Unpaid Profits Ui. collected Total. 7,338,557 705,653 2,736 124,341 41 50 57 57 $10,075,074 05 State of New York, Cotntt of New York : I, D. L. Ross, President of the l,Tenth National Bank” in New York, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. D. L. ROSS, President. Sworn to and subscribed before me this seventh day of October,1367. E. Francis Hyde, Notary Public. D. L. ROSS, President. “ $450,000 00 QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE NATIONAL PHENIX i Of the city of on the morning BANK. New York, in the State of New York of the first Monday in October, 1867 : 335 00 outs'anding Individual riepor-its United States deposits 449,665 2,132,500 39,716 717,838 5,392 3,348 ■. Due to national banks Due to other banks and bankers...... State Bank circulation outstanding... Discount $36,399 98 Interest 3,503 50 Profit and loss 15,068 42 00 68 48 SO 00 00 $964,357 12 Commercial Paper 1,246,334 99 Demand Loans 4,074 42 317,500 00 Due from National Banks U. S. Bonds deposited with $4,800,566 30 I, EDWARD T. OAKLEY, Cashier of the Me^ -chants’ Exchange National Bank of the City of New Nork, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. E. J. OAKLEY, Cashier. State of New York, County of New York, ss. : Sworn to and subscribed belore me his 7th day of October, 1867. Jonathan Marshall, -Notary Public of County of New York. [U. S. Int. Rev. 5 cent stamp cane.j QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE BANK. NATIONAL New York, in the State of New York, of the first Monday of October, 1867: (Hi 175,000 UO ZJ\ 50,261 88 3,354,424 02 lSy,349 21 U.S. Treasurer 600,000 00 506,500 00 42,692 18 Circulating Notes U.S. Bonds and Securities on hand Other Stocks, Bonds and Mortgages Cash on hand in Circulating Notes of other to secure 49,976 00 Banks. 234,104 23 Specie 442 60 Fractional Currency $442,323 00 202,360 00 Legal Tender Notes Compound Interest Notes Current 748 55 _ Banking House Items (including Revenue Cash Ttnme /liinlnflintr Parnniid Stamps)... Exchanges for Clearing House this a.m— National 55,031 90 Total $2,532,266 53 Loans and Discounts Indebtedness of Directors Overdrafts Loans and Discounts Commercial Paper $1,103,005 Demand Loans. 610,165 Bad Debts—see Sec. 38 105,239 Other Suspended and Overdue $1,839,670 14 88 68 93 644,683 00 15,144 83 Expenses. $8,395,593 03 Cr.-LIABILITIES. Capital Stock paid in Surplus Fund $43,963 70 $1,800,000 00 62,567 40 89,679 17 Profit and Loss Discount Circulating notes received from 196,210 27 Comptrol¬ $540,000 00 ler Less Amount on hand 252,890 00 Amount outstanding Individual Deposits (including uncollected checks) Due to National Banks Due to other Banks and Bankers State Bank Circulation outstanding Dividends unpaid ..... .... 287,110 00 5,476,032 37 473,226 37 147,790 82 11,860 00 3,363 20 $8,395,598 03 20,000 00 150,000 00 Banking-house Other Real Estate Current Expenses Cash Items (.including as per schedule 5,700 00 , Revenue Stamps) Due from National Banks Due from other Banks and Bankers U. S. Bonds deposited with U. S. Treasurer to secure 151,057 65 9,715 33 195,000 00 schedule, N- V. County Bonds. Notes of other 20,060 86 45,914 00 15,848 10 4,019 28 Specie Fractional Currency $306,089 00 Legal-Tender Notes Compound Interest Notes 486,510 00 Superintendent of Bank Department, N. Y. 792.599 00 10,S22 25 $4,437,162 01 Capital Stock paid in Surplus Fund. .' Circulating Notes received Comptroller STOUT, Cashier. October, 1S67. 27,547 92 237,126 67 U. S. Bonds and Securities oil hand Other Stocks, Bonds and Mortgages, as per Cash on hand in Circulating National Banks knowledge and belief. Sworn to and subscribed 15,120 81 917,000 00 Circulating Notes State of New York, City and County of New York, ss:—I, JOHN PARKER, Cashier of the “Phenix Na¬ tional Bank,” of the City of New York, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best ol my 65S 65 Paper Indebtedness of Directors.... $1,000,000 00 450,364 26 JOHN PARKER, Cashier. _ NATIONAL BANK. Of the City of New York, on the morning of the Monday of October, 1867, $10,727,682 18 $367,752 61 14,089 56,975 880,722 2,550,000 38,404 78 United States Taxes Cash on hand, viz : Checks 1,755,457 47 10,402 00 68,558 13 2,261 87 $4,4375.62 01 $3,876,784 00 27,569 10 64,552 00 1,585,021 93 —I York, City and County of New York, I, ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier of “ The Trades¬ men’s National Bank of the City of New York,” do solemnly swear that the above statement Is true to the knowledge and belief. ANTHONY ns XX l,<0o,0W W Circulation Deposits: Individual United States Banks $6;823,946 66 115,483 24 7,778,289 11 : day $19,857,102 04 W. H. SANFORD, Cashier. Sworn and Subscribed to before me, this seventh aay of October, 1867. • Charles E. Booebt, Notary Public, __ Ttrnci p n w Tp Notary Public, City and County of New York, 14,717,719 01 3,921 00 Dividends unpaid HALSEY, Cashier. Sworn to and subscribed before me this seventh of October, 1867. 5,544,867 03 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock Surplus and Profits. State of New ss.: best of my 00 47,359 96 Ixpenses...’ Legal Tenders Specie National Currency 54 59 96 $19,857,102 M 323,302 12 28,683 16 Unpaid dividends first RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts Liabilities of Directors Overdrafts Premiums Due from Banks United States Bonds 798,133 00 ; ... Public. QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CENTRAL 7... $799,950 1,817 Less amount on hand Amount outstanding Individual Deposits...Due to National Banks Due to other Banks and Bankers State Bank Circulation outstanding Discount of before me, this 7th day Elijah N. Riker, Notary from ‘ J. H. JOSEPH P. MUMFOKD, Cashier. Suspended Paper Amount LIABILITIES. Deposits, knowledge and belief. Dr-RESOURCES. 1,235,000 00 162,064 44 TRADESMEN’S the National 6,535 00 Cr.-LIABILITIES. Circulation $2.400,018 73 I, JOSEPH P. MUMFOKD. Cashier of my 270 00— $1,075,074 05 Capital 8tock 44,302 ?2 Bank of the Republic.” of Philadelphia, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of Exchanges for Clearing-house this A. M... .X,. Total 938,216 06 LIABILITIES. amount on 417,500 00 Total “ hand .$1,000,000 00 Profits 44,826 41 2,572 00 Comptrol er 78 dr.-resources. Legal Tender Notes $462,000 00 Compound Interest Notes. 337,450 00 Notes $2^00,013 I IYBILITlFS Capital Stock, full paid 100,000 00 51,185"88 bonds... 48 16,798 96 Total Legal tender notes $447,351 00 Compound interest notes.. 320,660 00— 768,011 00 Of the City of the morning Clearing House-Uncollected Checks. Due from National Banks 612,503 74,000 00 Speeie Less 13,830 91 29,312 46 260,263 11 Deposits Fraction 1 currency Irom $1,770,718 34 21,964 00 Circulation..' posits Ne v York Countv 7 per cent C ish on hand in circulating notes of other national banks Cash on hand in circulating notes of state banks 131,057 24 Expenses and Taxes.. United States bonds deposited with United States Treasurer to secure de¬ on Bills Discounted $683,947 60 Demand Loans 984,310 00 Other suspended and over¬ due papers 1,950 00 Indebtedness of Directors. 58,500 00 Taxes Paid Furniture and Fixtures Current Expenses Premiums Ccsh Items, including Revenue Stamps National Bank Notes Fractional Currency and stamps Premiums Due from other Banks 21 72 85 67 501,000 00 circulating-notes I, George Ellis, Cashier of “ The National Bank of the Common weal tn. in iheCity of New York,” do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. (jrEOKuE ELLIS, Cashier. TENTH $287,127 00 4,512 00 $4,152,993 64 State of New York, County of New 500,000 00 Legal Tender Notes and Specie. 4,728 22 125,000 00 Banking house Exchanges for RESOURCES. Notes and Bills Discounted $1,139,659 10 $2,533,538 34 Capital stock paid in Deposits of U. S. disbursing officers. Philadelphia, October 7,1867. RESOURCES. $7 0,000 00 47,303 €9 .... Republic. In the city of New York, in the State oc New York, the morning of the 1st Monday of October, 1867 * on Total Circu ating notes outstandi ng Individual deposits United States deposits of the National Bank AL BANK. LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in * Surplus fund Circulating notes received from Comptroller $234,000 00 QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE MERCHANTS’ EXCHANGE NATION¬ hand, 7 3-10 Treasury notes 43 311 38 51)7 80 Fractional currency OF THE United States bonds and securities on 36,377 00 Specie CONDITION QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE New York, Oct. 7, 1867. . Railway pomtov, and fwssuvmw §0untal ante’ tecttc, ^mmewial WEEKLY A NEWSPAPER, , representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states. NO. 120. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1S67- VOL. 5. and retrenchment at Washington to an public is not fully aware of, the extraordi¬ The Public Debt 453 I Latest Monetary and Commercial «54 | English News The Breadstuff's Market 456 nary disbursements for the War Department, and especially Cotton Growing and the Cotton | Commercial and Miscellaneous for the payment of bounties, mount up to a very large sum. Tax 45S 455 I News And when Congress voted the extra bounties it was pointed Public Debt of the United States 456 | THE BANKERS’ GAZETTiS AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. 463 out as inevitable that the donations to our soldiers must be Cotton C ONTENTS. duced by THE CHRONICLE. extent which the Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks. Philadelphia Banks National Banks, etc tsale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange Commercial Epitome 0 Tobacco Breadstuffs Groceries 465 466 . 468 Prices Current and Tone of the 477-47S Market.... 450 461 462 THE RAILWAY MONITOR * Dry Goods AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Railway News 470 ■. Railroad, Canal, and MiscellaneousBond List 471-472 [ Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. 474 Insurance and Mining Journal . 4T3 j Advertisements.440-52, 474-5-6, 479-80 €i)c €l)ronicle. Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. The Commercial and TEEMS OF SUBSCBIPTI0N—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,) ForOneYear . For Six Months For $10 00 6 00 By an arrangement with the publishers of the Daily Bulletin we are enabled to furnish our subscribers with that paper at the reduced price of $4 per annum making the price Of Chbonicle with DAIlt Bulletin, \ !! $*8 00 economy consequent increase of the public burdens and the public debt. As to the diminished revenue, that is a result of the more equable adjustment of our internal taxation, which in 1865 and 1866 was found so galling and oppressive as to paralyze industry, to fetter the productive powers of the country, and to take out of the pockets of the people much more than it brought into the For these reasons, and for others coffers of the Government. which are waived for the present, \vre are not surprised to see that the tendency of the public debt is to augment rathe? But when our crippled industries have than to diminish. had time to gather vigor, when the organization of labor and capital is no longer dislocated in the South, when the pro¬ ductive energies of the whole country are revived and set in full harmonious activity—when, in a word, the giant strength made by borrowing, and by of the nation is a recuperated and disenthralled, the pressure less severe, and Postage is paid by the subscriber at his own jx>st-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ of the debt will be infinitely less onerous, cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $120 in advance. more manageable. will1 am b. dana, 1 WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers, john o. flovd, jr. 60 William Street, New York. f The second suggestion from the debt is Remittances Office Money Orders. should invariably be made by drafts or Post Soliciting Agents make no collections. THE PUBLIC DEBT. The statement of the National debt, which another page, offers some very suggestive is the net total, which now stands at 2,495 print on aggregates. One wTe millions, against 2,492 millions a month ago. Since the debt reached its highest point two, years ago, we have become so accustomed to see the aggregate diminish month by month, that some feeling of disappointment is apt to spring up when we find that the process of liquidation has been even temporarily In the present case the amount of the increase is arrested. small, and does not quite reach 2£ millions of dollars. It must be remembered, however, that, in a practical point of view, the present pressure of a National debt upon the re¬ sources of the people does not depend so much upon the nominal aggregate of that debt, as upon the amount of the annual interest it calls for, the methods of taxation used to collect the amount, and the sacrifices which these taxes entail by the interruption of the industry of the toiling masses of the the satisfactory progress of the funding operations, in which the progress has been so steady and successful for two years past. We had been prepared to expect that Mr. McCulloch would have been compelled to relax the activity of these funding move¬ ments, and that after the vast efforts lately put forth to get relief for the Treasury from the prodigious aggregate of compounds and other floating short-date securities which ma¬ ture this Fall, he would have left the Seven-Thirties that ma¬ ture next summer, and would not be able to make any effect¬ ive arrangements at present to diminish the amount out¬ standing. One is gratified, however to find that no less than thirty-five millions of these Seven-thirties were redeemed The aggre¬ during the month of September. gate now out is thus teduced to 365 millions, of which some 225 millions mature in June next, and 140 millions in the following month. The aggregate of these two issues was and cancelled originally 530 millions. Although it is matter for regret originally as that such vast together, still they are now brought down to such narrow limits as to be easily manage¬ able, and to suggest little ground for anxiety. The discovery on Thursday last of a dangerous and unusually well executed that these notes amounts were so issued of them should mature population. we are rightly informed, there are two causes for last counterfeit of the June Seven-Thirties has caused some con¬ month’s increase of the debt—heavy disbursements and sternation among the holders of these securities, and will prob¬ diminished revenue. Although the ordinary payments inci¬ ably exert no small influence in stimulating the funding of both dent to the carrying on of the Government are being re¬ series into long bonds. Indeed we shall not be surprised if these If [October 12,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 454 clever forgeries, together with the frequent losses of bond¬ exceptions, the rule for the whole country being all that holders by fire and robbery, by shipwreck and other causes could be expected from an increased average under crops, a should tend to induce more preference than has heretofore been fine season for planting and growing, and propitious weather shown for registered bonds. It is worthy of being generally for harvesting. We have the best possible confirmation of known to the public that registered bonds may be had from this view in the large amounts of grain now pressing towards the Treasury without delay. The conversion is facilitated the markets. Exclusive of corn, the receipts at the grain by act of Congress, which permits coupon bonds to be ex ports of the West show an enormous increase upon those of changed without expense into registered bonds; and holders last year. The arrivals at the ports of Chicago, Milwaukee, for investment throughout the Eastern States are availing Detroit, Toledo and Cleveland, from August 3 to October 5, themselves of the privilege so rapidly that we shall not be compare as follows with those for the same period of 1866: 1866. 1867. Increase * surprised if the greater part of the gold-bearing issues helc Flour.. 196,026 228,963 in this country should before long be transmuted into regis Wheat bush. 7,377,973 4,786,292 12,164,265 tered bonds which offer complete safety. Oats 3,370,086 1,922,150 5,292,236 703,797 889,274 1,593,071 Barley We have only space to notice one more point in the debt Rye 461,817 274,766 726,583 statement, namely, the contraction of the greenback cur 9,320,418 10.455,737 Total 19,776,155 Corn 10,544,723 rency. In the exercise of the discretion confided to him by The receipts of wheat show an increase of 65 per cent/ Congress in the act of April, 1S05, Mr. McCulloch has seen and of oats, 175 per cent.; while with the total of wheat fit to withdraw currency to the amount of four millions which is the maximum the law allows. He evidently be oats, barley and rye there is an increase of 90 per cent. In lieved that the relief to the money market which would be corn there is a falling off of 2,843,250 bushels, or about 37 caused by the issue of the Three per cent. Certificates woulc per cent. In accounting for the anomaly of such immensely increased countervail any tightening or stringency which might be caused by the maximum amount of legal contraction. As receipts being coincident with high prices, it is necessary to Mr. McCulloch is an old banker, and on the w hole a very keep in view the condition of stocks both here and abroad discriminating and judicious thinker on practical finance before the harvest, and the supply of the European grain At the close of the last crop year the stock of it is not improbable that he may have calculated aright this countries. time. Indeed the present indications confirm our opinion as breadstuffs in all parts of this country was low', almost be¬ expressed last week, that the monetary pinch caused by yond precedent. The stock of wheat was so far reduced locking up currency suddenly in the Treasury, and aggrava¬ that a few weeks more consumption would have found us ted by popular apprehension or by the machinations of without flour for large masses of population. The early speculators, has completely passed off for the time being. supplies have thus been required for stocking the millers and Still the Secretary of the Treasury incurs so much odium in meeting the immediate wants of consumption, while the consequence of his being the depository of the power over surplus receipts have been readily taken for exportation. A the currency that it has been proposed as a great relief to similar condition of stocks prevailed in Europe. Taking him that this control should be deposited in a Board like the average of European countries, it may be affirmed that that which governs the Bank of England, all whose delibera¬ they have now had deficient harvests for two successive years, tions and doings shall be completely public; and should be and the past summer found them in a condition closely verg¬ known by the press to every one. Whether this project can ing upon famine. There, as here, the millers, owing to the be carried out or not may, perhaps, be doubted: as, also, high prices of grain, had worked upon the lowest possible whether it would work well, if adopted. But we may be stocks, intending to replenish after the harvest; and the well assured that the duties of the Secretary of the Treasury consequence has been an unexpectedly large early demand are quite heavy enough, and multifarious enough, without for grain, and a general advance in prices. Were there be¬ hind this active fall demand an abundant supply of grain, it this additional burden. would be reasonable to conclude that the present high rates must ultimately yield THE BREADSTUFFS MARKET. but the general tenor of European advices tends to a different estimate ,of the result of the It was very generally' anticipated that one "of the early harvest. It is now generally conceded, with reference to consequences of the abundant harvest throughout the entire Great Britain, that, although the harvesting weather was country would be a decline in the value of breadstuffs. The high prices of cereals for several months past were attributed moderately propitious, yet the cold, heavy rains during the maturing of the crops did serious injury, so that the yield to the deficiency of last years crops; and it was naturally of wheat may be estimated at 20 per cent, below the aver¬ concluded that, with our unusually abundant harvest, prices would rule low. That result, however, has not followed. age. The imports of wheat into the United Kingdom for the first two weeks of September were 1,521,000 cwts., On the contrary', as will be seen from the following compar¬ ison, the quotations now are little changed from those current against only 596,000 cwts. lor the same period of last year; which indicates a conviction among grain merchants that at this time last year, when the deficiency of the crops was the country will require unusually large foreign supplies. generally understood: Indue importance seems to have been attached to the fact that Oct 10, If67. Oct. 5, 1866. Flour, Superfine, $ bbl $-> 65® 9 80 $.... ® France has bought somewhat freely in the British markets, 11 50®12 00 Shipping R. hoop Ohio 10 75®11 40 Double Extra Western and fct. Louis 12 25®16 60 13 00® 16 50 the purchases having been chiefly of red wheat, intended for Southern, fancy and extra 12 U0®15 00 13 50® 16 (XI 2 30® 2 50 Wheat, Chicago Spring, per bushel 1 S0@ 2 60 Milwaukee Club, seeding, and being after all comparatively nominal in quan¬ 2 30® 2 50 2 00® 2 25 Red Winter. 2 66@ 2 76 2 70® 2 80 White tity. It is very generally conceded, however, that the 2 80® 3 10 2 80® 3 10 Corn, Western Mixed 1 30® 1 35 94® 96 French Southern White crop is as short as that of Great Britain, and that 1 40® 1 42 96® 97 Rye 1 66® 1 65 1 10® 1 40 France will have to be an importer of breadstuffs to a con¬ Oats, Western cargoes f 3® 76® 61 Barley 1 40® 1 55 1 30® 1 50 siderable extent. In Belgium the crop is short; the harvest This apparent anomaly in values is not to be accounted of Poland is poor; Spain is deficient, and has begun to im¬ for by any disappointment at the result of our harvest. In port from Marseilles; and in Algeria the crop is so inade¬ some sections complaints are made of the yield falling con¬ quate that urgent assistance will be required from France. siderably short of anticipation. But such cases are the rare On the other side of the account, South Russia is reported .. ..... v .. . . ..... .... . ... Turkey, and the countries bordering on the Danube, have a full average; Egypt will have more than its late surplus; Hungary and Banat have overwhelm¬ ing crops; while, as to the countries on the Baltic seaboard, there is as yet no definite information. It will thus be seen that while many of the grain countries have about an aver¬ age yield, yet the number deficient far outweighs those hav¬ to have a fair crop ; in connection with the very light stocks at the beginning of the year, the inference is plain, and it appears to us beyond reasonable question that the Old World will require all our surplus to make up its deficiency. This fact, Wheat enough however, does not warrant famine prices. has certainly been raised to supply the world’s demand. And yet, since it is our surplus that determines the value of our crop, and as that surplus is needed for meeting the European deficiency, it is not easy to see how the prices of breadstuff's in this country can rule otherwise than high until next harv¬ est. In the event of the yield proving better than is expected in countries from which the advices are not conclusive, or of our own crop proving even more abundant than present esti¬ mates, this conclusion may be to some extent modified ; but yet, taken in that case, tive heavy item of cost, the pres¬ upon factor’s loans being about 2^ per cent, per month. Taking into consideration all these circumstances, it is readily perceived that the cost of growing cotton now is more than double that of years before the war. Yet, to these items of increased cost must be added the tax of 2£ cents per pound, the climax of the planter’s diffi¬ culties, placing him, as it does, in a position in which it be¬ interest ing above an average. Taking Europe as a whole, then, it must be concluded that its harvest is short. Still we do not consider the actual foreign yield below that of last year ; and even charges become a very' ent rate comes more than doubtful whether he can continue to com¬ successfully with the growers of other countries. be said of the duty of the South to pay its share of the Federal burthens, it is very clear that the en¬ forcement of this impost must end in sapping that section of its vitality and fatally prostrating its chief industry, and thus depriving the country of one of its principal sources of wealth. When cotton was selling at 35 to 45 cents per oound the duty appeared comparatively harmless; but now that the price is steadily descending to its old level, the question of the tax becomes a matter of life or death to the We can ill afford to allow sectional influ¬ cotton interest. pete Whatever may to ences render result of such us in any degree indifferent to the necessary The whole country is deeply con¬ policy. cerned in maintaining our old ascendancy in the world’s cotton trade, for it has not only hitherto been a chief element a through the foreign demand which always exists for this staple, but the interests of Northern commerce and manufactures are also bound up in the main¬ tenance of this supremacy. If England can supply herself with cotton cheaper than ours, she at once gains an important in it would be too much to expect compara¬ cheapness in breadstuff's. COTTON GROWING AND THE 455 THE CHRONICLE. 12,1867.] October COTTON TAX. national power, our advantage over our cotton manufacturers. But the really grave fact to be contemplated, in the event of our being outdone in competition as cotton growers, is that the South countries under the new condition of affairs inaugurated in itself would be comparatively ruined—a mere grain growing the South. The experience of the planters during the last country competing with the West—and in that case what details of cotton growing, it has long been a matter of doubt as to how far we should be able to compete with the growers of other Among those best acquainted with the has been far from encouraging, notwithstanding becomes of the large Southern demand for Northern manu¬ It is a short-sighted the high prices realised upon their product; but as that has factures and Western breadstuff's ? been a period of transition, it would be unfair to regard it policy which aims to relieve the burthens of the North by as fully illustrating what may be expected to obtain per¬ the imposition of this tax. Just so far as the tax injures the South does it injure Northern trade; so that although we manently under the new order of things. The recent decline in the price of cotton is forcing this may escape the impost, yet we do not escape its effects. That there is real danger of our losing permanently our question upon the serious attention of the cotton trade. The current price of the staple at Liverpool is equal to about 20 former ascendency in the cotton trade is evident from a com¬ cents, currency, for low middling, which may be taken as parison of the imports of American cotton and of that of other representing the average crop ; but out of this 20 cents the countries into Great Britain before the war and since. The planters receives only about two-thirds, or 13A cents ; for there following figures will illustrate this point: BEFORE THE WAR (GREAT BRITAIN). must be deducted 24 cents tax, and 3^ cents expenses, in¬ Total. Other countries. American. 603,576,861 cluding loss of weight on account of the damp condition of 1S50 170,423,749 lbs. 498,153,112 757.379.749 100,740,787 590,038,902 the cotton; which brings down the price to 14 cents, with¬ 1851 929,782,448 104,151,904 795,030,544 1852 895.278.749 236,826,953 058.451,7% out any allowance for the cost of carrying the article from 1S53 887,333,149 105,181,803 722,151,340 I854 891,751,952 210,122,528 081,029.424 the plantation to the interior towns. According to one of 1S55... 1,023,886,304 243,840,288 7K),040,010 1856 two years ... ... ... ... .. the most trusted authorities in the New York cotton ■ this and this trade . ... * price is really below what it now costs to grow cotton ; a brief consideration will show the entire credibility of assertion. Before the war the cost of cotton to the 1857 1858 1851) 054,758,048 833,237,770 961,707,204 ... ... ... SINCE TIIE WAR 1S65 1806 969,318,896 1,034,342,176 1,225,989,072 (GREAT BRITAIN). " 135,832,480 520,057,440 ”! 314,500,848 201,104,400 204,281,808 842,145,SOS 857,072,496 977,978,238 1,377,129,936 LIVERPOOL ONLY, understood to be 6 cents per lb. Nowr, however, Year ending Aug. 31st. 3,654,179 2,393 470 1,260,709 every item of cost is enormously advanced. As a rule, prices 1806, bales 3,106,158 1,800,544 1,239,014 average about double those of 1860. This rule applies to 1867 For the ten years preceding the war the imports of Amp. draft animals, to agricultural implements, to buildings, to the appliances for transportation and to gins, repairs and rican cotton amounted to 7,127,500,000 pounds, and ot the labor. The negroes live more expensively than when in a cotton of other countries to 2,161,000,000 pounds; the pro¬ state of slavery, and require comparatively higher wages, portion of the whole imports consisting of American while, owing to the high prices of breadstuff’s and provisions* per cent., and of all other countries 23 per cent. it costs much more to feed them than formerly. It may, there¬ the proportion of American was 14 per cent, and of fore, be quite safely estimated that for a given amount of countries 86 per cent.; but, owing to the continuance of the labor the planter has to pay fully twice as much as-in former war during the first four months of the year, that period AT grower was ♦ being 77 In 1865, other times. He is formerly upon the factor and, as his greater de¬ pendence is attended with increased risk to the lender, his more than for advances to cultivate his crop, dependent exceptional. In 1866, when planting in the South had been resumed, the receipts from the United States were 38 per cent, of the whole, and from other counmust be regarded as 456 THE CHR0JS1CLE. [October 12,1867, tries 62 per cent. Taking two last cotton years the receipts at Liverpool, for the Catcst iHIonetarj) antr Commercial (Engliol) JLiua. (ending August 31, 1866 and 1867), RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON we find the proportion in bales has been 37 per cent, of AT LATEST DATES. American and 73 per cent, of other countries. These statis¬ EXCHANGE AT LONDON— EXCHANGE ON LONDON. SEPT. 27. tics show that we have lost ground immensely, and should LATEST be regarded as affording a conclusive reason why the RATE. DATE. RATE. ON— Government should relieve this interest of its burthens. While we are now raising cotton without profit, India cotton is - selling at 7d. per pound at Liverpool, about 60 or per cent, above its value beldre the war. In e ther words the India growers can alford to have the price of their staole reduced 2£d. per pound before they are placed in their former position of competition with the United States. Can we afford a proportionate reduction in the price of our staple ? If not, how are we to compete with Eastern cotton ? That the planter should be able to pay the tax under such circumstances is Abstract statement, October, 1867 .<■. short. Sept. 27. 44 44 44 11.95 @ 2 ' .25 @ 13. 8^@ 44 44 44 Paris 25.32,53 @25.37j*. short. Paris .'. 25.17>3@25.25 Vienna 3 months. 12.62^3 @i2.67>3 4fc Berlin 6.27 @ 6.275a 44 St. Petersburg 32 @32^ ^44 49 !*@ 49,5£ Cadiz Lisbon 90 days. 6IX© 52 3 months. 27.45 @27.?0 Milan 44 Genoa 27.45 @27.50 44 27.45 @27.-0 Naples New York.... Jamaica Havana Rio de Janeiro Buenos Ayres. 44 44 n 25.20 — — — - — — — 33 H 3 mo’s. Sept. 27. — — @ 25.32>3@ 8 mo’g. "" — — — . 30 Sept. 22. 53^ days. — — . — — — — — — — — — 60 days. 44 44 44 44 30 As. C‘%d. 4s. 5Yid. 2 p. c. dis. Is life/® lslljc/@ 44 Madras Calcutta Sydney — — Singapore Hong Kong... Ceylon.. Bombay ... appears TIME. short. 11 1SK@11.19«4 3 months. 25.37,tf@25.42,53 44 13.10 ©13.10J* Pernambuco.. from the books and Treasurer’s Treasury Department, on the 1st September and 1st as ... Valparaiso.... clearly impossible. PUBLIC DEBT OF THE. UNITED STATES. returns in the Amsterdam Antwerp. Hamburg TIME. lsll[d@ days. 1 p. c. [From : — — — dis. Aug. 15. our own — — Sept. 26 sept. 9. Sept. 6. Sept. 6. Aug. 26. Aug. 16. Sept. 8. Aug. Is. Aug. 2?. Aug. 21. Sept. 23. Sept. 20. Sept. 22 — — — 60 90 00 109* days. days. days. 1 p. c. 20Ja@21 @48X 4» 48 44 45)4 @ 21 @ 44 6 mos. 44 r 44 44 44 - 175ii@18prem. 44 4s. 6itftf.@ 4s. 4.H<L@ — - — — 2@2)*( p.c. is.nxcm 1 — 44 lftlix# — 30 days. 1@1^ p. C.. 1 —* Correspondent.] London, Saturday, Sept. 28, 1867. Although the trade of this country is so extensive, being carried on nation in the world, there is but one branch which has at¬ $ 6 “ ’67 & ’68. considerable degree of attention during the present week. 14,869,791 80 14,707,041 80 161,S50 00 6 “ 1881 283,670,100 (10 283,676,100 00 It is, however a department of commerce which concefns every class of 6 “ (5-20'e) 1,205,710.500 00 1,235,380,750 00 20,670,250 00 Navy Pen. F’J 6 p.c. the community, and is especially important to the United States. 13,000.000 00 13,000,000 00 Of course I refer to the wheat trade, and, in tome respects, the position of Total 1,715,6S7,741 80 1,745,196,141 80 20,508,400 00 the market for breadstuffs is an anomaly, although when we come to DEBT BEARING CURRENCY INTEREST. examine into the minuter details we find that the existing firmness is 6 per ct. (RR ) bonds $ 10,316,000 00 $16,746,000 00 $400,000 00 $ 3-y'ars com. iut. n’tes 78,830,600 00 78,839,580 00 20 00 quite justified. - I referred in my letter of Saturday last to these circurn 3-years 7-30 notes 400,786,025 00 365,489,100 00 35,296 925 UU stances affecting the trade, and they may be recapitulated as follows : Total 493,971,625 00 461,074,680 00 34,896,945 00 firstly, the small supplies of old wheat iu the hands of the farmers; MATURED DEBT NOT PRESENTED FOR PAYMENT. secondly, the limited stocks held by the millers; thirdly, the circum¬ 7-S0 n. due Aug. 15/67 stance that the wheat crop iu this country proves, so far as we are able $ $4,250,000 00 $4,250,000 00 $ 6 c. comp. int. n'es 12,672.730 00 7,483,160 00 5,189,630 66 to B’ds of Texas ind’fy judge, below an average, and greatly under the expectations which 263.0 0 00 262,(KM) 00 • 1,000 00 Treasury notes (old). 165,311 64 164,511 64 S00 00 had been formed regarding it at the period of blooming ; and, fourthly B'ds of Apr. 15, 1812. 64,768 68 54,061 64 10,707 04 Treas. n's of Ma. 3,63 the deficiency of the French harvest, and the purchases of Freuck 959,380 00 959,380 00 Temporary loan... 5,279,185 55 5,012,203 55 266,982 00 Certifi. of indebt’ees buyers here, as well as in Germany and Eastern Europe. These cir¬ 36,000 00 36,000 00 cumstances fully justify the existing position of the trade, which during Total. 19,440,375 87 18,221,256 83 1,219,119 04 the present week has, for the most part, continued firm with an upward DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST. tendency in prices. Some of the priucipal provincial markets, however, United States notes. $365,164,844 00 $361,164,844 00 $ $4 000 000 Oft have shown less firmness, and the quotations have declined Is. per qr„ Fractional currency. 29,392,172 97 29,864,713 37 472,540 40 ’ ‘ Gold certi. of deposit 15,462,700 00 14,867,820 00 but at the close of the week much firmness prevails, and in the London 594 880 U0 market foreign produce has improved in value to the extent of Is. per Total 410,019,716 97 405,897,377 37 4,122,339 60 DEBT BEARING COIN INTEREST. September 1. O tobsr 1. Increase. Decrease. with every tracted any .. ... * ... . quarter. RCATITULATION. $ Bearing coin interest..1,7!5,687,741 Bearing cur’y interest.. 495,971,625 Matured debt 19,440,375 Bearing no interest.... 410,019,716 Aggregate Coin & in Treas... $ $ 80 1,745,196,141 SO 29,508,400 00 00 461,074,680 00 87 97 <>4 10 730 003 64 ......... 135,112,009 24 2,495,277,446 76 13,224,085 35 2,494,081 71 The following statement shows the amount of coin separately at the dates in the foregoing table : COIN 94V66 4,122,339 60 2,641,119,459 64 2,630,389,456 00 Debt less coin and cur.2,492,7S3,365 05 34 896 lWilO 18,221,256 83 405,897,377 37 148,336,094 59 cur. It ie well known circumstance that on a $ .. and currency AND CURRENOY IN TREASURY. September 1. October 1. Increase. Decrease. $101,203,020 00 $103,298,659 69$2,U35,639 69 $ 47,073,074 59 31,813,349 55 15,259,725 04 Coin Currency.. Total coin & curre’v. 148,336,094 59 135,112,009 24 $13,224,085 35 The annual interest payable on the debt as existing September l,and October 1 1867, (exclusive of interest on the compound iutereit notes,) compares as follows : ANNUAL INTEREST PAYABLE ON PUBLIC DEBT. C'jin—5 per cents 6 “ 67-68 6 6 6 “ 1881. “ 5-20s “ N. P. F. Total coin interest ... Currency—6 per cents. 7-30 “ . September 1. October 1. $9,921,507 50 $9,921,667 50 892,187 17,020,566 72,342,630 780,000 51 00 00 00 882,476 17,020,566 74,122,845 780,000 51 00 00 Decrease. - $ 9,711 00 . 1,780,215 00 00 $100,956,951 01 $102,727,455 01 $1,77 ,504 00 980,760 00 1,004,760 00 24,000 00 $ 29,251,379 82 26,680,704 30 2,576,675 52 Total curr’ncy interest $30,238,139 82 $27,685,464 30 Aggregate coin & currency,excl.comp. interest notes $181,195,090 83 $139,412,919 31 Increase. $ % $ $2,552,675 52 $782,171 62 , rising market farmers are very unwilling to thrash out their produce and send it to market, but that when wheat or any other .description of produce has reached its highest poiut, or rather when the market is not only on the wane, but is decidedly droopiug, farmers send their produce forward freely, and force down prices at a rapid rate. So far as holding back supplies is concerned, the remark applies to the present time, and not only in thi® country but also in France, and, from the nature of our latest advices, to the United States. The consequence is that the principal wheat mar¬ kets of the world are rather scantly supplied, and as millers in this country are short of stock, the trade must for the present continue to rule firm. As regards this country, the imports are on a very large scale. Millers are in the position of making considerable purchases out of the foreign arrivals, and probably when their wants are somewhat adequately supplied, they will be enabled to place the trade more in their own hands. At present they are operating with great caution, although, at the same time, they are buying to a considerable extent. Notwithstanding the many statements to the contrary, lamina position to state that, from the results of threshing, the wheat crop, on good and well-farmed land, is a good one. One of the principal growers in our leading wheat county—Essex—has threshed out several hundred quarters, and the yield is at the rate of 6^ quarters to the acre. This is a most satisfactory result, and is more especially so when I can further state that the produce was sold at an average price of 63s. per quarter. Of course, the reports in circulation respecting the deficiency of the harvest suit the purposes of the farmer, and many shrewd agriculturists are takiDg advantage of the present firmness of the trade to realise at once. But so far as I can perceive there seems to he do immediate necessity for selling freely, because farmers are not 186t.] October 12, THE CHRONICLE. receive lower pricas than those now current. Our imports, though large, are about sufficient to check any permanent rise in rices * but the intelligence we have received from the United States emB to imply that we shall not be in the receipt of any considerable eupplies from thence until the spring. As regards a foreign supply, our position at present is eminently better than at this period last year vhile it is generally admitted that the crop in this country is larger than in 1866. As soon, therefore, as the millers have completed their heavy purchases, it is probable that if wheat does not become cheaper, the trade will rule extremely quiet, owing to the extreme caution that millers are likely to show. The following statement shows the extent of our imports and exports of wheat and flour into and from the United Kingdom during the last three weeks, compared with the cor likely to responding period in 1866 : Wheat. Imports / 1866. Week ending t—Exports—s \ 1867. cwt cwt. 282,064 1866. 1867. cwt. cwt. 757,270 764,138 737,175 5,792 11.676 8,136 29,405 92,083 457 firmer, but the quotation is without material variation. In other quarters there is but little demand, and the rates are mostly unchanged. The supply of bullion held by the Bank of France amounts to £38,274,350, while discounts are at £17,617,400. The aunexed state¬ ment shows the present rates of discount at the leading Continental cities, compared with those current at this period last year : r-B’k rate-^, -—Op. m’kt—, I860. 1867. 1866. 1867. At Paris Vienna Berlin Frankfort. Amst’rd’m ... 3 2# 3 5 5 4 4 5* 4 5 2* 4 2* 2)4 3)4 5* 5)4 2-2* B’k rate—, Op. m’kt—, 1866. 1867. 1866 1867. Turin 6 5 Brussels.. 3 2* 2* 2*-2* Madrid 9 5 l*-2 2-2)4 <— - ... Hamburg St. . - Petbg. 5)4 — 4 7 7 — 2 -10 8-9 During the last few days the rates of foreign exchange have become country. At the same time, however, they are not against us, aud the large supplies of gold which we are likely to receive in the course of the next few weeks are likely to be retained here. Yesterday, bills on Paris and Hamburg were decidedly more in rather less favorable to this demand. The bullion market remains without an especial feature. The arri¬ large, having amounted to nearly £800,000. 826,369 2,258,5S3 26,014 129,624 Of this supply the principal proportion is from the West Indies and .OUR. Australia. The export demand for gold is very limited, and the busi¬ 144 46,893 27,297 1,088 ness 22.088 42,364 184 80 doing in silver is chiefly for export, there being scarcely any de¬ 6 28,S47 29,1S4 1,362 mand for shipment to Bombay or China. As regards Mexican dollars, the 78,232 118,441 1,278 1,586 tendency of prices, owing to the arrival yesterday by the West Indian It may be noticed that in the north of England and in Scotland the packet, of about £400,000, is decidedly downward. The quotations •weather has been extremely favorable for securing the crops. During for bullion are now as under : Bar gold, 77s. 9d.; flue gold, 7 7s. 9d. the past week we have had fine dry autumnal weather throughout the to 77s. 9£d.; do, refinable,77s. lid ; Spanish doubloons, 73s. 7d. to 73s, country, and great benefit has been derived. In Scotland, the crops 9d. ; United States gold coin, 76a. 3d.; bar silver, 60 5-16d ; dore do are good, and as the wheat has been harvested in good condition, we 60£d.; fine cake silver, 65,*., and Mexican dollars, 5S£d. per ounce. are not likely to have thosi spasmodic arrivals of northern buyers to On Tuesday next the new postal convention between England and purchase our dry wheats, of which there is by no means an over-abun¬ the United States comes into operation, so far as regards printed papers dant supply. of all kinds, and patterns and samples of merchandize. The reduction Cotton continues to be pressed for sale. At Liverpool during the in the charge on letters to six pence the half ounce will not take effect present week a further decline has takeu place in the quotations, not¬ until the 1st of January. The consol market during the week has been flat, with withstanding the sales have been considerable. At Manchester the very little amount of business passing in the market for cotton yarn and cotton business, and with a downward tendency in prices. The uneasy feeling goods has not been large, and buyers uecessarily contract their opera said to prevail in France respecting the recent circular of Count Bis¬ tious in consequence of the continued downward movement in the valiio marck, aud the movements o iGaribaldi in the neighborhood ©f the of the raw material. The heavy fall which has now takeu place in cot- Papal frontier, have produced much weakness in the quotation©. The toD has produced much anxiety respecting the financial soundness of arrest of Garibaldi—from which action on the part of the Italian several firms in this department of business, and, in addition to the Government it is inferred that there will be no serious disturbance 314,855 , 229,450 . 8,546 vals this week have been . . . . . failure of Messrs. James Hewitt <fc Co., noticed last week, several others mentioned. The most important is that of Messrs. Walker, Ham¬ ilton <fe Co., of Manchester and Glasgow. Other departments of trade are very quiet. The business doing is chiefly of a hand-to-mouth character, and but few changes of importance have taken place in prices. The following statement shows the extent of the fall which has taken place in the value of cotton during the last few weeks : are June 7. d. 18 Sep 28. Decl’e June 7. Sep. 28. in Italy—has caused a firmer market to prevail, but there is a great animation, and the recovery in prices is very trifling. The following are the highest and lowest prices of consols on each day of waut of the week Week : ending Sept.,28 .Monday. Tuesday Wed’y. Consols for money Thur. Friday. Sat. 94* -94* 94*-94* 94*-94* 94*-94* 94*-94* 94X-94* American securities have been dull, and, in most cases, prices have given way. United States Five-Twenty bonds are dull, and have 11* 8* 3* 11* Upland 8* 7 2* Fgypiian 12* 5* steadily declined in value.' In Erie Railway shares, during the early Mobile Broach 11* 8* 2X 7* 5* 2* Orleans 9 2* Dhollerah.... 11* 7* 5* s* part of the week, a heavy fall took place ; but since then there has been The position of the money market is without decided change. As au improvement, and the decline in prices has been partly recovered usual towards the close of the quarter there is an increase in the Atlantic and Great Western Railway securities are decidedly firmer. maud for accommodation ; but, at the same time, there is a United States Five-Twenty bonds close this evening at 72|@73 ; At¬ great waDt of animation in the market. The supply continues large ; first class lantic aud Great Western Railway debentures, 25$@26£ ; do Gonsolibills are scarce, and are therefore taken at low quotations. There dated Mortgage Bonds, .23(5)24; Erie Railway shares, 40@4l, and seems to be but little prospect of any speedy improvement. Trade re* Illinois Central, 76£@77i. The highest and lowest prices of American mains quiet, without even a tendency to increase, and the amount of securities on each day of the week are subjoined: capital required to carry on the business of the country, owing to the Weekending Sept.28 Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat’rday continued fall in prices, daily becomes less. In fact, probably not until U. S. 5-20’s 73 -73* 73 -73* 72%-73X 72*-72* 72*-72* 73 the price of cotton has reached its minimum are we likely to witness Atlantic & G’t West¬ ern consol’d bonds 22*22*-22* 22*-22* 22*-... 22*-23* 22%-23* any stability in our markets. The cotton trade is so extensive in its —rie Shares 41 -42 ($100).. 41 -42 39*-.... 40 40*-41 40*-41 Illinois shares ($100) 76X-77* 77 -77* 76*-77* 77*-.... 7n*-77* 77*-.... nature and effects that depression in it exercises a material influence on Middling— Sea Island.. ... d. d. 2 16 Middling— d. Pernambuco. ... .... ... d. I a. .. • • .. ... .. -.... -.... other branches of commerce. and although the Gold continues to flow towards London* supply of bullion held by the Bank is is certain that the accumulation must continue. tations for the best bills Annexed having various periods to 30 to 60 a 4 Percent I days bills 8, months’bank very are bills | 6 months’bank bills l*du* I 4 & 6 months’ trade bills.... l*@2 I Oq the Continent there has been an the quo¬ run : * 1*@1* ,Y * large, it Percent. 2 @23* 2 @3 increased demand for money English Market Reports—Per Cable. The daily closing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬ pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as shown in the following summary ; London Money and Stock Market.—-Quotations in the London market have been made this week generally without reference to New York^ It will be observed that what effect would otherwise have been pr©_ duced by the prices here to-day, appears only on the succeeding day. owing partly to the close of the quarter and the firmness of the wheat The results are summed up in the following resume of the daily closing trade. The supply of bullion held by the Bank of France shows a di¬ prices of reported securities : minution thia week of about £608,000, and it is understood that this Sat. Toes. Fri. Mon. Wed. Thn. decrease is caused 94 5-16 94 5-16 9-4 5-16 94 3-16 94* 94* chiefly by the purchases of wheat recently made. Consols for money... The demand for money at Paris has been extensive but there is no increase of firmness in the quotations, the Bank minimum being still M 2|, while in the open market the best descriptions of paper are dis. counted at 2 to 2J per cent. At Hamburg the money market is also more ; U. S. 6’s (1862) Illinois Central shares.. Erie Railway shares.... Atlantic & Great West¬ ern cons, bunds The 71* 76* 71* 71 7-16 s 72 40* 77* 40* 77* 41* 71* 77* 43* 71* 77* 42* 44 23* 22* 22* 22* 22 21* daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort 77* were— Franklmt 74>tf 74)f TiJa 74* 74# 74# -Liverpool Cotton Market.—The following are the closing quotations for cotton through the week ending with Friday : 10,000 Uplds. gj 12,000 8^d. f? 8^?d. Orleans S^d. Price Midd. • Tuea. 10.000 8>id. . >—• i 12.000 8Hd. S/S»d. 8^d. Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—The short stocks are having an en¬ hancing effect on the market. The movement has been upward through¬ out the list. The daily closing prices are given below : Peas. .(Canadian) pr504 lbs Flour (extra West.) p. bbl. Mon. a. d. 33 10 14 9 44 0 5 3 3 7 46 0 • .... • • Tuea. a. d. 14 3 .... Sat. a. d. 13 10 14 9 43 6 5 3 3 7 46 0 Fri. a. d. Wheat (Red W in.) p. ctl ... 13 9 *• 34 9 (Ca.if white)44 Corn (West, mx’d) p. 480 lbs 43 6 Barley( American) per 60 lba 5 3 Oats (Am. & Can.) per 45 lba 3 7 .... • Thu. d. a. 14 3 15 3 44 9 5 6 3 8 47 6 Wed. d. 3 3 6 6 8 47 6 a. 14 15 44 5 3 3 15 44 5 3 47 6 6 8 6 . • .. • Liverpool Provisions Market.—Beef is down and sinking. Pork is quiet, but in bacon and lard a solid advantage is gained. Cheese is lower Lard (American) Cheese (mid. Am.) 0 0 0 6 71 44 54 52 44 “ Mon. s. d. 130 0 Sat. s. d. 132 6 71 0 44 0 54 6 62 0 Fri. a. d. 135 0 71 44 65 52 0 71 41 55 52 Wed. a. d. Tuea. a. d. 130 0 0. ‘ 0 0 330 71 44 O 0 0 0 Thu a. 52 a 325 71 44 55 52 Ashes—pots Rosin per 112 lbs (com Wilm ). s" “ middling..., “ 44 44 s' ’6 6 0 11 11 0 44 flue Sp turpentine 1 etroleum (std white).p. 8 lbs spirits....per8 lbs Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs. Clover seed (Am. red) 5X 44 a. 8 6 12 U 8 *6 12 0 8 0 0 26 20 6 1 45 ’6 d. 27 n 0 ”6 27 0 1 6 1 6 1 1 1 45 O 1 45 1 6 1 9 45 0 6 Produce, Oil and Metal Markets.—With exception of Linseed unchanged in price. The first is 15s. dearer, latter 10s. The closing prices are given below : Sat. 25 6 68 6 were quoted as 44 39 10 0 Whale oil p. following 252 gals.38 are Wd. Tu 25 6 68 6 Mon. 25 6 68 6 129,806 44 23 68 6 6 68 The 38*0 0 38*‘6 6 38 0 0 $297,373 ....... Cruz— Silver “ 30—St. Missouri, Hav’a— Gold Oct. 2—St. Henry Chauncy, Total for week Week.—The imports this week show dry goods, but a considerable increase in general merchandise, the total being $4,025,402 against $4,114,806 last week, and $4,726,415 the previous week. The exports are $2,872,657 this week against $3,330,163 last week, and $3,425,523 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week were 2,444 bales, against 1,414 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) Oct. 4, and for the week ending (for general ^nerchandise) Oct. 5 : General merchandise... Previously reported Since Jan. 1 In our 1865. 1866. 1867. $3,129,787 $1,867,576 $1,546,195 - 2,651,102 2,715,999 2,539,429 2,479,207 $3,571,006 173,612,493 $5,815,786 138,839,835 $4,407,005 226,460,263 $4,025,402 190,011,111 $144,685,121 $230,S67,26S $194,036,51g report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry goods for one week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Oct. 8: EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 1864. For the week $169,797,396 Previously reported Since Jan 1 .... $3,622,356 166,175,040 1865. 1866. 1867 $2,418,527 117,801,363 $2,930,151 145,328,783 $2,872 657 136,902,503 $120,219,890 $148,258,934 $139/776460 The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in thefol. lowing table: of This Since To week. Jan. 1,1867 Great Britain... $1,541,717 $74,008,823 France 147,317 8,149,396 Holland & Belg. Germany Other N.Earope Spain 369,370 305,834 1 $21,627,513 33,046,072 28,588,098 24,703,670 30,456,205 16,533,574 21,115,868 $1,069 2,820 • $121,054 2,493,930 $2,614,984 Since Jan. 1, 1867 steamship Rising Star, from Aspinwall Oct. 1, arrived at this port Oct. 9, with treasure to the following consignees : Treasure from California.—The FRANCISCO, CAL. $19,838 85 1 Duncan, Sherman &Co.... $54,440 60 Eugene Kelly & Co 61,600 00 | J. & W. Seligman & Co 12,100 00 Wells, Fareo & Co 129,473 72 Dabney, Morgan &Co 94,756 42 Eureka L & Yuba Canal Co 16,542 26 | Order 40.000 00 Panama Railroad Co $428,716 85 Total from San Francisco FROM ASPINWALL, N. G. —. $500 00 I McKesson & Robbins 289 00 | J. W. Canfield $500 00 1,000 00 2,289 00 Aspinwall Total frem San Francisco and This week. To Cuba. Hayti 4,082,641 Other W. I 16,361,951 Mexico 1,385.116 New Granada... 1,142,814 Venezuela .... $163,7b8 61,585 123,011 33,043 42,969 $431,005 85 Aspinwall The arrivals of treasure from San Francisco since the commence¬ shown in the following statement: Since Since Date. Steamship. At date. Jau. 1. Steamship. At date. Jan. 1. Date. Jan. 10.Rising Star. $874,764 $874,764 June 2.H. Chauucey. 774,31311,214,959 44 20.New York.. 625,966 1,400,720 June 11.Arizona.... 6c3,26211,868,218 Jan. 31.H. Chauncey 1,072,175 2,472,8*6 June 23.0c’n Qneenl,141,19813,009,416 Feb.10. Ocean Queen 788,027 3,260,922 July 4.Rising Star. 804,v50 13,813,669 Feb.22.Ra ng otar . 952,082 4,218 004 July 11.Arizona.... 699.493 14.513,158 Mar. 4 H. Chauncey. 818,818 5,031,8x2 July 21,Oc’n Queen 1,158,396 16,671,571 44 13.Ocean Queen 244,888 5,276,710 Aug. l.H. Ch’ncey.1,858,062 17,529,655 Mar.24.Rising Star.. 833,151 6,109,861 April 1 H. Chauncey 891,992 7,001,868 “ 14.Ocean 44 Aug. 11, RisingStar 1,165,844 18,695,417 Aug. 20, Arizona... 22.New V ork... 1,114,778 Queen 1,142,884 8,144,737 943,194 19,688,667 Sep. 2.H. Chauncey1,088,822 20,727,456 9,259,515 Sep. 9.RisiDg Star. 207,252 1,3)5,366 206,214 9,465,729 Sep. 20.Arizona May 11.Arizona 409.667 9,875,396 Ocr. l.H. Ch’ncey. 815,447 May 26.0cean Queen 565,24710,440,646 Oct. 9.Rising Star. 428,717 May 2.H. Chauncey. Bankers’ 20,934,725 22,2.0,095 23,065,542 23,494,259 ©alette. Friday, Oct. 11, 1867, P. M. $177,183,499 Total for the week...... $42,350,3^8 A spin wall— Gold... 5.045 Silver 2,289 3—St. Rapidan, HavanaGold.. 109,831 FOREIGN IMPORTS AT MEW YORK POR THE WEEK. 1864. - _ Same time in 1858 1857... 1856 1855 1854 1853 1852 Previously reported ment of the year, are decrease in $917,904 58,850 | Sept. 28—St. Northwood, Vera 38*‘6*6 COMMERCIAL AMD MISCELLANEOUS MEWS. Drygoods 42,450 Gold bars 41,640,649 _ for the 10,552 imports of bpecie at this port during the week have been as „ the quotations for metals: Exports l COO : Fat. 38 0 0 Foreign silver 2,045 46,490 ..... 2,noo follows: Total from 0 0 Foreign silver 5—St. City of Antwerp, Liverpool— British gold 5—St. Laurent, Havre— Total since Jan. 1,1867 Same time in 1866 $53,915,883 1866 22,991,855 1864 35.566,559 1863 33,452,114 1862........................ 43,5.j6,214 1861 8,281,582 1860 40,012,793 1859 58,588,642 Mon. Tu. Wd. Th. £10 10 0 £10 10 0 £10 10 0£ll 0 0 39 10 0 39 10 0 40 0 0 49 0 0 follows 6—St. Hammonia, Ham— Mexican silver Previously reported Th. 25 6 Iron (Sc. pig mxd nnm) p. ton Tin (Straits & Banca) p. 112 lb and Gold and silver bars. British gold 3—Sr. Bremen, ParisGold and silver bars. Total lor the week Isaacs & Asch Marcial & Co 44 Imports “ (obl’g). p ton£10 5 0 £ Sperm oil a 44 1,200 8 68 Fri. The 6 6 25 Sugar (No.12 Dch atd) p.,112 lbs. Linseed (Calcutta). *44 Linseed cake 44 oil „ Foreign silver 3—St. Bremen, South¬ ampton- FROM SAN Oil and cake the market is Cake and oils 44 $3,000 “ 44 Fri. 2,826,917 2,704,458 * following will show the exports of specie from the port of New ending Oct. 6, 1867 : Oct. 2—St. Russia, Liverp’l— Mexican silver " “ 3—St Bremen, Bremen— *8 6 12 0 London and the 97,392 895,028 2,280,41)0 York for the week 6 Th. s. d. *6 12 1 6 5X 1 1 1 45 0 0 1 1 9 1 1 44 Tn. s. d. '9 26 6 27 44 Wed. Mon a. d. Sat. a. U. The 3,800 54,073 26,649 40,001 Brazil Other S. A. porta Allother ports 11,331 1,704,613 2,287,832 2,184,940 0 Liverpool Produce Market.—Ashes and Oiover Seed continue to be unquoted. Rosin is firm, medium having gained Is. on the week. Spirits Turpentine is easier by 6d. Petroleum is strong and advancing. Fri. 8. d. Australia Br.N A Colonies 5,267,377 Br. Guiana 52,128 - 0 0 0 6 0 55 Other S. Europe East Indies China & Japan. Thu- Wed. 12.000 8^d. 8fr d. Mon. Sat. Fri. Bales s^.d “ [October 12,186?. THE CHRONICLE. 458 Since Jan. 1. $4,415,212 1,075,757 6,432,566 1,585,649 2,435,179 542,091 The Money Market.—After the completion of preparations for quarterly statement of the banks, made up on Monday, the' money market exhibited a partial relaxation from the extreme strin¬ gency noted at the close of last week. According to the weekly statement of the Associated Banks, the banks commenced the week with a loss of about 2 millions in deposits, and a reduction of nearly 4 millions in loans, but with a gain of 5800,000 in legal tenders ; and although the statement showed a loss in loanable resources, yet it exhibited a relatively sounder condition of things than was shown in the previous returns* The applications for money from the brokers have been quiet active ; but as the rate ou demand loans has ruled at 7 per cent., discounts have been discarded to a considerable extent, and call borrowers have been able to procure wbat money they wanted with¬ out difficulty. Discounting operations are at present done generally through the brokers, at rates ranging from 7@9 per cent, for the best grades of paper. Low grades are sold with unusual difficulty, and at high rates. There has been a perceptible falling off in the remittances of cur¬ rency to the West. The Express Companies report merely nomi¬ nal money parcels for that section; and Chicago advices represent the October 12, that the banks are experiencing relief from the return flow of cur¬ country. rency from the 3 The following are the Per cent. for loans of various classes : cent quotation Per Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. prime endorsed bills, 2 months 7 6 ©.. © 7 ” @7% Good endorsed bills, 8 & 4 months . do single names...... Lower grades 8%@10 which it i8 stamped is a shade lighter, and the points projecting from the seal are blurred and a little longer than the genuine. ~ Second—The imprint at the bottom of the face of the bond is set dif¬ ferent in the margin, there being more 9pace given it than the genuine. Tnird—The borders of the coupons which are attached to the coun¬ terfeit bonds are larger, while the red figures are finer than in the 10 ©.. 12 ©20 Securities.—Government securities have fluc¬ tuated widely. The week opened with a very active demand from United 459 THE CHRONICLE. 1867.] States parties who had sold *• 3bort” during the fall of last week, and prices consequently advanced £@1£ per cent., Sixty-Twos being especial¬ ly firm. This advance was, however, followed by another decline» during which prices touched about the same figures as at the close week. Again the process of selling “ short” was repeated ; to-day the market has bounded up in consequence, prices being above the lowest figures of yesterday. Apart from these genuine. Fourth—The borders of the ornamental lathe work are blurred and somewhat indifferently executed. Fifth—The figures denoting the bond are slightly uneven, while the blue ink in which they are printed is a duller blue, and lacks the me¬ tallic, glossy appearance of the genuine. Sixth—There is, to the experts, a difference in the vignette—the female figure on the face of the bond—the lines are not so well shaded, nor is the black ink so well distributed. The following the closing prices of leading securities, com- are of last and speculative movements the market is quiet and prices weak, the pre¬ dominant tendency being in favor of lower figures. Ten-Forties have been decided^ strong, and at one time touched 101£@102, but subsequently reached and close at 101£, an advance of £ upon O. U. U. CT. U. C. U. U. U. S. S. S. S. S. S. S S. S Sept. 6. Sep. 13. Sep. 20. Sep. 27. 111% 112% 11»% 111% H 4% 114% 113% 114% 109 110 109% 109% 111% 110% 109% 111% 108 108% 107% 107% 6’s, 1881 coup 5-20’8, 1862 coupon 5-20’s, 1864 •“ 5-20’s, 1865 44 5-20’s, 1865, N. iss. 5-,0’s,lS67,c 10-40’e, 108% 99% 107% 7-30’s 2d Series 7-30’s 3rd series.. .. 107% Oct. 4. Oct. 11. 111% 112% 110% 111% 108% 108% 109 107 109% io>% 107 108}.' 108% 99% 107% 99% 307% 99% 99% 100% 107 107 106% 106% 106% 106% 105% 105% 105% 105% Railroad Miscellaneous Stocks.—The stock market has beta quotations. Yesterday advices were received from the Treasury Department, unsettled, but firmer than last week. The easier position of the Washington, that a counterfeit had been discovered upon the $1,000 3anks has encouraged speculation, and prices have advanced our last Seven-Thirty notes of the June issue. The notes had been received throughout the list, N. Y. Central being 4 per ceut. higher, Erie from the Sub-Treasury at New York, but to what amount could 4£, Michigan Southern 1£, Cleveland and Pittsburg 4, and Cleve¬ land and Toledo 3£. The late upward movement appears to have not be definitely stated until all the receipts had been examined. It been promoted to some extent by a foreknowledge of the arrange¬ is stated however, that $120,000 had been found at the time the ad¬ ments for turning out Mr. Drew from the Erie direction ; and, on vices were sent. After the information had been communicated to the brokers it was discovered tlat $90,000 were in the the consummation of that plan on Monday last, Erie stock advanced hands of dealers, and to-day iurther amounts have been found to 71, other shares sympathizing; after which there wa3 a large amount of the stock put upon the market, while other stocks also to be in the hands of banks, bankers and others which will carry were offered quite freely. The consequence of this realizing move¬ up the amount in the hands of Wall street firms to about ment was a decline of 2@4 per cent., which to-day has been suc¬ $150,000. We append an official account of the points in which the spurious notes are considered to differ from the genuine ; ceeded by a successful effort to rally the market. The following were the closing quotations at the regular board, but at the same time it must be said that the extended comparison of notes made in Wall street to-day has shown that some of these compared with those of the six preceding weeks : 27. Oct. 4. Oct. 11. criteria are not to be entirely relied upon. In some of the points Cumberland Coal Aug. 30. Sept 6 Sept. 13. Sept 20. Sept.29 27 30 25 25 28 24% 25% 2S% in which the spurious notes are said to differ from the genuine, the Quicksilver 43% Canton Co 47% 47% 44% 43% 18 17 20 17 good notes differ from each other. So far as respects the execution Mariposa pref.... 103% 106% 106 107% 110% New York Central 108% 114% of the notes, there appears to have been discovered tut one point in Erie 70 70 61% 61% 65% 70% 69% 133 Hudson River.... 128% 12/% 128% 126% 128% 124% which the counterfeit differs from all other notes with which it has 104 103% 101% 101% 101% 101% 102% Reading 76 81% 82% 83% 82% 81% 8-8% been compared, viz., that in the letter u, in the word “ Treasurer,” Mich. Southern.. 109 109 111 111 110 109% Michigan Central 81 89 79 94 under F. E. Spinner’s signature, the letter is made with a hair line Clev. and Pittsb. 83% 79% 128 128 126 130 128% Clev. and Toledo. 131% 126% at the commencement in the good note; while there is no such Northwestern.... 4L 46 43% 46% 39% 43% 46% 67% 65% 67% 70% 70% 64% preferred 70% stroke in the bad. The counterfeit differs, however, in all cases 104 102%x.d.97 109% 102% Rock Island 104% 103% 106 102% 100% 105% 100% 100% 105% from the genuine notes in the seal; which in the former is larger. Fort Wayne 121 121% 122% Illinois Central 120% The seal on the false notes, however, is found to correspond exactly The following statement shows the volume of transactions in with that used on greenbacks. Putting these circumstances together, shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, ou each day of the theory is held by many dealers that the plates of the Treasury the week, closing with this day’s business : have been used, and also the Treasury seal, but that one appropria Thurs. Fri. Week. Tucs. Wed. Mon. Sat. 60 55 320 90 55 60 ted for legal tenders instead of the one employed in printing the Bank shares 66,308 41,708 391,491 Railroad “ 55,601 83,429 83,823 60,617 20 210 249 19 Seven-Thirties. The officers of the Treasury Department, however, Coal “ 500 400 400 1,300 Mining “ 200 .400 500 1,600 2,700 regard the note as a thorough counterfeit; and it is said that the Improv’t 44 5,2li0 1,850 2,421 25,961 5,930 6,900 3,600 Telegraph “ experts of the American Bank Note Company hold the same Steamship14 9,888 200 1,200 1,250 1,318 2,230 3,640 892 977 1,950 7,005 7S3 1,300 1,103 Express *44 opinion. It 13 impossible to estimate what amount of these notes have been At Regular Board 31,796 29,367 23,107 185,725 41,538 42,918 17,000 33,890 42,170 23,630 253,159 50,862 At Open Board... 54,387 48,200 put in circulation. Many of those received here are traced to the 7 r,537 46,736 438 864 65,686 Total current week. 93,780 West, and as such a large amount is in the hands of the New York Total Previous w’k. 65,200 95,925 73,687 75,816 72,329 83,462 422,346 66,997 50,055 dealers, it is to be presumed that the entire issue is very extensive. The following is a summary of the amount of Government bonds The Treasury has not yet made any reclamation upon the parties and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds from whom it has received the notes ; but the officers of the Depart¬ sold at the Regular Board on each day of the past week : ment anticipate having to take such action when the whole amount Sat. Tnes. Fri. Mon. Wed. Thur. Week, a.S. received has been ascertained. The dealers 7ery generally consider U. S. Bonds..*..$719,500 $919,5001,144,6001,018,700 548,000 369,000 $4,719,300 Notes 92,000 242,700 153,000 77,000 60,000 201,500 826 5oO State* City b’ds 42,000 111,0 K) 136,000 174,500 116,500 176,000 that their responsibility ceased when the Treasury accepted the Company B’nds. 14,900 24,000 43,000 36,000 38,700 23,000 756,000 178,700 notes, upon the same principle as a party receiving payment for a Total Cur. w’k...$86S,000 1,296,500 1,476,6001,306,200 763,200 769,500 6,4£ 1,500 spurious check from a bank is not subject to reclamation. We pre¬ Previous week.. 670,701) 718,300 890,500 806,1001,741,800 947,300 5,71 ,400 sume that the matter will be tested in the courts in the event of the The Gold MARKET.-r-Gold has been unsettled during the week, , , , • f « • • .... .... .... .... . . . .... . “ .... .. ;. . . . .... .... . * .... .... .... . . . . . . speculative movement. The price has depressed by the anticipation of the payment of the Novem¬ It is stated that ber coin interest, and by the more pacific aspect of affairs in Italy. seventy thousand dollars of these well-executec counterfeit Seven-Thirty Bonds had been presented at the Treasury The elections of Tuesday were followed by a fall of 2 points in the Department for redemption. All of them were of the second series premium, the result being construed as fatal to the plan of impeach¬ due Jane, 1868, of the thousand-dollar denomination, and either o ment. The market is at present considerably oversold, which for the A or B series, ranging within the following-named thousands the moment is the only consideration sustaining the market. Loans m : 68,000,140,000,160,000 and 180,000. The result of the ex were made to-day at 1-16 per cent, per day. ana in at ion as ordered The fluctuations in the gold market during the week closing with by the Solicitor of the Treasury is: Krit—The seal is slightly larger than the genuine, the red ink with Friday are shown in the following table : Treasury attempting to return the notes to those from whom it has but with less than the usual taken them. been Clos¬ High- Open- ing. Lowest, est. Range, ing. 144% 144% 144% 144% 14 >% 145 145 144% 145% 144% 143 144% 143% 143% 144 143% 143% 143% Saturday, Oct. 5 Monday, “ 7 Tuesday, “ 8 Wedn’day, “ 9 Thursday, “ 10 “ 11 Friday, Current week. Previous week Jan. 1 to date 144% 143% 132% 143 143 132% 144% 85,801,000 0% 0% 145% 40,538,000 0% 145 45,123.000 1% 143% 43.947.000 0% 143% 90,227,000 .. 143% 145% 2% 143% 145% 2% 145% 140% 14% 14 290,109,000 gold in this city for the week ending 0?tober unusual circumstance of an excess of $1,273,963 the demand, as will appear from the subjoined 5, shows the very in the over supply : Specie in banks on Saturday, Sept. 23. California $9,490,103 $815,447 118,5 >0 Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports Com interest 58,200— paid from U. S. Treasury reported supply for week Export of coin and bullion to foreign ports Paid into U. S. Treasury on account of customs 992,153 $10,438,316 Total $297,393 2,100,283— 2,393,670 $8,094,640 9,308,003 Apparent excess of reported supply for week Specie in banks on Saturday, Oct. 5 $1,273,903 Foreign Exchange.—The market for foreign bills continues Excess of supply oyer withdrawals remitting little, while the supply of pro¬ leading drawers quote 60 days sterling 109£@£, but transactions have been made £ per cent, below these figures. The following are the closing quotations for the several classes of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : The importers are dull. At the close, duce bills increases. London Comm’l. bkrs’Zn<7 do do do shrt Paris, long do short Antwerp .... Hamburg Amsterdam Frankfort Bremen Berlin © .... 109%© 109% 108% @ 10S% 5.17%© .... 6.18%© 5.17% 30 109 109%© 109% 109%© 109% .... 5.10%@ 5.13%© Oct. 11. Oct. 4. Sept. 27. 109 @109% Sept. 20. 109%© 109% 110%© 110% © 5,1S%@ 5.17% Swiss 5.15 5.20 5.20 80 © ... .... @ 40%@ 41 7.\k>@ 71 %@ 72 ... .... ... — 5.17%@ 5.15 © .... .... .... 41 41 © 40,%© 41 78%© 7l%© 72 ©109% 17% @5.17% 5.20 @5.17% 5.20 ©5.17% © 35%© 30 The transactions for the week at the 41 40%© 4(!% © 40% 78% © 78% 71 %@ 71% 108%@108% 109%© 109% 109%© 109% 5.18%©5.17% 6.16%©5.15 5.20 @5.17% 5.20 @5.17% &5%@ 30 40% © 41 40%@ 4<*% 78% © 78 * 71%@ 71% Custom House aad Sub- Treasury have been as follows : Custom House. Sept. Receipts. $354.885 49 30 477, 07 -28 408,758 09 363.386 94 Oct. 262,457 48 239,287 65 Total Balance in Sub-Treasury Deduct -Sub-TreasuryRecciDts. Payments. $4,917,146 57 $S, 1:15,776 51 518,03-2 63 1,065,759 18 2,527,617 16 639,656 39 1,758,352 55 8,093.346 59 3,670,157 17 1,588,318 45 4,258,938 99 8,458,10!) 30 $2,106,2S2 93 $27,433,239 87 morning of Sept. 30.. Balance on Saturday Increase during the $18,197,966 62 114,989,483 34 $133,187,449 96 27,433,239 87 payments during the week issued, $580,000.' Included receipts of customs were $138,000 in gold, and $1,968, 282 in Gold Certificates. People’s : Irving Metropolitan Citizens Nassau Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather Corn Exchange Continental Commonwealth Oriental Marine Atlantic following table shows the aggregate Treasury since July 6 : Custom House. Park Mechanics’ Banking Ass. Grocers’ North River East River Manufacturers & Mer.... Fourth National Central National Second Xatioual Ninth National First National Third National New York N. Exchange. Tenth National Bull’s Head National Currency Bowery National Stuyvesant / i Payments. 15,022,070 * Changes in following statement shows the condition of the Associated Banks of New York City tor the week ending at the commencement of business on October 5, 1867 : -AVEKAGE Loans and City Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical Merchants’Exchange.... National Butchers’ Mechanics and Traders’. Greenwich Leather Manuf. National Seventh Ward, National. State of New York American Exchange Commerce 5,000,000 3,000,000 800,000 1,000,000 500,000 1,000,000 AMOUNT OF- Circula- Net Legal tion. Deposits. Tenders. CaDital. Discounts. Specie. $3,000,000 $6,206,546 $1,911,833 $S93,932 $6,551,986 $2,576,708 11,534 3,691.965 1,429,686 222,4?2 2,050,000 5,062,761 879,886 4,780,369 1,752,066 484,262 3.000,000 6,933,656 5S7.000 864,013 3,416,895 129,790 2.000,000 5,206,9.13 477,0:12 742,152 109,718 2,213,797 1,500,000 3,754,156 1.900 6,594,214 1,708,276 1,013 8‘6 8,090,850 3,000,000 287,110 514,483 ‘253,4(6 2,164,471 1,300.000 3,383,122 294,626 2,186,035 444.997 1,000,000 3,131,976 19,740 798,176 1,390,384 616,528 2,717,068 1,000,000 2.0.84,917 65,103 1,786,699 877,221 600,000 396,008 ..■ 4,586,176 -1,198,517 300,000 5,766,860 33,663 2,353,516 721,869 452,858 1,235,000 3,216,226 487,994 878,188 300,584 146,727 1,500,000 2,697,600 259,9:13 1,763,690 540,912 18,823 2,403,548 800,000 195,720 1,485,520 477,536 19,320 1,986,228 600,000 3,875 805,574 103,975 200.000 1,1:19,218 139*0i3 268,140 1,769,235 724,593 600,000 2,632,234 680,886 178,641 254,567 36,726 500,000 1,223,026 290,000 3,110,960 843,831 289,763 2,000,000 4,834,396 4,733,642 993,611 1,269,422 445,057 5,000,000 10,232,429 671,844 6,938,115 9,042,935 4,708,994 10,000,000 25,752,765 1,335,758 16,927,801 12,887,36S 1.139.206 25.254 2,91*5,828 3,416,015 157,622 57,718 9,769 46,500 6,8*39 21.1S3 2.917.500 1,413,859 100.000 250,000 23-2,110 719,16-1 515,880 411,540 834,789 1,082,531 777,485 1,174,308 500, *360 1,061,991 13,6:32,870 12,4(35,506 883,535 5,551,396 3,087.270 2.715.700 641,357 1.885.700 1,555,479 904,100 9,316 90,000 225,000 24S.612 196,798 215,755 240,93s 4,464,165 3,680,701 309,278 2,394,790 822,947 933,305 288,138 91,290 214,541 69,557 115,948 250.836 9,368,60334.025,581 178,477,422 56,S53,585 $000,6S8,710 53 570,187,624 96 Clearings for the week ending Sept. 28, 1S67 Clearings for the week ending Oct. 5,1867 Balances for the week ending Sept. 28, 1267 Balances for the week ending Oct. 5, 1867 The deviations from the returns 1,579,909 3,674,367 568,342 509,054 485,685 366,697 690,222 559,959 249,233 1.200 402,939 509.694 479,975 843,370 222,000 6S6.000 688,908 240,120 476,915 299,596 3>9,912 299,261 82,520,200 247,934,3*39 Total 14,224,615 235 1,107,667 404,098 970,958 1,474,987 914,431 5,344,724 445,243 797,330 268,169 300,000 415,020 2,052,408 2,178,038 913,997 1,000,000 200,000 l,378,0u0 5,384,425 1,332,645 1,764,549 1,597,731 939,156 2,182,300 1,661,943 1,985,125 270,000 5,137.417 900,486 Eighth National 22,660,708 07 24*154,943 23 of the previous week are as fol¬ lows: Specie Circulation Dec. The following are 121,688 the totals for a series of weeks past Legal Deposits. Tenders, 191,524.312 71,196,472 197,872,063 72,495,708 199,435,952 73,441,301 200.608,8?6 74,605,840 201,153,754 75,098,762 199,40S,705 76,047,431 194,046,591 69,473,703 188,744,101 64,960,030 Circula¬ Loans. 6. 246,361,237 13 247,913,009 20 249,580,255 27. 251,243,830 3 254,940,016 10 253,427,340 17 253,232,411 24. 250,697,679 31. 247,877,662 7 250,224,560 14. 254,160,587 21. 254,794,067 28. 251,918,751 5 247,934,369 July July . J uly July Aug. . . Aug. . Aug. Aug. Aug. Sept. Sept. Sept. . . Sept. Oct. . tion. Specie. 10,853,171 33,669,397 12,715.404 33,653,869 11.197,700 33,574,948 8,738,094 33,596,859 6,461,949 33,559,117 5,311,997 33,565,37S 5,920,557 33,669,757 6,028,535 33,786,249 7,271,595 33,715,128 7,967,61!) 33,708,172 8,184,946 34,015,228 8,617,498 34,056,442 9,496,163 34,147,269 9,368,603 34,025,581 190.892,315 67,932,571 195,182,114 for last and previous $16,017,150 $16,017,150 53,041,100 Decrease. 272,5:35 258,303 Decrease. 15,518,794 15,557,404 Increase. $614,459 Increase. Decrease. 172,617 483,934 35,152,605 34,857,467 Decrease. 295,138 31.664,741 36,494,213 Increase. 3,172,788 4,515,974 Increase. 4,829,472 53,655,569 Specie Legal Tenders- . .... 4,752,851 6,843,907 4,580,234 7,327,841 Due from Banks Due to Banks Deposits Clearings The annexed statement shows the condition Banks for a Decrease. 10,627,921 10.629,976 Circulation. 1,343,186 following are 10,640,201 419.399 Deposits Circulation. 461,951 10,641,770 10,637,651 10,633,750 10,635,925 10,6-27,761 871,744 333,118 302,055 304,! 179 317,389 314,242 307,658 279,714 252,691 228,528 272,535 258,303 36,364,835 36,459,379 36',323,355 36,45S,539 36,263,347 10,6*28,310 10,628,324 10,626,356 10,628,794 10,632,737 10,628,744 10,629,976 10,627,921 35,327,203 35,152,605 36,494,213 weeks : compared with those of the two previous Sept. 30. $41,900,000 Loans 95,177,109 $41,900,000 Specie Legal tender notes 417,073 13,046,359 15,694,139 14,079,652 452,339 12,987,468 14,570,379 13,428,063 Deposits 35,294,823 24,855,5)15 Due from other banks Due to other banks (National) Circulation (State) - 249,299 96,409,055 following are the comparative totals for a Legal Loans. “ “ Oct, 2 :.... 97,’19,813 97,726,719 97,922,483 97,022,167 30...... 96,409,055 7..,.^ 95,177,109 Specie. 14,068,633 13,099,023 35,198,755 24,801,364 259,122 253,523 past: Tenders. ^Deposits. 400,680 15,296,583 35,810,808 510,564 14,674,569 35,906,160 453,029 13,423,822 85,660,369 467,016 12,864,108 35,198,755 452,339 12,987,468 34,933,685 417,073 13,046,859 35,294,823 Sept. 23. $41,900,000 97,022,167 467,016 12,864,108 34,933.686 24,860.394 Capital • 37,077,456 37,-'85.226 38,170 418 37,839,640 38,094,543 86,861,47? the footings of the Boston Oct. 7. 9. 16 23 2,055 of the Philadelphia Specie. Loans. Legal Tenders. 52,4-20,272 16,022,675 16,234,914 52,802,552 53.150.569 16,608,860 16,862,112 53,104,475 53,427,840 16,733,198 53.117.569 15,909,195 53,5i9,449 15,767,146 53,399,090 16,882,816 53.734,687 15,717,909 53,776,452 16,249,658 53,792.203 16,060,733 15,845,482 53,540,501 53.655.569 15,513,794 53,041,100 15,557,404 banks statement, Circulation 14,232 43,610 series of weeks. Boston Banks—The “ 414,289,517 421,196,637 8s5,591,548 441,707,385 514,088,733 592,142.360 Oct. 5. Sept. 28. “ 491.830,952 481,097,226 468,921,746 499,868,035 ; Capital Sept. Clearines 494,081,990 521,259,463 69,657,445 193,086.775 65,176,903 1S5,603,939 57,709,885 1S1,439,410 55,991.526 600,688,710 178,447,422 56,853,585 670,187,624 leading items of the Philadelphia Banks The Aggregate following shows the totals of the Philadelphia Banks.—The weeks Dec. $2,961,988 862,059 Inc. Deposits..... Legal Tenders Dec.$3,984,382 Dec. 127,560 Loans New York City Banks.—The Banks. New York Manhattan Merchants’ Mechanics’ Union America Phoenix 897,301 <90,372 657,676 358,086 849,723 419,249 112,976 391,864 369.693 1,266,798 . 1,360,105 New York Gold Exch’ge transactions at the Sub- Sub-Treasury Receipts. Balances. s 874.915 350,000 500,000 , 32 ,*330 7,000 118,568 2,206,100 18.653 132,309 4,189 55,563 570,033 104,602 753,160 21,S<38 947,361 22,298 7,7:30 17,125 565,541 137,086 242.127 34,048 8,069 10,475 360,000 56,328 98,223 11,335 501,436 39,144 91*0,000 572,378 308,351 4,129 19,009 77,917 11,615 16,572 283,500 1,483 S36 -11,535 67,743 2,966,21*3 16,189 1,680,167 916,693 400.000 Eleventh Ward Balances. Date. Dec. 1,966,678 July 6.... 13,055,392 130,492,492 6. 1,610,006 Inc. 89,112 13.... 28.444,856 2,078,270 28.533,967 130,581,603 July 13.. Inc. 269,989 July 50.. 20 17,330,180 17,060,498 130,311,621 1,901,280 “ Dec. 511,522 21,804,904 21,689,378 130,196,095 27.... 2,576,313 .July 27.. Inc. 1,434,426 Aug. 17,416,869 128,761,670 18,851,294 ...3 2,447,422 Ang. 3.... “ Inc. 325.535 18,180,192 18.505,724 129,087,202 10.... 2,685,075 Aug. 10. it Inc. -«7 6,196,900 Aug. 17 17.49 :.144 23,690,104 1:35,284,162 2,978,496 Dec. 884,962 24 28,475,460 27,610,499 134,449.200 2,992.122 Aug. 24. “ Dec. 21,683,181 21.445.375 112,766,019 31.... 43,128,556 2,480,567 Aug. 31. Inc. 1,148,640 Sept. 7. 15,47S,r97 16,927,244 111,214,666 2,894,219 Sept. 7.... ‘f Inc 5,166,620 Sept. 14. 15 453,207 20,619,828 119,381,287 14.... 2,605,971 “ Dec. 684,465 21.... 23,595,430 22,910,965 118,686,822 2,996,876 Sept. 21. * “ Dec. 3,707,338 20,259,418 16.552,079 114,989,483 28.... 2,858,3. 4 Sept. 28. Dec. 11,235,273 Oct. 27,4:33,239 18,199,966 105,754,210 5.... 2,106,2S2 Oct. 5.. Ending 500,000 800,000- 4,703,054 2,126,972 2, -240,522 1,325,441 3,114,773 1,581,290 1,171,284 1,669,-207 798,705 4S 1,534 140,153 858,750 131,702 6,556 333,000 286,743 195,536 10,230 163,596 - Balances The Weeks Chatham North American Hanover Loans $105,754,210 09 11,285,273 25 evening week Total amount of Gold Certificates in the Republic 900,000 63,442 57,772 89,226 12,877 239,063 59,309 1,000,000 1,000,000 Ocean Mercantile Pacific Importers and Traders’.. Treasure receipts from 5,786,009 3,103,255 2,988,473 1,741,252 422,700 4,839,718 2,000.000 1,738,926 450,000 1,472,009 412,500 2,100,995 1,000,000 1,000,000 2,348,729 1,617,000 500,000 4,000,000 10,798,687 400,000 1,403,783 2,120,163 1,000.000 2.669.499 1,000,000 2,448,467 1,000,000 4,525,000 1,500,000 2,876,236 1,000,000 2,000,000 3,728,289 750.000 2,936,587 300,000 1,273,629 400,000 1.855.205 1,150,249 300,000 6,144,352 1,500,000 10,869,910 2,000.000 1,000,000 Broadway Clearings. The movement of statement [October 12, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 460 series of weeks ■Circulation.— National. State. 24,734,146 24,783,967 24,817,759 260,577 252,740 259,723 a October THE CHRONICLE. 12,1867.] 461 SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, TOGETHER WITH THE AMOUNT OP BONDS AND NUMBER OP SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK. STOCKS AND American United do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. " • * eu l burs Eri. National: . States (is, 18tSI..registered. do 6s, 1868 coupon. do 6s, 186 8..registered. do 6s, 1881 coupon. do 6s, 1831. .registered. do 6s, 5-20s (’62) coupon. do 6s, 5-20s doregist'd do 6s, 5-20s (’64) coupon. do 6s, 5.20s do regist'd do 6s, 5.20s (’65) coupon do - 6s, 5.20s do reqist'd do 6s, 5.20s ('65 n.) c->up. do 6s, 5.20s do regist'd do 6s, 5.20s (1867) coup. do 6s, 5.20s do regie* d do 6s, Oregon Wa. 1881 do 6s, do. (i y'rly) do 6s, 1871 coupon. do 5s, 1811..registered. do 5s, 1874 coupon. do 5s, 1874. .registered. do 5s, 10-40s ...coupon. do 5s, 10-40s. registered. 7-30sT. Notes ls£ se. do do do 2 d series do do do 3d series do State: 112 — 110% 112% 112% 112% 112 104%:104% |lll% 96,000 112% 1,176,510 30,000 158,000 — 108% 1109% 109% 109% 108% *04% 109% 108% 109% 109% 109% 109 107% 107% 107 — — — 107% 107% 107 1,950,000 107% 327,100 3U1.7U0 — 107% 20,C. 0 107% 118 116 — — — 100% — 250, >'00 468,00J — 105% 106% 106% 106% 105% 106% 106% 105% 105% 10 0% 106 166,000 $ 82% 84 57,000 do Kentucky 6s, 1368-72 Louisiana 6s do 7s, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s 104% 104 104% 104% Missouri 6s 82 do 6s, (Han. & St. Jos. RR.) 104% do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 100 99% 100 do 6s,1867-77 do 5s,1868-76 107 do 7s, State B’yB’ds (coup) do do do (reg.) 52 52% North Carolina 6s (old) 53 52% do 68. (new) Ohio 68,1870-75 do 6s, 1S81-86 Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 5s 63% 63% 03% 63% 64% do 6s (old) 62% 62% 63% 63% 62 do 6s, (new) —— — — — ‘04% 82 500 10,000 — 44,500 90 9,000 — Municipal: 95 Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan do 6s, Public Park Loan., do 6s, Improvement Stock. Chicago 7s, Water Loan Jersey City 6s, Water Loan .... 53 64% 63% — — — 146% 45 - 50 20 44% 100 — — 44% — 45% 19 45 19 700 2,200 — 25,861 4,100 0,438 143% 14% 142% 141% 112% 100 Central American... 100 , United States i!8’ FarS° & Co wwMft^v—MaripoBa Gold Manposa preferred Minnesota Copper New Jersey Zinc Quartz Hill do 59 60% 62% 61 3,238 62% 23% 58 — — — 57% 9 -- 17% 57 — — 31 52 — 55% 2,953 9 17 ^ 100 4 0 50 do do 128% 122% 122% — 25 1,300 2,650 1,262 109% 525 83 83% 32,900 46% 67% 46% 67% 4,210 11,700 no% 111% 114% 114% 113% 114% 62,279 26% 1,970 83% 34% 83% 77 45% 42 65% 66% 26% 72% 27% 45% 67 68% 27% — — 49% — 49% 43% .100 26% 26% 74 73 400 50 305 - 50 50 43% 43% . do 200 102% 92 1st mort consolid’ted . — Western, 1st mortgage do 2d Hannibal and St. — 3d 85 85% S5% 82 101% 91 91% - 91 91% — — m 107 lJ7 6,000 101% — 7,000 99 — — ..... — mortgage. 103 1,000 ljT mort, (S. F.). ’85 mortgage, 1875.. — ~r i — — 15,0 0 117% — 85% Essex, do 2d Central York d° do do do do — do do — — — 85% do do do . 93% do do 2d 1,000 — 5,000 86 ‘ — 80 87 — — 83% 80 80 500 3,000 4,000 7,000 — 5,000 90 — 2,000 rriortgrasre. sinking fund American Dock Lauds Western Union 94 — Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort.. ext.. do 2,000 94% — m. do do — 99 7 2d mort. 3d mort. 2d, pref 2d, inc. ToIed°, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mort do — 90% 6s, 18837.. 6s, 1887 7s, 1876......... conv’le, 1876 Louis, AJtOD & Terre n, 1st 3,000 — — 1st mortgage... mortgage do do 0 110 100 86% Mississippi 1st mortgage Pacific (guar.)..... ” s Pittsb’g, Ft. Wayne & Chic!,' 1st m. do do 5,000 — — Paul, 1st mort.. 2d mort.. 7.^° New — ' — do Moms and 1,000 4,000 — itrn do Goshen Line,’68 Milw n kee & Pr. du Chien, 1st mort Milwaukee and St. ,, 17,000 4,000 90 90 7s, 1875 , 91% 18,000 4,000 6,000 25,COO — convertible, 1867.. Central .0 85 — 2d mort. Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 do, 8s, new, 1882.'.! 109 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund do do 2d mort .,7s... ■w- — — Joseph, 1st Mort Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72. - 1,000 7,000 — — 2d mortgage, 1879 3d mortgage, 1883.. 4th mortgage, 1880 ”” 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended.... do do 2d mortgage. do 91% — Interest do 2d $2VAr — Equipment do 9,817 12,500 1,050 1,810 93 1st mortgage.. Income do do do do * — 68 pref.100 Troy, Salem and Rutlaud.let Lorg Dock 9* 25 25% 200 120 100 100 128 109% 110 109 81 pref.100 do do do do do do do do 15 1,560 — — Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund 5 23 — 107,960 63 Railroad Ronds: Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie, 1st mort., ’77 Central of N w Jersey, 1st mort.. St. 100 55% 100 100 59% 61 7' 78% guar.100 95 do do , $35 p’dlOO 24% 100 50 61 New York and New llaven Ohio and American ..!.500 Merchants’Union $30 p’dlOO -1 do & Trust 25 New York Life & Tru=t.l00 Unicn Trust 100 United States Trust 100 tt 78 24,300 8,060 100 Toledo, Wabash and Western. 100 100 100 68% 78 0 100 express.—Adams t 70% 50 „?U?Ua and Cincinnati, Cary ...100 Telegraph.^Western Union... .100 35% 37% 38 37 36% 36% West. Union, Rus. Ext’nlOO 100 112%! 114 arnmsihip.—Atlantic Mail 114% 114% 114% ll ’ 7 r— Chicago McGregor Western, 1st mortgage. Wat. Fow. 20 Insurance.—Home — 70 76% 64% 65% 50 Illinois Joliet & 20 100 Nicaragua me.-—Farmers’ Loan 131 127% do Cons’lidated & Sink Fund do 3d mortgage, 1868 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d — 180 83% 131% 130% 131% — do do Yu- 50 23,350 — 50 do 50 7fW i 37,156 Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100 300 50 Pacific Mail....! 47,620 67% 44% 44% 42% 68% 68% 67 102% 103% 103% 103% 102% 98% 98% 78% 81% 82% 84 82% 100 129 123 100 128% 130% 123 122% 100 do do 2d preflOO Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 do do pref. ..100 Morris and Essex 100 New Jersey 100 New York Central 100 New York and New Haven 100 Norwich and Worcester 100 Ohio and Mississippi Certifi 100 do do do pref.100 Panama ioo Great 30 48 25 New York Iransit. 43% 69 do do do do No. Jersey City and Hoboken 20 Brunswick City Canton 44% 67% do 100 Williamsburg 127 50 preferred Ene, 1st mortgage, 1868 146% 146 77 60 240 50 — do 3d mort , conv. do 4th mortgage.. Cleveland and Toledo, Sink’g Fund do do new 7s Delaw’e, Lackawan. & West, 1st m 10 Metropolitan 128 2,200 43% 100 pref. ..100 Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort Chicago. R. I. and Pac, 7 r ercent.. 200 Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort.. 95% $ 100 Manhattan 130% No. 125 Milwaukee & P. dn Ch. 1st preilOO 183,000 50 50 Citizens (Brooklyn) Harlem — — do do Miscellaneous Stocks 100 oal.—American Ashburton 50 Butler 25 Cameron 50 Central 100 Consolidated 100 Cumberland 100 Delaware and Hudson...100 Pennsylvania. 50 Wyoming Valiev Brooklyn "... Joseph do do 2d preflOO Michigan Central 100 Michigan So. and N. Indiana .100 ,, wilkesbarre 16 125 122 — Marietta and Cincinnati, IstpretlOO 124,000 6s 5s Spruce Hill 100 — — Chicago, Burl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c. Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mort. Chicago & Northwest., Sink. Fund New York 7s Schuylkill Spring Mountain 100 Hartford and New Haven Hudson River Illinois Central Joliet and Chicago.. . 48 new improvement.—Bost. do 108,000 r do do 50 Reading St. 5iP Virginia 6s, (old) Week's bale* tn 100 100% 100% !C0% 100% 101 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic.100 102 101% 101% 102% 102% Michigan 6s 6s, Erie do preferred Hannibal and St. do do do 83% | Thurs. 15% ed. 16 122 .. do do Cleveland and Toledo Delaware, Lackawana and West 50 Dubuque & Sioux City, pref...100 Long Island do 1877. do 1879. War Loan. Indiana bs, War Loan. do 5s „ . 7,010 Registered, 1860 6s, cou., ’79, aft.’60-62-65-70 do do do do do 100 100 100 do do preferred... .100 Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOO 100 Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago and Northwestern 100 do do pref.100 Chicago, Rock Island and Pac 100 Cleveland, Columbus and Cin. ..100 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 Harlem 116 111 100% 100% 101% 100% ioo% 100% — W ues Railroad Stocks ; 5> 111% Alou. 1 fetUUT btLLiUHtJ). Boston, Hartford and Erie Central of New Jersey Chicago and Alton > 110% STOCKS AND Week’s Sales Golfi Coin (Gold HootrC).. 144% 145% 145% 143% 143% 145% California 7 s.. Connecticut 6* Georgia 6s do 7s (new) Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 * Tubs. — — mort — _37 -J S6% 5,2u0 [October 12,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 462 Exports of Leading Articles from New York. The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the <£fie Commercial ©imes. COMMERCIAL exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York since January 1, 1867. The export of each article to the several porfg /or the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount ?n the Ugt EPITOME. the Chronicle from that here given r number of <mc©coq —oo —c© §0-00 o'eo'erf tjJ" OlOTfO Friday Night. The markets have become October 11. 5? ® ! ©* t- go to oo © »n t*«5 £7 2 • — exception dull, with scarcely an • S3 24 CM t- — §? great staples that come under review. Cotton has further declined. BrcadstufFs have receded con¬ in the list of Groceries are generally Tobacco maintains prices, but with siderably from the highest figures. lower, and rather dull. thereby somewhat restricted in some descriptions. Provisions show a uniform decline in hog products, ex¬ business “ BQ notice a fair business in Cumberlaud for winter delivery at lie. Mess pork declined to day to #22 50, cash, closing firm ; and lard has become quiet at 14^-c.@14Jc. for prime. Beef begins to sell for future delivery at extreme prices. Butter has advanced, but closes dull, and cheese is rather Hat under the extreme rates of oceau freights. In Hides we notice some advance in foreign dry, 22^c. gold having been paid for medium Buenos Ayres, but the close is dull. Leather is more steady on small receipts. Petroleum has been active and firmer ; large sales have been made for export at 36c. for standard white in bond, but the 00 w © «> © »o .OS <M • O • •Q'XJ'212 - .ocooom — 92 C* lO — *n — • • <M-rjo ■v —o cept for bacon, in which we close is co = ot. . . . . . . — ■ g £ • ■ £55 : — GO CO — cj »no S3 OQ cj £ CO — 30 . 42 S3 Jj »2©9S l*. S © 3 «S Ci — CO • *. o !Z1 T-i • * g 03 h • ff* • 03 • • *n • rft CO . .00 ® . :3 as Barley Grass seed. Flaxseed Beans 812 .... 60,727 Rot-in Tar Pitch...!.... 1,878,918 2,127,057, Oil cake, pkgs 4,443 2,812 84,716 29,287 293,425 576 Peas., C. meal,bbls. .... 645 55,311 C. meal.bajrs. Buckwheat & B. \V. tlour,bg 1,150 228,616 Cotton, bales Copper, bbls... Copper, plates. 8,015 465,965 .. l)riedfrnit,pkgs Grease, pkgs... Hemp, bales... .... 194 474 380 .... 4 6,085 9,201 13,420 25,564 1U,145 691 4,3Si 259.215 Hides, No 7,115 Hops, bales. ... 1,470 Leatl'er, sides 37,928 1,881,435 A,ead, pigs 187 14,437 .. .. . ... Spirits turp.. .... 10,416jSugar, hhde ’ r~t 5 283,OSS|Tobacco, pkgs.. 9,185 Tobacco, hhds.. 791,572 Whiskey, bbls.. 6,530 Wool, bales 11,525 353 503 7,407 51,026 33,105 Rice, bush ; <m — •S U3 CS »o rt-v 5,067 o ”§3 gs .03 — .. tji t'T — • • <M • --C » • Ot TJ. KC-'C — co co ._J • • • • • — . 1 —‘ — — 11- ^ - WfC« .r--^C0b- . coco O — • • t- t- — 00 t- in co. — ■ - • iftV -) CO _ o t- «e . im oo o .oooot-ot-io®c< S 30 TO oo co <» TO ©i <M — > • (M ■ t- • .*n <M r— . :Si • 03 ■ oo .t-rjl • . .000 . • O • .oo • • . . .05 ••• • • . . -CiTrfj ... . *n <M co 03 • . on tH — • co • • ^ Q* .5; 5* co 30 5 t— .co co in . t— SCO t- co co • •©© • -*CX' «r-i CO — ©*in^ • l-CO O CO • CM • • •rlri ■ *1-10 «00 .r-ref— • . r; x - • * ’ * cc cfSH ct :S : : : : t— .... , : ■ co • rp o rH .Oo .§ •| <o •: •: tSS •; :g .co • . c •••••' •••••« • • • • ’”1 -S o’ < .HffiOlOO . — t- (M — • — TO . .COOCi- . . co t— t-t • 3 § • * «oe« ■ • > .lOt-S* o ^ If HOI .HrfCO :s£.: ; t-03lji< • r ’ ■ o * : : -2 t-« ssp : '”S-oe4©,» • . • COOS. ‘oo Oi CO GO -'oT •<& :2gS : •30 CO :S ’ 03 lO long” ®t •Tf oT .... 43 7,118 1,759 rough, .... 79,873 3,964 50 — CO — ho«i-o< ' 32^ CO • • • • • .(M — 30t-C in — rji — — — , csf ttAggSgS*09 — • i'9»»no»if.«om»oo»»no5t“,52S rg^aj-SSBSCSBSSSe^sisScDSSASS. : iiiiiiiiiiiil BDaoaD®®®®® ® • ^ OD m «* • • O • • ^ a • . • .* • • • • ® ® g ® ® qq ^ fH ?H H S®-2 g S • • • • OD • a-g g ° 8 2 ©t:2 8 * ->,3 o « :W^O0^ 3,3001,135,051 133,22. 1,347 84,714 56,311 2,876 114,573 64 669 1,442 78,306 108,618 .... t^.»o33Troco in to —' zd ccT ©j — t— PQ . CM 00 (Ml (M »o to to co — co l-Ot-tgrt COC01- — cT (-• 2.967 5,009 Hogs, r- co o 2 a 03 3,569 2,430 — l o w 7,266 2,801 p ^ . • •75 1|§H •■§ o* . © ©; ©u ea ® © r, © _ iilil, .... 46,20-3 ' - • ^ Ph K- -Xn s :jn® ; S3 © « uih © © © H ©rd -g © - -•S«fS«S I 7 a *. . 81,769 - S3 t-03 jj V. > d3 « • jo22 rr S3 CO • 1 O.—< 'C3C<M 'T«0t''S)rHp* i •ccTcm i ffffff • e; 03 • oo ©i co(M©»iot'*ooo — f .Oi 00 (M < •0330 ’cog :«*§ ; .ff*® • • ®oo«® A .... . :'»8S : tT o . CC TO '/3 . icTot * CO O <M COtOCOlOCSCOCO O — l- • t-« “ :§S •T'g3 • - ;« : : • • — <M rf* *001- OW# .©tt-Of- . co <M *o eo — t - t- 5-3 30 -}< oo <m — 50 m . • 'rt ^ 2,374 -t-t* ®K3CO00W • ^(M— -o o*. • - CO <M - -51^ :1 ill J- > «S I 62,956 83,328 50 3,363 ' 3,878 28,830 S04,448 809,253 12,939 9,832 & 5,743 bbls 2,558 Tallow, pkgs.;. 14,797 — th M ®l*W ■ 8 g S ■■ :8 ® a • ‘s H 1,349 6,028, Spelter, slabs... 90 CO •at-cy ’ ©f 00 50 since : 14,527 266,765 307,129 122 17,207 39,998 87 l6.158!Stearine Molasses, hbds and bbls Naval Stores— Crude trp,bbl follows Cheese Cut meats.... Dressed No — JO GO 00 <M — CO idx-f CO C5 CO • 9,999 402,174 339,792 28,995 9:38,813 476,273 148 81,620 94,442 44.328 2,529 188,360 132,883 48 122,359 96,372 Pork 154,383 750 29,933 47,697 184,053 Beef, pkgs. ... 2,092 113,2>.9 83,743 Lard, pkgs.... 229,974 100 10,356 Lard, Kegs.... 6,196 246 9,187 2,176 75,731 Rice, pkgs 6,707 174,987 67,655 464,183 Starch 120,852 57,039 ;x . This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66. 4D2,5444,011,396 5,874,213|Oil, Petroleum 42,537 282,232 549,956'Peanuts, bags Provisions— 1,974 3S$,896 409,334 ~ 372,846 Butter, pkgs.. 220,140 323,796 Malt 50 — — 1 This Since Same week. Jan. 1. timc’66 Kye tr . t- 30 — O • O — January 1. 473,638 11,466,42219,337,385 Oil, lard -latN-r • • GO 50 P 0 — *o Tf • time in 1866, have been N. tjT CC Week, snd since receipts of domestic produce for the weekending Oct. 11, CO f" ST •t-rj->fc* o -*-> Goru Oats <2 • 2? ©* S 3 — — o5 TJ1 lC. <M . 00^ r-4^ * * O to ^ © Flour, bbls. 111,6461,643,831 Wheal.,bush712,5863.77-2.194 'CrlKO c; j oo • • O 00 .t-t- O 00 CO I©©*© 'Sri CO ;o 2 <M •'T co 10 co Breadstuff's— • <j j — £ s- - .33 4,503 • • O — O co co. jj — . • 4 , I- CO .00 X rj« 11 si® <y 03 CO f— ,o*oo . r- (M CO co . •wow'# ;in s© 58 • TO©* — » Ashes, pkgs... CO 03 00 • CO — CO . *C © —O3co CO © m «P “5 X5 t*-poco-Sw co o A . same ”8' f* l— • PQ CO quiet at 35^c. Jan. 1, and for the » — ,c© *n — ’ 0 important movement. A A ; moderate business has been done at 58c.@58^-c., free, -for S q : : S "-1 spirits of turpentine, closing at the lower figure, and #3 80 for common rosin. Oils have been quiet and wholly un¬ Ci_0 rt *5 as™ changed. East India goods have been very quiet, and generally droop ing. Metals of all kinds are dull, with American copper tend¬ ing downward. Fruits of all kinds have been dull. Fish are 9 K2 fairly active. Hops are in increased supply, and prices weak. Building materials are rather firmer. Wool closed more steady, but with only a moderate busi¬ g < 2 5SS s 55 § 55 ness, mostly at 39c @40e. for coarse and 43c.@50c. for me¬ dium and fine Western. The result of yesterday’s auction sale of woolen goods was rather better than was generally an¬ •a ticipated. Freights have been very active, and rates have materially advanced; but at the extreme rates now current there is a *CO better supply of room offering. The business to-day embraced ^ rn o « 90,000 bushels wheat at 9£d.@lld. by sail and steamer to Liverpool and lOd. by sail to Glasgow and London. The — CT» T}< , o o ■ Naval Stores have been without Receipts of Domestic Produce for tlie m CO ^ ■ i- — o o? o © 50 . - . . . 00 E fl o THE CHRONICLE. 12,1867.] October 46 Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept« 1, and Imports of Leading Articles. Stocks at Bates Mentioned. following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port or the week ending Oct. 4, since Jan. 1, 1867, and for the correspond* The EXTORTED SINCE SEPT. PORTS. SINCE SEPT. ing period in 1866: [The quantity is given in packages when Same 163 Since Jan. 1, 1867. 4.679 .... 3,819 147,133 185.577 basis... Coffee, bags .. 14,706 9J35 701,782 12,753 547,843 For the week. Buttons Coal, tons Cocoa, Cotton, bales. Drugs, &c. Bark, Peruv Blea p’wd’rs Brinist. tns. Cochineal... Cr Tartar 631 9,407 551 ’i47 Madder Oils, ess ... Oil, Olive... Opium Soda, bi-carb 10,193 2,208 1.059 ... Gambier.... Gums, crude Gum, Arabic Indisro 19,979 14.352 5 11,315 116 189 62 29 356 3.928 2,770 3.929 2,688 37,202 1,905 6,067 Hardware. time 1866- Iron,RRb’rs 7,147 313,429 Lead, pigs.. 9,396 321,286 Spelter, lbs.329,151 3,393,288 Steel 5,900 163,739 Tin, boxes.. 16,132 580,379 Tin slabs,lbsl70,516 3,205,870 10 662 203,828 318,006 7,533.515 144,513 623,046 5,170,230 45,161 86,248 19,720 Rags 14,450 Sugar, 972 1.0 74 Same For Since the Jan. 1, week. 1S67. 162 7,688 time 1866. 4,962 N. not otherwise specified.] .. 1,645 hhds, tcs&bbls.. 611 263,763 350,359 Sugar,bxs&bg 2,052 220,761 310,532 714,514 21,990 650,013 16.412 4,795 11,941 7 573 12 22,617 Tea:... 10,847 Tobacco 3,050 Waste 2,754 Wines, &c. 7,381 Champ, bkts 3,491 Wines 567 70,405 94.571 11,731 112,677 341,924 52,900 1 TO— SHIP- rec’d Orleans, Oct. 4.. Mobile, Oct 4 Charleston, Oct. 4... Savannah, Oct. 4... Texas, Sept. 27 New York, Oct. 11* Florida, Oct. 4+ N. Carolina, Oct. 11. Virginia. Oct. 11... Other ports, Oct. 11* Total this year.. Same tims last year 1. m’nts Great France Other Britain 8,102 13,5 >2 Total. for’gn. 877 • • .... • • • • • • • • • • ,,,, • • • • • • • » 15,703 • • • 5,77b • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• .... • • • • • . . .... 7,043 • • • • • • 8,165 • .... • • 8,906 2,291 29,201 784 .... . . . 5 477 1,837 *13,0x0 112 112 1.060 9.626 30,409 80.144 2,781 47,024 39,317 230,740 .... .... • 472 948 174 • • 1,837 1,195 • • 477 • •- 9,676 2,553 4,397 4,454 12,462 . • 1.962 5,998 19,512 • • 472 • • • • 633 48 • STOCK PORTS. 877 • • • to NORTH. 49,838 8,392 174 38,593 38.292 5,851. .... yet to our Cotton market. Prices have steadily declined during the past week, and the close is about There is no relief as lb lower than last Friday. The receipts from the South liberal, and have been pressed for sale from the 3.550 127,336 108,747 Cigars wharf, owing to the great expense of storing and handling. 917 21.352 777 208,911 133,727 30,266 Corks Soda, sal.... With a steady decline in Liverpool, the quotation this after¬ 29.135 Fancy goods.. 48,124 2,693,214 3,350,370 759 27,911 Soda, ash... 1:50 9,121 Fish 1,651 23,867 466,554 624,301 noon Flax being 8-Jd. for middling Uplands, buyers for export 90 3,861 Fruits, &c. 3,4^5 Furs 21 Lemons 28,165 22,502 14,791 407,393 440,617 have reduced their bids from day to day. Cotton goods have Gunny cloth 421 4,258 8,852 Oranges.... 507 657,116 284,529 been weak and Hair Nuts declining and spinners have not been eager 2,519 547,178 707,578 94,421 95,904 Hemp, bales.. 1,994 Raisins 20,953 53C.572 604,342 Hides, &c. buyers. Still, from the pertinacity with which receivers have 59 1,911 Hides,undrsd. 83,177 7,113,229 5,204,413 1,555 Bristles 340 Rice. 8,687 428,795 610,294 been sellers from the wharf, the business of the week has been 7,905 Hides,dres’d 278 31,3:36 17,779 SpiceSj &c. India rubber.. Td*day, prices having reached the lowest figures 668 Cassia 73,056 128,543 quite large. 2,015 Ivory named by the most persistent bears, there has also been con¬ 44,323 45,747 Ginger Jewelry, &c. 64 866 601 170,068 202,827 Pepper Jewelry 891 Saltpetre 24 739 44,009 136,919 siderable speculative feeding exhibited, and sales to the amount Watches.... 5.0U0 816,960 199 313 Woods. of 837 bales on that account have been made. Linseed The quality 502 40,495 124,924 122,343 Fustic Molasses 25,148 of much of the Cotton of this year’s crop thus far received is 155,825 135,534 Metals, &c. Logwood... 108 100,378 113,614 3,008 4,551 Cutlery Mahogany.,. pronounced inferior and trashy, and some affect to hold old Cotton 1c. higher than the new of the same grade; but this discrimination does not generally obtain. Sales of the week COTTON. amount to 11,918 bales, of which 6.074 bales were taken Friday, P. M., Oct. 11, 1867. by spinners, 4,700 bales for export, and 1,144 bales on specu* The leceipts of Cotton this week from all the ports show a still latiou. The following are the closing quotations: N. Orleans further large increase, the total reaching 18,621 bales, Upland. Florida. Mobile & Texas 15 15 14 14 ft (against 12,507 bales last week, 8,228 the previous week, and Ordinary 16 16 15 15 17 17 16 16 5,452 bales three weeks since), making the aggregate receipts 19 19* 18 18# since September 1, this year 49,838 bales against 38,593 23 22 21 20 bales for the same period in 1866. The details of the receipts The exports of Cotton this week from New York show for the past week are as follows : a small increase, the total shipments reaching 2,444 bales* 571 47 30,943 reported by value. $6,519 $326,3111,183,952 85,561 Wool, bales... 653 Articles 2c. per have been . • • • • • • . . ... ... ... ... Received this week at*— Receipts. New Orleans.: bales 3 V<62 Mobile 4,364 Charleston 2,903 Savannah 7,126 Texas 55 Tennessee, Kentucky, &c 520 Receipts I Received this week at— Florida ' bales North Carolina Virginia Total rece'pts for week Same week last year 11 38 342 18,6 ’1 9,787 In the exports there is a small increase this week, the total from all the ports reaching 2,556 bales, against 1,414 bales last week, and 1,905 bales the previous week. It will be seen The particulars of these against 1,414 hales last week. shipments are as follows : To 1,155 Liverpool, per steamers--City of Antwerp, 319—Denmark, Russia, 247....Tarifa, 194....Propoulis, 2S4. Total bales To Havre, per steamer—St. Laurent, 32. Total bales To Hamburg, per steamer—Hammonia, 141. Total b des To Bremen, per steamer—Bremen, 39... .Baltic 33. Total bales .. 2,199 32 141 72 give our table showing the exports of Cotton York, and their direction for each of the last four in the following detailed statement of the week’s exports that weeks; also the total exports and direction since September there were no shipments except from New York and Boston : 1, 1867 ; and in the last column tho total for the same period Exported this week toixp Total. From— Hs avre. Hamburg. Bremen. of the previous year : Liverpool. New York 32 141 72 2,444 2,199 Boston 112 112 Total this week 2,199 32 253 Below we from New Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1867 2,556 72 Same, WEEK ENDING For the corresponding week in 1866 the shipments of cotton from all the ports amounted to 9,272 bales. The total foreign exports from the United States since Septem¬ ber 1, 1867, now reaches 9,626 bales, against 47,024 bales for the same period last year, and the stocks at all the ports are at present 80,144 bales, against 230,740 bales at the same time in 1866. It will be noticed that the stocks are gradually in¬ creasing again, the receipts being very liberal and the ex. ports extremely limited, and yet the total is even now hut little more than one-third the amount on hand ago. Below we give our usual table of the of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing the total a year movement at a glance receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: EXTORTED TO prev. year. Sept. 24. 1. Oct. 8. 1,496 Liverpool Sept. Oct. 17. 1,411 920 2,199 7,043 21,038 1,496 1,411 920 2,199 7,043 21,0*5 22 120 32 174 826 22 120 32 174 826 49 325 72 141 22* 725 622 125 203 374 213 918 850 to date. 19 Other British Ports Total to Gt. Britain. Havro .... Other French ports Total French. • Bremen and Hanover Total to N. Europe spi Spain, Oporto All others.., and Gibraltar Total Spain, etc.., • • • 91 259 Hamburg Other ports Grand Total * time loiai 350 • • • • • • • • 795 .. .... ... 1,846 .... ... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... 1,433 1,414 2,444 795 8,165 23,456 In this table, as well as in our general table of receipts, &c., we deduct receipts at each port lor the week all received at such port from othei TOirn P°rt8, For instance, each week there is a certain amount shipped Florida to Savannah, which in estimating the total receipts must be de¬ ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We are thus par¬ ticular in the statement of this iact as some of our readers fail to understand it. irom the * The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated. + Tnese are the receipts ut aU the ports of Florida, except Eept. 20th. * Estimated- from Tennessee ; Apalachicola, to 464 THE CHRONICLE. Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the week and since Sept. 1 : This week. Bales. From New Orleans Texas Since 4,776 Mobile From SonthCarolina Bales. 2.952 2.589 615 222 Savannah This week. Bales. Sept. 1. j North Carolina ] 20 Total lor the week ^tal since Sept. 1 Bales. 5,796 409 267 1.160 233 Per Railroad 555 Since .'IS 12,4 41 i Norfolk, Baltimore, «fcc.. Florida There has been Sept. 1. 1,864 1,613 8,015 27,335 The [October 12, 1867. a fair business the past week, the sales reaching 3,700 bales, but prices have declined, closing at from 1@1^ lower than a week ago, middling (Liverpool classification) being quoted at 174@i8 and low middling at 16(5)164. Exchange closes dull: New York"sight buying rate is par@£ discount, and selling rate discount." JQ freights there is little more doing ; Liverpool fd. aud coastwise lc. New Orleans, Oct. 6.—The mail returns for the week ending Oct. 4, show a further increase in the week being 3,262 bales, against 1,796 bales the previous week. The 1,294 bales, of which 58S following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila_ Boston. Stock on hand delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬ shipments for a series weeks of tember 1, 1807 each week -Boston.Last Since week. Sep. 1. 7,499 1,217 Receipts from— New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile Florida South Carolina North Carolina Since Sep. 1. Since Sep. 1. “ 1,595 143 2C6 177 483 *51 508 30 190 401 1,484 Oct. 4 •24 1,065 2,206 bales 13,140 37 2,874 182 York, &c*. 477 +2,501 Reshipments. + These do not include the railroad There have been receipts at Philadelphia. exports this week from these cities no 19,512 bales. was The receipts and follows : 1866, 6...*... 1,(125 1867. 1,547 848 1.771 2,013 Stock 4,682 1867. 1866. 1867 26 @26% 34 @35 9,695 25 @— 35 @36 493 3,311 23 @23% 36 @37 2,207 4,612 — @21 37 @38 1,294 1»,009 —©19 40 @hae giveu some indications of 15,896 14,719 17,018 17,095 19,512 83,S returning acti 2,402 2,<>43 4,163 7,566 1,796 3,262 1860. 479 The market this week 9lS 92 fiS vity though prices have declined, middling (Liverpool classification^ being quoted at the close at 19c., and low middling at 174@lSc against 21c. for middling and 18^@19c. for low middling last week Freights are quiet : to Liverpool, fd. by steam, and 4@9-16tbs by sail td New York, by steam, fc., and to Philadelphia and Boston lc. Sterling exchange closed at 156(5)157 for A 1 clear, aud 15S@169 for bank. Exchange sight on New York, £ per cent. prem. from bank and £ die.@par for commercial. Galveston, September 28.—We have one week later mail retunn except 112 bales to Hamburg from Boston per Bark Figaro from Galveston. The receipts are small, in fact they show a consider¬ Thf. Crop.—Fuvorub e weather for cotton pickiug has continued able falling off, the total for the week ending September 27 being 55 through the week in all the Southern States, so that the in¬ bales, agaiust 106 bales last week and 214 bales the previous week The shipments for the last week were only 24 bales, all of which were gathering of the crop has proceeded with as much rapidity as the- to New Orleans. The receipts and shipments for a series of weeks this poiitieal agitation of the freedmen would allow. Good judges rel year and the corresponding weeks of 1866, also the stool? and p ice of middling at the close of each week were as follows : port that with a late frost the receipts at Savannah this year wil Stock—, probably reach 450,000 bales, and at Charleston at least 250,000 Week ending /—Rec’pts-%,—Shipm’ts—n ,—Pric e of low midl’g-^ r-S 1867. 1S66. 1867. 1866. 1667. bales. From the other States the reports are more tend to confirm the conclusion generally received at the crop conflicting, but this point that will be about 2^ million bales. Charleston, Oct. 4.—The mail bales, of which 1,332 bales timore. The were to New York and 187 bales to Bal¬ receipts and shipments for a series of weeks tbisyear and ffie corresponding weeks of 1866, also the stock and at the close of each week were as follows : Week ending. Sept. 6.. “ 13.. 20.. 848 27.. 1,111 3. 2,903 “ “ Oct. price of middling /—Receipts—, t—Shipments-—\ /—Price Middling—, 1867. 339 578 1866. 480 1867. 1,089 844 547 950 1,014 1866. 794 1867. 24 1,683 3,176 1866. @24% 30 31 33 3-4 38 22%@.... 1,431 530 1,361 22 19 2,096 1,519 1,076 17%@16 @22% @19% @31 @32 @ @.. @39 r~ Stock—^ 1867. 723 754 587 1,169 2,553 3 866. 5,105 2,872 2,300 2,285 3,148 The market this week has fluctuated for Low Middliug, and falling off on somewhat, opening at 18 cents Monday to 17 cents, and subse¬ quently advancing, but declining aga n on the receipt of the Liverpool quotation at 8£ b, and closing at 17 cents for Low Middling, and 17^@ 18c. for Middling. Sales of the week are 1,622 bales. Freights to Liver¬ pool are dull and nominal: to New York, per steam, 75 cents per bale. Exchange closed for sterling 60 day’s bills at 154£, and for sight checks on New York, banks are paying £ dis., and selling £ prem. Savannah, Oct. 4.—The receipts for the week tndiDg Oct. 3 were 7,137 bales (of which 11 Sea Islands were from Florida), against 4,220 bales last week. The shipments this week were 5,265 bales, of which 41 bales were to Boston, 826 to Baltimore, 662 to Philadelphia, and 3,896 to New York. The receipts and shipments for a series of weeks this year, and the corresponding weeks of 1866, also the stock and price of Middling at the close of each week Week 1S67. 1866. 1,440 1867. 268 494 1,631 1,237 2.296 1,433 1.472 3,002 1.799 2,847 5,265 3,274 , “ Oct. 2,233 4,220 7,137 “ 13 2’> 27 “ “ 126 214 106 .. .. 145 37 120 108 484 474 327 24 1,860 : 1866. 20 @21 20 @21 20 @21 20 @21 17 169 39 @17% 16%@17 16%@17 162 nominal 1867. 2,841 2,581 1,782 Stock Middling—, ,—SI 1866. 1867. 30 @31 850 30 @31 879 31 @31% 816 84 @34% 2,034 38 @39 3,906 24%@25 23 @.... 22%@.... 1«%@,... 18 @.... 1866 5,205 4,156 3,950 3,62” 1866. 5,919 5,789 2.260 5,870 5,826 2,291 dull through the week, and prices are merely nominal. Exchange on New York has been quite active at ^<5,£ per cent, premium for currency, ai d 1 per cent, premium for gold. Freights dull and nominal. European kets and Indian Ootton Markets.—In reference to these mar correspondent in London writes as follows : Liverpool, Sept. 28.—Cotton continues tc be pressed for sale, and a further decline has taken place in the quotations. The transactions have been to a fair extent, and comprise 65,900 bales, of whieh 1,690 bales are on speculation, 20,010 bales for export, and 44,200 bales to the trade. A.s compared with Saturday last American produce shows a decline of 4d. to £d., Brazilian ^d., Egyptian £d., and East Indiau -J-d. per lb. Annexed are the prices current of American Cotton at this date, and at this period last year : our — -1867& Mid. Fair & G’d fair. G’d & Fine. 16 17 22 30 64 12 13 14 15 16 s Middling— Sea Island. Stained Ordin’y 14 11 7 7 7 7 ... Upland.... Mobile.... N. Orleans Texas. The .. :. @8 8% 8% @8 @8 9 9 @8 * , • • . . . Mid. 26 18 14% 14% 14% 14% • 12 12 • • • • , , , . .. , . . -1866 Fair. Good 32 52 20 23 r- • 25% 15% 16%. , , 4 # 16% following statement shows the price of middliug qualities of cot¬ ton at this date since 1864 1864. 1865. Mid. Sea Island 41d. 34d. Upland., : 1866. 1867. 26d. 16d. 26% 27% 1S64. 1865. 1866. 1861 Mid. Pemamb. 23%d. 19%d. 14%d. S% 8% 21% 14% 21% 14% 8% 27 9 21% 14% Annexed is a statement showing the Mobile.. Orleans. ... .. Egyptian.. 20 18 Broach.... 14% 10% 10% Lhollerah. 14% 12 7 8% 8% 5% 5% stocks of cotton in Liverpool and London, including the supplies of American and Indiau produce ascer¬ tained to be afloat to those ports : 1S66. 1.543 go m.. 3.. “ follows r-Price of 1867 1866. 485 6.. 13.. 1,660 ‘ were as ^Receipts—N /—Shipments—, ending. Sept Sept. 6 The market has continued returns for the week ending Oct. 8 show a further increase in the receipts, the total being 2,903 bales, (2.886 Uplands and 17 Sea Island) against 1,111 bales last week, and 848 bales the previous week. Shipments this week amount to 1,519 • “ October 4 ^"Receipts—, /—Shipm’ts—, r-Price of Middl’g—, 18(i7> 13 20 27 4 “ 477 24 783 were as Week endinew eek ending, Sept. v.64 53S Total receipts • Last week. Last ‘S2i Tennessee, Kentucky, <fcc... * week. for the of weeks this year, and the corresponding 1866, also the stock and price of middling at the close of /—Baltimore.—, 857 Virginia New Philad’phia. Receipts, the total bales last week, and 1,771 shipments for the last week were onlv bales were to New York, aud 706 bales to Stock in “ Liverpool Bales 1867 261,860 1,248,487 London American cotton afloat.; Indian “ 820,520 110,812 4(1,000 316,280 1,271,612 864,500 102,127 20,000 Total 3,29* The exports of cotton from the United Kingdom since the comEarly in the week the market was unsettled, but later it improved, mencement of the year have been as under : and closed with considerable firmness, though at a decline of l-£ cent To date To date For year To date To date For year on the week, 1867. 1866. 1866. 1866. 1866. 1867. Middling being quoted (Liverpool quotation) at 18c., and K ilpa b llpflLow Middling at 17c. bales. bales. bales. Exchange (sight) on New York, baying rate, is American ±c. dis., and selling rate at par to |c. discount. Freights to New York Brazil........ 192,681 170,632 208,015 East Ind. &c.352,364 381,853 773,141 9,387 65,721 88,033 111,685 China.... 3,510 1,587 are £c. for square, and fc. for round bales. Egyptian, &c. 9,827 15,600 19,524 Total ...:..633,72o 665,309 1,136,565 5,681 14,813 Mobile, October 4.—Our mail returns show for the week ending Oc¬ Wedftlnd.,&c. 11,545 tober 4 a small decrease in the receipts, the total this week being 4,362 Subjoined are the particulars of sales and imports for the week and bales, against 4,618 bales last week and 2,146 bales the previous week. year, and also of stocks on the eveniug of Thursday last, compared with The shipments for the last week were in all 3,846 bales, of which 496 the same period in 18:56 : were to New York, 1,361 to Boston, 760 to Providence, and 1,239 to SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS. New Orleans. The receipts and shipments for a series of weeks this Sales this week. Total Same Average year and the corresponding weeks of 1866, also the stock and price of Ex- Speculathis period weekly sales 1866. 1867. 1866. Trade. port. tion. Total, year;, middling at the close of each week were as folk ws : 18,920 .... , Week ending ,—Rec’pts—v—Shipm’ts—, /—Price of midd ing—, 1867. 1S66. 1867. Sept. 6 “ f “ “ Oct. 13 20 27 3 1866. 640 479 1,398 2,145 772 1,748 4,613 1,607 1,152 3,802 1,510 22#©— 122 3.888 21 19 4,362 3,086 3,846 3,S91 17%@18 982 248 546 1867. 21 @— @— @— 1S66. — " ©30 30 32 35 @31 @33 ©— 37 @- ,—Stock—, 1867. 1866. 4,448 25,817 5,300 24,786 5,697 25,436 9,158 23,155 9,674 22,160 > American....bales. 15,450 6,270 Brazilian Egyptian 2,600 1,750 West Indian East Indiau China and Japan.. Total , 2,580 3,200 510 270 18,120 13,430 10 20 100 20 18,1401,054,310 1,024,130 20,320 5,130 4,990 9,470 281,410 28 ,290 3,130 138,100 153,580 3,150 3,380 80,480 2,020 72,200 1,660 1.500 33,110 954,9201,122,710 14,600 16,230 90 20 30 3,860 f>7,260 * lj560 44,200 20,010 1,690 65,900 2,513,0302,668,170 44,910 44,810 •Imports Stocks- . , ' To this date 1867. This week. American West East This Total. 1866. orts. 1866. day. 149,393 149,2H4 8S4 Indian Indian China and ] 446 Egyptian 253 360 Japan .... 49,031 !2,671,4712 ,916,487 Total Of the 27,400 372.S90 200,083 Bee. 31 1866. 167,270 41,760 23,180 11,620 270,100 76,770 23,280 21,5 0 449 850 124,860 40,460 90.274 75,264 88,978 992,9811 ,302.531 1,544,615 894 11,032 12,993 41,849 Same date 1866. 285.5 0 I in- 2,087 1,081,871 ;1,028,042 1,156,130 404,8'.5 3,765 354,543 350,220 Brazilian 465 THE CHRONICLE 1867.] October 12, 1,550 2,840 820,520 3,409,020 7,520 864,500 516,770 present stock of cotton about 30£ per cent, is American. TOBACCO. e Friday, P. Mm October 11,1867. exports of crude tobacco this week from all the ports a decrease in the number of hhds. shipped, but the bales that can be paid. The business of the week has been blit moderate. The sales are 68 cjises Ohio, 1S64 crop, at about 5c.; 321 cases Connecticut at 19c.@25c.; and 76 cases Penn¬ sylvania private terms. In Lancaster, Pa., 1,800 cases purchased by one of our largest shipping houses at prices ranging from 14c.@ 18c. for the crops of 1865 and 1866. Manufactured tobacco is quiet. The difficulties between the Treasury Department and the manufacturers remain unsettled and the domestic trade is quiet. There has been some busi¬ ness in black work for .export at about steady prices. Foreign tobacco has been in demand, and the sales include 400 bales Havana on private terms. on have been QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCY. The show « KENTUCKY LEAP Heavy.' considerably in excess of last week, the total reaching 4,325 hhds., 1,292 cases, 1,921 bales, against 5,146 lihds. 1,026 cases, 627 bales for the previous seven days. Of these shipments, for the past week 1,450 hhds. were from New York, 2,830 hhds. were from Baltimore, 31 hhds. from Boston, and 14 hhds. from Portland ; and the direction of these ship¬ Light. Common Lugs.. 5)*j@ 5% Good do 6 @ 7 Common Leaf... 7%@ l.)% SI uiuin * do ..10 @12 follows: 554 hhds. to Great Britain* 584 hhds. to Bremen, 131 hhds. to Antwerp, 1,521 hhds. to Rotterdam, 1 042 hhds. to Amsterdam, 441 hhds. to Cadiz and the balance (HHD8.). Heavy. Light. Fillers, 1865 and 1866... Ohio Wrappers Running lots N. Y. State running lots Pennsylvania prime wrappers Wrapper lots and cases are ments was as The shipments of bales and cases during the week were almost entirely to Germany from New York, as may be more fully seen from our tables of exports from New York and other places. The following gives the particulars of the week’s shipments from all the ports: other ports. ,—Stems hhds. bales. Connecticut “ Hhds. Case. Bales. New York 1,450 1,292 2,830 Baltimore. 31 14 Boston Portland, Maine... 4,325 Total this week 5,146 Total last week Total previous week.. 3,5bS .... ... Tcs. 1,803 Pkgs. 115 7 31 164 325 • 118 .... .... . lbs, 51,312 .... .... 1,292 1,026 1,921 627 7 4 722 1,715 .... 325 252 198 310 153 ISO .... 30 .... .... G6,0SG 98,571 444,096 give our usual table showing the total exports of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their direction, since November 13 1866: Below ber Hhds. To Great Britain Sweden Germany ... . Belgium . Italy ... France... Spain, Gibralt.&c.. Mediterranean Austria Africa, &c China, India, &c.. Australia &c. B. N. Am. Prov... South America West Indies’ East Indies Mexico Honolulu, &c All others T’l since Nov. 1.. above 48,520 6,300 24,397 19,026 16,744 ...11,170 ... ... Holland The 22,631 342 ... ... ... 1,096 Cer’s&,—Stems—, Pkgs. Manfd, lbs Cases. Bales, tcs. hhds. bales. & bxs. 86 560 232 1,095 1,296,706 2,542 20 8 4,210 924 729 283,971 37,315 10,480 891 13 59,977 18 2 169 17,276 1,513 23 21 49.876 154 25 99 18,215 20 647,568 1,447= 1,029 51 61 ..." 72,605 . .... • • 1,825 • . ... ... ... • . 80 688 227 897 7 3 .... 25 . ... • • . • . . . . • • • • . . • • . . . • 1,213 1,847 ^ 97 . • “ 21, 1,397 ... . ... ...153,992 49,293 28,364 • • • Black work—com., tax paid. 30 “ 45 good • v ... • • • • • . ... . . ... 662 New York Baltimore Boston Portland New Orleans Philadelphia Hhda. ..79,920 62,296 1,499 84 9,332 25 Cases. 44,892 132 3,804 Bales, crns. 24,618 371 4 .... 3,391 ... ... ... ... ... ... • . . ... • • ... .. . ... ... 149,818 3,142 2,714 5,097 3,058,626 973 748 688,416 755,881 303,774 . . 4,571 . 58 50 ... 6.002 691 274 ••• o ... 10,513 92413,562 8,052,437 bis. pkgs. manf’d. 2,270 3,732 924 65 ... 5,290 7,647,316 142 286,409 6,756 4,516 530 31 47 45 8S6 29 Total since Nov. 1... 153,992 49,293 369 ... 662 @35c Black work,common, in bond 15 @20v g-od *• 18 @22c 60 “ 25 @30c 35 @45c Bright work, medinm,.. “ 50 @75c good & fine “ 25 50 @45c @35* fine 80 @125 The Nov. receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and siuce 1, have been as follows: RECEIPTS NEW YORK SINCE AT /—Thisweek-^, hhds. pkgs. From Virginia 161 146 826 46 427 3,229 427 35,816 61,145 36,313 129 871 129 871 77,360 3,300 1,330 T’l sin. Nov. hhds. pkgs 9,594 116,008 4,593 5,712 3.083 497 156,031 78,690 159,331 .... Total 1. 1866. 60,319 ... Other NOVEMBER Previously-^ hhds. pkgs 9,397 113,251 4,432 5,666 2,757 197 Baltimore New Orleans The following are the exports of tobacco from New Yoi^ the past week : for EXPORTS OF TOBACCO 6,002 YORK.* NEW FROM fi)S. v Hhds. Liverpool.. 154 The market this week has been fairly active and firm* There is an improved demand for export, with some specula¬ tion and a fair business with the trade. The estimates of the 17 Pkgs. ,... 50 1,351 297 320 1,221 Antwerp 131 441 .... .... .... 5 80 58 Havti... 5 .... .... 5,807 ... Other West Ind British Guiana New Grauada 23,169 4,400 3 Cadiz. Cuba Manf. 110 7 13 Bremen. 7,707 4 50 10,179 Argentine Repub 1,450 Tot.exp’t forw’k 1,292 * 1,803 7 The exports in this table to European ports are made up fests, verified and corrected by an inspection of the cargo. 115 51,312 from mani¬ The direction of the other foreign exports for the week, from the ports, has been as follows : hhds. leaf and 125 hhds. stems To .To Bremen, 264 hhds. leaf, 200 hhds. stems From Baltimore—To Rotterdam, 1,521 .. and 31 pkgs. .To Montevideo and Buenos Ayres, 11,266 lbs. manufac¬ tured....To St. Johns, P- R., 3 hhds. leaf and 4,108 lbs. manufactured. . 924 13,562 8,052,437 ... Hamburg 114,196 . Cases. Bales. Tierces. 400 Loudon Amsterdam, 1,042 hhds. leaf 467 222 28,364 70 “ fine 8 263 391 San Francisco Lbs. hhds. 14 .... 5o@l GO at, Yara, average lots.. Bright work—common “ good 4 Fine, r “ ... Tcs.&^-Sterns.—■, Bxs. & From Yara ... • • 1 2C@2 Havana.—Wrappers, @60c @70c • 24 3 • . • • ... 6,901 231 . . 50 3.057 Good Fine manufactured. .... following table indicates the ports from which the exports have been shipped : Virginia FOREIGN. 60@ 70 75@ 85 90@1 05 . 15 . 1,631 372 51 220 . • • . • • 306 722 276 ... • ... Fillers Havana.—Fillers—Common. . ... . • 14 ... 1, 1866. @45 @25 15 @35 10 @15 5 @ 7 20 @48 10 @18 8 @16 SO @32 16 @25 10 @14 3^@ 6 4 @ 6 Running lots Ohio and Penncylvania New York State Ohio, &c United States since Novem¬ 20 16 “ we Exports of Tobacco from the (CASES). “ 15,374 .... 20 @23 “ 1865 Running lots “ 16^@19 “ Wrappers “ 14>>'@16 Wrappers* crop of 1SG6. Running lots, “ Man’f , Exnort’d this week from | Good Leaf......12y@14c. 7 @ S# l Fine do 15 "@17 9 @11>£ j Selections 18 @20 12 @14 1 SEED LEAP “ to I From Boston—To New Zealand, 20 pkgs... From 118 bales To British and 89 pkgs. To Africa, 25 hhds — To Hayti, Provinces, 52 boxes.... To South America, 6 hhds. Portland, Maine—To Halifax, 14 hhds. leaf. Maryland and Ohio.—At Baltimore receipts have fallen off the past week, both of Maryland and Ohio. The demand for Maryland Continues active, and most of the inspections find ready sale for shipment at full prices. From Ohio the advices are of a verj unfavorable character. A large portion of the crop which was saved from drought has, by the late severe frost, been seriously injured—causing increased firmness on per cent, less, and Missouri and north of the Ohio at 10 per the part of holders. Sales for the week only 50 hhds. The light in¬ cent. more. The sales of Kentucky for the week amount to spections the past week would indicate that last year's crop has nearly about 1,200 hhds., of which about 800 for export, the balance all been forwarded to market. Inspections for the week 1,112 hhds. to the trade and for Maryland, speculation. The freight engagements total 1,2S9 (176 reinspected,) 176 Ohio, (30 reinspected,) 1 Virginia— hhds. Cleared same period, 1,621 hhds. leaf, 125 do. stems, include a vessel of 700 hhds. to Genoa. The prices range to Rotterdam ; 1,042 hhds. leaf to Amsterdam; 264 do. and 200 do. 6c. to 20c. for lugs to prime heavy leaf. Iu seed leaf the stems to Bremen ; 3 do. to West Indies—in all, 2,830 hhds. leaf, 325 new crop vary from 50 to 75 per cent of the crop of last year. The Commissioner of Agriculture estimates Kentucky at 24 complaint is still heard of scarcity of goods offering at prices do. stems. We renew quotations, viz.: . 466 THE CHRONICLE. Maryland sonnd “ common. good Per 100 lbs. $4.00© 4 60 Per 100 lbs. Ohio inferior to good com. “ brown and greenish. 44 medium & fine red.. 44 com. to med. spang. 44 fine spangled “ 44 5.60© 6.50 middling 7.50© 0.05 good tofine b’wn 10.00@15.<0 44 upper country... 44 “ Jancy 17.00 ft 25.00 grou’d leav. new Stock 1st Jan., 1807.. Inspected this week .. do 44 3.00@30.00 3.00© 5.00 19,595 foreign ports. 59,021 Coastwise & reinspected 7,823 56,461 Total 20.00©30.00 . Cleared for 1,289 previously yellow do. & fancy 3.00© 6.00 6.00© 7 00 7.50@15.(>0 8.00©15.00 15.00@20.00 57,844 77,345 on shipboard Manufactured Tobacco—Market still active for not cleared most Virginia.—At Richmond, on the 10th, breaks and receipts were very light, and the market w as buoyant, but without quotable advance, sales past week amounted to about 400 hhds. At Petersburg the market the past week has been firm and active, at full prices ; the breaks comparatively light and receipts small. The damaged the new crop. $3 50© 6 Fair 7 00© 7 Gocd shipping.... 8 0; © 9 Good working.... 8 50@10 : 00 I Leaf—Common 50 J Medium 00 I Good working 00 | Fine Good • 93 doubt has slightly We quote Lugs—Common Receipts this week, no I Fine hogsheads. for the whole State, which are 15 00@16 17 00@20 18 00©20 00 00 00 00 00 00 We give below the inspections, : Richmond, 28,374 hhds.; Lynchburg, 6,436—Total, 43,778 follows as Petersburg, 10,278; Farmville, 690 hogsheads. 12 00@14 shipping..... 14 00@16 ** ; Rye Flour, fine and checked prices The on upward movement in flour and wheat was Wednesday, and the tendency since has been downward. Flour has been in liberal supply, and the general demand quite brisk, upon which prices were firm, but more in sym¬ pathy with wheat than from the proper relations of demand and supply in the flour market. At the close, there is some decline, without largely stimulating business. Of the sales for the week about 15,000 bbls. were for British markets . Western Yellow Southern White Rye Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State and 50© 7 25 NEW 566,370 25,280 102,710 Oats, bush 359,665 486,950 EXPORTS FROM NEW THE Flour, C. meal, Wheat, To Gt. Brit. week.... since Jan. 1 11,192 80,987 N. A. Col. week.. 5,S73 Eye. 26,110 " bbls. 8 33 bush. bush. AND Earley. bush. 18,213,880 638,220 885,075 5,690,605 SINCE JAN. Oats, bush, 164,056 715,770 6,515 1 Corn bush 57,470 861,973 116,406 6,426,078 5,500 1,750 7 4,546 .... 473 82,365 1,053 since Jan. 1, 1867 485,416 115,4 9 tame time, 1866 750,560 116,751 2,112,445 700,680 41,775 132,195 136,110 WEEK 367 114,976 We»t Ind, week. 6,867 since Jan. 1 189,393 Total exp*t, week 28,059 bbls. follows: 144.200 570,655 FOR 6 -1866- 3,805,210 YORK 6 6 Forweek. S’eJan 1 62,HO . 1,848,615 3,6 0 226,445 1,615,235 170,495 3,522,0S0 11,691,480 262,115 700 Wheat, bush Corn, tush Rye, bush Barley, &c., busn FOREIGN as . 116,155 Corn meal, i)Dls © . YORK. 1867 For week. B’eJan.l. . Flour, bbls... 42 72 SO 48© 65© 45© Malt AT 41 79© Peas, Canada RECEIPTS 70© 2 80 85© 2 90 90© 3 25 l •37© l 41© l 67© Barley The movement in breadstuffs at this market has been .... 430 650 1,205 63 9,152 104,599 730 ’ 192,568 29,085 71,020 821,096 166.097 886,661 129,883 6,734.313 296,445 204,500 985,37210,112,953, .... . .... Since Jan. 1, from Boston 133,868 21,068 31,122 20,913 115,762 36,893 Philadelphia Baltimore BREADS TUFFS. The market this week has been somewhat excited and 2 2 2 Corn, Western Mixed.... 7 25© 9 00 6 $2 25© 2 38 2 25© 2 38 White super¬ meal, Jersey Brandywine Spring Red Winter Amber do 10 20@12 CO fine Chicago bushel Milwaukee Club com¬ 1,897 2,758 8,302 283,751 6,35 9,49S 678,74' 2,620 703,50 Lake Ports.—The following shows the receipts following lake ports for the week ending Oct. 5 : Weekly Receipts Friday, Oct. 11, 1867, P. M. per Double Extra Western and St. Louis 12 25©16 25 Southern supers 10 8o@ll 85 Southern, fancy and ex. 12 00@15 00 California 12 00@13 50 at the variable. Western,-, good mon to since Jan. 1 $3 Wheat, 10 15@10 85 Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 10 40@11 15 Extra descriptions and $13 25(5)13 60, 2 at $12 25@12 75, 4 at 11@11 75, 3 at $1(@10 25, 6 at $9 2li@9 80, 6 at $8@8 90, 2 at f7(5)7 50,7 at $6@6 90, 5 at 5@5 90 The late frost Extra State 19,501 prices tending upward, particularly low grades, which have to be written higher. Kentucky.—At Louisville, on the 8th, the receipts were sraa1!. The market ruled firm at better prices than prevailed last week. No bids to-day were made under $5, and the sales passed off without any re¬ jections. The offerings amounted to 66 hhds ; sales were 1 hhd at $21 75, 1 at $17, 2 at $16, 5 at $16 25@15 75, 8 at $M@14 60, 3 at stock has been much reduced. Flour, Superfine..^ bbl. $8 66© 9 60 Corn Stock to-day in warehouses and [October 12 1867. at Flour* bbls. Corn. bush. bush. 65,517 Chicago Wheat. 857,936 Milwaukee Toledo 976,923 Detroit Cleveland Totals. Previous week ' 82,499 54,456 141,521 83,550 — 25,338 660,201 3,329 25,257 6,576 Oats. bush. Barley. 739,679 52,820 34,354 166,918 12,137 13,428 bush. 5,496 8,470 16,894 20,205 Rye. bush. 71,«61 8.S10 2,285 1,240 83.396 736,884 852,418 217,985 310,r24 908,951 897,589 94,058 Correspond^ week,’66. 142,876 1,374,629 183,097 81,350 613,696 229,170 Since Jan. 1, 1867 2,445,104 17,680,72525.965,022 9,905,646 2,132,4131,290,101 Same time, 1866. 2,639,715 18,011,505 33,568,979 9,732,882 1,080,2171,555,974 1867, Decrease in flour, bbls 194,611 1867, Decrease i* grain, bush 6,976,649 .. 153.805 1,906,953 Eastward Movement of Grain by Canal.—The following statement will show about the amount of grain on canals destined for tide water; Oats, Corn, Barley, Wheat, >RyK’ bush. bush. 602,410 61,901 Buffalo, 14 days.... OBwego, 9 days bush. 945,648 bush. 284,350 bush.- 185,590 296,093 mainly for London, principally at $10 25@10 65, with Total 664.311 945,648 580,448 1S5,590 freights at 3s. Previous week 821.311 620.208 698,182 140,810 1,340,619 Wheat has arrived freely from the canal since the 606,963 1,370,191 332,315 46'3,580 124,545 repair Corresp’di’g week’66 of the break, and supplies for the balance of the season, which groceries. usually ends about the 1st of December, may be safely esti¬ mated at 150,000 bushels per day—a quantity that will Friday Evening, Oct. 11. per¬ mit a liberal export, with a fair accumulation for winter The grocery trade has been characterized by the same stock and for the use of millers. The receipts of Spring wheat irregularity and want of confidence that prevails in all other at the Western markets still exceeds three hundred thousand departments of trade at this time. There is a general want bushels (say 40,000 quarters) per day, of confidence in prices from the unsettled state of Natioual with every prospect that this rate of delivery will be maintained for six weeks to come. affairs, and the light demand prevailing. The trade iu first No. 1 Spring touched $2 50, but has receded to $2 38. hands is very small, although a fair line trade for immediate Winter wheats are very scarce, and bring extreme prices. Corn has arrived sparingly, and with a large speculative consumption is reported. The imports of tea for the week advance has been much neglected both by shippers and the have been small, embracing only a few hundred packages via trade. Our supplies henceforth promise to equal if not exceed Aspinwall. Of Rio coftee five cargoes have come to hand, those of last season. Some orders have been diverted to Bal¬ amounting to 20,790 bags, and also small lots of Maracaibo, timore, where prices are lower than here. Oats have also St. Domingo, and sundries. The imports of sugar and molasses experienced a speculative advance, but close flat and neglected. have been small both at New York and other ports. Full Rye and barley have brought higher prices to meet pressing details of the imports of each article will be found under the wants, but, these supplied, the close is flat and drooping. One of the most potent influences in checking the advance respective heads. in flour and wheat, and giving a downward turn to TEA. prices in the past two days, was the scarcity and extreme rates demanded The tea market has been as last week very quiet in first hands, but fur freight room. As high as Is. per bush, was paid for with a liberal consumption demand holders are still firm in their views. wheat to Glasgow, and to day business was done at lid. by The sales are 1,400 half-chests greens, 800 do. Japans, and 600 do. steam to Liverpool ; but the room on the berth is somewhat Oolongs. increasing. The closeness of the money market, and the The imports of the week have been only 342 packages from Aspin* slight decline in gold, have also had some influence in favor of wall. Dates from Hong Kong are to August 12. No shipments or the buyer, but in the various changes there is little if any¬ any importance had been made to the United States eince the previous We thing to the advantage of the European shippers. What he mail. camegive below extracts from a ShaLghae circular of August 16, which via San Francisco. has gained in price, he has lost in freights and Our usual fable of shipments from China and imports at this port gold. The following are closing quotations : remaining almost unchanged, is omitted for this week. ... October 467 THE CHRONICLE. 5,1867.] August 16.—The circular of Messrs. Augustine Heard and not numerous, sales effected. The market at 'he close was firm at an advance, No. 12 being quoted 9@9J rs., the latter price being obtain¬ Co. of this date reports of tea— able f oigood ury and strong sugars Standard quotation.—No 12 at Settlements of Congou since the 3rd instant, when our last circular 9£ ri al e er arrobe. Exchange, 19 percent. premium=24e. 4d. sterling was prepared, amount to 20,000 chests, and the unsold stock to 36,000 per cwt. f. o. b. without freight) and fra. 30.81 per 50 kilo’s. Exchange chests. Receipts to date are about the same as last year’s at this on Paris, 6 p r cent, premium. Last year at this date No. 12 being at time (taking together the arrivals io Shanghae, Hankow, and Kew- 8 rs., and exchange 1V^ per cent, premium, stood iu at 21s. 3d. per cwt kiang), but it is confidently asserted that there will be a marked de f. o. b. ficiency in our total supplies for the season, as compared with those ol Receipts, exports and soteks at Havana and Matanzas have been aa 1866-1867, inasmuch as the present prices offer little inducement for follow s: * the leaf to be brought to market. Arrivals are taking place slowly, Rec’d this Expts to U. S.—> Total export Stocks boxes. week. week. Since Jan. 1. week. Since Jan.l. and the ctock comprises 10,000 packages of New Teenkais and Fychows, ^ear. 1S67 633 17,875 168J 39 6,401 316,283 3,246,338 5 000 of Pingsueys, and 4.000 of Old Fychows and Common Shanghae 17,769 1866 8 9 355,2:«9 1,169,570 240,074 281 387,095 1,348,432 126,450 4,070 packed description. Of the first named kinds only one chop is of fine 1865 quality, and for this an offer of 41 taels is said to have been made by MOLASSES. an English buyer and refused. American operators are doing nothing, nor is it likely that they will be in any haste to ship at prices corre¬ The business in Molasses lias Veen merely nominal during the week, sponding to the above, while the home advices continue to discourage the payment of high rates, and while native reports from the producing although there is no change in prices. The sales are only 518 hhds. The imports of molasses at the several ports are small, showing a districts warrant the expectation of a supply somewhat in excess of the considerable decrease from those of the previous week. The details are previous crop. What the quantity in excess will be is very uncertain. Chinese estimates vary from 5 to 20 per ceDt.; and as the supply of as follows : Porto Porto leaf brought to market (whatever the actual production may be) will Cuba. Rico. Other. AtAt— Cuba. Rico Other. depend chiefly on the course rf prices at the shipping ports later in the New York 8 323 Philadelphia..hhds. 639 hhds. 206 season, we shall probably not be in a position to know the facts for Baltimore 66 Portland 333 The total receipts in 1866-1867 at all the ports Boston eorae months to come. Newr Orleans of Ch:na were, in round numbers, 400,000 half chests, or 24,000,000 lbs., Stocks, October 8, and imports since January 1 are as follow*: of which 14,500,000 lbs. went to the United States, 8,500,000 lbs. to N.O P. Rico. -rOth. Fo’gn—\ Total. Cuba. Great Britain, 400,000 lbs. to Canada, and 600,000 lbs. ware carried ♦hhds. bbls. hhds. ♦hhds. At *hhds. over to this season. The export to Great Britain for the next twelve New 343 2.180 8,158 5,630 York, stock months may be safely estimated at 10 to 10|- million lbs., ts the stock N. Y 30,723 127,427 7,377 34,3*2 imp’ts since Jan. 1.76,397 527 99 i 37,593 of Green Teas is very low there and prices are high. We hear from Portland “ 36,967 62,435 1,122 5,821 3,46/ “ “ “ 53,147 Japan that a good yield of tea is expected in that country, but our Boston, 984 1.757 48,255 1,401 s Philadelphia “ “ “ 45,047 report from Yokohama direct will give later information than we can Baltimore “ ).;9 15,012 2,92i “ “ 11,122 175 30,ft90 furnish on this head. New Orleai s “ “ “ 30,715 London, October 9.—Later advices from China have been received 9,483 41,754 321,612 Total import 26,413 253,445 by telegraph. The shipment of the new crop of tea continued with Shanghai, « 1 rr 4 ,• -4 T , , c;.. .... .... ’ . • .... • ^ • • • • .. .... . • — • • • • • • • • ..... .... .... great activity. Up to the 11th of September sixty-seven pounds had been exported to various foreign countries. million fair business doing in Rio coffee, althorg the shipments to this port have caused a decline of ceat.during past week, and the market closes dull. The sales are 16,985 bags Rio. Other kinds are quiet. The imports of the week have been large, including 26,790 bag3 of Rio as follows:—4,410 per “Acme,” 4,432 per “ Leonore,” 5,524 per Doris Brodersen,” 4,014 per “ Palme,” 5,011 per “ Medora,” 3,400 per “Union.” In addition to the above, 1,501 bags of Maracaibo, 778 bag8 of St. Domingo, 318 bags from Aspinwall, 147 b igs from Curacoa, and 19 bags from Calcutta, have come to hand. At Baltimore 7,530 bags, at New Orleans 13,711 bags, and at Galveston 5,462 bags, all of Rio are reported arrived since our last. The imports since January 1, aud stock in first hands Oct. 8, are liberal light stocks of Spices in first hands prevent any decline in although the present demand is very small. The the “ as follows : OTHER 80BT8. op bio COPPER. Import. 562,'. 57 19,730 196,265 72,293 16,662 New York, bags. it Philadelphia 44 Baltimore New Orleans Galveston Mobile Stock. 14,000 5,400 44 44 .... 322 — At New York, At Bost. import. Stock. Import, java, bags* 46,104 3,427 23,£10 Ceylon 9,110 4,110 “ Singapore, “ *20,962 .... 11,442 Maracaibo, “ 41,485 6,199 Laguayra “ 27,620 2,944 St. Domingo,“ 23,759 9,378 Other, 2.02/ “ 20,557 3,977 .... Includes pockets 1S9,597 21,657 46,657 reduced to bags. SUGAR. Sugar market shows less business, although prices are pretty firmly held at the highest figures. The trade demand is small for raw sugars in beth hogsheads and boxes. The sales are 3,711 hhds. Cuba and Porto Rico, and 3,573 boxes Havana, on a basis of 13f@12c. for fair to good refining. Refined sugars are steady. The imports of sugar in boxes has been larger this week than the previous week. Of hogsheads the receipts are quite small at all the ports. The details are as follows : The Cuba . Other At—' boxes, hhds. hhds. N. York 4.919 536 676 Portland Boston , Brazil, bags. .... FRUITS. 4 We annex ruling quotations of goods in first hands : Tea. Duty: 25eents per lb. Cuba , boxes, hhds. Other hhds. , At— f Philad'l Baltimore New Orleans 1,101 276 3J7 /—Duty raid-, Duty pa d Hyson, Common to fair ... 90 @1 05 do Superior to fine.... 1 10 ®1 39 Ex fine to finest ...1 35 @1 5 do Y’g Ilyson, Com. to fair ... do Super, to fine. .1 do Exfinetofinest.l unp. & Imp., Com.to fairl do Sup. to fine ,1 Uncol. Japan, 85® Cora, to fair. 90 80 ® 90 90 @1 05 Sup’rtoflne. do do * Ex f. to flnestl 10 @1 20 Oolong, Common to fair. do Superior to fine... li @1 35 40 @1 70 ^ do Ex f. to fin’st do 7 @1 i 5 70 ® 80 85 @1 10 do Ex fine to finest ..1 25 @1 60 Souc & Cong.. Com. tofair 65 ® 80 do Sup’rtofine. 9* @1 05 do Exf. to flnestl 25 ®1 55 00 @1 15 25 @1 45 do do Ex. f. to finest. I 55 @1 8 * H.Sk. &.Tw’kay,C, tofair. 6i ® 7u do do Sup. to fine 75 ® SO .... 'Total prices Foreign Dried Fruits are without especial business worthy of note. Prices are steadily held, although the demand is nominal. Domestic Dried are fairly active and prices are advancing. Coffee. .... 100,137 Total.. * 17.000 44 44 Savannah 58,787 5,000 hogsheads. Includes barrels and tierces reduced to SPICES. COFFEE. There has been a * Duty: When imported direct in American or equalized vessels from the place of its growth or production; also, tho growth of countiies this side the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels,5 cents ^ lb; all other 10 $ cent ad valorem in addition. lava, mats an I bags ;...gold 24 ® 25 Rio, prime, duty paid ...gold IP*® 181 Native Ceylon IP*® 20 do good gold 16*® 17 ® 18$ do fair gold 14.® 15* Maracaibo Laguayra 17*® 18 do ordinary gold I3j® 14 St. Domingo 15*® 16 do fair to g.cargoes . .gold 14J® 1<* Sugar. Duty : on raw or brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 8; on white clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, not over 20,4 ; on refined,5; and on Molado, 21 cents lb. above 15 a’ or ID® fair to good do ... ID® fair to good grocery... 12*® 12,® pr. to choice do 11 ® centrifugal Cuba, inf to com. refining do do do do do do lb 111® 14 Porto Rico de J3 to 15 13*® do 16 to 18 14*® do 19 to 20 15*® white 14*® do do do 11* do do 12 do 12* !_ do Loaf... 13 Granulated 14 .... 13* 14* 16* 16* ® 17* ® Crushed and powdered White coffee, A Yellow coffee.... Mel ado 7 ® 9 Hav’a, Box. D. S Nos. 7 to 9 111® 12 do do do 10 to 12 12,® 12} 8$ 46* 16 ® 16* 151® .. Molasses. Stocks Oct. 8, and imports since Jan. 1, are as follows : Other , N. York stock Same date 1866 Imports since Jan. 1 Portland Boston do do Philadelphia do do do Total import.... * , For’gn, boxes. *hhds. *hhds. At— Baltimore New Orleans Cuba. 60,525 60,126 ... .... Doty Brazil, Manila, Total *hhds. bags. bags,&c ' ' , 41,314 61,110 29,862 65,1.9 13,999 72,070 170.399 218,760 39,879 258,639 1,709 5,015 53,756 31,231 1,483 7,601 6,498 33,835 27,310 59,233 17,063 40,325 12,135 9,463 25,346 1,118 68,696 22,395 315,894 343,437 84,893 42,409 13,253 - 5,200 159 4,056 428,360 23,255 72,229, Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads. Havana, October 6.—The Weekly Report says of sugar (clayed) — la consequence of further favorable accounts from New York and of the steady prices ruling at London for this staple, as reported per cable up to yesterday, some buyers have of 9 re. per arrobe for good No. 12 finally decided to grant the price D, S„ and some important, though : 8 cents $ New Orleans Porto Rico Ouba Muscovado. gallon. $ gall. . ® do dayed...... Bat badi.it*.... . . 55 ® 75 60 ® t0 Duty: mace, 40 cents; .. (gold) 90® 87*® Nutmegs, No. 1....(gold) r ..... ...... Spices. nutmegs, 5o; cassia and cloves, 20; pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 cents 18 lb. Cassia, in mats gold ^ lb . 45® j Pepper Ginger, race and Af(gold) 10}® 11} I Pimento, Muce .. (gold) Jamaica (gold) (gold) 9?* | Cloves 90 | 47 (® 49 58 pepper 2"*® 19® 16® and 39* 26* Fruit. Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes, 5; Shelled Almond?, Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filberts and Walnuts, 3 cents $ lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved GingeT, 50; Green Fruits, 25 $ cent ad val. B air. ns, Seedless.. $* cask do Layer do Bunch — ®.... $ box 4 35 @4 40 ... ®.... Sardines . . Pigs, Smyrna Brazil Nuts.. 9 qr. box # B> IP*® 19 21 ® 21* .. ® 10 468 THE CHRONICLE. Currants $ lb Citron, Leghorn 11J® !2 32 Prunes, Turkish Hates Almonds, Languedoc do do do Sicily, 8oft Shell Shelled Sardines $ box do ® @ ® ® ® ® ® ® 3' 28 21 85 Provence .. $ hi. box Filberts, Sicily ‘ 3 21 11 31 11$® 12$ Walnuts, Sago 21$ 12 ® 12 ® @ Pearl Tapioca Macaroni, Italian 40 2» . @20 Drih.1) Fbuit— 23$ Apples at) Blackberries B> Raspberries . S2 7® 12$@ ® : 9 13 .. THE DRY GOODS TRADE. Eriday, P. M., October 11, 1867. The unsettled state of the Stripes show [October 12, 1867. some decline, and light a demand. Amoskeag 28$, Uncasville 16$-17$, Whittenton ■ BB 17, do C 16, Pittsfield 3 3 9$, Haymaker 16 and 17, Everett 15-15$, Massabesic 6-3 Boston 14$ and 15$, American 24 14$ and 15$, Eagle 12$ and 134 Ham* ilton 23, Jewett City 13$ and 14$. Checks are without material change or feature of interest Park Mills Red 18, Lanark 4x2. 2S inch 13, Lanark Fur 13, Union 50 4x2 30, do 50 2x2 30, do 20 4x2 27$, do 20 2x2 27$, CaleJonia 15 inch 28 do 11 inch 22, Kennebeck 26$-27$, Star No. 800 2x2 18. do No 900 4x2 20. Cameron No. 90 19, do No. 80 17. Denims are also York 28 inch 27$, quite. Amoskeag 80, Haymaker 28 inch 16 Bostou Manufacturing Co. 29 inch 29, Monitor 13, Manchester Co. 19, Columbian XXX 13$, Pearl River 30, do blue 29 Arlington 18, Mount Vernon 26$, Pawnee 12$. ’ Brown Drills are not materially changed, but prices are nominal with a light demand. Wiuthrop 14$, A - oskeag 17$, Laconia 18 Pen! perell 18, do fine jean 19, Stark A 17$, Massabesic 16, Woodward duck bag 26, National bags 31, Stark Ado 55, Liberty do 31. very Dry Goods market reported as existing at the close of last week still continues, with perhaps less hope of present improvement. There are a variety of reasons assigned for this. The heavy decline in cotton which Printing Cloths are dull and nominal at still continues ; the absence of 8c for 64x64, square clotb buyers causing larger stocks to Prints are without business, but prices show less change than last !— ’' * 1 ' ’ accumulate, and the crowding of sales through the auction week. / do palm rooms, are among the most prominent. The decline in prices 18, do pink of foreign and domestic goods has continued turkey during the week? Swiss red 14$, do blue check 14$, do solid 13$, doTodigo blue H*$’do ruby. 14$, London Mourning while the demand has been exceedingly light for the season. keag Mourning 12, Duunell’s 14, 13$, Simpson Mourning 13$, Amos Allen pink 16, Gloucester On Monday the ball was opened by the reduction of New sutta 10$, Pacific 14$, Cocheco 15, Lowell 11$, Victory 14, Warn* 11$’ Horn* 10, Empire State 7, Atlantic 8$. York Mills bleached Muslins from 35 cents so 27^ cents a Ginghams are in very large the stocks, yard, a move which caused considerable surprise and distrust, lot at auction on Thursday unsettle nandthe offering of a large market. Lancaster Domestic and materially unsettled prices of less desirable grades of Caledonia Ginghams sell at 20 cents, Hartford 14, Hampden 18 12$, Glasgow 18$, Berkshire 17$, .Roanoke 11$, Manchester goods. Since that time trade has been at a complete stand' 15 cents. Canton Flannels are in still, and at the close there are no very hopeful indications of light demand, but generally lower. N brown 29, do O do 27, do P do Ellerton 23, do S do immediate improvement. The do T do 1*8, Laconia export demand is also smaller Brown 21, Slaterville do 17, Hamilton do 21, 20, Naumkeag do 21$, Nashua A 20, Ellertou N Blea 31, do O do notwithstanding the lower prices. 29, do P do 25, Stillwater do 18 Granite State do 20, Naumkeag do 21. * The exports of dry goods for the Corset Jeans are not past week and since January particularly changed. Androscoggin 12 1, 1867, and the total for the same time in 1866 and 1860 Bates colored 12, do bleached 12, Naumkeag 16, Peppe'rell 17* Naumkeag satteen 19, Laconia 16, Amoskeag 16, Indian are shown in the Orchard 124* following tabie : Ward 16. ’ Cambrics -FROM NEW YORK. Exports to British W. Indies . 1 7 1 29 . .... Buenos Ayres . . 1 1 .... • .... Br. Provincts .... annex a Domestics. DryGo pkgs. • . • 6,305 76,315 few our jobbers: Brown Sheetings • • • • .... • • • cases • 750 . 40 4,716 . .... 1,160 1,225 .... • • • • • • • 66 19 . .... $7,327 993,692 .... .... . 2,692 1,000 . .... • . .... • .... .... 76 $6,043 8,755 1,161,137 • .... . .... manufacture, 2 31 5 1,315 ... Hayti We 482 850 170 *' .... Total this week. Since Jan. 1 Same time 1866... “ “ 1860... FROM BOSTON Val. ... Cuba Mexico New Grana-ia Argentine Repub Liverpool Glasgow ^-Domestics. -> D, Goods Val. packages. pkgs. 18 $3,2 6 ... • • • • 32 153 117 153 158 6,542 4,029 30,725 particulars of leading articles of domestic prices quoted being those of the leading and Shirtings are lower for all but standard makes, with a very small demand. Atlantic N 3-4 10, Massachusetts C do *10, Union do 10, Peppereli N do 12$, Atlantic Y 7-8 13, At lantic E do 13, Pacific E do 13, Bedford R do 10$, Massachusetts E do 13$, Peppereli O do 14, Indiau Head 4-4 16$, Pacific extra do 16, do H do 16, do L do 15, Atlantic H do 16, do A do 16$, do L do 15, Lawrence E do 14, do C do 15$, do F do 14$, Stark A do 16, Amoskeag A do 16$, do B do 16, Medford do 15, Kenebeck do 9$, Roxbury do 15, Peppereli E do 16, Great Falls M do 13$, do S lo 12$, Standard do 13$, Peppereli R do 15, Laconia E do 14$, Laconia B do 15$, Laconia O 9-8 14$, Pequot do 20, Saraaac E do 20$-, Nashua 5-4 25. Utica do 30, Utica 7-4 35, Peppereli 9-4 35, M< nadnock 10-4 33$, Peppereli do 42$, Utica do 60, do 11-4 65. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are also lower. New York Mills are selling at 27$ cents, and other grades are declining. Globe 3-4 8$, Kingston do 9$, Boott R do 10$, Globe A 7-8 9$, Stratford S do 12, Waltham X do 14, Ej. Harris do 12, Great Falls M do 13$, do S do 12$, do A do 14$, Lyman Cambric do 16$, Stratford M do 13, Bartlett 31 inch 14, Putnam A 4-4 12$, New¬ market C do 16$, Great Falls K do 16, Bartletts do 17$, James Silesias show and 26. - . - further reduction, with but a very Lonsdale Silesias 28 inch 20, Victory J 15$, Indian Orchard 16$, Ward 16$, Washington glased cambrics sell at 10$ Victory H 9$, Superior 8, Pequot 10$, Waverly 11, and S. S. & cents Sons paper cambrics at 14 cents, do high colors 16, Maaonville 14. Muslin Delaines are steady, but without especial 22$, Hamilton Co. 22$, Manchester 22$, Pacific dark business. Lowell 22$, Pekin 28, Armures dark 22$, Pacific Merinos A 37$, Mourning 22$, Spragues 20 a light business. Skirtings 30, Alpacas 28. Flannels and Linseys are quite active, but in the absence of other trade the market droops. A sale of domestic Woolens on Thurs¬ day unsettled prices. Belknap shirtings 43, Washington Roy rolled 6-4 86 to 91, Rob Roy |8-4 43 to 47$, Cocheco do 60, Rob black and white check 40$, Franklin shirting 47$, Caledonia shirting 87$, Pequa, double fold 45, Bay State Opera 52$, Gilbert's do 60, and ParkLinseys 85 inch at 20 cents, do 60 do 27$, do 60 do 30, do 65 do 37$ do 75 42$, Black Rock 22$. Cottonades are entirely nominal for the time. New York Mills d Js t 52$, Farmer’s and Mechanics’ 40, Pemberton d & t 40$, Great Western 37$, Plow, L. <t Anv 37$. American Linen remains steady, and fairly active. IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Oct corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866 have been as 10, 1867, and the follows: entered for consumption for the week ending oct. -1865.Value. Pkgs. do do do 'silk . .2,722 $1,161,056 1,788 635,258 /. 632 690.935 1,501 . 361,200 136,230 259 .6,902$2,884,685 WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE Manufactures of wool... do cotton.. do silk do flax.... Miscellaneous dry goods. .... Total Add ent’d 1,803 560 295 790 $835,048 178,007 309,106 387 188,467 135,268 3,835 $1,645,896 AND 263 57 26 177 201 724 forcon8iimpt’n6,902 $84,827 15,789 37,679 49,133 12,417 $199,845 2,884,685 Totalth’wmipon mak’t. 7,626 £3,081,530 ENTERED FOR '. do do do -1866.Pkgs. Value. THROWN INTO THE SAME PERIOD. Steam do 17, Attawaugan XX do 14$, Hope do 16, Tip Top do 19, Blackstone do 17, Boot B do 17$, Forestdale do 18$, Masonville do 18$. Audroscoggiu L do 21, Lonsdale do 21, Bate3 XX do Lyman J do22, Wamsutta H do 26 do O do 25, Atlantic Cambric do22$, 29, New York Mills do 27$, Hill do 20, Amoskeag 42 inch 21$, Waltham do 1S$, Naumkeag W 6-4 21, Boot VV do 21, Nashua do 25, Bates do 24, Wamsutta do 32, Amoskeag 46 inch 23$, Waltham 6-4 25, Mattawamkeag do 25, Peppereli do 27$, Utica do 35, Waltham 8-4 82$, Peppereli do 37$, Mattawamkeag 9-4 40, Peppereli do 42$-, Utica do 65, Waltham do 40, Monadnock 10-4 37$, Waltham do 50, Allen¬ dale do 47$, Peppereli do 50, Utica do 60, Peppereli 11-4 624. Ticks have declined les9, but trade is light. Conestoga extra 35, Amoskeag A C A 32 inch 40, do A 32 inch 32, do B 32 inch 28, do D 30 inch 20, do C 30 inch 24, Brunswick 4-4 15, Hamilton 27$. Somerset 13$, Thorndike 20, Pearl River 37$, Housewife ex. 32, do AAA 28, do AA 2 r, Pittsfield 9$, Housewife A 20, York 82 inch 85, do 30 inch 27$, Cordis A A A 82 inch 81$, do 4-4 27$, Everett 21$, Boston A A . cotton silk flax ... ... . . . S. 6S4 181 109 276 374 1,624 3,835 THE $292,377 3,1867. Pkgs. Value 707 396 451 811 252 $^89,300 123,753 356,251 178,175 96.037 2,617 $1. MARKET DURING 529 144 $229,630 44,720 94 382 87 95,567 72,142 26,112 $558,535 1,236 1,645,896 2,617 $490,072 1,043,516 55,542 112,362 5,459 $2,201,431 89,898 30,257 3,853 $1,533,588 WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. 516 127 63 379 21 $236,138 40,572 83,959 115,750 5,414 ’n6,902 $481,833 2,884,685 Total entered at the port 8,008 $3,366,518 355 212 26 45 $333,625 66,859 36,065 3,542 795 813 164,409 20,833 4,184 $349,440 3,835 1,645,896 2,768 2,617 1,043,516 3,576 $150,546 59,404 25,394 110,554 15 899 216 $621,791 October THE CHRONICLE. 12,1867.] Dubuque ®f)e ftailwajj Jttonitor. ^Railroad Earnings (weekly).—la the following table pare the reported railroads in 1866 road. AUau«c&Gt.Westem.4thAu?;] 2d, “ ' 44 !! l®ts®PL1 3d’, “ “ »4 “ and N. Chciago “ 3d, “ and Alton Chicago f 4th, “ 4?A 44 Chic.,R-1- and Pacific. .1st, ;; ^ sd,1 44 “ Septj 4th, “ “ 44 44 “ 2d, 3d, “ , Marietta and Cincinnati “ 44 “ “ 280 (. 2d, “ “ 223,474 410 “ 1 Central,... “ 44 Michigan Southern .“ “ 44 ‘ Toledo, 44 I * 2d. 2d, 3d, 1st,Sept. ] 3dl “ f 44 “ 44 “ 3d 4th “ 37,540 43,013 41,591 188 24,336 26,384 24,041 257 83,577 147,166 99,524 92,647 99,987 97,291 100,654 107,369 105,550 88,601 83,166 77,991 285 524 44 “ 44 “ .4 “ 521 1st,Sept.1 Union 113,900 122,000 145,500 136,300 3S,887 40,574 46,640 44,973 26,894 2-.-,700 30,042 34,581 152,698 93,991 110,402 111,379 104,780 1st, Oct. J Wab’sh&Wt’n 1st Sept. ]1 “ 2d Western 317,672 352,362 477,647 356,750 90,943 4th, Michigan 112,505 102,210 41;356 3d, 44 103,993 103.502 231,678 315,851 265,033 110,S12 89,502 f 1145 1st, Sept] 44 133,530 83,105 85,882 71,122 82,527 J 1st,Sep. 1 44 166,635 139,454 H2,3'7 113,729 116,804 507 2d, 3d, 1 “ 4th, “ I • 177 J r-Eam’gs p. m—, 1867. 123,360 Win’66-1 44 Milwaukee.4tb,Aug.) “ and Detroit " 1866. 156,642 J West’ll.2d, Sept. 1 ;; - I “ 44 we com¬ weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of the leading Week. Miles of .—Gross earn’gs—> 97,212 122,3(0 122,218 117,932 84.575 296 306 254 294 81 72 01 74 371 369 401 365 216 224 396 256 55 49 05 81 277 44 307 74 41716 311 58 270 218 221 255 74 32 81 56 277 297 354 332 199 ‘228 221 219 68 79 23 97 206 84 215 82 248 08 239 22 94 69 102 66 104 64 616 37 349 21 325 09 350 83 535 79 829 79 3S7 37 390 80 (507 m.) $289,-100 $504,992 f327,269 408,864 899,870 388,480 90,959 162 33 189 98 174 58 27,089 30,415 31,456 37,533 109 44 108 21 121 66 137 85 153 04 394,533 451,477 474,441 402,674 528,618 526,959 343,408 399,364 429,669 472,483 596,583 510,537 687,121 614,849 475,723 Oct.... Nov Dec.... 641,491 497,250 368,581 ... 5^48^359 5,476,276 3,050,340.. Year.. Erie Railway. 1866. 1865. (798 m.) (798 m.) $1,070,890 $1,185,746 1 011,735 987,936 1331,124 1,070,917 ..Jan $906,759. .. 917,639. ..Feb... 1,139,528. ..Mar... i;538,3l3 1,153,441 1,217,143. .April.. 1,425,120 1,101,632 1,122,140. ..May .. 1,252,370 1,274,558 1,418,742 1,435,285 1,243,636 1,118,731...June... 1,208,244 1,071,312 .July... 1,295,400 1,239,024. ..Aug ..Sep—1,416,101 . 1,524,917£ 1,041,115 6,501,063 14,596,413 — — ..Oct.... ..Nov... ..Dec.... ..Year.. $163,996 366,361 1866. 429,177 496,655 429,548 352,218 ...Oct.... .Nov... ..Dee... 277,234 412,715 413,970 418,024 413,974 865,180 851,489 387,095 301,613 418,575 486,808 534,760 495,072 351,799 1,826,722 1867. (524 m.) fan. $305,857. 311,U88. .Feb.. Mar.379,761 391,163. April. 358,601. ..May.., 304,232. .June., 31*,879. ..July.. 428.71.2. ..Aug*.. 486,408. ...Sep... (524 m.) $312,846 384,684 338,858 384,401 4,650,328 . . . — ..Year (468 m.) (468 m.) $690,144 $559,982 678,604 857,583 733,866 637,186 646,995 684,523 712,495 795,938 868,500 712,363 680,963 480,986 662.163 599,806 682,510 633,667 552,378 648,201 654,926 757,441 679,935 665,233 t,M,0n 7,48T.SU pleted in six months (years ?) The St Paul 1865. 234 m.) ,98,183 74,283 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,838 217,159 170,555 228,020 contract 1805. .Feb... ..Mar... 142,947 . 238,362. 283,951. .April.. 338,691. .May... 343,678. .June.. 356,142. .July 421,484. .Aug... ...Sep... .. ..Oct... .Nov... .Dec... , 496,616. 497,521. 684,377. 704,893 _ ..Aug... ..Sep... ...Oct.... .Nov... ..Dec... . 310,594 226,840 110,664 1,985,713 262,172 170,795 116,224 150,9S9 245,7ol 244,854 98,787 1,943,900 (468 m.) $560,115...Jan... 522,821... Feb... 678,349...Mar... 575,287.. April., 678,242...May.. 506,586 .June.. 534,733-July-. 602,069 *Aug„. — _.Sept .. ..Oct.... — , Nov.,.. - ' Dec.... -Year.. 8,840,744 3,351,535 . 72,768. .April.. 90,526. ..May... 96,535. June.. . ..July.. 114,716. ..Aug... Sep... 1< 6,594. 116,146 112,952 123,802 . 85,900. 72,000. 87,510. 119,104. 114,579. ..Feb... ..Mar .. .April.. ..May... .June . 130,000. .July... 113,404-. ..Aug... ...Sep... ,..Oct.... .Nov.-* .Dec.^, . , _Year.. — $131,707 237,562 251,906 241,370 276,416 416,359 328,539 129,287 ^300,841 S395,579 £ 346,717 El71,125 — 1866. 521 m.) 1865. ..Jan.. $149,658 , (242 m.) $144,084 149,342. ..Feb.. 174,152. ..Mar.. 188,162. .April. 171,736. ..May.., 226,059 194,167 189,171 155,753 144,001 . 256,407 270,300 138 738 316,433 194,524 156,065 ..June. 172,933 July.. f 271,798 374.534 220,788 .Aug.. .Sept.., §379,981 ,.Oct 375.534 ..Nov;... t381,610 304,917 396,248 349,117 436,065 354,830 (247,023 2S4,741 , . .Dec.... 325 691 -Tear- 8,938,678 #,894,975 , 200,793 270,630 317,052 329,078 304,810 309,591 364,723 $aut»,i 279,15 344,228 337,240 401,456 365,663 329,105 413,501 1866. 274. SO J. 404,600 517,702 - 337,158 375.210 343,736 365,196 335,082 324,986 359,645 429,166 493.649 362,783 333,952 284,977 313.021 398,993 414,604 308.649 4,504,546 4,260,125 — Mississippi. 1866. ..Year.- 3,793,005 3,380,583 .Jan.. 1867. (285 m. $304,095 2&3,66 ...Oct... .Nov... .Dec.... . 1867. (340 m.) $242,795 219,067 279,643 284,729 282,939 240,135 234,683 322,521 — -Western Union. 1865 1867. (521 m.) $237,674 280,283 251,916 261,480 (285 m.) $2S2,438 265,796 (340 m.) (340 m.) $259,223 $267,541 239,139 246,109 326,236 813,914 271,527 277,423 283,130 290,916 253,924 304,463 247,262 349,285 305,454 344,700 278,701 350,348 372,618 310,762 302,425 412,553 281,613 284,319 r-Toledo, Wab. & Western.— (210 m.) S 428,474 $292,047 224,621 272,454 o 315,027 S260,268 1865. . 2,538,800 2,535,001 2400.941 —Ohio & - 134,900, ..Mar.. 192,548, .April. 230,497. ..May.. 221,690. .June., 193,000. ..July., 20 i,436. ..Aug... ...Sep... 208,785 188,815 306,693 238,926 317,977 328,869 130,000, ..Feb. 123,404 123,957 121,533 245,59S 244,376 277,505 460,661 490,693 447,669 ..Year.* (370 m.) $146,800. (275 m.) (234 m.) $98,181 86,528 95,905 106,269 203,018 209,099 (285 m.) .Dec... . 105,767 1S67. 257,230 1867. (410 m.) 3,313,514 3,466,922 ..Oct... .Nov... .. . 1866 I860. (228 m.) $241,395 183,385 ,1865. 78,976. ..Feb... 84,652. ..Mar... — (228 m.) $305,554 246,331 289,403 196,580 234,612 321,818 244,121 306,231 389,489 307,523 270,073 201,779 Michigan Central. (251 m.) $94,136. .Jan.*. (251 in.) (251 m.) $90,411 $96,672 85,447 87,791 84,357 93,763 81,181 78,607 96,388 76,248 103,373 107,525 98,043 104,608 106,921 115,184 104,866 125,252 113.504 116,495 1865. (234 m.) $143,000. ..Jan... - ..Year.. — -Milwaukee & St. Paul.-> 1867. L., Alton & T. Haute.-* 1866. (210 m.) (210 m.) $170,078 $178,119 155,893 153,9Q3 192,138 202,771 167,301 169,299 168,699 177,625 167,099 173,722 166,015 [162,570 222,953 218,236 198,884 216,783 244,834 222,924 212,226 208,098 177,364 162,694 1865. (860 m.) (1,032 m.)(l,152 m.) $541,005 $590,767 $696,147 ...Jan... 482,164 459,007 574,664 ... Feb... 613,974 765,398 .. .Mar... 499,296 468,358 624,174 774,280 . .April.. 585,623 880,993 895,712 ... May... 747,942 925,983 898,357 ..June... 702,692 808,524 880,324 .. .July 767,508 797,475 l,0i',824 ...Aug... 946,707 1,000,086 1,451,2S4 ....Sep... 932,683 1,200,216 — ....Oct..* 754,671 1,010,892 — ..Nov... 712,359 547,842 — ...Dec... 1,224,058 1,201,239 ..Year — 1867. Marietta and Cincinnati. 1867. 1865. 1866. 1867. .June.. ..J uly.. 1866. 7,976,491 9,424,450 ..Year.. - 1866. r-Chic., Rock Is. and Pacific -Chicago & Northwestern-* 567,679 72,135 108,082 267,488 stipulates that the extensiou shall be completed by De¬ cember 1. 420,007. .April.. 477,607. ..May 84,897 the completion of the The Dubuque (Iowa) Herald assures us that the “ Cedar Falls and Minnesota Railroad, ’ now open from Cedar Falls to Waverly, is to be immediately extended northward 20 miles to Nashua. The 411,605 569,250 (234 m.) $121,776 announces from each other only 28 miles. Before the end of the current mouth this gap will be Ailed up and trains running from McGregor via Austin to St. Paul, a distance of 122 miles. These roads are leased to and operated by the Chicago and Northwestern Company. 417,352. ..Mar... 6,546,741 (Minn.) Press Minnesota Central Railroad ” to Austin, and of the “ McGregor Western Railroad ” to Le Roy, both in Mower County and distant “ 505,465 7,181,208 : The New Haven (Conn.) Register says that the survey of the Air Line Railroad ” between New Haven and Middletown has been completed, and that the route is fouud to be twenty one miles in length. The road, so says the authority quoted, will be com¬ (708 m.) $660,4:38. ..Jan.«, 554,201. ..Feb... 518,088 643,887 exchanges “ (708 m.) $603,053 505,266 480,626 578,253 571,348 661,971 588,219 504,066 following excerpts relating to rai 1 energy. (280 m.) $240,238. .Jan... 1866. 1865. from The Giant County (Wise.) Witness says that operations have been commenced ou the “Dubuque, Platteville and Milwaukee Railroad ” at Calamine, and are to be pushed through with all -Illinois Central.- (708 m.) $571,536 528,972 616,665 516,608 460,573 617,682 578,403 747,469 739,736 641,589 are ‘ 1865. 1867. „ Railroad Progress.—The road matters 1867. 3,840,091 3,695,152 —St. -Pittab., Ft. W., & Chicago.—. 1866. 1866. operated by the Dubuque and Sioux City Company. The Company amount to about five millions and a half, or, on 143 miles, $38,400 per mile ,of road. The floating debt is reported to be provided for, and also a 5 per cent, dividend on the preferred stock. The earnings in 1866 were $805,271 and the expenses $567,410, leaving the net earnings at $237,861. stock and bonds of the Mil. and Prairie dn Chien. Mich. So. & N. Indiana. 1865. 1524 m.) (280 m.) (280 m.) $280,503 $226,152 222,241 275,282 290,111 299,063 269,249 258,480 329,851 322,277 871.543 355,270 321,597 335,985 387,269 409,250 322,638 401,280 357,956 360,b23 323,030 307,919 271,246 236,824 1867. (775 m.) agains1 fore EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. 1866. 1865. 438,046 .inarch 443,029 April.. 459,370. May... 380,796. June.. 400,116. July... 475,257.. Aug... Sept... 171 83 177 72 212 05 a lease of the Dubuque and Sioux City Rail¬ road, for which they have agreed to pay 35 per cent, of the gross earnings for the first ten years and 36 per cent, for the second ten years free from all taxes and assessments. This contract also in¬ of the Cedar Falls and Minnesota Railroad, hereto¬ cluded the lease Chicago and Alton. , 377,852. Feb... 52 46 24 41 170 06 159 63 149 70 93,676 19,371 19,154 21,535 24,401 1866. (466 w.) 189 233 238 224 67 09 90 41 COMPARATIVE MONTHLY (507 m.) $361,137. Jan— 8d 56 88 44 115 66 114 49 134 55 September. 1867, $1,603,000, of $123,000. 1865. 40 68 80 03 93 54 130 65 d -Atlantic & Great Western 1867. 1867. 275 05 2*1 67 225 33 263 37 1866. 308 95 243 31 328 67 230 38 185 192 204 201 Sioux City Railroad.—The Illinois Central and Company have taken and 1867 : Railroads. 469 (157 w».) ...Jan... ...Feb... ..Mar... April.. . ..May... ..June.. July.. .Aug... .Sept... « .Oct.... .Nov.. Dec.. ? ..Year.. $43,716 37,265 32,378 33,972 63,862 82,147 68,180 6<‘,862 75,677 92,715 61,770 87,830 1866. 1867. (177 m) (177 m.) 45,102 36,006 39,299 43,333 86,913 102,686 85,508 60,bW3 84,462 100,303 75,248 $39,079 27,666 36,392 40,710 57,852 60,553 58,26273,525 54,478 889,883 814,088 - 470 THE CHRONICLE. [October 12, l86t. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. Subscribers w 11 confer a qrreat favor by erlvlnar us immediate notice of any error discovered In our Tables. interest. DESCRIPTION. Where the total Funded Debt Amount la not given in detail in the 2d col outstand¬ umn it ia expressed by the dgures ing. in brackets after the Co's name. as Friday . V 33 T3 O c3 P >» Payable. ■r *-■ P-t DESCRIPTION. a is not aiven in detail in the 21 col- outstandnmn ft is expressed by the flgnres ing. in brackets after the Co’s name. ^4 T3 « INTEREST. PRI DAY. N.B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount s Payable. AJ T3 S Railroad: Atlantic A Ot. Western ($29,940,000): 1st td lat do do Railroad $2,151,500 Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) 737,500 886,000' Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. T.) Sd do let Mortgage, sinking do „ 761,000 fund, (Ohio) 2,681,900 do ) 2,653,000 Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex 1,332,000 (Consolidated Bonds 17,105,000 Atlantic ASt. Law .1st Mort.(Portland) V>W,<HX 2d Mortgage 268,900 Sd let do 464,000 Sterling Bonds do of 1864 Baltimore and Ohio. Mort (S 610.036 F) 1834 915,2S0 1,021,750 , Mortgage (S. F.) of 1S55 do do 1850 1853 do do 628,500; l,852,m Bdlefontaine ($1,745,000): lat Mortgage 225,000 433,000 do 21, Belvidere Jreieiware : lat Mort. (guar. C. and A ) do 2d Mort. 3d Mort. 1,000,000 500,000 do 539,500] Boston, Cone. A Montreal ($1,050,000): lat lat Mortgage I do Sinking Fund Bonds 1 364,000 do do do 1882 1879 1881 1876 1883 1884 1895 May & Nov. Ap’l & Oct. Ja Ap Ju Oc Jan. A July do Ap’l & Oct. General Mortgage Bonds conv. into pref. 867,000 4,437,300 Loan 1st Mortgage 1,84!,962 490,000 493,000 141,000 78«,000 900,000 600,000 2d Mortgage Catawissa : 1st Mortgage Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage Central of New Jersey : lat Mortgage 2d Mortgage Central Ohio : 1st Mort Central Pacific of Cal.: lat mortgage Convertible Bonds Cheshire: Bonds 2,500,000 7,336,000! 4.500,000 673,200 Chicago and Alton : Mortgage (Skg Fond), pref.... „ 483,000) income April & Oct July Jan. & Jan. & May & Nov. July 5,600,0001 Ap’l & Oct. do (new) Cine., Ham. A Dayton ($1,629,000): 2d Mortgage do . lat Mortgage 8d do Hubbard Branch 2d Mort. Bonds Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,872,360): 2d Mortgage 8d do convertible 4th do ftcveland and Toledo ($2,746,280): 103 91* 91* 82* 101 91 >8 91* 1880 Jau. A July 1885 do 1895 May A Nov 1893 May & Nov do Jan. & July 1885 do 1886 75* 01 1,00 -,000 250,000 600,000 Mortgage Cumberland Valley: lat Mort 2d do J’ne & Dec. 1876 161,000) 6pereent bonds Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): 109,500 108,100 do Toledo Depot Bonds Delaware: lat Mortgage, guaranteed. Qua.. Lacka. A Western ($3,491,500): Mortgage, sinking fund 2,589,000 642,000 169,500! 500,0001 1,122.500 2d do Laeka. and West, lat Mort Dss Mol'ns VaRsy : Mortgage Bonds Detroit and Milwaukee ($5,206,680): lat Mortgage, convertible let A 2d Funded Coupon Bonds.. Detroit and Pontiac R.R do do MortJ( do do 1,668 0001 572,000 1,740,000 $2,500,000] 1,000,000 May & Nov. o various, 2d " do do do 1860 1890 0,000 . . y . v # ^ a a ... . 101 104 9 ' .... 118 118* .... .... • • • • • • .... 1872 1869 1873 1883 94* > 1875 a 1890 1893 . 1,650,00( • • • • • • •• 1S97 y var. 230,000 ... • • • • r. var. 2,362,800 4,000,000 g 3 1,095,600 r. ... 315,2(X 660,(XX) 300,0(X 1,294,00c J. .... 2,2<>7,00< 4,504,501 ... 1892 1885 90-’91 70-’71 t. 1874 • • « • 1870 v. 1880 p 1869 pi 1882 109) 109 110 7. 863,(XX 2,693,0(X 651,000 1885 1877 98 100 92) 1868 16 do L£ , , , *• 108 : 296,56( ly 1893 85 1893 Cl 1884 75 324,00() Income Bonds Real Estate Jan. & Jul) 1891 Ly 4,269,000 di 1,500,500 135,500 . 831,90 4,187,09 ( Interest bonds Montgomery A West Point $1,130,700 , 75,81 • • ly 1876 600,(XX. ($6,133,243):.... • • 1} 1875 297,5(X 10 ..i,.,. Sterling bonds » m 1870 « • do v. o do do do 1867 • 1882 • , . • • • i876 • . | • •►•l c • Bonds ofl870 Income Bonds Mortgage Bond 9 (no 86 • • ?. 4 ’. 95 1 1877 886,000 500,00< 175,(XX 150,000 1,500,000 (Mil. & Western).. Mobile and Ohio Income bonds • ... JS85 ( ... • • 1882 1874 1875 903,000 1,000,000 1,465, (XX 1,300,009 Mortgage, sinking fund Mortgage 1881 1873 1881 1906 • p 20 T4 • 1866 July 90« 009 Mortgage, sinking fund 1st Mortgage Income 96 Jan. A 400,000 Mississippi A Tennessee ($1,069,600) 97 1875 1864 1875 1378 1886 various. 250,000 250,000 8 Feb. & Aug 924,0001 7 Feb. A Aug iai« do 0,000 ... • 1866 1870 . 10 gu0,000 Milwaukee and St. Paul: 1st • 1882 Ang 485,000 Mortgage 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee A Prairie du Chien Jan. & July 1867 do 1881 M’ch& April 1884 do ’81-*4| Jon. & July 1875 April & Oct M’ch A Sep Jan. & July Ap’l & Oct 1887 M.. Mich. S. A N. Indiana: ($9,135,840) d 1875 1881 1871 Feb. & 1875 1875 1890 1875 do do do 600,000 364,000' Sinking Fund do 1st • . 95 1870 1875 6,668,50( 2,523,000 2,563,000 358,000 Convertible 1904 1904 • , • 640,000 397,000 612,50( 2,000,000 1st 233,000 Mortgage Ap’l & Oct. ne 600,000 600,000 !1,100,000 Loan Bonds .... Tan & July 18— May & Nov. 18M’ch A Sep 1878 3.290 099 1876 1869 & Dec 1885 ay & Nov 1875 do 1867 3,890,000 1,907,000 192,000 523,000 400,000 Loan Bonds st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds 2d do (P.&K.RR.) Bonds. Memphis A Charleston: Mort. bonds Michigan Central, ($7,463,489). 103* . 1868 do 2,(j55,000 Marietta A Cincinnati ($3,688,385): 1875 Jan. & July 1892 . April A Oct 1881 Jan. A July 1883 Jan. A July 1883 Jan. A July 1873 633,(XXJ 7(H), 000 927,000 Mortgage 1st Mortgage. McGregor Western 1st Mortgage Maine Central: ($2,733,800) 104 101 3,437,750 Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000) M’ch & Sep 1873 !02 1868 600,000 Memphis Branch Mortgage 90 do do Mortgage 1st 1st 89 88 81 Louisville, Cincinnati A Lexington 1st Mortgage (guarrante* d) 1873 1876 1875 1874 1880 98* 73 Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point) do (Glen Cove Br.) . do July 1890 L06 .01 1888 ceased) lAhigh Valley: 1st Mortgage Little Miami : 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill ($1,000,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Long Island : 1st Mortgage § 1893 1868 300,000 Joliet andN. Indiana: 1st Mort; Lackawanna A Bloomsburg 1st do Exteusi n 2d Mortgage do Extension La Crosse A Milwaukee: 1st Mortgage, Eastern Division... do 2d do si* V .... Aug Jeff., Mad. & Indianap., 1st Mort Joliet and Chicago : 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 97 85 95 95 85 • • Feb. A Jeffersonville, Madison AIndianapolis 1898 • May & Nov. July, Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284) 1st • 2,500,000 326,000 700,000 COO, 000 do 6 per cent Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort Indianap. A Madison RR., 1st .... l,4o5,000 1875... Indiana Central: 1st Mortgage, (interest 2d do : 2d do Connecticut River: lstMort Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($80u,000) 1,000,000 April & Oci Mortgage 1st do Feb. & Ana M’ch & Sep Jan. & July Jan. & July do 500.000 1,000,000 Redemption bonds Sterling Redemption bonds Feb. & Aug 1885 Jan. & 2,021,000 692,000 lat Mortgage Detroit, Monro* A 2de4o: lat July 450,000 1,129,000 1,619,500 1,107,546 Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1866 1st 5‘0,000 1,300,000 534,900 121,000 Cl*».,Fain. A Ashtabula: IstM. B’ds 8d Jan. & 705,000 Cleveland A Mahoning ($1,752,400): 1st 1,250,000 500,00C 388,000 927,(XXI Jan. & July do do Jan. & July 189.000 2d 102 * 1S82 1875 1884 878 70-75 1870 1868 Aug May A Nov. 200,000 : do Illinois Central: Construction bonds, do do Feb. & 1,919,000 1,173,000 do Huntingdon A Broad 2bp($1,462,142): 1st Mortgage 1883 1895 1,397.000 6,663,000 Cincinnati Richmond A Chicago. . Cincinnati A Zanesville 1st Mort.. Cleveland, Gel. and Cine. ($450,000): lat Mort.(payable $25,000 per year) lat July Jan. & July 1870 do 1896 484.000 165,090 Chicago, Pock Island A P icific: 1st Mortgage (C. & R. I.) 88 98 .... Jan. & July 1870 do Convertible 1877 1893 1883 2,200,000 Ejuip nent Bonds Equipment Bonds 149,000 3d 1885 May & Nov. 1863 F.M A.&N. 1915 Feb. & Aug 1885 Anr. A Oct 1874 May & Nov. ’6S-’71 3,040,000 ... Harrisburg A Lanc'r : New D. B’ds Hartford A New Haven : 1st Mort. Uartf'., Irov. A Fishkill : Hudson River ($7,762,840): 1st Mortgage 2d do sinking fund 1st 756.000 . (ind. in C. A N. IK): sinking fund 2nd do do Greenville A Columbia: 1st Mort.... Bonds guaranteed by State Bonds unsecured Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds July ’75-’80 Chicago and Gt. Eastern lat Mort.. at Bon Interest Eonds Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. till 1870 Extension Bonds 3,875,520 Illinois and Southern Iowa :, Jan. & 1,250,000 3,600,000 . May A Nov. M’ch& Sep 926,500 Mortgage 56* Great West., 111.: 1st Mort., W, Div. 1st Mortgage Whole Line ?. 9G* April A Oct 1862 1867 1879 1883 do April A Oct 1880 June & Dec 1888 M’ch & Sep 1875 convertible do Mortgage 1870 1870 1870 Aug. 1883 May A Nov. 1889 J’ne & Dec. 1893 880 Jan. & July 1873 Ap’l A Oct. 1879 Feb. & Aug 1882 Mar. A Sep. 1875 Feb. A Aug 1870 May & Nov. 1875 M’ch A Sep 1890 Jan. & July 1880 3,000,000 4,000,000 6,000,000 4,441,600 convertible.... Grand Junction 1888 Ap’l & Oct. I 670,000 Mortgage do do do do July ’33-’9i 1,000,000 cent. Bonds Sterling convertible (£800,000)... Feb.& 3,525,000 Columbus A Indianar,ol'is Central 99* 1866 Ap’l & Oct Fund. 1st 2d 3d 4th 5th 98 * 873 1879 Jan. & 861,000 698,000 Erie Railway ($22,370,982): 96* 1865 1889 1,100,000/ 3d 5 per Jan. * July 1872 Feb. & Aug 1874 1865 do : Mississippi Eiver Bridge Bonds.. Elgin and State RR. Bonds Georgia ...- do do Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406) Trust Mortgage (S. F.) 1st ~ 1st Williamsport Mortgage Feb. & Aug 1865 2,400,000 Preferred Sinking lat Mortgage Elmira A Gal. A Chic. U. 1st Mortgage, 2d do Ap’l & Oct. , Pennsylvania: Sinking Fund Bonds J’ne & Dec. 1877 May & Nov 1372 33S,040 675,000 Sterling £380,555 at $4 -4 Chicago East J’ne & Dec. 1867 M’ch & Sep 1885 Feb. & Aug 1877 Ap’l & Oct. 1,180,950 600,000) stock Camden and Amboy ($10,204,403): : do Jan. & 394,000 750,000 160,900 do do ao Erie and Northeast ($106,000): 500,000 let Mortgage Burlington A Missouri ($1,902,110): 900,000 Mortgage, convertible 78* 13-<4 380,000 Buffalo and State Line ($1,200,000): Camden and Atlantic 78* Jan. & July ’70-’79 do 1870 Jan. & July 2,000,000 Dollar Loans do Dollar Loan Consolidated ($5,000,000) City : 1st Mort. Sinking F’d, conv. bonds Eastern, Mass. ($1,848,400): 1S66 1878 1867 1875 1880 1885 : and Sioux S 0 -oo,(Jit 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage do do Ap’l & Oct. 444*(>6‘ of Oct. (864 Buffalo. N. T. and Erie ($2,395,000): lat lat 2d do do do do Jan. & July 86 56 Boston, Hartford and Erie. Boston and Lowell: Bonds o'Jay ’53 do j 200,000 Ap’l & Oct. 1877 I 100,000( 810,0001 750,000 Lly 187G do do 1876 1881 * 'm • • • • 85* THE CHRONICLE. October 12,1867.] RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.— Continued. Subscribers will confer a great favor by giving ns Immediate notice of * Description. tc vt —Where the INTEREST. total Funded Debt Amount col ontstand Ni®-otdveninrf^inthe2< is expressed by the figures fig . nmn in it brackets after ing. the Co a name rH S3 P.O 0^3 3 *C & *d a. Payable. PQ any error discovered In oar Tables. Description. N.H*—Where the total Funded Debt Amount is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ outstand¬ FRIDAY. . umn t it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co's ing. Rate. name. Payable. | Railroad: Railroad: 5.000.000 576,000 7 7 do 2d _ V . 224,0011 180,000 450,000 200,000 485,000 Bedford',dfc Taunton .......... yew Bonds... Haven & Northampton : ttAmDshire & Hamden R.R. NewJmey do . ($855,000): Bonds of 185. nZ London Northern I1st.Mortgage 140,000 Jackson &Gt. North.. Mortgage Sinking Fund Jan. A July 6 do 1881 7 Jan. & July 1869 6 April & Oct 1874 • • • • • York Central: Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ... Bonds of October, 1803 (renewal) July • • • •••••• • Bonds Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink Fund B’da (assumed debts).. Bonds of August, 1859, convert.. ) Jan. A and Harlem ($6,098,045); • • • .... improvement Bonds Central ($5,424,500) .* 1st Mortgage, State (Md.) Loan.., April & Oct 8 Apr. A Oct. 1889 .... ... May & Nov 1883 June A Dec May A Nov. do Feb. A Aug do do 1887 1883 1883 1876 1876 1876 .... 103 101 108 .... » • • • Bonds. 700.000 7 145,000 7 339,000 8 Mortgage ($6,000,000; 50,000 North Penns /Ivania ($3,124,737): Mortgage ] ionds • 100,000 300,000 1,494,000 2,900,000 750,000 Mortgage.. 2d Mortgage R.R.: ($2,923,004): ... W. & O.) Oswego and Syracuse ($311,500); 1st Mortgage 7 Jan. A July • 7 7 Jan. & Feb. & Pacific, guaranteed by Missouri.... • t do .... • • • • • • * • • 1896 .... • • • *• • • 1869 1872 1874 88 89 87 ... .... .... • • • 7 Mcb & 4,980,000 4,904,840 6 6 • .... .... 1st 675,000 7 Jan. & 1st let 2d 1,000,000 6,000,000 4,000,000 7 6 6 1st Mortgage 3d do Hula, and Balt. Central ($800,000): Mortgage Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000) Mortgage (Sunbnry A Erie)... do (general) do (general) Philadel., Germant. db Norristown: . Convertible Loan • • do .... .... ... • do Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1861 do do 1843-4-8-9 Sterling Bonds of 1843 .* Dollar Bonds, convertible Philadelphia db Trenton : let Mort. Philadel., miming. db Baltimore: Mortgage Loan Coupons Bonds 450,000 1,000,000 let Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.j Pb'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573, let Mortgage 2d do 8d 400,000 do Bridge O. & P. RR Akron Branch: 1st mortgage. Pittsburg and Steubenville: 1st Mortgage 2d . do Quincy and Toledo; 1st Mortgage.. Portland db Kennebec ($1,394,661): 1st mortgage bonds, ext Consolidated bonds Raritan and Delaware Bay: let 21 Mortgage, sinking fund .... • • • 1st Mort'.. Rensselaer & Saratoga consolidated: 1st Mort. Rensselaer A Saratoga 1st Mort Saratoga & Whitehall.... lit Mort Troy, § & Rut. (gnar.) . . «SI4^!a.TOW!.($1'717’500,: Interest %onds Richmond db Petersburg ($319,000): * * • 78 • • * .... 99* .... 1876 * • • • 9i* 94 •••• 92 5,250,000 6,160,000 2,000,000 158,500 200,000 6 Jan. A July a April A Oct 6 7 7 7 Feb. A , April A Oct 7 May A Nov. 7 Jan. A July 9i* 91* • • • ~ . m .... • ... • • ... 104* , f .... • • • do do • • • 98 88 , 826,000 7 Feb. A Aug ’73’75 do ’69 ’76 140,647 7 8 Mar. A oep. 1870 Jan. & July June & Dec 7 7 5 6 1892 • .... 140 35 • • .... .... .... ....' .... ___ • • • • • *•> • • • • • • •• » 94 S3* ••• • 80 80 .... • • • ... ••« • .... mm .... •-m-m ) ) ) ) ) ) J ) J m Feb. * Ang 1872 Mar. & Sept 1870 Jan. & July 1886 Various. .... ■*«< .... .... • 9 •• 68-74 7 Jan. & 7 7 Jan. & • • • • • • April & Oct Jan. & July June & Dec 1876 1870 1894 7 Feb. & Ang 7 do 7 May & Nov. 7 do 7 Apr. & Oct. 7 do 1890 1890 1878 1878 1883 1871 7 7 7 1872 1884 1865 1875 7 Jan. & July 8 April & Oct 1873 1878 . .. 3 Sterling (£899,900) Bonds Albany City Bonds 3 3 3 3 Dollar Bonds Western Maryland: 1st Mortgage,. 1st do , guaranteed Western Union: 1st Mortgage York tf- Cumberland (North. Cent.): 3 5 April & Oct ’68-’71 6 Jan. & Jnlv ’70-’76 6 April & Oct 1875 6 Jan. & yuly 1S90 6 do Feb. & Ang .... 3 6 May & Nov. 3 6 Jan. & July 3 6 do Mortgage 1870 1871 1877 do m . 3 Lehigh Coal and Navigation Loan of 1870 l.o,m of 1884 1st mort. (RR. below M. • .... .... J • m . • • 0 [1 ) 0 3 . . 80 89* .... so* • - 81* . 69 69 .... • • A • - • .... .... .... • • • • 65 66 31 .... .... • • • • • • ••% • Chunk)... • • .... .... .... .... . • v • m • --* • • • • • m m • > .... • • • . .... .... .. .... .... • West Branch and Susq.Ast Mortgage Wyoming Valley : 1st Mortgage.., JUUscellaneouts : American Dock <fc Improvement: Bonds (guar. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) • • • • • • • • • Western Union Telegraph: 1st Mortgage convertible . . . .... .... .... • • do 1870 188*1 1897 1887 1876 1S76 Mch & Sept Jan. & July Jan. & July do 1865 1878 3 [» 3 D J .. . « 1882 •••••• • 6 May & Nov. 1883 6 Jan. & July •1878 6 Jan & July 1878 3 2;000,000 7 Jan. A July 188. 6 ) 7 )... 3 l 7 , 7 . ... 500, OfK . . . . .... .... 1870 6 6 \ . . • • 1872 May & Nov. .... . 1876 3 1st Mort.,prin. Aint.payable in gold 3d do do • Quarterly. May & Nov. Quicksilver Mining : • . l 6 1 Pennsylvania Coal: Mortgage Bonds. • Jan. & July Mch & Sept Jan. & July 1890 1885 1878 1870 1865 0 6 0 6 0 6 do do do 6 D 690,000 Improvement Susquehanna and Tide- Water: Maryland Loan Coupon Bonds Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bonds Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage 3d July 1886 JaAp JnOc 1870 0 6 do ) 6 Jan. & July [) 6 April & Oct 7 6 do Mortgage • • Jan. & 6 I • •• : Pennsylvania db New York: 1st Mortgage (North Branch) Mortgage Born's 6 5 6 6 7 7 0 Monongahela Navigation .^Mortgage Morris. Mortgage Bonds 1st 6 m .... 1890 1896 7 * ... 1886 June & Dec do 3 do J 7 Feb. & Aug 3 • .... • July ) 3d do Income Mortgage Warren: 1st Mortgage (guaranteed).. Westchester db Philadelphia : 1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon ... 2d do , registered Western (Mass.) (6,269,520): . July 1871 7 Jan. & July 188'1' 7 Apr. & Oct. 1885 7 May & Nov. 1875 ) 7 Mar. & Sep. 1882 J 6 Jan. & July ’68-’74 ) 7 June & Dec 1861 ) 7 Jan. & July 1867 ) 6 Jan. & July 1883 do Mariposa Mining: 1st Mortgage • t 4 • ) ) ) Consolid. Coal Co. (Md.): Mort.f conv.) Cumberland Coal: J st Mortgage... • • .... July k70 ’75 ’'.0 ’72 ’66’68 ) *... Covington and Cincinnati Bridge : .... w 49 • 1875 1875 1867 6 Jan. & 6 do 6 do ) Virginia db Tennessee ($2,177,000); 1st Mortgage 1st 2d 130,600 7 June A Dec 1876 179,000 1st Mortgage 2d do 3d do Convertible Schuylkill Navigation: 1876 1890 1880 ) Boat Loan * 400,000 7 May & Nov. 1890 840,000 7 600,000 7 (guar, by Petei sburg) Preferred Bonds Delaware Division : 1st Mortgage.. Delaware and Hudson.; Bonds (coup) Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage. 92 92 m • 230,000 6 April & Oct 1883 do 1895 300,000 6 do ) Sterling Bonds, guaranteed 94 1,000,0)0 7 Feb. A Ang 1881 do 1881 600,000 7 1890 600,000 7 208,000 7 ) Chesapeake and Delaware: 1st Mort. Chesapeake and Ohio : Maryl’d Loan 91* 92 1884 800,000 7 Mch A Sept 1879 1894 1894 1894 • Canal 1880 1880 1886 1868 1912 1912 1912 1876 1884 i Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds.... Aug 1889 Semian’ally do 1867 1880 1870 1871 1875 1881 • .... lc92 7 Tan. A Jnly ) 7 Jan. & July 7 June & Dec Equipment (Tol. A Wab. Rrilway) Sinking Fund (T. W. & W. R’way) Troy ana Boston ($1,452,000) : 1st 2d 1,000,000 7 Mch & Sept 1888 do 1888 250,000 7 do Convertible Bonds Reading and Columbia: 1884 April A Oct 1877 April & Oct 1881 April & Oct 1901 408,000 5 Jan. & July do 182,400 5 2,661,600 6 April & Oct 106,000 6 Jan. & July do 1,521,000 6 do 976,800 6 do 228,500 6 200,000 6 May & Nov. do 1863 1863 • 981,000 6 Feb. <fc Ang 1900 Troy Union ($680,000): Mort. Bonds. Vermont Central: 1st Mort. (consol.) • 143,800 6 Jan. & July 1882 Philadelphia db Reading ($6,900,663) Sterling Bonds of 1836.- May & Nov. 7 S. W. Pacific, Railroad: Bonds gnar. by At. & Pacific R.R. Southern Minnesota: Land Grant B’d Staten Island: 1st Mortgage 2d July 1880 April & Oct 1875 July Semi an’ally do )\ 7 free) Vermont and Massachusetts 1st Mort Jan. & Pennsylvania ($18,209,040) : Sept 1st Mortgage (tax free) 1st Land Grant Mortgage (tax Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191): 1st Mortgage Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage Toledo,Peoria and Warsaw .1st Mort Toledo Vabash db Western .-(13,300,00) 1st Mort. (Tol. & Illinois RR) 1st Mort. (L Frif\Wab A St L. RR. 2d Mort. (Tol. A Wab. RR) 2d Mort. (Wab. & We<»t. Railway). 87* — 1,075,000 7 7 7 Special Mortgage • 1867 762,000 7 April & Oct ’70-’75 1,150,000 7 Feb A Aug. 1872 2d do do Peninsula : 1st Mortgage do 10 Jan A July to Feb. & Aug .... W. Louis, Alton db Terre Haute ; 1st Mortgage 3d Mortgage preferred 2d do income St. Louis, Jacksonville db Chicago: 1st Mortgage 3d Mortgage • panama: Mortgage, sterling i S » July 1874 Aug 1870 7 April & Oct 7 Jan. & July 7 • • 1868 198,500 7 Jan. A July ’70-’80 do. 1885 189,000 7 7 Jan. & July • •• do 1st - Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: • 1869 350,000 7 May A Nov. 1916 200,000 6 Feb. A Aug 1°91 Income 2d Mar. A Sep. do do 400,000 6 May A Nov. 1866 1,110,500 6 Jan. A July 1875 570,00C 8 May A Nov. 1873 — Oswego db Rome ($657,000). 1st Mortgage (guar, by R. 1st Mortgage Sandusky and Cincinnati: Mortgage bonds • .... 180,000 6 April A Oct ’67-’69 var. 6r-’84 223,000 6 var. ’75-’76 1,458,000 6 Bonus do do 1st Extension 2d Extension • 85* 2,500,000 0 Jan. & July 1880 860,000 10 April & Oct 1887 ttelMc ChattelMortgage . Norwich and Worcester ($580,000) .* General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage iamplain: Ogdensburg and L. Che or or 7 let Mortgage Funded Bonds Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage Shamokin Valley db Pottsvule: 1st Mortgage Shore Line Railway: 1st Mort. bonds South Carolina : Sterling Loan.... 85* Domestic Bonds South Side ($1,631,900): • % 1,500,000 6 Quarterly. lned. 2,500,000 6 Jan. A July 1885 724,500 6 April & Oct 1900 149.400 6 April A Oct 1874 do do do do 7 Feb. & Aug 1st Mortgage 94)4 95 1,372,000 7 April & Oct. 1894 94 94* St. Paul db Chicago ($4,000,000) .* 1st Mort. land grant, S. F. guar ... J. A. J.&O. 1900 90)4 St. Paul db Pacific oj Minn : (1st Div) .... Northern Mortgage ■ July 1986 .... 1st 2d 3d 7 Jan. & July 1880 7 Jnn. &Dec. ’69-’72 7 Jun. &Dec. 1891 Potsdam A Watertown, gnar R. W. & O., sinking fund Rutland and Burlington: 1st Mortgage do Sacramento Valley: , • Orange db Alexandria • .... # Old Colony & Newport m m m 3,000,000 7 May A Nov. 1872 102* 104 96 1,000,000 7 Feb. A Aug 1893 87 do 1868 93 1,000,000 7 1,068,500 6 April A Oct 1875 250,000 6 Feb. & Aug ’73-’78 10U,000 7 •Ian. A July 1881 General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage 1st 1st • • 9 m 1890 460,000 ) Northern New Hampshire : North Eastern : let Mortgage 2d do North Carolina: Loan • ^ 1885 8 8 6,450,438 6 2,925,000 6 165,000 6 606,000 6 1,398,000 7 Real Estate 2d 3d • Aug 1873 1,730,000 New New York 7 2,741,000 423,000 New Orleans, Opelou. & Gt. West.. let Mortgage Construction Bonds Bonds of 1805 • • • • do New Orleans, 1st Rome, Watert. db Ogdens. ($1,848,000) Sinking Fund (Wat. A Rome) Princpal ‘payble. P "d . May A; Nov. 1916 6 Feb. A 6 Jan. A FRIDAY. INTEREST. Jan. A Jnly ’74-’F4 Jan. & Jnly 1885 Jan. A July 1879 Jan. & July 18— April A Oct Feb. A Aug June A Dec ) 7 Jau. A July • 7 ">8 • 1881 1873 1879 2,000,000 w May A Nov, 1867 72* ! 73 j CO* . . . • • •-* 62 . .... . . ... • • • • .... .... • • 472 THE CHRONICLE. [October 12, 1867. RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK Snbscrlbers will confer — page last The figures refer to the name, after the vol. and of Chronicle containing report. * means “ leased a great favor by giving Dividend. N. Stock FRIDAY. out¬ standing. 1 Periods. Last Date, I,23850 Boston, Hartford and Erie... .100:11,877,000; do ' Cape Cod 100 599.100 50 preferred 50 00 do ' Catawissa* 50 do preferred 50 Central Georgia A Bank’g Co.100 Central of New Jersey 100 Central Ohio 50 do preferred.......50 Central Park, E. & N. River..100 Chicago and Alton, 4, p. 329.. 10C do preferred. .100 Chic.Bur. and Quincy, 3, p 261. 50 Chicago and Great Eastern. ..100 Chicago, Iowa A Nebraska*... 100 Chicago and Milwaukee* .... 100 Chicago and Northwestern .. .100 do do prof.. 100 jrate ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 122 ’67} 1* ’67; 2* Boston and Lowell 500| 1,830,0001 Jan. & July July Boston and Maiue, 8, p. 355.. .100. 4,076,974:Jan. <fc July!July Boston ana Providence 100j 3,360,000 Jan. & Julvi July Boston and Worcester .100; 4,500,000j.fan. & July! July Broadway & 7th Avenue 1 0| 2,11)0,000 dan. A July! July Buffalo and Erie Camden and Amboy. 4, p. Camden and Atlantic ’67, ’67 ’67 ‘67 ’67 1,000,000! Feb. & Aug; Aug. ’67 4 5 5 5 5 50 Cleveland, Columbus, A Cin..l0o Cleveland A Mahoning* 50 Cleveland, Painesv. A Ashta.100 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 Cleveland and Toledo,3, p. 151 50 Columbus & Indianan. Cent..100 Columbus and Xenia* 50 Concord 50 Concord and Portsmouth..... 100 Conn.& Passump. 3,p.216 pref.100 Connecticut River .100 Cumberland Valley 50 Dayton and Michigan 100 Delaware* 50 Delaware, Lacka., A Western 50 Detroit and Milwaukee 100 do do pref. ..100 Dry Dock, E. B*way & Bat... 100 Dubuque and Sioux City 100 do do pref. ..100 Eastern, (Mass) 100 East Tennessee A Georgia.. .100 East Tennessee & Virginia . 100 850.000 June A Dec June ‘67 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 6,936,625! Feb. & Aug Aug. 67 July ’67 10,193,010 4,390.000 1,000,000 April. Apr. Apr. Mar & Sep. Sep. Mar *fc Sep. Sep. April & Oct Apr. Jan. A 2,227,000 ’67 ’6'< ’67 50 50 55* 2* 119 ’67! 5 122 1:33 ’6710 125 Saratoga and Whitehall... .100 Troy, Salem A Rutland 18* July July ’67 60 ’ 4 * 43* 67* i 67* £97* July '67 HO* 2,141,970j June & Dec June ’67 69*1 69* 7 78* 9 4 • 1 50* 63 180 65 127 305 104* 104* 55* 56 101* 101* 126 06- 107” 3 101* 4 500,000 April & Oct Apr. ’67 800,000 April A Oct Apr. ’67 2,000,000 1,008,600 2,385,500 Jan. A July July ’67 2,233,376 48 68 May ’67 May A Nov May ’67 Jan. & July July '67 Feb. A Aug Feo. ’67 2* Jan. A 3 July Jan. ’67 Quarterly. May ’67 3 125 5 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’66 Jan. & July July ’67 Quarterly. 3* 43* May & Nov May ’67 3* 834,400 Jan. & July July ’67 4 2,250,000 June & Dec June’67 4 2,860,000 Jan. & July July ’67 1* 3,353,679 5305 2,94 ,791 64 69 7 7 58 121, 122*1 • • • • no (consolidated),4, p.631. 10 preferred 100 I Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 do prefer.. 50 Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50 Union, preferred 50 West Branch <fc Susquehanna. 50 Wyoming Valley ■ 50 do Miscellaneous. Coal.—American.. 60 41 . | Ashburton Butler . Consolidation Central Cumberland Pennsylvania .; Spring Mountain Spruce Hill Wilkesbarre 12 19 ... r Wyoming Valley Gas.—Brooklyn.. v Citizens (Brooklyn) 83* .83* 46* 67* 67* 115 Mar. A Sep Mar. ’67 3*« May & Nov Aug ’67 20 25 50 25 100 100 ...100 50 50 Boston Water Power 93” 29 56* 29* Jan. A July Jan. ’65 Irregular. Sept.’66 94 48 1,500.000 Mar. A Sep. Mar. ’67 3* 5,000,000 2,(XX),000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 30 5,000,000 3,200,000 Quarterly. Feb. 1,250,000 Jan. & July Jan. 10 1,000,000 Jan. A July 100 3,400,000 Apr. A Oci 100 1.250.000 Feb. A Ang Ang. 25 2,000,000 Feb. & Ang Aug. 20 50 20 100 S6 26 53 2,500,000 500,000 Jun. & Dec. June’67 William burg 50 750.000 Improvement. Canton 100.(16jpd) 4,500,000 - 78* 2,888,805 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’07 2,052,083 2,907,850 1,100,000 800,000 149 112 4,000,000 45 31 108* 174 ’67 ’67 33 ’66 '67 Jan. A July July '67 Jan. & Jan. A July July ’67 July July '67 175 May A Nov May ’67 July July ’67 Jan. A 44* 1** 36* Jnly ’66 20 ’67 2 45 19 Telegraph.—Western Union. 100 28,450,000 Jan. & July Jn v 36* Pacific & Atlantic 25 3,009,000 Quarterly. Aug. ’67 2* Adams Express.— 100 10.000,000 Quarterly. Nov ’66 2 62* 62* 70 Feb. A Ang Aug. ’67 Jan. A July July '67 Jan. & July! July ’67 Feb. &AugiAug.’67 895 000 Mar & Sep. j Mar. ’67 American. Merchants’ Union do do 500 9,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66 3 (30 p’d) 100 20,000,000 (35 p’d) 00 United States I0u 6.000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’66 3 Wells, Fargo A Co.. ...100 io,ooo,ono Oct. ’67 Steamship.—Atlantic Mai 113* 113* 105 100 7 1,025.000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67 1,175,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 1,908,207 Feb. A Ang Feb. ’67 1,200,000 644,000 Jersey City A Huboken.. 386,000 Manhattan 50 4,000,000 Metropolitan. 100 2,800,000 New Yor.c 50 1.000,000 narlem 109* 109* 90 75 46 1,633,350 Feb. A Ang Aug. ’67 Navigation . 50 6,968,146 May A Nov May ’67 Monongahela Navigation Co. 50 728,100 Jan. & July -inly ’67 Morris 93 2* 109 50 June & Dec June ’67 ! Lehigh Coal and 4 July January. Jau. ’67 5 Jan. & July; July ’67 4 300 800,000 Ajiril A Oct Apr. ’67 Chesapeake and Del. (5 p.183) 25 1,818,963 Chesapeake and Ohio 25 8,228.595 Delaware Division 3* Jan. & June’67; Delaware and Hudson 100 10,000,000 Feb. A Aug Ang. ’67 Delaware A Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 -2,521,300 Feb. A Aug Aug.’67 127" February... Feb. ’67 88* Canal. 6 3 4 2 2 26* 26* "3* 74 .. 4 1* 65 2,530,700 pref.100 1,700,000 Annually. . 5 4 72 Virginia Central, 3, p. 678 100 Virginia and Tennessee .100 do do pref.100 555,500 Western (Mass), 4, p. 247 143 100 8,710,800 Jan. & July July ’67 5 Western (N. Carolina) 100 1,860,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’64 4 Western Union (Wis. & Ill.) 2,6S7,237 Worcester and Nashua 75 1,141.000 Jan. A July July '67 5* 4 Mar. ’62 Jan. & July July ’67 Feb. & Aug! Feb. ’65 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 February... Feb. ’67 New T^n.don Northern.. 100 N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt,. WestlOO 4,093,425 N. O.,Jackson <fc Gt.N.,4,p.l34lOO 4,697,457 New York Central, 3, p. 769 ..100 26,530 000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 New York and Harlem 50 5,285,0 Jan. &3uly Julv ’67 do ’67 preferred 50 1,500,00)1 Jan..& July) do Utica and Black River 100 Vermont and Canada* 100 Vermont and Massachusetts.. 100 4 2* 3* June A Dec 1,750,000 Jan. A July July '67! Louis, Jacksonv. A Chic.*lC0 1,469,429 50 2,989,090 do do pref. 50 393,073 Sandusky, Mausf. A Newark.100 900,236 Saratoga and Hudson River.. 100 1,020,000 Savannah A Charleston 100 1,000,000 Schuylkill Valley* 50 576,050 ShamokinVal. A Pottsville*. 50 869,450 Shore Line Railway .100 635.200 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) 100 750,000 South Carolina 50 5,819,275 South Side (P. &L.)4, p. 521.. 100 3,360,000 South West.Georgia, 8, p. 616.100 3,203,400 Syracuse, Biugh’ton A N. Y..100 1.200.130 Terre Haute A Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,150 Third Avenue (N. Y.) 100 1,170,000 Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw...100 776.200 do do 1st pret.100 1,651,314 do do 2d pref.100 908,424 Toledo, Wabash & Western..100 5,700,000 do do preferred.100 1,000,000 July ;67 75. .100 ‘i;500,666 Louis, Alton, & Terre H... 100 2.300,000 do 83 Mar. ’17 64 Sandusky, and Cincinnati .. .. St. St. 82* Sep. ’67 131* Apr. ’67 Apr. ’67| 2# July '67; 5 May '671 5 July 67 5* July ’67 July ’67 Apr. ’67 July ’67 ... "Richmond and Dan.. 4, p.456.100 Richmond A Petersb.,1,p.488.100 Rome, Water!.. A Ogdensb’g.,100 Rutland and Burlington 100 97* 5,391,575 5,000,000 April & Oct Quarterly. 1,786.800 Jau. & July 1.500,000 >1 ay A' N ov 350.000 Jan. & July 1,514,300 Jan. & July I,650,000 Jan. & July 1.316.900 Apr. & Oct. 2,38 >,063 406,132 Jan. A July Jan. A July 452,350| 1,500.0001 1,200,000 1,673,952 1,983,170| March. 3,573,300! Jan. A July 2.646.100 Jan. A July July ’67 Liong Island 50 3,000,000 Quarterly. Aug. ’67 Lonisv.,Cin.&Lex.,9 p.c. pref 100 ’67 4* 48.6:38 Lionisville and Frankfort 50 1,109,594 Jan. A July July ’67 3 100 5,500,000 Feb. & Aug Ang. ’67 4 Louisville and Nashville Louisville,New Alb. & Chic..100 2,800,000 Macon and Western :.. .100 1,500,000 May & Nov May ’67 Maine Central 100 1,600,860 Marietta and Cincinnati 50 2,029,778 do do 1st pref. 50 6,586,135 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’66 38. do do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. A Sep Sep. ’66 38. Manchester and Lawrence... .100 1.000,000 May & Novi May ’67 5 .. 5s. 4 . Portland, Saco, A Portsm’th.lOO 5 123* S8 , Providence and Worcester... .100 Raritan and Delaware Bay... .100 Rensselaer A Saratoga consollOO 98* do do guar.100 787,700 Milwaukee &P.du Ch.lst pref.100 3,204.296 do do 2d pref.100 841,400 100 3,627,000 Milwaukee and St. Paul do„ preferred 100 7,371,000 Mine Hill Schuylkill Haven 50 3,775,<300 Mississippi & Tenn.4, p. 489.100 825,399 Mobile and Ohio .?*.. 100 3,588,300 Montgomery and WestPoint.100 1,644,104 Morris and Essex 50 3.500,000 Nashua and Lowell 100 720,009 Nashville & Chattanooga ... 100 2,056,544 Naugatuck 100 1,408,600 New Bedford and Taunton .100 500.000 New Haven & Northampton.. 100 1.224.100 New Jersey, 4, p. 183 100 6,250,000 123 80 and Connellsville. 50 1.776.129 Pittsb.,Ft.W. A Chic.,4,p.471.100 II,440,987 Quarterly. Oct. '67 *2* 100* 108* Portland A Kennebec (new)..100 Feb.& Aug. |Aug. ’67 j 3 1,600,250 Memphis A Chariest., 3p. -187.100 5,312,725 Michigan Central, 5, p. 151... 100 7,502,866 Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l00 9,813,500 Periods. N. V. and New Haven (5 p.55)100 6,000,000 Jan. & July July ’67 New York, Prov. & Boston.. .100 1,755,281 Jan. & July July ’67 Ninth Avenue 100 797,320 Northern of New Hampshire. 100 3,068,400 June & Dec-June’67 Northern Central, 4, p. 568.. 50 4.518,900 Quarterly, j Aug.'67 North Eastern (S. Car.) 898,950 do 8p.c., pref. 155,000 May A Nov May ^’67 North Carolina 100 4,000,000 North Missouri 100 2.469,307 North Pennsylvania 50 3,150,150 j Feb.’67 Norwich and Worcester 100 2,3G3,600 Jan. & Julv; July ’67 56*1 Pittsburg 6,000,000 Feb. & Aug Aug, 67 2,044,6iK) May A Nov May ’67 5,000,000 Jan. & July July ’67 3,572,400 FRIDAY. Last paid. Dale, rate Bid. | Ask out¬ “ leased.” standing. Ogdensb. A L. Champ(5 p.119)100 3,077,000,Feb. & Aug| Aug. ’67 3 do preferred. 100 356,400’Apr. A Oct Apr. ’671 4 Ohio andMiss.certif., 4,p. 631.100 20,226,604) ,...|. | do preferred. .100 3,353,180 January. ;Jan. ’671 7" Old Colony and Newport..... 100 4,848,30C Jan. A July; July ’67 3 Orange and Alexandria 100 2,063,655 482.400 Peb. A Ang1 Aug. '67 4* Oswego and Syracuse., 50 Panama 100 7,000,000 Quarterly. |Oct. '67 6 12S*1 Pennsylvania 50 20,000.000 May A Nov May ’67 3c 56 Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5,091,400 Jan. & July 1 Jan. ’67 3 Pliila. and Reading, 4, p. 89.. 50 22,742,867! Jan. & July July ’67 5 Phila., Germant. & Norrist’n* 50 I,507,8*0 Apr. A Oct;Apr. ’67 5 Phila., Wilming. A Baltimore. 50 9,019,300 Jan. & July July ’67 4 6 . Little Miami Dittle Sclmvlkill* 126 3* 2,200,003 April & Oct: Apr. ’67 3* 4.666.800 June A Dec June ’67 5 13,000,000 Quarterly. July ’67 2* 2,425,000 means ... 721.926 Jan. & July 1,150.000 970,000 3,886,500 * ...... 3* 5 5 16 report. mvidena Stock 144 522,3501 600,000 1,902.000 Eighth Avenue 100 1,000,000; Quarterly. July’ 67 Elmira and Williamsport*.. . 50 500,000 " May ’67 do do pifff. 50 500,000 July 67 Feb. '6 i Erie, 4, p. 599 100 16,574,300 do preferred 100 8.536.900 January. Jan. ’67 Fitchburg 100 3,540,000 Jan. A July July 67 100 4,156,000 Apr. A Oct. Apr. ’07 Georgia Hannibal and St. Joseph 100 1,900.000 do do pref.100 5,253,836 Hartford and New Haven. .100 3,000,000 Quarterly. Oct. ’67 Housatonic preferred 100 1,1.80,000 May & Nov May '67 Hudson River 100 13,937,400 April & Oct Oct. ’67 494,380 Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50 do do 190,750 Jan. & July July ’67 pref. 50 Illinois Central. 4, p. 311 100 23,386,450, Jau. & July July '67 Indianapolis, Cin.* Lafayette 50 1,689,900!Mar. A Sep! Sep. ’67 Jeffersonv., Mad. & lndianap.100 2,000,000! Jan. & July Jau. ’66 Joliet and Chicago* 100 300,0001 Quarterly. Apr. ’67 Joliet and N. Indiana 100 300,000 Jan. A Julv July ’67 Lackawanna and Bloomsbnrg 50 1,335,000 f. Lehigh Valley 50 10,734,100! Quarterly. July ’67 514,646 May & Nov May '67! Lexington and Frankfort 100 . 15* 136 142 3* 13,232,496 14,789,125 Annually. Dec. ’66 7 Chicago, Rock Isl. A Pacific..100 9,100.000 April <fcOct OCt. ’67 5 Cine., 11am. A Dayton(5 p.87)100 3.200.800 April A Oct Apr. ’67 6 362,950 Cincin.,Richm’d & Chicago...100 Cincinnati and Zanesville 122*1 394,SIX)j 2,600.000 400,000 I*.—The figures alter the refer to the vol. and e of Chronicle containing Bid. Ask.J LIST. any error discovered in our Tables. name paid. 1 Railroad. par Albany and Susquehanna.... 100 1,675,139 Atlantic & St. Lawrence*.. ..100 2,494,900 Jan. A July July Baltimore and Ohio. 100 16,151,962; April A Oct Oct. Washington Branch* 100 1,650,000;April & OctjOct. Bellet'ontaine Line 100 4,420,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. 996,647: j Belvidere, Delaware 100 100 600,IKK): Quarterly. Oct. Berkshire* 250,000 June & Dec. June Blossburg and Corning* 50 Brooklyn City 10j Brooklyn City and Newtown. 100 Buffalo, New'York, <fc Erie*. .100} immediate notice of ns llOllO 4 « « • • i ' ‘2* 100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Sept.’67 Pacific Mail 100 20,000,000 Quarterly. Sept.’67 3 Trust.—Farmers’ L. A Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. A July Jnly ’67 5 New York Life A Trust.. 100 1,000,000 Feb. A Ang Feb. ’67 10 Union Trust 100 1,000,000; Jan. A July July ’67 4 United States Trust 100 1,500,000 Jan. & July July 67 5 Mining.—Mariposa Gold... .100 5,097,600 Mariposa Gold Preferred. 100 5,774,400 IP Quicksilver 100|10,000,000 62 23 62 6 24 64 59* 115* 116 142 142* 3* 9 17 Feo ’65 17* 25 25* PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Bid. Askd Companies. .pat 10 ° Bennehoff Run...... Bennehoff Mutual... Bergen Coal and Oil Alien Wright Bemis Heights • • Farm Buchanan • - Run Petrol m Run special.. Cliutou Oil . • • • • • • 43 1 00 , . , , .... » •••• Germania . Great Republic..... ■ J « • mi* . . • • . • . . . • • . .... 2 90 66 3 .... .... .... . is 10 • 16 .10 2 10 10 Bid. Askd .paid 3 • ... • V • . . • • . paid 1 Lake 3 25 1# • 3 50 1 Amygdaloid. .. Manhattan .. j Mendotat 2 j Merrimac Aztec Bay State... 17k Bohemian... Caledonia... Calumet Canada — Oak. 16 to 30 01 38 00 50 .... — — . 26 00 3 50 5 Concord Copper Creek.. Copper Falls... Copper Harbor. 4 .... ....— • • 3 75 • .... 28 CO 28 50 1 .... .... * .... • 1 00 Davidson ....20)£ Dev-n. 1 60 .... .... .... „ Dudley. . .... 1 .... „ r .... ttt ....10 1 Everett. New York.” North Clift' North western Norwich . ..Ilk Petherick Pewabic Phoenix 5 Rockland 9k .... .... .... 17 75 18 00 St. Clair St. Louis St. French Creek. Mary’s Salem.". .... .... Hanover .... .... Hec.a. Seneca 1 Sharon 10 50 10 63 Sheldon & Columbian.21 “ 63 1 GO, South Pewabic IX 1 1 00 South Side 2k 2 Star IX .11X 35 00 8 Superior . Toltec 1 88 88 Humboldt. 1 ...19 ...10 ...33 Hungarian Tremont ... Knowlton. . . .... _ • • • 2 50 6 00 .... .... 5 8 1 4 00, 50 50 1 25 75 {■8 H OO JL OO .... 6 1 Minnesota . 2k .. .... Winona 3 VVinthrop 4k i 66 50 * Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares. + Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares, ijkpital $200,000, In 20,000 shares. Capital of Lake Superior comnanies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares Companies. Bid. Askd Alameda Silver American Flag Atlantic & Pacific par .... .. 1 09 £5 — 10 — Ayres Mill & Mining. Bates & Baxter Benton Bob Tail Boscobel Silver Bullion Consolidated 30 60 1 25 85 — 50 5 i 06 *65 65 3 00 — . .. — 1*66 — Burroughs 10 Central Church Union Columbia G. <b S — Companies. Harmon E. & S — 25 Crozier Des Moines 70 60 _ — Downieviile Eagle • • • • 1 4 60 — 4 75 *“ Gunnell 4*66 101 i 1 35 on 40 — to 7 100 15000 — 5 JQ New York & Eldorado . — — ., — People’s G. & S. of Cal. 5 Quartz Hill 25 Reynolds Rocky Mountain 10 Sp«vpr Hdg'hill Fall River First National Gold Hill 4b — Manhattan Silver Midas Silver Montana Combination Silver.... — 35 00 35 00 Nye Consolidated Gregory.. .100 5 30 5 50 Owyhee Corydon 2 Ynrlr. io 4 90 12 40 75 2 Kipp & Buell — — 40 — — 25 LaCrosse xO 25 ‘30 Sensenderfer.. Smith & Parmelee 11 85 9 80 20 3 80 Symonds Forks — — 2 50 17 v 80 3 75 5 30 00 40 1 35 4 40 12 00 9 95 3 95 1 00 8 Twin River Silver .....100 MISCELLANEOUS stock list. Companies. Copake Iron.... Foster Iron Bucks County Denbo Lead Kanhar Lead Bid. Askd pa^ 5 . 4 <S • • V .... Phenix Lead". Don Tank Storage. . ... 5 . . . • . . . • Lead! • • • • .... Companies. Tudor Lead .par — 25 Saginaw, L. S. & M. Wallkill Lead — Wallace Nickel Rutland Marble 25 mm .. ,. 35 40 — . . .... ... .... Long Island Peat.... ■Rnaafi .. Bid. Askd . m TM « • •• .... { Relic* St. Mark’s St. Nicholast • ... ft . .... • • • 1 200 000 200,000 150,000 150,000 50 1,000,000 50 200,000 100 200,000 ' 100 200,000 Standard Star Sterling * Stuyvesant 25 25 20 50 Tradesmen's lTnitedStat.es Washington Washington *t....l0f. Williamsburg City.50 Yonkers & N. Y.. 100J 200,000 150,000 250,000 400,000 893,700 150,000 500,000 Railroad Projects prises in Maine and Lincoln are in f . - • • * • • • • . , • • . • > - ^ . • • * f - • • V * ♦ ... # • . • • • . « • • .... • • • • • • • « • » • • .... . . . . • • .... • . • . . U «... • • • • • .... • t . . • « , • .... , .... • • • . »-* ..... .... ... .... • 14 • • • . , • • • . • .... • . • » m • .... • • Feb. and Aug. ^Uig.’67..6 do T’eb. ’67. 5 i Jan. and July. /Lug.’67 .5 Feb. and Aug. 1 ’eh.’66.3k Jan. and July. J uly ’67 .5 * 3 uly ’67 ..5 do* 200,731 Feb. and Ang. A ug. ’67 5 Feb. and Ang. A ug. ’66 5 " 158'733 Jan. and July. July *07 . .6 J an.’67 .5 do 330,091 030,314 Feb. and Ang. A ug.’67.. .5 190,200 Feb. and Aug. F eb. ’67...5 179,008 Jan. and July. J uly ’67 ..5 do J ulv*67 ..5 501,244 • • ... . • • • • .. «... «... .... . . . • • • • • • • • . . „ . • • . . . • . . • • • . . . . . . • - . . Maine.—The various railroad enter¬ progressing finely. Road will • • 210,000 200,000 1,000,000 500,000 350,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 300,000 . • r#i, 200,000 100 .... .... 300,000 100 25 25 25 Republic*.. • % • . 500,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 200,000 200,000 300,000 150,000 150,000 200,000 • • • • 150,000 50 .... . _ • 200,000 North American*. 50 North River 25 j Pacific 25 Park 100 Peter Cooper 20 People’s 20 150,000 Phoenix + Br’klyn. 50 1,000,000 Security t Hope... Liberty 7k Rutgers’ Bid. Askd Gunnell Union par Hamilton G. & S. bonds Holman National . • . 200,000 1,000,000 New Amsterdam.. 25 N. Y. Equitable 3 35 j N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100 I Niagara 50 .... .... 150,000 Metropolitan * +.. .100 Montauk (B’klyn). .50 Nassau (B’klyn).... 50 .... . 300,000 50 • • 500,000 Long Island (B’kly). 50 • . , . 280,000 Resolute* GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. . 200,000 100 25 • . 400,000 40 ^100 r , 200,010 25 100 - , . 150,000 Lorillard* Manhattan - . . 200,000 150,000 30 Merchants’ IX Washington West • 25 Mechanics (B’klyn). 50 Mercantile 100 .... Victoria Vulcan ... 50 100 Meehan’ & Trade’. 25 . .... .. Market* k 2 2 • . 2,000,000 25 150,000 Lamar Lenox 2 38 . Hope. 15 50 50 100 - . * .... 200,000 Lafayette (B’klyn)-,. 50 5k . . 200,000 — Irving 1 1 ... 150,000 50 Jefferson 3 . . • ( .. 200,000 25 Knickerbocker 66 Ridge m .... King’s.Co’ty(Bklyn)20 . . ... 200,000 Import’ & Traders. 50 200,000 International 100 1,000,000 24 00 25 50 10 6k 8 6 50 8 00 12 . .... 300,000 200,000 Hope Princeton Providence ( ... .... SO Howard .10 k • .... 400,000 50 Humboldt ’ 2 00 3 00 5X 20 00 26 00 • . «... .... .... 250,000 100 Home. .15 Pittsburg & Boston. . V-» • 1 .... 40 Hoffman 1 25 5k 3X 14 5‘: 15 CO . 300,000 200,000 153,000 600,000 200,000 400,000 200,000 250,000 500,000 . ... 7 .50 • • .... 210,000 Greenwich Grocers’ Guardian Hamilton Hanover 4 .. Resolute .... River. 2 1 .10 .. .. Quincy X ... .... Excelsior Flint Steel 4 25 Portage Lake ... Empire. Native Nanmkeag New Jersey Consol.. Pontiac . IX .... . Pennsylvania * .... ... Dana ik .18k .. Minnesota National Ogima - * * 6k .. ..8" Milton Boston ~ 5 .. • • .... ... 200,000 • • .... „ 300,000 Exchange IX .. 300,000 200,000 70 390 Jan. and July July ’67.1(1I ... )73 Jan. and July July ’67 . 5 L27 Jan. and July Jan. 65..., 5 153 Feb. and Aug Aug. ’67... 170 March and Se] j Sep. ’67.. 5 T90 May and Nov .71 Feb. and Aug Aug. ’65.. 1 t49 June and Dee Dec. TG6..« 5 168 Feb. and Aug Aug. '67...( 3 106 Jan. and July July ’67..1( ) >83 July'64 ..<1 *66 Jan. and Julv 178 Feb. and Aug. Aug '67.7* i ►91 Jan. and July July’67. 22 do July’64.3* 47 do July’67 .£ 89 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’■ 7 96 Jan. and July. July’67 ..£ ►72 Jan. and July. July'67...£ )37 Jan. and July. Ju'y ’67 .r 78 March and Sep ?ept.’67..£ IS *95 April and Oct. Oct. '67..£ >90 Jan. and July. July’67 ..r 76 do July'67...£ 65 Feb. and Aug. 40 Jan. and July. July '67 .5 68 do July’66.3k? 33 do July '65 .£ 66 do July ’67 .5 89 May and Nov. 54 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67 ..5 62 Jan. and Julv. July’67 ..7 15 Jan. and July. July’67 ..5 57 Jan. and July. July *67.3k 57 Feb. and Aug. Aug ’G6..5 25 April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5 73 Jan. and July. July ’67 3k 71 do July '67 ..5 52 do July ’67 . .5 do 29 July’66 .5 S7 do July 6' .5 13 do July ’65 .5 22 do July '67 . .5 26 do July ’65 . .5 33 do Julv ’65 .6 >4 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’66.3k T9 do Aug. ’67..5 )8 March and Sep Sept.'67 .6 ?8 Jan. and July. July ’67 5 1 do July’67 ..5 39 do July’67 ..5 )G do July'67 ..5 IT do July’67 ..5 )5 do July ’67..7 >4 do Julv’67 ..ft 0 do July’67..5 7 do July’67 3k .1 do July’67 ..5 2 do July ’67 ..5 6 do , July'67 5 9 do July’67 .10 6 do July ’65 . .5 3 do July ’67 .5 0 do July ’67.10 S do July’67 ..6 0 do July ’67 . .6 3 Jan. and July. July ’67 ..5 5 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67..5 5 Jan. and July. Tu y’67 ..6 1 do July’67 ..5 9 April and Oct. Jet. ’67..5 3 Jan. and July. July’67..6 * 1 uo , Inly ’67 ..5 5 Feb. and Aug. Vug.’67 ..5 3 Jan. and July. J ruly ’67 ..5 3 <j bily’67.,5 do do J ruly ’67. .5 i... do J ruly’67.6k • do J ruly’66.3k • . Firemen’s 17 204,000 Firemen’s Fund... 10 150,000 Firemui s 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 4k .. Last Sale. . '* Excelsior 4k 5k .. Bid paid .... 250,000 20 Periods. . — Eagle Empire City 2 6 .. Mass Medora ..." ...17 . Atlas Charter Lafayette Superior j Madison j . Bid Askd IMandan Algomah. Aliouez • 11 jEtnn .... Albany & , Clinton 100 Columbia* 100 Commerce (N.Y.). .100 Commerce (Alb’y).l(K) Commercial 50 Commonwealth... 100 Continental * 100 Corn Exchange... 50 Croton 100 3 50 2 ri5 Companies. : 200,000 500,000 City io COPPER MINING STOCK LIST. Companies. 25 25 ...17 ... ’ts 200,000 Central Park Citizens’ 5 Last $300,000 300,000 Bowery (N. Y.) Broadway Brooklyn 50 25 Venango (N. Y.) — • • Shade River Union United Pe’tl'm F’ms United States • • • • 10 10 Consol • • . Rynd Farm 15 ® National 5 5 5 5 1 . • Oceanic Pit Hole Creek Rathbone Oil Tract , ... Excelsior..... 15 .... N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons 1 45 1 20 . .... dividend. - Capital. Adriatic 25 iEtna *. 50 American * 50 American Exch’e.. 100 Arctic 50 Astor. 25 Atlantic (Br’klyn)..50 Baltic 25 Beckman 25 .... 2 2 Manhattan Mountain Oil Natural N. Y. & Alleghany New York &‘Newark... N. Y. & Pliiladel .... .... Empire City Western • • • 42 75 Cherry Cherry G’t - .jv Central First • • Ivanhoe 1,1807. dan. write Marine Risks. .— i5 4 Marked thus (*) are participating, and (t) Bid. Askd Hammond par 20 HamiltouMcClintock... .... 4 00 • INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Companies. . Bradley Oil Bfevoort Brooklyn... 473 THE CHRONICLE. October 12, 1867.] The be commenced survey shortly. of the Knox The Board of Directors have been chosen, of which Oliver Moses, of Bath, is Pre¬ The total amount of subscriptions has reached nearly #400,000. The eastern terminus of this road is at Rockland, and the western at Bath. Already one survey of the Belfast and Moose * head'Lake Road has been made as far as Newport, and another survey is in progress which is to intersect the first survey about sident. twenty miles this side of Newport. The survey of the Bangor and Piscataquis Road will be entered upon in about three weeks. It will go to Dover, connecting at Milford. This road, as well as the preceding one, penetrates a region rich in material resources. The line from tide water at Winterport to Bangor, the necessary link to give Bangor a winter outlet, has been subjected to a preliminary reconnoissance. The work of laying a portion of the track on the European and North American Road will be shortly commenced at Bangor, and it is expected that the road to Milford will be open to the public before many months. THE CHRONICLE. 474 Insurance. Insurance. Home Insurance Co., LIFE $2,000,000 00 Capital A*set*, Jan. 1, 1867 Liabilities FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE. WILLMARTH, Vice-President. J. H. WASHBURN, Secretary. INSURANCE. FIRE COMPANY, OF LIVERPOOL AND City oi New York. NO. 40 WALL STREET. $2,300,000 ASSETS Queen Fire Insurance Co been ad opted bv this Company. See new Prospectus. Profits available after policies have run one year, and annually thereafter. JOHN EADIE, President. Nicholas De Groot, Secretary. Special Fund of Insurance 114 OFFICE Sun Mutual Insurance 49 WALL STREET. Incorporated 1841. $500,000 00 1867, $755,057 77. Insures Property against Loss or Damage by Fire at the usual rates. Policies issued and Losses paid at the office of the Company, or at its various Agencies in the principal This MOSES H. GRINNELL, President. April 16,1867. This Company having reduced its capital according o law, under the sanction of the Superintendent of the nsuranco Department to the sum of $300,000, city of New York and vicinity, and will also write Marine Risks on Cargo only, at the office in the Metropolitan Bank Building. JANIES LORIMER GRAHAM President. LOBERT 3?I. C. OR A HAITI, Vice-President, Directors NEW YORK. STEAM a rebatement on premiums in lieu of value to an average scrip dividend in Instead of issuing a the principle that on PER CENT. scrip dividend to dealers, based all classes of risks are equally Srofitanle, this the current rates, when premiums are iscount from Company makes such cash abatement or paid, as the general experience of underwriters will profits remaining at the close of warrant, and the nett the year, will be divided to the stockholders. This Company continues to make Insurance on rine and Inland. Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Mer¬ Ma¬ chandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Currenev, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Ratlibone, Bros. & Co., in Liverpool. F. H. Wolcott, P. W. Turnev, William T. Blodgett. Charles P. Kirkland, Watson E. Case, John A. Graham, John C. Henderson, James L. Graham, Clinton B. Fisk. James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Watt, D. Colden Murray, •, E. Havdcck White, N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Henry Eyre, Henry R. Kunhardt, John S. Williams, William Nelson, Jr., Charles Dimon, A. William Heye, Harold Dollner, Paul N. Spofford. Cornelius Grinnell, Joseph Slagg, Jas. D. Fish, Geo. W. Hennings, Company, Charter Perpetual. HENDEE, President. GOODNOW, Secretary. Niagara Fire Insurance CASH CAPITAL $1,000,000 278,000 SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1867 Liabilities _ . 37 President Notman, Secretary. 7,668 46 H NEW YORK AGENCY STREET. o P Fire Insurance E Company, OFFICE, No. 92 BROADWAY. ALEXANDER, Agent. Cash Capital - ------ Asset*, June 1, 1867 - Germania Fire Ins. Co., BROADWAY, N. Y. - - ' $150,000 - SURPLUS, July 1st, 1867 TOTAL ASSETS RUDOLPH $500,000 00 315,074 73 $815,074 73 GARRIGUE, President. JOHN E. KAHL, Yice President. Hugo Schumann, Secretary. cabin. A limited quantity of merchandise will be conveyed under through bill of lading. For further information, application to he made to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall st. Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William st. New Y SAMUEL THOMPSON & NEPHEWS’ Black Star, Line ok Liverpool Packets, and National ■■■■■ Line of Liverpool and Queenstown sailing every week. Passage office 73 Broad¬ er of Rector Street (formerly 275 Pearl Street). Sight Drafts on the Royal Bank of Ireland, payable in alfits Branches, and on C. Grimshaw& Co., Liverpool, payable in any part of England and Wales. Bankers supplied with Sterling drafts and through tickets from the Old Country to any part of the United States. PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE To California, United Mail, LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬ ER, FOOT o ) Canal street, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and list of every month (except when those dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. OCTOBER: 222,433 on 1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden City. 11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with Montana pany. 20th—Arizona, connecting with This Company insures against Loss or Damage by Fire terms as favorable as any other responsible Com¬ Board of Directors: CAPITAL,. men States FIRE. CASH vants, And Carrying the NSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DAMAGE BY No. 175 years, ; under twelve years, half-fare; male ser, one-half fare; female do., three-quarters fareservants berthed forward, women do., in ladies quarter fare Char- 253 per cent. -$4,650,938 27 JAS. A. Special steamers run to the newly-discovered gold No. 12 WALL STREET. paid. Assets!July 1,1867 Fares payable in United States gold , COMPANY. WALL $25 additional. coin. Francis Hathaway, Aaron L. Reid, Ellwood Walter. ELLWOOD WALTER, President. $3,000,000. 62 Melbourne, $346 to $364 for first class, and $218 to $243 for second clnss. The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward cabins of the Australian steamer: after cabin, latter NEWCOMB, Vice-President. J. Despard, Secretary. CAPITAL NO. SIA via PANAMA. The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of each month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬ tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving New-York for Aspinwall (Colon) on the 11th of each month First and second class passengers will be conveyed under through ticket at the following rates: From New York to ports in New Zealand, or to Sydney or CHAS. HARTFORD. NEW- AND AUSTRALA¬ region of Hokitika, New Zealand. Children under three years, free; under eight TRUSTEES. Incorporated 1819 J. YORK scrip, equivalent of COMMUNICA¬ BETWEEN TION IN CASH, : iETNA L. J. ) Steamship Companies. $1,261,349 During the past year this Company has paid to Its Policy-holders, WADSWORTH, Secretary. Insurance jS^dSAciLL "Nk vvw\ ovk. CO)e_ctLrtA in flL <§/p-CiLiitiaA ajhd J3*al-eirt-n. fp:icflculqp., anil metnUeLA of gf>acfz and ^aid fpzcr-liancyeA. in LcJ/l c.itieA. dLaranntA af J^cluUa and /^a.nU.ElA. teaeiuLcd an LiUciat Sft., COMPANY. Assets, January 1st, 1867 TWENTY ntends hereafter to confine its fire business to the W. R. ib £tfc. SlL. ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. NEW YORK, OF INSURANCE No. 35 WALL STREET, BROADWAY. Edward A Stansbury, J. Boorman Johnston, Samuel D. Bradford, PAULISON, Vice-President. Secretary. JOHN P. Isaac H. Walker, Hauliers, The Mercantile Mutual Metropolitan Insurance Company, Lorrain Freeman, n y telrnA. F. H. Carter, Secretary. J. Griswold, General Agent. Joseph B. Varnum, added to its previous land Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected from Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are en¬ titled to participate in the profits. JAMES W. OTIS, President. R. W. BLEECKER, VicePres’t. Martin Bates, Company having recently assets a paid up cash capital or $500,000, and subscrip¬ tion notes in advance of premiums of $300,000, continues to issue policies of insurance against Marine and In¬ cities in the United States. Dudley B. Fuller, Franklin H. Delano, Gilbert L. Beeckman. $1,614,540 78 Capital and Assets, Surplus 255 057 77 Cash Capital and Surplus, January l, j ^ THIRD INCORPORATED 1823. 108 Broadway. ADLARD, Manager' Secretary. (INSURANCE buildings) BROADWAY, BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE, AVENUE. NO. $200,000 COMPANY. Co., Cash Capital St? $1,432,340 United States Branch, No. 117 GEORGE Fire £2,000,000 1,893^20 Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany William H. Ross, North .American LONDON. Authorized Capital Subscribed Capital Paid-up Capital and Surplus C2?"New and important plans of Life Insurance have CHAS. J. MARTIN. President. A. F. INSURANCE In the a,439,120 73 114,849 48 Miscellaneous. States United BROADWAY. 135 [October 12, 1867. Henry M. Taber, Theodore W. Riley, Steph. Cambreleng, Joseph Foulke, Cyrus H. Loutrel, Jacob Reese, Lebbeus B. Ward. D. Lydig Suvdam, Joseph Britton, Fred. Schuchardt, Henry S. Leverich. Robert Schell, William H. Terry, Joseph Grafton, Amos Robbins, Thos. P. Cummings, Jno. W. Mersereau, David L. Eigenbrodt, William Remsen, Stephen Hyatt, JACOB Jambs E. Moobb, Secretary. REESE, President. Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with Pacific ports: 1st andllthtor Central American Kirts. Those or 1st touch at Man¬ steamers for South zanillo. , Baggage cnecKed through. allowed each adult. An One hundred pounflB — experienced Surgeon on hoard. attendance free. „ . Medicines ana , For passage tickets or at the Company’s ticket Canal street, North „ farther information, appiy office, on the wharf, iooio River, New Tort:. . THE CHRONICLE. 12,1807.] October Financial. Financial. 460 MILES OF THE Treasury Department, Bankers. Garth, Fisher & Hardy, Union Pacific Railroad RANKERS, No. 18 NEW Successors STREET, RUNNING Hardy). Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc. M. K. Are Jesup & Company, BANKERS AND MERCHANTS, Steel Iron or and undertake all business now fornia end of the route, under the direction of the Central Pacific Company', commencing at Sacramento, RANKERS, NOS. 14 & 16 WALL STREET, NEW Y'ORK. Receive Deposits in Currency and Gold, and allow Interest at the rate of FOUR PER CENT per annum on for at sight. daily balances which may be checked Will and purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks strictly only on Commission. The accrued interest NET EARNINGS OF THE all notes presented for such pound Interest Notes therein mentioned will now be received at this office, and certificates issued for the principal thereof. Interest on the notes will be com¬ puted to October 15th, 1S67, at which time the certifi¬ cates bear date. Schedules may be obtained on appli' catiou at the office. United States New DYCK, Treasury, Y'ork, October 5th. 1867. 3 PER CENT. Issued ip OCTOBER CERTIFICATES Exchange for AND DECEMBER POUNDS UNION COM¬ WANTED AT A PREMIUM. RAILROAD. During the quarter ending July 31 of the 1 8 6 5 current year, an average of 325 miles of the Union Pacific Railroad was in operation. The Superintendent’s re¬ port shows the following result on redemption will be paid in currency. H. M’CULLOCH, Secretary. In accordance with the foregoing notice the Com¬ Assistant Treasurer. already been expended. From the liberal Government aid, the wealth and energy of the stock¬ holders, and the ready market for the First Mortgage Bonds, there is no want of funds for the most vigorous prosecution of the work, and its early completion is as certain as any future business event can be. PACIFIC Tameson,Smith 8cCotting cember next. II. H. VAN in cash have James D. Smith, of the late firm of James Low & Co., New York and Louisville, Ky. redemption of the Compound Inter maturing in the months of October and De¬ TLIrty-five Million Dollars connected with Railways issue Three Per as and $10,000 each, in confidently expected that the two roads will 1870, thus completing the entire grand line connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, on which Rails, Locomotives, Joseph A. Jameson, Amos Cotting, Of Jameson, Cotting & Co. St. Louis. CONTINENT. est Notes Bonds and Loans for Railroad Cos., to authorized by Act of Congress,, approved March 2d, 1S67, in denominations of $5,000 and it is Negotiate Cars, etc., THE Cent. Certificates OMAHA meet in 12 PINE STREET. Contract for FROM completed, and it is expected that the re¬ maining 57 miles, to carry the track to the base of the Rocky Mountains, will be finished early in October. Contracts have already been made for rock cuttings beyond, to be done during the winter. The work is being pushed forward with equal energy on the Cali¬ Domestic Exchange bought, sold an collected. WEST ACROSS bought and sold at the “ regular” Board of Broker and at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis- only. Foreign aDd September 30th, 1867. hereby given that the Assistant *? reasurer Notice is at New York has been instructed to Harrison, Garth & Co. and Henry aion 475 COMPOUNDS Bought at highest market rates. 5-20 : COUPONS, DUE NOVEMBER 1, CASHED IN GOLD, BY EARNINGS. Passengers $160,526 92 Freight Telegraph 549,672 39 1,416 23 12,140 00 453,205 44 26,077 97 Mails Transportation, Contractor’s-Materials Transportation, Contractor’s Men - Henry A. Heiser’s Sons, Dealers in Government Securities, NO. 38 WALL STREET L $1,203,038 95 Drake Brothers, STOCK RROKERS AND No. 16 BROAD Fuel $131,089 58 109,767 64 50,984 44 54,907 60 33,204 73 15,486 93 807,508 03 Repair of Track Repair of Engines, Cars, Shops, &c RANKERS, Offices and Stations Conductors, Engineers, &c STREET, NEW YORK, Trains Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities ,| Net Earnings to balance Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds, a Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum, and $1,203,038 95 Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to From the relative high charges, the operating expense Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬ of the road are but 32 7-8 per cent, of the earnings and ments made. Orders Promptly Executed Gibson,Beadleston & Co., BANKER^ , 50 EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK. Government Securities, bought and sold, ONLY on Stocks, Bonds and Gold Commission, Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which at the Stock, we are bers. Interest allowed mem¬ on Dividends, Coupons Liberal advances Deposits. and Interest collected. Government and other Securities Information cheerfully given to Executors, etc., desiring to invest. Professional men, Refer by nermiwsinn Keiei hv permission to 1 Messrs. LOCKW'OOD & to Co., on | Dabney, Mokgan & Co. the ratio would be much less if the contractor’s busi¬ Notices. 42d RAILROAD COMPANY, Tontine Buildings, S3 Wall Street, New York, Sept. 24th, 1867. of Directous have this SIX (6) Per Cent, out of day the Dividend.—The Board declared a Dividend of earnings of the road for the three months ending 30th inst, payable to the stockholders, or their sentatives, on and after the 5th of October legal to B04D AND the commercial, business stands as follows Earnings for May, June and Tuly Expenses for May, June and July Net at Jacksonville, Ill.. Sept. 23, Mortgage 1867. Coupons of First Bonds Jacksonville and Chicago Railroad of the St. Louis, Company, due Oct. 1,1867, will be paid ou and after that D. B. COMPANY. i TAPFEN, Cashier. llie present at | Continental National Bank, No. 7 Nassau St. Clark, Dodge & Co., Bankers, 51 Wall St. John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, No. 33 Wall St. Henry Clews & Co., Bankers, No. 32 Wall St. Hedden, Winchester & Co., No. 69 Broadway. by BANKS AND BANKERS generally through¬ States, of whom maps and descriptive out the United pamphlets maybe obtained. JOHN J* CISCO. Treasurer. NEW YORK Capitalists. FALLS CITY MANUFACTURING Company^ Louisville, Ky., Capital Stock, $1,000,000.— This company is now organized for the manufacture of Linen and Linen Machinery, and have fully de¬ monstrated that linens can be produced much cheaper than cotton goods before the war. We have in this country $100,000,000 invested in cotton machinery, and only $1*000,000 in flax machinery, while the imports of linen are $50,000,000 annually. This company propose to manufacture all kinds of fine and coarse linen,bag¬ ging, cordage, twines, &c., from the law material. They have secured tlieir patents in Europe and the United States, and have commenced the manufacture of heavy goods, and desire to extend their works to meet a portion of the demand for other goods. The stocks of the eastern companies are now held at many times tlieir par value, paying $100 per cent, dividends. This company have demonstrated by tlieir recent workings that they cau show a profit o‘f 200 per cent, on SJKXfspindles. A portion of this stock is now offer, ed at par., and it is confidently believed tnat no stock has been offered to the public presenting more tive and more profitable Inducements than that otposi¬ the Falls City Manufacturihg Company. Full particulars, samples of goods or circulars can be had by application to M. L. Sheldon, Agent for the Company in New Y'ork, Nos. 23 and 25 Nassau Street, Leavitt, President, No. 100 Fifth street, Louis¬ or O. S. ville. OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, IN premium on gold, pay __ and To Currency i'rom July 1st. Subscriptions will be received in New York at the and y anu by Secretary T. D. for Company’s Office, No. on Kashru street, 20 Nassau street, ATIOAL B IK. New York, Sept. 27,1867. At a meeting of the Board of Directors of this held this day, a Dividend Bank of FIVE Per Cent, was de¬ clared, payable to the Stockholders on and after the 10th of October next, the hank assuming the govern¬ ment tax. The Transfer books will be closed from the 1st to the 7th lust., inclusive. offered IN GOLD, Over Nine Per Cent. Interest. . LATI are urrent rate of September 18,1867. The Board of Trustees bavo declared a of EIGHT dividend of CENTS the Union Trust per share, payable at the office of company, No. 73 Broadway, New York city, on und after the’lst day of October next. The transfer books will be closed on the 23d insta and reopened on the 2d October. A. L. PURVES, GIL $485,789 00 Many parties are taking advantage of the present high price of Government stocks to exchange lor these Bonds, which are over 15 per cent, cheaper, and, at the HOWARD, Treasurer. OIL TRACT 237,966 50 Ninety Cents on tlie Dollar, and in OFFICE OF THE BATHBONE $723,755 54 accrued interest at Six Per Cent, of Messrs. M. K. date, at the office Jesup & York, free of government Co„ No. 12 Pine Street, New tax. Corner Wall & William streets. : profit of operating 325 miles of road And CO., MARQUAND, Vice President, CLARK, DODGE & €(>., cost, because of the half price charged for it, and we operating expenses oil the commercial business for the quarter, $237,966 50. The account for SIX PER CENT. J'uJL1?* •lAfKSONVIHE, CHICAGO BAII H. G. to have the net OFFICE OF THE ST. 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 bv rail. 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 beyond that of any other bonds now offered. Apply at the office of the company, No. 43Wall street, or First Mortgage Bonds, whose interest is so amply provided for and so thoroughly secured must be class¬ ed among the safest investments. They pay next. Transfer books will be closed on the afternc the 25th, and reopened on the morning of the 8tli prox. HENRY SMITH. Treasurer. St. Louis & IronMountain work done for contractors, which was less than actual 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 the earnings for this quarter were more than four times the interest on the First Mortgage Bonds on this length of road. OFFICE OF THE PANAMA THE ness were not done at. half rates. Throwing out charges to contractors for transportation of materials and men ($479,283 41), and deducting from the aggre¬ gate of all operating expenses ($395,530 92) 32 7-8 per cent. ($157,564 42) as the proportion chargeable on the three months Financial FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS. EXPENSES. THE CITY OF NEW YORK. ! No. 40 Wall Street, New Y'ork, September 25, 1867. At a special meeting of the Board of Directors of this Company, convened for the purpose of deciding w hat action should be taken by them in consequence of the decease of the late President, Joseph B. Col¬ lins, the following appointments were made: JOHN EADIE, late Secretary, wras unanimously elected a Director and President of the Company. NICHOLAS DE GROOT, late Assistant was Secretary, appointed Secretary of the Company; and ISAAC A. GIFFING, late first clerk, was appointed Assistant Secretary and Cashier. WM. TUCKER, President pro tern. Clinton Gilbert, Secretary pro tem. T. A. Hoyt, GOLD AND EXCHANGE BROKER, 36 NEW AND 88 BROAD STREETS. Orders executed for Bankers, Brokers and Merchants Bank Statements. Insurance. QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF OFFICE OF THE Bank Statements. QUARTERLY REPORT CONDITION OF OF THE THE MARKET NATIONAL BANK. Of New York, on the October, 1867 morning of the first Monday of : Loans and Diccounts Overdrafts $1,930,387 36 5,354*33 35,000 00 19,093 28 60,109 00 3:35,408 58 158,738 79 672.000 00 5.166 76 12,000 00 105,485 13 Banking Ho use. Current expenses Cash items Exchanges for Clearing house this A.M.... Due from Banks and bankers United States bonds to secure circulation.. Other bonds and Stocks Circulating notes of other banks Specie Fractional currency Legal Tender Notes Compound Interest Notes 127 00 171.121 00 377.000 00 $3,8S8,631 23 Total LIABILITIES^”* Capital $1,000,000 00 I roht and Loss in reserve Profit and Loss Circulating notes outstanding Circulating notes outstanding, Market Bk. Individual deposits Uncollected checks Due banks and bankers Dividends unpaid 1 254 s73 71 6o!oS7 91 575,700 00 8.500 00 ic,- 007 ^ 331 400 00 16'V'>52 01 Vo40 00 Total $3,88S.651 23 I, A. GILBERT, Cashier of the “Market National Bank,” do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. _ GILBERT, Cashier. A. QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE CHATHAM NATIONAL BA INK. In New York, in the State of New York, on the morning of the hrst Monday of October, 1S67 : RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts $1,609,593 25 Real Estate Current Expenses.., Cash 6 052 ll’sOO Items,(including revenue stamps) and Foreign Checks Exchange for Clearing house this A.M.... Due from National Banks Superintendent Bank Department .New York Suspense h. $ 38 373 93 32,986 73 • to secure circulating notes N. Y. county 7 per cent, bonds Cash on hand in circulating notes of other National Banks 80 00 212,714 00 Notes 190 000 00 expenses-..,. 00 140 00 violation l&n? $ 30,000 (K) v n»e 1° ^all°nal Banks e,^. °fher banks and bankers »<ttdend*,S.8“on outsUn‘U“S tenn’i*"1 fliecks Interest1 Profit 1 «» 20,000 469,134 2,335 508,531 00 30 83 00 $13,292,188 71 Cr.-LIABILITIES. Capital Stock paid in Su’-plus’Fund and Profits Circulating Notes received Comptroller $2,0011,000 00 599,390 74 00 16 96 85 8,158 00 $13,292,188 71 State of New York. Countv of New York.—I, JOHN R. KEARNY, Cashier of “ The National Bank of the State of New York.” do solemnlv swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. JOHN R. KEARNY, Cashier. Sworn to and subscribed before me, this eighth day of October, 1867. J. LAURENCE SLOSSON, Notary Public. Insurance. “Chatham National statement is knowledge and belief. O. H. SCHREINER, Cashier. Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 7th day of October, 1867. Henry C. Banks, Notary Public, N.Y. the best of my — Financial. T. H. McMahan 8c Co. COMMISSION MERCHANTS H4 Dealer* in Domenile and. Forel^B July 1st, 1867. Cash capital Surplus $-100,000 00 187,205 93 Gross Assets Total Liabilities J. Rejiskn VALCOTT, $587,205 93 33,480 09 President. Premiums 1st on Policies not marked off January. 1866 2,1S3,325 15 Total amount of Marine Premiums.. $10,470,346 31 No Polices have been issued upon Life Risks; nor upon Fire Risks discon¬ nected with Marine Risks. Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ 1866 to 31st December, 1866 $7,632,236 TO Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks, $6,771,885 secured by Stocks, and other¬ wise 1,129,350 Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages, 221,260 Interest and sundry notes and claims due the Company, estimated at 141,866 00 ary, same paid during the period $5,683,895 05 Returns of Premiums and $1,194,173 23 Expenses » ■ The Company has the following As¬ sets, viz.: United States and State of New York Loans Cash in Bank 00 24 3,837,735 41 434,207 81 . Total Amount of Assets 00 $12,536,304 46 OF BUFFALO. ORGANIZED Cash Exchange. IttYing prompt and reliable correspondents at all ac¬ cessible points In the State, and REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. BKTEJt TO Vattonal Park Bank. Howes A Macy, and Spofford, Tiles ton A Co., New York. Second National Bank and J. W. Bearer, Esq., Boston. Drexel * Co. and D. 8. Stetson A Co- Philadelphia. T. P. Thixkleld A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and Jos. E. Elder A Goodwin, St. Louis. Fowler, Itanard A Co, Mobile. Pike, Ispeyre A Bro., Hew Orleans. Drake, Klein worth* Cohen, Lon¬ don and Liverpool. Capital Paid In ..........$200,000 WM. G. Street, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOV¬ SECURITIES, STOCKS or their legal representatives, on and Tuesday the Fifth of February next, from which date all interest thereon will The certificates to be produced at the time cease. of payment, and cancelled. thereof, FARGO, President. REYNOLDS, Vice President. SMITH, Secretary A dividend Directors. Richard Bullymore,! L. K. Plvmpton, James H. Metcalfe John Greiner, James Bray ley, O. P. Ramsdell, Lauren Enos, Wm. G. Fargo, Rufus L. Howard, Dexter P. Rumsey, John Allen, Jr., Peter J. Ferris, Stephen G. Austin, Wm. H. Glenny, S. G. Cornell, Henry Martin, George W. Tift, John C. Clifford, S. S. Guthrie, C. J. Hamlin, O. L. Nims, John H. Vought James Adams, j A. Revnolds, James N. Matthews, Pascal P. Pratt, James M. Smith, Adrian R. Root, has just organized with * Agency in city, aud are prepared to write FIRE AND INLAND NAVIGATION RISKS AT CURRENT RATES. an this Office in New York, No. 6 Pine Street. CHARLES W. STAND ART Agent, The Mutual Life InsuRANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. »ASH ASSETS. September 1st, 1866, over $16,000,000 00. FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President. R. A. McCURDY, Vice-President. iaiie Stuart. tary, Twenty Per Cent. 1* on next. By order of the Board, J. H. Sheppard Homans Railroad Iron, FOREIGN, TRUSTEES! Wm. John D. Jones, Charles Dennis, W. H. H. Moore, Henry Coit, Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, Charles H. Russell, Lowell Holbrook, R. Warren Weston, Royal Phelps, Caleb Barstow William E. Roads, Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert, Joshua J. Henry, Dennis Perkins, Joseph Gaillard, Jr. J. Henry Burgy, Cornelius Grinnell, C. A. Hand, B.J. Howland, Benj. Babcock, Fletcher Westray, Roht. B. Minturn, Jr. Gordon Dodge W, Burnham, Geo. G. Hobson, Frederick Chauncey, David Lane, James Low GeorgeS. Stephenson, James Bryce, Francis Skiddy, Wnliam H. Webb. Daniel S. Miller. Paul Robert L. for CHAPMAN, Secretary. A. P. Pillot J Isaac Ubbatt. J Joojr of the net earned premiums of the Company, for the year ending 31st December. 1866. for which certificates will be issued on and after Tuesday the Second of April declared paid up Cash Capital, as above, and have established Steam and Street NEW YORK. The outstanding certificates of the issue of 1864 will be redeemed and paid to the holders after APRIL, 1867. AMERICAN AND Co., Six per cent interest on the outstand¬ ing certificates ot profits will be paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, after Tuesday the Fifth of on and February next. Lane, Secretary. BuffaloCity InsuranceCo. GALVESTON, TEXAS. Special attention given to Collections of all kinds, AND GOLD. Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the Company, submit the following Statement of its affairs on the 31st December, 1866: Premiums received on Marine Risks, from 1st January, 1866, to 31st De¬ cember, 1866 $8,282,021 26 COMPANY, This Company No. 10 Wall JANUARY 25th, 1867, Premium Notes and Bills Receivable.. Hanover Fire Insurance HENRY T. swear that the above Van Schaick 8c # The Losses $600,500 309,500 Unclaimed Dividends County of New York, -I, O. H.' the Co., from Less amount on hand Amount outstanding 291,000 Individual Deposits ana Uncollected Checks 9,655,405 Due to National Banks, as per schedule 722,854 Due to other BaViks and Bankers, as per schedule 15,379 $2,810,S29 71 i 91,604 30 Currency Legal Tender Notes 6,612 53 ERNMENT 667,500 00 Fractional A. 5.390 10 of 7.124 63 21,<66 61 Specie 36,551 54 ‘rue to 56,171 02 National Banks « $23,548 91 rodt on a Loss and 7 Cashier _ A.M.... Due from National Banks as per schedule.. Due from other banks and bankers, as per schedule United States Taxes paid United States Bonds deposited with U. STreasurer to secure circulating notes.... New York City Stocks Cash on hand in circulating notes of other 11 170 ->3 45 283 45 t solemnly 31,069 95 7,369,15b 85 :•••••••••• Exchanges tor clearing house this Comptrol¬ KSwmSVW'V* Du?l?, ,( h ,kf, UtStaudin^r t/j 201,571 86 BENJ. S. $450,000 00 band on 1,089 90 Banking house LIABILITIES. notes received from Insurance • NEW YORK, 270,000 00 .Amount outstanding T ... 91,285 87 Capital Stock paid in ler Less amount Mutual No. 45 WALL STREET. Surplus Fund Circulating 240,03b 02 1,130,437 90 206,350 00 7,995 00 Currency , $3,842,133 16 $2,205,309 24 Time Accommodation Loans. Demand Loans Indebtedness of Directors.... Overdrafts 3,899 58 $2,810,829 71 . dr.-resources. Commercial Paper 150.000 00 Legal Tender Notes _ New York, in the State of New York, of the first Monday of October, 1867. Loans and Discounts Current Atlantic STATE 4,000 00 * Compound Interest In the City of the morning State of account fractional NATIONAL BANK OF THE OP NEW YORK. 8,087 10 264,171 33 133,072 40 Due from other banks and bankers.. I S. Bonds deposited with U. S. Treasurer Specie THE on RESOURCES. si! S [October 12, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 476 . Spofford. Charles P. Burdett, Taylor, Shephard Gandy. JOHN D. FOR SALE BY JONES, President, DENNIS, Vice-President CHARLES S. W. HOPKINS & Co., 69 & 71 W. H. H. Broadway. • MOORE, 2d D. HEWLETT, Vice-Pres 8d Yfce-Prea i. October PRICES CURRENT. addition to the duties noted discriminating duty of 10 per iiZf’ad val. is levied on all imports iaes that have no reciprocal Mtiesvith the United States. • * •ST /* . On all goods, wares, and m „ growth or produce of of the oUSSrA 9?* Knen **« Cape 0/ Goad imported from places this the Cape of Good. Hope, a duty 5JV val. tS levied in adimposed on any such Irtides when imported directly from the t/Le or places of their growth or producjL . Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The tor in all cases to be 2,240 ft 10 per cent, ad iition to the duties Ancbors-Daty: 2* cents lb. anil upward^ ft 8f@ ot *-lies—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. AFot, 1st sort... ^ 100 lb .... @10 00 50 Pearl, 1st sort. il. Beeswax—Dutyj20Jp cental val42 American yellow. 39 lb -- ® ■*rtnes—Duty: on Uio invoice 10 $ ct. Grande shin 39 ton45 Sfc::::::::::"" 00 @ ... si® Breadstuff s-See special report. . So "S" h*r4:per..M: “ “ S*> 00 35 00 @40 Philadelphia Fronts... hogs hair Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; imer’n,gray &wh. $lb Batter 55 @2 00 and Cheese.—Duty: cents. Butter- 40 36 34 36 28 15 I-1* 18 11 prdl, 39 lb, new. Bt-fl-kmtubs $ lb “ Welsh, tubs $ lb. “ Fine to ixtra Sta e,... Good ioflue Stat^, .... Common Stite, Fresh 45 40 38 40 86 33 37 :3 ® ® ® ® @ ® @ '(& m IS ® W. tcroBuitor,.._.v Grease bu ter, urk. Cheese— 14 ® 32 @ 12 12 @ 12@ 14 Factory Dairies do Common F&rm Dairies do Common.. 7 ^ " ® 16 13 15 10 Candles—Duty, tallow, 21; sperma¬ ceti and wax a; U earine and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents $ lb. Sperm, patent,. ..$ ft 55 @ 60 Refined sperm,city... 45 @ 50 Stearic 30 @ * 20@ Adamantine 31 24 Cement—Rosendale$bl — @ 1 75 Chains- Duty, 21 cents One inch & upward $ ft Anthracite Cardiff steam 8@ ' @ .... .... @18 03 0 50 @ 7 0 > @ .... @15 CO @10 10 Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ lb. Caracas (In bondj(gold) 17 @ 39 lb Maracaibo do @ .(gold) 12 @ Guayaquil do .(gold) 9 @ St Domingo.. .(gold) 19 • . in 91 Coffee,—See special report. Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and Ingot, 21; old copper 2 cents 39 lb ; manu¬ factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing and yellow metal, in sheets 42 long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. 39 square foot, 3 cents $1 lb. Sheathing,new..$ ft 33 @ Sheathing, yellow 26 @ Bolts @ 34 Braziers* 83 @ Baltimore 25 @ copper inches 26 @ Alum..... Arseni c, Powdered.... Assafcetida Balsam Copaivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru Bark Petayo 1 Berries, Persian Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ castle gold Bi Chromate Potash... Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined Brimstone .. 25 @ Manila, 21 other untarred, 31 cents $ lb. Manila, $ lb 23*@ 241 Tarred Russia 181 @ Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia. @ i lor v/» ude, (in .(gold) Camphor, Refined..... Cantnaridos Carbonate in bulk Epsom Salts Extract Logwood Fennell Se> d......... Flowers,Benzoin. $ oz. Gambier gold Gamboge Ginseng, South&West. Gum Arabic, Picked.. Gum ArabiOj Sorts... Gum Benzoin Cotton—See special report. and * GO per Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, gallon; Aloes, 6 cents 39 lb; Alum, 60 cents $ 100 lb; Argols, 6 wnto# lb; Arsenic and Assafcedati, *5 Antimony, Crude and Regulus. Arrowroot, 80 « cent ad val BtiMmOppalvi 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; ***» Peru, 50 cents* ft; Oalisaya 5 ... .... Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ;8almon $3; other pickled, $1 50 39 bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬ rels, 50 cents 39 100 lb. Dry Cod $ cwt. 5 50 @ 6 50 Pickled Scale... 39 bbl. 4 Mi @ 5 u0 Pickled Cod.... 39 bbl. 6 50 @ Mackerel, No. 1, Mass .... .... Fruits—See Gum Damar Gum Myrrh.East Cat, Wild Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. Senegal (gold) GumTrsgacanth,Sorts Gum Tragacanth, w. (gold) flakey do Hvd — 60 @ 1 «0 8 80 Licorice Paste Spanish g0Ud Licorice Paste, Greek L Si 'S 33 @ 24 @ 84 @ 30 @ Madder,Dutch., (gold) Ji® do, French, EXF.F.do 7 ® Manna,large flake.... 1 W @ Manna, small flake.... 1 00 ® Mustard Seed, Cal.... « ® Mustard Seed, Trieste. A ® Mu Blae .. 35 25 40 .. 7$ 1 -5 -:.... PP! 4**5* 8uoA^.:r:..""*8«©4oo OUBergamot T00® 8 00 I ! 00 8Q 80 @ 7g over 80 or Window 10x15 inches, larger and not over 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 square foot; 16x24 inches, foot; unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and above that, 4U cents 39 square Commtfh Window, not exceeding lOx 15 inohes square, II; over that, and 16x24, 2; over that, aud not ,21; all over that, 8 cents 24x30 over 39 A>. Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th qualities. Subject to a discount of i5 39 cent. 6x 8 to 8x10. .39 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50 American 8x llx . <• i2x!9 18x22 20x31 24x31 25x36 tol0xl5 to 12x18 to 16x24 to 20x30 to 24x30 to 24x36 to 30x44 80x46 to 32x18 32x50 to 82x56. Above ovei 22 @ at 2f cents or less W cent ad lb, 6 cents 39 ft>, and 39 val.; over 20 oents 3f lb, 10 cents 39 ft and 20 $ cent ad vaM Blasting(A) 39 25ft keg @4 00 Shipping and Mining.. @4 50 Rifle.....^ 6 50 @ Sportine, in 1 ft canis20 .. .. ... 4 ters 39 ft 86 @ 1 06 If air—Duty free. RioGrande,niixed39 ft Buenos 87 @ 25 @ 11 @ Hog,Western, unwash. Hardware— Axes—Cast steel, best brand {.erdiz do ordinary *7* 14 Ayres, mixed. 17 13 27 25 86 12 @ 12 @ Carpe ' ter’s Adzes,.... do ordinary Shingling Hatchets, C’t Steel, best br’ds, Nos. 24 @ ^ 21 @ 1 to3. 8 00 @ 9 00 do ordinary. 6 17 @ 7 50 Broad Hatch’s 8to8 bst. ?2 00 @25 00 do i.rdi(.-ary 12 < ft @ Coffee Mils List2. % dis. do Bri Hopper @ do Wood Back @ . Cotton Gins, per saw... $5@'i less 20 % Narrow Wrought. Butts List 5 % dis. Cast Butt^—Fast Joint. List 10 £adv “ Loose Joint.. List. Hinge-,W r<,u^ht, List 5 % adv Door B< Its, Cast Bbl... L st 30 % <!is Carriasre^ud Tire do List 55 % dia Door L c s and Latches List 71 # dis. Door Knobs—Mineral. List 7* % dis. “ • Pore lain LLtlijgdis. N«-w List 25&7I % dis. . Padlocks Locks—Cabinet, Eagle “ Trunk Stocks and Dies Screw Wrencaes—Coe’s Fatem do Taft’s 8m ths’ Vis*js 39 List 15 % r-is. List’5^di3 List 85 % dis, List 25 % dis; s* 65 £ dis. L ft 20 @ 22 Framing Chisels.NewList37I «t,tt^dis. Firmer do insets. do in sets.. 00 List40*adv handled, List40*ady. Augur Bitts. List 20& 10 % dis Short Augurs,per dxNewList 30^ dis. do List 30 List 75 List 60 List i5&40 Cut Tacks. Cut Brads Rivet , Iron % % % % dis dis dis. dis. Screws American.. .List 40@45 % dis. do Engijsh List 2-’ @oU % dis. Shovels and Spades... List 5 % dis. Horse Shoes 5 @7 39 ft Planes. List 30@35 %adv Hay—North River, in bales^ 100 fts for shipping 70 @ 75 Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $45; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 39 ton; and Tampico, 1 cent $ ft. Amer.Uressed.39 ton 850 O0@S6Q 00 do Jute 5p not over $ square yard, 3; Calcutta, standard, y’d 00 00 10 @ on 21 Russia, Clean 15 @ 21 cents ?0I@ Gunpowder—Duty, valued CO 5 00 @ 8 0o Polished Plate not ovei 10,4 cents 39 5>. 75 (jilass—Duty, Cylinder ( cents or less 2 DO @ 4 5 00 @20 2 b0 @ 5 3 00 @ 6 8 @ Raccoon Skur k, Black Potash, Fr. and Licorice, Paste, Sicily. 00 75 @ 20 @ 8 00 @50 00 @ 5 00 Opossum .. Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 @ ® ^ Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3 . . Musk rat, Otter ** *jEng.. .VT..!.. .(gold) 3 60 @ pale Mink, dark 06 50 50 50 00 less, 39 square yard, 3; 50 @ Lynx Marten, Dark .. 85 @ 5 0G 00 00 3 00 1 00 @ 1 50 do Cross do Red do Grey • @ .. 4 00 Fox, Silver 45 55 @ ... 10 do House Fisher, jjO ® -® brown do Badger *« *3 @ 50 @ 2 5 00 @i2 2 00 @ 8 50 @ 1 50 @ Pale 25 @ 75 @ Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 1C Ring 22 special report. Bear, Black 80 @ 60 4*/n .. I 75 @ 2 00 India @ 5 6j Furs—Dni,y,10 $ cent. Beaver,Dark..39 skin 1 00 @ 4 00 .. 70 78 40 @ .... @ .... @ .... @ @1150 @ ... @ .... @ @ v @ .... @ 20 Flax—Duty: $15 39 ton. Jersey fi> 15 @ 29 dS 17 65 @ 50 @ 34 @ 21 50 @22 00 Mackerel,No.l,Halifax Mackerel,No. 1, Bay Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..13 5J Mackerel, No. 2, Ha ax Mac*el,No.3,Mass. l’ge .... Mackerel, No. 8, H’fax Mackerel,No. 8, Mass Salmon, Pickled, No.1.37 00 Sa mon, l i kled, p. tc Herring,Scaled^ box. 4*0 Herring, No. 1 18 Herring, plckled$bbl. 4 50 1*» • .... .... Gpio Uedda Licorice Paste,Calabria 70 40 ... or 8 9 10 15 16 18 20 24 10, 4 cents 39 lb Calcutta, light &b’y % • ... 1 00 17 @1 • . do @ 10I@ • • ... 3 25 2 171 65 83 9 20 J • Dnck—Dnty, 30 39 cent ad val. Ravens, Light. pee 16 00 @ 8 On @ Ravens, Heavy 72 Scotch, G’ck,No.l $y. ® 60 @ Cotton, No. 1 39 y. Dye Woods—Duty free. Camwood..(gold)$ t’nl6J 00@ 31 0U @ 82 00 Fustic,Cuba Fustic,Savanilla @ Fustic, Maracaibo 25 00 @ Logwood, Hon. 23 00 @ Logwood, Laguna (gold) @ Logwood, St. Domin..22 00 @ Logwood, Cam .(gold) @ Log wood, Jamaica co @16 00 Lima wood 115 tO@120 00 Barwood (gold) .... @ 23 00 Feathers—Duty: 30 ^ centad val. Prime Western...39 ft 85 @ S-0 Tennessee 75 @ 80 28* .. • • 97 @ .... 1 70 @ 1 90 22 @ Cardamoms, Malabar,. @ Castor Oil Cases $ gal 2 15 @ Chamomile Flow’s^ft 20 @ Chlorate Potash (gold) 10 @ Caustic Soda 8I@ 19 @ Carraway Seed Coriander Seed 14 @ Cochineal, Hon (gold) 95 @ Cochineal,Mexic’n(g’d) 9u @ Copperas, American 11@ Cream Tartar, pr.(gold 28I@ Cubebs, East India.... 33 @ Cutch 7.6 @ • • ** cents .. • to 10x15 to 12x18 to 16x24 to 24x80 to 24x36 to 30x44. to 82x48. to 32x56 6 50 7 00 @ 7 50 @12 00 @18 00 @15 00 50 @16 00 00 @18 00 Groceries—See special report. Gunny Bag's—Duty, valued at 1C .. • shore 8x11 llxJ4 12x19 20x31 24x81 24x36 30x45 82x50 2 @ 21 26 @ 14 @ Seneca Root. 58 @ 40 25 @ 30 Senna, Alexandria.... 20 @ 25 Senna, Eastlndia Shell Lac 4" @ to Soda Ash (80$c.)(g’ld) 2J@ 28 @ Sugar L’d, W’e(goid).. Sulp Quinine, Amoz 2 25 @ 2 35 Sulphate Morphine.... 6 75 @ 50 @ Tart’c Acid..(g’ld)$ft 501 H @ Tapioca 47? @ 50 Verdigris, dry A ex dry 10 Vitriol, Blue 9i@ Ammonia, Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val. Regular, quarts^ gross 55 @ 70 Phial . 8 @ H@ Sarsaparilla, Hond “ Sarsaparilla, Mex “ 201 51 36 ® • • 20 @ ... 40 @ . 7 Salaratus SalAm’n ac, Ref (gold) Sal Soda. Newcastle“ Sul¬ : 50 @ 12 @ Sago, Pea. led 39 ....(gold).39 00 @40 00 Brimstone, Am. Roll 39 lb @ 3} Brimstone, •• • • . 3I@ 3} 75 @ 1 5 j @ 18 @ 20 35 @ 38 3i@ 25 @ 40 90 @ 40 @ 1 50 @ 8 75 5*@ 19»@ 5|@ • • .. 60 38 @ • • ton 22 @ • 21 85 35 @ Crude Oil Lemon 8 87 @ 4 121 Oil Peppermint,pure. 5 50 @ Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 65 @ Oxalic Acid 88 @ 90 88 @ Phosphorus Prussiate Potash 15 @ 87 ■8 @ 80 Quicksilver 2 00 @ 2 50 Rhubarb, China 88 20 @ 75 @ Annato, good to prime. Antimony, Regulus of Argols, Crude Argols, Refined Gum Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; um^rred Mineral @ 4 00 @ .... Liverpool Gas CaDneL Portage Lake Acid, Citric Alcohol, Aloes, Cape * lb Aloes, Socotrine bond) Newcastle Gas Detroit * Bark,80 * centad val.: BlCarb.Soda, U; Bi ChromatePotasn, 3 cents 39 lb; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents 39 1001b ; Refined BoraT, 10 cents 39 lb ; CTude Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 38 ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 39 ton, and 15 39 cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40 cents 39 lb.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 39 cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Oantharides, 50 cents 39 ft; Castor Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, II; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, I; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents 39 lb ? Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent 38 ft: Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gamboge, 10 3? cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 39 cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per lb; Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacantb, 20 $ cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬ limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anls, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $i 39 b>; Oil Peppermint, 50 3£ centad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $ lb; Phosphorus, 20 $ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents 39 5>: Quicksilver, 15 39 cent a(* val.; Sal ASratus, II cents 39 lb? Sal Soda, I cent $ lb; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 39 cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; Soda Ash, I; Sugar Lead, 20 cents 39 ft; Snlph. Quinine, 45 39 cent ftd val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 39 oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents 39 lb ; Sal Ammoniac, 2u; Blue Vit¬ riol, 25 39 cent ad val.; E4herial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $ l 39 ft; all others quoted below, free. phur Camphor, $ lb. Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 ft to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28 bushels of80 ft $ bushel. Liverpool Orrel. $ ton of2,240 lb Liverp’l House Cannel 477 THE CHRONICLE 12,1867.] 7 9 9 11 14 16 17 18 20 24 75 25 50 75 50 00 00 00 00 00 @ 6 @ 6 @ 7 @ 7 @ 9 @k0 00 50 00 50 00 00 @11 00 @12 00 @13 00 @15 00 English and Fe*%ch Window—1st, 2d, 31, and 4th qualities. (SiigleThlck)—Discount 15@2039cert •x 8 to8x10.3?50 feet 7 75 Q 6 00 Undressed.. 280 0H@240 00 @:*5t) to (gold) 110 00@120 CO 12 @ 121 Manila..$ ft..(gold) Sisal @ .. Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry ed and Skins 10 Dry Hides— Buenos or Salt¬ 39 centad val. Iftg’d Ayres^'ftg’d Montevideo Rio Grande ^Mnoco California do do do 21 gold ;. do California, Mex. do 22* @ 21 21 .. . @ 2 1@ 19 @ i0 @ @ 19* 21* 16 @ i7 17*@ 17I@ 20 @ 18 22j (gold) 15 @ 16 do do Tamp co South&West. do Wet Salted Hides— Buo Ayres.39 ft g’d. Rio Grande do California do Western @ @ 11 @ 12 Porto Cabello .. . Vera Cruz . Tamploo . do do do Dry Salted Hides Ch li California... ; .... Coutrysl’ter trim. & cured. City do do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip 39 ® gold Sierra Leone....cash Gambia & Bissau do 18 .. .. H @ 11 @ 11 @ , . Hi llj @ 32i@ lvi@ 18i 23 @ 23* 13* 36 @ 27 @ 30 Honey—Duty, 2 eent ^ gallon. Cuba (in bond) (gc1 $ gall. 60 @ 62* »conU do of 1866 Foreign .... • w • • • 3? ft. • 40 @ 45 @ •* ® 70 70 THE CHRONICLE. 478 Horn®—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande. ..$ C do 9 90@ Ox, American 7 00® 8 00 India Rubber-Duty, 10 $ cent, $ fi> 774® East India .. Cartaagen*, &c Indigo—Duty free. Bengal (.old) $tt> Oude (sold) ~ 0' 75 65 65 95 75 Madras Manila Guatemala Caraccas /—Store Pricks—, Bar Swedes, assorted sizes ®155 00 'Bar,English and Amer¬ 105 00® 110 00 do do Common 95 00®100 0 do Scroll 132 50®180 00 Ovals and Half Round 130 00® 140 00 Band ®132 50 HorseShoe 127 50® ... Rods,5-rf®3-16inch.. 110 G0@ 165 00 137 50® ;90 00 Hoop Nail Rod 1«'4 $ ft) 9 ® Sheet, Russia 2 4© 22 Sheet, Single, Double 6 ® 74Bails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 52 50® 53 00 do American 79 Oo® r2 50 Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime $ lb 2 87® 8 00 East Ind Billiard Ball 3 00® 3 25 African, Prime.. 2 S7® 3 00 African, Scrivel.,W.C. 1 60® 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 ft Old Lead, 1$ cents $ 3); Pipe and Sheet, 24 cents $ ft). Galena ® 9 50 $ 100 ft) Spanish (srold) 6 55 ® 6 55 German (gol I) 6 55 ® 6 55 and Treble , .. .. <- (gold) 6 55 ® 6 8*4 English .net net .net ®10 50 ®12 00 Pipe and Sheet.. Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper 30 $ cent ad val. Bar .. .. /—cash. $ 33 Oak, Slaughter, light middle do do do do heavy, do light Cropped.... do middle do do * do do do do do do do do do do Orino., etc. l’t. do middle do heavy, do & B. A, dam’gdall w’g’s do do do poor 50 32* 30 81 25 ® . do middle, do heavy. uv/ ® ® 30 ® 294® 23,® 29i® 28 ® heavy Califor., light, do •264 21 30$ 314 304 2'.*4 30 29 21 19 ® 87 ® 42® do Slaugh.in rough Oak, Slaugh.in rou.,l’t do do do mid. and heavy 3 * 46 41 46 40 ® 40 ® Lime—Duty; 10$ cent ad val 50 .. Rockland, com. $ bbl. ® 85 do heavy @ Lumber* Woods, Staves,etc. —Duty: Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, free. Spruce, East. $ M ft 16 00 ® 18 00 Southern Pine 30 00 @ 85 00 . White Pine Box B’ds 80 00 ® White JJine Merch. Box Boards 33 00 ® 85 00 Clear Pine 80 00 ®10O 00 Laths, Eastern. $ M .... ® 3 00 Poplar and Whi e wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 ® 65 00 Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 00 ® 90 00 60 00 ® 65 00 Oak and Ash Maple and Birch ... Black Walnut 35 00 @ 40 00 100 00 @120 00 STAVES— White oak, do do . do do do do do do do do do pipe, $ M. exLa @275 00 .. pipe, hoavy .. Dibe, pipe, light. .. pipe, culls .JIO 00 hhd., extra. .. hhd., heavy hhd., light, .. hhd., culls. bbl., extra. bbl., heavy, bbl.,light., hhd., light.. _ HEADING —White oak, hhd HahoranTt - Cedar, @225 00 @175 00 ®170 00 00 @2 <5 00 @175 00 @11) 00 @100 00 @150 00 @115 00 @ 90 00 @ 60 00 ©120 00 @ 80 00 @150 00 Rose* wood —Duty free. Mahogany St. Domin¬ go crotch®*, $ ft.. Honduras 4 8 Cedar, Nuevitas do do do Mansanilla Mexican Florida. $ c. ft. Rosewood, R. Jan $ ft) do 20 12 12 12 ® ® 8 © 8 ® 25 ® 5 @ 4 & Bahia 50 8 6 Molasses.— See special report. Nail®—Duty: cut 1$; wrought 2$; horse shoe 2 cents $ ft). Cut, 4d.@00d. $ 100 ft) 5 6’4® 5 75 Clinch '. 7 124© 7 25 Horse shoe, fd (6rt)$ ft) 3 28® Horse-hoe, pressed... ® Copper 42 ® Yellow metal. 26 ® 13 © Zinc M @ 50 Bhoulders, Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30cents $ gallon; crude Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 $ cent ad val. Turpeut’e, < f ,$280ft) 4 95 ® 5 00 Tar, Am rlc*. bbl 3 25 © 4 00 Pi ch 4 » 0 @ 4 25 Rosin, common 3 7> @ do strainedandNo.2.. .3 87 ® 4 124 do No. 1 4 2o ® 5 00 . .... . Pale and Extra (2S0 lbs.) Spirits turp., Am. $ g. 5 25 ® 8 00 57© 60 11 Oakum—Duty fr.,$ ft> 8@ Cake—Duty: 20 $ centad val. City thin obl’g, in bbls. Oil $ ton.61 50 @62 00 do West, thin in bags. 59 00@60 00 obl’g, do 54 00 @55 00 Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1: burning fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val. Oils — Olive, qs(gold per case 4 00© do in casks.$ gall.. 1 6 > @ Palm $ ft) 1 4© Linseed,city...$ gall. 1 23 @ paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents $ ft). Carolina 100 ft>10 51 @11 50 East India,dressed.... S 75 @ 9 25 Salt-^Duty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 ft); bulk, 18 cents $ 100 ft). Turks Islands $ bush. Whale @ Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 2 00 @ 2 05 do fine, Ashton’s(g’d) 2 60 @ do fine, Worthlngt’s a 00 @ 3 10 Onondaga,coin.flnebis. @ do refined winter.. 87 Sperm,crude 2 25 @ 2 30 do do unbleach. @ 2 40 Lard oil 1 SO @ 1 35 .... Red oil, city distilled . Paraffine, 28 — 80 gr.. 65 62 @ 70 © 75 @ 35 @ 40 52 @ (free). Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ ft); Paris white and whiting, l cent $ ft); dry ochres, 56 centi $ 100 ft>: oxidesofzim, If cents $ ft); ochre, ground in oil, | 50 $100 ft>; Spanish brown 25 $ cektad val; China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian rea and vermilion 25 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $ 10 $ ton. Litharge, City $ft) U* Lead, red,City. © 114 do white, American, pure, in oil @ 14 . do white, American, puie, dry Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1 do’ white, American, do No. 1,in oil whi e, French, In oil 124® • • 94® 8 10 @ 12 334© 14 Ochre,yellow, French, 00 dry $ 100 ft) 2 25 @ do 8 @ lu gr’u in oil.$ ft) Spanish brown, dry $ 100 ft) 1 co @ 25 do 9 gr’d in oil.$ ft) 8® Paris wh., No.I$l00ft> .... @ Whiti'ig, Amer 2 @ "h 39 Vermilion,Chinese$ ft) 1 59 © 15 do Trieste 1 0 > @ do 35 Cal. & Eng.. 1 30 @ 85 do American.... 25 @ Venet.red(N.C.)$cwt 3 00 <@ ; 25 Carmine,city made$tt>16 00 @20 00 China clay $ ton32 <0 @ Chalk $ bbl. 4 00 @ 6 00 Chalk, block....$ ton*2 5 @25 0j Chromeyellow. ..$ ft) 15® 35 Barytes. 39 00 @42 75 Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents; refined, 40 »ents $ gallon. 20 Crude,40®47grav.$gal. 194® Refined, free .. .... do do 210 ft) bgs. do do $ bush. Solar coarse Fine screened do .... .... @ @ $ pkg. bgs F. F @ @ 50 © do in bond 31 © 36 25 24 @ Naptha, refined Residuum $ bbl. 8 00 @ 3 62$ . . Parts—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 $ cent ad val. Blue Nova Scotia$ ton @ .. 240 ft) @ @ Refined, $ ft) pure Nitratesoda . . 94 Timothy,reaped $ bus 2 75 @ 3 <0 Canary $ bus 5 5J @ 6 00 @ .... do Am. rough $ bus 2 75 © do Calcutta ...gold 2 20 @ 2 25 Shot—Duty: 2| cents $ ft). Drop $ ft) 11J@ Buck 1-4® Linseed,Am.clean$tee Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk, 35 $ cent. Tsatlees, No. 1 @3. $ ft) 11 25 @12 00 superior, .......10 00 @10 50 » 09 @ 9 fO Canton,re-reel.Nol©2. 8 25 @ 8 5 Japan, superior 19 50 @12 50 medium,No3@4. do Medium 9 00 China thrown @10 i0 @ Goat,Curacoa$ ft» cur do Buenos A.. .gold do VeraCruz .gold do Tampico. ..gold 42$@ 8j @ 40 @ do do Matamoras.gold do Madras ....each @ 814@ 40 @ 4C @ Payta .. do Cape Deer,SanJuan$E>gold do Bolivar ...gold do Honduras..gold do Sisal gold do Para gold do do 44 45 424 82 324 50 50 @ 474 45 @ 37$@ 474 49 .. .. cent ad val. 17 @ ...$ft>. plates, $1 50 $ 100 ft)s. Plates.foreign $ ft) gold 6|@ domestic 1U @ 6* 10$ Spices,—Bee special report. 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cts $ ft); over 11 cents, 3$ cents $ ft* and 10 $ cent ad val. (Store prices.) over 18 @ German 14 @ American, spring 12 @ 21 @ 104® 114® 23 16 15 23 1*4 *0 J8|@ 16 Amer c . , n cast English, spring English blister Jinglisu machinery.... Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Sicily $ ton.. 125 00 @225 00 White Nova Scotia Tallow—Duty :1 cent $ ft). American,prime, coun¬ try and city $ ft)... 12 @ 12$ .. .... . d> Malaga, sweet do Claret, In hhds. do 90® do do . 2 66 65® v* ,(0 09® 25 66 11 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered $2 to $3 5i $ 100 ft), and 15 $ cent ad val. No. 0 to 18™.174@2?i$ No. 19 to 26.... No.27 to 36.... ct off list. $ct off list $ ct. off list. 39 35 Telegraph, No. 7 to il Plain $ ft> 8j® 47® Brass (less 20 per cent ) Copper do Wool—Duty dinary fore 57 . 91 ® „ Imported : in the “ or¬ condition as now and hereto practiced.” Class 1 Wools—The value whereof—Clothing at the last pbice whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less $ fl>, 10 cents $ ft) and 11 $ cent, ad val.; over 32 cents $ ft), 12 cents $ ft) and 10 $ cent, ad val ; when imported washed, double these rates Class 2 —Combing IFoofo-The value where¬ of at the last place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents less $ ft), ID cents $ ft) and 11 cent, ad val.; over 32 cents or $ $ ft., 12 $ ft) and 10 $ cent, ad val. Class 3 .—Carpet Wools and other cents similar Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the imported scoured, three times duty as if imported unwashed. Amer., Sax. fleece $ ft) do do 6. ® full bl’d Merino. 4 and 4 Merino.. Extra, pulled 88 ® 80 ® 24 ® 18 ® 1« ® ' common.... do washed 28 ® ® .... ....... Mexican, unwashed.... Smyrna,unwashed Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 $ 100 lbs.; sheets 24 cents $ lb. Sheet.... $ lb 114® 11| I’reiglits— To Liverpool : Cotton $ lb Flour $ bbl; Petroleum d. s. Tobacco.—See special report. Wines and Llanors—Liquors —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per fallon, other liquors, $2.50. Wines— )uty: value net 50 cents $ gal¬ over lon 20 oents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over 5i and not over 100, 50 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent aa valorem: over $1 $ gallon. $1 $ gal¬ $ cent ad val. 8. @ £-15 @30 @ 5 0 @17 7 Heavy goods... $ ton @25 0 Corn, b’k& bags$ bus. Wheat, bulk and bags Beef $ tee. Pork $ bbl. 7 74 @ 4 0 @ 3 0 : $ tee. 27 26 24 75 I. C. Coke 11 00 @l> 5u Terne Charcoall2 70 @13 12 Terne Coke.,.. 10 00 @10 25 .. 18® 26 ® 85 @ .... washed Beef Pork Wheat @ @ English (gold) 23$@ Plate8,char. I.C.$ boxl3 00 @18 @ .. $ bbl. .. 89 .. 36 ® 18 ® 81 ® .. @25 0 @35 0 @ 3 0 Oil .. .. 86 .. . Flour Petroleum • 35 80 23 33 28 ® common,w... African, unwashed 45 ® Valparaiso, unwashed.. S. Amer. Mestiza, nnw.. Entre Rios, washed 63 ® 65 45 ® 4t> 45 @ 50 Texas Peruvian, unwashed do the 50 Superfine 1, pulled California,unwashed... Tin —Duty: pig,bars, and block,15$ cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cent afi va*. lon and 25 1 I’O 1 15 9(@ do 35 00® 60 in cases. Champagne To London do do do 4) 8 50 1 30 4 50 7 00 85 50® 70® Heavy goods... $ ton $ ft) (gold) (gold) 4 75 ....® do dry.... do . Teas.—See special report .... @ @ 2 40 Calcined city mills @ 2 50 Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ct; lams, bacon, andlard,2 ts $ ft). Beef,plainme8s$ bbl.,16 00 @23 00 do extra mess.. *..**33 00 @27 00 Pork,mets, new/..*...23 25 @23 50 do mas* >ld @ .... Calcined,eastern $ bbl do Sherry 8 Oil Sugar.—See special report Banca Straits.. 4 50 50® do do do Marseilles S. American Cordova Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents $ ft) or under, 2$ cents; . 75® 75® 75® 75® 75® 5f@ Whisky(n bend) 36® .(gold) 2 0 Burgundy Port, do 85® 1 90® Sherry do Madeira do Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and English, cast, $ ft) do 4 4 4 4 3 8 Hiv. Pellevoisin do Seignette. do ArzacSeignette do P Romieux.... do Rum—Jamaica do No. Soap—'Duty: 1 cent $ ft), and 25 do 4 *24 £0 @ 4S @ 474® @ Chagres ...gold Puerto Cab.gold Castile 75® ....® do . 45 @ VeraCruz .gold do @ .. gold do Seignette Alex. 15 4 cent $ lb ; canary, $1 $ bushel of 60 ft); and grass seeds, 30 $ cent v&l* Clover $ft> 13 @ 13$ do A. 9 tO Or® IQ 00 4 ... Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, Taysaams, No. 1 @ ... 10 66 4; 90® 5 Lrger freres Cog. do of) ./* @ f *°® Other br’ds 00 06 ofl • ••• Wines— cents; @ 94® 8i@ ■ do do do do 00 ....® . .. gold • Jules Robin.... Marrette & Co. Vine Grow. Co. 9 jg 13 17 16 Gin—Differ, brands do 3 00® D<>m-c—N.E. Rum.cur. Bourbon Whisky.cur. ....® . Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2$ cents; Crude ,, St. CToix Plaster .... (gold) 4 90® Hennessy (gold) 4 <« Otard, Dup. ACo.do 4 @ Pinet,Castil.&Co,do 4 8rt@ 75® Renault & Co.. do 6 00® J. Vassal & Co., do .. . Skills—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. 7 ■ @ 85 @ J. & F. Martell Pellevoisin 50 @ Cadiz .... 12 Brandy— Rice—Duty: cleaned 2$ cents $ ft).; refined and partially refined, 3 nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft). Naval do @20 50 14® 15 16 @ 18 12 @ 13 $ ft) . . bbl., culls.. Sod oak ) hhd.,h’vy. UU1 do 14 !4 14 15 Kerosene, 29 middle. — ® @ ® ]1 ® Mexican 46 47 30$ ® Heml’k, B. A.,Jcc.. l’t. n.in 40 10 lo 10 .. Bank Straits @ ® 294® 30® .... ® 30 Nuevitas.... Mansanilla 42 46 47 19 .... bellies do ft>.- ® 38 ® 40 ® 44 do do do do prime, Lard, Elams, (American wood).. 70 85 15 00 20 0) @ © © @ © (gold) (gold) (gold) (gold) © Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1$ cents $ ft). Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 lb ; Boiler and Plate, 1J cents $ ft); Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1$ to 1 £ cents $ lb; •Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents $ ®>. Pig, Scotch,No 1. $ ton 42 O'l® 44 00 Pig, American, No. 1.. 44 00® Bar, Refl’d emg&Amer 85 0.® 90 00 Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold) 92 50® 105 00 ican, Refined do 10 7 ® logs 80 © © @ ® .. .. Domingo, do Port-au-Platt, crotches do Port-au-Platt, ad val. Para, Fine Para, Medium Para, Coarse St. ordinary logs .... [October 12,1867. @ 5 6 @ 5 0 $ bbl. $ bush. @ 8 .. 6 9 8* Corn To Glasgow (By Steam): Flour 3 $ bbl. .. Wheat @ $ bush. .. @ Corn,hulk and bags. _ . . Petroleum (sai]’" @5 . Heavy goods...$ ton* Oil Beef.’. $ toe. Pork $ bbl. To Havre : Cotton # ft> Beef JLICvA and pork.. $ bbl Meaeurem. g,d*.$ ton — " %r ,13 t2S @6 I @ 4 ( .. . * * m 00 @ . _ JlA * ^ 10 00 @ Petroleum...../..... 5 ^ Lard* tallow, cut m t eto~.. $ 9> Am, pound pear!.. 8 00 f It Bankers and Brokers. and Brokers. LETTERS ofELLERS. for trav- Vermilye credit & Co., RANKERS. EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS. No. 44 Wal Street. New York. SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery all Bankers BONDS BOUGHT AND STOCKS AND AT 54 A. M. Late Pres. SOLD* THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. James G. King’s Sons, Street. William W. W. Loring. Foute, Gayoao Bank, Memphis, Tenn. issues of UNITED STATES BROKERS, BANKERS AND BROAD STREET AND 36 NEW STREET. Government Securities ofall kinds, Gold, 38 „iew York State 7 per cent. 2d, & 3d seriees Our “ MITATION ” has a very costs hut half much as Patent Reversible e BROAD STREET. George Pearce & Commercial Importers of Cards. White Goods, Laees and Emb’s, Linen Handk’fto, British and Continental. WASHINGTON MILLS, BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO., BANKERS and CHICOPEE MANUF. CO., VICTORY MANUF. collections on favorable terms RANKERS, ° AND DEALERS IN BULLION, SPECIE UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Wall Street. Hatch, Foote RANKERS MILTON John O’Neill & Sons, CO., MILLS, Lindsay, Chittick & Co., IMPORTERS MANUFACTURERS OF Sewing: Silks, Machine Twist Langley & Co., COMMISSION Dres|i Goods, Goods, AMERICAN COTTON AND WOOLEN GOODS. Linens, Ac., A, NOTES exchanged for 150 & 152 DUANE MERCHANTS FOB Irish and Scotch SECURITIES, FIVE-TWENTY BONDS, on the most liberal ;erM8, and without delay. IMPORTERS and others supplied with GOLD at mar set rates, and Coin on hand for immediate delivery. No. 12 WALL STREET. 84 CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK. MILLS AT PATERSON, N. J. Wm. C. And Fancy White GOLD, &c. Embroidery, Organzlne, and Tram. COMMISSION AND MERCHANTS, British Staple, & Co.., DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT of SEVEN-THIRTY Co., 70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK, SECURITIES. accounts from MERCHANTS, ues Paper Collars. most economical collar ever invented. VERMILYE A CO. Cohen & Hagen, All superior finish, and real silk, which it equals in and durability. Agents for the sale of the Bonnty Loan. Nos. 43 A 45 WHITE STREET. MID as AGENTS FOB and Sell at Market Rates. No. 1 Silk, Imitation Oiled Silk. Compound Interest Notes of 1864 A 1865 Bought and Sold. otherynd allow interest on dally balances, subject to AND SILKS, CHINA and Manufacturers of Oiled Harney & Co., E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. UNITED STATES Bake Importers of „ SILK AND COTTON HANDKERCHIEFS, ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS. BANKERS, Solicit Co., BROADWAY, EUROPEAN AND LIBERAL Bank, and Railroad Stocks and Bought and Sold. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to check at sight. Collections made in all the States and Canadas. ALL No. 353 INCLUDING Bonds Buy S. H. Pearce & S T.O C K 8 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, 6 “ “ 1864, “ 6 “ 1865, 6Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, ’13-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, iPer Cent Currency Certificates. State, NO. 24 Commercial Cards. appearance & Loring, Foute Gilliss, 479 THE CHRONICLE. 1867.] October 12, STREET, NEW YORK. From Numerous Mills. 17 & 19 WHITE STREET, NEW YORK. ;he new Wm. No. 53 No. RANKERS, WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. Securities. Interest or Sight Draft Check. 56 WALL , Silk Mixtures, Smith, PLACE, NEW YORK. Agents for WILLIAM Agents for KIRK A SON, Linen Manufacturers and Bleachers, Offer to Jobbers only. BELFAST, IRELAND. John Graham, J. & P. Coats’ COMPANY, STREET, BOSTON. Manufacturer of Duncan, Sherman & Co., BANKERS, WOVEN world: also, COMMERCIAL CREDITS, Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope West Indies. Sontn America, and the United States CORSETS, SKIRT MATERI¬ LACE, COTTON YARNS, Ac., ISSUE 234 CHURCH CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the nse of Travelers abroad and in the United States, available in all the principal cities of the BEST STREET, NEW YORK Wm. G. Watson & m Son, MANUFACTURER* OF SIX-CORD CABLED Thread. ALS, WEBBINGS, BINDINGS BED CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., For use in W. D. Simonton. Anderson & 33 PARK MACHINE AND SEWING SILK, BUTTON-HOLE TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C. STREET, NEW YORK, 28 STATE MERCHANTS, COTTON. SPOOL FOR BARING BROTHERS A Fancy Casslmeres. Agents for the Glasgow Thread Company’s Also Ward, York New W. W. Coffin, Treas., 119 CHAMBERS STREET. made on approved securities. Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper. Collections both inland and foreign promptly made. Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated. AGENTS HANDK’FS, AC. Street. Chnrch 185 COMMISSION Advances S. G. & G. C. i C. Holt & Co., of Exchange, Governments, Bonds, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable allowed on Deposits subject to Co., Beavers. Dealers In Bills Stocks, Gold, Woolen 198 A 200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK. LINENS, LIN EN CAMB’C Co., Globe Importers of IRISH SOUTTER & Thompson & Co., JOHN A HUGH AUCHIXCLOSS, SOLE AGENTS IN NEW YORK. No. 108 Dnane Street. Brand & Gihon, UPERIOR MACHINE TWIST AND Riker & SEWING Co., BROKERS IN MINING STOCKS, NO. 5 NEW STREET and SILKS, No. 335 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. WORKS PATBBSON, N. J. 80 BROADWAY. Importers A Commission Merchants, 42 & 44 MURRAY STREET. IRISH A SCOTCH LINEN GOODS, In fall assortment for the John Bloodgood & Co., 22 WILLIAM DEALERS IN STREET, NEW YORK. GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES. Interest allowed on AND deposits of Gold andCnrren 8r, subjectto accounts ofsight, and particular atten on given to check at country banks and banker LINEN GOODS. Strachan & Malcomson, IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS FOB RISK AND SCOTCH 40 Murray LINENS, Street, New York. Jobbing and Clothing Trade. Agents for the sale of WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’ WHITE LINENS, AC. BURLAPS, BAGGING, FLAX SAIL DUCK, AC, 480 THE CHRONICLE. Commercial Cards. Commercial [October 12, 1867. Cards. Commercial Cards. NOTICE TO THE CONSUMERS OF THE Petrie & Go., GENUINE Everett & DANNE- SWEDISH 28 State Street, MORA IRON. 75 & 71 LEONARD STREET. I beg to announce that I have this day entered into Jessop & Sons, of Sheffield of the above Iron, which future, will be stamped contract with Messrs. W. for the whole Annual Make a We invite the attention of the Jobbing Trade Only in AGENTS FOR Sc And to which I request trade. Germantown Woolen BUCK Goods, GLOVES, Foreign KID, CLOTH AND BERLIN GLOVES. D. Napier (late of Becar, Napier & Co.) Agent Cor S. Courtauld Sc Co.’s ENGLISH And for this Ikon, and for Blister and Extra Cast Steel made from the Iron, at their establishments. Nos. 91 & 93 John Street, New' York, and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed¬ Linen Morris, Tasker & Co., CRAPES, Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red Offers and OFFICE AND FURNISHING a new GOODS, George Hughes & Co., ScLnerln®8 Particular 198 Sc 200 CHURCH 15 GOLD LINEN CHECKS, &e., WHITE GOODS, approve,! 1 p ove<1 Carpenter, Commission Merchant,—United States Bonded Warehouse. NOS. 263 & 265 WEST PEARL STREET, CINCINNATI. Tools, &c. N. 292 PEARL J. Pope & Bro. STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET NEW YORK And F. W. HAVES Sc F. & F. A. Co., OF Dana, IRON, OLD AND NEW, Scrap Iron and other Metals, Lo¬ comotives, Kui<roa4 Chairs Sc Spikes. Old Rails Re-rolled Exchanged for or COTTON BROKER, CINCINNATI, OHIO. STREET, NEW YORK, THE ESTABLISHED IN 1826. Singer ManufacturingCo. 458 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Proprietors and Manufacturers of the world A. B. Holabird & CINCINNATI., O., re SEWING MACHINES, Sawyer, Wallace & Co., Real Brussels Imitation Goods, COMMISSION Laces, MERCHANTS, ENGINE AND MILL NEW YORK. 73 LEONARD STREET, NEW YORK. Byrd & • day. REED’S PATENT GOLD PREMIUM WHEAT AND CORN MILLS. STREET, NEW YORK. Jr. Sc End, Glasgow. Offer for sale, IN own 1SS CO»8. Parmele Brothers, SUCCESSORS TO H. L. A. Duck, Weights. COAL, Wm. G. hand. POLHEMUS Sc CO MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS. Office .. Threads, THREADS, G. Falls & COTTON England & Co., AND GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Mobile, Ala. Henry Lawrence & Sons, THREADS, ETC. N. J. Co., BUYERS, Memphis, Tenn. G. Falls. Refer J. N. Falls J. C. Johnson. by permission to Caldwell & Morris, New York. WILSON, SON Sc CO. JOS. H. WILSON, Merchandise, ROBT. N. WILSON Prodnce, Stock, Note Brokers. Warehouse and office corner of Lombard and ick streets, No. 39 East End, Exchange Place and Frede Baltimore, Md. MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE Sprlgg, cashier; J. Sloan. Jr., cashier, Ba timore, Md. And by permission to Jacob He ala * Refer to D. BROTHERS, STREET, NEW YORK. TENNESSEE. use, Brooklyn. 65 Commerce Street, , BROKER, COTTON FACTORS of Beaver _. Cummins, MEMPHIS, and 32 Pine Street. on L; COTTON PARMELE & BROS. Of all the Best Kinds for Family and in Mills at Patterson STBXBT. Chicago, Ill*. Yards: West22d street, near 10th Avenue, New York, Street, corner SEEDS MERCHANTS, WASHINGTON and other flrst-cla6s Dis¬ • Large Stock always GRAIN, AND PROVISIONS* COMMISSION STREET, NEW YORK, BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their tilleries, Kentucky. M CHAMBERS STREET. N.Y. All Widths and Particular attention ENGLISH AND AMERICAN COAL. X8 UNSURPASSED FOK HAND AND MACHINE SEWING. THOS. RUSSELL, Sole Agent, § FLOUR, MERCHANTS, 58 BROAD PARASOLS, CLARK, Built of solid French Burr Rock. given to Southern patronage. AND COMMISSION Spool Cotton. 95 CHAMBERS our IMPROVED CIRCULAR SAWMILL. It Is superior to all others in strength, durahilitv and simplicity, will cut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumber DISTILLERS Hall, UMBRELLAS AND BARBOUR MANUFACTURERS. Particular attention is called to J. M. Cummings & Co., Blair, Densmore & Co., Manufacturers of SEWING-MACHINE Co, NO. 47 BROAD STREET, Laces, Corsets, Ac. SHOE Burnham per Swiss Sc French White Linen ST., CINCINNATI, O. Erastus new. for family use and manufacturing purposes. Branches and Agencies throughout the civilized world, SENI FOR CIRCULAR. Edgings, — MERCHANTS, Special attention given to filling orders for Spinners SINGER Draperies, Cotton So felted. Gano, Wright & Co., NO. 27 MAIN Lace Curtains. Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN Consignments and Orders nowned Goods, THEODORE MERCHANT, Cotton, Flour, Grain and Provisions. CO, Belfast, & IMPORTERS Mile COMMISSION CINCINNATI. PI S, CO., Banbridge. Delisle Machine PRODUCE COMMISSION 67 WALL DICKSONS’ FERGUSON Sc French Dress J. Chapin, METALS. PATENT LINEN THREAD Sole Agents ior Banking"® FOREIGN Sc AMERICAN RAILROAD SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS, Broad “y’ Mercan,,le an<< Daniel H. STREET, NEW YORK. Thomas STREET, SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, 59 Specifications prepared for Store* attention paid to the most forms of iron and Fire-proof construction. WAREHOUSES: Importers Sc Commission Merchants, A ENGINEERS Stock of the above at 364 BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN STREET. JOHN Co., BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Designs and Works, Philadelphia. Gas and Steam Fitters’ DKERCHIEFS, MEN’S Muslin CO Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, HOSIERY Oscar 111 Manufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street and Lawn HAN Street, Boston. Pascal Iron importer of the special attention of the Leufsta, in Sweden, 29th April/1867. CARL EMANUEL DE GEER, Proprietor. WM. JESSOP & SONS, in referring to the above notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers ot, Iron and Sreel, that they are prepared to receive orders eral Alexander E. T. Littell & ARCHITECTS Sc CIVIL Hosiery, Sc OF CHINA AND JAPAN. LEUFSTA, W. JESSOP Sc SONS. DRAWERS, ' AUGUSTJINE HEARD To our Large Stock of DOMLSTIC SHIRTS Co., Boston, FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC . 192 FRONT STREET, NEW YORK. USE, Com Lord & Robinson, Balt.; Tannamu, McIBvaine & Co., N. Y.; Ambrose Rucker, President 1st Nation¬ al Bank, Lynchburg, Ya.