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THU §attorag Ponitot, m& giwumrott fowml iawto’ fcftte, (StommMriaJ Mimw, NEWSPAPER, A WEEKLY REPRESENTING the industrial and commercial interests of the united states. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1867. VOL. 5. Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Rodman, Fisk & Co., Satterlee & NO. 121. (Bankers and Brokers. Co., L. P. Morton & Co., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN TO BROADWAY A 18 HEW STREET. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, NO. 18 NASSAU STREET, BANKERS, , — Buy and sell at market rates : Six Per Cent. Bonds of 1881, Ten Forties, Five-Twenty Bonds, all issues ; Seven-Thirty Notes, all series; 10 BROAD STREET, STOCKS AND BONDS STERLING EXCHANGE BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, At Sight or Sixty Dayt; also, Circular Note* and Compound Interest Notes, and Gold and Silver Coin. QOVERNHINT Letters of Credit for Travelen* Um, on SBCURITIBSS, Registered Interest collected and Coupons cashed taken in exchange for the new without charge. 7-30Notes, all series, . L. P. (58 Old Broad Street, LondoaJ Consolidf^ed 5-20 Bonds, on terms advantageous to and Importers supplied with Coin for duties at lowest market rates. Mail and telegraph securities promptly executed. orders will receive our personal attention. Deposits received, and interest allowed on balances. Collec,i0Mmadeon all points & ^ Bankers and Commission merchants bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬ chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on depjMts. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco. &c., consigned to ourselves or to our Street, New York. of promptly execute orders for the Purchase or sale Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad BANKERS on favorable terms. References Waltxb H. H. Cnuaxn Oaxlst. BANKERS, 2T A 29 Pine AND RANKERS 12 NE>V BROKER & 14 BROAD STK3ETS, Members of the Stock, Gold and Government Boards, Dealers in Governments and other STOCKS, Street, New York. DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE AND NEW ORLEANS. Temple & Marsh, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Dealers in Government Securities, &c., on Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travellers, able in all parts avail¬ No. 9 Wall NO. 19 BROAD Commission, Street, cor. New. on George Deposits. Farnham, . (Late of G. S. Robbins & Son,) Pott, Davidson & Jones, BANKERS AND BROKERS, (Meant. Brown Bros. A Co.’s new building^ 69 A 61 WALL STREET, NEW YOKE? Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Government Securities. Accounts of Banks, Banksrs, and Merchants receiv¬ favorable terms. Interest allowed on depos¬ its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬ tions famished to correspondents. Rcrbsmobs : James Brown, Esq., of Meant. Brown Brothers A Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬ ident of ths Chemical National Bank; James H. °* *** Mow PAPER, COMMERCIAL AND .SOLD STOCKS, BONDS. GOLD, &c., BOUGHT ON COMMISSION. BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Brokers. Stock9, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold at market rates, on commission only. Interest allowed on balances. Advances made on ap¬ proved securities. Particular attention given to orders for the purchase or sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells, Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks. All orders faithfully executed. JOSIAH HEDDEN, ISAIAH C. BABCOCK, LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN. Bussing, BROKERS^ John Munroe & Co., AMERICAN BANKERS, AND No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers in all 48 Pine Street, New York. parts of Europe, eta, eta. Also Ccmmeieiai Credits. B. Jr., Warren, Kidder & Co., Murray, BROKER IN BANKERS, Government and other Securities, 27 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exaented. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED <m Franklin M. Ketchutm. Thos. Belknap, BANKERS AND BANKERS 6c 27 WALL STREET t receive our Personal Attention, J, Gxlston, j0h» s. Bussing NO. 69 NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS deposits, subject to check at sight. George: Phipps. Jr. KETCHUM, PHIPPS 6c BELKNAP, _ Fred. Wendell Jackson. Hedden, W inchester& Co ALSO, on Gelston & STREET, NEW YORK. Henry Jackson. of Europe. Interest Allowed ?^k N* G tLD AND GOV¬ SECURITIES, 6cct% RONDS, ERNMENT Rankers and of Gold and Currency , DEALERS IN Securities. Interest allowed on deposits subject to check at sight. Bunn, Jackson Bros. Wm. Winslow, Lanier & Co., wn. Chabus E. Mttwou, J. H. Fonda, Pres. National Mech. Banking Ass., N.Y. C. B. Blair, Pres’t Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. Bell, Faris & Co., wv Lavi P. Morton, : Securities. ed Telegraphic orders executed for the Porchaae and 28 BROAD r ‘ Sale of Stocks and Bonds in London and New York. 6c STREET, NEW YORK, Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received LONDON, Europe and the East. J. L. Brownell & Bro., BROKERS, Buy and Sell at Market Rates, and K. GILLIAT & CO., correspondents, Messrs. Liverpool. BANK OF Available in an the principal towmi and dtlse ot STREET, NEW YORK Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds and Gold BANKERS AND BROKERS, ALL UNITER STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight Draft. Make Collections on lkvorable terms, UNION NO. 44 BROAD Taussig, Fisher & -Co., No. 32 Broad aitd m Wilson, Callaway & Co., miscellaneous purchase and sale of all MORTON, BURNS A CO.f .. ^Merchants customs Orders for NEW TORN. BROKERS, No, 24 Broad Street, New Government securities, railroad York. 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. Frank & Gans, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN U. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. No. i4 WALL STREET S. THE CHRONICLE 482 [October 19, 18(57.] Eastern Bankers. [Bankers and Brokers. Southern Bankers. & Sayles, Jacquelin & De Coppet, Dupee, Beck BROKERS, STOCK NO* t6 NEW ilallroAd STREET, N.Y* No. M STATE Itoefca, Honda, UMH A. Gold, and Govinimeut Seenritlea, STREET, BOSTON. HENRY SAYLES JAMES BECK, DUPES, Page, Richardson & Co 114 STATE STREET, BOSTON, BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON ' COMMISSION. BOUGHT AND SOLD ON Aon H. Jaoquxum. Eon Do Own*. Conner & Na. I Broad John 6c Smith McGinnis, Jr ^ Bxpecial attention paid to Collection*. Refer to Duncan, Sherman A Co., New YorkDrexei A Co., Philadelphia; Tha Franklin Bank! and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. H. Maury & Qo Richmond, V&., Charles D. Carr A Co. Augusta, Gal CO., PARIS* 54 CAMP Southern Bankers. on Deposits received and interest allowed same as with Incorporated Bank. Bonds and Loans negotiated fur Railroad Companies. Bank of the LIVERPOOL. shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen Liverpool, and to grant mercantile London and credits upon West Indies, them for use in China, the East and South America, &c Marginal credits the Loudon House issued for the same purposes. VISSER, Exchange Place, New York. Heath & Hughes, National Trust PHILADELPHIA. 423 PENN $ 1,000,000 iU uirers Bankers Banks to Mrneei on Company STREET, PITTSBURGH, ai Capitol liberal terms. PA. i.$100,000 Particular attention given ceeds promptly remitted. dueotom: Joseph T. Bailey, Nathan miles, Benjamin Rowland, Jrn Samuel A. Biapham, SIMON DE 20 STREET, Capital The subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys in the United States, is prepared to make advances ;/Westem Bankers. Republic, 809 A 811 CHESTNUT Drake Kleinwort&Cohen and Collections and remittances promptly attended to. National • an oi Draw STREET, NEW ORLEANS, Merchant? National Bank, New York, Bank of Liverpool, England. BROAD LONDON AND Co., RANKERS, McGinnis, Commission. on Burke & CoMMxitoiA.it Credits for the purchase of Merehsa Also in England and the Continent Tbai Ox edits for ths use of Trar*Uera ahfMd. STREET, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Exchange, Commercial Paper and Gold, Purchased or Sold on 4 „ 8. c.t AND JOHN MUNROE & BANKERS AND BROKERS. MO. Wilson, Charleston, BANKERS & DEALERS Uf FOREIGN A DOMESTIC EXCHANGE, SPECIE. BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND BuNDt% iUO USUI Washington M. Smith. Street, to collections, and pro Edward B. One, William Ends*, J. F. Stark & Co., Osgood Welsh, Fredsrie A* Hoyt, BANKERS & William H. Rhawm William H. Rhawm, President, Late Cashier of the Central National Joseph P. Mumtoxd, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia National Bank. BROKERS, PITTS HU IIGII. Do a general Banking, Exchange and Collection busi¬ ness. New York Correspondents National Bank North America; Knautn, Nachod & Kuhne. BANKERS ^CONURISSION BROKERS P. Hayden. SECURITIES, IN GOVERNMENT Washington. AND GOLD, RAILROAD AND MINING STOCKS, 13 Broad Street, New York. Deposits received, subject to Check, and Interest al¬ lowed. A. HAWLEY HEATII. A T. W. B. HUGHES, Member of N. Y. Stock Ex. DAMS, KIMBALL A MOORE, BANKERS, 14 Wall Street, No. New York. Buv and Sell at Market Rates Government Securities, of all issues, and execute orders for Che purchase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD, f ^interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency subject to check at sight. Tyler, Wrenn & Co., BANKERS, NO. 18 WALL Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, «fcc. Orders for purchase and sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed. Chicago. Cohen & Hagen, BANKERS, AND AND Street* Central National 31S BROADWAY. WASHINGTON, H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.), Pbss*t. WM. 8. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Depository and Financial Agent oftlie United State*. We buy and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and uive especial attention to bus!ness connected with the several departments of the Government* Full information with regard to Government loans at all times cheerfully furnished. R. H. Maury & Bank, descriptions of Government Bonds- City and County accounts received on terms most fa vorable to our Correspondents. of the United States Collections made in all parts an 'Canadas. WILLIAM A. a General Business. Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Co., & WHEELOCK, President. William H. Sanfobd. Cashier. State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ac, bought and sold on commission. Erf Deposits received and Collections made on all accessible points in the United States. N. Y. Correspondent, Vxrmilyx A Co. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. CAPITAL $1,000,00 SURPLUS 450,000 RICHARD ernment Securities, Bonds, Gold attention given to Collections. Exchange, Gov¬ and Silver. Prompt and remitted for on on BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. Tenth National Bank. Ca pital $1,000,0u 0. No. 29 BROAD STREET. Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers and Dealers’ Accounts solicited. J. H. Stout, Cashier. D. L. ROSS, Preside accessible points day of payment.; UNION BANK OF LONDON. FOR SALE. FIRST Ca., Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York. E. II. Buikly & Co., Brokers, New York. Byrd & 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 Compan}'. Company of Hartford. Agency New York, Charles Walsh. Pre>ident Bank of Mobile. Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Ala. Charles D. Carr & Co., AND BROKBBI, AUGUSTA, GA. COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED FOB. NATIONAL BANK OF Cincinnati, Ohio. John W. : & BANKERS GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK COLLECTIONS MADE at all Ellis, Pres. Lewis Worthington, V.Pres. Theodore Stan wood, Cashier. CAPITAL $1,000,000 SURPLUS......$314,852 89 Collections made on all accessible points and promptly remitted for at best rates. Directors * John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L. B. Harrison, Jas. A. Frazer, R. M. Bishop, Robt. Mitchell, William Woods, A. S. Winslow, Jos. Rawson. Cash Capital, $150,000. Real Capital, *1,000,000. Jos. F. Larkin & Co., BANKERS, CINCINNATI. NATIONAL RANK. 291 Fonrih Street, St., Mobile, Ala. Dealer? in Foreign and Domestic Underwriters The Tradesmen’s West NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, Jas. M. Muldon & Sons, Aetna Insurance 110 CINCINNATI, OHIO. & Dealers in RICHMOND, YA. Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notea, Babcock Bros OHIO, Banking, Collection, and Exchange T. BROOKE BANKERS AND BROKERS No. 52 St. Francis *3,000,000 : Has for sale all BOB’! JAS. L. MAURY. References Capital COLUMBUS, Do 10S H. MAURY. Hayden NO. 13 S. HIGH STREET, Government HOB’T W. B Hayden,Hutcheson & Co Checks DEALERS IN BULLION, SPECIE, UNITED STATES SECURITIES. No. 1 Wall BANK OF No. 1014 MAIN ST., STREET TYLER, ULLMANN A. CO. NATIONAL FIRST Jos. Hutcheson. BANKING HOUSE OF Jos. F. Larkin, I John Coclmower, 1 Adam Poe, Harvey Decamp, (Thomas Fox. general f partnership. J , The Marine J JohnM. Phillips. 1 Thos. Sharp. (John Gates. Company OF CHICAGO. Ould & Carrington, LAW, ATTORNEYS 111! MAIN AT STREET, ’ RICHMOND, V A. J. Young Scammon Robert Reid ...President. Manager. ^General Ranking: and Collection* promptly attended to. 19,1867.] October THE CHRONICLE. Bankers. i Western Across Established 1848. H & C A S K E L L O • j Sierra Nevadas. the THE CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD. BANKERS, ST. LOUIS, MO Government Securities, Gold and Ex¬ Collections made on all accessible points and promptly remitted for at current rates of ex- 9 488 Dealers in change THE WESTERN HALF OF THE GRrAT NATIONAL TRUNK LINE ACROSS THE CONTINENT, hange. Benoist & L. A. Being constructed with the aid one of the most important lines Co., be Pacific Coast BANKERS, Buy ef the the UOUIS, MISSOURI, ST. United States and Canadas. Also, drafts for sale. in UOUIS, MO. the construction. The local business upon the completed are as follows, in gold : Capital..$200,000 | Surplus..$150,566 ending August 31, attention given to the business of corres¬ PromDt portion surpasses all previous estimate. Gross Earnings. E. D. JONES, Cashier. pondents. of the Main Stem Line between the Two Oceans. Its line extends from Sacramento, on the tidal waters of the Paciiic, eastward across the richest and most populous parts of California, Nevada and Utah, contiguous to all the great Mining Regions of the Far West, and will meet and connect with the roads now building east of the Rocky Mountains. About ONE HUNDRED miles are now built, equipped, and in running operation to the summit of of the Sierra Nevada. Within a few days THIRTY-FIVE miles, now graded, will be added, and the track carried entirely across the mountains to a point in the Great Salt Lake Valley, whence further progress will be easy and rapid. Iron, materials and equipment are ready at hand for THREE HUNDRED miles of road, and TEN THOUSAND men are employed on Second National Bank. ST, and supervision of the United States Government, is destined to ol'communication in the world ; as it is the sole link between the Great Interior Basin, over which the immense'Overiand travel must pass, and Principal Portion and Sell Exchange on all the principal cities London and Paris and the $487,579 Operating 64 Net Earnings. Expenses. $86,548 The figures for the quarter $401,031 47 17 the rate of about two millions per annum, of which more than three-fourths are net profit; upon les than 100 miles worked. This is upon the actual, legitimate traffic of the road, with 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 $125,000. or at York Bankers. New JAY H. C. FAHNESTOCK COOKE, EDWARD DODGE, ( PITT COOKE. MOORHEAD, WM. G. COOKE, H. D. Add to this ever-expanding through traffic and the proportions of the future business become immense. Company are authorized to continue their line eastward until it shall meet and connect with the roads building east of the Rocky Monutain ranges. Assuming that they will build and control half the entire distance between San Francisco and the Missouri River, as now seems probable, tha United States will have invested in the completion of EIGHT HUNDRED AND SIXTY-FIVE miles TWENTY-EIGHT MILLION FIVE HUNDRED AND NINETY-TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS, or at the average rate of THIRTY-FIVE TIIOLSAND DOLLARS per mile—not including an absolute grant of TEN MILLION acres of the Public Lands. By becoming a joint idvestor in the magnificent enterprise, and by waiving its first lien in favor of the First Mortgage Bondholders, the general government, in effect, invites the co-operation of pri¬ vate capitalists, and has carefully guarded their interests against all ordinary contingencies. Jay Cooke & Co., now BANKERS. Corner an The Wall and Nassau Sts., New York. 3d Street, No. 114 Sonth Philadelpliia. The Fifteenth Street, Company offer for sale, through us, their First Opposite Treas. Department, Mortgage Thirty Year Six Per Cent. Coupon Bonds, Washington. t In Principal and Interest Payable in Gold Coin. connection with our houses in Philadelphia and in New York City. They are in sums of$l,000 each, with semi-annual gold coupons attached, and are selling for the present at NINETY-FIVE per cent, and accrued interest from July 1st added, in currency, at which rate they yield nearly Washington we have this day opened an office at No. 1 Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., New NINE PER CENT. UPON THE INVESTMENT. York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington These House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will be resident We shall amount partners. give particular attention to the Bonds, authorized by Act of Congress, gage purchase, and exchange of government securities of all issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, bonds and gold, and to all business of National Banks. sale, JAY COOKE & CO. Bonds which can be issuea upon it. First.—Beside the fullest benefit of the Government to the subsidy they have Company from California, worth $3,000,000. Second.—Fully half of the Co., Third.—A local busines payable in coin. BANKERS. AND as well as the interest of its Bonds . Fifth.—Altogether the has and can have Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. the subordinate lien also donations cost of grading is covered in the 150 miles now nearly completed. agreement. IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES. as already yielding three-fold the annual interest liabilities, with advantageous rates Fowrth.—The principal No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. DEALERS issued only as the work progresses, and to the same 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. March-1,1866. Lockwood & are only as the Bonds granted by the Government; and represent in all cases the first lien upon a com¬ pleted, equipped, and productiva railroad, In which have been invested Government subsidies, stock subscrip¬ tions, donations, surplus earnings, etc., ana which is worth more than three times the amount of First Mort¬ most vital no " being payable in coin, upon a legally binding and valuable portion of the competition, through line as a final security ; since it Having carefully investigated the resources, progress and prospects of the road, and the management of Company’s affairs, we cordially recommend these Bonds to Trustees, Executors, Institutions and others eminently sound, reliable and remunerative form of permanent investment. as an P. D. Roddey, J. N. Petty, CONVERSIONS OF GOVERNMEMT SECURITIES INTO R. P. Sawyers. N. P. Boulett. CENTRAL P. D. Roddey & No. 2J£ Wall NOW REALIZE FOR THE Twelve to * BROKERS. Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Robt. McKjm. The net Jno. A. McKim. earnings interest liabilities on HOLDERS FROM RATE the completed portion of the road For sale by Banks and Bankers gene BANKERS OF INTEREST. places. are very large, and are four times the Company’* of whom descriptive Pamphlets and Maps can be obtained, and by FISK 62 WALL STREET, Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft at eight, and special attention given to orders from & HATCH, BANKERS, BANKING HOUSE AND OF TURNER DEALERS BROTHERS, NO. 14 NASSAU STREET, Corner of Pine, Opposite U. S. Treasury, Financial {Agents Government feecuril We also exec ^?dT>SolS at Market Rates. ffi Gold lKur-ch,a8e on Commission. and Sale of Stocks, Bonds TURNER IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, AN I* •a^^eive Deposits and make Collections, the sa BONDS 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 U. S. 5-20s, 1867, new Coupon, and pay difference 117 18 U. S. 5-20s, 1862, Coupon, 184 68 U. S. 10 40s. Coupon, and pay difference “ “ 37 18 U. S. 5-20s, 1864, Coupon, 134 G7 “ “ U. S. 7-308,2d Series, “ “ 125 93 U. S. 5-20s, 1867, Coupon, 147 18 U. S. 7-SOs, 3d S.ries, “ “ “ 119 98 U. S. 5-20s, 1865, new Coupon, 117 18 on each one thousand. “ McKim, Bros. & Co., offier MORTGAGE Eighteen Per Cent. Advantage, WITH THE SAME Com¬ mission. Particular attention given to the Purchase and Sale of all Southern and Misce laneous Securities. Collections made on all accessible points. Interest allowed on Balances Haslett McKim. FIRST * Co., Street, N.V., (PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.) BANKERS AND PACIFIC t B&OTHEBJ , of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, NO, 5 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. THE CHRONICLE. 484 Bank Statements. Bank Statements. Republic. State of New Yotkon the morn¬ Dr-RESOURCES. RESOURCES. 10 00 $1,770,718 34 $287,127 00 13,836 91 29,312 46 260,263 11 SOS 4Q — 16,798 96 Expenses and Taxes 309,180 27 “ 143,199 01 88 75 (250 00 11,703 37 4.848 68 4,521,985 58 42,335 62 8,212 80 Circulating Notes $1,000,000 00 Specie 44,30v «2 $2,400,018 78 Fractional Currency Legal Tender Notes Compound Interest Notes Taxes 75,320 00 3,124 58 2,044 17 416,742 00 5,947 30 approved March 2d, 1867, in denominations of $5,0qq and $10,000 each, in redemption of the Compound Inter eat Notes maturing in the months of October and De¬ redemption will be paid In currency. H. M’CULLOCH, Secretary. In accordance with the foregoing notice the Com¬ pound Interest Notes therein mentioned will now be received at this office, and certificates issued for the principal thereof. Interest on the notes will be com¬ puted to October 15th, 1867, at which time the certilk cates hear date. Schedules may be obtained on appir cation at the office. H. H. VAN knowledge and belief. JOSEPH P. MUMFORD, Cashier. QUARTERLY REPORTTHE OF THE Of CONDITION OF market national bank. New York, on the morning of the first Monday of October, 1867 : RESOURCES. $1,930,387 36 Loans'and Discounts £.354 33 Overdrafts 35.000 00 19,693 28 Banking House Current expenses 66,109 00 335,468 58 Cash items Exchanges for Clearing house this A.M.... and bankers United States bonds to secure circulation.. Other bonds and Stocks Circulating notes of other banks 138,738 672,000 5,166 12,000 Due from Banks 79 00 76 00 105,485 13 12* 00 171,121 00 377,000 00 Specie Fractional currency Legal Tender Notes Compound Interest Notes.. $3,888,631 23 Total LIABILITIES. Capital $1,000,000 00 - Profit and Loss in reserve Profit and Loss 254,873 60,087 Circulating notes outstanding 575,700 Circulating notes outstanding, Market B’k. 8,500 Individual deposits 1,486,897 Uncollected checks 331,400 Due banks and bankers 169,252 Dividends unpaid 1,940 71 91 00 00 60 00 01 00 Total .....’ $3,888,651 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. A. GILBERT, Cashier. QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE NINTH NATIONAL BANK. City of New York, on the morning of the first Monday of October, 1867: Of the RESOURCES. $3,539,371 46 Loans and Discounts Commercial Paper Demand Loans $2,838,635 14 603,074 72 Suspended and overdue paper 50,661 60 Indebtedness of Directors.... 44,000 00 3 PER CENT. 32,963 34 48,351 OS Exchanges for Clearing-house this A. M... ' 585,811 96 189,759 01 095,298 05 1,088,000 00 275,000 00 213,750 00 21,537 54 Specie Fractional Currency Legal-Tender Notes Compound Interest Notes... 19,400 00 . $1,385,499 52 761,040 00 2,146,539 52 Total Bank, New Haven State Bank Circulation outstanding Exchanges — Interest. Profit and Loss Premiums Dividends , Exchange Interest Profit and loss Unpaid dividends Total $50,134 05 603 35 36,586 90 4,740 73— 92,065 03 $8,941,104 42 Sworn to and subscribed before me this seventh day of October, 1867. __ WANTED AT A PREMIUM. 308,226 5,323,617 10 69,413 00 99 00 14 J. H. Y. A.bnold, Notary Public. COMPOUNDS 1865 Bought at highest market rates. 5-20 COUPONS, DUE NOVEMBER 1, CASHED IN GOLD, BY Henry A. Heiser’s Dealers in Government 48,148 74 1,732 76 .2,97182 Sons, Securities, NO. 38 WALL STREET ' OF THE OFFICE UNITED STATES LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, State of New York, City and County of New York, I, FRANKLIN CHANDLER, Cashier of the “ Na¬ Mechanics’ tional Banking Association,” of New York do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. F. CHANDLER, Cashier. Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 7th day of October, 1867. Wm. T. Farnham. Notary Public. [U. S. Rev. Stamp, 5 cents, canceled.] ss QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE THE CONDITION OF MECHANICS’ NATIONAL Of the BANK, City of New York, on the morning of the first Monday of October, 1867, RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts Overdrafts Banking House" Current Expenses Cash Items (including Revenue Stamps).. Exchanges for c.earing house this A.M Due from National Banks.. Due from other Banks and Bankers U. S. Bonds deposited with U. S. Treasurer to secure circulating notes U.S. Bonds and Securities on hand N. Y. State and city stocks, $127,779 36; Bonds and Mortgages $10,000 Cash on hand in circulating notes of other $8,698,362 1,700 175*000 10,907 85,906 2,321.436 184,798 27,700 83 81 00 88 62 40 10 03 667,000 00 657,500 00 137,779 66 23,977 00 199,988 25 835 24 Legal Tender Notes Compound Interest Notes 629,720 00 392,130 00 $9,214,751 02 Capital Stock paid in $2,000,000 00 Surplus Fund 400,000 00 Circulating notes received from Comptrol¬ ler $600,000 0q . Less amount on hand Amount outstanding Individual deposits Due to National Banks Due to other banks and bankers Unpaid Dividends State bank circulation Discount Interest Profit and Loss IN CITY THE OF NEW No. 40 Wall . YORK. Street, New York* September 25, 1867. At a special meeting of the Board of Directors of this Company, convened for the purpose of deciding what 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, was unanimously elected a Director and President of the Company. NICHOLAS DE OROOT, late Assistant Secretary, appointed Secretary of the Company; and ISAAC A. GIFFING, late first clerk, was appointed Assistant Secretary and Cashier. was WM. TUCKER, President pro tem. Clinton Gilbert, Secretary pro tem. OFFICE OF THE TRUSTEES OF CREDITORS AND STOCKHOLDERS OF THE Ohio & Mississippi R.R. COMPANY, EASTERN DIVISION 88 WALL STREET. New York, October 17,1857. Trust will be finally closed Saturday, the 30th day of November, 1867, at Two o’clock P.M., preparatory to the conversion of Trus¬ tees’ Certificates into Stock of the reorganized and consolidated corporation, to be called The Transfer Books of this on and Mississippi Railway Company. To the persons or parties, or to their legal representa¬ tives, in whose names Trustees’ Certificates shall be registered on said Thirtieth day of November, and upon the surrender and cancellation of the same, Cer¬ The Ohio tificates of Stock will be issued as followsPreferred Stock (full paid) for Preferred Certificates, and Com¬ LIABILITIES. _ 18,000 00 outstanding... 582,000 5,199,714 577,105 82,735 6,125 8,944 00 79 51 51 03 00 $34,464 70 20,781 19 302,880 29 Stock (full paid) for Common Certificates, at the for every one hundred dollars of Trus¬ tees’ Certificates, and Scrip for fractional parts of such share. Interest on Preferred Certificates from Janu¬ mon rate of oue share ary 1st, 1867, in cash. By to the day fixed for conversion, to he paid order of the Trustees. ALLAN CAMPBELL, Chairman. William B. INSURANCE 13 9 358,126 18 BROADWAY, Fire, Lake, Ocean A Hayward, BROKER, NEW YORK. Canal Insnrancce $9,214,751 02 Effected at the Lowest Rates in first class companies State of New York, County of New York,—I, WM H. COXj Cashier of the “ Mechanics’ National Bank,’ of the city of New York, do solemnly affirm that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. W. H. COX, Cashier. and on all kinds of Merchandise including Wool, Tobacco, Cotton and Petroleum; aiso to Manufacturing and other Special Risks. Sworn to and October, 1S67. subscribed before me, this 9th Frederic day ol Bull, Notary Public, N.Y. Financial. 1,195 00 State of New York, County of New York.—I. JOHN T. HILL,, Cashier of the Ninth National 5 cent : Bank of the City of New York, do sol: emnly swear that the above statement is stamp cancelled.: true to the best of my knowledge and belief. JOHN T. HILL, Cashier. COM- POUNDS $6,412,169 02 LIABILITIES. Discount DECEMBER AND - 97 85 70 22 unpaid $8,941,104 42 Capital Stock paid in $1,000,000 00 Surplus Fund 220,000 00 Circulating Notes received from Comptroller $949,300 00 Less amount on hand 13,533 00 Amount outstanding 935,797 00 Individual Deposits 1,771,816 76 U. S. Deposits 185,494 41 Cashier’s checks outstanding.. $2,054 45 Due to National Banks 3,371,802 32 Due to other Banks and Bankers 1,362,933 90 OCTOBER 13,792 57 11,915 00 $14,663 52 22,748 10,683 Discount $500,000 00 132,341 00 274 00 c Individual deposits Cashiers checks outstanding Due to National Banks Due to other Banks and Bankers—City 23,472 81 16,066 62 29,266 01 Revenue Stamps.... Due from National Banks Due from other Banks and Bankers U. S. Bonds deposited to secure Circula¬ tion .“ U. S. Bonds deposited to secure Deposits.. U. S. Bonds and Securities on hand Less Amount on baud. National Banks Current Expenses Taxes Premiums Cash Items, including Interest paid Banks Exchange for CR.-LIABILITIES. Capital Stock paid in Surplus Fund Circulating notes received from Comptrol¬ ler $308,500 00 Fractional Currency 3,517 07 13,000 00 CERTIFICATES Issued In Specie Overdrafts Furniture and Fixtures Treasurer. United States Treasury, r New York, October 5th, 1867. «• mv y DYCK, Assistant Efr $6,412.169 02 National I. JOSEPH P. MUMFORD, Cashier of the Bank of the Republic,” of Philadelphia, do solemnly; swear that the above statement is true to the best ol » 355,000 00 147,000 00 $190,782 00 225,960 00 paid September 30th, 1867. hereby given that the Assistant *] reasurer at New York has been Instructed to issue Three Per Cent. Certificates as authorized by Act of Congress Notice is cember next. The accrued interest on all notes presented for such 430 00 U.S. Bonds and Securities on hand ] Cash on hand in Circulating Notes of other National Banks... Profits Total 9,400 00 $2,400,018 78 LIABILITIES. Capital Stock, full paid $425,356 94 Due from National Banks Due from other Banks and Bankers U. S. Bonds deposited with U.S. Treasurer to secure Total $887,566 22 Loans and Discounts Commercial Paper Time Accommodation Loans Demand Loans Other Suspended and Over¬ due Paper Indebtedness of Directors.... Overdrafts Banking House Current Expenses Cash Items (including Revenue Stamps)... Exchanges for Clearing House this a.m 21,9&i 00 Premiums Due from other Banks MECHANICS’ BANKING ASSOCIATION. ing of the first Monday in October, 1867 : Philadelphia, October 7,1867. Legal Tender Notes and Specie. National Bank Notes Fractional Currency and stamps NATIONAL In New York, in the 24 Treasury Department, THE of the Notes and Bills Discounted $1,139,659 U.S. Bonds deposited with Trea¬ surer of the United States... 500,000 Real Estate (productive) 131,057 Financial. QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE National Bank [October 19, 1807, United States New Treasury, g3£“ Particular attention given to Insurance on Ves¬ sels and their cargoes, The most unquestionable references given. OFFICE OF THE RAILROAD COMPANY, Tontine Buildings, 88 Wall Street, New York, Sept. 24th, 1867. 42d Dividend.—The Board of Directors have this day declared a Dividend of SIX (6) Per Cent, out of the earnings of the road for the three months ending 30th Inst, payable to the stockholders, or their legal repre¬ sentatives, on and after the 5th of October next. Transfer books will be closed on the afternoon or the 25th, and reopened on the morning of the 8th prox. PANAMA m5'Tn,T DMITH. Treasurer. HENRY SMI York, October, 15,1867. Schedules of (30) Thirty or more 5-20 Coupons, due November 1,1867, will now be received for examina¬ tion at the United States Treasury. H. H. VAN DYCK, Assistant Treasurer- T. A. Hoyt, gold and exchange broker, 36 NEW AND 38 BROAD STREETS. Orders executed for Bankers, Brokers and Merchan ammm*|aj & iHmanqa anto’ fcetb, $<jmracmnt dime's, A Railway Pomtor, and §roaurmw frontal WEEKLY ♦ NEWSPAPER, ^ REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1867 VOL. 5. CONTENTS. NO. 121. try, is directly interested in the question. To the nation at THE CHRONICLE. large easy money means material prosperity, and to our en¬ 4S8 Railroad Earnings for September ShaR we Have an Easy Money terprising citizens everywhere it means remunerative em¬ Market ? 485 Latest Monetary and Commercial 489 English News Liabi ity for the Counterfeit 7-SO ployment for labor, and steady rewards for well directed Note.* 485 Commercial and Miscellaneous 491 News Trdeof Great Britain and the enterprise ; while stringency in money, on the contrary, United states 487 means THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. stagnation, distrust and depression, paralysis of com¬ Cotton 4% Money Market. Railway Stocks, merce and ruin to the producer. It is not without reason Tobacco 498 U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Breadstuffs 499 that M. Foreign Exchange, New York Turgot compares the disasters induced by monetary Groceries 499 City Banks. Philadelphia Banks 401 Dry Goods 501 National Banks, etc stringency and revulsion to those of an inundation over¬ 494 Prices Car rent and Tone of the sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange Market. 509-510 Commercial Epitome 495 spreading a fertile Swiss valley. As the flood rises it THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. drowns out one after another of the low-lying rich tracts 505 Railway News... v 502 j Railway, CanaL etc., Stock List 503 Insurance and Mining Journal 506 with their National, &c., Securities List... teeming harvests, and as it recedes it gives up these Advertisements 481-4, 507-8, 511-12 Railroad, Canal, and MiscellaneBond List 504 farms impoverished but restored once again to the industry of the laborer. The invasion of monetary stringency sweeps away the accumulated wealth of the past, and as we have a The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ memorable example in England from the revulsion of 1866, day morning by the publishers of Hunt’s Merchants' Magazine, it may require a with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. long, painful effort to recuperate. The only point we wish to insist on, however, is this : that what a TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. For The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier monetary panic does on the grand scale, that, a light mone¬ to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,) For One Year $10 00 6 00 tary stringency does on a small scale, for each partakes of For Six Months the same nature, and the difference between the two is chiefly By an arrangement with the publishers of the Daily Bulletin we are . i ors ®l)c Clironitlie. enabled to furnish our subscribers with that paper of $4 per annnm making the price of Cbroniclbwith Daily at the reduced price in their extent and their force. $*8 00 Bulletin,^ Postage is paid by the subscriber at his own post-offlee. II is, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $120 in advance. will1 am b. dana, ) WILLIAM B. DANA & OO., Publishers, john 6. floyd, jit. ) 60 William Street, New York. Remittances should Office Money Orders. invariably be made by drafts or Post Soliciting Agents make no collections. SHALL WE HAVE AN EASY MONEY MARKET ? We seldom hear much now from the desponding croakers their pre¬ and other years ending in the unlucky nnmeral 7, would be a year of panic and financial disaster in this country. These shocks time ago, were both loud and free in dictions that the present year, like 1857, 1837, who, some are now better understood, and their causes being bronght analysis, prevention bacomes more pos¬ within the reach of sible. Hence the mercantile world longer looks upon mysterious visitations with which human foresight cannot cope or human precaution and saga¬ city combat. Notwithstanding this progress, however, or rather because of it, the course of the money market is close¬ ly watched, and the effect of any new forces operating on it is eagerly measured. At this season of the year there is al ways a special anxiety to know how the loan market will work, for every department of industrial enterprise suffers when money is tight; and from a want of elasticity our financial machinery, under its present management, is very such terrible events apt to cause some no as disturbance from the turn in our domestic exchanges which always occurs in the Fall. In divers ways every merchant .and manufacturer, every farmer and mea j, \ > 13.14 thin every binker and capitalists in th3 coun¬ In view of this fact the question how the money market will work ought to be regarded with anxiety not only by the people but by the Treasury. The belief is gaining ground in this country that the vast power which the Secretary of the Treasury holds, and w hich gives him at critical moments a control over the financial machinery of the country, is sometimes used with the intention of tightening the money market. It is affirmed that that power has been very re¬ cently so used, and a fear of the repetition of the experi¬ ment is doing something at this very time to depress and partially to paralyse the industry of the country. Waiving this aspect of the case, however, let us look in other directions, and inquire as to the probable indications of the monetary movements of the immediate future. And it cannot be denied that there are forces at wroik which ought to produce ease. First, we have an abundance of idle capital disengaged, capital of our own, capital belonging to foreigners. As to the American capital, it wras ample enough without foreign aid to absorb and manipulate all our Government and other securities three years ago, besides carrying on the business of the country. During those three years our capital has been rapidly growing and accumulating, while the securities have diminished rather than augmented. The Government bonds, the railroad shares, the bonds and negotiable instruments dealt in at the Stock Exchange, have received no great accessions to their aggregate amount dur¬ ing this interval. On the contrary, securities have been bought and exported by foreigners to the extent probably of £00 millions, We have fewer of them now than we had THE CHRONICLE. 486 [October Id, 1&67. r- c three years ago. And what is the inference from all this ? Why, that if our floating and semi-fixed capital was adequate three years ago to manipulate the securities then afloat, much more is it ample and abundant now when it has aug¬ mented, and the securities have suffered a large decrease. We might adduce other arguments proving the prodigious extent and increasing amount of floating American capital in this country. But we pass on to the next point, which is, that these supplies of our own loanable funds are swelled by large contributions from foreigners. Money in Lombard street begs in vain for borrowers to take it at 1 or 2 per cent., while in Wall street it gets ready employment at 6 or 7 per cent. The admonitory war cloud warns it off from Europe, and stimulates its flight across the Atlantic to our safer continent. If this foreign capital were not here, or if it should not increase, as it probably will, we have ade quate supplies of our own. Having the foreign surplus balances at command, however, we shall use them, and one of the effects will of necessity be, that other things remaining equal, the money market will work the easier, and give the more stimulus to the great financial work of the country, which work will be for several years to come the reorganizing of our dislocated industry North and South, and the adjustment or removal of every tax which paralyses and disorganizes that industry, leaving other problems and difficulties which are too far to reach, and too difficult to deal with at present. So far, then, as ample supplies of capital of are a condition^ market, there seems to be no cloud of hanging over the immediate future. How far the Treasury may disturb the movements of capital, by locking an easy money doubt up currency in the Treasury or by contracting of greenbacks, we cannot tell, but with the the volume experience of the past to guide him, Mr. McCulloch will, no doubt, adopt in this respect a very cautious and conservative course. upon the plaintiff to be satisfied that him was in the drawer’s hand before he the bill drawn upon accepted or paid it but it wras not incumbent upon, the defendant to inquire into it. If there was any fault or negligence in any one, it cer¬ tainly w as in the plaintiff and not in the defendant.” (Price v. Neal, 3 Burrow’s Reports, 1354.) And that eminent jurist, Judge Bronson, in rendering the decision of the Court of Appeals in our ow n State, in the case of Goddard and St. John against the Merchants’ Bank, (4 Comstock’s Reports, 147,) only affirms the well-settled law, when he says: “The drawee of his a bill is held bound to know the correspondent, the drawer handwriting of and if he accepts or pays a value, he is con¬ cluded by the act, although the bill turns out to be a forgery. If he has accepted he must pay, and it he has paid he can not recover the money back. This is an exception to the gen¬ eral rule, that money paid under a mistake of fact may be recovered back. The exception is fully established.” To bill in the hands of the same effect is the a ; bona fide holder for case of The Bank of Commerce against The Union Bank. (3 Comstock’s Reports, 230.) Nowr, it seems to us, that in the matter under considera¬ tion, law and justice are strongly on the side of the bankers. The 7-30 notes are Government promises to pay—they are simply promissory notes. The holders at maturity have the option of demanding of the United States either currency or 5-20 bonds. They have exercised this option, and the Government has paid its notes by the issue of bonds. The notes are therefore, discharged, and the law will not allow the payer of forged paper, purporting to bear his signature, to recover the amount, paid from an innocent party. The 7-30 notes are just as truly paid as if they had been re¬ deemed in currency. If they were' not originally genuine, payment has made them so, as far as the Government is concerned. Other considerations tend to confirm this view of the is the lapse of time. The The bankers have closed LIABILITY FOR THE COUNTERFEIT 7-30 NOTES. up their transactions. They have settled accounts with their We hope the Government will not deem it advisable to principals, the owners of the notes, and delivered the bonds endeavor to compel bankers and others to return the 5 20 to them. Suddenly they are startled by the announcement bonds issued to them in conversion of counterfeit 7-30 notes. that the notes are forged, and that it is purposed to hold It is not easy to perceive what principle of law would sup¬ them responsible. It seems to us that they may with rea¬ port such a proceeding. It would seem only consonant to son answer that it is now7 too late—that the time of their reason and common sense, that if a forged note is presented responsibility, if they ever were responsible at all, has to the pretended maker for payment, by an innocent pur¬ passed by—that if they had been notified immediately, the chaser, and the former, through carelessness, pays it, the loss loss would have fallen on the original owners, and not on should fall on him who, of all men, should be able to decide them. If the delay has been caused by official routine, and respecting the genuineness of the paper. In such a case it the necessity of examining the notes carefully in their order, is easy to see that the person whose name is forged, by pay. payment ehould not have been made until this examination ing the note, affirms its validity. The law does not allow was finished,-and every test of genuineness applied. him, after payment to such innocent holder for value, to Indeed the point of agency is a very important one claim a return of the money. The rule may result in hard Although the bankers did not, in each individual case, de. ship to him, but it would work great wrong were it other¬ clare to the department the names of the persons for whom wise. To allow' a man to demand a return of the money they were acting, it was still well known, from the nature paid on his own forged note, after the receiver of the money of their business, that they were not personally the owners has, perhaps, entirely lost sight of the person from whom he of the millions of notes which they presented for conversion. purchased the note, would be unreasonable, and result in It would seem reasonable that they should be allowed to set much injustice. up their representative character in justification of a refusal Indeed, the law goes farther than this, for it is w'ell settled to return the 5-20 bonds. that if the drawee of a forged draft, being the agent of the Again, suppose it should be made to appear that these pretended drawrer, pay such draft to a holder who has no counterfeits are merely duplicates, issued by some persons knowledge of the fraud, he can not demand a return of the employed in the Treasury. “ It is a general doctrine,” says money, as he is presumed to know the signature of his cor¬ Judge Story, An his Treatise on Agency (§452), “ that a respondent. As long ago as 1762, when an action was principal is liable to third persons, in a civil suit, for the brought by the drawee of a forged draft to recover the frauds, deceits, concealments, misrepresentations, torts, neg¬ money w'hich he had paid on it, neither party having knowl. ligence and other malfeasances or misfeasances and omis¬ edge of the forgery, Lord Mansfield decided that the action sions of duty of his agent in the course of his employment, could not be maintained, and said: " It was incumbent although the principal did not authorize, or justify, or par- Prominent among these notes were converted weeks ago. matter. THE CHRONICLE. October 19,1867.] \ ticipate in, or indeed know, of such misconduct, or even he forbade the acts or disapproved of them,” etc. Now V" if if the facts respecting these notes are as we understand them to be, they seem to furnish a case which a jury would be likely to consider a defense to the claim. The counterfeit have only been discovered by duplicate numbers, and the discovery has not been made until weeks after the eonversion. The forged plates are most wonderful productions. notes counterfeits resemble the originals The so •* ... Besides all this, it is said that they are printed from different plates, so that two plates must have been counter¬ feited. But the red stamp, we are told, is different, and in several particulars, with the stamp used genuine notes. And yet it is the same iu every res¬ does not agree, the on not greatly in error, with the stamp used for legal tender notes. Now is it not inconceivable that, in pect, the if we are the wrorkmen should have so altered it, in minute particulars, as exactly to repro¬ duce the greenback stamp ? Moreover, this discrepancy would perhaps render it impossible that photography had counterfeiting the 7-30 of. agency ? As we go to press the policy of the department does not seem to be definitely settled; the rumor that an attempt will be made to'hold the bankers responsible is, we trust, 62,095 60,282 977,600 75,259 2,446,194 1,797,714 241,353 251,858 248,636 476,789 514,340 49S,880 714,384 78,096 155,660 190,773 68,827 461,207 331,087 1,619,106 87,364 2,785,326 167,170 1,956,81 115,639 Earthenware and porcelain Haberdashery and millinery Hardwares Cutlery— and Knives, forks, &c Anvils, vices, &c 929,090 53,490 Manufactures of German silver, &c Linen Manufactures— Piece goods. Thread Iron—Pig, Ac 70,851 193,988 Bar, &c 104,767 Railroad 231,369 366,992 507,809 Hoops, sheets and boiler plates 43,490 12,242 214,265 254,925 250,369 923,038 9,358 238,891 Wrought Castings 3,023 90,196 151,004 94,231 Steel Unwroueht 184,109 435,451 Copper, wrought Lead, pig, &c 21.2)3 429,440 14,543 95,273 952,539 2,14-4 22,116 31,793 96,931 1,018,484 200,733 7S,765 50,398 Tin plates Oil seed Salt Silk Manufactures— Broad piece goods 545,384 96,H26 1,295 17.571 7.088 Other articles of silk only Other artioles mixed with other materials.... 75,443 20/76 15,793 84,214 58,782 2,754 10,132 10,360 9,300 290,518 745,034 157,113 18,028 £47.953 479,862 514,140 36,436 41,001 1,711,453 2,727,118 1,648,003 Spirits, British Wool Woolen and Worsted Manufactures— Cloths of all kinds Carpets aud druggets Shawls, rugs, &c Worsted stuffs of wool only, and ®f wool mixed with other material 58,276 2,829 6,632 34.647 58,360 6,830 765 COTION. The imports of cotton into Great Britain this year have fallen off as compared with 1866, owi*ig to the decline in the receipts of produce from the East Indies. The imports from the United States, however, have slightly increased, and for the eight months ending August 31, amount to 3,940,083 cwt., against 3,834,000 cwt. in 1866. Annexed are the parti¬ culars of imports for eight months: From United States ... Bahamas and Bermudas. Mexico Brazil 1865. 1866. 186T. C A tS. CWtS. CWt9. 103,863 3,834,000 158,604 275,550 6,413 3,145 3,940,083 10,349 294,820 166,601 1,005,454 1,941,401 Turkey.... British India China Other countries. - 495,883 83,930 735,460 3,439,087 301,509 17,949 307,235 193,734 4,561,040 ’ TRADE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND THE UNITED STATES. 8,809,601 yht months COTTON, BREADSTUFFS, PROVISIONS, TOBACCO, ETC. the result of the diminution in the extent of the 61,736 33,760 Total just issued, it appears that during the first seven months of the present year a considerable falling off has taken place in the value of the produce and manufactures exported from Great Britain to this country. The decline shown in the statement recently pub¬ lished by the British Board of Trade is not, however, so much 193.929 Handkerchiefs, &c Ribbons, of siik only unfounded. From the British Board of Trade returns, 159,231 66,070 Metals— stamp If, then, all these and other circumstan¬ ces are brought strongly before a jury, would they not be justified in finding that the notes were issued through the fraud of some of the Treasury employees, and would not the Court hold that the Government must bear the loss resulting from the fraud of its agents [in the regular course of their been made use 70,714 Thread Ail the minute and delicate workman¬ supposed to be the safeguard of the govern¬ notes. 487 v Cotton Manufactures— Piece goods escaped detection. government securities, is identical with the paper of these v Coals closely that they ship, which was ment obligations, is minutely and most carefully reproduced. Moreover the peculiar paper, manufactured expressly for l. To Russia, Northern Prussia Hanover Hanse Towns Holland Other Countries port* cwts Of cotton 7,391,680 subjoined : 1865. 1866. 163,716 248,235 293,735 22 782 42,089 5,618 145,786 14,011 Total are 22 467,007 55,332 851,675 1,869,451 4,767 193,054 1867. 3.514 395,360 262,216 727,909 516,477 459,132 347,865 1,127,323 378,894 1,585,994 1,585,994 2,287,(4)7 2,051,717 770,666 piece goods the exports in the same periods were ' 87,349,326 1865. To United States yards , : 1866. 1867. 87,558,2'4 70,000,205 trade, as of To all quarters 1,666,584,984 1,267,426,062 1,789,176,406 the heavy decline in prices which has taken place in many of BREADSTUFFS. the leadiog articles of manufacture exported by Great Britain. The high prices current for wheat in the markets of the This is more especially the case with regard to cotton, iu which a heavy decline has been produced by the continued world have rendered this branch of commerce more important At one period it desire showrn by holders to sell. In the seven months ending than has been the case for some years past. was anticipated that the crops in England and in this country July 31, the declared value of the exports of British and Irish would be so considerable that an important fall in prices was produce and manufactures to this country was as under : inevitable. The result of the harvest, however, is much less 1865. 1866. 1867. ’ , Ports on Ports on the Atlantic—Northern.... —Southern.... Pacific Total 312,274 £16,268,977 643,820 426,142 £12,462,678 771,285 490,816 £7,846,861 £17,338,939 £13,727,779 £7,469,832 34,755 In the first eight months of the present year the total ex¬ ports of British and Irish produce and manufactures amounted to £121,056,913, against £125,265,820 in 1866, and £102,400,696 in 1855. These figures are very favorable, and they show that, notwithstanding the alleged slackness of trade iu Great Britain, the exports are still on a very considerable aud very important scale. Of the above exports, the pi oportion forwarded to the United States EXPORTS OF BRITISH AND UNITED Alkali Peer and ale IRISH was as PRODUCE STATE8 IN crease of of 1,400,000 cwt. WHEAT. MANUFACTURES TO THE MONTHS. 1865. 1866. 1867. £261,443 £615,117 45,544 £537,927 58,751 " 26,461 The following are the particulars imports: follows: AND EIGHT satisfactory than had been anticipated, and instead of a de¬ cline, prices have experienced an advance. Ihe causes of the rise in Great Britain and in Europe have been alluded to iu our London correspondent’s letter, and need not therefore he recapitulated. The return of imports shows, however, that the imports of wheat into Great Britain this year have been very large, and are 5,500,000 cwt. in excess of 1866. In flour^ owiug to*the diminished receipts from France, there is a de¬ From Russia Prussia • • Schleswig, Holstein and Lauenburg Jlecklenburg 1865. 1866. 1867. 4,336,307 4,610,396 8,045,857 345,204 354,108 3,092,508 2,898/06 141,078 545,365 171,367 361,799 343,483 'T III [October l'\ 1867, THE CHRONICLE. 488 301,831 620,378 485,241 862,052 3,305,024 Turkey, Wallachia, and Moldavia.. Egypt 457,962 329.733 531,976 1,694,506 11,769 422,203 United States British North America Other Countries €64,023 345,750 222.067 8,789 2,358,398 1,738,945 3,132 2,624,669 Hanse Towns France . . 750,383 Total... Western Union. in September in August in July in June in May in April in March Total in Februry... Total in January FLOUR. 1866. 1867. 154,401 1,550,369 \ 194,561 181,232 3,078,740 193,051 281,362 1,071,394 208,704 130,667 97,306 15,818 168,807 23>38 1865. From nanse Towns France United States cwts British North America Other Countries 632,234 1,399 1,463 670 477 735 714 'I $1,020 $1,186 978 I 9941 Total Total Total Total Total Total Total 21,031,847 15,529,299 11,565,473 468 621 177 468 521 177 lrg, J Toledo, Wabash and Western. ... }- 7,034 .- 7,124 848 953 912 778 795 65 237 $166 37 808 816 829 816 791 673 760 663 J 64 „ 764 40 137 63 38 To 4 -1 Jannary-September: 9 months . 7,034 7,124 $7,674 $7,659 $ -$15 The tables given above show the approximate earnings of leading railroads in gross and per mile for the month of It will be seen that in 1867 the The exports ol foreign and colonial wheat and flour in the September, 1866 and 1867. earnings of all, except of the Atlantic and Great Western, are eight months were as under: in excess of those for the corresponding month of tne previous 1865. 1866. 1867. Wh^at 114.604 29.318 35,727 qr«. The causes Flour cwt. 11,758 year, and of any past month of the current year. 18,657 15,779 of this change for the better are well known, and have re* Total Indian corn maize 2,267,532 6,530,093 3,637,648 10,509,656 2,126,704 or 3,234,997 TOBACCO. the ceived from us sufficient discussion in the late issues of the The imports and exports into and from Great Britain dur¬ Chronicle. The chief among them, as we have already ing the eight months ending August 31, were : pointed out, is the large and increasing grain movement in IMPORT. the West; and for the purpose of the further illustration of 1865. 1866. 1867. Stemmed lbs. 9.718,268 5,908,327 3,829,998 this movement we have compiled, and here introduce the fol¬ Unatemmed 26,841,806 18,244,945 14,38-\432 Manufactured and snuff. 2,615,929 lowing statement showing the receipts of flour and grain at the 1,668,632 1,33?,218 ENTERED FOR HOME CONSUMPTION. lake ports of Chicago, Milwaukee, Toledo, Detroit and Cleve¬ Stemmed lbs 7.840.262 8.982,682 11,919,959 Unstemmed 17,540,214 14,592,995 land, for the five weeks ending with Sept. 28, and the cor¬ 17,540.432 Manufactured and snuff 547,190 578,946 620.3&6 responding weeks of 1866 : , * EXPORTS. Stemmed Unstemmed lbs Manufactured and snuff 856,919 633,580 9,194,751 9.762,162 12,014,926 911,834 1,505,370 3,656,456 The following were the imports of provisions into the United Kingdom in the first eight months of the present and last two Sept. years: Sept PROVISIONS. 1865. 1866. 1867. 509,909 521,119 161,558 14-.362 327,352 120,232 123,085 659,861 456,102 141,162 671,510 406,610 U>0,918 267,984,840 326,331,840 87,677 217,076 301,711.080 142,010 _ cwts. Pork, salt Batter Cheese Number Bard cwts 708.835 462.820 1867. Oats, Barley, bush. bur-h bush. Rye, busbu 75.741 108,844 1,254,606 1,944,388 1,016,044 233,086 1,001,751 114,643 101,86° 90,293 119,714 742,2:30 1,155,287 1,502,298 788,432 168,3*8 532,617 41,881 257,733 92,489 31,272 57,58, 92,45-9 100,765 892,617 135,523 1,609,055 918,442 959,636 167,816 669,080 2 137,913 146,110 1,062,391 1,746,005 708,374 851,748 176,880 738,239 354,414 ■94,288 138,608 153,805 1,157,199 1,906,953 463,513 134,919 908,951 897,589 93,287 310,724 38,7(8 91,(58 643,320 663,996 4,764,201 7,671,906 5,537,015 4,024,811 881.059 271,615 296,894 120,676 2,907,705 41,382 68,139 5,139 107,849 63,823 48,434 3,639,216" 1,332,653 490,549 1,502,204 Decrease 1867. This statement, West to East. Corn, bush. 909,664 bbls. Weeks ending Aug. 31, 1866., Sept. PROVISIONS. Bacon and hams salt Wheat, Flour, 232.627 2,758,217 1,061,008 195,156 however, accounts only for the trade from trade of the seaboard cities ha8 The Fall freighting movement from East to West. The The gross earnings of the under mentioned railroads for the total result is shown in earnings footing up in gross $8,448,865 against the earnings in September, 1866, which amounted month of September, 1866 and 1867, comparatively, and the difference (increase or decrease) between the two periods, are only to $7,178,435—making a difference in favor of Septem¬ ber, 1867, of $1,270,430, or 17.69 per cent. Taking the exhibited in the following statement: whole mileage operated in the years respectively as the divisor, Railroads. 3866. 1SC7. Increase. Decr’se. Atlantic and Great Western $.... $526,959 $483,857 $43,202 the quotient for 1866 is $1,020, and for 1867, $1,186—differ¬ 99.339 Chicago and Alton 322,638 421.977 120.495 Chicago and Great Eastern 104,546 15,949 ence, $166 per mile of road. Chicago and Northwestern 1,000*086 1,451,284 451,198 Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific 121,653 517,702 396,049 The results of the third quarter of the current year, com¬ Erie 1,416,101 1,444,745 28,644 Illinois Central 133.546 704 894 671,348 pared with those of the corresponding quarter of 1S66, are Marietta and Cincinnati 16 311 194,866 121,177 created RAILROAD EARNINGS FOR SEPTEMBER., a like .... Michigan Central Michigan Southern 429,166 429,177 179,527 Milwaukee and Prarie du Chien Milwaukee and St. Paul Ohio and Mississippi Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago.. Toledo, Wabash and Western Western Union Total in September Total in August Total in July Total Total Total Tot 1 Total To.al in June in May in April in March in in ...... February January 330,767 278,701 654,925 $49,117 84,462 35,617 57,231 shown in the statement which follows: 98,303 Gross earnings.1867. Railroads. 1S66 Atlantic and Gt. Western —$1,518,275 $1,359,130 464,778 486,408 277,830 403,658 3-56,9->l 72,891 77,200 6S5.067 30,142 382,996 33,879 42,034 126,496 $7,178,435 $8,448,865 $1,270,430 6,619,650 6,973,228 353,578 5,754,795 5,967,856 6,706.446 5,815,741 6,402,287 5,907.650 5,473,127 5,812.738 $39,611 5,593,523 5,639,601 46,078 4.664,525 4,798,978 134,453 5,378,441 5,413,437 34,996 Jannary-September, 9 months..$53,984,290 $54,565,033 Chicago and Alton 1,031.504 Chicago anu Gt. Eastern 297,635 C hicago and Northwestern. . 2,606.084 Chic,, Rock Island and Pacific 1,1.07,711 Erie 3,919,745 $.... Illinois Central Marietta and Cincinnati M chigau Central 213,061 890,705 494,637 Chicago and Alton Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago and Northwestern ' P du Chien.. Milwaukee and St. Paul Milwaukee and .. $880,743 Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific. Brie Illinois Central Marietta and Cincinnati Michigan Cen:ral Michigan Southern Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien.. Milwaukee and St. Paul Ohio and Mississippi 1,032 1,145 410 798 708 251 285 524 234 275 $40 410 775 703 251 285 524 234 275 $40 1,152 467 969 966 1,774 1,507 533 1,269 1,263 1,877 807 995 419 482 1,506 1,<>31 819 762 928 1,203 1,887 1,458 820 1,046 466,588 746.620 831,417 Mississippi Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chic 1,>-55,504 Toledo, Wabash and Western 1,050,282 $ , 280 224 1,152,677 Ohio and Western Union. Total 3d quarter Total 2d quarter Total 1st quarter Miles of road—* r—E&rni n c s—* r-Dffer’e-^ 1866. 1867. 1866. 1867. Incr. Dec. 507 507 $1,0 ,9 $954 $85 280 224 1,113,797 Michigan Southern The gross earnings per mile of road operated for the same months of the two years are shown in the table which follows : Railroads. Atlantic & Great Western ... 1.(30,127 307 810 , Jannary-September, 8 qts ' , , f ... •' • « * • • i 3,755,081 1.886.792 ■ 342.487 1.176.792 1,228,0-9 521,134 802,094 904,066 l,f21,869 1,0 ;7,oio $2,995 3,684 1,329 2,525 2,458 4,912 2.302 1,226 3,907 2,198 1,993 m.—DifFc$-> 1867. Inc. Dec. $2,68 •• 4,284 600 1,324 2,943 2,913 4,845 2,665 1,364 ... 5 .. 418 460 . 363 138 4,123 221 2.343 145 2,227 234 2 916 202 2,660 214 3,893 .. 2,030 15 2,714 2,446 3,965 2,015 1.303 1,459 156 230,068 253,283 19,765,941 18,5^1,860 2.810 2,973 163 15,636,4t>9 21,116,888 17, 36,129 15,85 ,016 2,642 2,2.3 2,225 2 53,984,290 54,565,033 7,675 7,660 .. 2,462 314 .. ... ... 67 . : ... ... ... ... ... ... 72 ... ... 180 15 improvement in the earnings for the third quarter of 1867 over those of 1866 is $1,410,947, or 7.14 percent, being a gain of $163 per mile of road operated. In the second quarter there is a deficit of $180 per mile. The first quarter showed a small gain ($2) per mile. If we take the gross earnings for the nine months, we find a gain in the cur¬ rent year over the previous one of $580,743. But the earc The , 355 71 300 297 103 188 63 125 109 425 265 226 1,199,603 296,-62 3,370,432 1,196,602 -Earn’s p. 1866. THE CHRONICLE. October 19,1367.] of 1867 were made on increased mileage. ings And hence mile for the first three shows a small decrease, the earnings having been for 1866 $7,675 per mile, and for 1867 $7,660 per mile, a loss in 1867 of $15 per mile. This difference will, however, be converted into a gain by the eud of October; and there is now every prospect of the current year giving even a larger return of gross earnings than its the amount per predecessor. We also anticipate much larger profits to the companies owning these railroad, as no such large sums have been taken from income for improvements, extraordinary re¬ pairs or rolling stock, as in previous years, and in many in¬ stances greater economy has been practised in working a Several of the Western roads, however, received expenditures. considerable damage by storms and floods in the early mouths of 1867, which undoubtedly must have used up very large sums in their restoration to a proper working condition. latest Jlloiutarjj anil dommertial (English LATEST DATES. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— EXCHANGE ON LONDON. OCT. 4. J , LATEST TIME. ON— Amsterdam... Antwerp. - Hamburg Paris Paris Vienna Berlin St. Petersburg Cadiz Lisbon Milan Genoa Naples New DATE. TIME. short. 1118 ©11.19 3 months. 25.37*®25.42* 13.10 ©13.1014 25.30 ©25.35 short. 25.15 ©25.20 3 months. 12.75 @12.85 6.27 © 6.27* Oct. 4, short. 31%® 31% 49*© 49* 90 days. 5l*@ 51* 3 months. 27.70 ©27.80 27.70 @27.80 *4 27.80 @28.00 Oct. 4. Jamaica Havana...— Rio de Janeiro Buenos Ayres. — — -- — — — — — — Valparaiso.... 60 Hong Kong... Ceylon 44 44 44 8 mo’s. — — — — 3 mo’s. — Oct. 3. • 80 11.93 2.‘.25 © © 13. 8*® 25.15 © 25.32 © — — — — — — — 33* - days. — — — — — — — — — days. 44 30 4s. 5*d. 4$. 5*d. 2 p. c. dis. lslHtf® Is llld® Is Hid© 44 days. 1 p. c. Oct. 3. 60 days. Oct. 9. Oct. 14. Oct. 9. 90 60 days. days. 1% Aug. 26. — — 41 Bombay Madras Calcutta Sydney 44 RATE. 50*®50* _ 44 York.... Pernambuco.. Singapore RATE. — — — dis. Aug. 16. Sept. 16. Aug. 30. 6 44 Aug. 26. Sept. 5. 44 44 Sept. 27. Sept. 24. Sept. 2 i. Aug. 15. mos. 44 44 30 days. prevails. Millers, however, operation with caution, but speculative movement in progress and this is one of the principal causes of the advancing prices. The question is, why should prices rise * It is generally admitted that the crop of wheat in this country is superior to last year, and our Custom House returns show that our imports from foreign countries are very largely in excess of 1866. The export demand has been much talked about, but the actual supplies exported are comparatively trifling: the total export in September being only about ‘202,734 cwt., against an importation of 2,905.288 cwt. The state of our supplies being more satisfactory, the cauae of the present advancing market must be traced without doubt there is to the state of the a ... _ 109 1 p. c. 19*@19* 21 ©21* 47*® 48 45*® — 21 ® 21* 4s. 6*d.® — 4s. 4*d.@ — 2® 2* p.c. Is. 11 5-l«d Is. ll*d Is. 11 7-16d 1®1* p. c. [From our own Correspondent.! demand, and there is no doubt that millers, who have for many months worked closely, have of late made considerable purchases, although these purchases have been conducted with much caution. Probably, when the millers shall have more freely “upplied themselves, the trade will relapse into a stale of considerable inactivty. In regari to our supplies, I must not omit to mention that the stock of old wheat, not only in England and France, but also in the United States and in several other countries, has not been so low for in the world has been secured, but supplies of old produce; the latter have found it necessary to buy, and the consequence is that prices have advanced, while, as farmers are unwilling to sell freely in an advaucing market, produce is, to some extent, held back. As stated above, our foreign receipts are large, and probably when millers shall have run more freely into stock, the trade will assume a different aspect, al¬ though we cannot hope for any material reduction iu prices. Our imports of wheat in September were very targe, and amounted to as much as 2,905,288 cwt., while in the corresponding month in 1866 we received 1,192,064 cwt., iu 1865 2,108,966 cwt., and in 1864 2,665,* Our imports of flour have increased ; the supply received in 799 cwt. September being about 50,000 cwt. more than in 1866. For (he first nine months of the present year our imports were about 7,200,000 cwt greater than in the corresponding period last year. In flour, however owing to the diminution in our receipts from France, there is a decrease cf 1,820,000 cwt. The annexed statement shows the extent of our im¬ ports of wheat, flour, etc., in September, and in the nine months end ing Sept. 80, compared with the corresponding periods in the three preceding years: IMPORTS London, Saturday, October 5, 1867. The trade for wheat throughout the country continues very firm and a higher range of prices has been established since Saturday last, Our imports continue on an extensive scale, and it seems strange that this upward movement should continue to make progress. But such has been the case, and the rise which has taken place has checked any improvement in other departments of trade. Your readers are aware that the commercial body in this country laid much importance on a good harvest, and were of opinion that a cheaper market for wheat, and a lower price for bread, would have a material effect in improving and rendering more sound our commercial position. The disappointment which has been occasioned in regard to the yield of wheat, and the rise in prices which is the result, have, with the distrust which continues to prevail, produced much caution ou the part of merchants, while the heavy decline in the price of cotton, combined with the rumoured financial difficulties of several, but chiefly small, firms in the cotton trade, have had the effect of necessitating the limitation of orders in most branches of our commerce. Nor must the agitation which exists on the Continent be omitted as affording a cause for the quietness which now exists. During the present week, the news received from Paris has been of an excitable character, and the Stock Exchange, markets at one period were in so excited a state, that prices* as regards certain securities, experienced a heavy decline. This was caused by the depressed state of the Paris Bourse, consequent upon the rumours which had been put into circulation respecting the position of affairs in Rome and on the Papal frontier, and in regard to the relation of the French and Italian governments concerning the Roman question. There is, it may be noticed, an uneasy feeling in Europe regarding the future, not only in respect of the Roman question, but also as regards the relations of France and Prussia. There are, in fact, many who be¬ lieve that a war is threatening, and so long as such an opinion is enter¬ tained, we cannot hope for a return of active trade. Bnt to return to the wheat trade : the advance established in prices, this week is quite 2s. per quarter, and at the close of the market much IN SEPTEMBER. 1864. cwts. Wheat 1866. 1867. 2,108,966 1,192,064 629,909 800,763 115,886 656,306 556,686 42,596 63,778 1,191,110 456,818 67,343 812,7;0 301,596 421,278 694,802 25,559 173,578 2,905.288 Barley Peas Beans Indian Flour Corn 1865. 2,665,799 IMPORTS are considerable many years. A fair field of wheat both farmers and millers hold short RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON AT firmness 489 IN NINE 29.532 739.455 164,140 MONTHS 17,723,333 13,674,4 9 16,721,363 Barley 3,798,0,-6 6,907,876 5.204.198 3,825,683 752,310 602,632 3,636,560 3,811,893 369,644 693,714 236,027 1,573,972 103,965 Wheat Oats. Peas Beans Indian Corn Flour ‘ 5,7; 9,703 348,3 9 23,936,935 4 -18 196 6,812,542 917,591 536,237 12,043,628 3,741,613 637,517 4,047,717 2,428,30,1 7 306 327 1,130 876 1 467 009 7,269.547 2,421,672 following figures show the extent of our imports and exports in September, compared with last year. I insert the statement to show that at present the supplies taken for export are quite insignificant, and that our supplies of breadstuff's have been very materially augmented The . WHEAT. Imports. , . « 1866. , > Exports. 1867. 1866. cwt-. , 1867. cwts Week endi g cwts. cwts. September 7A 282,064 314,855 229,45 i 293,824 757,270 761,138 737,175 646,705 11 676 29.405 8,546 29,424 92,i 83 1,119,693 2,905,288 55,438 202,784 46,893 33,379 1,088 144 80 44 I “ 21 28 1 “ £ Total ••••••« ... ,.... 5,792 8,136 73jl60 FLOUR. September 7 “ “ “ 14 21 28 Total A 27,297 22,088 28,847 22,727 44,bS4 184 6 235 1,362 '538 154,140 1,563 2,124 20,184 heavy fall has taken place in the value of wool during the last eighteen months, and the quotations are now at a comparatively low Our imports continue to increase year by year, the supplies received since the 1st of January last being much larger than in 1866 or in 1865. The latest advices from Australia state that the approach¬ ing clip is likely to exceed that of the present season by about 80,000 bales, and we learn from South America that the clip or wool in that part of the world will be larger than in former seasons. As regaids this country, it may be noticed that the supply of eheep ha9 been very materially augmented since this period last year. So much so has this been the case that the value of store sheep has fallen very considerably. It may therefore be inferred that the clip of wool in England and Scot¬ land in the spring of 1868 will be above the average. Our manufactupoint. 490 THE CHRONICLE. will then have abundant supply of wool to meet their wants and prices will very probably be lower than at the present time. The imports of wool into the United Kingdom in the eight months ending August 31, were as under ; rere an From Continent Cane East Indies Australia Other countries 1863. lbs. 1866. lbs. 14,318,926 14,491,801 9,294,213 88,034,891* 11,720,715 90,705,702 11,619,449 12,388,168 97,047,069 13,925,859 1867. It)*. 11,380,301 18,552,086 8,323,646 115,290,496 17,178,894 [October 19,1867. , The rates of foreign exchange continue to give way, but, at the same time, quotations are not yet,adverse to this country. Italy and Spain are decidedly lower. In Paris there is a decline, owing to a heavy de¬ mand for remittance caused by the sale of securities in the London market on French account. and £1,500,000 or three days. It is estimated that between £1,000,000 in securities have been disposed of during the last two In the market for bullion, the principal feature is a firme market dollars, and a rise of id. per ounce in the quotation. There Total 137,860,546 155,686,247 170,655,423 i9 scarcely any demand for gold for export, and the business doing in The exports of wool from the United Kingdom have increased, and silver is almost entirely on French account. Our imports of gold dur¬ in the first eight months show an augmentative of about eighteen mil¬ ing the week, have amounted to £273,000; of fine bar and dore lion of pounds. The increase is chiefly to Belgium and Germany. silver to £254,000, and of Mexican dollars to £200,000. The prices Annexed are the particulars of exports : current for bullion are as follows: Bar gold 77s. 9d., fine do. 77s. 9d. to 77s. 9£d., do. refinable 77s. lid., Spanish doubloons 76s., South 1865. 1866. ,1867. American do 73s. 7d. to 73s. 9d, United States gold coin 76s. 3d.; bar lbs. lbs. lbs. To Hanse Town* 1,134,748 6,357,570 silver 60fd., dore do, 60£d., fine cake silver 65d., and Mexican dollars 1,838.4S7 2,018,828 32,432,049 617,090 868,641 46,507,371 37,071,856 Belgium Prance United States Other countries — Total 8,814,492 35,673,220 472,348 1,986,920 To Hanse Towns 53,304,550 1,320,283 757,142 610,117 3,5G8,125 6,989,872 GROWN. HOME To Hanse Towns 4 France Total regards 1,724,733 , 720,676 105,104 124,640 654,590 414,667 2,412,817 8,904 954,595 5,489,280 5,788,632 5,821,725 United States Other countries As 1,234,121 343,542 3,671,662 1,490,778 1,241,308 1,997,500 Belgium 452.512 918,880 689,468 2,117,971 6,757,829 Total 129,077 2,092,245 966,612 2,660,420 818,023 Belgium France United States Other countries exports of woolen goods, it appears that in woolen reduction, as compared with last year, of 2,700,000 our cloth there is a yards, of which 1,260,000 yards is in our shipments to the United T llowing have been the total quantities of woolen goods exported in the eight months: x States. 1865. Woolen and worsted yarn, lbs Woolen cloths of all kinds, yards In n 1866. 1867. 24,489,350 21,629,194 4,189,737 1,924,754 800,633 4,774.862 479,756 143,212,487 16,331,(*85 24,388,092 20,051,900 16,934,2.. 0 3.886,337 4,058,254 1,059,949 Flannels, do Blankets, do Blanketing and baizes, do Carpets and druggetts, do Shawls, nigs, &c., number Worsted stuffs, yards 4,636,038 3,036,887 804,927 5,202,933 3,295,617 589,277 443,047 133,530,775 156,909,670 cotton, at Liverpool, this week a further decline has taken place At the commencement of the week there appeared to be prices. less pressure to sell, but the market closes with a dull and heavy ap* Business has been deranged by rumours of failures, one of likely to have been of a very important and extensive character. An arrangement, however, has been entered into by which the firm in question will be enabled to meet its liabilities. The heavy fall in cotton since the commencement of June has caused much anxiety to prevail respecting the actual poiition of the cotton trade, and many fears are entertained that numerous failures will be the result, and pearance. which was there is this feeling in the country respecting this trade, other branches of commerce are not l'kely to improve. In the money market there has been rather more animation, but the activity which has prevailed being chiefly incidental to the quarter and to the maturing of bills on the “ fourth,” is only of a very temporary character. There is still a very large supply of money seeking em¬ ployment in the discount market. The best descriptions of paper are sought after, and are therefore taken at low rates. The quotations are decidedly lower than at the close of last week, and as regards the best descriptions of paper, having various periods to run, rule as under : probably, so long as r'er cent 30 to 60 days' bills 3 months'Dills 4 months' bank bills l*(gH % Per Cent 3 %<g>2 | I 6 months'bank bills l*@l* I 4 & 6 months' trade bills 1*@1* I 2 @3 ^The purchases of grain made by France, and the quarterly payments a diminution of about one million sterling in the supply of bullion held, and an increase of about £2,120,000 in the amount of bills discounted by the Bank of France. The Paris money market is rather firmer, but there is no important change in the quotations. The supply of bullion held by the Bank of France is still large, viz., £37,257,440 Discounts have been augmented to £19,733,462. In other parts of the Continent, the value of money has not materially changed during the week. The following statement shows the rates of discount at the leading Continental cities at that date, and at this period last year: have caused r-B’k rate—* At Paris Vienna Berlin ... 1866. lboi. 3 2ft 5 4 5 4 .Frankfort. 4 fAmst’rd’m 5* 2* 2* 73 3 5* 5 3* 5* , . r-B’k rate—,Op. m’kt—, 1866. 1867. 1866 1867. m’kt—, 1867. 2-2* 4 2* l*-2 2-2* 59d. per ounce. Comparatively speaking the Stock Exchange has been almost de¬ Very little business has been transacted in securities of any description, and the tendency of prices is unfavorable. On Wednesday the markets were inj a very excited state, owing to the panic on the serted. FOREIGN. * for Mexican Turin 6 Brussels.. 3 Madrid 9 ... 5 2* 6 Hamburg. - — St. 7 7 Petb?g. - 2* i,— 2*-2* — 4 7-10 2 8* 9 Paris Bourse. Italian stock declined about 3, and was offered at 45, decline of £ took the markets have been quieter, but and in Consols place. During the last few days much uncertainty exists m regard to the actual 9tate of affairs on the Continent as well as at Liverpool. The highest and lowest prices of Consols on each day of the week are subjoined : Week a ending Oct. 5.. Monday. Tuesday Wed’y. Thur. Friday. Sat. Consols for money.. 94%-94* 94*-94* 94%-94* 94*-94% 94*-94% 94*-94* The Committee of Investigation in the matter of the Atlantic and Railway Company have issued their report. The Com¬ mittee states that the sum required to complete and repair the line is $3,000,COO, and to pay outstanding debts for supplies, Ac., 11,000,000. The total sum required, therefore, is [$4,000,000. It is proposed to defer the payment of the interest on the first devisional bonds for two years, on the second divisional bonds for three years, and on the con¬ solidated mortgage bonds for four years, from the 31st of March last. American securities have commanded very little attention. The amount of business transacted is therefore small, and the tendency of prices is unfavorable. On Thursday Atlantic and Great Western Rail¬ way debentures and bonds 1090 1 ; but the whole of this improvement has since been lost. United States Five-Twenty Jbonds are decidedly weaker, but not to any important extent. Erie Railway shares are dull, but Illinois have ruled steady. United States Five-Twenty bonds close this evening at 71 £ to 71£ ; Atlantic and Great Western Railway debentures 25 £ to 26^ ; do. consolidated mortgage bonds, 22 to 23 ; Erie Railway shares, 40£ to 41£, and Illinois Central, 77 to 77£. The following statement shows the highest and lowest prices of the principal American securities on each day of the week: Great Western W eek ending Oct. 6. Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat’rday. U. S. 5-20'8 Atlantic & G’t Westera consol'd bonds ^rie Shares ($100).. Illinois shares ($100) 72*-72* 72%-72% 71*-72* 71*-72* 71*-71* 71*-7l* 22*-23* 23 -.... 22*-.... 23*-... 21 *-22 22*-— 4l*-42% 42*-.... 44*-.... 41*-.... 40*-.... 41*-— 77 -.... 76*-.... 76 -77 77*-.... 77 -77* 77 -.... English market Reports—Per Cable* The daily losing 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.—The Bank of England has lost £847,000 during the week, and the Bank of France 4,000,000 irancs The drain of coin from England to France is reported to have been large and is continuing. Consols continue to fall, and on the week have lost 11-16. American securities ar9 without animation, and on Thursday closed exceedingly flat at the quotations named : * Fri. Consols for money U. S. 6’s (1862) llliuois Central shares.. Erie Railway shares.... Atlantic & Great West¬ ern cons, bonds The 94* 11* Sat. 94* 71* 77* Mon. Tnes. Wed. Thu. 93% 71* 93* 93 9-16 43* 44 94* 71* 77* 46* 21* 21* 21* 78 x 68 7-16 x68* 77* 77* 77* 46* 45* 44* 21* 21* 21* daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort were— Frankloit 74* 74* 73* 73% 74 73* Liverpool Cotton Market.—The Liverpool cotton market has been active, and quotations close at id. better. The daily movement is shown in the following quotations at the close of each dav : Fri. Bales bo d 12,000 Price Midd. Uplds. 8*d. ik Orleans 8kd. Sat. 18,000 8 3-16 85-16 | Mon. 20,000 8 5-16d. 8 Tnes. 15,000 8*d. ll-16d. 8*d. Wed.! 15,000 8%d. 8*d. "Tim. 115,000 8*d. 8#d. THE CHRONICLE. October 19,1867.] Liverpool Breadstuff* Market.—Breadstuff, hare been Tery active ^ price, have now reached a very high figure. At the close Thursday, however, quotations were somewhat easier, and as stated in the following table : on’ s. 8. d. , d. 14 16 45 5 3 49 Wheat (Red W in. )p. ctl ... 14 6 (Oahf white) “ 16 0 lfWe8t.mi,d)p. 480 lbs 44 9 *- Peas. Mon. Sat. Fri. Tues. d. 14 10 17 0 48 9 6 6 3 9 50 0 a. 8 9 3 6 9 0 Wed. d. b. d. 0 0 3 6 10 0 b. 15 0 17 0 48 3 5 6 3 10 52 0 15 17 48 5 3 62 Thu. s. d. 14 10 17 0 47 9 5 6 3 10 52 0 . Flour (extra • • • • • . . . # ... V • • Liverpool Provisions Market.—Beef, after being steady at 125s. broke on Thursday, and closed at 122}s. Pork is steady at 71e. and Cheese at 62s. In Bacon there is an advance of 6d„ the last quotation being 45s. 6d. Lard, however, is 6d. lower. The alterations during the week are reported as follows. 6 Fri. s. Sat. Mon. s. d. 0 0 45 0 55 6 52 0 8. 125 71 125 71 45 55 52 d. 304 lbs 125 0 B«ef(ex. pr. mess) p. 304 lbs 125 o Pork(Etn. pr. mess) p 200 lbs 71 0 (Cumb. cui) p. 112 lbs 45 0 (American) “ “ Cheese (mid. Am.) “ “ Bacon Lard Tues. d. Wed. d. 0 0 45 0 55 0 52 0 8. 0 0 0 6 0 8. 125 71 125 71 45 55 52 d. 0 0 6 0 0 Liverpool Produce Market.—Rosin and Spirits Turpentine no Thn. 8. d. 122 71 45 6 0 55 6 0 52 0 change Petroleum, which has been steady at the late maximum closed on Thursday at a decline of fd. Tallow has advanced from 45s! 3d. to 46s. 9d. Clover Seed is nominal, the latest quotation (Tuesday) being 48s. 6d. The daily reports give the following closing quotations. has occurred. Fri. d. 8. Ashes—pots Rosin (com Wilm ). “ middling.... “ floe per 112 44 lbs (American)..p 112 lbs. 44 6 0 Mon s. d. 8 *6 12 0 6 0 8 12 27 0 27**0 27 1 1 45 6 2 1 6 1 2 45 3 1 6 1 2 45 3 44 Sp turpentine “ tetroleum (std white).p. 8 lbs 44 spirits...,per8 lbs Tallow * 8 12 “ Sat. s. d. 3 Clover seed (Am. red) • • • • . . *0* . • Ta. 8. d. Wed. 8**6 "o’ 27 8~6 0 12 1 1 45 48 d. 8. 12 d. 12 0 27**6 27*0 1 1 45 • • • Sat. Cake and oils were quoted as Fri. 25 68 follows 6 6 Mon. 25 68 6 6 Tn. 25 68 6 6 • .... Th. 26 0 68 6 : Mon. Tn. Wd. Th. linseed cake \(obl’g).p IaIUDCCU. ton£1015 0£10 15 0£10 15 0 £10 15 0 £10 15 0£1015 ** o/ A Ai\ 1f\ n A(\ 1A A AA 1 A 40 0 0 40 0 0 oil 40 10 0 40 10 0 40 10 0 40 10 116 0 0 116 0 0 116 0 0 116 0 jerm oil “ 38 0 0 "hale oil 38 0 38 0 0 0 38 0 0 38 0 p. 252 gals.38 0 0 The ~ are the quotations Iron (Sc. pig mxd num) p. ton. Tin (Straits & Banca) p. 112 lb. following 1866. $2,285,710 1867. 120,219,890 148,258,934 139,775,160 .$175,250,196 $124,380,986 $150,544,644 $142,909,242 .... Since Jan 1 1865. $4,161,096 $5,452,800 169,797,396 $3,134,082 The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive of specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the fol lowing table: This To Great Britain. France Holland & Belg. $1,286,234 $75,295,057 Germany Other Since Jan. 1,1867 week. N.Europe 8,100 211,728 457,900 Spain 4,575 Other S. Europe East Indies China & Japan . Australia Br.N A Colonies The 39,089 12,805 176.810 5S2.781 8,157,495 4,293,369 16,819,851 1,385,116 1,147,389 5,306,466 11,331 1,717,418 2,464,642 2,767,721 This To Cuba Since Jan.1. week. $91,797 Hayti OtherW. I Mexico $4,607,009 35,341 130,928 52,5S4 .... New Granada... 1,111,098 5,563,494 1,638,233 2,435,179 542,091 895,028 Venezuela Br. Guiana Brazil OtherS. A. ports Allother ports 40,809 2.321,269 2,826,917 2,707,059 2,601 following will show the exports of specie from the port of New ending Oct. 12, 1867 : York for the week Oct. 10—St. America, Bremen— Foreign silver 10 —St. America, Havre— 44 American gold... 10—St. America, Paris— 44 10—St. America, London— Mexican Doubloons 44 10—St. Gold and silver bars 11—St. City of Boston, Liverpool— 60,900 . Mexican Doubloons 44 ampton— $1,200 America, South- British 58,231 11—St gold Saxonia, Hamb’g— Doubloons 51,600 American Gold American Silver .... 91,550 10,493 14,198 180,300 5,000 $473,478 41,938,042 1,1867 - 1 6* 1 2 45 9 Same time in 1866 1865 1864 1863 1862 1861 1860 1859 ..$54,113,938 1858 23,803,975 35,806,051 for metals : 29,090,584 24,784,763 32,353,393 17,630,354 21,922,987 60,019,525 imports of tpecie at this port during the week have been as follows; Silver 0 A 0 0 0 $22,513,748 33,216,727 1857 1856.... 36,007,879 1856 45,811,727 1854 3,283,282 1853 40,059,472 1852 . The $42,411,520 Same time in Oct. 8—St. Saxonia, Hamburg- Sat. XT Previously reported Total since Jan. 6 2 9 Wd. 26 0 68 6 1864. For the week. Previously reported Markets.—Sugar is firm at 6d. advance, closing at 26s. Linseed Oil is 10s. higher. There is no other chaDge in the reported list. Fri. EXPORTS PROM XXW YORK TOR THE WEEK. Total for the week London Produce, Oil and Metal Sugar (No.l2Dch std) p. 112 lbs. 25 6 Linseed (Calcutta) per qtr. 68 b following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Oct. 15 : the Hi 0 6 2 3 6 The Th. s. 491 44 9—Brig L. Adelaid, Port au Prince— Gold Silver 9—St. Santiago “ 5,500 1,000 438 de Cuba— Gold....... “10—Brig La Creole— 850 Gold 4410—St. Rising StarGold “ Silver 10— Gaubimela 17,755 3(0 449 Reuligo— Gold “11—Moro Castle, HavanaGold Silver 500 550 542 . Total for week Latest: Previously reported Friday Evening, October 18. quoted at 94-J-. American securities continue U. weak; S. 6’s (5-20’s) are quoted at 68, Illinois Central shares at at Sales to-day 12,000—middling Uplands at 8f and Middling Orleans at 8f. The sales of the week foot up 95,000 bales, of which 28,000 were for in expoit and 6,000 on speculation. port is 718,000 (193,000 American) bales. The stock Breadstuffs quiet. Corn, 47s. 9d. Wheat—Western, 14s. 10d., and Barley nominal at 5s. 6d. Oats, 3s. lOd. Peas, 52s. Provisions are unchanged. Produce without cbaDge. Tallow, 45s. 9d. The London Produce and Oil markets are quiet and prices as yes¬ California 17s. terday. $2,642,898 ©1)£ Bankers* ©alette. and Atlantic and Great Western consolidated 21±. Cotton is firm. $27,914 2,614’9S4 Since Jan. 1, 1867. Consols for money are Erie shares 44f, . Friday, Oct. 18, 1867, P. M. The Money Market.—The loan market has shown a steady de¬ parture from the relief reported last week. The applications for money have been unusually active, and yesterday the stringency was equal to anything experienced since the crisis set in ; although to¬ day we observe a slight relaxation so far as respects brokers loans. On call loans the minimum.iate has been 7 per cent.; a consider¬ however, has been loaned at 7 per cent in gold, able amount, or 7 per cent, with a commission of | per cent. The last bank statement showed a loss ot $1,300,000 in deposits again of $800,000 in legal tenders, changes which did not ap¬ Imports and Exports for the Week.—The imports this week show pear to warrant an expectation of any such stringency as as since a small increase both in dry goods and in general merchandise, been experienced ; especially as the drain westward has ceased, and the total being $4,191,500 against $4,025,402 last week, and there is not yet any important demand from the South. The wants 14,114,806 the previous week. The exports are $3,134,082 this week of brokers have not increased but the severity of the pressu re against $2,572,657 last week, and $3,330,163 the previous week. The appears to have arisen from the urgent necessities of merchants; exports of cotton the past week were 3,898 bales, against 2,444 bales Merchandize and produce paper has been neglected by the banks last week. The following are the imports at New York for week for four or five weeks past, and the merchants have become not a ending (for dry goods) Oct. 11, and for the week ending (for general little inconvenienced faom the inability to get discounts. There merchandise) Oct. 12 : has been consequently an unusually active demand from this source, FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE which the banks have been but partially able to WEEK. satisfy ; and, with 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. the large offerings outside the banks, rates for the Dry goods $735,179 highest grade o f $2,279,936 $1,996,336 $1,665,307 General merchandise... 2,512,484 2,009,011 1,938,818 2,526,193 paper have advanced to 8@10 per cent., while prime produce Total for the week.. $3,247,663 $4,288,947 $3,934,154 $4,191,500 commission paper has been offered at 10@12 per cent. These are Previously reported 177,183,499 144,685,121 230,867,268 194,036,513 the highest rates experienced for a very long period ; and as there Since Jan. 1 ....$180,431,162 $148,974,068 $234,801,422 $198,228,013 is always a large amount of second rate paper, in times like these, 1° our report of the dry-gooda trade will be found the imports of dry I which cannot be negotiated, there is naturally an unusual caution goods for one week later, | among lenders, and a close discrimination as to names. COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. and , .. .... * , The following are the quotation for loans of various classes : Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 2 months Good endorsed bills, 8 4months.. do single names I Lower grades ©.. 7 © 7 .. 8 © 9 United States Securities.—Governments & 9 ©12 H ©12 15 ©25 have been unsettled induces a certain amount of re¬ alizing on the part of individuals and even banks, while the discov¬ ery of the counterfeits in Seven-Thirties has caused a large influx of the notes from the interior, depressing their value, and conse¬ quently depreciating bonds generally. The course of the London and Frankfort market has been unfavorable to the value of.Five The monetary pressure and weak. The uneasiness in France and on Twenties. dered ment “ the Continent, engen¬ by the position of affairs in Italy, and the probable embroil¬ of Fraucc in the difficulties, has tended to weaken our securi ties; and the result is that Five-Twenties are to day 68,ex coupon, equal to 70$ with coupon attached, against 72 a week ago. This fall has caused the foreign dealers here 10 realize extensively upon their bonds, and Sixty-Twos have fallen 1 per cent, during the week, while Sixty-Fours and old Sixty-Fives are respectively $ and $ per cent, lower. The severest fall, however, has been in new Sixty-Fives and Sixty-Sevens, which are each down 1$. This de¬ Rock Island Fort sympathy with the fall in Seven-Thirties, explain ed above; the Seven-Thirties being now convertible at the SubTreasury into either of those bonds. The conversions are made even, as respects principal, the iuterest on Seven Thirties being al¬ lowed to date of conversion at 7 3-10 per cent., and that on the bonds being charged at the rate of 6 per cent, in currency. There have been no further important amounts of counterfeit Seven-Thirties discovered. The issue is now generally estimated at about $2uO,COO, of which $79,000 has been received by the Treas¬ ury. The Secretary of the Treasury has made a formal demand upon the firms from whom the notes were received for reclamation, which has not be£n complied with, the purpose of the dealers being, we understand, to test their liability at law. The interest on the Five-Twenty bonds, payable semi-annually, falls due on the 1st of November, and $24,900,000 in coin will be requited to Boston, pay the At New York, $L7,429,5ul; Philadelphia, $ ; Baltimore, follows same, as $2,910,351 ; : $258,439 50; Cincinnati, $194, 752; St. Louis, $94,772; Chicago, $128,7< 9 ; Pittsburg, $10,422 ; New Orleans, $13,937; Buffalo, N. Y., $9,865 5(J; Charleston $3,058; San Francisco, $3,585. The lollowing are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬ pared with preceding weeks : $652,016 50; Washington, D. C., 13. Sep. 20. Sep. 27. >ep. U. U. U. U. U. U. C. U. S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons. S. 5-2U’s, 1S64 “ S. S. S. S S. S 5-20’s, 1865 " 5-20’s, 1865, N. iss... 5-~0’s, 1807, c 10-40’s, 7-30’s 2d Series 7-30’s 3rd series... Railroad and . 111% 114% 109% 110% 10‘% 107% 99% 166% 106% 111% 114% 109% 111% Bank shares. Railroad “ Coal “ . Mining “ Improv’t “ 108 108% 99% 107 107 5 109% 107% 107% 99% 107 107 99% 165% 105% 106% 106% 1U0% 105% 105% Miscellaneous Stocks.—The stock market has irregular, but prices, have not sympathized with stringency in the money market so closely as might have been expected. It is understood that the combinations which are operat¬ ing lor a higher market have made arrangements for loans extend¬ ing 20 to 30 days ahead ; so that they have no difficulty in carrying been excited and the stocks, and experience no embarrassment from the calling in of loans. The fall iu Government securities, aDd in State stocks and railroad bonds, has, however, reduced the relative value of railroad stocks, and the cliques have shown a disposition to moderate their expectations, and have probably sold a moderate amount of stock. Erie, Northwestern The chief interest centres in common, and Rock Island. Prices are percent, of last Friday, excepting Northwestern common and Rock Island. The following the closing quotations at the regular board, were compared with those of the six preceding weeks : Sept 6 Sept. 13. Sept 20. Cumberland Coal Quicksilver • • • • \ 28 Canton Co 47% Mariposa pref... 20 • • • L47% • • • New York Central Erie Hudson River... 106% 69% 126% 70 133 Reading 102% 82% 103% 82% Michigan Central 111 89 111 Clev. and Pittsb Clev. and Toledo 126 130 Mich. Southern. 108% • • 24% 44% .... 106 61% 128% 101% . Sept. 27. Oct. 4. Oct. 11. Oct. 18. 27 25 29 • .... 30 25 25% 43% 43% 18 17 17 no% 114% 74% 128% 101% 83% 109% 83% 107% 61% 127% 101% 81% 76 109 81 [109 128 12S% 79 70 128% 101% 81% , 79% 128 .... 92,878 59,588 100 500 28 2i" 71% . . Total current week. Total Previous w’k. 1,000 3,135 683 737 25,568 39,250 35,871 63,800 20,979 50,720 40,436 35,200 29,349 36,023 64,818 65,200 99.671 71,699 93,780 75,636 65,372 7J.537 The transactions the si" 131%x.dl06 54,385 7,900 2,460 - - - 95,925 for shares in 114 51,216 2,950 2f250 T «... Regular Board Open Board... 59,362 500 400 • . . 200 ’400 1,450 400 200 10,054 3,770 7,266 1.410 1,180 4,885 2,138 3,575 65,686 several weeks 716 26^399 274 „„ 375,293 3,350 1,400 35,229 15,193 ”,971 178,602 36,000 260,903 02,399 40,736 are 439,595 438.864 shown IQ following statement: Im- Min- Rail- Tele¬ Coal. ing. pro’t. graph. ending— Bank. road. July 5 (5 days) 298 395,506 4,406 23,425 4,850 23,753 12 2,182 464,286 15,742 24,635 19,675 42,837 19 1,281 287,142 4,955 5,150 5,900 15,115 20 1,027 641,057 5,940 10,600 13,500 24.309 Aug. 2 1,202 359,786 1,S55 6,400 5,000 10,209 9 990 277.709 1,590 5,550 3,000 8,108 003 177,001 10 38<r 3,200 1,500 8,884 24 516 217,152 2,423 4,450 1.600 19,357 30 242 166,482 341 3.520 2,205 9.125 410 710 3.010 9.489 358 178,166 Sept. 6_ 638 2 4,t.02 2,179 1>00 1,000 9,978 13 20 525 417,212 544 4,8*0 3,344 18,250 27 198 508,558 853 3.350 5,400 34 T45 Oct. 4 205 850,048 1,160 2,700 l,7t() 51,676 11 320 391,491 249 1,300 2,7'0 25,961 18 374 375,293 585 3,350 1,400 35,229 Week “ “ “ “ “ “ “ " Steam¬ ship. Other. Total 8.600 8,344 469,247 16,672 5,643 590 679 11,441 7,631 18,295 13,439 6.537 14,074 0,70 > 5 048 0,356 3,84 1 9,200 5,438 8,707 11.580 338 615 628.162 4U5,12 808.75 > 201,827 260.197 i02 205 4,916 17,162 212,415 10,090 1,1,228 28L515 9,328 6,755 7,903 5,775 9.538 7,005 15,193 7,971 460,588 574,785 422,316 4:18,864 439,595 following is a summary of the amount of Government and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds bonds “ *• “ “ 13,978 9,082 The sold the at Regular. Board U.S. Bonds... .$236,000 U. S. Notes 85,000 State* City b’ds 221,000 38,000 Company B’nds. ending , July July Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Auk. 19 26 2 9 16 23 Sept. ~ept. 27 13,000 Oct. Oct. Oct. 4 11 18 21,000 15,000 19,500 7,000 113,500 weeks are shown iu the following tabuState & Company Total Notes. City Bonds. Bonds. amount 441,500 437,000 797,006 208,000 Governments Bonds. 1,596,500 4,026,500 1,363,400 2,172,500 2,752,' 00 4,020,£00 2,921,900 4,228,900 4,719,300 3,962,. 00 , 97,000 592,350 317,000 399,500 279,500 441.500 83,100 457,500 145,000 2,572,000 7,171,250 8,342,700 4,180,600 3,590,850 6,462,350 8,957,500 6,770,050 3,954,600 6,609,700 5,104,850 8,383,400 488,7 0 623,000 631,000 217,500 4,530.050 487,500 235,1.00 756,0o0 1,618,000 178.700 5,774,400 6,480.5'0 6,698,600 2,137,750 367,800 1,041,600 276,&5U 1,866,850 449,100 1,823,400 1,492 500 796,500 456,000 419,000 457,509 500,000 196,000 5,^66.850 4,137,6" 0 2,697,860 3,192,800 20 ‘ Week 670,000 624,0001,265,500 271,500 $3,962,000 86,000 332,50'J 406,500 18,600 1,005100 76,5o0 482,0^0 353,000 2i5.000 189,01)0 158,000 1,6 rf,0‘>0 4,240,650 3,262,100 30 : Fri. Thur. $895,000 The totals for several past lation: Friday. July 5 (5 days).. July 12 Wed. Tiies. 1,47.6,0001,370,500 800*' 001,550,500 455,100 6,698,600 1,296,500 1,470,000 l,3Ub,200 7 63,200 769,500 6,480,500 Total Cur. w’k...$580,000 Previous week.. 808,500 Week each day of the past week on Mon. Sat. 826,600 1,005,100 119,000 170,000 106.500 156,000 129,600 216,000 159,500 151.(J 00 246,200 ' 1I3.COO price of gold has fluctuated duriug the week between 142$ and 144$. The premium has sympathised with foreign movements, the threatening prospect of a quarrel be¬ tween France and Italy on the Roman question having especially strengthened the market. . The failure of a large cotton firm at Liverpool early in the week, and the lack of confidence in the cottou merchants of that port had a tendency to force up the premium. At the same time, the market is largely over sold in anticipation of the payment of the November coupons, making cash gold very scarce. To-day loans have been made at 1-16 to $ per cent, per day. The fluctuations in the gold market during the week closing with Friday are shown in the following table : The Gold Market.—The OpenHighClos¬ ing. Lowest, est. Range, ing. Saturday, Oct. “ Monday, Tuesday, “ Wedn’day, “ Thursday, Friday, 144% 144% 144% 143% 143 143 144% 144% 144% 144% 144% 144% 143% 144% 143% 143% 143 144% 12 “ 14...15. 16 17 “ 18 144% 144% 132% Current week.. Previous week Jan. 1 to date 0# J% 0% C% 1% 0% 144% 1% 143 143 145% 2% 132% 140% 14% Cleannc;*. 144# 59,948,WO 144% «:V2JO,000 143% 56,550.000 143% 50,301,000 144% 64,272,000 144% 144% •••• 143% 878,200,000 144% , .... this port for the shown in the following formula : The movement of coin and bullion at ending Oct. 12, was as Specie in banks on Saturday, Oct. 5 receipte from California Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury $428,717 23,074 35,000— Total reported su ly for week Export of coin and bullion to foreign ports $473,478 Treasure 100% 80% $ iai* Fri. Week 85 300 27 .... 17 112 67^ Thnrs, 230 700 100 Cleve¬ land and Pittsburg, below those 57,863 Express At At Wed. 10 Tues. 86 Mon. 10 2,674 6 109% 10'% 108% ... Sat. 69 . 13 109 121 ••• 43% 67% 102%x.d.97 100% 100% 121% 122% following statement shows the volume of transactions in and open boards conjointly, on each day of the week, closing with this day’s business : Sept. 109 105% , 43% 65% 102% 102% shares, at the regular Sept. 111% 112% 104 120% .. 41 The 111% 111% 108% 168% 106% 1(6% 100% 104% 104% no% 111% 108% 108% . 106 Wayne Oct. 4. Oct. 11. Oct. 18. Hi% 113% * Illinois Central which is cline has been in 70% 104% preferred 39% 64% 100% 100% 46% 70% 46 Northwestern.... Per cent Per cent. [October 19, 1867. CHK0N1CLE. THE 492 week $9,368,603 $9,860,394 Specie in U. S. Treasury on $7,167,761 9,603,771 banks on Saturday, Oct. 12... $2 436 010 unreported sources Derived from 2,692,633 2,219,155— account of customs Apparent excess of reported supply for week Paid into Exchange —The coarse of rates has been steadiiy downward during the week, sterling being to-day -f per cent, lower There is a considerable accumulation of bills on than a week ago. the market with but few buyers. Foreign following are the closing quotations for the several of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : The London Comm 1. Oct. 4. 109 (ft 109% Sept. 27. @ 109 k; 109%® 109% 104%® 1095* 109 bkrsVfl# do shrt Paris, long.. -5-17%@ do short 5.15 @ do do .... Swiss Hamburg 41 (ft Amsterdam Bremen Berlin..^...-... ®5.17% 35%® 36 40 %@ 41 41 40% @ 1*%(ft 71%@ Frankfort . 5.20 40 %@ 40% 78% ® 78% 71% ® 71% 72 Custom House and Sub transactions for the week at the Treasury have been as follows : The Custom House. Sub-Treasury rReceipts. Payments. $3,814,317 15 $3,057,090 13 2,876,073 69 4,877,042 00 2,559,000 39 1,698,198 02 5 ‘4,085 76 1,383,494 54 5,339,931 41 3.726,169 24 2,64S,552 26 1,037,933 20 Receipts. $309 926 06 501,591 45 430,196 99 377,354 79 257,219 66 342,866 8S 7... Oct. “ 8. 9... 10... . “ “ “ 11... “ 12... Total Balance in $14,80 ,539 23 $2,219,155 83 Sub-Treasury morning of Oct. 7. $18,251 348 56 105,754,210 09 $124,005,558 65 Deduct payments 14,805,539 23 during the week Saturday evening during the week $109,200,019 42 3,445,81)9 33 Balance on Increase -. Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $095,000.-. Included receipts of customs were $154,000 in gold, and $2,065,- in the 156 in Gold Certificates. The following Weeks 13.... 20.... 27.... “ “ - — -- — — Sub-Treasur y 1,010,006 15,022,070 2.078,270 28.444,856 17,330,480 28,533,967 17,0(50,498 21.689,378 21,804,904 2,894,219 2,605,971 “ 2,996,876 23,595,430 “ 22,910,905 2,858,3 4 2,106,2S2 2* 1,259,418 27.433,239 10,552,079 18,199,966 2,219,155 14,805,539 18,251,343 “ 10.... 17 24 31 ... “ . “ ... Sept. 7 “ 14 ... 21.... 28.... Oct. 5.... “ 12 .. 2.685,075 2,978,496 2,992.122 2,480,507 130,581,603 130,311,621 130,196,095 128,761,670 17,416,809 18,505,724 129,087,202 23,690,104 135,284,162 * 27,640,499 21,445.375 16,927,244 20,019,828 New York City Banks.— -The condition of the Associated Banks 134,449,200 112,766,019 114,214,666 119,381,287 Inc. 1,434,486 Inc. Inc. Dec. Dec. Inc. Inc. 325.535 Dec. Dec. 118,686,822 114,989,483 105,754,210 109,200,019 Dec. Inc. 6,19(5,900 884,962 21,683^181 1, J48j640 5,166.620 68-1,465 3,707,338 11,235,273 3,445,809 following statement shows the of New York City for the week ending at the commencement of business on AVERAGE Loans and Discounts. Baxes. New York Manhattan Chiinges in Balances. Dec. 1,906,678 Inc. ; 89,112 Inc. 269,989 Dec. 511,522 , Receipts. Balances. 13,055,392 130,492,492 18,851,294 18,180,192 17,49 hl44 28,475,460 43,128,556 15,478,-97 15 453,207 Aug. 3— October 12, 1867 : Circula Net ... . 1,128,472 2,702,054 1,157,243 4,899,879 —: — Broadway Ocean Mercantile Pacific Republic Chatham 600,000 500,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 2,000,000 450,000 412,500 Hanover 1,000,000 Irving Metropolitan Citizens. Nassau Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather Corn Exchange Commonwealth Continental Oriental Marine Atlantic Importers and Traders’.. Park 1,000,000 500,000 4,000,000 400,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 1,000,000 2,000,000 750,000 300,000 400,000 300,000 1,500,000 Mechanics’ Banking Ass. 2,000,000 500,000 Grocers’ 300,000 North River Manufacturers & Mer.... Fourth National Central National 10,022,314 10,000,000 26,664,917 1,000,000 6,417 ,.‘585 1,000,000 3.110,098 1,000,000 8,065,373 422,700 1,683,319 People’s North American 1,372,9-17 251,364 Eighth National Exch’ge 5, Clearings for the week ending Oct. Clearings for the week ending Oct. 12, Balances for the week ending Oct. 5, Balances for the week ending Oct. 12, 400.000 1,581,757 335.589 477,502 473,237 .354,017 719,206 549,472 9,603,77136,006,041 177,185,684 118.SU 195,5-! 7 75,702 59.300 277,255 56,114,922 $570,187,624 96 1867 1867 685,542,270 12 24.154,943 23 22,882,987 86 1267. 1867 The deviations from the returns of the lows 262,477 703,390 1,856,700 249,200 1,100 303,593 799,187 662.764 282 82,520,200 247,833,133 Total 797,330 269,434 903,300 9,227 90,000 225,000 946 709,819 499,708 311,550 838,999 757,667 Eleventh Ward New York Gold previous week are as fol¬ : Loans..... Dec. $101,236 8peele Inc. 235,163 Dec. 19,540 Circulation The following the totals for are Pec. $1,341,788 Deposits Legal Tenders a JffStk 913,009 6. Julv 13 247 series of weeks past: 33,653.869 jS £ Sue 2?3'4^? B40 10 IS: issss ss ’ Aggregate Legal g,|f| SI' SI 111? iil s&ss 33*565‘378 I99,40s’.705 12,715,404 AuS‘ 738,663 Dec. Circula- -*47,872,Und ,ni 76,047,431 5,31 R997 95^ J99,8g,035 11 mmmmfflt M a? Sisssas mg ffs ffl SSs » The following is the quarterly statement of the Banks of the city York, compiled from their official the Banking Department on the morning of Monday, Oct. 7, 186 < : of New statements^madejo T.TAT3T i ITIES. „„„„ Oct. 7, 1867. Jnlv 1,1S67 „ Capital .A Net profits Circulation $81,772,200 *28’fil'ioi •• 27.467.644.. Inc. 35.151.738.. Pec. 61,904,624. Dec. 145,172,566.. Dec. S’irrnViAA Due individual depositors 137 $950,157 246,824 4,4-3.668 7,599.559 2,078,019.. Dec. 1,750,935 nei 327.UM Total $342,965,362 $356,546,191 4,654,123 1,786,057 1,426,874 1,931,537 2,312,175 1,613,000 10,512,080 1,361,157 2,091,927 2,602,382 2,432,431 4,523,000 2,941,035 3,831,388 2,794,267 1,271,340 1,865,143 1,147,091 5,979,277 10,919,231 9,929,051 882,873 1,344,424 870,166 1,274.814 16,297,536 • 350,000 500,000 5,000,000 3,000,000 13,157,129 Loans and discounts Realestde Due from banks Cash items and bank-notes 151,412 49,981 3,860 801,303 150.262 268,251 178,730 291,000 1,891,238 780,419 263,895 1,166,619 1,519,501 4,533,311 1,873,356 809,162 496,473 993.170 798,283 5,926,225 47,401 900,000 45,591 798,705 51,493 481,556 10,978 140,132 858,750 132,359 275,575 78,122 10,205 6,532 51,710 333,000 35,088 291,158 9,000 195,363 366,306 2,205,777 17,072 132,219 88,010 4,189 102,099 33,779 575,700 752,839 947,214 7,686 564,702 242,127 20,762 29,537 128,001 28,250 10,475 47,606 11,914 46,387 379,450 3,125 23,235 17,344 1,256 9,129 123,959 22,202 744,989 3,183,973 4,859.121 9,801,714 5.671,227 1,884,440 2,428,158 1,320,048 2,772,704 1,642.852 1,150,655 Over-drafts 1.576,746 1,252,537 1,385,000 4,512,855 1,329,674 1,725,286 1,552,870 920,815 2,201,300 1,753,873 2,075.706 2,200,506 8,004 984,002 860,000 1,402.202 98,158 984,695 501,408 5,130,976 990,000 13,893,129 308,216 992,322 77,.850 756,760 11,615 1,184,071 461,561 283,500 836 1,036,018 2,964,156 12,458,304 1,696,765 12,384,828 317,680 560,052 476,689 811,600 219.000 687,000 641,786 230,001 533,919 243,824 188,126 288,095 S,858,232 3,586,637 273.366 280,041 1,‘■-76,42S 9,048,' 77..Inc. 2,559,791 76,632,374.. Dec. 16,231,936 1,166 1:30,859.. Dec. totals of the leading items of the Philadelphia Banks for last and previous weeks; Oct. 5. Capital Specie Legal Tenders Deposits Circulation Oct. 12. $16,017,150 $16,017,150 53,041,100 52,987.057 258’303 240,714 15.557,404 15,027,418 34,857,467 34,343,942 10,627,921 10,628,396 36,494,213 $4,276,301 2,760,866 4,515,974 Loans ; Clearings Decrease. Decrease. $54,043 Decrease. Decrease. 529,986 513,525 Increase Banks for a Date. 6. 13 July July July July Aug. ... Decrease. Philadelphia Circulation. Loans. Legal Tenders. 16,022,675 52,420,272 16,234,914 52,802,552 Specie. 461,951 419,399 10,640,201 10,641,770 10,008,860 53.150.569 871,744 16,862,112 16,733,198 15,909,195 15,767,140 16,882,816 15,717,909 16,249,658 10,009,733 53,104,475 333,118 302,055 10,637,651 10,633.750 3 Aug. 10 17 24 31 7... 14..... Oct. Oct. 475 2,217,912 755,088 series of weeks. 20 27 Aug. Aug. Aug. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. 31,589 . D. crease. The annexed statement shows the condition of the 21 28 15,845,482 5. 12. 15,557,404 15,027,418 15,513,794 banks statement, 53,427,840 53.117.569 53.5 9,449 53,399,090 53,7:34,087 53,776,452 53,792.203 53,540,501 53.655.569 53,041,100 52,987,057 804,979 10,635,925 10,627,761 317,3-9 314,242 307,658 10.628,310 279.714 252,691 228,528 10,628,794 272,535 258,303 246.714 10,628,324 10,626,356 10,632,737 10,6;’8,744 10,629,976 10,627,921 10,628,896 Deposits. 37,077,456 37,885,926 38,170 4 iS 37,839,640 38,094,543 36,861,477 36,394,835 36,459, ■■‘79 36,323,355 36,458,539 36,263,347 35,627,203 35,152,605 36,4“4,213 34,343,9’2 the footings of the Boston compared with those of the two previous weeks : Oct. 14. Oct. 8. sept. 80^ $41,990,000 $41,909,000 ^900,090 94,@2,617 95,177,109 96,409,0o5 Boston Banks—The following are - Capital Loans SDecie 478,161 Legal tender notes 13,572,652 Deposits 14,487,171 13,487,095 35,989,155 24,8^6,209 253,3i7 Due from other banks Due to other banks Circulation (National) Circulation (State) The past following are tl it 11 11 Oct. 4o2,339 15,694,139 14,079,652 35,294,823 24,85o,ot>5 ^,->u ,0G3 249,299 21,800 394 253, the comparative totals for a series of weeks L^"al Specie. 97, 19.81S 400,680 Tenders. 97,726.719 97.922,483 97,022,167 5lo,504 14,'74.509 453,029 407,016 452,339 417,073 13,423,822 12,b64,108 12,987,468 13,046,3,9 478,161 13 Loans. Sept. . 417,0*3 I 366,100 1,478,438 3,417.890 468,676 219,641 . 1,622,161 Total $312,965,3(51 $356,546,191 Philadelphia Banks.—The following shows the 681.610 411,210 lb-2,467 541,511 384,194 420,000 1,388,911 390,376 14,033.390 3,804.641 11,607,S6S 60,400.438 129,693 Specie Legal tenders 785,035 405,701 765,171 75,109,670 .Dec. 6,642,041 ..Inc. 13,744,3 9 Inc. 5.081.069.. Dec. 6,915,407 . Inc. $2,42S,064 $170,157,752 $172,686,416 73,487.5; 9 Stocks, bonds and mortgages —.... - — East River Bowery National...' Stuyvesant Legal * Commerce 2.820,500 200,000 100,000 250,000 Balances AMOUNT OF Capital. Specie. tion Deposits. Tenders. $3,000,000 $7,899,152 $1,845,168 $874,970 $5,792,265 $2,463,051 253,431 2,050.000 5,230,700 11,534 3,360,694 1,042,577 Merchants’... 7,021,694 330,632 8,000,000 876,330 1,885,516 4,964,942 Mechanics’ 2,000,000 149,998 5,288,940 587,000 3,651,774 937,087 Union 1,500,000 3,758,132 99,251 $ 465,919 770,061 2,247.294 America 3,000,000 7,988,241 1,264,421 1,900 6,915,?2S 1,835,462 Phoenix 1,800,000 3,582,705 226,338 287,110 2,370,420 565,735 City 1,000,000 206,937 3,075,125 422,764 1,949,125 Tradesmen’s 1,000,000 2,790,600 15,393 798,127 666,306 1,527,561 Fulton 67,763 600,000 2,020,152 1,740,252 812,844 Chemical........ 300,000 5,584,589 375,722 4,619,894 1,347,173 Merchants’ Exchange.... 1,235,000 3,130,201 42,755 452,611 2,292,124 75S.448 National 1,500,000 179,958 2,713,675 487,690 822,173 203,850 Butchers’ 800,000 20,005 2,382,501 26.0,206 1,735,144 574,15t ..•••••••••>,• Mechanics and Traders 600,000 1,985,526 19,319 195,720 1,514,03-4 485,337 Greenwich 200.000 Leather Manuf. National Seventh Ward, National. State of New York American Exchange 966,827 297,823 2,179,552 1,149,570 834,842 5,251,593 8.253,169 2,640,604 270,000 916,233 445,083 31,217 34,353 66,544 17,105 58,300 6,868 RESOURCES. Payments. 1,901,280 2,576,313 2,447,422 1,112,519 5,173,854 2,878,475 8,555,409 * .. table shows the aggregate transactions at the Sub- Custom House. 300,000 1,000,000 500,000 1,000,000 300,000 1,000.000 “Unpaid dividends Treasury since July 6 : Ending July 6 .. Second National Ninth National First National Third National New York N. Exchange. Tenth National Bull’s Head.... National Currency Oct. 18. Oct. 11. .... 5.20 @5.17% 5.20 @5.17% 3(5 @ .... Antwerp classes 108 @ 108% 10S%@108% 109%® 109% 108%® 108% 109 @ 109! 109%® 109% 5.18%@5.17% 5.20 @5,18% 5.17%@ 5.16%®5.15 5.20 @5.17% o.22%@5.20 6 20 @5.17% 6,‘ 2%@ 5.20 35% ft 36 35% @ 36 40% (ft 41 40% (ft 41 40%@ 40% 40% @ 40% 78%@ 78% 78%® 78% 71%@ 72 71% @ 71% 109%® 109% 108%® 108% 5.17%® 5.15 (ft 5.20 ®5 17% , .. .... a..», - 493 THE CHRONICLE. 19,1867.] October 2 9 ... ... ... 16.... 23.... 30.... 7.... 14.... .. .. .. .. . 96,409,055 95,177,lu9 94,762,617 15,296.583 572,652 -Circulation. Deposits. National. 35,810,808 24,734.146 35,960.100 21,783,967 35,060,369 24,817,759 35,198,755 2!,801,364 34,933,686 24.869,394 35,294,823 21,855.565 35,989 155 24,806,209 State. 260,577 252,740 259,724 259,122 253,5z3 249,299 253,371 [October Id, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 491 SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON BACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, OCTOBER WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK. Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. Tuea. ea Tburs Fri. National: United States do do 6s, 1368 coupon. 6s, 186$..registered. 6s, 1831 coupon. 6s, 1881 ..registered. 6s, 5-20s (’62) coupon. 6s, 5-20s AoregisVd 6s, 5-20s (’64) coupon. 6s, 5.20s do regist'd 6s, 5.20s (’65) coupon 6s, 5.20s do reqi&Cd 6s, 5.20s (’65 n.) coup. 6s, 5.20s do regist'd 6s, 5.20s (1867) coup. 6s, 5.20s do regied 6s, Oregon War 1881 6s, do. (i y'rly) coupon. 5s, 1871 5s, 1871.. registered. coupon. 6s, 1874 5s, 1874 ..registered. 6s, 10-40s ...coupon. 5s, 10-40s .registered. 7-30sT. Notes 1st se. do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 144 1*2 30,000 71,000 187,000 41* 144 111* Ill* 111* HI* 111* HI* 111* Ul* Ill 112 *,H1* 112* 112* 111* 104 103* 103* 104 109 108* 10 s* 108* 108* 118,000 1,315,0- 0 32,000 200,000 109)7 107* 108* 19'* 108* 108* 1,208,000 107* 106* 106* 10B* 106* 106* 250.000 — 1 — 236,CoO 106* 106* 107* 106* T—i o t- 7,000 HI* 100* 100* ;oo* 100* 100* 100* 99* 100* 100* 235,500 104* 104* 814,000 191,100 73,00 J — - 2 d series California 7s.. Connecticut 6s. Georgia 6s. 7s (new) do ' Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 a 3,000 — 82* do Registered, 1860 do 6s,con., ’79,aft.160-62-65-70 do do 1877 do do do 1879 do War Loan do Indiana bs, War Loan do 5s — 107 Cleveland and Toledo 50 132* 133* 112* 112* 113* 112* 113 Delaware, Lackawana and West 50 Dubuque & Sioux City, pref.. .100 Erie... 100 73* 75* 72* 72* 71* 71* 80 80 78* do preferred 100 — — — -* — Louisiana 6s do 7s, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s 105 Missouri 6s -••••• do 6s, (Han. & St. Jos. RR.) do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 do 6s,1867-77 do 5s,1868-76 do 7s, State B’yB’ds (coup) do do do (re, ' North Carolina 6s (old) do 6s, (new) Hudson River Illinois Central Joliet and Chicago 1G5 — 105 — 104* 105* 82* 82* 83 673.000 100 25,000 18,000 100 — — 107* 107* 52* “ " — — 2,000 6,000 38,000 6,000 — — 51* 51 51 51 68,1870-75 6s, 1881-86 Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 5s do 6s do 6s, — AA ou (old) (new) 64 63* S3 62* 62* 60* 60* Municipal • Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan do 6s, Public Park Loan... do 6s, Improvement Stock Chicago 7s, Water Loan Jersey City 6s, Water Loan .... 9" 5s No. 100 100 «100 Coneolidated Cumberland Delaware and Hudson...100 Pennsylvania Schuylkill Spring Mountain Spruce Hill — 147 — — 100 — 100 31 Telegraph.—Western Union... .100 Union, Rus. Ext’nlOO Steamship.—Atlantic Mail Pacific Mail Transit. Central American... 100 18 16* 44.- 36* 36* 35 34 600 16* 800 — 34 34 35 116* 116* 116* 117)6 117* ill* 2,800 12,393 100 143* 144* 144* 117* 147* 146* 100 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust 25 New York Life & Trust .100 Union Trust 100 United States Trust 100 Insurance.—Home 100 100 Axpress.—Adams 500 American * 65* — Merchants’Union $30 p’dlOO “ $35 p’dlOO United States Wells, Fargo &Co g.—Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred Minnesota Copper New Jersey zinc........ Quartz Hill Quicksilver Rutland Marble — 63* 100 57* 100 100 100 67 64 64 63* €3* 64* 4,970 63 62 62* 32 23* 23 66 56 67 57* 56* 9 — 17 — 22* 25 do do do do 1st mortgage... Income 65* c do Equipment 1st mort do consolid’ted . Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 do 4th mortgage, 1880 do do 90* 111 — 85 — — 91* — — New York Central 6s, 1883 do do 6s, 1887 do do 7s, 1876 do do 7s, conv’le, New York and New Haven 7* 17 1 25 24* 24 21* Louis, Alton & Terre do do do 1,3 0 2,100 do do 100 — — 1,000 2,000 102 — — 11,0 0 118 118 — — — — 109 100 loo — — — • — 99 • • • — 99 94* 94* — 94* 95 95 '— 101* •- ■ 111 2d mort. 3d mort. H, 1st m. — —— — — — — — 5,000 — — ■ — 2d, pref 83* 83* 80 2d, me. 83* 80 — 90 89 —— - . ..... 3,000 — Wabash, 1st mort., ext.. do 2d mortgage, American Dock Lands Western Union.. — — 1876 do sinking fund Troy, Salem and Rutland.1st mort Lorg Dock 1,000 1,000 5,000 Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mort Toledo & do do 1,000 — — 1st mortgage 88* do do do do do 500 — 17 do do 9,000 1,000 90 1882... do do 2d mort.,7s.. do do Goshen Line,’68 Milw’kee & Pr. du Chien, 1st mort Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mort.. do do 2d mort.. Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage... do do 2d mortgage 96 97 — new, — t mortgage, 1868 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mort, (S. F.), ’85 104 do 3d moirtgage ge, 1875.. 8s, 84 — 3d do 3,000 1,000 500 95 — Cons’lidated & Sink Fund 1,409 1.110 55 22,603 i*100- Interest do do 3 n 15 35 do do Chicago, Burl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c. Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mort. Chicago & Northwest., Sink. Fund St. 23 65 50 100 do do Pittsb’g, Ft. Wayne &Chic., lstm. 66 65 50 Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund, Ohio and Mississippi, Pacific (guar.) ‘ 6- 4,450 — Michigan Sonthem, Sinking Fund — [ 27,120' Railroad Bonds: do ...100 Nicaragua 44* 43* McGregor Western, 1st mortgage. Marietta and Cincinnati, 2d mort. Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 — 1,710* 18,100. 200 18 m Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie, 1st mort., ’77 Central of Ntw Jersey, 1st mort... do convert! irtible, 1867.. Illinois Central 7s, 1875 Joliet & Chicago 50 100 50 450* 28,450 pref.100 Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72.... 20 Williamsburg 50 Improvement—Bost.Wat. Pow. 20 Brunswick City 100 100 Canton Cary 100 175 50 Manhattan Metrouolitan New York do 30 200 — 147 100 25 20 Jersey City and Hoboken .100 do — 125 Toledo, Wabash and Western. .100 65 100 41 10 (Brooklyn) pref.100 do 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended.... do do 2d mortgage. Great Western, 1st mortgage do do 2d mortgage Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mort 50 Wyoming Valley Go*.—Brooklyn “ 100 — k 50 ®0 - • • Wilkesbarre Citizens Harlem 6 50 25 50 Central do 50 68 —— — Miscellaneous Stocks 100 oat.—American • 200 — 109* 109* 1G9* 109* 109* 83 82 81* 81* Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort. do do 3d mort, conv do do 4th mortgage Cleveland and Toledo, Sink’g Fund 108 do do new 7s Delaw’e, Lackawan. & West, 1st m do do do 2dm . 100,035 1,660 220 100 83* 84* .. .100 Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort Chicago, R. I. and Pac, 7 percent. * New York 7s do 6s Ashburton Butler Cameron 18 50 do do Sixth Avenue — 6s. new 70 22,300 7,200 1,060 1,250 do do guar.100 Milwaukee & P. dn Ch. 1st preilOO do do do 2d preflOO 47 44* 44* 44* 100 46* Milwaukee and St. Paul 67* 65* 65* 65* 65* do do pref...100 67* Morris and Essex 100 New Jersey 100 113* 113 112* 112 New York Central. 100 115* 115* 123 New York and New Haven .100 25 27* 26* 26* 26* 26* Ohio and Mississippi Certifl... .100 74* do do do pref.100 Panama 100 99 101 ioo* 100* 99* 101* Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic. 100 102 102* 102 101* 100 '■ 101* 74,000 704,000 62* 60 Virginia 6s, (old) West. 50 Michigan Central Michigan-So. and N. Indiana do 22,600 10C St. Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100 — do do 129* 128* 126* 100 122* 121* 100 122* '. Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st prellOO 2d preflOO do do — do 50 100 Reading Michigan 6s 50' 82,100= 34,170 50 preferred... Hartford and New Haven — — 800' 10* 1U0- 100 pref. ..100 ... Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 Ohio Joseph Long Island *> — tfo. 15* — ——. — do — — rf] Jersey 125 Chicago and Alton 137 do do preferred 100 187 137 Chicago, Burlington and Quincy 100 137 18 15 100 Chicago and Great Eastern 46 46* 46* Chicago and Northwestern 100 44* 47* 45* 66 67*' m do do pref.100 67* 69* 67* 97* »7* 90* 97* Chicago, Rock Island and Pac.. 100 98* 99* 98 98 97* 98* Cleveland, Columbus and Cin. ..100 84 86* 84* 85 83* 84 Cleveland and Pittsburg 60 132 106 Hannibal and St. do do Harlem 105* 105* KM* 105 104* 3d series 105* 105* 104* 104* 104* do do do do State: 100 100 120* 100 Boston, Hartford and Erie — — — 17 16* Central of New * Xnurs. - Railroad. Stocks s Boom).. 144)* 144* 143* 143* 144* 144* American Gold Coin (Gold Wed. Mon. Tuea. satur. BriOUrUTlES. STOCKS AND Week’s Sales . STOCKS AND 18, TOGETHk’B — 98 . —1 -—,J . „ October 19,1867 J THE CHRONICLE Export* Sfoe Commercial ©trnca. COMMERCIAL for EPITOME. January Trade continues in a very dull, unsatisfactory condition. Business men are not making any money. There is a want of confidence in prices, and it is extremely difficult to induce on 1, 1867. the past week number of Friday Night, October 18. considerable addition to stocks Leading Article* from New can The export of each article to the several ports be obtained by deducting the amount *n the last the Chronicl* from tha* here givenr ' sail a > ® 35 £-tH X) »-l CO © CO r-l © © CO C- oa cn © T-t qi < © q< • lr-lC<T-ICOTj.COT-1©r-3 O* © CO ^ a g S? |sissso2g^s _ 1 C- q« q« o»-!74r-ir-i<74©©r.© ©i-;aooao5®cOr«’COcoo:t'“t''00©©»o©co©coctcOT».cPf. qi ao so Wrt5s«00r(aiM 04 r—1 <?JS>2*tjcot.'»qi©q,2^a<^TnT-(<— 2 o t£ ; ®*© © © »-j,C5 © © o r,H r-i © O 50 CO t-t-t- © © C7 © c© q5 rH © r-1 © ■ qi • *10 ©©oo©r-itH.<t*©.ri *--»> • *q* tr? % c4 ©© ©©© ©CO co © ot co . . . .©q*© • .<©©© CO q* ^ 52 o q^r* 4 •qi r-l TO ,«iOh © ©^ r-l © " ©« © • • *r-l > © r-t ' © © ‘riCOoi o» <n . • CO ©© -■«*•© © 'rH«lOT"lt-* 'lflCOHr-iOOb c- <74 55 • t— t- >00©CO •©r-l © wt-ofit* ■ • ;« ; -qT r- - , <7* IS :g :gs 00 •S oS a r-t i r t-> ■ o ^2© © t•©£*© 04 . •q< to * iSS <74 • *© *©« •q* CO r-l ' drooping under large supplies, and advanced freights, but with rather more doing towards the close, at 55@55£c. for Spirits Turpentine, free, and $3 50@ ao .©o © -q. ,OlOQ .t-© ’oO .r-»c*co •©£; § 00 • ■ t- co ■q> co • ‘r-T© 00'V ? I afrf ‘ m 0 are J- • :S • .©©r— • "• | . .00© : : • r-T«f eft 22 30 © tO © :1 gS »§S 8 sympathy with the lower quota¬ tion from Antwerp and higher rates of freight, but at the close there is a fair business at 33£c. for standard refined, in bond, and 14£c. for crude. East India goods have been dull. Calcutta linseed, in Boston, sold down to $2 gold, duty, paid, and gunny cloth 7fc., gold, in bond. Metals of all kinds are dull and heavy, and ingot copper is somewb&t lower; 100,000 lbs. sold to-day, for delivery 1st November, at 24£c. Wool has been dull and prices drooping. Freights have been quite excited, and extreme rates have been paid for breadstuff's to British ports. Latterly there has been a better supply of room in the berth, and rates declined to-day Id, but with a brisk business, the business being about 90,000 bush, wheat and 6 bbls. flour; the rates paid being, to Liver, pool, by sail, wheat 10^@lld., and flour 3s., and by steam, wheat 14d., and flour 4s. To London, by sail, wheat lid., and flour 3s. 3d. To Bristol Channel, by charter, wheat 7s., and to Cork for orders, 7. 6d. per quarter. The petroleum charters were at 6s. to Antwerp, and 5s. 6d. to Marseilles. •'V © tr OOO* r-l © op w © © ‘--C>(?*©t-ft-t-'-q»©r-l©Cr no <7* © © © © co • Petroleum has declined in • rj« Ot © © 1-1 rH 00 ■q' © <74 t- © SO ! r-l © © >©©t: 77,© r-» . • © • co -q; •© • • r-t • CO, 1®^* t- <7* t— © 10 © TP © © <7* © © —I to • cq © © co © • © TJ. •© C4 • Breadstuffs— Flour, bbls. 102,8911,746,722 rH CO -q. .naf-f__ co <7* .© o .» » © ■ , Wheat,ba 1,188,6934,910,867 £on> gats £7?; "alt ^rley Grass pkgs. 400,26011,866,68419,655,842 Oil, lard 538,678 -4,548,074 6,022,048 Oil, Petroleum. 156,919 439,151 589,150 Peannts, bags. seed... 18,500 407,346 487,928 8i3,724 834 61,561 Flaxseed.... 21,694 106,410 Beans Feas 1,620 30,907 37,006 330,431 C. meal,bbls. 421 55,732 C. meal,bags. 1,915 230,531 Buckwheat & B.W. flour, bg 423,734 Provisions— 775,247 Butter, pkgs. 121,406 Cheese 61,368 Cut meats... 44,328 154,765 184,728 Beef, pkgs... 231,779 Lard, Lard. egs. , 536 6,621 76,584 Rice, Lotton, bales 10,027 475,992 472,620 Starchpkgs" 219 topper, bbls... 9,420 16,278} Steanne topper, plates. 13,420 M68 j slabs.. Briedfruit,pkgs ’809 26,373 11,484 Spelter, Grease, pkgs... 10,145 5,945 Hemp, bales... 16 707 2,604 Tallow, pkgs.. Hides, No 6,296 264,541 284,764 Tobacco, pkgs. Hops, bales. 2.209 9,384 10,245 Tobacco, hhds Leather, sides 42,613 1,924,048 1,846,067 ..od Whiskey, bbls. .. Sugar, jfa^ Pigs _ Molasses, hhds and bbls .... Naval Stores— Crude trp,bbl Spirits tarp.. 520 14,437 ’hhds <i 6,530 Wool, bales Dressed Hogi 15,370 11,744 1,300 8,762 3,369 54,395 33,229 No Rice, 46,616 bosh, 18,219 60 ‘r-Tof 00 ^ <74 t- co ct ■ <74 T-. © C- © tP I -qi ©; _ 13,163 r4CO TO — © :a.S r-T ’cDot ’ ,©o© • .©©■ . . . . * * ’ • : ■ to » H © © . • .00 . >rr-q< • • •© • ■ «© .<75©'©©© 4- © •©CO 2,013 -05©© * •SJ .00 • © • ’ © rjoo * •£-«© • • ’cf * ©" -co • .—1 • •r-rq<©©£< , © » rH ■ t- .a • 1,100 11,461 328 9,515 10,425 185,412 91 7,509 2,8C1 .... .... 103 4,697 1,072 3,632 2,081 .© - • • 79,951 ■s < ^ m wti . 8,964 .... is'0* : 1J O ... . ... *r_r* : : : •© fr-T r-t • © <74 O^OrH C»r . • -q. • © <74 • , Cf)n t-©-qt< - ^ ; : r-^CO ^r-l - 54 CO © * o' <74 . • ■ © CD ■ t-<74 :i8SS : t- zn © © © • 2 ■ ' CS ©*" pi (35COr-l©©© o.rt © *3 TCOCCrlt-O^ITH g ^ C/D . ^©©TrcrH© Kjt*C4' ©rH CO C4 : : £g: ’o »0 CO >a <74 © r-l © 1—I © 50003 © ©. ©'<74" :'«%£'£ • -qt <74 CO © ©"eg © © qt .©7ii<-;©©t-rrT-l©r-ICpfOt--i74©©©r-l©C-H<ft-©'qt© •00 © © CO ©i qt q^© © W^t-^CO t— rf —-^Ci ©^© qt rl -qt ^ © r-l t- © ©© © l(^©©OilO-T—'lOOTfC10 ct to co • C4 CO <74 © © CP tH Tf H • 0) • r-i ©C0CK74,TG7-t©04r4'q<©CO©2JrHrH«^<74-H5if—©lOgOcoq' • 5§3 <uT:iS ; CO » — la -I? * • :S : • ^ © c* CO 0B gg P • >»oS aj o • ••^‘3 8 . o 41 § 5"2^ ca3.si g g'S E-o 00 . •tri T .... X) . c* 81,769 rougl m.imj • r-t * : U 78 CD oT * 9,923 1,759 2,967 2,543 5,163 139,748 136,616 85,786 57,297 118,205 66.711 80,587 109,731 5S C4©©®'* * :S : : :g8 : : :SS • • TO :8 : : 40,103 48,324 84,556 7,071 2,250 67,555 7,327 3,569 rHeo_ . J ’ t-T 122,612 97,726 31,946 th £— * 3? 331 81,935 94,640 3,573 191,935 134,245 3,680 116,949 .2^1 » • . .©gjT/©© ;t^©© *COr-T : • .co^c^ ; . s r CO CO * • • © ^ ^ =2 t—r^©©tr© ■q* C4 qd ^ ■q* T—I 14,653 416,827 348,487 36,246 975,109 512,6^8 253 0< • GO 00 t-O’*© <74 • r- <74 r , * ©CO ■05 t-© q<t»f me 5,117 2,390 3,200 66,156 85,586 200 3,563 3,900 28,347 832,7^5 838,378 224 *o. © © rH © r-t tO © q. ; 10.37,1-1 ©<¥» OHC £-©, Hm" This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66. 25,771 292,536 308.503 1,012 Jr r- rf c* co © q.©<?4 ■•q.gjjg • c.->« to <74 The receipts of domestic produce for the weekending Oct. 18, since Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1866. have been as follows : Roein Tar 1,934,273 Pitch 2,410,687 Oil cake, • • Mt-m 1 ©©r*« <7* © - vH 50 © rH © © © . Week, and since 4,518 rj* • uc ©54 January 1. 4,567 •©© co®* 52 64 .©© C1HH • • AJhcs, pkgs... a5c-<7* • 0*3 © © © <75 r-l • 24-qi . S t- t- T-l ' rH CcTr-, * ©" quiet. This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66 — CO *0 »0 r-t ’hh Naval Stores have been All kinds of Oils q^c© ©©©, ©qi rHfc^qj, ©q^os ©2>,ri »o co © CO CO S'* <75 CO r-t © —l © T-H CO CQ « of Domestic Produce for the “ co the turn firmer. Receipt* © © CO © >00q<t-O»t-t-©t-.-iq0 w t-© qi t—© r? q> © © 35 22 »o 'R.' -,c©c<iOT-‘'c}<co^>'?5o:<3'«',r©'3D©*c-05 2 ■a ^5<JJ and strained Rosin. © © < © t-»— < closing firm and active at 14-£c. for Prime. In Bacon there have been large sales for Winter delivery at U^c. for Cumberland, and $12^@12 3 8c. for short ribbed. Butter has advanced, with considerable speculative feeling, based on the drought that has prevailed at the West. Cheese has also ruled firmer, prime factories selling at 16@16£. Beef is common — rH © O Lard for © «© ©4 00 < _ ' 05 ©r-l 04©t-<?*<7400©qi • •rHOHBlOr.eC" « t-00 05 I •IOMXhCOGOii lOOSOOOOWI | ©,00©,© of CO © rH rf> r-t ©'r)T if tQrrt-co OWffiQ t-HSS hand. Provisions are quite unsettled, as usual at the commence¬ ment of the packing season. Mess Pork sold down to $22, followed by some recovery, but closing dull at $22 25, cash. 3 75 York. following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York O) any of The since ■ 495 r !3 # *—> - # > ’q si 2 c3 Q‘*5 © j© or fc- > =3 «S 496 Imports of Leading; Articles. shipments, unless there is some further advance in prices at Liverpool. Below we give oar usual table of the movement of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing at a glance the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, show8 the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this poi^ or the week ending Oct. 12. since Jan. I, 1867, and for the correspond ing period in 1866 : Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept, l, and [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] For the week. 2.'l Huttons i oahy tons 4,2.>6 601 Cocoa, bags... Coffee, bags 30,5o9 9 Cotton, bales. Drugs, Ac. 33 Iiark, Peruv Blea p’wd’rs 322 .... .. Brimst. Since Jan. 1, 1867. Same time 1866. 4. m f ,019 151,359 1S9.26S 15,307 732,321 13,078 Gambier.... Gums, crude Gum, Arabic 14,352 1.059 ... Indigo ... Oils, ess Oil, Olive... ... Opium Soda, bi-carb Soda, sal.... Soda, ash... . Hair 11,331 3,997 51 22 3.980 "io 2,820 2,710 241 1.0S9 29,000 6 64 1.657 3,-49 29,682 1,517 Hemp, bales.. Bristles 32,778-Corks India rubber.. Ivory Jewelry, Ac. Jewelry Watches.... Linseed 11,113 Molasses 670 Metals, Ac. Cutlery 91 52,915 1329 210,240 8,‘793 3,939|Fruits, Ac. Lemons SEPT. 1 TO— Great 1. Britain 13,125 18,125 N. Orleans, Oct. 13. Mobile, Oct 11. Charleston, Oct. fl.. Savannah, Oct. 11.. Texas, Oct. 4 New York, Oct. 18* Florida, Oct. lit N. Carolina, Oct. 18. Virginia. Oct. 18... Other ports, Oct. 18* ... 10,835 24.703 France Other - • « • • • • Total. for'gn. 877 . 8HIP- m’ntsto 8INCH SEPT. .... . . . . « . .... .... .... .... 8,113 "23,897 4,651 13,250 7,343 3,784 13,325 8,562 877 .... .... • .... .... 679 472 2.266 10,293 103 - . .... 472 .... 174 1,596 .... .... — .... .... .... .... .... .... .... 1,407 .... .... 1,052 12,063 .... 2,779 STOCK. north. PORTS. * r 905 2,226 27,788 5 965 2,779 .... 112 112 +13,0(0 _3ai228 92.012 60,010;247^38 r Total this year.. Same time last year reported bv value. $1S,2S1 $-344.5921,186,562 2‘2,5u2 74,987 11,642 174 o 00 13,524 73,UU 40,776. 7,201 2,900 60,877 136,011 The cotton market this week opened buoyant on tbe in¬ creased activity and higher quotations of the Liverpool mar- 648,853 475,347 407,393 Since 657,468 284'e29 I ket, an(* “idling Uplands sold on Wednesday at 20c. Nutsf.'T.12,647 559^825 7271427 that date, however, the continued favorable picking season has 2,005 Hidn^undrad*. 73,io5 7,191’,334 5,262Jo o caused some increase in the estimates of the crop, and the up’7ii 429,506 ’6i7’,723 ward tendency of prices was not only checked, but one-half 4,690 ^cassia.?! 73,056 128,543 the advance lost. There has been considerable activity through 94,489 1.601 8,"27 Oranges.... 352 _ _ . ’ 8!,679 2,198 614 921 924 754 32S,073 125,594 30,943 9d3l F]gh 95,904 5S 15 PORTS. 2.136 29,613-Fancy goods.. 87.750 2,730,964 3,429,118 3,857 46 122 843 53 Steel il3,687j cigars Hides, Ac. Hides,dres’d 3v5.09 ‘ jwool, bales 6591.Articles 4,273 15 324,929 85.761 37.202 590 127,536 21.593 20U Flax Furs Gunny cloth 16 69 50 203.82;: Lead, pigs.'. SINCE rec’d 3,393,288 7,555.915 165,875 146,375 Tin, boxes.. 12.457 592,836 637,368 Tin slabs,lbs 47,881 3,253,751 5,170,220 6,202 827 19,720 Rags 45,988 37,411,1 14,450;! Sugar, hhds, 989} tcsAbbls.. 1.955 265,718 351,962 1.0.9: Sugar, bxs&bg 4,568 225,329 340,932 22,617 ;Tea 7.600 722,114 ' 650,984 11,025 Tobacco 23,174 17,216 1,184 3,700i Waste 15 4,810 11,964 2,801 Wines, Ac. 7,331 Champ, bkts 701 71,106 95,208 3,':38; Wines 6,265 118,942 343,973 9,410 2,210 7,770 347.852 Spelter, lbs 1,905| 20,301 10,191 tns. EXPORTED I860' 10 92” Hardware... Iron.RRb’rs 34,423 3,613 Stocks at Rates Mentioned. Sam® timc Since Jan. 1, 1867. For the week. 82 561,124 640 Cochineal... C'r Tartar Madder. [October 19,1867. THE CHRONICLE. Ginger Pepper..... Saltpetre ... 199 .313 Woods. 123,195 4,661 170,068 44,069 Fustic Logwood >gw 3,099 45,989 1,626 ... Mahogany.. 2,927 40,495 158,752 1,101 101,479 I amounting by spinners, 7,109 bales for export, and 2,649 bales on specu¬ The market closes quiet at the following quotations: 25,148 lation. 135,811 113,614 Friday, P. M.yOct. 18, 1867. a further large increase in the 19 Middling 21 Good Middling, ie- N. Or) ears & Texag Mobile. Florida. 14 16 17 19 • Upland. ...$ R> 14 16 17 Ordinary Good Ordinary Low Middling COTTON. There has been this week an increased demand for export, the total 9ales to 14,179 bales, of which 3,999 bales were taken fch® w^ek, and 202 827 136,’919 15 17 18 20 22 21 15 17 18 20 23 The exports of Cotton this week from New York show ports—the total reaching 25,075 bales (against 18,621 bales last week, 12,507 bales the previous a further small increase, the total shipments reaching 3,898 week, and 8,228 bales three weeks since), making the aggre. bales, against 2,444 bales last week. The particulars of these gate receipts since September 1, this year 74,987 bales against shipments are as follows : ceipts of Cotton at all the 73,011 bales for the same period in 1866. r receipts for the past week are as follows : The details of the . Received this week at*— Receipts. New Orleans bales 4,423 Mobile 4,623 Charleston 5,090 Savannah 1 Received this week at— Florida North Carolina To Bremen, per tal bales Receipts. bales 55 488 Virginia Below 78 Tennessee, Kentucky, Ac 456 Total receipts for week Same week last year 25,153 28,202 In the exports there is also a further increase. The tota reaching 3,898 bales, against 2,556 bales last week, and 1,414 bales the previous week. These shipments were, steamer—America, 302 | of the previous year however, all WEEK Total this week 1 , Liverpool. 3,250 246 402 I 3,259 246 402 I Liverpool Havre. cotton from all the ports Oct. 8. Oct. to 1. 15. date. prev. year. 920 2,199 3,250 10,298 21,718 .... 120 Bremen and Hanover period last year, and the stocks at all the ports are at present 92,012 bales, against 247,533 bales at the same time in I860. Freights for the next three months do not promise favorably for cotton. The extensive shipments of breadstuff's have given employment to large numbers ot vessels that J same .... destined for the early cotton shipments, and having dispatched with cargoes of wheat and flour, are not now, of course, available. This circumstance, it is thought, will result in high rates of freight, which will tend to check were been * In this table, as from the receipts at well as in our general table of receipts, Ac., we deduct each port lor the week all received at such port from othei Southern ports. For instance, each week there is a certain amount shipped from 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 fact as some of our readers fail to understand it. 120 32 49 325 72 141 .... 374 .... 8,250 10,298 174 .... .... .... 402 246 213 ' 648 Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar .... All others Total Spain, etc Grand Total • .... .... 1,433 — - • .... 1,414 • • • .... 623 971 760 4C8 203 1,596 — | 2,444 • * .... - .... .... ... 3,898 ■ 826 .... 826 3 ♦ 21,782 174 .... .... 19 .... .... 32 .... .... ... Total to N. Europe.. 2,199 .... 22 Other ports .... 920 1,411 .... Total French.... amounted to 1,207 bales. Oct. 22 : Other French ports.. Same time 24. .... Hamburg the ENDING Sept. 1,411 ; Other British Ports Total to Ot. Britain.. ' York since Sept. 1,1867 Total * Total. 402 .. : Exports of Cotton (bales) from New shipments: Exported this week to Hamburg. Bremen. To¬ we EXPORTED TO / ship Ruchstag, 100. per . I From— New York — give our table showing the exports of Cotton from New York, and their direction for each of the last four weeks; also the total exports and direction since September I 1, 1867; and in the last column tho total for the same period 942 8,998 Texas To Liverpool, per steamers—Cityjof Boston, 188....Erin, 1,838....Chicago. 651 City of New York, 229 per ship Palmyra, 488 eiara Wheeler, 6. Total bales 3,250 To Hamburg, per steamer— Saxonia, 246. Total b iles 34$ c. .... 12,063 1,171 795 .... 795 24,724 I Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the week | an<l since Sept. 1: This Since This 8mc« From New Orleans Texas week. Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. 698 108 week. Sept. 8,550 From South Carolina 2,fc97 North Carolina L Bales. Bales lJ*’8 477 7,569 888 The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee, Kentucky, Ac., not otherwise enumerated. , b t These are the receipts at ail th j ports of Florida, except Apalachicola, w * Oct. 11th. X Estimated. * Savannah MohUe..., Florida The Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.. 17,265 1,481 1’13b 1,937 1,917 827 304 , 20 10,027 Total since Sept. 87,362 1 following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila’ for the last week, and since Sep. delphia and Baltimore tember 1, 1807: —Boston.Last Since week Sep. 1. 7.499 857 >pr fromReceipts New Orleans Texas - Savannah — '821 Mobile Florida South Carolina North Carolina Virginia York, Ac*............. New -Philad’phia.Last week. Since Sep. 1. -Bnltimore.Since Last week. Sep. 1. c64 960 2,555 320 '586 263 SOI 478 961 4 11 115 48 623 *24 4, >54 1,480 124 101 Kentucky, Ac... Tennessee, Liverpool, October 5.—At the commencement of the week, Sea Island. Stained 14,744 bales 1,604 1,223 952 +3,724 2,486 1( 11 7 7 ... *218 28 Upland.... Mobile.. A N. Orleans Texas. Reshipments. do noi include * The the railroad receipts at Philadelphia. exports this week from these cities. Charleston, Oct. 11.—The mail returns for the week ending Oct. 11 ehow a further increase in the receipts, the total being 6,090 bale? been There have (5,050 no cation) at the close Sept. 6. 13. 20.. 27.. 1,111 “ “ “ 1,089 844 547 950 1,014 8. 2,903 1,431 2,096 10.. 5,090 2,663 Oct. 1866. 794 1867. 1,683 3,176 530 1,361 1,519 2,889 1,076 3,851 ,—Price Middling—> ,—Stock—, 1866. 1867. 1867. 1666. 24 @24% 30 @31 723 5,105 754 2,872 22%®.... 31 ©32 587 22 @22% 33 © 2,300 19 @19% 34 @.. 1,169 2,285 38 8,148 ©39 2,553 17%@1S 16 ©.. 35 @36 4,754 2,620 some activity in the market, arising but the di mand has been almost entirely have continued to decline, closing at 16c Middling, and 15@15^ for Low Middling. Freights to Liverpool are more active, the rate beiug : to New York, per steam $3 per bale, to Boston, fc. per lb., and to Philadelphia and Baltimore £c Exchange closed for sterling 60 day’s bills at 154£, and for sight checks on New York, banks are paying £ dis., and selling at par. Savannah, Oct. 11.—The receipts for the week ending Oct. 10 were 9,019 bales (of which 21 Sea Islands were from Florida), against 7,137 bales last week. The shipments this week were 4,863 bales, of which 330 were to Baltimore, 985 to Philadelphia, and 3,548 to New York. The receipts and shipments for a series of weeks this year, and the cor responding weeks of 1866, also the stock and price of Middling (Liver¬ pool classification) at the close of e^ch week were as follows : devolved past week has The from the increasing receipts ; for the better grades. Prices for (Liverpool) -Receipts- Week ending. Sept 6..* 1,440 494 13.. 1,660 “ 20 2,233 “ 27.. 4,220 3.. 7,137 Oct. 10.. 9,019 *• /—Price of Middling-^ ,—Stock—, 1867 1866. 1867. 18665 30 @31 850 24%@25 5,206 23 ©.... 30 ©31 879 4,150 22%®.... 31 @31% 816 3,953 34 @34% 19%®.... 2,034 3,626 18 ©.... 38 @39 3,906 3,299 36 @37 8,562 16%®17 5,500 ,—Shipments—» 1866. 1867. 4S5 1,237 1,472 2,847 5,939 1867. 268 1866. 1,782 1,543 1,631 2,296 3,002 1,433 1,799 5,265 4,863 3,271 3,726 unsettled, and closes dull and lower, under unfavorable advices from New York and Liverpool, Middling being quoted (Liverpool classification) at 16i@17c., and Low Middling at 15@15-ic. Exchange (sight) on New York, buying rate, is £@fc dis, and selling rate at £c. discount. Freights to New York are ^c. lor The market this week has been sq ;are, and |e. for round bales. Oct. 12.—The mail New Orleans, returns for the week ending show a further increase in the receipts, the total for the beiug 4,423 bales, against 3,262 bates last week, and 1,796 Oct. 11, week bales the The shipments for the last week previous week. 2.073 bales, of which 1,052 bales were to only were New York, and 1,021 bales to @7% @7% ©8 @8 Sept. Oct. “ ending 6. 13 20 27 4 11 -Receipts- Shipm'ts- 1,025 1,547 1867. 479 848 1.771 2,013 2,402 2,643 493 1,796 4,163 3.262 7,566 1867. 1866 1866. 4,682 9,605 3,311 2,207 4,612 1,294 1 ,009 -Price 1867. ofMiddl’g- 26 @26% 25 @— 23 @23% —@21 —@19 lS%@l9 1866. —Stock1867. 1866. 34 @35 15,896 35 36 37 40 40 @30 @37 14,719 17,018 91,S04 @38 @— 17,095 92,008 19 512 83,839 91,628 ia— 4,423 12,602 2,073 3,103 23,397 93,398 There has beeu lees activity this week, owing to the unwillingness of factors to meet the views of buyers ; prices have, however, declined slightly, middling (Liverpool classification being quoted at the close at 18$@19c, and low middling at 174c. against 19c. for middling and l7^@18c. for low middling last week.) Freights are quiet: to Liverpool, -f I. by steam, and £@9-16ths by sail; to New York, by steam, fc., and to Philadelphia and Boston lc. Sterling exchange closed at 156^@156£ for A 1 clear, and 158@ 159 for bank. Exchange sight on New York, per cent. prem. from bank and i dis.@par for commercial. European keta our and Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to these mar correspondent in London, writing under the date of October 6 states :* •For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph dis London letter in a previous part oi this paper.—[Ay Mtcaes at the close of our LOitmuiciAL & Financial Chronicle. . 15 15 “* . shows the 15% 15% 16% 16% . . price of middling Upland cot- : 1S66. 1667. 26d. 16d. 14% 8% Mobile.... 25% Orleans... 26 24 24% 14% 15 8% 8% Mid. Pernnmb. Egyptian. Broach Dhollerah, 1S64. 1805. 1866. 1867 22%d.22d. 15d. 12 6% «9 9 5 5 20 14 14 *0% 16 16 8% subjoined figures show the stocks of cotton in Liverpool and London, including the supplies of American and Indian produce afloat The to those ports : 1867 1866. Stock in London American cotton afloat Indian “ 1,213,437 1,248,850 827,060 97.847 . 28,000 Total The 260.5:30 795,680 106,180 4,U00 342,490 Bales Liverpool r exports of cotton since the commencement of the year have beer: To date To date For year 1 1S66. 1866. | 1867. bales. bales. I bales, 196.067 175,041 208,015 East American Brazil Egyptian, &c. 10,222 Westlnd.,&c. 11,711 Annexed the are Ind., | 111,685 1 China 89,074 16,304 6,129 66,836 19,524 | 14,813 i To date To date For year 1S66. 1866. 1867. bales. bales. bales. 773,141 &c.364,020 398.136 1.611 3,596 9,387 TotaP 650,467 688,340 1,186,565 particulars of sales and imports for the week and year, including the stocks of each description of produce on the evening of Thursday last, compared with the corresponding period in 18o6 : SALES, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Sales this week. , Total Same Ex- Specula, period this Trade. port. 1866. tion. Total, year. 940 22,710 1,077,020 1,055,160 American....bales. 19,120 2,650 Brazilian 7,270 3,410 .... 10,680 292.090 300,730 ..... ... Total « 7,520 51,060 16,550 8,460 76,070 2,589,100 2,794,740 5 .... This week. West Indian East Indian China and Japan Total Of the ] orts. 1866. 45,070 45,050 233 550 Same date 1866. 269.590 122,640 68,200 Itn- Total, This 1866. day. 2,699 1,087,570 1,030,365 1,156,130 6,161 360,704 350,220 404,865 American Brazilian per To this date 1867. £57 149,561 150,953 200,083 3,851 92,829 75,411 90.274 29,SS7 1,022,8681,321.576 1,544,615 3 ,020 2 i.370 29.680 379.260 18.660 441 960 12,993 1,530 7,2S0 42,955 2,714,4262,039,557 3,409,020 795,680 827,060 .... 894 11,032 1866. —Stocks- -imports- Egyptian 1867. 20,290 18,230 5,190 5,770 8,170 140,680 157,550 3,6C0 81,840 75.410 1,650 1,510 995,4301,197,9 >0 14,750 15,810 20 130 3,860 7,970 20,870 10,120 1,410 West Indian East Indian China and Japan Average weekly sales- 2,760 1,410 38,510 365 2,390 Egyptian Dec. 31» 1S66. 167,270 41,760 23,180 11,620 270,100 2,840 516,77 present stock of cotton 29f per cent, is American, against 32f cent, last year. London, Oct. 5.—The market, taken as a whole, has continued de¬ pressed. Prices have not materially changed since Saturday last. particulars relate to East India, China and Japan otton Imports, Jan. 1 to Oct. 3 Week 16 * # 24 each week : 26 18 64 14% 14% Upland.... 25% annexed follows Mid. . 12 12 following statement Philadelphia. Stock on hand October 11 was 23,397 bales. The receipts and shipments for a series of weeks this year, and the corresponding weeks of 1866, also the stock and price of middlii g at the close of were as , 30 15 22 14 17 13 8% 8% 8% 8% 1864. 1865. Mid. Sea Island 41d. £>d. “ ,—Shipments—, 1866. 480 1867. 339 573 848 ending. “ of each week v Receipts—> Week .. ton at this date since 1864 Uplands and 40 Sea Island) aga'nst 2,903 bales last week, and ] 111 bales the previous week. Shipments this week amount to 2,889 bales, of which 657 bales were to Boston, 252 bales to Philadelphia, 1 502 bales to New York and 47S bales to Baltimore. The receipts aDi shipments for a series of weeks this year and the corresponding weeks of 1866, also the stock and price of middling (Liverpool classifi¬ 16 12 .. 7 7 . + These -1866Fair. Good 32 52 20 23 -1867- Ordiu’y & Mid. Fair & G’d fair. G'.d & Fine. Middling— " 1,189 encour¬ aged by the comparatively low prices, there was an increased demand for cotton, and a slight improvement took place in the quotations. Subsequently, however, owiog to rumours of impending failures, con¬ siderable desire was shown to realize, and the market at the close of the week is dull, and prices are rather lower than on Saturday last, Medium American produce shows a fall of £d ; Egyptian, }d., and East India, £d. to £d. per lb. The total sales amount to 76,070 bales, of which 8,460 bales are on speculation, 16,560 bales declared for ex¬ port, leaving 61,060 bales to the trade. Annexed are the prices of American colton at this date, and at this period last year : - Total receipts 497 THE CHRONICLE. 1867.] October 19, Bales. Deliveries Stocks, Oct. 8 The : 1865. 15l».400 1866. 1867. 231,317 219,755 218. £41 39,711 97,847 1S2,351 139,931 106,180 parcels of new cotton have been re¬ ceived, of fair color, but of poor staple. Very little business is passing in our market. Good Middling is quoted at 7d., fair to fully fair 10d., and good fair llfd per lb., free on board. The exports have been : Alexandria, Sept. 25.—A few From Sept. 17 to Sept. 25 Previously from Nov. 1 Total 1865-6 1864-5 Great Britain, bales. Continent, Total, bales. 1,249 257 bales. 1 506 161,241 44,077 205,318 1,;2,1«0 149,316 307,192 44,334 2^,145 63,458 206,S24 178,481 370,650 Bombay, September 27.—The shipments of cotton during the week bales. The exports from this port from January 1 to September 6, have been : have been 6,260 To London Liverpool Clyde Total Gt. Britain 1867. bales. 1S67. bales. 60,7? 6 1866. bales. • 9,137 20,5:33 963,591 800,781 Continent China ; 1866. bales. 26,923 40,3’6 2,438 Grand total.. 972,728 823,752 1,073,860 850,676 THE CHRONICLE. 498 “ TOBACCO. Wrappers, “ Friday, P. M., October 18,1867. this week in the exports the total reaching only 2,717 hhds., 887 cases, 540 bales, against 4,325 hhds., 1,292 cases, 1,921 bales for the previous week. Of these shipments the past week 784 hhds. were from New York, 1,918 hhds. were from Baltimore, and 15 hhds. from Boston; and the di¬ rection of these shipments was as follows : 115 hhds. to Liver>ool, 1,146 hhds. to Rotterdam, 1,032 hhds. to Bremen, 386 i^hds. to Marseilles, and the balance to other ports. It will be Ohio 44 “ 1865 Running lots Fillers, 1865 and 1866... “ There is a very decided decrease of crude tobacco from all the ports, [October 19,1867. Wrappers Running lots N. Y. State running lots Pennsylvania prime wrappers 44 Wrapper lots 44 Running lots Ohio and Pennsylvania New York State 20 10 8 o0 16 30 @48 @18 @16 @32 @25 @14 4 @6 Fillers 6] FOEEIGN. Havana.-—Fillers—Common. 44 60@ 70 75@ 85 90@1 05 Good Fine Havana.—Wrappers l 2C@2 Yara 55@l Yara, average lots 60& <jq manufactured. liced that there is another large shipment this w#ek of Black work—com., tax paid. 30 @35c Black work,common, in bond 15 @20v 44 good 45 @6Uc 4k 18 @22c good mamifactured tobacco, of which 319,368 lbs. were to Mel¬ fine 44 fine 44 60 @70c 25 @30c bourne from New York. The following gives the particulars Bright work—common “ 35 @45c Bright work, medium... 44 25 @45c theNweek’s shipments from all the ports: of ,—Stems Export’d this week from Hhds. Case. Bales. Tcs. New York Baltimore Boston 1,918 .... Philadelphia , •••• , 15 .... 176 240 273 .... .... •••• . . . . Man’f. lbs. 354.534 259 540 1,292 1,026 1,921 7 627 4 416 325 252 .... give Nov. 461 310 158 .... .... 30 360,648 66,686 98,571 our . 342 ... Germany Belgium .... 891 169 21 25 6,300 25,543 ...19,026 ... Holland . Italy France Spain, Gibralt.&c.. Mediterranean Austria ...11,170 1,635 1,096 61 ... 14 Africa, &c China, India, &c... Australia &c B. N. Am. Prov South America • • . , , ... West Indies East Indies Mexico Honolulu, *fcc 25 2 1,713 « . . . ... 924 * . . Virginia.. • ... 1,213 1,847 97 . ... ... . „ 15 50 . 194 • ... ... ... ... 691 274 ... 973 748 ... ... . 149,818 3,142 3,977,994 312,061 688,416 756,140 2,714 5,288 ... • 18,215 663,028 72,605 1,029 ... . ... « 49.876 51 24 3 • 17,276 ... # ... . ... 3,057 7,053 . 59,977 • 18 23 ... . • 283,971 . 231 4,571 m ... r m 58 50 i ... 50,180 28,904 6.418 662 10,513 8,413,085 92414,026 following table indicates the ports from which the exports have been shipped : From New York Baltimore Boston Portland New Orleans Hhds. Bales. .. . 132 64,214 1,514 3,901 84 14 8S6 31 891 29 Total since Nov. 1.. .156,709 50,180 25 • 4 . Virginia . . . 6,947 ... .... 530 8 263 47 45 .... 28,904 286,668 4,516 142 3,972 65 3,406 9,332 Philadelphia San Francisco Tcs. & .—Stems.—, Bxs. & Lbs. bis. pkgs. manf’d. erns. hhds. 371 2,446 924 6,563 8,001,850 25,143 Cases. 45,682 .. .. ..... 120,051 222 ..... 662 . 369 467 . 924 6,418 NEW ... 14,026 8,413,085 The market this week is less active for Domestic Tobacco from various causes, with more doing in foreign. The princi pal falling off is in the shipping demand. Kentucky Leaf has been rather quiet. The demand has been mainly for consumption and jobbing, with very little for export. The sales foot up only about 700 hhds. The sales for the month thus far, are, however,' about 5,200 hhds. Prices are unchanged, and the sales mostly common and medium grades at 6@16c. The interior markets were all .. 633 Ohio, &c Other 137 The for the 1,072 ., There has been consumption, but a de¬ very good lines. * The sales cases Connec¬ Pennsylvania, private terms. 36 21c.; 296 cases Connecticut, private terms; 47 cases Ohio 8c.; Manufactured Tobacco is quiet and unchanged. Foreign Tobacco has been active, almost wholly for consump¬ tion, and the sales embrace 320 bales Havana at 85@97c.; and 200 bales Yara on private terms. QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCY. KENTUCKY Light. 5X Common Lags.. Good do fi Common Leaf... 7#@ 9# Medium do ..10 @12 LEAP @ 8X @1U$ 12 @14 9 Good Leaf.. Fine do Selections SKHD LEAP Connecticut Wrappers, crop of 1866 “ Running lots, *• (HHDS.). Heavy. 7 Light. . .12#@14c. 15 18 9,594 4,593 116,008 3,229 427 61,145 36,313 9,828 4,661 3,229 61,778 129 871 266 5,712 159,331 78,690 119,059 5,723 871 427 37,348 79,762 164,028 following are tlie exports of tobacco from New Ycil past week: EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM Hhds. YORK.* NEW @17 @20 Heavy. 14J*@16 16#@19 20 @23 (CASES). 20 16 @45 @25 Cases. Bales. Tierces. 8 115 Liverpool Glasgow Marseilles Bremen Gibraltar Melbourne Canada Br. N. A. Colonies .... . 594 188 20 ... .... •••• The 11,419 176 .... •••• .... . . . Other West Ind ♦ 14 259 . . . t 15,460 319,368 t . 173 • Hayti. Tot.exp’t for w’k lbs. Mar.f. . • 215 . Pkgs. ••.. .... — . 2 21 784 790 . . 8,^87 .... 116 .... .... .... 625 176 .... 273 354,534 exports in this table to European ports are made up from mani¬ fests, verified and corrected by an inspection of the cargo. The direction of the other foreign exports for the week, from the ports, has been as follows : From Baltimore—To Rotterdam, 1,146 hhds. leaf and 200 hhds. stems....To Bremen, 772 hhds. leaf, 40 hhds. stems ...To Marsala, 259 lbs. manu¬ factured. From Boston—To Melbourne, 96 cases....To Africa, 15 hhds....To 16 bales To British Provinces, 1 case and 191 boxes. Hayti, Virginia.—At Richmond, breaks and receipts continue very with a firm market, and prices tending upwards. The s.des of the were about 460 hhds, and a few tierces and boxes. We quote: light, week Manufacturing Tobacco.—Lugs, common to medium, dark working cured, common, $7(0)12 ; good, $12@18; coal cured, common, $9@15 ; bright, $1‘2@25 ; fancy, $20@$45. Leaf—common, dark working $7@9 ; medium, $10(344 ;good, $15@ 17 ; fine and wrapping, $18(3)21 ; sun cured, $16@25@32 ; yellow wrap¬ pers, common, $20(3)85, medium to extra, $40@ 100(5)200. Shipping Tobacco.—Lugs, very common and heavy weights, $5@ 6 60; medium, $6@8 00 ; good, $8(3)12 60. Leaf—English $18@22 60; continental $13@18@28. Stemming Tobacco.—Leaf—Common, $12@$14; good, $15@$1'I ; fine, $18(a)$20(3)$23. Stems—very common to good, $1@$4 50, At Petersburg the market the past week has been firm and active, at full prices ; the breaks comparatively light and receipts small. The s’oek here for inspection has been much reduced. Receipts this week 150 hogsheads, last week 93. Inspections since Oct. 1st. 278 hhds. New Orleans.—We have but little ehange to note in the general $5 00@$9 ;good, $8@12 ; sun gree ticut r-T’l sin. Nov.l-. hhds. pkgs Previously-^ pkgs 4,697 tenor of this market since cases @85. 1. 1866. NOVEMBER hhds. .... Seed Leaf has been rather quiet. mand for fine New Connecticut for little could be picked up. The speculative inquiry continues for 83 SINCE 1,035 stronger at the last mail dates. are YORK .... 729 V 154 ... 50 . . . 806 ... T’l since Nov. 1.. above • 372 51 220 ... 4,426 99 20 1,397 All others The . 1,631 7 3 8 13 818 277 100 688 227 ... ... 20 - .. ... ... 1,840 . .. ... 37,909 16,695 49,553 .. @75c 80 @125 .—This weekhhds. pkgs. 234 3,651 68 11 Baltimore New Orleans... Cases. Bales, tcs. hhds. bales. &bxs. lbs 232 56# 86 2,550 1,368 1,313,980 Hhds. AT From Total Exports of Tobacco from the United States since Novem¬ ber 1, 1866. Cer’e &,—Stems—, Pkgs. Manfd, good & fine 44 50 receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since 1, have been as follows: RECEIPTS direction, since November 1, 1866: To Great Britain Sweden 44 The 5,855 .... 887 44 Fine, 191 .... usual table showing the total exports from all the ports of the United States, and their we of Tobacco , .... Pkgs. .... Total this week 2,717 Total last week 4,325 Total previous week.. 5,146 Below , 97 15 . 525 790 784 , hhds. bales. good our last review. There has been a fair de¬ of euquiry on the part of buyers, but owing to the light supply offering and the advanced views of factors, transactions have been con¬ fined to a few small sales, of which 60 hhds., in lots, on private terms, 6 at 12c., 2 at 12c., 3 at 9c. and 10 at 8c. ^ lb. Early in the week a lot of 983 hhds. were sold ou private terms. This makes a total for the week of 1,200 hhds. taken mostly for shipment. There are now remaining unsold about 650 hhds., of which fully 200 hhds. are for the present withheld from the market, under instructions from shippers. We now quote as follows: Light. Heavy. Inferior and Trashy Refused 4 @ 4#c. 5 @ 5%c. Common refused Fair Good to Fine Common Leaf..... Medium Good Fine Choice selections 4%@ 5 V 6 ;.. @14 @16 17 @20 6 c. 6&@ 6&c. 7 @ 8 c. 9 @11 c. .12 15 5#@ 5*ic c. c. c. c. @ 6#c 6&@ 7 6 @9 1° @32 14 @15 36 @17 18 @2* c c c c c c Stock in ware- Cleared since the 8th inst. for New York 424 hhds. houses and on shipboard not cleared on the 11th instant Week’s sales 1,200. Receipts 12. Exports 424. - 2,587 hhds. Maryland and Ohio.^—At Baltimore receipts last week were very light, both of Maryland and Ohio—indicating tbot the crop of both hw nearly all been forwarded to market, Owing to the difficulty in naa* - THE CHRONICLE. ..October 19, 1867.] — °N *XPORT8 FROMFJ™r, Vl/xn. N*wC “eal» *ork Wheat, for theRye,week and since jan. 1 selections out of the limited receipts sales are restricted, but the de- foekigm hpo1t, ivg f°r exP°f* a°d prices firm. Of Ohio, we report ** * • ‘ - the close of our last review amounting to 550 hhds. taken from France and Germany. C ontracts for the former are now com.j uou tut out ior pleted. Prices are firmly maintained for iuw low graues, grades, but for nne fine " sales since "" ■* crop, f , * to the anticipated short In Kentucky leaf there is nothing Inspections this week 876 hhds. Maryland, • *“*— * * hhds. Cleared same time 772 hhds. leaf, 40 do hhds. leaf, 200 do stems, to Rotterdam. W^s revise Per 100 lbs. f “ “ “ 100 119,680 26,110 5 ,820 8 1,218 83,613 Jan.T?.*!! Ind.* week since same ........ 140,667 . 121,940 Chicago 70,893 21,179 Milwaukee Toledo 25,636 Detroit There has been 33,060 4,130 Cleveland general decline in the leading stapler* a 6,515 861,973 116,406 6,501,940 .... .... 296,445 204,500 .... 999,30010,333,891 1,897 283,751 9,498 2,758 15,462 2,870 Totals. 612,347 15 V 37 76,(26 35,466 F,442 6,041 3,t-69 868,413 972,535 85,954 85,030 466,008 30,840 128,619 46,506 13,650 27,300 20,541 15,000 6,978 , business "early scarcity and high rate of freights checked the week, and latterly the reaction in Liverpool has had a lc,otf9 111 21,000 1,875 192 409 ' depressing influence. The higher grades have not shared in improvement, and have remained steady. The east¬ trade of New York is unusually quiet for the accounted for, we learn, by the fact that lar<™ , I. f ratt’ “at arSe receipts of flour by rail, at Albany and Athens, go forward direct to Eastern markets, by lines of propellers. It is estimated that average I freely, and has met with a large shipping demand, checked only by the extreme ..1 llgt of freights. Since adverse private advices from Liverpool, there has been a wen eral slackening of the demand, and prices have declined 8(® 10c. per bushel. At this decline, with a better supply of I freight-room, easier freights, a slight advance in gold and the belligerent aspect of Continental politics, there is more steadi very wLLa.7ltZ“S large, 1 a slight falling oflf in Spring being made good by an Bye. hush. hush. Total Previous week 1 AftO QQQ 1 ioq 664,311 a from day to day. . . Extra Western, 10 00©10 75 com¬ fine meal, Jersey and Brandywine _ Whi*£ movers eat - WestemYeiiow - Canada in breadstuff at has been AT as meal, hDls Wheat, hush Ry™’buUsh.V.V.V;.V.V.V.V.‘V. 111,910 92,200 ^b£cu’,b.M“v:.v:::::: mfi i‘70 82© 83 ^ @ 1 40© 1 55 1 55© 1 60 1 40© 1 45 — NEW YORK. -1867- Flout, bbls 60© .... follows: Forweek. 8’eJan.l. ■ t 6 50© 7 25 Corn 1 37© l 41 A..V.’i —-■ 7 25© 9 00 RECEIPTS 2 90© 3 25 <© Rye Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State Barley Peas The $2 is© 2 30 2 16© 2 30 2 70© 2 75 2 80© 2 85 f0©16 00 Com, Western Mixed.... 12 00©13 75 *. Rye Flour, fine and super¬ Com 85©11 75 75©11 76 11 85©15 00 Southern, fancy and ex. California per bushel Milwaukee Clnb Red Winter Amber do 10 25©11 00 mon to good 9 Double Extra Western ! and St. Louis 12 Southern supers 10 1 Jl OQ IOTA ft U 185,590 80,030 !aet >ear; excited one for White Wheat, our own than of Red, fine Australian brought 15s 3d., Californian 15s. and Chilian 14s. 9d. per 100 lbs.; Red was not generally dearer, nevertheless 14s. 8d. was paid for fine American Winter. Flour quite Is. and Indian Corn 6d. dearer. Tuesday’s market was an ProviD& worse .markefc l!a(* ^T° • * usual good attendance of buyers, which er!t0 as£ a further advance, especial y for White Wheats. ElATS''K 8CarCe‘ Iodmn Corn 44s- for mixed, 79,298 at 64s. Id toSleeT.:'.:”:;:.':::. 2KS lu? • farmers’ deliveries. Week ending qrs.“ 51s. 6d Floursacks. I. Com qrs. Sept. 28, 1867 --— ~ IMPORTS. bbls. qrs. NorthEuro^e and Portugal .. . Cwt. 753,905 95,039 1,600 5,274 6 698 10 3^408 2,3(8 1,031 47,945 276,970 70,829 273,673 8,965 720,815 914,345 10,395 .1,022,417 377,166 Wheat, 1,025 I. com, Oth. grn., Cwt. Cwt. 249,844 188,486 283 FI. & Ml. Cwt. 50,783 436,029 Rye has declined 5@10c. and is $8 75© 9 75 Wheat, Chicago Spring Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 580,448 720,342 L The local demand quiet. Barley at lower prices has been quite active. A small business has been done in Canada peas at $1 45 in bond, but they close nominal at $1 40. The following are closing quotations: Extra State Uvw^trl i b“8ID.e88 has mbeenSeptember done and allto the arrivals coast are spo,ied ofof The import Unitedon the Kingdom was diupwards small; the movement towards the seaboard is quite as I S large as last year. Shipments to Europe have nearly ceased and the prospect increases from the superb Fall weather that Since Sept. 1,1867 we are having, for an early and liberal supply of new corn I Same time last year Flour, Superfine..$ bbl. I^ 1IW 945,648 283,970 sparingly and country In France the markets generally are weakness. In floating cargoes a large very .States. 246,000 138,570 310,347 steady advance. quiet. aDd white wheats are Corn has declined from the middle 820,210 776,193 firm, but Paris shows some way. market Barley, bush. Liverpool, 4 th Oct.—Farmers deliver but of five thousand barrels daily find a market in this Wheat has come to Oats, bush. 1,129,760 prices show is to be . Cora, bush. 1,372,400 110,539 It,. season. Wheat, Buffalo, 14 days Oswego, 9 days Corresp’di’g week ’66 the late an 7,094 Mn’.ssv ^ JJe<™a8eiB Brai“-bn6h Eastward Movement of Grain sr onCanal.—The following statement water about the amount of grain canals destined for tide come The ern Rye. bush. Com. bush. 154,898 2,058,438 .. forward freely by rail, and the canal begins w a few boat loads, Shi nr,ore have i„.(taken 1 . “ to hrin<r onn3 a [shippers about 5,000 will show te Doat loads bbls. Extra State daily for Great Britain, at $10 50@10 75, in 6,566 678,749 705,607 Barley. bush. Oats. bush. Wheat. bush. 1867, Decrease in flour, bbls Flour has bush 75,862 Lake Ports.—The bbls. Friday, Oct. 18, 1867, P. M. Com following shows the receipts following lake ports for the week ending. Oct. 12 : at Flour. BREADSTUFFS. bush, 1,750 74,546 3,290 1,250 63 1,205 10,402 107,790 174,971 54,951 1,250 79,062 996,067 221,048 886,661 131,133 6,813,375 21,418 20,913 38,071 36,037 Weekly Receipts at the Oats, bush. from Baltimore medium & fine red.. 7.50©15.00 “ com. to med. spang. 8.00©15.GO “ fine spangled 15.00©20.00 “ yellow do. & fancy 20.0f>©30.00 Earley. .... A»848 • bush. .... . . “ 174,411 890,1S1 33 *195,5,213 Philadelphia 3.00© 6.00 6.00© 7.00 bush. . 1, 1867 502,643 116,787 time, 1866 754,086 121,101 Since Jan. 1 Boston Per 100 lbs. middling 7.50© 9.05 I good to fine b’wn 10.00©15.00 1 17.00®25.00 I Jancy upper country... 3.00©30.00 grou’d leav. new 3.00© 5.00 | “ ail* since Jan. *••••• 1 •.* 84,849 4,710 since Jan. 1 quotations ; Maryland sound common. $4.00© 4.50 ] Ohio inferior to good com. .. good “ 5.50© 6.501 “ brown and greenish. 1 bbls nrrk*»i since Jam- stems,To BremetTi,146 I ‘ s n ~ /121re-inspected) 193 do Ohio, 7 Virginia, and 2 Kentucky—total 678 . ... ' Gt. Brit. week.;., for reasons given in our tost. doing worthy of notice. „„„ To JpaDgled are held considerably higher, owing : 499 -1866— For week.- S’e Jan. 1. 171,630 4,699,780 11,986,830 354,315 1,056,160 30,940 365,970 1,923,820 228,060 2,369,890 18,957,565 55^,160 1,251,045 4,293,955 30,090 5,920,695 1,?«,M» 75,205 1,615 257,4.46 743,685 GROCERIES, Friday Evening, Oct. 18. trade, like all other branches of business in commercial circles, is unsettled and hesitating. There can be no definite reasons assigned for this continued quietness except * r . the uncertainty as to the'1 future which seems to prevail, and ‘ r confidence any which destroys in business transactions beyond V , ithe wants of the present month. We annex details applying to the leading articles, in which, however, there is but little of . , , change since last week. The imports have been small, amounting to only 265 pack¬ ages of tea from Liverpool, 14,892 bags of coffee, of which 9,906 bags were Rio, 2,088 boxes and 2,118 hogsheads of of molasses. The details of each article will be found under the respective heads below. The grocery . , , TEA. The tea market has been more very quiet and unsatisfactory than for a long time before, and there are no propbicies of the future given improvement or of dulness. The only sales of the week are either of W^z 500 THE CHRONICLE. rumored transfer of 4,000 half chests Japans to go to sale of 1.760 half-chests Greens from first hands. a Havana, Oct. 12.—The Weekly Report says of Sugar—(Clayed)— exchange, buyers this week have re¬ ^ arrobe for No. 12 D. S., whilst holder are still asking on the basis of 9@9.£- ra. as to quality, cmboldered by firm prices in England and a further advance of £ ct. in New York. The market has consequently been quiet up to the close to-day,the only sales of any importance effected being, 400 boxes No. 12 at 9 rs. aud 403 dy No. 10 at 8f rs. ^ Canada, and the The imports of the week have amounted to only 265 packages. shipments had been made from China at latest dates, and usual table of shipments, With considerably lower rates of duced their offers to 8£@9 ra No fui ther our remaining nearly unchanged is omitted. COFFEE. The coffee market has also been dull and inactive and prices are j@ic. lower for Rio, the maiket during the week closing dull, with sales for the week mostly sold before arrival of 12,500 bags of Rio. Other kinds are quiet. 2543.—New 29.—New QUOTATION. No. 12 at 9£ rials ^ arrobe—Exchange 16J ^ cent, prem.^ 24s. 1 Id. stg. <jp cwt. f. o. b. (without freight) and fes 31.42 ^ 60 kilo’s Exch on Paris The 3£ ^ cent. P. imports for the week have included 5,75p bags of Rio, per “Kleoniky,” 4,147 bags do., per “ Umea,” 8,217 bags of Maracaibo, and 1,706 bags of sundries. At Baltimore cargoes of Rio have been're¬ Last year at this date No. 12 P., at 21s. 2d. <{$ cwt. f.o.b. ceived by the Boadicea and Winnifred,amounting to 5,848 bags. The imports since January 1, and stock in first hands Oct. 15, are as follows : or RIO COFFEE. New York, bags Philadelphia “ Baltimore “ New Orleans “ Galveston “ Mobile “ Savannah 11 Import. 572,663 19,730 Stock. 202.113 13.000 72,293 16,662 8,0t)0 .... 70,319 5,000 322 Total 883,783 York, At Bost. import Stock. Import bags* <40.104 3.427 23,810 “ 9,110 *20,902 Other, 4,110 44, 02 27,620 2,612 9,378 4,2S9 2,027 m,520 23,555 46,657 Rio Janeiro, September 7 —The following is from the Market Re¬ port of Messrs. Boje it Co. : Immediately after departure of the Bordeaux steamer, on the 24th ult., our principal Coffee dealers, showed much willingness to realize, 200 further reduction of about 100 the lower descriptions, and rs ou rs the better and about fair demand on thereby occasioned a both for Europe and the United States, which has still increased. Our stock is now reduced to about 80,000 bags and our market loses firm, principally for good coloury sorts, which, although more abundant, do uot yet surpass the demand. We estimate sales at 65,000 bags for the North of Europe. 19,70 “ “ 74,700 “ “ 2J0 “ “ • 7,000 Superior. Prime good first. j- Good first “ nrd. Good second Ord. [ “ The following United States : — “ “ 6,500 — 6,800 6,200 5,100 — 5,500 “ 3 11 46 41 “ “ - 5,000 4,000 64 — — 11 34 — 8 4 vessels have sailed, cleared, 41 — Vessels. Coffee. Ang. Orleans..Expounder.. 8,711 ^ork... 24. 25.—Baltimore Nautilus 28-—Delaware B.f.obSuperb Hampton Roads...... Iconia ... VE88KLS New York Baltimore Vessels. .Ann Bravo... York., 30. —Baltimore New York 31.—New York September. 4,228 J 5.—New York Gideon 4,200 Bremerin... 3,000 FOR SEA. 3,S14 | New York Aeolus 4,319 4,500 I Mobile....k. .Charles Henry 4,500 | New Orleans.Ella S. Thayer , Aug. U. States.. 30,169 Jan. 1. 434,764 Total exp.131,749 S55,113 4,500 5,600 i . Aug. 39,513 Jan. 1. 402,374 154,5021,144,654 , Aug. Jan. 1. 77,913 494,578 176,4711,044,702 Aug. 155,-463 The market for 273.S091,571,644 sugar has remained inactive, although prices are especial change. The sales are 3,326 hhds. and 2,000 boxes Havana, and 1,200 bags Manilla. Refined sugars are fairly active and steady. The imports of sugar for the week have uot been large at any of the ports, but have amounted to about the same as the previous week. raw fo lows are as <—Cuba boxes, hhds. , 1,317 : Other Brazil, hhds. bags. 791 869 > 5ul Baltimore 343 Stocks Oct. 15, y——Cuba boxes, hhds. At- Philad'l 12 New Orleans... aud imports since Jan. 1, are as Other , At— N. York stock Same date 1866 Imports since Jan. Portland Boston do do Philadelphia do Baltimore New Orleans do do Cuba. For’gn, boxes. *hhds. *hhds. , 56,946 53,830 Ne\vOrleais“ “ 1 . .. ... ... . .... ... .. .. 172.437 220,077 1,709 5,015 51.6J5 31,231 27,310 24,291 59.734 17,063 40,325 12,1:35 40.670 1,495 7,947 9.463 25,346 2,833 20,541 99 53,147 45,097 11,760 3,46 7 1,401 import.. 31,916 527 5,865 '2,921 26,652 42,986 bbls. 9,027 129,545 37,593 7,377 62.479 1,757 969 175 30,715 N.O hhds. 1,122 '984 48,255 15,650 30,890 .... .... S24~412 9,483 Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads. SPICES. The market has been very quiet, with only small sales to the are absence of demand prevents trade We quiet and slightly easier in prices, but the reliable quotations. Domestic Dried Brazil, Manila, Total bags. bags,&c ♦hhds. 260,747 —, • 29,494 61,764 13,999 72,070 • 6,510 39,178 5,200 ruling quotations of goods in first hands annex : Tea; Duty: 25cents per lb. y—Duty pa‘d.Hyson, Common to fair 90 @1 05 do Superior to fine.... 1 10 ©1 30 ... do Ex fine to finest,. .1 35 ©l 5 Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair > 7j @1 <5 Super, to fine. .1 1-* ©1 35 Ex fine to finest! 40 ©1 70 unp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 00 ©1 15 ... do do do do H. Sup. to fine J 25 @1 45 do Ex. r. to finest! 55 ©1 8> 6k.&Tw’kay,C, to fair. 66© Sup. to fine 75 © do do 7o 80 '-Duty raid-* do do Ex f. to fln’st Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair. do Sup’rtofine. do Ex f. to flnestl Oolong, Common to fair.. do Superior to fine... do Ex fine to finest .! Souc & Cong., Com. to fair do Sup’rtofine. do Ex f. toflnestl 431,291 23,255 90 ©1 05 10 ©1 20 70© 80 85 ©1 10 25 ©l 60 80 9* @105 25 @1 55 65 © . Sugar. brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 8; on white or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 8$; not over 20,4 ; on refined,6 ; and on above! 5 a* Melado, 2$ cents I ft. Porto Rico do $ do do J8 to 15 13 © 13f *H@ 14 Cuba, inf to com. refining do do 1U@ 11$ do 16 to 18 14 @ 141 do fair to good do ... Ilf© 12 do do do 19 to 20 15 @ 15$ do fair to good grocery... 12$© 12$ do do white l4f@ 16 do* pr. to choice do ... 12P© 13* Loaf © m do centrifugal 11 © 14 Granulated © 161 do Melado 7© 9 Crushed and Duty : on raw or Hav’a, Box. D. S Nos. 7to 9 11$@ 111 do do do 10 to 12 12$© 12| .. Duty : 8 cents $ New Orleans Porto Rico Cuba Muscovado White coffee, A Yellow coffee .. .. , .. © 161 16 © .. 15$© .. gallon. $ gall. . @ .. 55 © 70 48 do Clayed....^,*. BaibiidocS. ,v. © 55 46 © 57 © '8 58 Spices. cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and cloves, 20; pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 cents 18 ft. ' Cassia, in mats-.gold $ ft 45 © . | Pepper, (gold) Ginger, race and Af(gold) 10$© 111 • Pimento, Jamaica.(gold) Mace (gold) 90 @ 92$ I Cloves .....(gold) . 72,229 powdered..., Molasses. Duty: mace, 40 86,039 90 9o Imported direct in American or equalized vessels from the place of its growth or production ; also, the growth of countries this side the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents $ lb; all other 10 cental valorem in addition. lava, mats an! bags .►..gold Bio, prime, duty paid ...gold 18 © 18* 24$'7. 25 do good gold 161© 17 Native Ceylon 28$7. 20 do fair gold 14$@ 15 Maracaibo 17 @ 38i do ordinary gold 13 © 13$ l.aguayra. 17J© 18 do fair to g. cargoes .gold 14 © 16 St. Domingo 15$@ lb 159 42,409 4,056 85 © 80 © Duty: When 69.197 13,253 are advancing. ., .... follows 1,118 Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads. *hhds. 1.130 ... 52,7:36 ... Other lihde. 1,896 38,947 345,255 “ 44 follows: Coffee. Jan. 1. 761,771 without Portland Boston. 44 are as * 36,967 , SUGAR. 2,088 “ 5,000 EXPORTATION OF COFFEE IN AUGUST AND SINCE .TAN. 1 FOR FOUR YEARS. .—im.—, 1865. 1866. 1S67.— At— N. York “ “ ^ .. Rico.-v-Oth. Fo’gn— Total, ♦hhds. 3,200 4,807 AunaGesina 2,420 Oslo. 5,780 4.—New York 633 FRUITS. LOADING OR ABOUT TO LOAD. Monitor .Nora The details u n Bales o Coffee . Agnus 4,1.77 1 ,—P. New York, stock. N. Y imp’ts since Jan. 1.77,088 U “ active and For VESSELS CLEARED AND READY Cuba. *hbds. 2l*d. loading for the are 31. ..Grey Eagle.. 4,484 Aqulla 3,500 .. 25.—New Vork 27.—New York At— Philadelphia, .hhds. .. 29—Mobile .Union 3,360 Nor America 6.276 Jeanette 4,043 .New York 'ew York 222,376 llo,862 Porto Cuba. Rico. Other Baltimore Foreign Dried Fruit9 or - ' New Orleans 44 At Exchange Bales of For Porto I Cuba. Rico. Other, j hhds. 691 239 1,188 , Stocks, October 15, and imports since January 1 Freight 45s. f 48 11 3 154.556 1,192,061 1,357,986 : f o. b. inclu. 44 — follows are as At— New York Portland Boston * 52 11 22,499 9.554 \ 66s. 8d) 56 3 SAILED. Aug. The details Total 50 364,li'6 396.075 .... Stock* boxes slightly easier terms made at the close of last week, and the supply has given more animation to the molasses trade, and the the sales are 2,650 hhds. of of all kinds, the market closing steady. The imports of molasses for the week have been small at all the ports, though rather larger at New York than for the previous week Boston, “ Philadelphia “ Capetown. 7,300 32s,969 Total export—, week. Since Jan.l. 7.856 1,254,174 , as belter Baltimore — Since Jan. 1. .... Portland Meuiteranean. United States. 8,500 reis 56s. 3d. .. at Havana and Matanza3r have been 7,686 - cent MOLASSES. 159,600 bags. And quote Washed ' Prime Superior.. week. and exchange 20 13 rs., The Includes pockets reduced to bags. even at a being at 8 Expts to U. S.—, week. 869 1.181 957 11*, 442 8,917 23,859 22,163 “ Total * Rec’d this Year. 1867 1866 1S65 At New Singapore, “ 5,u0) Maracaibo, “ Laguavra “ St. Domingo,“ 101,849 Receipts, exports and soteks follows: OTHKR SORTS. Java, Ceylon [October 19,1867. Nutmegs, No!....(gold) 87$@ 90 1 pepper 2’$© 19© i6 © and .. 19* 26$ THE CHRONICLE. October 19,1867.] Somerset 13$, Fruit. Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes, 5; Shelled Almonds, Almonds, 6: other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filberts and Walnuts, 3 cents $1 lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits,25 $ cent ad val. qr. bov lpj© 19 Raisins,Seedless..# *cask .... ©.... Sardines $ lb 18 © '^0 do Layer |i box 4 35 ©... Pigs, Smyrna Brazil Nuts 9*© 10 do Bunch ©••.. Sicily Hi© *2* Currants ^ lb 11*©... Filberts, Walnuts, 12 © 12* Son, Leghorn 8* © Prunes, ■notng Turkish .»•••••• Almonds, .... •••• •••«•••• Languedoc do Provence Sicily, Soft Shell do Shelled do Bdo J8 Pearl }*1 ^ 20 3 •< 28 23 85 © 29 © 23* © 86 © 40 . © © 20 Dried Fruit— B> Apples Blackberries Raspberries 7© 9 12 © 13 .. © * • 20 @ 28 Pared Peaches 81 © 82* # hi. box © Sago Tapioca Macaroni, Italian THE DRY GOODS TRADE. I riday, P. M., October 18, 1867. ’ The Dry Goods Market has show n the same declining ten¬ all kinds of goods, and with a very light demand up yesterday, when the slight reaction and advance in cotton gave a better feeling to those interested, and buyers entered dency for to market with more satisfaction as to prices. In fact, the idea has become quite general that prices have about touched bottom for the present. The slightly less firm market for cotton, and the absence of buyers however, still suggests cau¬ tion in business, and it will be some days before there will tlie anything like a return of business. Woolen goods have become quite nominal for both foreign and domestics, with the be exception of balraoral skirts, shawls and few makes of fine a goods. Foreign dress goods, silks and other fabrics are pressed through the auction houses at a sacrifice. The export demand is fair this week. exports of dry goods for the past week and since January 1, 1867, and the total for the same time in 1866 and 1860 are shown in the following table: The -FROM NEW YORK. .—Domestics.^ Exports to pkgs. Val. 27 $1,560 48 6,841 Cuba Mexico Hamburg • • • . • Liverpool • British Australia . . . .... . > Val. . . . annex a 75 $8,401 8,830 1,169,538 5,317 76,6ol • • • .... few our • ...i .... «... 1 600 15 891 250 100 14,209 1 84 — 145 FROM boston $35,050 1,028,742 ... • . — . • .... 80 • . . ca^es. .... .... .... .... • • .... . • .... 16 96 6,638 4,051 81,247 .... .. 158 .... .... particulars of leading articles of domestic prices quoted being those of the leading and Shirtings have been inactive, and a Standards are selling at 16@15$ cents, a" which there feeling at the close. Atlantic N 8*4 10, Massachusetts C 9$, Union do 10, Pepperell N do 12$, Atlantic V 7-8 13, At rather better do lantic E do 13, Pacific E do 13, Bedford It do 13$, Pepperell O do 14, Indian Head ex. 23,do AAA 25. Stripes are also lower, with only nominal demand for immediate a consumption. Amoskeag 22$, Uncasville 16$-17$, WhitteDton BB 17, do C 15, Pittsfield 3 8 9$, Haymaker 16 and 17, Everett 14-14$, Massabesic 6-8 22$, Boston 14$ and 15$, American 14 and 15, Eagle 12$ and 13$, Hamilton 23, Jewett City 13$ and 14$. Checks are without especially interesting feature. Park Mills Red 18, Lanark 4x2 2C inch 13, Lanark Fur 13, Union 60 4x2 80, do 50 2x2 80, do 20 4x2 27$, do 20 2x2 27$, Caledonia 16 inch 28, do 11 inch 22, Kennebeck 26$-27$, Star No. 800 2x2 18, do No 900 4x2 20. Cameron No. 90 19, do No. 80 17. Denims are very quiet, and a few makes are reduced. Amoskeag 27$, Haymaker 28 inch 16, York 28 inch 25, Boston Manufacturing Co. 29 inch 13$, Pearl River 29, Monitor 13, Manchester Co. 17, Columbian XXX 80, do blue 29, Arlington 18, Mount Vernon 24, Pawnee 12$. Brown Drills have been fairly active for export, but with the steady decline in cotton prices are nominal. Winthrop 14, Amoskeag 17, La¬ conia 17, Pepperell 17, do fine jean 18,StarkA 17, Massabesic 14$,Wood¬ ward duck bag 26, National bags 31, Stark A do 55, Liberty do 31. Print Cloths are null, and nominally lower. Prints have been inactive, but steady up to yesterdav, when a rather better feeling prevailed ; but there is little confidence felt as to the future. American 14. Amoskeag dark 12$, do puv ple 14, do^hirting 12$, do palm leaf 14, Merrimac D 14$. do purple 15$, do W dark, 17, do purple 18, do pink 18. Sprague’s 14$, do purple 15, do shirting 15$, do pink 15, do turkey red 14$, do blue check 14$, do solid 13$, do indigo blue 14$, do Swiss ruby. 14$, Loudon Mourning 13$, Simpson Mourning 18$, Amos¬ keag Mourning 12, Dunnell’s'14, Allen pink 15, Gloucester 14, Wam¬ sutta 10$, Pacific 14$, Cocheco 15, Lowell 11$, Victory 11$, Home 10, Empire State 7, Atlantic 8$. Ginghams have further declined, in sympathy with the lower prices accepted at auction last week. Lancaster Domestic Ginghams sell at 16 cents, Hartford 12$, Hampden 12$, Caledonia 12$, Glasgow 15, Berkshire 17$, Roanoke 11$, Manchester 15 cents. Canton Flannels are also lower, and only moderately active. Ellerton N brown 29, do O do 25, do P do 23, do S do 20, do T do 18, Laconia Brown 20, Slaterville do 17, Hamilton do 20, Naumkeag do 19, Nashua A 20, Ellerton N Blea 28, do O do 25, do P do 25, Stillwater do 18, Granite State do 20, Naumkeag do 21. Corset Jeans are quiet, but steady. Androscoggin 12, Bates colored 12, do bleached 12, Naumkeag 16, Pepperell 17, Naumkeag satteen 19, Laconia 16, Amoskeag 16, Indian Orchard 12$, Ward 16. Cambrics and Silesias have been steady but inactive. Lonsdale Silesias 28 inch 20, Victory J 15$, Indian Orchard 16$, Ward 16$, Washington glased cambrics sell at 10$ cents, Victory H 9$, Superior 8, Pequot 10, Waverly 11, and S. S. A Sons paper cambrics at 14 cents, do high colors 16, Masonville 14. Muslin Delaines are inactive aod lower. Some low grades are offered at material reductions. Lowell 21, Hamilton Co. 21, Manchester 21, Pacific dark 21, Pekin 28, Armures dark 22, Pacific Merinos A 37$, Mourning 22$, Spragues 20, Skirt’ngs 30, Alpacas 28. Flannels and Linseys are more steady. Belknap shirtings 45, Wash¬ ington do 50, Rob Roy roiled 6-4 86-91, Rob Roy 3-4 43-47$, Cocheco black and white check 40$, Franklin shirting 47$, Caledonia shirting 87$, Pequa, double fold 45/Bay State Opera 52$, Gilbert's do 60, and Park Linseys 85 inch at 20 cents, do 50 do 27$, do 60 do 30, do 65 do 37$, do 75 42$, Black Rock 22$. Cottonadk8 are without business of moment. New York Mills d A t 52$, Farmer’s and Mechanics’ 40, Pemberton d At 40, Great Western 87$, Plow, L. A Anv 37$. steady. are gen erally reduced. ia A A American Linen continues , Brown Sheetings , Domestics. Dry Goods pkgs. «... 4,861 , $4,100 .... Total this week. 8ince Jan. 1 Same time 1866.. “ “ I860.. manufacture, jobbers: •. 9 .... Brazil Br. Provinces... We •. •. . D, Goods. packages. Thorndike 18, Pearl River 35,Housewife 25, do AA 22, Pittsfield 9$, Housewife A 19, York 32 inch 82$, do 30 inch 27$, Cordis AAA 32 inch 27$, do 4-4 27$, Everett 27$, Boston Dutt : . 501 10, Massachusetts E do 4-4 16V, Pacific extra do 16, do H do 15, do L do 15, Atlantic H do 15, do A do 16$, do L do 15, Lawrence E do 13$, do C do 15, do F do 14, IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Oct corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866 have been ae 18, 1867, and the follows : entered for consumption for the week ending oct. 18,1867. 15$, Amoskeag A do 15$, do B do 15, Medford do 1865. 1 867. 1866. Value Pkgs. 15, Kenebeck do 9$, Roxbury do 15, Pepperell E do 16, Great Falls Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value. 605 1,731 $763,252 .2,034 $846,460 $ 22,358 M do 18$, do S lo 12$, Standard tlo 1*2$, Pepperell R do 16, Macon 650 406 219,774 113,158 1,866 619,016 do 14$, Laconia B do 16, Laconia O 9-8 14$, Pequot do 20, Sara¬ silk 5356 ' 306 380 537,684 822,044 817,628 nac E do 19, Nashua 6*4 25, Utica do 80, flax... 1,713 862 538 Utica 7-4 86, Pepperell 247,315 108,084 431,157 354 360 229 i. 79.303 123,359 9-4 86, Mcnadnock 10-4 33$-, Pepperell do 42$, Utica do 55, do 11 4 60. 141,518 Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are more active at the close» 3,903 $1,693,903 .6,509 $2,557,676 2,158 $838,531 but prices still continue to decline. New York Mills are sold at 27$- cents, WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN INTO THE MARKET DURING Globe 3-4 8$-, Kingston do 9$, Boott R do 10, Globe A 7-8 9$, THE SAME PERIOD. Strafford S do 12, Waltham X do 14, Ed. Harris do 12, Great 330 260 567 $68,963 $129,582 $222,896 Falls M do 13$, do S do 12$, do A do 14$, Lyman Cambric do Mann lactu res of wool.. 107 do 153 cotton, 96 32,315 27,944 47,779 16$, Strafford M do IS, Bartlett 31 inch 14, Putnam A 4-4 12$, New¬ 61 do silk 29 71 70,043 51,439 94,675 market O do 16$-, Great Falls K do 16, Bartletfca do 17$, James 65 337 do flax... 265 60,676 13,235 94,474 269 73 53 15,074 19,858 Steam do 17, 15,867 Attawaugan XX do 14$, Hope do 16, Tip Top do 19, Blackstone do 17, Boot B do 17, Forestdale do 18$, Mason832 723 1,181 $475,691 $228,467 $260 662 ville do 20, Androscoggin L do 20, Lonsdale do 20, Bates XX do 22$ 3,903 1,093,903 2,158 a6,509 2,557.676 838,531 Lyman J do 22, Wamsutta H do 26 do O do 25, Atlantic Cambric do 29, 4,735 $1,954,565 3,339 7,232 $2,736,143 New York Mills do 27$, Hill do 20, Amosbeag 42 inch 21$, Waltham do 18, Naumkeag W 6-4 20, Boot W do 20, Nashua do 23, Bates do 22$, 1 WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Wamsutta do 82, Amoskeag 46 inch 21$, Waltham 6-4 25, Matta- * . . 444 699 736 $197,701 $347,480 $278,686 wambeag do 26, Pepperell do 27*. Utica do 86, Waltham 8-4 123 394 154,480 .. 411 44,313 105,08° 73 75 076 165 98 82$, Pepperell do 37$, Mattawamkeag 9-4 40, Pepperell do 42$, Utica | 9-\027 silk — 234 266,936 do 826 488 78,698 63,016 do 65, Waltham do 40, Monadnock 10-4 129,312 37$, Waltham do 50, Allen-" Miscellaneous do flax 23 13 20 14,064 10,746 dry goods. 4,634 dale do 47$, Pepperell do 60, Utica do 60, Pepperell 11-4 62$. 989 $406,531 $845,976 1,699 1,159 $612,739 Ticks have further declined, with but a very light demand pre¬ Stark A do * , , . ... . ' ... . . . Manulacture8°f wool vailing. Amoskeag A C A 32 inch 37$, do A 82 inch 28, do B 82 inch 26, do D 80 inch 19, do 0 30 inch 22, Brunswick 4-4 15, Hamilton 27$, 2,557,676 3,903 1,693,903 Total entered at the port 7,668 $8,403,652 4,892 $2,100,437 i6,509 2,158 838,581 8,857 $1,4 51,27 502 THE CHRONICLE. ®l)t Railtnag Janitor. Atlantic Bainbridge Railroad Earnings pare (weekly).—In the following table we comi the report-ed weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of the leading railroads in 1866 and 1867 Week. Miles of Railroads. road. Atlantic & Gt. Western.2d,Sept, ,8ept, I “ “ “ “ 3d [ “ i. 4th 2d,Sept. 1 3d, ‘* r 4th, “ 1st, Oct. in’wi m i 1st, Oct. 2d, /: 032.) ^ Chic., R. I. and Pacific. .2d, Sept. ) “ “ “ “ “ “ Detroit and “ 8d, “ ■ 4th, “ f 1st, Oct. J 410 Milwaukee.2d, Sep. “ “ “ “ “ 3d *• 4tn, “ 85,832 71,122 82,527 82,996 103,502 306 254 294 298 72 01 74 41 369 68 231,678 315,851 265,033 852,362 477,647 356,750 307 74 417 16 279,412 347,549 270 22 224 49 396 05 270 22 89,502 90,943 104,780 118,191 122,000 218 221 255 282 32 81 56 71 297 354 332 352 56 88 40,574 46,640 44,973 47,508 228 79 221 23 219 97 245 31 215 248 239 252 82 08 22 70 2°,700 30,042 34,5S1 102 93 130 94 54 115 66 114 49 65 81 134 55 113 72 349 325 350 855 21 09 83 06 329 79 387 37 390 80 363 9s 192 204 201 207 09 90 41 31 233 233 224 219 1st, Oct. J 46,124 Marietta and Cincinnati.2d, Sept) oepi| “ 3d, 26,384 24,041 83,577 24,36C , “ “ “ “ “ Michigan Central ^ “ “ “ “ Michigan Southern ^ “ “ “ 1 \ 4th, i. 257 1st. t, Oct. J “ 285 f 2d, Sept. ) ! 3d, “ 524 ist, oct. r 2d, “ J K5 550 108,650 83,601 Toledo, Wab’sli & Wt’n 1st Sept. 1 “ “ “ “ **^$1 “ Western Union 2d 3d “ “ * “ 4th “ 2d, Sept. 3d, “ “ “ “ “ “ “ 4th, 83,166 521 77,991 1306. 472,483 696,533 540,537 687,121 402,674 528,618 526,959 614,849 475,723 497,250 5,548,359 Erie “ 1st, Oct. 20,504 1866. (798 m.) / 1867. .Jan— .Feb... march . April.. May... 459,370 380,796. .June.. 400,116. .July... 475,257. .Aug... .Sept... .Oct .Nov 368,581 Railway Dec.... 3,050,340..Year 1866. 1867. (798 m.) (775 m.) 275,282 299,063 258,480 322,277 355,270 335,985 409,250 401,280 307,919 236,824 1865. (708 rn.) $571,536 ...Oct... 641,589 643,887 . 1,580,31731,476^244 1,637,592,11,416,001 ...Not., ..Dec... l,524,917tl 1,041,115 * ..Year.. Mich. So. A N. Indiana. 1865. (524 m.) $363,996 366,361 413,974 865,180 851,489 887,095 301,613 418,575 486,808 524,760 495,072 851,799 4,826,722 «»Pittsb.,Ft 1865. (468 m.) $690,144 678,504 857,583 783,866 637,186 646,995 584,523 712,495 795,938 858,500 712,362 680,963 1866. (524 in.) $312,846 277,234 412,715 413,970 418,024 384,684 338,858 384,401 429,177 496,655 429,548 852,218 4,650,328 . . . ...Oct... ..Nov.. . — .Dec.. ..Year.. 480,986 522,821... Feb... 662.168 678,349...Mar... 575,287.. April.. 578,-242...May.. 506,586 .June.. 534,733. July-. 602,069 *Ang-.. 687,067 Sept.,. ..Oct.... Nov.... Dec.,.. — „ * 528,972 616,665 516,608 460,573 617,682 578,403 747,469 739,736 618,088 7,181,208 1865. (234 m.) $98,183 74,283 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,838 217,159 170,555 228,020 41 01 171 83 177 72 212 05 154 36 (280 m.) $226,152 222,241 290,111 1866. $603,053 505,266 505,465 411,605 569,250 567,679 480,626 578,253 57i;348 661,971 588,219 504,066- 6,546,741 Railroad Uniforms.—The New York Central Railroad Com-, pany have instructed their employees to procure uniforms in accord¬ ance with the last-session Act of the State other of companies will have to conform to course their separate styles and badges. 1866. (234 m.) $5,000 $15,000,000: and the Cleveland and Toledo Riilroad Com¬ pany have in like manner increased their share capital from $5,000,000 to $6,250,000. New Harlem Bridge.—The new Harlem bridge was opened on the 15th inst. Its dimensions are as follows: Length between abutments, four hundred and eighty-six feet; extreme length, in¬ cluding abutments, walls and approaches, eight hundred and seventysix feet; width of roadway, twenty-eight feet: of the sidewalks, seven feet six inches; entire width of the 000 to The cost of the has been 142,947 .Feb.. 238,362. ..Mar.. 283,951, •April. 3:48,691. ..May.. 343,678 .June 356,142 ..July 421,484. ..Aug.. 421,977. ...Sep. .Oct... .Nov. .Dec., ..Year.. $121,776 110,664 1,985,712 1,943,900 310,594 226,840 I860. (210 m.) (210 m.) $170,078 $178,119 153,903 155,893 202,771 192,138 169,299 167,301 177,625 163,699 173,722 167,099 [162,570 166,015 218,236 222,953 216,783 198,884 222,924 244,834 208,098 212,226 162,694 «Year« 2,240,744 177,364 2,251,525 bridge was nearly nearly six years building. 1867. 1866. 7,976,491 9,424,450 bridge, fifty-two feet. This bridge million dollars. RAILROADS. •—Chic., Rock Is. and Pacific1865. 1867. (860 m.) (1,032 m.)(l,145 m.) $541,005 $590,767 $696,147 482,164 459,007 574,664 499,296 613,974 765,398 468,358 624,174 774,280 585,623 880,993 895,712 747,942 925,983 898,357 702,692 808,524 880,324 767,508 797,475 1,03",8‘24 946,707 1,000,086 1,451,2S4 932,683 1,200,216 — 754^671 1,010,892 — 547,842 — 712,359 1865. (708 m.) $660,438. ..Jan.. 554,201. ..Feb. 417,352. ..Mar.. 420,007. .April. 76,248 96,388 107,525 103,373 104,608 115,184 125,252 116,495 116,146 105,767 98,043 . ...Oct... .Nov.. .Dec.. . . ..Year — ..Jan.., .Feb.. ..Mar.. .April. ..May.. .June.. ..July,, ..Aug.. ...Sep.. $143,090. ..Jan.. 1866. $98,181 S5,000. .Feb.. 72,000. ..Mar 87,510. .April. 119,104. ..May.. 114,579. .June 86,528 95,905 106,269 203,018 237,562 251,906 241,370 . . 130,000. ..July.. 113,404 ..Aug.. 277,833 ...Sep.. ...Oct... .Not.. .Dec... . . Year.. ^300,841 fe 395,579 *2346,717 Em,125 2,535,00! $131,707 123,404 123,957 121,533 245,598 244,376 208,785 188,815 276,416 416,359 328,539 129,287 2,538,800 1867. 1865. (242 m.) $149,658... Jan... $144,084 149,342... Feb... 174,152... Mar... 188,162.. April.. 171,736...May... 189,171 155,753 144,001 138 738 156,065 ..June.. 194,524 172,933 July.. f 271.798 220,788 .Aug... ,4 374,534 ..Sept... 8 379,981 ..Oct ^ 375,534 ••Nov:... ?361,610 —..Dec.... (247,023 . — — — **Year*- 2,926,678 1866. (521 m.) $226,059 194,167 256,407 270,300 316,433 325 691 804,917 396,248 349,117 436,065 354,830 264,741 78.976. ..Feb.. 96,535. .June. It 6,594. ..July. 114,716. ..Aug. ...Oct.. .Nov.. . .Dec.. . 8,694,975 (285 m.) $282,438 265,796 337,158 404,61 517,71 ..Year.* i OCX 1865. 239,139 813,914 271,527 290,916 304,463 349,285 844,700 850,348 872,618 412,553 284,319 205 436. ..Aug.. 403,658. ...Sep.. ...Oct.. ..Not.. ..Dec... — . m. $259,22: . Year.... ...Feb... ..Mar... .April.. ..May... ..June.. July.. ..Aug... ..Sept... ~ ..Oct ..Nov.. Dec.. ,. ~Yaar„ — 1 DL'l! 1866. (340 m.) ** - / CIO 1867. (340 tv.) $242,795 219,067 279,648 284,729 $267,641 246,109 326,236 277,423 283,130 253,924 247,262 305,454 278,701 310,762 802,425 282,939 240,185 234,683 322,521 281,613 3,793,005 3,880,583 1865. ...Jan... 333,952 284,977 313,021 398,993 464,778 Mississippi Western Union 1867. 362,783 4,504,546 4,260,125 (340 $146,800. .Jan.. 130,000. ..Feb. 134,900. ..Mar.. 192,548. .April. 230,497. ..May.. 221,690. .June. 193,000. ..July. 283,66 375,210 493.649 414,604 308.649 ■Ohio A 1867. 1867. (285 m. $304,095 343,736 365,196 335,082 324,986 359,645 429,166 328,869 (370 m.) — 1866. (285 m.) 413,501 460,661 490,693 447,669 Sep., .. 1865. 279,15 844,228 337,240 401,456 365,663 329,105 84,652. ..Mar.. 72,768. .April. 90,526. ..May.. — 274.8( "M00 CU1 $sw,i . — 224,62 272,4] 280,28 251,91 261,4! Michigan Central. 1867. (251 m.) $94,136. .Jan.. 809,591 364,723 $292,04 306,693 238,926 317,977 3,318,514 3,466,922 (521 m.) $237,674 200,793 270,630 317,052 329,078 304,810 1867. (410 m 277 505 ..Year. /—Toledo. Wab. A Western.-* <210 m.) 183,385 257,230 209,099 270,073 ® 315,027 201,779 S260,263 . — (275 m.) 246,331 289,403 196,580 234,612 821,818 244,121 306,231 389;489 ..Dec,. 112,952 123,802 1865. (228 m.) 307^528 5:428,474 ...Oct.. .Nov.. 113,504 (234 m.) 1866. (228 m.) $305,554 $241,395 . 1,201,239 -Milwaukee A St. Paul * . 106,921 104,866 1,224,058 1867. — 1866. (251m.) (251m.) $96,672 $90,411 87,791 85,447 93,763 84,357 78,607 81,181 . 477,607. ..May 496,616. .June. 497,521. ..July. 684,377. ..Aug.. 704,893 ..Sep.. — PRINCIPAL a -Marietta and Cincinnati. (234 m.) Legislature. All the same law, selecting the Stock Increase.—The Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad Company have increased their share capital from $240,238. ..Jan.. — sti’,' Binghampton, work has scarcely been commenced. In another year, however, the last named placed will undoubtedly be reached and this long-delayed but important enterprise completed. 1865. . completed Albany, and before opened to Afton, 6 miles Harpersville, to ' . road is further, and by the 1st January, 1868, to Harpersville, 7 miles further west. Between the tunnel, 4 miles from (280 m.) — Savannah. being daily les. which distance is /-Chicago A Northwestern-. . miles soushwest from the 1st of November the road is to be 1867. 329,851 871,543 321,597 387,269 322,638 360,823 323,0:40 271,246 (708 m.) Bainbridge is 21 miles, EARNINGS, OF 269,249 84,897 72,135 108,082 267,488 262,172 170,795 116,224 150,989 245,7nl 244,854 98,787 1865. £559,982 679,935 655,222 46 24 and r-St. L.. Alton A T. Hante.—. 1867. 8,488,063 7,467,218 (524 m.) $305,857. fan. 311,088. .Feb.. 379,761 Mar.. 891,163. April. 358,601. ..May.. 304,232. .June. 312,879. ..July.. 428.7t.2. ..Aug*. 486,408. ...Sep.. (468 rn.) $560,115... Jan... 699,806 682,510 633,667 652,878 648,201 654,926 757,441 69 108 21 121 66 137 85 1866. running to the Oclockonee River 4 214 miles by the tracklayers. and Susquehanna Railroad.—This in operation to Bainbridge 108 miles from -Mil. and Prairie dn Chien.- 1867. Tafe*01 icago.—* 468 m.) 44 162 33 189 98 174 58 115 94 or Albany -Illinois Central.- . « $280,503 $906,759. ..Jan 917,639. ..Feb.. 1,139,528. ..Mar.. 1,217,143. April. 1,425,120 1,101,632 1,122,140. ..May 1,252,370 1,243,636 1,118,731. June.. 1,274,558 1,208,244 1,071,312 .July.. 1,418,742 1,295,400 1,239,024. ..Aug 1,435,285 1,416,101 1,444,745 ..Sep... — 311 58 303 54 170 06 159 63 149 70 3,840,091 3,695,152 1,070,890 $1,185,746 1,011,735 987,936 1,381,124 1,070,917 1,538,313 1,153,441 6,501,063 14,596,413 beyond Thomasville, Chicago and Alton. (280 m.) 357,956 ... 30,415 31,456 37,533 27,323 401 80 365 03 350 69 66 MONTHLY 1S65. (507 m.) $361,1:47. 377,852. 438,046 443,029 541,491 5,476,276 93,991 110,402 111,379 103,704 122,300 122,218 117,932 114,760 84,575 93,676 90,959 19,154 -Atlantic & Great Western 1865. 29,277 21,5:15 24,401 177 COMPARATIVE (507 m.) (466 m.) $289,403 $504,992 408,864 *827,269 899,870 388,480 343,408 394,5:43 399,364 451,477 474,441 429,669 - 99,987 101,191 100,654 107,369 Oct.) 1st, 145,500 136,300 144,600 99,524 92,647 lat.Sept. ) 3d, 102.210 93,194 43,013 41,591 41,356 188 1867. 225 33 268 37 245 00 257 92 67 38 00 22 112,505 cars are now sened p. m 1 '66. 328 230 237 226 114,696 ( 1 145 1 " -Earn’gs 113,729 13:3,530 124,211 130,764 116,804 120,160 f 280 Chciago and N. West’n.3d, Sept. 3 4 th, 166,635 I 1st, Oct j Chicago and Alton -Gross earn’ I860. 1867. Gulf Railroad.—The extension of this road to is being accomplished at a rapid rate. The track has and been laid and Thence to : [October 19,1867. 1866. — * 1867. (157 m.) (177 m) (177 m.) $43,716 45,102 $39,67y 27.666 37,265 36,006 32,378 39,299 36,392 33,972 40,710 43,333 63,862 57,852 86,913 82,J47 102,686 60,558 68,180 85,506 68,262 5’*,862 73,525 60,b98 75,677 04,462 92,715 100,303 61,770 75,248 87,830 54,478 —* 689,888 814,08$ — October 503 THE CHRONICLE. 19,1867.] NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES Prtnct- INTEREST. Amount Ontitandinrf. Rate. JNifcKfcai, FRIDAY. Bid Payable. LIST. OaUt&ndinf. DENOMINATIONS. Marked thru * are In dofanlt for intereet. iIsktd FRIDAY. pa Rat* Payable. _ Due. B Id Aakad M„k«J 144* 4llNaU®““*J>Secnittie*. do do do do do do do ^ do registered. do coupon. 1sca registered. do coupon. tana do':.....-registered. registered. do do do do do do do do (new).coupon. ! do registered. J 1«65 do 1864 ...coupon. do do do . • ($5,322,000): ’60. Bonds of 57 and Bonds Connecticut ^ War ($10,000,000): State Bonds war) war) do do (war) tax Florida ($370,617): State Bonds State Bonds Georgia ($5,706,500): State Bonds do do (f exempt. Coupon July Jan. So July ... o s Jan. & July do 8,000,000 2,000,000 2,000,000 Jan. A July April &Oct \l Buildings Loans Missouri ($35,404,515) : ♦State Loans (old). ♦Railroad Loans5 (various).... do do (Pacific) do do (EL & St. Jo) New Hampshire ($3,791,327): State Bonds (war) 1861. do do (war) 1864 do do (war) 1866 do do (war) 1866 New Jersey ($3,395,200): War Bonds, act May 10, ’61 (free) u act Mar. 24,’63 (free) act April 14,1864... New York ($51,753,082): General Fund Loans do do do Bounty Fund Loan, do Canal Loans do do do , coupon registered.. 100 loo* 100* 1(*0 State Stock (Fire Loan) do Bonds (Blue Ridge RR.).. do do (State House)... do Stock (do do ) ... do Bonds (Funding) Tennessee ($51,148,497): Internal Improvement Bonds do do do Railroad Loan Bonds 104* 104* 104* 104* .... t Jan. So July do var. 99 99 .... • A* l var. 3 1886 6 4,578,017 5 Jan. So July • 6 6 6 16 May & Nov 184,000 7 300,000 7 Jan. & July do 1863 1881 6 7 Jan. & July do 1875 409,800 1,992,000 345,000 800,000 525,000 475,000 2.832.500 9,178,800 3,000,000 6 6 6 6 Water Stock Pittsb. A Connellsv. RR. Loan. Baltimore A Ohio RR. Loan Park and Park Improve. Stock. Defense Loan ... Floating Debt Stock Boston ($12,845,376): Municipal Bonds • do Jan. & July 3 do 2 Feb. So Aug. Various. Feb. A Aug. t> .... 2 .... 1886 .... .. .... !!!! .... 6 6 6 6 6 Mar. ASept. Various. Mar.A Sept Feb. A Aug June A Dec. 3 5 6 6 Quarterly 5 5 6 6 7 7 250,000 8 100,000 7 do do do .. do May A Nov. do July 3 1894 3 i Jan. A Mar. A 3 1,798,900 6 1,002,900 6 C93,400 6 Jan. A July do do Quarterly .... .... .... • • • .... .... .... * * * .... 105* 105* 105 7 82 . . .... .... .... • • ♦ • 3 100 Quarterly do 6 3,626,500 6 Various. ’71-’94 .... Central Park Fund Stock do do Impr. Fund Stock do do do do Real Estate Bonds Sold. Family Aid Fund Bonds.. do do do do Court House Stock .. Riot Damages Bonds ... Soldiers’ Bounty Fond Bonds.. Philadelphia ($36,165.621): (old) — ($5,644,000): Municipal Bonds....: Real Estate and Improv. Bonds Water and Sewerage Bonds.... 94 96 95 318,159 5 Quarterly. 1870 1,000,000 6 Jan. A July ’75-’79 do 500,000 6’ ’71-’8i do 1,775,000 6 ’77-’90 do 1887 1,210,803 6 2,347,340 2,175,400 13,911,900 5 6 6 6 do Jan. A July do 6 Jun. A Dec. ’71-’78 Apr. A Oct. 494,000 6 1,450,949 6 Jan. A July do do do 406,100 6 Jan. A P45,'i 22 4,l:-5,399 250,000 4,335,034 1,000,000 5,000,000 J.,A.,J.AO. May A Nov. July J.,A..J. AO. 2,192,168 225,000 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6,088,200 5 Various. • • 1868 1868 6Gr long. 62* 1882 60* ’86-’95 ’S4-’96 ’6--’99 ’68-’99 63 61 49 48 • 723,966 July ’68-’88 do Jan. A July Jan. A do Mar. ASept. do 1,0S8,000 5 336,000 6 622,000 893,840 850,0C0 1,217,000 589,000 6,188,000 615,000 6 6 7 6 291,000 1,062,500 1,435,000 6 7 7 Jan 1,231,000 6 ’87 '78 ’76 ’79 ’76 95 ‘ 95* 92 95 Jan. A July ’72’90 May A Nov. ’70 ’97 April A Oct. ’95 ’00 Various. ’68 '86 Jan. A July 1871 May A Nov. '67 ’84 ’67 ’90 1887 Various. ’75 ’93 Various. do 1,975,000 6 851,000 6 Apr. A Oct. ’82’93 May ANov. 1887 94 861,500 4 June ADec. 1894 3,000,200 2,147,000 900,000 1,800,000 1,878,900 2,748,000 3,066,071 2,500,000 2,083,200 1,133,437 2,000,000 1,500,000 1,800.000 4,000,000 2,000,000 5 5 5 6 6 F. M.A.AN. 1870 1880 do do do do do do do do do 6 6 6 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 May A Nov do do do do do do 1,620,000 6 1,122,400 7 829,886 93 Jan. A July 73 ’76 Varioas. '72 ’96 Jan. A July '81 ’90 do 1876 do 1886 6 6 6 6 7 7 ■67 ’67 ’74 '70 '75 1894 '15 ’16 '81-’99 '85 ’90 1,03^,000 6 689,900 650,000 1870 1870 1873 1875 1886 1890 1890 1893 1895 ’67 ’95 ’67 ’95 ’67 '91 7 6 7 1890 1883 1875 1878 1887 1876 1887 1873 ’69 ’72 ’73 ’75 ’75 ’92 ’83 ’90 ’78’76 ’77 ’82 ’91 ’97 Jan. A July ’67 ’85 ’67 ’82 do d o ’67 ’95 do 67 ’04 do 94 ’95 5 478,897 5 (new) (old) 4,097,383 6 18,109,955 6 (new) Loan Bonds... 11,650,000 6 ): 108 1,800,000 5 1,516,000 6 100* Sacramento—City Bonds 98 101* Jan. A July 1913 ’88 ’98 do St. Louis May A Nov. Jan. A July do do Municipal (re-adjust.) Bonds... 1870 Jan. A July .... New York City ($83,326,524): Water Stock ; do do Croton Water Stock do do do Water Stock do do do do do do War and Bounty Pittsrurg ($ Railroad Bonds .... 3,000,00.* Var. 1871 561,254 Municipal Loan Bonds Municipal Bonds .... Var. do Feb. A Ang. 469,968 7 650,000 7 City and War Bonds 1869 .... Various. 575,000 Soldiers’ Bounty Fund Bonds do Substit. A Relief B’ds 83 i 5 896.000 do do Water Works Bonds Detroit ($1.109,968): Floating Debt Fund Stock ... . J 1 51* 1875 & 1,083,000 Municipal Bonds Railroad Loan Bonds Water Loan Bonds Milwaukee ($911.500): July 6,168,090 790,000 7 do do do Water Loan Bonds Louisville ($4,118,000); ... •. Water Bonds do do Cincinnati ($3,203,000): Water Loan Bonds Jersey City ($1,953,596): ...l •... Municipal (old issues) do A school (new issue) Municipal Loan Bonds 1867 1877 1,194,100 6 600,000 6 1,387,600 6 500,000 8 7 6 5 5 7 7 6 5 , .... • 3 July Sep. Apr. A Oct. Jan. A July . !*.!! > 1879 1886 1890 , ... * Jan. A July do do do 622,000 6 14,132,000 6 7,000,000 6 3,000,000 6 , • 1 7 3 Sep. Jan. So July do do .... 1870 1874 do do do Jan. A July Jan. A 96* 3 Various. Mar. A .... ... 1889 do do do do Water Loan Bonds Soldiers’ Aid Fund Bonds Chicago ($5,397,464): Sewerage A River Improvem’t. .... 1871 1S83 1880 3 May A Nov. Jan. A July .... Jan. A 1,000.060 6 1,800,000 6 Improvement Loan Bonds do 3 100,000 7 5,466,000 do do do do do do (currency) Water Loan Bonds do do do (currency) Brooklyn ($10,023,419): 1 7 1,966,000 6 700,000 2,489,780 442,961 2,609,607 2,559,000 21,726,500 12,700,000 • do Jail Stock Municipal Bonds (various) do j- 6,826,196 \l 463,000 • .... Various. 798,000 5 541,000 6 1,100,000 • !. 50 29,209,000 • Prospect Park Loan Bonds 5-1,0 0 525,000 6 1,688,000 8,376,372 3,000,000 2,118,000 • pleas 1866 1868 6 • .... do 60 " 11,108,000 6 21,896,298 6 State Bonds (coupon) do do (registered) .. do g) coupon (Fundin do ( ) registered do West Virginia ($ State Bonds,•,••••... ..••••• Wisconsin ($2,248,191): War Bonds municipal Securities Baltimore ($21,928,656): 73 75 Internal Improvement Stock... 82* 83* 945,200 6 6 7 1,567,500 War Loan Bonds .... 1885 Funding Bonds (new) Vermont ($1,650, ),000): 218,574 s Virginia ($43,166,286): Jan. & July 1870 100* 1870 do 100* 5 101 do 3 101 do 7 101 do 101 1879 do 1879 do 101* 101* 1,157,222 1,229,667 1,000,000 State Military Loan Bonds Rhode Island ($3,626,000): War Loan Bonds 125 do Jan. A July do 4,838,933 6 569,000 6 State Loan Bonds Pennsylvania ($38,377,000): State Bonds, coupon do do transmissable 106* 106* - 67-’76 do 77-’86 do 87 ’96 Jan. A July 1900 Jan. A July 1860 do 1868 do 18 0 do 1875 do 188C do 1881 1 do ’68-'71 379,866 6 2,183,532 6 1,6->0,000 6 4,C95,309 6 2,400,000 6 679,213 6 ty a State Bonds 1883 1887 3,774,000 1,548,000 3,346,000 Bounty Loan Bonds Minnesota ($2,525,000): do do 1885 ios* 108* July 1868 Apr. & Oct. 1861 271,000 5 (bounty) ao May So Nov. 1884 111* lii* 103* 104 108* 108* Jan. So 610,000 899,000 98,975 500,000 Maine ($5,127,500): State Bonds do do (war) of ’61.... do do (war) of'63. . do do of ’63 do do [war) ot '64.... Maryland ($13,549,766): State Bonds do do do do bounty do do Massachusetts ($25,555,747): State Bonds ,do do Railroad Loans do do War Loans do do do do do do (currency) Michigan ($3,970,921): State Loan Bonds Canal do War Loan do do do do 1882 do do 437,850 848,000 .. 106 May So Nov 1872 1,514,489 2* Funded Coupon Bonds ... Railroad Loans of ’53- 66 “ 1881 1881 1867' 168,000 1,941,000 14,663,254 State Bonds Levee Loan Bonds State Bonds. do do (Union Loan) do do do do do do do do do do (domestic) 111* lii* 111* in* 18811 444,022 6 Various. .... 1874 Jan. & July 1886 Bonds War Loan Bond Indiana ($7,009,092): State Bonds do do :. War Bonds, coupon Iowa ($84,000): State Stock War Loan Bonds Kansas ($604,475): State Bonds do do Kentucky ($5,324,652): State Bonds do do Louisiana ($13,357,999): BanK Loan Bonds . 118 5,514,500 1,425,000 6 6 6 6 477,000 Sis7\000 State Loan Bonds. do do do do do do Funded Coupons.. May So Nov. May & Nov. ct o o .... 143 18711 ] July— Jan. So July 1.269.500 6 3,030,000 7 do do * do do 20,000,000 Jan. & 870,093 Illinois) $7,795,995 Canal Bonds do do registered.... - July 3d series). ♦State Bank Loan.. ♦Real Estate BanK Loan State Jan. So 7.30 Feb. & Aug. 7.30 Jun. A Dec. 1868 7.30 Jan. & July 1868 do (funding) Arkansas (incl. int. $3,252,401): California 7,022,000 511,939,525 (extended) do 1868-j .registered. j Bonds........ do do July Mar. & Sept. 1904 State Securities. Alabama ($4,066,210): State Jan. So \ 171,409,350 T^ury series) Notes (1st 2d series). do do do July 283,746,350 1864./..coupon. , do .registered. ' 1865 ...coupon, j do .registered. | (10-408) Jan. A .......coupon. 1861.. do do do do do do do do do 6,417,300 8,908,342 1867 3 1877 1877 .... 107 197 rioo 1 .... . 107* 100* • •• • Harbor and Wharf Bonds 1,138,000 6 1,062,000 6 902,000 6 982,000 6 Railroad Bonds 1,104,OCq 6 Jan. A July do do do , do 67’85 ’71 ’06 ’70’88 ’67’87 ’71 ’77l 82 THE CHRONICLE. 504 [October 19,1867, RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. Subscribers will confer a great ftvor * DESORIPTIOX. by giving ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In our Tables. TRIDAV* interest. Where th^-total Funded Debt Amount ie not given in detail in the 2d colit is expressed by the dgures in brackets after the Co’s name. outstand cJ 4-> ing. uinn Princpal payble. Payable. INTEREST. DESCRIPTION. N.B.—Where the total Funded Debt; Amount is not given in detail in the 2d col-joutstandit is expressed by the figures in* in brackets after the Co’s name. 'd i| umn s FRIDAY. CVS P M 5 Railroad: Railroad: Atlantic <ft Gt. Western ($29,040,000): 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 Mortgage, sinking fund, {Pa.) 1st Sd let do do Mortgage, sinking fund, (*V. Y.) Id do do 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, {Ohio) do do ) Bd 1st Mortgage S’k’i* Fund (Buff, ex Consolidated Bonds tlanticdbSl.Law. 1st Mort (Portland) 2d Mortgage 17,105,000 1,5(d), Out 268,900 484,000 619,0:16 915,280 Sterling Bonds do of 1844 Baltimore and Ohio. Mort (3 F) 1834 1,024,750 Mortgage (S. F.) of 1855 1877 do 1882 do 1879 do 1881 do 1876 Jan. & July 1883 Ap’l & Oct. 1884 do 1895 •8 u dn 1866 do Ap’l & Oct. - do 1880 1885 1,852,000 Ap’l & Oct. Bdlefontaine ($1,745,000): 1st Mortgage 1,225,000 Jan. & July ’70-’79 do 1870 do Belvidcre t maw are : 1st Mort. (guar. C. 2d Mort. do do 3d Mort. 628.500 433,00(1 i l 1,000,000 and A.) 500,000 589.500 Boston, Cone. db Montreal ($1,050,000) 1st 1st Mortgage ( do f Sinking Fund Bonds Boston, Hartford and Erie Boston and Lowell: Bonds o Ju y ’50 of Oct. do 364,0001 200,00U Bufalo, N. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Bufalo and state Line ($1,200,000): 1st Mortgage Burlinaton eft Missouri ($1,902,110) : General Mortgage . Bonds conv. into pref. stock . Waiden and Amboy ($10,204,403): Dollar Loans *44 I*,u0 330,000 J’ne & Dec. 1877 May & Nov 1S72 500,000 Ap’l & Oct. 600,000 675,(KK Dollar Loan 807,000 4,437.300 1,841,060 490,00u 493,000 Camden and Atlantic : 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Cataivissa : 1st Mortgage Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage.. Central of New Jersey : 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Central Ohio : 1st Mort 7,80,000 900, OIK) 600,000 2,500,000 Central Pacific of Cal.: 1st mortgage Convertible Bonds Cheshire: Bonds 7,336,000 1,500.000 673,2th do do 2d income till 1S71 iuip nent Bonds Equipment Bonds Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific: 1st Mortgage (C. & R. I.) 1st "do (new) Cine., Ham. db Dayton (,$1,629,000): 2d Mortgage .. 861,001 Jan. & 3,040, (XX 165,0-0 do do ast do do Pennsylvania: 1st 394,000 750,000, 160,090 Jan. & Juh,1872 Feb. & Aug! 1874 1886 do 570,000! Bonds Erie Railway ($22,370,982): 1st Mortgage 2d do convertible 3d do 4th do convertible 5th do do 99^ Jan. & 1,000,000 Mortgage 5 per cent. 900,000 Julyj’S3-’94 81 598,000 7 Ap’l & Oct. 18S8 Sinking Fund Bonds. Elmira eft Williamsport : 3,000,000 4,000,000 . 93 May & Nov. 1867 Sep 1879 106 101 99 89 1883 April & Oct 1880 June & Dec 1888 M’ch & Sop 1875 8,875,520 Erie and Northeast ($400,000): Jan. & July 1880 April <fc Oct 1862 M’ch & do 6,000,000 4,441,600 926,500 Sterling convertible (£800,000)... 149,000 Jan. & 1,919,(MX) 1,173,000 200,900 Fob. & Mortgage July :07 j91. I •( .... 1870 Gal. cft Chic. U. 1st 2d (ind. in C. eft N. W.): Mortgage, sinking fund....... do do Mississippi River Bridge Bonds. 64 90 Grand .function : Mortgage Great West., 111.: 1st Mort., W, Div. 1st Mortgage Whole Line 2nd do do Greenville eft Columbia: 1st Mort.. Bonds guaranteed by State Bonds unsecured Hannibal db St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds Harrisburg db Lanc'r 86 96 87 97 3d do Convertible April & Oct 1,455,000 2.5*X>,000 329,000 700, (KH' Feb. & Aug 1888 May & Nov. 1893 1868 July, 1868 do 1868 do Illinois Central: Construction bonds, 1S75 do do do 6 per cent Redemption bonds Sterling Redemption bonds 1st 74 April & Oci 1881 633,60* 7(h),(XX 927,* KK ?,< 65 000 Jan. Jul* 1883 Tan. & July 1883 Jan. & July 1873 876 do -3,890,00* 1,907,00* 192,000 523,00* Feb. & Aui! 1869 T’ne & Dec 1885 May & Nov 1S75 *867 do 600,00* 500,000 .May & Nov IS70 1st Mortgage 2d do 73 1868 1,(XX),00*i Huntingdon db Broad 7b/)($l,402,142): lOi 878 do 70-75 do Tan. & Jul\ 1870 388,000 927,000 3,437,75* Hartford db New Haven : 1st Mort. Hartf., Prov. db Fishkill : Hudson River ($7,762,840): 1st Mortgage 2d do sinking fund 102 100 fan. & Juh 1851 (.00,000 New D. B’ds : Aug 1882 May & Nov. 1875 189,000 Elgin and State RR. Bonds Georgia 6,668,50* 2,523,(XX 2,563,00* Feb. & Au; 1875 April & Oci 1875 1875 1890 1875 • 358,00* do do do 101 !05 IS : Mortgage Feb. & 300,000 .. Mortgage do convertible do fflcveland and Toledo ($2,746,2S0): 3d 4th Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 18->6 Columbus db Indianapolis Central: 1st Mortgage 2d do Connecticut River: 1st Mort Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000): Mortgage Cumberland Valley: 1st Mort 1st Detroit and Pontiac R.R do do PetnAt, Monro* & 2ote*o: 1st Mort. Mortgage 1st 1885 1863 97 83 1915 82* 1885 1874 82^ 84!% RR., 2d Mort Indianap. -fr Madison RR., 1st M.. Jeff., Mad. & Indianap., 1st Mort.. Joliet and Chicago : 1st Anp 1882 2d Extensi 01 1880 18S5 : 1st Mortgage Little Miami : 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill ($1,000,000): May & Nov 1893 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Long Island : 1st Mortgage 5 0.00* 1,300,0*h 450, OOT Tan. & July M’ch & Sep 1873 do IS75 Jan. & July ! 892 2,021,00* 692,0(X: fan. & July 1885 do 1886 3.2"0 0"v Jan & July May & Nov. M’ch & Sep 600,00* 161,fX)*; 2d 1st 1st 13— 8— 1878 * 96 74 76 103 McGregor Western 1st Mortgage Maine Central: ($2,733,800) Ap’l & Oct. do do 1904 1904 500,01K 1,122.500 1,668 000" 572,000; l,740,000i 1,000,000 8 1,005,640 7 250,000 7 250.000. 8 Jan. & July 1S67 do 1881 M’ch&April 1884 do ’81-V Jan. <fc July 1875 April & Oct 1875 VTch & Sep 1881 Jan. & July 1871 \p’l & Oct L887 May & Nov. o 1875 1864 1875 1878 various. various. Feb. & Aug 1886 „ 984,000 7 £eb.& Ang 1816 ... $1,1*H),000 Loan Bonds $400,000 Loan Bonds 1st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds. 2d do (P.& K.RR.) Bonds.. Memphis db Charleston: Mort. bonds Michigan Central, ($7,463,489) Convertible Sinking Fund do 1st ! ($9,135,840) Mortgage, sinking fund do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee cfe Prairie da Chien: 2d 1st 169,50* Mortgage Mich. S. db N. Indiana: J’ne <ft Dec. !S76 1,300,00* Memphis Branch Mortgage .... Marietta db Cincinnati ($3,688,385): 1st Mortgage. 1.874 1880 Mortgage, sinking fund Milwaukee and St. 1st 2d Paul: Mortgage do do do (Mil. & Western)... Income Bonds Real Estate . Mississippi <ft Tennessee ($1,069,600).’ 1st Mortgage Income . Mobile and Ohio Income bonds . ($6,133,243) Interest bonds. Montgomery db West Point .-$1,130,700 Bonds of 1870. 1— | Income Bonds..... MortgageBondi (ne 1881 150,00( 1,500,00( 1897 1,650,00* 280,00* Jan. & 2,362, SO4,000,(XX Feb. & Am 1892 Jan. &J11I3 1S85 1,095,60* 315,20 Fob. & Aug 90-’91 Tune & Dec. 70-’71 Kpr. & Oct 1874 Feb. Aug 1S70 May & Nov 1880 July May &Nov. 660,00* 300, (XX 1,294,00 103 1872 1869 1873 1883 Vpril & Oci 1877 Tan. & Juh 1875 Fob. & Au? 1890 May & Nov '.893 886,00* 500,00* 175,001 108 95 car. var. 1S69 1882 2,297,00* 4.504.50 March&Sep 4 863,00 2,693,(10: 651,00 May & Nov 885 877 868 100 do Feb. & Am 296,56* Tan. & Juh 891 98 4,269,(XX Jan. & Juh \pril & Oc April <fc Oc: S93 893 884 875 87 324,00* April & Oc’ 1.600.50 135,509 (an. & Juh •Tan. SC-1,90, May & Nov. 867 4,187,0*1 75,341 100,000 310,000 750,0001 &July do IS do do do Ijs 109 75 876 *870 600,00* 297,50 0 Sterling bonds May & Nov May & Nov. Tan. & Julj May & Nov May & No\ 1,465,00* Louisville, Cincinnati db Lexington: 1st Mortgage (guarrante d) Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000). 1873 1876 1875 00*. 1,000, (Xh do do *1 0,0*H! 0,000 903,00* Mortgage, Eastern Division.... Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point), do (Glen Cove Br.) .. do 1890 1,129.00* 1,619,50* 1,107,546 250,00* 1st 91)4 do 1,000,00- 1,00 "-,000 9U* Ij.hlgh Valley Feb. & Aug M’ch«fc Sei> Jan. & July Jan. &Jul\ do ' 500,(Xh 20 do Extension La Crosse db Milwaukee : May & Nov fau. <fc July July 900,000 40 Mortgage. 1866 Jan. & Julj 1882 Jan. & Julj 1874 Tan. & Juh 1875 March& Sep 1385 April & Oci 18S0 May & Nov. 1890 800.00* n July \p.ril & Oci 1873 May & Not 1881 April & Oct 1906 485,00* Mortgage, sinking fund Jan. & Julj 1866 do 1870 Tan. & 640,00* 397,00* 612,50* 2,000,00* Joliet and N7Indiana: 1st Mortgage Lackxwanna eft Bloomsburg 1st Mort do 10 500,00* Mortgage Jeffe rsonviuefMad is on db Indian apolis. 1,250.00< $2,500,000 7 Bonds.. Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284) 1870 1896 2,589,001 642,00; 2d 1885 - . do 283,00* Mortgage, convertible Feb. & Aug do Mav & Nov. F.M A.&N. Feb. & Aug A or. & Oct Tan. & 1st Mortgage 2d do 8d do Toledo Depot do 2d "Lacka. and West. 1st Mort Dx Mol'ut* Valley : Mortgage Bonds Detroit and Milwaukee ($5,206,680): do 6,663,00( 109,50*1 108, tOO Bonds Delaware'. 1st Mortgage, guaranteed. Lacka. dt, Western ($3,491,500): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 1S98 1,397.00( 2d do 6 per cent bonds Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): July 600,(XX 864,00* Mortgage, (interest ceased)... 1st 2d Jeffersonville May & Nov. ’68-’71 121,000 3d Mort. Bonds Cleveland eft Pittsburg ($3,872,860): 100 102 90 92 1st July Ap’l & Oct. 2,200,001 795, (XX bonds Mortj Tgagej convertible .... .... July ’75-’8( 3,525,00* 5,600,00< 534.9): do 1st & 2d Funded Coupon Jan. & 1883 1895 do Hubbard Branch Cl6'\,Paln. & Ashtabula: IstM. B’d;- <r .... : conv. Illinois and Southern Ioiva •Ian. & Mortgage 1st Ang. May & Nov. 1S77 1893 1883 500,(XX do Cincinnati Richmond eft Chicago. Cincinnati & Zanesville. 1st Mort.. Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($450,000): 1st Mort.(payable $25,000 per year, Cleveland <ft Mahoning ($1,752,400): 2d 1870 1883 1889 J’ne tte Dec. 1893 "880 Jan. & July 1873 Ap’l & Oct. 1879 Feb. & Aug 1882 Mar. & Sep. 1875 Feb. & Aug 1870 May & Nov^ 1875 M’ch & Sep 1890 Feb & May & Nov. July Ap’l & Oct. 484.00t E 1st fid 70 April & Oct 1870 Jan. & July 1870 Jan. & 756,00* Extension Bonds 3d • 1866 2,400,00( 1,100,001: 1,250,00* 3,600,00( Sinking Fund 1st Mortgage Interest Bonds Consol. S. F, Bonds, conv. 141.00<> 483,000 Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): Trust Mortgage (S. F.) Chicago and Gt. Eastern 1st Mort.. Chicago and Milwaukee : 1st Mortgage (consolidated) Chicago db. Northwest. ($16,251,090): Preferred • 55 City F’d, Indiana Central: Chicago and Alton : 1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref 1st • and Sioux ort. Sinking 70 55 • Z>, .... j Jan. & July ’873 2,000,000 1,180,950 • Feb. & Aug 1865 do 1865 1889 do Ap’l & Oct. 1879 338,040 Sterling £380.555 at $4 -4 • J’ne & Dec. 1867 M’ch & Sep 1885 Feb. & Aug 1877 U0, ti t do Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan.... • 62 ' fi’-* • May & Nov. 1878 Ap’l <to Oct. 1.8 <4 Ja Ap JuOc 1867 Jan. & July 1875 1850 1853 do do do do 70 55 SAi 1852 876 Jan. & July 1870 1876 do 1881 do co»4 • ••4 October RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. will confer > great ftevor by giving Immediate notice of any error discovered in our Tables. Subscribers fS~a. — 505 THE CHRONICLE. 19,1867.] IN. H. —The ngures after the name refer to the vol. and Dividend. the alter The agures Stock and name, refer to the vol. out¬ containing na‘^e of Chronicle cor’Q leased " standing FRIDAY. , Iasi report. * means Periods. Last Date, paid. Railroad. par 1,675,139 Albany and Susquehanna.... 100 2,494,900 Jan. & July July ’67 Ulantlc* St Lawrence*....100 16,151,962 April iV, Oct Ocr. ’67 Baltimore and Ohio.■ • Branch Bellefontaine Line Washington Belvidere, •• • .. iw 100 Delaware Blossburg and Corning ... . 50 Boston, Hartford and Erie -. • • 100 Boston and ^owell. ...... Boston and Maine, 3, p. 355.. .lOj. Boston ana Providence 1W 100 Boston and Worcester 10 Brooklyn City.• •••••• • ™ Brooklyn City and Newtown 100 Buffalo, New York, A Erie . .100 Buffalo and Erie......... • • • • • JW Camden and Amboy 4, p. 699.100 Br-adway & Camden and do Cape 7th Avenue Atlantic ......... ™ preferred 50 do jjj Cod Carawissa*......... Co.100 Central Georgia A Bank’g Central of New Jersey Central Ohio 100 preferred do Central Park, E. & Chicago and Alton, do w N. River..100 4, p. 3~o. .lot preterred. .100 Chlc.Bur. and Quincy, 3, p 261. 5G Chicago and Great Eastern .. .100 Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska*.. .100 Chicago and Milwaukee* ....100 Chicago and Northwestern .100 .. • I,2850 250,000 June & Dec II,877,000 1,830,000 Jan. & July 4,076,974 Jan. A July 3,300,000 Jan. & July 4,500,001 Jan. & July 2,100,000 Jan. & July 1,000,000 Feb. & Aug ,.. - do do pref... 100 E. B’ way & Bat... 100 100 Dubuque and Sioux City do do pref. ..100 Rastern, (Mass) 100 East Tennessee A Georgia.. .100 East Tennessee & Virginia .100 Eighth avenue 100 Elmira and Williamsport*.... 50 do do pref. 50 100 Erie, 4, p. 599 . do preferred lOf Fitchburg 100 Georgia. 100 Hannibal and St. Joseph 100 do do pref.100 Drv Dock, , Hartford and New Haven. Housatonic preferred Hudson River .. 100 100 100 Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50 do do pref. 50 Illinois Central, 4, p. 311 100 , Indianapolis, Cin.& Lafayette 50 Jetfersonv., Mad. A Indianap. 100 Joliet and Chicago* 100 Joliet and N. Indiana 100 Lackawanna aud Bloomsburg 50 Lehigh Valley 50 Lexington and Frankfort 100 June ’67 123 6,936,625 522,350 600,000 721,926 1,150.000 2,200,0C 9 4.666.800 13,000,000 2,600.000 400,000 970,000 3,886,500 2,425,000 10,193,010 4,390,000 1,000,000 2,227,000 13,232,496 14,789,125 Feb. A Aug Jan. & 2* July ’67 ... Aug. 67 • • • 5 5 • • • • Apr.’ ’67 June ADec June ’67 Quarterly. c Ct. ’67 April. 3X 5 2* 54“ 55" £*126 122'' Apr.’ ’67 6*' \pr. ’67 2* ’67 5 5 ’6 ’67 10 Mar & Mar & Sep. -ep. Sep. sep. April & Oct Apr. 125 130 137 12 137* July July ’67 .... . 16* 67* S97j Annually. Dec. ’66 April AOct Oct. ’67 April & Oct Apr. ’67 .... Feb. & Aug Aug, 67 May & Nov May ’67 Jan. & July July ’67 Sep. ’67 April & Oct Apr. ’67 Quarterly. Apr. ’67 Jan. & July July ’67 May & Nov May ’67 Jan. & July July 67 Jan. & July July ’67 Jan. & July July ’67 Apr. & Oct Apr. ’67 Jan. & July July ’67 Jan. & July July ’67 4 4 5 5 6 j.... 4<>X 67* 97* i~ 98* 98* 84 85 06» 107 2* 5 5 3* 3 4 4 3 5 ’ 11334 1,200,000 1,673,952 1,983,170 Mar. ’< 7 March. 3.573.300 Jan. & July July ’67 3.... HO* 7 s. 4 2,141,970 1,902.000 , , 60 82 72* 78 120 72* 79 40" 186' 52 t5 125* 129 122* 124 77 95 105* 106 56 p. Nashville & Chattanooga ... .. .. New York Central, 3, p. 769 New York and Harlem do preferred .. 2,530,700 800,000 500,000 800,000 2,000,000 1,008,600 2,385,500 2,233,376 2.300,000 1,700,000 April AOct April & Oct •Saratoga and Whitehall 100 April & Oct Troy, Salem & Rutland .100 Richmond aud Dan., 4, p.45^.100 Richmond & Petersb.,1,p.488.100 Jan. & Jul} Rome, Watert. & Ogdeneb’g..l00 Rutland and Burlington 100 St. Louis, Alton, & TerreH...100 do do Annually. pref.100 St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Chic.*lC0 1,469,429 Sandusky, and Cincinnati 50 2,989,090 do do 393,078 May & Nov pref. 50 900,236 Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark.100 Saratoga and Hudson Itiver. .100 1,020,000 ... 10 1;"00,000 576,050 Jan. & July 869,450 Feb. & Aug 635.200 Jan. & July Sixth Avenne (N. Y.) 750,000 Quarterly. 10C1 South Carolina 50 5,819,275 South Side (P. & L.) 4, p. 521.. 10C' 1,360,000 South West.Georgia, 3, p. 616.100 2.203,400 Feb. & Aup Syracuse, Bingh’ton & N. Y..10C 1,200,130 Terre Haute & Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,150 Jan. A July Third Avenue (N. Y.) 1(X 1,170,000 Quarterly. Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw.. .100 776.200 do do 1st pret.100 1,651,314 do do 2d pref.100 908,424 Toledo, Wabash & Western.. 10C 5,700,000 do do preferred. 100 1,000,000 May & Nov Utica and Black River 100 834,400 Jan. & July Vermont and Canada* 10C 2,250,000 June & De*< Vermont and Massachusetts. .100 2,860,000 Jan. & July Virginia Central, 3, p. 678. ..100 3,353,679 Virginia aud Tennessee .10C: 2,94 ,791 do -do pref.100 555,500 Western (Mass), 4, p. 217 100 3,710,800 Jan. & July Western (N. Carolina) 100 1,860,000 Jan. A July Schuylkill Valley’1' 5l ShamokinVal. & Pottsville*. 50 Shore Line Railway. 100 Western Union (Wis. & Worcester and Nashua Canal. III.) 75 Mar. & May & Nov May ’67 3s. 3s 5 18 18 109*! SIX ’67 81*| ’67 44* 44* 65* 66 117 116 ’67 2,056,544 1.408.600 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 500.000 Jan. & July July ’67 Jan. & July July ’67 6,250,000 Feb. & Aug Aug.’67 895.000 Mar & Sep. Mar. ’67 1.224.100 4,093,425 4,697,457 1 ^00,000* Jan. July] ’67 5* 4 3 5 4 *7* 3 4* 6 Coal— American Ashburton 26* 75 290 305 104* 55* 101* 10i* 56 127 106 2* 3 3 4 99* 100 101* Apr.' ’’67 ’2' Apr. ’67 2 Apr. ’67 2 July ’67 51 68 May ’67 May ’67 July ’67 2* 3 Feo. ’67 Jan. ’67 3 May ’67 5 130 128 Feb. ’66 July ’67 190 42 M*»y ’67 3* July ’67 4 Iune’67 4 July ’67 1* 44 97 56* 57 530« 5* 143 Inly 4 Jan. Ang. Ang. \ng. May uly ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 Feb. *67 \ug. ’67 Feb. ’67 Feb. ’07 25 50 25 ;. 100 1,500,000 Mar. &Sep. Mar. ’67 3* 2,500,000 122 149 145 76* 40* 90 28 65 • • • ••» 55* • • 28 32' 94" 40 49 500,000 Jun. ADec. Jnne ’67 5,000,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 3,200,000 1,250,000 1,000,000 3,400,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 Jan. & Jan. & Feb. ’67 Jan. ’67 45' 28* •30* lJJ 35 750.000 Jan. & 18U 45 j 40* Aug. ’66 Ang. ’67 July ’67 July ’67 July ‘67 <6o‘* i25 1®» 162 100 2,800,000 60 1,000,000 May A Nov May ’67 60 77” • • • • 1‘0 .... • • • • July Jnly ’67 43* 45~ If* 17 20 July ’66 4,000,000 34* 34* Ju 2 Jan. & y ’67 Western Union. 100 July Telegraph.— 28.450,000 Pacific & Atlantic. 25 3,003,000 Quarterly. Aug. ’67 2* 63* 64** Express— Adams 100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Nov*’66 2 62 62* American 500 9,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66 3 Merchants’ Union (30p’d) 100 20,000,000 23~" 23* do do (35p’d) 00 63* 65 United States I0u '6.000,'006 Quarterly. Dec. ’66 8 f 5 65* Oct. ’67 Wells, Fargo & Co.. ... 100 io,uoo.ono 117* 117* Steamship — Atlantic Mali 100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Sept. ’67 l46* 146* Pacific Mail 100 20,000,000 Quarterly. Sept. ’67 126 Trust.—Farmers’ L. & Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. A July Jnly ’67 225 245 New York Life A Trust.. 100 1,000,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67 10 Union Trust 100 l'OOO'OOO Jan. A July July ’67 4 United States Trust 100 1,500,000 Jan. A July July 67 3* Mining.—Mariposa Gold 100 5,097,600 17 17* Mariposa Gold Preferred. 100 5,774,400 Improvement. CantonlG0.(16ipd) 4,500,000 Boston w ater Power 100 .... 150 • H2X 112* IOO 106* June A Dec June ’67 Quarterly. July July Apr. & Oct Wyoming Valley ' 100 1.250.000 Feb. & Aug Gas— Brooklyn 25 2,000,000 Feb. & Aug Citizens (Brooklyn) 20 1,200,000 Jan. A July Harlem 00 644,000 Jersey City & Hoboken.. 20 386,000 Jan. & July Manhattan 5p 4,000,000 Jan. A July Metropolitan 26* 74 89 3c 5$ 104 Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50 2,052,083 Union, preferred 5C 2,907,850 West Branch & Susquehanna. 50 1,100,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’65 Wyoming Valley 50 800,000 Irregular* Sept.’66 New Yorx William burg 90 75 ’67 90 66 July July ’67 5* . ioo 100 Pennsylvania50 Spring Mountain........ 60 Spruce Hill 10 Wilkesbarre ...100 109 ’67 ’65 Jan. & Delaware Division.... 50 1,633,350 Feb. & An£ Delaware and Hudson 100 10,000,000 Feb. & Aup Delaware & Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 2,521,300 Feb. A Auf Lehigh Coal and Navigation 50 g.OCQ 1/f« May & No' Monongahela Navigation Co. 50 738,100 Jan. A July Morris (consolidated),4, p.631. 10 1,0:&>,iaA) Feb. & Au< do loo 1,175,000 Feb. & Auj. preferred Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,207 Feb. & Auj. do prefer.. 50 2,888,805 Feb. & Auj. Cumberland Mar. ’£2 Jan. & July July Feb. & Aug Feb. 787,700 Feb. & Aug Aug. 3,204,296 February... Feb. 841,400 February... Feb. 3,627,000 Jan. & July 7,371,000 January Jan. 3.775.600 Jan. & July July 1,141.000 Chesapeake and Del. (5 p.183) 25 1,818,953 Chesapeake and Ohio 25 8,228,595 ^ Sep Sep. ’66 Sep Sep. ’66 64 2,687,23' Central 1,600,860 100 26,530 000 Feb. A Aug Aug.’67 50 5,285,0»: Jan. & July Julv ’67 50 Raritan and Delaivare Bay... .100 Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO Consolidation 489.100 100 Naugatuck .. r 100 New Bedford and Taunton .100 New Haven A Northampton..100 Sew Jersey, 4, p. 183 100 New London Northern.. 100 N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt. WestlOO N. O.^Jackson &GtN.,4,p.131100 | Butler 40 2,800,000 1,500,000 May & Nov May ’67 Mar. & 5s. 4 3 4 Miscellaneous. ’67 825,399 Mobile and Ohio 100 3.588.300 Montgomery and West Point. 100 1,644,104 Morris and Essex 50 3,500,000 Mar. & Sep Mar. ’67 3X8 Nashua and Lowell loo 720,009 May & Nov Aug ’67 20 125 Mississippi & Tenn.4, 155,000 May & Nov,May .’67 4,000,000 . 1,000,000 Quarterly Ju'y’ 67 4 500,000 May & Nov May ’67 2* 500,000 Jan. & July July 67 3/4 16.574.300 Feb. & Aug F«b. ’63 4 8.536.900 January. Jan. ’67 7 3,540,000 Jan. & July July 67 4 4,156,000 Apr. A Oct Apr. ’67 6 1,900,000 5,253,83f 8,000,000 Quarterly Oct. ’67 5 1,180,000 May & Nov May ’67 4 13,937,401 April A Oct JCt. ’67 4 494,380 190,750 Jan. & July July ’67 3)4 23,386,450 Jan. & July July ’67 5 1.689.900 Mar. & Sep Sep. ’67 4 2,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’66 300,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’67 i* 300,000 Jan. & Julv July ’67 4 1,335,000 10,734,100 Quarterly. July 67 2* 514,646 May & Nov May ’67 8 87 898,950 , Savannah & Char’cston x 1,755,281 Jan. A July July ’67 797,320 3,068,400 June & Dec June ’67 4,518,900 Quarterly, j Aug.’67 Ask 123 123 85 6,000,00<> Jan. A July July ’67 2.409,307 iFeb. ’67 3,150,150 2,363,600 Jan. & July July ’67 ! Ogdensb. & L. Champ(5 p.H9)l00 3,077,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 do 356.400 Apr. & Octi Apr. ’67 preferred. 100 j Ohio and Miss.certif., 4,p. 631.10C 20,226,604 do preferred. .100 8,353,18': January. iJan. ’67 Old Colony and Newport 100 4,848,30C Jan. & July! July ’67 100 2,063,655 Orange and Alexandria 1 482.400 Feb. & Aug; Aug. '67 Oswego and Syracuse 50 1 Panama 100 7,000.000 Quarterly. |Oct. '67 ! Pennsylvania 50 20,000. UUU May & Nov May 67 Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5,061,400 Jan. & July Jan. Phila. and Reading, 4, p. 89.. 50 22,742,867 Jan. & July Jnly Phila., Germaut. & Norrist’n* 50 I,507,8*0 Apr. & Oct Apr, Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50 9,019,300 Jan. & July July ’67 Pittsburg and Connellsville. 50 1,776,12^ Pittsb.,Ft.W. & Chic.,4.p.471.100 II,440,987 Quarterly. Oct. ’67 Portland & Kennebec (new)..100 Feb. & Aug. Aug. ’67 Portland, Saco, & Portsm’th.100 1,500,000 June A Dec June’67 Providence and Worcester... .100 1,750,000 Jan. & July July ’67 j ll2*t"* 125"! .. Periods. • 125 124 report. * means “ leased." standing. N. Y. and New Haven (5 p.55)100 New York, Pro v. A Boston. ..100 Ninth Avenne... 100 Northern of New Hampshire. 100 Northern Central, 4, p. 568.. 50 North Ea-tern (S. Car.) do 8 p. c., pref North Carolina 100 North Missouri 100 North Pennsylvania 50 Norwich and Worcester 100 Last paid. Date, rate Bid. out¬ 1 1,500,000 2,029,778 6,586,U35 4,051,744 1,000,000 Memphis & Chariest., 3p. 487.100 5,312,725 Michigan Central, 5, p. 151.. .100 7,502,866 Michigan Southern & N. Ind.,100 9,813,500 do do guar.100 Milwaukee &P.dn Ch.lst pref.100 do do 2d pref.100; Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 do preferred ioo Mine Hill A SGhuylkill Haven 50 143 3* 60 50 jjouisville.New Alb. & Chic..100 Macon and Western loo Maine Central ioo Marietta and Cincinnati 50 do do 1st pref. 50 do do 2d pref.. 50 Manchester and Lawrence... .100 ' 136 5 16 July ‘67 5 144* July Y>7 5 Aug. ’67 3* 3,572,400 June & Dec June ’67 4 uttle Schuylkill* 2.646.100 Jan. & July July ’67 2 ’jong Island 50 3,000,0X1 Quarterly. Aug.’67 2 48.638 ’67 4* Louisv.,Cin. ALex.,9p c. pref 100 Louisville and Frankfort 50 1,109,594 Jan. & July July ’67 3 Louisville and Nashville 100 5,500,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 4 Little Miami......... 75* July July ’67 3* April & Oct Jan. & 1% July ’67 a' July ’67 5 394,800 850,000 June & Dec June "67 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug Aug ’67 do pref. .100 Chicago, Rock Isl. A Pacific..100 9,100.000 Cinc.,°Hara. & Dayton(5 p.87)100 3.260.800 362,950 Cincin.,Richm’<l & Chicago...l00 Cincinnati and Zanesville 50 1,600,250 Cleveland, Columbus, & Ciu..l00 6,000,000 Cleveland A Mahoning* 50 2,044,600 Cleveland, Painesr. A Ashta.100 5,000,000 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 5,391,575 Cleveland and Toledo,3, p. 151 50 5,000,000 Columbus & Indianap. Cent..l00 Columbus and Xenia* 50 1,786,800 50 1,500,000 Concord 350,000 Concord and Portsmouth 100 Conn.& Passump. 3,p.216 pref.100 1,514,301' Connecticut River 100 I,650,000 Cumberland Valley 50 1.316.900 Dayton and Michigan 100 2,383,063 406,132 Delaware* 50 Delaware, Lacka., A Western 50 452,350 Detroit and Milwaukee 100 do last I,650,000 April & Oct Oct. ’67 4,429,000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’67 996,647 600,000 Quarterly. Oct. "6? of Chronicle containing page Bid. Ask rate FRIDAY. Stock l ™ Quicksilver , 100 10,000,000 Feb ’65 ••* 21 21 CHRONICLE. THE 506 [October 19, 1887. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Allen Wright Bemis Heights Benuehofi’ Run Bennehoff Mutual Hammond 10; par 3 75 lu Bradley Oil 10 5 Brevoort 10 5 Brooklyn Buchanan Farm Central 10 100 42, 2 Cherry Run Petrol’m 51 Cherry Run special ... 10 Clinton Oil 1 CO 5 Empire City j — 1 75 .j .. 5 5 5 Excelsior First National Germania Great Republic G’t Western Consol 44 1 05 i 00 — OUj Rynd Farm .. 10 10 14 10 Shade River Union United Pe’tl'm F’ms United States Union 151 325 4()| . ... 5 lOi 10, 2 8 (Bid.J Askd 25 1 75 Bid. Askd Companies. 25 * 3 Albany & Boston Algomah • . 1 17 2 .... .... . . . .... -• .. 50 i6 io — ... N a f i .... Copper Creek.. Copper Falls... Copper Harbor. • 20* 1 3 fc8 .... .... 1 • i ••• r • • • • .. • . • • . . . .... .... • • S* 16 O' id 75 .... .... 17* li . .j... .... *4. 1 00 Hungarian • • -.10* .... • 10 6* .. • .. 1 .. • 5* * • . 1 .. .... 5 8 * . • . . ... • ... • • • • 6 8S .... • • • • .... • • • • • • • . . 17 10 10 • • • • .... 50 50 1 25 7> 75 1 50 Ayres Mill & Mining 65 25 1* •• 1* i — 50 Burroughs 10 . . 5 ■ 69 — — — *• . . .... Central Church Union Columbia G. 9 S 23 0 ■ Combination Silver.... Consolidated Gregory... 100 5 50 — 25 Corydon . 1 .. 2* .. • • • • - .... .... . .... • • 50i .... 1 0 .... 1 .... * * * . . . — Fail River First National Gold Hill Gunnell 4 40 — — .... 5 12 15 10 77 — 8ft 2 70 — 4 Quartz Hill 5 25 Reynolds — 1 Rocky Mountain j 25 (i0 25 40 1 35 1 40 4 10 — 50* .... — .... 10 1 10 3-f MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Bid. Askd ■ Companies. Copake Iron X*dn Tank storage.. Tudor Lead 5 .. Foster Iron Lake Superior Iron . Bucks County Lead, Deabo Lead Kanhar Lead Phenix Lead. CO JPANIK8. Bid.; Askd r. M • .... 5 ... • • Saginaw, L. S. AM. Wallkill Lead Wallace Nickel Rutland Marble .... . .. ,. .... Rnsse. .. — .... .... Fi e Savon de Terre 25 — 35 .... .... T,nng Tgland Peat.... , • « . . . • • • • • •. • • • • • -. .... • • • ,,. • . • • • ... • • . , •.. .... .... .... . ... .. ... .... . .... ■ ¥. .... • • . • • 40 .... 25 5 .... • • • r - - •. .... . .... . . * .... . • . • • • • • .... . .... . • 25 150,000 150,000 50 50 Standard .100 Star 100 Sterling * 25 Stnyvesant 25 Tradesmen's United States.... 26 50 Washington 1,000,000 Washington *!... 100 Williamsburg City.50 Yorkers «fc N. Y.. 100 ) 393,700 St. Mark’s St. Nicholas! 40 — 90 5 12 2 10 30 25 6 00 — 45 2 53 60 — 3" 4 — 100 95 GO 2 50 — — — Rpnvrr Eagle Edg hid . .... 50 11 35 11 40 10 00 4 Sensenderfer.......... — 1 20 3 85! 3 95 Smith <fc Parmelee i uo 1 Svmonds Forks. — 8 5 4 00 Texas — 1 Twin River Silver 100 25 CO' ... * . , . . «... People’s G. & S. of Cal. i — .. Gunnell Union par Hamilton G. & S. bonds •• to . . Bid. Ask Companies. ....j 70 ... . .... Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares Hope .... ..... .... . .... 4* .. 1 00 u arm on E. & S 701 Kipp & Buell.. 3 00 LaCrosse ....! Liberty 1 00, Manhattan Silver 1 Midas Silver Marita Tin 1 ! New York 12 New York & Eldorado N ye 5 60 Owyhee — ... ... . .... . .. .... 6 i tx>: Holman .. Bates & Baxter Benton Bob Tail Boscobel Silver Bullion Consolidated Crozier Des Moires Downieville 85 134,06s Feb. and Ang. 204,000 . ' — .... . . " 10 . . • • GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. o>! .... ... ..... Capital $200,000, In 20,00u shares. Capit il of Lake Superior coranauies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares 1 200,000 200,000 150,000 . t par 300,000 . .... Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares. Alameda Silver American Flag Atlantic & Pacific 400,000 * ... . .. 3 Bid. Askd-' . . 500.000 . .... .... * — 200,000 400,000 200,000 250,000 .... .... 21*840 Jan. and July. July *67 .5 do July *66.3* 150,000 122,468 do July ’65 .5 150,000 165,933 do 25 July’67 .5 200,766 Fulton 200,000 50 150,000 149,681' May and Nov. Gallatin 100 200,000 Gebhard 227,054 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67 .5 50 500.000 Germania 525,762 Jan. and July. J nly ’67 ..7 50 Globe 200,000 200,015 Jan. and July. July’67 ..5 Great Western*!. 100 1,000,000 2,385,057 Jan. and July. July’67.3* 25 200.000 Greenwich 255,657 Fcb.hnd Aug. Aug ’66..5 50 Grocers’ 200,000 170,225 April and Oct. Apr. ’65. .5 Guardian 200,000 177,173 Jan. and July. July ’67 3* .T.. do 15 July ’67 ..5 Hamilton 150,000 162,571 do July ’67 ..5 50 400,000 Hanover 419,952 do 50 152.229 July’66 .5 Hoffman 200,000 do .100 2,000,000 2,271,387 July Cl ..5 Home do 25 July ’65 .5 150,000 135,793 Hope do 50 July *67 ..5 Howard 500,000 546,522 do 100 Humboldt July ’65 .5 200,000 195,926 do July ’65 .6 Import’ & Traders 50 200,000 167,833 800.604 Feb. and Ang. Aug.’66.3* .100 1,000,000 International do 25 Ang. ’67..5 200,000 206,179 Irving 30 200,010 Jefferson 238,808 March and Sep Sept.’67 ..6 176,678 Jan. and July. July ’67 5 King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20 150,000 do 280,000 Knickerbocker... 40 July’67 ..5 302,741 do July’67 ..5 Lafayette (B’klyn) ...50 150,000 141,431 do .100 July ’67 ..5 Lamar 300,000 363,006 do 25 July’67 ..5 Lenox 150,000 121,'07 do 200,000 July’67..7 284,605 Long Island (B’kly) .50 do 25 1,000,000 1,118,664 July’67 .5 Lorillard* do 100 610,930 July ’67. .5 Manhattan 500,000 do .100 July’67 3* 200,000 288,917 Market* do July’67 ..5 Meehan’ & Trade’ 25 200,000 222,921 do July ’67 ..5 Mechanics (B’klvn) .50 150,000 146,692 do .100 July ’67 5 Mercantile 200,000 195,546 do 50 Merchants’ July ’67 .10 200,000 245,169 J uly ’65 do 300,000 516,4)36 5 Metropolitan * + .100 do 150,000 July’67..5 Montauk (B’k'yn) ..50 161,743 do 150,000 July ’67.10 Nassau (B’klyn).. .50 259,270 do July’67 ..6 7* 200,000 228,628 National do 25 319,870 300,000 New Amsterdam. July’07 ..6 210,000 N. Y. Equitable 3 35 204,703 Jan. and July. July’67 ..5 247.895 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67..5 N.Y.Fire and Mar.100 200,000 60 1,000,000 1.053,825 Jan. and July. Ju y’67 ..5 Niagara do North American* 50 500,000 511,631 July’6 U. .5 25 North River ,350,000 379,509 April and Oct. Oct. ’67..5 25 200,000 Pacific 244,293 Jan and July. July ’67 ..6 no .100 Park 200,000 212,521 July’67 ..5 20 Peter Cooper 150,000 185,365 Feb. and Aug. Avg.’67 ..5 20 150,000 14',203 Jan. and July. July ’67 ..5 People’s do Phoenix + Br’klyn 50 1,000,000 1,077,988 July ’67 .5 do 50 Rebel 200,000 190,167 July’67.. 5 do .100 300,000 453.233 July’67.6* Republic* 200 000 do .100 Resolute* 185,952 July’66.3* 25 Rutgers’ 200,000 216,879 Feb. and Ang. Ang. ’67..6 .... Companies. 500,000 . •• .. Winthrop t 250,000 .... ..21 Winona 1 ... 338,878 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’67.7* 275,591 Jan. and July. July’67. 6 do July’64.3* 309,622 do July’67 .5 214,147 424,189 Feb. and Ang. Aug. ’.7.5 228,696 Jan. and July. July ’67 .5 234,872 Jan. and July. July '67.. .5 1,289,037 Jan. and July. Ju y ’67 .7 404 178 March and Sep s ept.’67. .5 36,51 S 424,295 April and Oct. Oct. ’67..5 203,990 Jan. and July. July’67 .7 do July’67... 5 229,276 - 8 .. West Minnesota 4 00 384,266 Jan. and July. 300,000 210,000 ..... .... -.11* •■•J Washington .... .... • • * .. Trcmont Vulcan July ’67..10 July’64 ..4 ..... .... .... 6 00 2 00 12 3 . _ 19 Aug. ’65..4 Dec. ’66..5 Ang. ’67.. .6 . • • To iter. 1 25 .... . .... St. Clair St. Louis St. Mary’s Salem Seneca Sharon j Victoria Knowlton. • .... 1 1ft .33 • 14 25 2 GO 3 00 ..15 5* 23 00 c Superior ! ... . • ..— Star — Humboldt. .... .. 2* 1>8 Hee.a. . Aug. ’67...5 Sep. ’67..5 .... • • .... ftft 11 25 Sheldon & Columbian.21 63 1 00 ! South Pewabic 1 o 1 00 ! South Side 1 * Hope. ■ . . • .... Rockland • — 5 2 2 ... .... Ridge .... 153,000 Jan. 65.. .5 . .... 5* 3* 13 25 • • Resolute . . 200,000 ... . • 7 50 .. Quincy t .... 200,000 200,000 300,000 . • . • 5 00 .... .... ..11* • Princeton Providence • .... • 4 , Pontiac ^ . 300,000 July ’67.101 July ’67 5 • . .... j iPortage Lake — 9* .. Phoenix ; • .... • 500,000 250,000 • ..... ..11 1 0 ft Petherick 1 E0 1 Pewabic .... 5* .. iPittsburg & Boston. . • 515,890 Jan. and July. 222,073 Jan. and July. 282.12'i Jan. and July. 257,753 Feb. and Aug. 336,470 March and Sep 204,790 May and Nov. 170,171 Feb. and Aug. 345,749 June and Dec. 266,368) Feb. and Aug. 238,506 Jan. and July. 92,683 • — 1 Pennsylvania * i .. 151,002 Jan. and July. 325,233 Jan. and July. 200,000 200,000 Bid. Last Sale. Last paid. Periods. . ... Oo-irna . .... .... 1 .1U .. North western... Norwich .... .... 10 1 French Creek. .... . 50 30 Firemen's. Firemen’s Fund.. Firemen s Trust. 0 .. 'North Cliff .... 1* i* 3* 1H Excelsior ‘ SO 1 uo — Everett. .... New York... 3 63 2* 3* Devn. .... Netas’ts ... Excelsior 5* .. :. vo . 34 * 27 03.27 50 1 Davidson .... 4 00 .... 5 4 .... .... 1* • 50, Naumkeag — .... S .. National 1 . 4* .... Minnesota i • 5 Hi 6* .. Mcsnard Milton j . . - . . .... .... 4* 1J» •• Merriinac 1 Caledonia Mandan .... n* ** Calumet Canada Charter Oak. .. Manhattan I Mass | Med ora 1 Mendotat .... 4/2 Aztec. 3 3: .... 2 6 .. Madison .. 3 13 1* 1 • paid 1 Lafayette Lake Superior .... DIVIDEND. 1867. - .... J 13 ii $300,000 300,000 n 20 70 100 Clinton 100 Columbia* Commerce (N.Y.). 100 Commerce (Alb’y).lOO 50 Commercial Commonwealth... 100 100 Continental * 50 100 Proton 40 Eagle 100 Empire City COPPER MINING STOCK LIST. Companies. 25 50 50 American * American Exch’e. 100 50 Arctic 25 Astor. Atlantic (Br’klyn) .50 25 Baltic 25 Bcekman Bowery (N. Y.) .. 25 25 .A7 Brooklyn i Central Park Citizens’ City 10 2 — Capital. /Ft i 15 Jan. 1 write Marine Risks. Adriatic lvauhoe 3 Manhattan .’ 2 -Mountain Oil Natural 5 N. Y. & Alleghany 5 3 New York &■ Newark.;.. 5 N. Y. & Philadel 5 N.Y,Ph. & Balt. Co ns 1 10 Oceanic Pit Hole Creek ..25j Rathbone Oil Tract -- 4 25 — Bergen Coal and Oil 30 par — HamiltonMcClintock 5 .Varked thus (*) are participating, and (+) Bid. Askd Companies. Bid. Askd Companies. INSURANCE STOCK LIST. ,, ,, Security ! . . . . . 140,879 156,221 962,181 226,756 195,780 206,731 198,182 Jan. Feb. Jan. 200,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 Feb. Feb. 158,733 Jan. 250,000 400,000 336,691 630,314 150,000 500,000 do and July. and Aug. and July. do and Ang. and Ang. and July. do and Aug. and Ang. Feb. ’67. 5 Aug. ’67 .5 Feb.’66.3* July ’67 .5 July ’67 ..5 . 5 Aug. ’67 Aug. ’66 5 July *67 .6 • •. .... ..... . . . . ..... .... .., .... . Jan. ’87 ..5 Feb. Aug.’67...5 Feb. ’67...5 190,206 Fab. 179,008 Jan. and July. July ’87 ..ft do 501,214 July 67 .5 . . .... .... , . , .... ... .... .... ** • • ••* The Memphis and Ohio Railroad, from Memphis to Clarks¬ .hundred and thirty miles, has been leased to the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company (James Guthrie, owner,) for a term of ten years, with a provision looking to ville, one ultimate consolidation. The immediate occasion for this was the threatened seizure of the road bv Governor Brownlow for delinquency in meeting the interest on bonds for which the state is responsible. The Avalanche thinks the management have done a good thing, and that the public is to be congrat¬ ulated. The Bulletin, on the other hand, denounce? the action as an outrage that makes Memphis the tail of the Louisville kite. The Hartford insurance companies their returns for the month of August: JEtna H rtford.....;. Phoenix Putnam City.,., give the following as $2£6,269 I North American...... 112,674 | Merchants’ 85,925 * Connecticut 32,425 | Chaiter Oak 27,4591 $26,562 24,791 V4* THE CHRONICLE. 19,1867.] October 607 Bankers. Steamship Companies. 460 MILES OF TIIE Fisher & Hardy, Garth* TION Union Pacific Railroad BANKERS, SIA via PANAMA. Harrison, Garth & Co. and Henry RUNNING Hardy). Govt-rument Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc. sold at the “ regular” Board of Broker sr.d~it the Gold Exchange in person and on conimis- Foreign and Domestic Exchange bought, sold an collected. M. K. J esup & Company, BANKERS AND MERCHANTS, 12 PINE STREET. r, ^UoiiDs WEST ACROSS FROM Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Roval AT ail Company dispatch a steamer on tire 24th of each month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬ tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the Pacific Mail Steamship Contpanv leaving New-York for A spin wall (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 Svdnev or Melbourne, $346 to $364 for first class, and $218 to'$243 for second class. The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward cabins of the Australian steamer • after cabin, latter OMAHA CONTINENT. THE steei Kails, LocomoliveB, and undertake all buBiui ss Joseph A. Jameson, Amos Cotting. Of Jameson, Lotting & Co. St. Louis. I of the late firm of James Low & Co.. New York | and Louisville, Ky. Jameson,Smith ScCotting BANKERS, sight. purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks strictly 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 he. PACIFIC No. 16 BROAD BANKERS, STREET, NEW YORK, BANKERS, PLACE/NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold, ONLY on Commission, at the Stock, Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we arc mem¬ bers. Interest allowed on Deposits. Dividends, Coupons and Interest collected. Information cheerfully given to Professional men, Executors, etc., desiring to invest. 5 Messrs. LOCKWOOD & CO., j .. Daksey. Morgan & Co. A. M. Foute, Late Pres. Gayoso Bank, W. W. Loring. Memphis, Term. EARNINGS. Passengers Freight. Telegraph & Loring, BANKERS AND STREET BROKERS, AND 3f> NEW STREET. Government Securities of all kinds, Gold, State, Dank, and Railroad Stocks and Bondg Bought and Sold. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to check at sight. Collections made in all the States and Canadas. T. H. McMahan & Co. commissiok merchants Dealer* in Domestic and Forelga TEXAS. S1!61110 Collections 0f a* kinds, reliable correspondents at ad acand HlWtB ln the State, mMpr^LY MA1)B IN SIGHT AT CURRENT RATES. RBTXS TO Ttlwtof*? ?«n\How^8 Bsnk*and 6W York* j Thirw iJV?; 8tet»oa A Repair of Engines, Cars, Shops, &c. Ofllces and Stations Conductors, Engineers, &c-.... Trains Net Earnings to and Spofford. Second National Co., Philadelphia. T. F. ThirdNationalBank Van Schaick & Co., No. 10 Wall - PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S £9 23 THROUGH LINE 00 44 97 — balance 58 64 44 60 73 93 03 $1,203,038 95 From the relative high charges, the operating expense but 32 7-8 per cent, of the earnings and the ratio would be much less if the contractor’s busi¬ of the road To Street, ’ NEW YORK. NE< cost, because of the half price charged for it, and we operating expenses on the commercial business for the quarter, $237,966 50. The account for the commercial business stands as follows : Net $723,755 54 237,966 50 profit of operating 325 miles of road three months Slates Mail. LEAVE PIER NO. 4‘2 NORTH RIV¬ ER, FOCflf ^ - Canal street, at 13 11th, and o o'clock noon, on the let, 21st of every month (except when those dates fall on on the preceding Saturday), for Sunday, and then ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. OCTOBER: let—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden City. Uth—Henry Chauncey, connecting w ith Montana 20tb—Arizona, connecting with Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for SoutJi Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for "’eiitral American Ports. zanillo. Those of 1st touch at Man¬ Baggage cnecKed through. One hundred pounds allowed each adult. An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and attendance free. For passage tickets or further information, apply Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot o Canal street, North River, New AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, for Steam and Street And at arc ottered l'or S. TV. HOPKINS «fc Co., 69 & 71 Broadway. present FIRST MORTGAGE RONDS. THE St. Louis 8c IronMountain IN GOLD, the at Ninety Cents on ihe Dollar, and RAII ROAD SEVEN PER CENT. July 1st. Many parties are taking advantage of the present high price of Government stocks to exchange for these Bonds, which are over 15 per cent, cheaper, and, at the ufrent rate of premium on gold, pay Over Niue Per Cent. Interest. Subscriptions will be received in New York at the Company’s Office, No. 20 Nassau street, and hy 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. and out by BANKS AND BANKERS generally through¬ the United States, of whom maps and descriptive These Bonds cover a Road of 91 miles, finished from Saint Louis to Pilot Knob, and in first-class order, and ar, extension of about the same length from Pilot Knob io 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 by 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 oft'ered. Apply at the office of the. company, No. 43 Wall street, to II. G. MARQUAND, Vice President. «rr to CLARK, DODGE & CO., Corner. Wall & William streets. ItDTHBBN * Edwin BANKER BANK KOlBli Q. Bell, AND BROKER, In Somthem Securities and Bank Bills. •• BROADWAY JOHN J. CISCO- Treasurer. NEW YORK COMPANY. INTEREST, FEBRUARY AND AUGUST. accrued Interest at Six i’er Cent, in Currency from Roads, FOR SALE BY Mortgage Bonds, whose interest is so amply provided for and so thoroughly secured must be class¬ ed among the safest investments. They pay PER CENT. Agent. Railroad Iron, First SIX York. F. R. BABY $485,789 00 Company can issue on 325 miles, at $16,000 per mile, is $5,200,000. Interest in gold three monMis, at 6 per cent., on this sum, is $iS,000; add 40 per cent, premium, to correspond with currency earnings i $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. pamphlets maybe obtained. URI1TES, STOCKS * A L I F O R N I A And Carrying- tlse United it the Earnings for May, June and Tuly Expenses for May, June and July dealers in gov¬ AND GOLD, C arc ness were not done at half rates. Throwing ont 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 work done for contractors, which was less than actual Liverpool. ernment $131,089 109,767 50,984 54,907 33,294 15,486 807,508 Fnel 8W> SKmwft4*-8**. Louis. Fowler, ?«w Orleans. Dn' Asa and 519,672 1,416 12,140 453,205 26,077 Repair of Track .fiA£V??TONi EXCHANGE $160,526 92 v: Mails Exchange. _ SAMUEL THOMPSON & NEPHEWS’ Black Star Line of Liverpool Packets, and National Line of Liverpool and Queenstown Steamers, sailing-every week. Passage ofhee 73 Broad¬ way.corner of Rector Street (formerly 275Pearl Street). Sight Drafts on the Royal Bank of Ireland, payable in all its Branches, and on C. Grimshaw & Co., Liverpool, payable in any part'of England and Wales. Bankers supplied with Sterling drafts and through tickets from the Old Country to any part of the United States. The amount of Bonds the Foute J? RAILROAD. have the net Liberal advances on Government and other Securities • UNION $1,203,038 95 Gibson,Bead!eston & Co., Ppfpr hv nprmisKinn in Refer hy permission to THE Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent. No. 23 William st. N^w Y EXPENSES. Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum, and Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬ Orders Promptly Executed ments made. 50 EXCHANGE OF During the quarter ending July 31 of the current of 325 miles of the Union Pacific Railroad was in operation. The Superintendent’s re¬ port shows the following result: Brothers, STOCK BROKERS ANB _ EARNINGS Transportation, Contractor’s Materials Transportation, Contractor’s Men only on Commission. Drake Mfl already been expended. From the liberal of the stock¬ year, an average NOS. 14 & 16 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Receive Deposits In Currency and Gold, &nd allow Interest at the rate of FOUR PER CENT per annum on daily balances which may be checked 38 BROAD men servants berthed forward, women do., in ladies cabin. A limited quantity of merchandise will be conveyed under through bill of lading. For further information, application to be made to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall st. Tliirty-live Million Dollars NET payable in Ucitid States gold run to the newly-discovered gold region of Hokitika. New Zealand. Children under three years, free; under eight years, quarter fare ; under twelve years, half-fare; male ser, vants, one-half fare; female do., three-quarters fare- Bonds, there is James D. Smith, Fares Special steamers holders, and the ready market for the First Mortgage connected with Railways p Will $25 additional. coin. Government aid, the wealth and energy « and now 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¬ fornia end of the route, under the direction of the Central Pacific Company, commencing at Sacramento, and it is confidently expected that the two roads will meet iu 1870, thus completing the entire grand line connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, on which in cash have Cars, eto., for at Are and Loans for Railroad Cos., Contr.tcut,, NEW- ANB AUSTRALA¬ The bov-ht sod ** COMMUNICA¬ BETWEEN YORK STREET, No. 13 NEW Successors to STEAM * S NEW STREET, New York. — ■ —* [October 19, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 508 Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TBAVELLEBS. EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS. SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW. STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. Go., BA NKEBS. No. 44 Wal Street. New York. Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery issues of STO STATES UNITED James G. King’s Sons, 8c Vermilye Commercial Cards. BANKERS, BROAD STREET. Bay and Sell at Market Rates. ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. NO. 24 Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS and others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight draft. make collections on favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. cITs Oiled 2d, & 3d seriess GOLD, &c. for the most liberal Compound Interest Notes of 1864 & 1865 Bought and. Sold. BONDS, on terras, and without delay. IMPORTERS and others supplied with Commercial Co., White STREET, NEW YORK. S. G. & G. C. E. R. Mudge, Sawyer 8cCo. CO., CHICOPEE MANUF. CO., VICTORY MANUF. John O’Neill 8c Sons, CO., MILLS, Lindsay, Chittick 8c Co., IMPORTERS AND White COMPANY, BOSTON. the COMMERCIAL CREDITS, in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope West Indies. South America, and the United States nse Co., Goods, BROADWAY. John Bloodgood 8c Co., GOODS. STREET, NEW YORK. AND deposits of Gold and Curren subject to check at sight, and particular atten turn given to accounts of country banks and banker cy, Street* New York C. Holt 8c COMMISSION Co., MERCHANTS, /S^nSSau. <&ft., ev\>Y ovVi• cciLiiticS cltlcL aiLcic^n &rdLCLng.c, and rncmLeix afi &f,::adz and ^aLd ^.rdmusics in Lath. dticS. flrccauntx af: /^.anizX and J3$ank.c.tX LcccLllecI an LLLclaL 13.S,'Bokv&s STREET, NEW Woolen Globe YORK. Co., W. D. Simonton. Treas. Cassimeres. Fancy Silk Anderson 8c 119 CHAMBERS STREET. 33 PARK Mixtures, Smith, PLACE, NEW YORK. Agents for COTTON. SPOOL WILLIAM Agents for MACHINE AND SEWING SILK, BUTTON-HOLE TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C. KIRK Sc SON, Linen Manufacturers and Bleachers Offer to Jobbers only. .BELFAST, IRELAND. John Graham, J. 8c P. Coats’ Manufacturer of WOVEN BEST CORSETS, SKIRT MATERI¬ LACE, COTTON YARNS, Scc., 234 CHURCH STREET, NEW YORK Son, UPERIOR CABLED JOHN Sc HUGH AUCHINCLWSS, SOLE AGENTS IN NEW YORK. No. 108 Duane Street. Brand 8c Gihon, MACHINE TWIST AND SEWING NO. 335 SIX-CORD Thread. ALS, WEBBINGS, BINDINGS BED Importers Sc Commission SILKS, BROADWAY, NEW YORK. WORKS PATERSON, N. J. 42 & 44 MURRAY Merchants, STREET. IRISH Sc SCOTCH LINEN GOODS, In full assortment for the LINEN GOODS. Jobbing: and Clothing Strachan 8c Malcomson, Agents for the sale of SONS’ WHITE BISH AUD SCOTCH LINENS, fQ Murray Strcef, New York* Trade. WILLIAM GIHON & {IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS WO R a 19 WHITE & Agents for the Glasgow Thread Company’s MANUFACTURERS OF telrnS. 17 198 A 200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK, Wm. G. Watson 8c <Z£cclLp±X in flL. From Numerous Mills, W. W. Coffin, Church 185 STREET, NEW YORK. \\VUw\a. COTTON AND WOOLEN AMERICAN LINENS, Also BBOKkBS in mining stocks, \ MERCHANTS Beavers. CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES. Langley 8c Co., LINENCAMB’C HANDK’FS, AC. No. States, available in all the principal cities of world; also, 84 CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK. MILLS AT PATERSON, N. J. FOR Importers of BANKERS, /t) £fc. Siu Pft., Embroidery, COMMISSION CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., on Machine Twist Wm. C. Thompson 8c Co., Wm. Duncan, Sherman 8c Co., Interest allowed Sewing: Silks, Linens, Ac,, Sc, IRISH 22 WILLIAM MANUFACTURERS OF COMMISSION MERCHANTS, British Staple, And Fancy Dress Goods, 150 & 152 DUANE NO. 5 NEW STREET AND 80 Handk’ls, British and Continental. Irish and Scotch STREET, NEW YORK, Riker 8c Einb’s, - BURLINGTON WOOLEN Ward, BARING BROTHERS dt For YORK, ’ • Linen WASHINGTON MILLS, FOR 28 STATE STREET, Co., Organzlne, and Tram. Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper. Collections both inland and foreign promptly made. Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated. 66 WALL Goods, Laces and Nos. 43 Sc 45 WHITE STREET. Dealers In Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds, Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable Securities. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Draft or Check. .<* Advances made on approved securities. AOENT8 George Pearce 8c Importers of BANKERS, No. 53 WILLIAM Patent iteversible Paper Collars. most economical collar ever Invented. CO. MILTON SOUTTER 8c and and durability. “ Cards. AGENT8 FOB finish, e u GOLD at mar rates, aud Coin on hand for Immediate delivery. No. 12 WAUL STREET. ket Onr « IMITATION ” has a very superior 70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW of SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES exchanged the new FIVE-TWENTY Silk, Agents for the sale of the BANKERS SECURITIES, HANDKERCHIEFS, costs but half as much as real silk, which it equals in appearance LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS. VERMILYE Sc SILKS, Imitation Oiled Silk. Bounty Loan. .few York State 7 per cent. CHINA and Manufacturers of SILK AND COTTON “ “ 1864, *• “ 1865, Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, I Per Cent Currency Certificates. Hatch, Foote 8c Co.,, ues EUROPEAN AND 1881, 6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, 6 6 Co., BROADWAY, Importers of all 6 Per Cent Bonds of Gilliss, Harney & Co., All No. 353 INCLUDING 54 William Street. AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT S. H. Pearce 8c LINENS, Sc C. BURLAPS, BAGGING, VV.ATfllfL DUCKaACf October CURRENT. PRICES addition to the duties noted below, a discriminating duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. pW" On all goods, wares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place or places of their growth or produc¬ tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The tor In ail cases to be 2,240 lb. Anchors—Duty: 2} cento # lb. 0t209lband upward#Xt> 8i(ch Ashes—iDuty: 15 # cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... # 100 ft .... @10 25 Pearl, 1st sort. @12 50 Beeswax— Duty,20 $ cent ad val. American yellow. $ lb 41 @ 42, Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct. Kio Grande shin $ tonl8 00 © .... Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. 7* Pilot $ lb .. @ Navy @ 5} Crackers 8} © 1S( special Breadstuff ffs—See report. pT In Bricks. @10 15 @22 00 Philadelphia Fronts... 35 00 @40 0J Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair 1 # lb. Amer’n,gray &wh. #lb 65 @2 00 Butter and Cheese.—Duty: 4 Common Croton hard..per M.10 50 ) 8 <0 cents. Butter- Common St ltd Wo Pm Baiter, Grease bu ter, urk. Cheese— 36 @ ‘-8 @ 41 86 18 <ift 3i 28 20 © $ 5) .. @ 16 15 @ 12 @ Factory Dairies.. do Common - 60 41 88 40 @ 36 @ 34 © Fresh pell, $ lb Ht-fl k n tubs # lb.... Welsh, tubs $ lb Fine to rxtra Sta e,... Good .o line btato, .... 14 16 13 14 Q Farm Dairies do C.tmmon .. 11 @ Candles—Duty,tallow, 2*; sperma¬ ceti and wax a; »h earine and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents $ fl>. Sperm, patent,. . .# fl> Refined sperm, city... Stearic Adamantine 55 @ 60 30 @ 20 @ 81 24 60 45 @ Bark, 80 V cent ad vaL: BlCarb. Soda, 14; Bi Chromate Potasn, 3 cents # Bleaching Powder, 80 cents # 1005); Refined Borax, 10 cents 9 ft; Cmde Brimstone, $6; Boll Brimstone, $10 $ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 # ton, and 15 # cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40 cents 12 lb.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 # cent ad vaL; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 60 cents # 5); Caster Oil, $1 # gallon; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, 14; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cento # lb; Catch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salto, 1 cent # lb; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $1 cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrle, and Gum Damar, 10 cento per lb; Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 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, $1 # lb; Oil Peppermint, 50 a? cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cento # lb; Phosphorus, 20 # cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cento $ lb; Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad val.; Sal JSratus, 1* cento $ lb; Sul Soda, * cent $ lb; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; soda Ash, *; Sugar Lead, 20 cento $ lb; Sulph. Quinine, 45 # cent ad val.; Sulpn. Morphine, $2 50 # oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cento $ lb; Sal Ammoniac, 2o: blue Vit¬ riol, 25 # cent ad val.; Eiherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $1 # ft; all others quoted below) raze. Acid, Citric Alcohol, in bond Aloes, Cape # lb Aloes, Socotrine © 59 © 20 @ 88 60 21 75 @ fc5 84© 8* Annato, gooclto prime. 75 @ 1 5j Antimony, Regulus of @ Argols, Crude 18 @ 20 35 @ Argols, Refined 38 Arsenic, Powdered.... 34© Assafcetida 25 @ 40 Balsam Copaivi. 90 @ 1 40 @ 1 50 Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru.... @ 8 75 Baik Petayo. 60 vr» Berries, Persian 38 @ 40 Alum Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ castle gold Bi Chromate Potash... Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined .. 5*@ 19|@ 6t@ 85 @ 20* 6 36 Crude # (gold).39 00 @40 00 Brimston.', Am. Roll $ ft = © 3? Brimston >. ton & upward $ lb 8@ Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 fl> to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $1 28 bushels of 80 ft $ bushel. Liverpool Orrel. # ton of 2,240 lb .. @ .. .... Liverp’l House Cannel .... @18 01 6 50 @ 7 0) Anthracite. @ Cardiff steam I iverpo lGasCannf-1 Newcastle G -a .... @15(0 9 50 @10 00 Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ lb. Caracas (in bondj(gold) 17 © # ft Maracaibo do ..(gold) © 12 © Guayaquil do ..(gold) 9 © St DomiDgo.. ..(gold) 19 . . 1-4 94 . I lor Brimstone, Sul¬ phur Camphor, bond) . »/• r.de, (in ....(gold) Camphor, Ucflned..... Carraway Seed ... Coriander Seed—... Cochineal, Hon (gold) Cochineal, Mexic’n(g’d) Copperas, American .. Cream Tartar, pr.(gold Cubebs, East India.... Cutch Epsom Salts Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and Ingot, 24; old copper 2 cents # ft; manu¬ factured, 35 # cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. # square foot, Flowers,Benzoin.$ oz., Gambier gold $ lb Bolts Braziers’ Baltimore Detroit 33 @ 26 @ . © 33 @ 24 @ 34 24} 25 @ 25 @ Portage Lake.. Manila, 2$ other untarred, 3$ cents # lb. Manila, # ft 234© 24} Tarred Russia @ 18 Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia. @ @ 22 Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val. Regular, quarts $ Mineral Phial. gross 55 @ @ @ 60 12 70 70 40 Cotton—See special report. Drags and Dyes—Duty,Alcohol, S 60 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ lb; Alum,60 cents # 100 lb; Argols, 6 rents $ lb; Arsenic and Assafoedati, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regains. 10; Arrowroot, 80 # cent ad val Balsam Copalvi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 60 cents $ B>; Caliaaya * 4 28* .... 19 © 20 14 © 10 95 © 1 00 9i> © .. 1}@ 284© .. 33 @ 16 © 38 17 JJ @ 30 © 4* • • 1 75 © 2 00 Ginseng, South&West. 65© 70 Gnm Gum Gum Guiu Gom Arabic,Picked.. 50 @ ^3 <2^ Arabic, Sorts... Benzoin j-0 © 84 © 34© 88 © Kowrie Gedda Gam Damar Gam Myrrh,East. India . Tfvd © 55® Sum,Myrrh Turkey. (geld) Senegal GuraTragacanth,Sorts Gum Tragacanth, w. flakey (g‘»ld) © 85 © .. — 78 *0 j*b 25 45 • • •• *8 60 © 1 90 Potash, Ft. and HjEng.. ..:...(gold) 8 60 ©8 80 Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 © Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 8 Jalap, in bond gold.. Lac bye Licorice Paste,Calabria Licorice, Paste, SicLy. Licorice Paste Spanlsn Solid Licorice Paste, Greek .. ^ ® 8 22 85 © W 25© 31 © 24© 84 ® 30 © 55 23 25 40 .. Madder,Dutch..(eold) 8 © 84 do, French, EXF.F.do 7 © *♦ Manna,large flake.... 17'» @ 1 '6 Manna, small flake.;.. 9j>8© ® Mustard Seed, Cal.... M ustard Seed, Trieste. If © .... Nutgalla Blue Aleppo 35 © 40 Oil Ania Oil Cassia Oil Bergamot Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 65 © Oxalic Acid 1 5S 2 5 S ! 5 Sfc 4,00 6 50 ... • to 10x15 to 12x18. to 16x24 to 24x80 to 24x86 24x36 to 30x44. 80x45 to 82x48. 82x50 to 32x56 Phosphorus 90 87 8> 2 25 © 2 f0 7 64© 20© Prussiate Potash Quicksilver Rhubarb, China Sago, Pe*. led Salaratns SalAm'n ac, Ref (gold) Sal Soda. N ewcastle1* — 94© 2 © Sarsaparilla, Bond 11 Sarsaparilla,Mex “ Seneca Root. .... 86© 68 © £6 © 78 © . .. .. 2* 26 14 © © >8©, 40 Senna, Alexandria.... 25 © 30 Senna, Eastlndia 20© 85© 25 44 . Shell Lae...L Soda Ash (80$c.)(g’ld) 2i© 2* Sugar L'd, W’e(goid).. 28© Snip Quinine, Am$1 o* 2 2) © Sulphate Morphine.... 6 75 © Tart’c Acid..(g’ld)#1b 60 © 11 © Tapioca..Verdigris, dry a ex dry 47*© Vitriol .... .... .... 504 60 10 91© Blue Duck—Duty, 30 # cent ad vaL Ravens, Light.. $ pee 16 00 © Ravens, Heavy i8 ou © Scotch, G’ck, No. 1 $y. © 72 Cotton, No. 1 $ y* W© Dye Woods—Duty free. Camwood..(gold)$Vnl6) 00© Fustic,Cuba “ ....40 UU © Fustic, Savanilla“ © 30 00 Fustic, Maracaibo © 1 ogwood, Hon (gold). 19 00 © 20 00 Logwood, Laguna (gold) © Logwood, St. Domin..22 00 © Logwood, Cam .(gold) © Logwood,Jamaica «.o ©16 00 .. .. . HardwareAxes—Cast steel, best biand perdoz do ordinary do 1 to 3 do © 23 00 Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val. .... HingesW rc m ht, List 5 % adv Its, Cast Bhl... L^tSOgOis Door B. rels, 50 cents $ 100 lb. Dry Cod $ cwt. 5 53 © 6.50 Pickled Scale...$ bbl. 4 f>0 © 5 (0 Pickled Cod.... ^ bbl. 6 50 © Carriage and Tire do Liit 65 % dis Door L C's and Latches List 7* £ dia. Door Knobs—Mineral. list 7* % dis. “ Pore lain LD t 7* % dis. Padlocks N. w List 26&?4 % dis. Locks—Cabinet, Eagle List 15 % ois. “ Tiunk List'5 % dis*St( cks and Dies List 85 % dis. .... . Mackerel, No. 1, Maas 19 00 © Mackerel,No.l,Halifax Mackerel, No. 1, Bay Mackerel, No. 2, Bay. .13 0 t Mackerel, No. 2,Ha ax Mac’el,No.3,Mass. l’ge .... Mackerel, No. 8. H’fax .... Mackerel,No. 8, Mass. ...t Salmon,Pickled,No.1.37 00 .... Sa mon, ( i kleil. p. tc .... © .... © ©13 50 Screw Wrenciie6—Coe's PatenList 25 * dis. do 1 lift’s .s L s» 66 % dis. Bin ths’ V Is s # fl> 20 © 22 © ©11 5i © © © © ... .... Framing Chisel8.NewLi8t374 1 inner .... Du*y,10 6 00 @i2 00 2 00 © 8 00 brown jo 50 © 1 00 75 60 © Badger Cat, Wild 10 © do House 4 00 Fisher, Fox, Silver 5 Of . 3 00 I 00 do Cross do Red do Grey 50 © 75 2 (i0 © 4 i 0 Lynx Marten, Dark do pale........... Mink, dark Musk rat, 5 00 ©20 00 2(0 © 5 00 3 00 © 6 00 8 @ £0 _ 5 00 © 8 0u Opossum 15 © 8o 80 @ 7s I** © Raccoon k, Black Skui 20 © 8 00 @50 00 @ 5 00 © i 50 Rivet , Iron List -^5&40 % dis. Screws American.. .List 40©45 % dis. do Eng.ish List 2?@U> % dis. Shovels and Spades... Lists % dia. Horse Shoes Planes 5 @7 List30@35 %adv Hay—North Rivor, in bales# 100 lbs for shipping 70 © Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $-5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Bunn and Sisal, $15 # ton; and famploo, 1 cent # B). Amor.Dressed.# ton 850 00©860 00 do Undressed.. 280 0i<©240 00 Russia, Clean © (50 CO Jute (gold) 110 00@120 OO Manila..# lb..(gold) 12© 1?* Sisal © Hides-Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬ ed and Skins lu # cent ad val. 1 .. Dry Hides— ^0 Buenos Ayres# lbg’d Montevideo do Kio Grande do Olnoco .do California gold inches, 2* cents $ square foot; larger anil not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents $ square foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents square foot; on Porto Cabello VeraCruz 24x30 ,2*; all over < qualities. Subject to a discount of 45 6x 8 to 8x10. 50 ft 7 8x.. tolOxlS 7 Hx to 12x18 9 9 i2xl9 to 16x24 18x22 to 20x30 11 20x31 to 24x30 14 16 24x31 to 24x36 that, 8 cents 25x36 to 30x44 80x46 to 32x48 32x50 to 82x56. Above 17 18 20 24 $ cent. 25 © 5 50 00 00 00 00 00 © 6 @ 6 © 7 © 7 © 9 ©10 @11 ©12 ©18 ©15 English and Fr*tr.h Window—1st, 2d, 31, and 4th dualities. 174© 15© 16 llfornia... .do .. .. © © 11 © 12 11 © 11* 11 © 11 © 11* 1 4 © cured. 124© I84 City l'<4© 13* 23 © 23* Sierra Leone.... cash Gambia &3issi.u do 36 © 27 © 30 do do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip # It gold 00 00 00 00 00 00 20* 20 © Ooutrysl’ter trim. <fc 00 50 00 50 19* i0 © © 16 © 17*© do .... 8d, and 4th 75 25 50 75 50 • 19 © 22* .....cur Tamp co .do South & Wes', do Wet Salted Hides— Bue Ayres.# lb g’d. Rio Grande do California do Western $ lb. American fVindow— -1st,2d, do do Dry Salted Hides— thli (gold) Common Window, not exceeding lOx 15 inches square, 14; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and uot 21 21 17 13 18 22* .. Tampico Texas 21 © © 2 4© .. California, Mex. do unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and over List 3d % dis Liai 75 % dis List 00 % dia. Cut Brads filass—Duty, Cylinder or Window Polished Plate uot over 10x15 do Cut Tacks cent. Bear, Black hundied, List40^adv. Augur Bitts List 20Jfc 10 % dis Aueurs,per dz.NewList 30% di». Fruits—See special report. — jtdia. Ptaort 2'4 Beaver, Darkskin 1 00 © 4 00 do Pale... 50 © 2 00 o.ti List 40 £adv insets. do in sets Ring Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. B> 15i© Jersey no oo Herring, Scaled^ box. 41© 45 Herring, No. 1 20© 25 Herring, pickled$bbl. 4 50 © 5 6j Furs 8 00 @ 9 00 6 17 © 7 50 ordinary . »0 80 FisU—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 : Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 $ bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, smok¬ ed, or Dried, In smaller pkgs.than bar¬ shore 17 13 27 25 Broad natch’s 8to3 bst. .2 90 ©25 oO do «,)di ary 12 »0 @ .... Coffee Mil s List2 % dis. do Bri Hopper @ do Wood Back @ ... Cotton Gins, per saw... $5©« less 20 % Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 % dis. Cast Butts—Fast Joint. List 10 Jfaiv Loose Joint.. List. ©12) 00 85 © 75 @ ordinary Shingling Hatchets, C’t eteel, best br'ds, Nos. .... .... Prime Western...B) Tennessee 14 © 12 © 24 @ 21 © Carpe tor’s Adzes,.... .... (gold) ©18 ©15 ©16 ©18 50 00 50 00 00 00 00 00 .. .... Ltmawood Bar wood © 6 © 7 © 7 ©12 .. ... ... 25 75 50 50 50 00 50 00 - .... ... 8 9 10 15 16 18 20 24 Groceries— See special report. Gunny Bag's—Duty, valued at U cento or less, 9 square yard, 3; ova 10, 4 cents $ fi> Calcutta, light &h’y % £04© Gunny Clolli—Duty, valued at 1C cents or less $ square yard, 3; otci 10,4 cents $ Id. Calcutta, standard, y’d 22 © Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 2f cento or less $ lb, 6 cents 9 fl>, and 20 $1 cent ad val.; over 20 cento $ fl>, 10 cents ^ 1b and 20 $ centad va,, Blasting(A) $ 251b keg © 4 00 Shipping and Mining.. @ 4 50 Rifle 6 50 © Sporting, in 1 lb canis¬ ters # lb £6 © 1 0$ Hair—Duty fbix. RioGrande,mixed# lb 87 © ?7* Buenos Ayres, mixed 85 © 86 Hog,Western, nnwash. 11 © 12 .... Otter •• 60 Gamboge Gum Cordage—Duty, tarred,8; uuv-rred © 97 © . @ 104© Extract Logwood Fennell Se d Sheathing, yellow © Cantharidos 1 70 © 1 75 Carbonate Ammonia, in bulk 22 © Cardamoms, Malabar @ 3 25 Castor Oil Cases # gal 2 1> © 2 17* Chamomile F ow’s# ft 15© 60 Chlorate Potash (gold) 10 @ 83 Caustic Soda 84© 9} Coffee.—See special report. 3 cents # lb. Sheathing, new.. • 8x11 11x14 12x19 20x31 21x31 OllLemon 8 87 © 4 124 Oil Peppermint, pure. 5 50 © .... .. Cement—Rosendale#bl....© 1 75 Chains—Duty, 2$ cental lb. One inch 509 THE CHRONICLE 19,1867.] • Honey—Duty, 2 cent # gallon, Cuba (in bond) (gr’ # gall. 62 © 63 Hops—Duty: Seouts# t>. Crop of 1867 « 40 © 70 do of 1866 Foreign © \ 45 © .. © 70 510 THE CHRONICLE. St. Domingo, ordinary logs do .... ad val. Para, Fine Para, Medium # 1b 77*@ Para, Coarse East. Inula Carthagana, &c Indisro—Duty free. Bengal Oude Madras Manila Guatemala Caraccas 80 © © @ @ (.old) #lb 1 0> @ 1 70 75 @ 1 35 (cold) Co (gold) 95 (sold) 65 @ 1 <>u (gold) 95 @ 1 20 75 @ i 0) (gold) Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1* cents $ ft. Railroad, 70 cents # 100 ft*; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents # ft; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 11 to If cents # lt>; Pig, $9 # ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents $ lb. Pig, Scotch,No 1. # ton 41 0n@ 45 00 Pig, American, No. 1.. 44 00® Bar, Red’d r.ng&Amer to U ® 90 00 Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold) 92 50® 105 00 ••• '—Store Prices-—, Bar Swedes, assorted sizes @155 00 Bar,English and Amer¬ Rods, 5-8@‘.l-16 inch.. U0 <i0@16> 00 Hoop 137 50® 190 CO Nail Rod # lb le* 9 ® Sheet, Russia 17* @ 18} Sheet, Single, Double and Treble 6® 7* Rails, Eng. (g’d) # ton 52 50® 53 Oo do American 79 0 >® -2 50 .. Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime #!b East Ind , Billiard Hall 2 t'T® 8 00® 3 to 8 25 3 00 African, Prime.. 2 S7© African,Serivel.,W.C. 1 *0® 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 # 100 lb ; Old Lead, If cents $ ft; Pipe and Sheet, 2* cents $ lb. Galena # 100 ft ® 9 50 Spanish (gold) 6 TO ® 6 55 .. German ........ (g*d I) 6 f 0 ® 6 55 (goll) 6 50 ® 6 8<f English net Bar ®10 50 .. net .. ®12 00 Ijeaf.lier— Duty: sole 35, upper 80 Pipe and Sheet ad val. cent ^-cash.# ft.-, Oak, Slanehter, light 39 . do middle do do heavy. do do light Cropped.... do middle do do do 1 bellies 40 44 47 '.9 29 .... Heml’k, B. A.,«fec..l’t. do middle. do ' 80 30 do heavy Califor., light. . VO do middle. do heavy. 30 29 ‘-’8 29 Orino., etc. i't. do middle do heavy. do & B. A, do and do do 50 21 so 31 82 3i) 31 80 29 30 29 @ 10 ® 37 @ 42 @ f6 21 4o 41 2’ do Slaugh.lnrough Oak, Slaugh.in you., I’t do poor @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ 28 @ dam’gdall w’g’s do do 42 46 4i i 47 @ 33 @ .... do do do do do do do do mid. @ 40 @ 3* 46 heavy liime—Duty; 101 # centad vah Rockland, com. $ bbl. .. @ 1 4o 50 ® 1 85 Lumber^ Woods, Staves^etc. —Duty: Lumber, 20 $ oent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood do heavy and Cedar, free. Spruce, East. $ Southern Pine M ft 18 00 ® 20 «>0 80 00 ® 85 00 White Pin9 Box B’ds White Pine Merch. Box Boards Clear Pine 80 00 @ .... 38 00 ® 85 00 So 00 ®100 00 Laths, Eastern. # M Poplar and ® .... 3 00 Whi e wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 ® 65 OJ Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 00 ® 90 00 Oak and Ash 60 00 @ 65 00 Maple and Birch .'.. 85 00 ® 10 00 100 00 ®120 00 Black^Walnut STAVESWhite oak, ®2?5 00 . pipe, heavy pipe, light. pipe, culls. 1 bhd.,extra. hhd., heavy hhd., light. hhd., culls. bbl., extra do bbl.,heavy. do bbl., light.. do bbl., culls.. Bm oak, hhd., h’vy. do hhd., light.. . . >0 . . . . . . . _ @225 00 @175 Ofl @170 00 @2 !5 00 @175 00 @lle 00 @100 00 @150 00 @115 00 @ 90 00 @ 60 00 @120 0C @ 80 00 HEADING —White oak, hhd ftahogany, @150 00 Cedar, Rose¬ wood—Duty free. Hahoganj St. Domin¬ go do Honduras Nuevitas.... crotch®®, V ft.. .. 25 @ $0 @ 40 Hams, Shoulders, 10 @ 14 1" @ 10 @ J1 @ !4 14 15 4@ 20 8@ S@ 8 @ 12 (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas .... .. do .Mansanilla do do Mexican Florida. # c. ft. Rosewood, R. Jan # lb do Bahia "8 4 @ 6 bulk, 18 cents # 100 ft. Turks Islands # bush. do do 210 ft bgs. do do # bush., Solar coarse Fine screened do ^pkg. F. F 240 ft bgs Copper 12*® 7 25 28 @ 32 .. @ . 4 -‘ @ Yellow metal Zino nitrate Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30 cents $ gallon; crude Turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 # cent ad val. Turpent'e, soft.#289Ib 4 75 @ 5 00 @ Pi ch @ Rosin, common 3 (50 @ do strainedamiNo 2. ..3 7 @ do No. 1 4 6u @ Spirits turp., Am. # g. @ .. @ @ .... @ ® @ @ •• ... ••• ••• ••• 4 00 4 2-5 ad val. Clover 4 25 5 (>0 8@ 11 Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ centad val. City thin obl’g, in bbls. ton.61 50 @62 00 do in bags. 59 (!0@60 00 West, thin obl’g, do 54 00 @55 00 Oils - Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1 : burning fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal, anil cocoa nut, 10 # cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 # cent ad val. Olive, qs(gold per case 4 00® do in casks.$ gall.. 1 6> @ 12 Palm # ft 1 Linseed,city...# gall. 1 25 _ 13J #ft 13 @ Timothy,reaped # bus 2 50 @ 2 75 C.<Dary # bus 5 5j @ 6 00 Linseed,Am.clean#tee —. @ .... do Am. rough # bus 2 50 @ do Calcutta ...gold 2 16 @ Shot—Duty: 2f cents # ft. Drop •# 11 \@ Buck 1-4® Whale.... do refined winter.. Sperm,crude do Lard oil Red oil, do 2 25 @ 2 30 unbleach @ 2 40 @ 1 35 @ @ I @ @ 40 @ 1 30 city distilled 62 . 70 75 Bank Straits Parattir.e, 28 Kerosene 35 (free). 51 Paint*—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ lb; Paris white and whiting, 1 cent # 9); dry ochres, 56 conti $1 100 lb : oxidesofzinr, If cents $ tb ; ochre, ground in oil, | 50 #100 — 30 gr.. ft; Spanish brown 25 $ cel, tad val • China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red. and vermilion 25 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 $1 ton. Litharge,City... .#ft Lead, red, City ► do white, American, .. .. pure, in oil do while, American, pine, dry Zinc, white, American, . @ @ 11* 11* @ 14 Medium China thrown 9 50 do @10 50 (® dry, No. 1 do white, American, No. 1, i a oil ...... do -whi e, French, in oil 9i@ 10 8 12 @ gr’iinoil.#ft Spanish brown, dry $ 8@ I f0 @ 1 25 B @ do gr’d in oil.$ lb Paris wh., No.l#l00lb @ a <S> ‘-* Whiting, Amor. .. Vermilion,Chinese$llb 1 29 @ I 8o Trieste Cal. & do do do 15 l 35 85 1 O' 1 30 . Eng American.. Venet..red(N.C.)#owt 3 09 @ 3 25 Carmine,city made#ftli> oO ©20 oO China clay # ton32 <0 @ ... # bbl. 4 00 @ 6 00 Chalk, block.... $ ton > i 5 @25 0» Chalk Barytes 15 @ 35 39 00 @42 75 Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents; # gallon. Crude,40® 17grav.#gal. @ 51 @ Refined, free refined, 40 xntu do in bond Naptha, refined Residuum VeraCruz .told 40 @ 4 i Tampico...gold Matamoras.gold Payta gold @ @ 81f@ 40 @ 4C @ 45 @ £0 @ 4S @ 45 <2i 47f@ 50 Madras .. .. each Cape Deer,SanJuan# ftgold do Bolivar ...gold do Honduras..gold do Sisal g*»M ,do Para gold do Vera Cruz .gold do Chacres ...gold do Puerto Cab .gold 82 20 31 @ ' 34 26 @ 27 $ bbl. 8 00 @ 3 02* Paris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 # cent ad val. Blue Nova Seotia# toe @ Plaster Calcined,eastern# bbl Calcined oity mills.. @ .. . .... ® 2 40 .. @ 2 50 . Provisions—Duty: beef and pork 1 ct; tains, bacon, and lard, 2 ts & ft Beef,plain mess# bbl..16 00 @23 00 do extra mess..►..♦.23 00 @27 00 Pork,mess ...—,31 75 @23 00 75® 3 8 50® 5i® 0()® 3 do do Claret, In hhds. do in 4 75 ...® 36® do do 4 50 . . .(gold) 2 0® Madeira do Marseilles 7 4 <5® 75® 75® 75® 4 b nd) Burgundy Port, Sherry §•5® 1 8 50® 4) 8 50 1 sn 4 50 7 00 70® 85 @ f°@ 9i@ 1 00 1 15 do 85 00® 60 do cases. 2 65® Champagne.... MO • 00 do 11 00® 25 00 tVirc—Duty: No. 0 to 19, uncovered $2 to $3 5- # 100 ft,and 15 # centad val. No. 0 to 18 17f@2?4$ ct. off Hstt No. 19 to 26.;.. 30'# ct off list No. 27 to 36.-.... 33 # ct. off list Telegraph, No. 7 to il Plain # tt> 91 Brass (less 20 per cent ) 47® do Copper, ■ 57 @ Wrool—Duty : Imported in the “or¬ dinary condition as now and lureto fore practiced.” -Class 1 — Clotking cent ad val. castile 3vf 50 .. @ .. @ 47f 45® 37i@ 4.J 40 . Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and plates, $1 50 # 100 fts. 6|@ 6i Plates,foreign # ft gold do domestic 10 @ 104 German 1( (® American, spring 12®^ 15 c 21 ® n cast English, spring English blister 104® Hi® fnglisn machineiy I3{® H> 2.3 *'0 16 Sumac—Duty: 10 # centad val. Sicily # ton.. 125 00 @225 00 Sugar.—See special report . 12 @ over 32 cents United States is 32 cents or less # ft, 10 cents # ft and ll $ cent, ad val. ; over 32 cents # ft, 12 tents $ lb and 10 ^ cent, ad val Class 3 — Carpet Wools and other to the . similar Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the ^ .3 m - —— v — - •—- — 12f classes *•** Imported scoured, three times the duty as if imported uuwashed. Amer., Sax. fleece # ft do full bl’d Merino. do 4 and | Merino.. Extra, pulled California, unwashed... common... Peruvian, unwashed Valparaiso, unwashed.. S. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. do common, w Entre Rios, washed S. American Cordova :. washed do ® @ 55 62 as 45 @ so £8 ® 45 80® 85 24 ® 30 18 ® 25 Itt @ 33 @ 28 ® 30 28 @ 82 ® @ 36 © 40 18 @ 25 8" @ 40 18 @ 21 26® 80 85® 45 Superfine No. I, pulled African, unwashed 5 50 45® .... ....... Mexican, unwashed.... Smyrna,unwashed .... washed—... do Zilic—Duty: pig or block, $l 50 9 100 fts.; sheets 2| cents # ft. Sheet # ft lii® ll} I'reights- To Liverpool : Cotton # ft Flour # bbl. d. s. .. Petroleum s. ® 4 @3 0 .. @56 .. Heavy goods. ..# ton 80 @35 0 Oil 35 Corn,b’k& bags#bus. Wheat,bulk and bags Tallow—Duty :1 cent# ft. American,prime, coun¬ try and city # ft... # ft and 11 # cent, ad val.# ft, 12 Cents # ft and 10 # cent, ad val ; when imported washed, double these rates Class 2.— Combing TFoote-Tlie value where¬ of at the last place whence exported cents do Texas If ® # Jb. Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less # lb, 10 TT__ Z A Beef .#tce. Pork ..#bbl. @40 0 @ @ @6 @4 .. .. .’. » .. ll ll 0 6 To London : Tin—Duty: pig,bars,and block,!5# cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cent ad va1. Banca Straits # ft (gold) (gold) English (gold) Plates,char. I.C.# box 13 do do do I. C. Coke 10 Terne Charcoall2 Terne Coke.... 9 @ @ 23} @ 00 @18 @1? 75 @13 75 @10 .. .. 27 26 24 60 00 00 00 Tobacco.—See special report. Oil 35 @40 0 Flour # bbl. ..@34 Petroleum @5 6 Beef /# tee. .. @ 0 0 Pork .. @40 # bbl. Wheat # bush. @ U . Corn & -2 To Glasgow (By 8team): Flour Wheat .—# bbl. # bush. Liquors—Liqitor_ —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per gallon^ other liquors, $2.50. Wines— Duty: value net over 50 oents # gal¬ lon 20 cents # gallon and 25 # cent ad valorem; over 50 and not over 100. 50 cents # gallon and 25 # oent an # gallon. $1 # gal¬ ad val> .. Pork. To Have* : Cotton Beef and pork..# bbl. Measurem. g’ds.# ton Petroleum Lurd, tallow, outmt etc^— # ft ® J5 & i5 @5 ® .. .. @fi> jj .. #tca. # bbl. # Jb & .. Corn,hulk and bags.. Petroleum (sad)#Dbl. Heavy goods. .# ton. Beef.*.*.*.*. * Wines and valorem: over $1 lon and 25 # oent 80 @35 0 Heavy goods. ..# ton Tea*.—See special report ... White Nova Scotia do 10 00 9 10 10 00 *2f Soap—Duty: 1 cent # ft, and 25 # Auier l-» 100 ft .. do do do do do do .. Siee|_Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents # ft or under, 2J; cents; over 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cts # ft; over 11 cents, 34 cents # ft and 10 # cent ad val. (Store prices.) 18 @ English, cast, # ft . . 23 14 13*® Ochre.yellow, Frenen, dry $ *00 ft 2 25 @ 3 f'O do Skins—Duty: 10 # centad val. 4;’i@ Goat,Curacba# ft cur do Buenos A., .gold 8> @ Spice*.-See spocial report. m@ 4 4 Sherry d • do Malaga,sweet ^o do dry.... do t HOO 16 00 . Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk. 35 # cent. Tsatlees, No. l@3.#ftll 00 @11 57 Taysaams, superior, No. 1 @ 10 00 @10 50 do medium,No3@4. y 09 @ 9 f0 Canton,re-reel.Nol@2. 8 25 @ 8 5 Japan, superior 11 00 @i2 to .... 7 85 @ ArzacSeignette n 13 00 ® . . .... Oakum— Duty fr.,# ft* Or® 75® do 4 4 Whisky ( 15 »*. 3f@ gold 90® 90® A. Seignette . do Hiv. Pollevoisin do Alex. Seignette. do Wines—Port.... »00 18 00 ...@ P Romleux.... do Rum—Jamaica ..do St. Croix... d» Gin —Differ, brands do D m e—N.E. Rum.cur. Bourbon Whisky.cur. -• @ # ft do do do do do .... Seed*—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, f cent # ft ; canary, $1 # bushel of 60 ft; and grass seeds, 30 # cent 6 25 @ 9 fO Hi @ 53 (290lbs.) pure Crude Nitrate soda Pale and Extra do . soda, 1 cent # ft. Refined, Naval ! 25 4 0 ... Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2f cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; 16 @ 18 @ bbl finivlshton’sU’d) 2 60 @ fine, Vorthingt’s i 00 @ 3 10 Onondaffa.com.tine bis. # Tb. Cut,4d.@60d.# lOu ft 5 G }@ 5 75 fd(6d)# ft pressed ;. L“ger freres Other br’ds Cog. Pellevoisin....~. Liverpool,gr’nd# sack 2 00 @ 2 05 horse shoe 2 cents 7 Jules Robin.... Marrette & Co. \ino Grow. Co. ■ 50 @ @ Cadiz do do .<® • Salt—'Duty: sack, 24 cents # 100 ft; IHolasses.—See special report. Kails—Duty: cut If; wrought 2|; Clinch Horse shoe, Horse hoe, (gold) 4 Hennessy (gold) 4 (i. Otard, Dup. &Co.do 4 P*U6t,Castil.&Co.do 4 8'@ 75@ Renault & Co.. do 6 00@ J. Vassal & Co.. do 17 13 Carolina....*.# 100 ft 9 0> @10 00 East India,dressed.... S 50 @ 9 25 f0 5@ Brandy— J. & F. Martell 14® 15 @ 12 @ $ lb. 12 . 20 00 @20 59 Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* cents # ft.; paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents 12 25 @ Chromeyellow... # ft pipe, exLa. do do do do do do do do Mansanilla Mexican do prime, Lard,..., 30 logs Tar, Am rlc» ican, Refined 1«'5 00®110 00 do Common 95 90@i00 0 do do Scroll 132 50®ISO 00 Ovals and Half Round 130 09@140 00 Band @132 50 Horse Shoe... 127 50® ... - do Port-au-Platt, crotches do Port-au-Platt, do do do 10 7 @ . Korns—Duty, 10 # oent. ad vsl. Ox, Rio Grande...# C 9 <J0@ 7 00© 8 00 t)x, americaa India Rubber-Duty, 10 # cent, [October 19, 1867. @0 0 & - J 0 .@5 0 $ , r A I® I 00 @ i0 00 @ 6 potand pear?.. 8 00 * .. - THE CHRONICLE. October 19," 1867.J Commercial Cards, Commercial 51 Commercial Cards. Cards. NOTICE TO THE CONSUMERS OF THE Petrie & Co., GENEINE beg to Jobbing Trade Only Large Stock of And to which I request trade. GLhVES, Foreign AND ftiERLIN GLOVES. Napier D. (late of Becar, Napier & Co.) Agent for S. Courtauld Sc Co.’s WM. JESSOP & SONS, in referring to the above notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers ot, Iron and Steel, that thev are prepared to receive orders for this Iron, and for Blister and Extra Cast Steel made from the Iron, at their establishments, Nos. 91 & 98 John Street, New York, and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed¬ eral Street. Boston. Morris, Tasker & Co., Pascal Iron ENGLISH CRAPES, And importer of and 364 Daniel H. 15 GOLD GOODS, approved Carpenter, Commission Merchant,—United States ITondea Warehouse. Works, Philadelphia. OFFICE AND MEN’S FURNISHING a new BROADWAY, NEW YORK. fices generally. Particular attention paid to the most forms of Iron and Fire-proof construction. NOS. 263 & 265 WEST PEARL STREET, CINCINNATI. Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c. HANDKERCHIEFS, Offers 111 Boiler and Lawn HOSIERY Co-, Designs and Specifications prepared for Stores, Warehouses. Railway, Mercantile and Banking edi¬ Manufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, l ap Welded Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red Linen E. T. Littell & the special attention of the Leulsta, in Sweden, 29th April. 1867. CARL EMANUEL DE GEER, Proprietor. Germantown Woolen Goods, Alexander CO OF CHINA AND JAPAN. ARCHITECTS Sc CIVIL ENGINEERS, Hosiery, KID, CLOTH AUGUSTINE HEARD Sc LEEFSTA, W. JESSOP Sc SONS. SHIRTS Sc DRAWERS, BECK Co., 28 Stale Street, Boston, announce that 1 have this day entered into a contract with Messrs. W. Jessop & Sous, of Sheffield for the whole Annual Make of the above Iron, which in future, will be stamped invite tlie attention of the DOMESTIC & AGENTS FOR I To our Everett DANNE- mORA IRON. 75 & 77 LEONARD STREET. We SWEDISH 1 N. J. Chapin, WAREHOUSES: STREET, NEW YORK. PRODUCE COMMISSION MERCHANT, Stock of the above at BROADWAY CORNER FRANKLIN STREET. Thomas J. Pope & Bro. CINCINNATI. Consignments and Orders So icited. METALS. George Hughes & Co., 292 PEARL STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET NEW YORK COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Importers Sc Commission Merchants, 19S Sc 200 CHERCH E. & F. A. STREET, LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS, PATENT LINEN THREAD Old Rails Re-rolled Agents lor 67 WALL DICKSONS’ FERGUSON Sc CO, French Dress Muslin or Exchanged for Co., OF SingerManufacturingCo. 458 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Proprietors and Manufacturers of the world SEWING MACHINES, Sawyer, Wallace & Co., Real Brussels Imitation Goods, COMMISSION Laces, NEW YORK. STREET, NEW Y'ORK, sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class Dis¬ tilleries, Kentucky. STREET, NEW YORK. ENGLISH AND CO’S. Brothers, SUCCESSOKS TO H. L. C O A Of RUSSELL, Sole Agent, all the Best Kinds for 32 P*j> STREET, N.Y. e PARMELE Duck, A Large Stock always on hand. THEODORE POLHEMES 59 Wm. G. Weights. Sc CO L SHOE Threads, THREADS, SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC. BARBOER BROTHERS, 95 CHAMBERS STREET, NEW YORK. Mills at Patterson N. J. MERCHANTS, WASHINGTON STBIST. Chicago, Ills. A. L., Cummins, COTTON MEMPHIS, , Family and Office BROKER, TENNESSEE. use, Street. England & Co., AND GENERAL COMMISSION 65 Commerce Linen SEEDS G. Falls & Co., COTTON BUYERS, Memphis, Tenn. G. Falls. J. C. Johnson. J. N. Falls Refer by permission to Caldwell & Morris, New York. COTTON FACTORS « MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS. \ Broad Street, corner of Beaver 188 & BROS. Yards: West22d street, near 10th Avenue, New York, and in Brooklyn. All Widths and GRAIN, AND PROVISIONS. AMERICAN COAL. Parmele SEWING. Cotton FLOUR, COMMISSION Offer for 18 UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE 88 CHAMBERS Particular attention MERCHANTS, 58 BROAD PARASOLS, Jr. Sc End, Glasgow. Built of solid French Burr Rock. AND COMMISSION CLARK, day. REED’S PATENT GOLD PREMIUM WHEAT AND CO KIM HULLS. DISTILLERS Hall, Spool Cotton. THOS. inPKOVED CIRCULAR SAW MILL. It is superior to all others in strength, durability and simplicity, will cut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumber J.M. Cummings. & Co., Blair, Densmore & Co., Manufacturers of Mile ENGINE AND MILL MANUFACTURERS. Particular attention is called to our NO. 47 BROAD STREET, Laces, STREET, NEW YORK. EMBRELLAS AND Co., given to Southern patronage. MERCHANTS, Corsets, See, Byrd & B. Holabird & CINCINNATI, O., per Swiss Sc French White JOHN A. re for family use and manufacturing purposes. Branches and Agencies throughout the civilized world, SENI FOR CIRCULAR. Edgings, Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN CINCINNATI, OHIO. ESTABLISHED IN 1826. Lace Cnrtains. 73 LEONARD COTTON BROKER, THE SINGER Draperies, Burnham Special attention given to filling orders for Spinners nowned Goods, Machine ST., CINCINNATI, O. Erastus new. Belfast, & IMPORTERS NO. 27 MAIN STREET, NEW YORK, And F. W. HAYES Sc CO., Banbrldge. Delisle Dana, IRON, OLD AND NEW, Pig, Scrap Iron and other Metals, Lo¬ comotives, Rail roan Chairs <v “-pikes, SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS, Oscar Cotton, Flour, Grain and Provisions. FOREIGN Sc AMFRICAN RAILROAD gCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, Sole Gano, Wright & Co., MERCHANTS, Street, Mobile, Ala. WILSON, SON Sc CO. JOS. H. WILSON, Merchandise, ROBT. N. WILSON Produce, Stock, Note Brokers. Henry Lawrence & Sons, Warehouse and office corner of Lombard and Frede iek streets, No. 39 East End, Exchange Place Baltimore, Md. MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE Refer to D. FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC 192 FRONT STREET, NEW YORK, and USE, Sprigg, cashier; J. Sloan. Jr., cashier, Ba timore, Md. And by permission to Jacob Heald<fc Balt.; Tannanm, Mclllvaine Rucker, President 1st Nation- Co-Lord & Robinson, & Co., N. Y.; Ambrose al Bank, Lynchburg, Va. [October 19, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 512 Miscellaneous. Insurance. Insurance. THE INSUR1NCE COMPANY, Intbc City oi New York, £2,000,000 Stg. 1,893,220 $1,482,340 Subscribed Capital Paid-up Capital and Surplus Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany. United States Branch, No. 117 Broadway, N. Y. GEORGE ADLARD, Manager. Secretary. William H. Ross, NO. 40 WALL $2,000,000 00 1867..... 3,439,120 73 Capital Assets, Jan. 1, Liabilities MARTIN, President. WILLMARTH, Vice-President. H. WASHBURN, Secretary. plicant. Company, Insurance BROADWAY. 108 NO. NEW YORK, April N reduced its capital according o law, under the sanction of the Superintendent of the j nsurance Department to the sum of This JOHN P. PAULISON, Isaac H. Walker, Metropolitan Cargo only, at the office in the BanR Building. No. 35 WALL Assets, January President. Directors : I Martin Bates, F. H. Wolcott, Dudley B. Fuller, Franklin H. Delano, Gilbert L. Beeckman Joseph B. Varnum, P. W. Turnev, William T. Blodgett. Charles P. Kirkland, Watson E. Case, Lorrain Freeman, John A. Graham, John C. Henderson, Edward A Stansbury, J. Boorman Johnsto'n, Jame9 L. Graham, Samuel D. Bradford, Clinton B. Fisk. W. R. WAJ3SWORTH, Secretary. OF Company, Charter Perpetual. $3,000,000. CAPITAL HENDEE, President. L. J. L GOODNOW, Secretary. 1867 OF HARTFORD, CONN. $4,650,938 27 37 7,668 46 Liabilities has paid to Its Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Currenev, at the Oflice in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liverpool. D„ Colden Murray, E. Haydccir. White, N, L. MoC'ready, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, WTilliam T. Frost, William Watt, Henry Eyre, Cornelius Grlnnell, Henry 7c. Kunhardt, John P. Williams, WALL 62 $1,000 000.i STREET. SPRLXGF'EVD FIRE AND MAttUNE SPRINGFIELD, MASS. Capital and Surplus $700,000. Francis Hathaway, Harold Dollner, Paul N. Spofford. Aaron L. Reid, Eliwood Walter. ELLWOOD WALTER, President. CHAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-President. Secretary. Niagara Fire Insurance COMPANY. CONNECTICU f FIRE INSURANCE CO OF HARTFORD, CONN. M. Bennett, Losses CASH CAPITAL, SURPLUS, July 1st, 1867 promptly adjusted by the Agents here, and paid in current money. WRITE, ALLYN & CO., Agents, NO. 74 WALL STREET. Standard Fire Insurance $1,000,000 278,000 Net Surplus Oct. 1, ’67 over.... 100,000 Hugo Schumann, MONDAY, October 21st to NO. Wit. M. ST. 117 BROADWAY. OFFICE, No. 92 BROADWAY. ------ 1867 Asset*, June 1, - - - 8150,000 - 222,433 JOHN, Secretary. INSURANCE* FIRE Company, American Fire Insurance Co., North 315,074 73 114 OFFICE BRANCH OFFICE 9 This Company insures on terms as Secretary. of this Company WILL BE REMOVED on The office WILLIAM CRIPPS, President, Hope $500,000 00 RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President. JOHN E. KAHL, Vice President. 8200.000 Cash, Capital JONATHAN D. STlvELE, President Fire Insurance $815,074 73 Company. $300,000 equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Char¬ tered 1850. Cash dividends paid in 15 years, 253 per cent. Cask Capital TOTAJL ASSETS Capital $27 5,000. Jr„ Sec’y. - J. B. Eldbedge, Pres’t. WALL STREET. CASH CAPITAL SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1867 Co., BROADWAY, N. Y. No. 175 E. Freeman, Pres’t. J, N. Dunham, Sec’y. Notman, Secretary. Germania Fire Ins. COMPANY, INSURANCE A. William Heyc, Losses JAS. A. ALEXANDER, Agent. H. Kellogg, Pres’t. Sec’y. W. B. Clark, Cnarles Dimon, Jas. D. Fish, Geo. W. Henning3, No. 12 CO., Capital and surplus William Nelson, Jr., Joseph Slagg, INSURANCE FIRE PHOENIX CASH, Freeland, Geo. L. Chase, Pres’t. Coit, Sec’y. OF HARTFORD, CONN. chandise of all kinds, AND DAMAGE BY NEW YORK AGENCY NO. $1,500,600. Geo. M. ' NSURANCE AGAINST LOSS FIRE. Capital and Surplus $1,261,349 1st, 1867 scrip, equivalent of TWENTY PER CENT. Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based on the principle that all classes of risks are equally profitable, this Company makes such cash abatement or discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits remaining at the close of the vear, will be divided to the stockholders. Thi9 Company continues to make Insurance on Ma¬ rine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Mer¬ J. Despard, Assets!July 1, INSURANCE COMPANY FIRE TRUSTEES. HARTFORD. Incorporated 1819 COMPANY. Hartford rebatement on premiums in lieu of in value to an average scrip dividend James Assistant Manager. Lord, day & lord, solicitors. a ./Etna Insurance T^C.^AXUYxf ’ £ As30ciate Managers. CHAS. E. WHITE, Mutual During the past year this Company Policy-holders, L OBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice-President. Dabney, Morgan & Co. J STREET, NEW YORK. IN of DABNEY, MORGAN & Co., Bankers. ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. JANIES LORIMER GRAHAIR Chairman. SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esq. of E. I). Morgan & Co. AYMAR CARTER, Esq of Aymar & Co. DAVID DOWS, Esq ^f David Dows & Co. EG1STO P. FABBRI, Esq of Fabbn & Chauncey SIMEON B. CHITTENDEN, Esq., of s. B. Chittenden & Co. SHEPPARD GANDY, Esq..of Sheppard Gaudy, & Co. Secretary. INSURANCE confine its fire business to the city of New York and vicinity, and will also write Marine on CHAS. H. DABNEY, Esq., Vice-President. The Mercantile ntends hereafter to c promptly adjusted and paid in this Country. MOSES H. GRIXNELL, President. Company having $300,000, Risks $1,614,540 78 Company having recently added to its previous 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¬ land Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected from Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are en¬ titled to participate in the profits. 16,1S67. Currency at option of Ap¬ - • New York Board of Management: This Metropolitan Income Policies issued in Gold or Incorporated 1841. Capital and Asset*, $10,000,000 12,695 000 4,260,635 Accumulated funds Annual YORK. (IN GOLD): Capital Subscribed A. F. J. NEW STREET, CAPITAL AND ASSETS " Losses CHAS. .T. 1S09. UNITED STATES BRANCH, WALL 74 STREET. 49 WALL EDINBURGH. ESTABLISHED IN (INSURANCE BUILDINGS) INSURxlNCE. FIRE AND INLAND OF AND LONDON COMPANY. 114,849 48 .. Mercantile Insurance Co $2,300,000 Sun Mutual Insurance BROADWAY. 185 AND py.Yew and important plans of Life Insurance have been adopted by this Company. See new Prospectus. Pro!’ ts available after policies have run one year, and annually thereafter. JOHN EADIE, President.5 Nicholas De Gkoot, Secretary. Co., Home Insurance STREET. ASSETS $200,000 Special Fund of c North British LIFE OF LI VERPOOL AND Authobized Capital States United Queen Fire Insurance Co LONDON. against Loss or Damage by Fire favorable as any other responsible Com¬ BROADWAY, COOPER INSTITUTE, AVENUE. THIRD INCORPORATED 1823. pany. Hanover Fire Insurance Theodore W. Riley, No. 45 WALL STREET. July 1st, 1867. Surplus $400,000 00 187,205 93 Gross Assets Total Liabilities $587,205 98 33,480 09 capital. Steph. Cambreleng, Joseph Foulke, Cyrus H. Loutrel, Jacob Reese, Lebbeus B. Ward. Jno. W. Mersereau. David L. Eigenbroat, William Remsen, Lydig Suydam, Joseph Britton, * Fred. Schuchardt, D. BENJ. S. WALCOTT, President. J. Rzmssn Lans, Secretary. Henry S. Levericb. Robert Schell, William H. Terry, Joseph Grafton, Amos Robbins, Thos. P. Cummings, Henry M. Taber, COMPANY, Cash Board of Directors: Surplus Cask Capital and JACOB REESE, President. Secretary. $500,000 00 255 057 77 Snrplns, January 1, — 1867, $755,057 77. Insures Property against Loss or the usual rates. ; Policies issued and Losses paid Company, or at its various cities in tne United States. Stephen Hyatt, . James E. Moobe, Cash Capital - F. H. Carter, J. Qbiswold, Damage by Fire at _ ,... at the office or tne Agencies in the principal JAMES W. OTIS, President. R. W. BLEECKER, VicePrea’t. Secretary. General Agent.