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*nnj amrnmja Ijiwto’ fcftte, (EJammcwat iJUiilwajj ponder, and §n$urancr §ournal A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. VOL. 3. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 186(5. Bankers and Brokers. JAY COOKE wx. 6. MOORHEAD , COOES, *. D )V JH- C‘ FAHNESTOCK, 8 EDWARD DODGE, EDW. ( PITT COOKE. ) Cooke J ay Bankers and Brokers. & Washington we have this day opened an office at No. Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., on our Washing- House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will be resident partners. We shall give particular attention to the purchase, and EXCHANGE of GOVERNMENT SALE, all issues; to bonds SECURITIES Oi orders for purchase and ale of stocks, and gold, and to all business of National Banks. March 1,1866. Keep constantly Collections made in all the States and Canadas. For the more thorough protection of all—both Broker and 44 Principal ”—our business will be con¬ ducted entirely on the basis of Certified Checks; received unless certified. fully enable us to carry out this principle, although starting with a sufficient capital, all parties giving orders forstocks, of whatever description or amount, will be required to cover same with proba¬ ble amount at time of leaving order. Receipts lor such deposits given until stocks are delivered. none To & on New Co., York* given STATES Stocks purchased or sold 44 44 1864, 44 44 1866, Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, Per Cent Currency Certificates. solicited, and those complying requirements will receive special ana prompt attention. w th above can be bad daily upon be furnished if desired. will STOCKS application, ©i 2d, & 3d series Compound Interest Notes off 1804 1865 Bought and Sold. A Have Removed to No. 2 I Broad St. Buy and Sell at Market Rates. ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from Make collections Co., STREET, N. Y GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, :and OTHER STOCKS, BONDS, &c., bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only. Deposits received subject to check at sight, as with Banks. DEWITT C. LAWRENCE, Member New York Stock Exchange. Rawson & Co. Taussig, Fisher & Co., and Buy and Sell at Market Rates, AEI. UNITED STATES SECURITIES. on WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President. SANFORD, Cashier. WILLIAM H. Designated Depository of the Government. favorable terms, STOUT, Cashier. ROSS, Presiden t The Tradesmens NATIONAL RANK. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. CAPITAL $1,000,000 400,000 RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. SURPLUS A BROKERS, Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, bought and sold on Commission. SOUTHERN Edwin RANKER RANK NOTES. ;... BROKER, In Southern Securities and Bank Bills. 80 BROADWAY & 5 NEW STOCK BROKERS AND BANKERS, NO. 16 BROAD Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petro¬ promptly execute orders for the Purchase or void, >tate, Federal, and Rail¬ road* Securities. Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to Dividends and Int i rest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Orders Promptly Executed. Draft. of the London House issued for the same purposes. SIMON DE YISSER, 62 Exchange Place, New York. W. H. Whittingham, No. 8 Broad - TELEGRAPH, RAILROAD, Brothers, leum and terms, London and Street, MINING, EXPRESS, Malt# Collections •utyoc* to Sight Draft. shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen Liverpool, and to grant mercantile credits upon them for use in China, the East and West Indies, South America, &c. Marginal oredits on STREET, New York. Drake LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. The subscriber, their representative and Attorue in the United States, is prepared to make advances Q. Bell, AND Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and others, and allow interest on daily balances, \ favorable D. L. J. H. 291 on Bank, No. 240 BROADWAY. daily balances, STREET, NEW YORK, Buy and Se'l on Commission Government Securi¬ ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Collections made in all parts of the United State and Canadas. HANKERS COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED. NOS. 12 NEW A 14 BROAD STREETS. BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 32 Broad Street, New York. S*1* $3,000*000. promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. BANKERS NO. 16 WALL And Capital subject to Sight draft. Government CYRUS J. LAWRENCE, JOHN R. CECIL. late Butler, Cecil, WM. A. HALSTUD. Bank, Jones 8c Westervelt, Drake Kleinwort8tCohen Brothers BANKERS, best terms. 318 BROADWAY. Sale of Lawrence & MERCHANTS, and others, and allow interest And VERMILYE A CO. on Central National BANKERS, LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS on Collections made for Dealers Tenth National REMOVAL. Gilliss, Harney 8c Co., New Y6rk State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan. ‘ All the Government Loans for sale. descriptions of Government BondsCity and Country accounts received on terms mos favorable to our Correspondents. on Out-of-town orders including Per Cent Bonds of 1881, Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, STREET, N. E. COR. PINE STRE Has for sale all No issues of UNITED 6 6 6 6 5 7 6 or Quotations hand for immediate delivery a NASSAU more “Option.” BANKERS. ;; $5,000,000 different Stock Boards. . No. 44 Wall Street. Capital^. Securities, Railways, Petroleum, Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrip Miscellaneous shares of a 1 descriptions, bought and sold at the JAY COOKE & CO. Vermilye Fourth National Bank. Son, Government Philadelphia and NawYork, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of Banks and Bankers. STOCK COMMISSION HOUSE, NO. 17 WILLIAM S1REET. Co., BANKERS. In connection with our houses in B. C. Morris & NO. 69. . Bought and Sold ' AND ALL OTHER STOCKS, BONDS AND GOLD on Commission. J Quotations and sales lists furnished daily on appli¬ cation. Orders promptly executed. J. Van Schaick, 5 r . 38 Broad .. . * k . . Street, BANKER AND STOCK BROKER. [October 20,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 482 John Bryan & Co., j L. P. Morton & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold Bought and Sold on Commission. D. C. & R. H. Fisk, IN U. S. SECURITIES, NO. 16 NASSAU STREET, DEALERS UNDER THE FOURTH U. U. U. U. U. U. NATIONAL BANK, Sell at Market Rates: Buy and 6s of 1881. 5-20 Bonds. S. S. S. S. S. S. Notes. to suit purchasers; and also to Circular Letters of Credit, on this sums John Munroe & Co-, BANKERS, 1 AMERICAN NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, FARIS AND FORK^ Travelers in a parts of Europe, etc., etc. Als^ Orinrrercial Credits No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW Issue Circular Letters of Cred l tor curities* Interest allowed upon deposits of gold and currency subject to check at sight. Cold loaned to merchants and bankers upon favorable terms. C. & Commission BANKER AND Will take the Trust BANKERS, CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., I88UE AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the States, available in United Management of Estates for COMMERCIAL CREDITS, For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, South America, and the United States. OFFICE OF L. P. MORTON & CO., CO., TrtEET, BANKERS, 30 BROAD STREET, ) V s New t. York, Oct. 11, 1S66. !' ANTED COUPON BONDS, of $500 15, 1865, numbered ft) 265 175,266 175,267 136,647 16 645 Five 5-20 COUPON BONDS f November, 1865, numbered une 136>46 each, dated 175,268 130,644 136,648 136,649 of $1,000 each, issue 33,075 33,076 33,077 cautioned against negotiating the ime. Any information of value communicated to le undersigned, respecting them, will be properly ;knowledged and compensated. 33,074 „ STEWART & CO. CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK CITY OF NEW YORK, New York, Oc1866.—At a meeting of the Board of Direct¬ ors of this Bank, held this day, a dividend of sIX(b) ?ER CENT., free of government tax, was declared jut of the profits of the last six months, payable on ind after Novembe 1st. The Transfer Books will >e closed at 3 P.M. on the 23d inst. and reopened on THE 3F THE ober 16, he morning ot P. BANKERS AND COMMISSION all accessible November 2d. _ WHEELOCK, President, WM. A. P- Oldershaw, Street, N. Y. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents, Messrs. J. K. GILLIAT &> CO., or deposits. ton, Tobacco, &c., Liverpool. Southern Bankers. COMMISSION MERCHANTS and Dealers In Domestic and Foreign Exchange. GALVESTON, TEXAS. Special attention given to Collections of all kinds, having prompt and reliable correspondents at all ac¬ cessible points in the State, and REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. OF of New York City, RICHMOND, VA., Designated Depository and Financial Agent of th Government. • Collections made in this city points in the South. S. A. Glover, H. G. and all accessible FANT, President. Cashier. Eastern Bankers. Page, Richardson & Co BOSTON, 114 STATE , STREET, BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDO AMD JOHN MUNROE & CO., PARIS. ALSO T88UE Commercial Credits for *he purchase of Merchan¬ dise in England and the Continent Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers abroad. Dupee, Beck & Sayles, STOCK No. 22 STATE JAMES A. BROKERS, STREET, BOSTON. JAMES BECK, DUPEE, HENRY SAYLES Western Bankers. Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Sc West Fourth Street, 110 CINCINNATI, OHIO. Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, .COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible points snd remitted for on Checks on day of payment. UNION BANK OF LONDON. Lewis Worthington, V.-Brest. Stanwood, Cashier. FIRST NATIONAL RANK J.W. Ellis, Brest. THE Of Cincinnati. :■ 11 points WEST and SOUTH, promptly remitted for. Capital Mock, Collections made on and SI,< 00,000. Surplus Fund, $250,000. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M. Bishop, William Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. S Direct- rs.—John W. B. Winslow. Edward M. Tesson. Edward P. Tesson. REFER TO National Park Bank, Howes & Macy, and Spofford. Tileston & Co., New York. Second National Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel & Co. and D. S. Stetson & Co., Philadelphia. T. F. Thirkield & Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and Jos. E. Elder & Goodwin, St. Louis. Fowler, Stanard & Co., Mobile. Pike, "Upeyre & Bro., New Orleans. Cohen, Lon Drake, Kleinwo don and Liverpool. Tesson, Son & Co., RANKERS, (No. 45 Second Street, comer of Pine), ST. LOUIS, MO., Style of Panjen. Founded in 1847, under the Tessen & - J B. Chaffee, Pres. V. Pres. Geo. T. Clark, Cashier. FIRST NATIONAL RANK H. J. Rogers, George Butler, MERCHANT, GALVESTON, TEXAS. (Established in 1847.) Collections promptly attended to and remitted for by Sight Drafts on Messrs. Duncan, Sheiman & Co., BANKER AND COMMISSION I. Moses Tayioi, Bank of Republic ; Claflin & Co. king Houses Bank, National First Theodore York,; References given to several of the most prominent Street, New Correspondent, Vermilyb & Co. FOR SALE. Bankers, New York. 35 Broad points in the United States. N. Y. MERCHANTS, Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬ chants, bankers, and others allowed 4 per cent, on ACCOUNTANT* No. ST., RICHMOND, VA. Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &c * bought and sold on commission. Deposits received and Collections made on Wilson, Callaway & Co., All persons are ALEX. T. Co., No. 1014 MAIN 108 T. H. McMahan & Co. FOLLOWING UNITED STATES BONDS # HAVE BEEN LOST OR STOLEN, VIZ.: Ten 7 3-10 Bank” of New York; Messrs. Bankers, No. 30 Wall street, New COLIN CAMPBELL & SON, of Dubuque and Sioux City R. R. Prefer¬ red and Common Stock and Scrip. L. P. MORTON & CO, THE CREDITS. make advances on Rentals, Coupons or other evidences of Income. Will Hire and Rent Stores, Houses or other Pro¬ perty, Buv and Sell Real Estate, and make Invest¬ ments in Stocks and Securities. References : Hon. Samuel R Betts, U. S. Dis¬ trict Judge ; Hon. John A. Dix ; Hon. John T. Hoff¬ man, Mayor of New York; Messrs. Spofford, Tileston & Co., New York; Messrs. Phelps, Dodge & Co., New York; The President or Cashier of the No. 44 Broad Miscellaneous. T. BROOKE P.NISH Collect Rents and Incomes, and “Park National Howes & Macy, York. BOB’! BANKERS AND BROKERS Companies,Executors, Residents or i\ on-residents, TRAVELERS, . - TORREV, Cashier. H. Maury & R. all the principal cities of the world; also, ‘W PROCTOR, TRAVELERS’ Duncan, Sherman & Co., CIRCULAR NOTES NEW YORK, STREET, LIBERTY WILL F and sold Stocks, Bonds and Governments benight exclusively on Commission. J,078 69 Exchange JAS. L. MAURY. H. MAURY. Henry H. Elliott, AND MERCHANTS, 88 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. J. W. Drafts, &c tion of Dividends. POWELL, GREEN & CO. Bankers Deposits, subject tc on Cheques at sight. Prompt attention given to the Co ec BANKERS, BROADWAY AND No. 6 WALL ST. Dealers in Government and other Se¬ No. 94 bought and sold Interest allowed Co., Lockwood & ana on Commission. Orders for Securities executed abroad Bonds J London, Sank, for Travellers* use. Government Securities, Stocks Compound Interest Notes. all classes of Government Securities. And prepared to draw Sterling Bills of Exchange, at sight, or sixty days, on the Union Bank of J Capital* | $500,000 Attends to business of Banks & Bankers on liberal terms. Are ssue Certificates <>f Indebtedness. The C orn ROB’T NEW YORK. n 10-40 Bonds. 7-30 Treasury WALL STREET, 35 Executed. Orders Promptly A. G-. OATTELL, Pres’t 1 A. W MILL DIN, V. Pres’t J NATIONAL BANK, s PHILADELPHIA. Bankers, STREET, NEW YORK NO. 35 BROAD Bankers. Southern Bankers apd Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Of Denver, signated DEPOSITORY OF THE U. s. DESIGNATED depository of the u. _8. >tized Capital - - - - $500,000 Anthoi in Paid in Capital - - - $300,000 ict Transact a General Banking business Blake and F. Sts. DEN VER, , -». Henry Swift &. Co.; H. B. Office in New York No. 71 Broadway. comer of COLORADO. GEO. T. CLARK A CO., BANKERS, CENTRAL CITY, COLORADO. The Stockholders of the First National Bank of Denver, constitute the Arm, and are responsible lor all Deposits and Business transacted by th^House. 1 P,L <•> • •• • . • -.W-^■.Mjwijjgig.,ji|p^jipiaaf .li^iji.ijjim • • ’THE ■ante’ fcdte, Commercial ®imco, A Railway powitor, mi fnourawee foumal. WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES, NO. 69. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1866. VOL. 3. cliques in the Stock Market. Now, the question agitating the public mind at the present moment is as to the cause of this mingled excitement and depression, 486 and as to the nature of the stimulus to expansion, which has 489 490 lately received a new and active development. The answers to this inquiry are not numerous, for it seems to form CONTENTS. which is THE CHRONICLE. The Speculative Mania Treasury Lost or Stolen Bonds Trade of Great and the Memphis and Charleston Railroad Latest Monetary and Commercial 4S3 485 Britain and the English News Commercial and Miscellaneous News 485 United States THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. everybody. However improbably, it has 497 to puzzle almost 499 600 been asserted that the 500 Cotton Tobacco Market, Railway Stocks, Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks, Philadelphia Banks Money U. S. Breadstuffs Groceries Treasury is favoring the movement by enlargement of the volume of our active paper money. It impossible, however, to believe that Mr. McCulloch, in face 495 503-04 496 of his oft-repeated pledges not to expand the currency, but to THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. contract it, would adopt any such unpopular, mischievous and Railway News *. 505 I Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. • 5C8 Railroad, Canal, and MiscellaneInsurance and Mining Journal... 509 reprehensible course. The currency resolution proposed last 491 Dry Goods 494 Imports National Banks, etc N.Y. Stock Exchange National, State, etc., Securities. Commercial Epitome Sale Prices 506-07 Bond List ous Prices Current and Tone Market of the 601 502 an is 481-82, 510-12 | Advertisements Spring by Mr. Alley, and adopted unanimously by Congress, establishes the maxim that the policy of temperate, judicious contraction shall be the permanent policy of the Treasury. Moreover, the Act of April 12th carries out this decision by fixing the limit of the contraction to 10 millions during the six months ending October 12th, and to 4 millions a month after: ®t)e <£f)r0ituU. Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, with the latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all the Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to the hour of publication, wards. The Commercial and Financial TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. COMMERCIAL AND FINANCIAL CHRONICLE, with Th« DAILT Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, and mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage) The Commercial and Financial Bulletin, (exclusive of postage) For The Daily Bulletin, ’. Chronicle, without The Daily without The Commercial and Financial As this act is often understood, $12 00 10 00 Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage) 5 00 Canvassing Agents have no authority to collect money. Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers, 60 William Street, New York. * Neat Files for Office. Price holding the Chronicle or Bulletin can be had at the we referred to, and has been append a copy. Its text is as THE CHRONICLE. Complaint has not unfrequently been made of injury to the exposed pages of the Chronicle by carelessness in delivery. This is something we cannot always guard against, and yetthe change we make this week, by providing a cover for the follows : Representatives of the That the act entitled the government,” ap¬ proved March 8, 1865, shall be extended ana construed to authorize the Secretary of the Treasury, at his discretion, to receive any Treasury notes or other obligations issued under any act of Congress, whether bearing interest or not, in exchange for any description of bonds author¬ ized by the act to which this is an amendment; and also to dispose of any description of bonds authorized by said act, either in the United Be it enacted by the Senate and House of United States of America in Congress assembled, “ An act to provide ways and means to support States or elsewhere, to such an amount, in such manner, rates as he may think advisable, for lawful money of the or for any Treasury notes, or certificates of indebtedness, 50. much mis¬ and at such United States, certificates of deposit, or other representatives of value, which have been, or which may be issued under aDy act of Congress, the proceeds thereof to be used only for retiring Treasury notes, or other obligations issued under any act of Congress ; but nothing herein contained shall be construed to authorize any increase of the public debt: Provided, That of the United States notes not more than ten millions of dollars may be retired and cancelled within six months from the passage of this act, and there¬ after not more than four millions of dollars in any one month: And pro¬ vided further, that the act to which this is an amendment shall continue in full force in all its provisions, except as modified by this act greatly assist in preserving it. The Without giving morq reasons than have been already ad¬ always been published in this form, duced for our opinion, we repeat that we cannot think it experience there, as well as here, showing the necessity for likely that the Treasury Department should have done that the protection these outside pages furnish. which has been placed to its charge. Still, the statement is THE SPECULATIVE MANIA AND THE TREASURY. yet uncontradicted, that during the past week or two sev¬ eral millions of compound interest legal tenders have been Notwithstanding the great prosperity on which we have long prided ourselves, it is impossible to look without the bought up at about two per cent, premium, and their place greatest concern on some of the aspects of our commercial supplied by greenbacks and national bank notes, which have been hitherto locked up in the Treasury, and, therefore, have and financial affairs. On the one side we find that general business is depressed and our mercantile men are beginning been inert, and without any expanding force on the active to feel and to complain of the change, while on the other currency. Another story is that balances to a considerable aggregate hand speculation is rampant, and the superabundance of idle amount have been allowed to accumulate in some of the capital continues to multiply the monetary facilities sought National banks, who are not slow to use these Government by those who delight to gamble at the Produce Exchange, or paper, will, we think, London Economist has as =?■ ■■■:„ •>' r; THE CHRONICLE 484 deposits with a view to increase their loans, so as earn more interest for themselves, to give greater accommodation to their speculative customers, and to contribute to increase the expansion of prices, which is felt to be such a burden upon the material interests and the productive growth of the country. We shall, no doubt, have in a few days a positive denial of these injurious rumors. They give us another illustration of the necessity for the freest, promptest publicity as to all the movements of the Treasury. Nor can this publicity be dispensed with so long as by regulating the amount of the active currency, and by controlling the loan facilities of many of the banks through lessening or enlargeing the Government deposits, the Secretary of the Treasury has more unlimited control over the money market than was ever possessed by any government officer in this country [October 20, I860. The transaction had t&ken place at an early hour, being purchase recorded that day on the books of the bank. The name of the seller was not recorded, as this was not commonly done by that bank, or generally, by others engaged in the same line of business. The bank officers ad¬ ded, that as they had bought the securities in good faith they must refuse to return them. On this Seighel brought his suit for the recovery of the value of the notes, relying ness. indeed the first on the evidence he could furnish that his circulars announc¬ ing the robbery, and describing the stolen securities, had been delivered in the banking house before the purchase was made. In the existing state of the law Seighel had, of course, no chance of success in his suit, except he could prove that the bank had made the purchase in bad faith. In other words, he had to show that the notice had been legally served, and that that notice was adequate. On this point the court charged the jury that if any notice had before. LOST OR STOLEN BONDS. been “ delivered at the defendant’s place of business, bp they either had, or with reasonable care advantages which the holders of Goverument securities would secure and the and attention might have had notice of the loss,” they dangers they would escape by the simple precaution of were to find for the plaintiff. This principle the court choosing registered bonds instead of the too frequently held further elaborated, and applied to the facts as follows: The real important question in this case is, Did the notice ever reach coupon bonds, which, like bank notes, are payable to the the defendants ? If it did, and they chose to disregard it, then bearer. If any of our readers will take the trouble to con¬ they are not purchasers in good faith; because, if they purchased after notice, sult in the past numbers of the Chronicle the formidable or wilfully shutting their eyes against notice, the law considers the catalogue of securities which have been lost or stolen during purchase to be made in bad faith. In other words, a purchase after notice implies bad faith. You must consider all the evidence upon the the last year or two, he will see to what an extent the public point of notice. There is conflict upon the question whether the de¬ fendants ever received and, has been the loser by a neglect of the precaution and of holding with value for the bonds it, then, of course, if they did not, case parted ; as there is nothing in the except registered bonds, which cannot be sold or the interest col¬ notice of the theft which can impute any bad faith to them, they will be entitled to your verdict. It is not enough that the notice before lected by any person except the real owner. A case of any of the officers reached the bank was left there ; you must be satis¬ some interest in this point of view was, last week, on trial in fied that the defendants received it before they bought the bonds. If you find that one of these notices was left on the Cashier’s table, then the Court of Common Pleas, in this city, before Judge it will be for you to say whether it did or did not reach him. It will Cardozo. Frederick Seighel, a worthy, hard-working, frugal rest with you to say upon all the testimony whether it was not reason¬ German, gray with toil and exertion, had invested the sav¬ able to infer if it were placed on the Cashier’s table that' it remained there until.be arrived, and that he then saw, and, if he chose to read it, ings of a life-time, amounting to ^$8,000, in Seven-thirties might have known its contents. You will remember that the two wit¬ who for the and coupon bonds. He had no reason for preferring these nesses as to were examined of the plaintiff give contradictory state¬ ments the distribution notices, each saying that he, and not to Government registered bonds. He only wanted a good the other, delivered them on the north side of Wall street, on which We have often insisted on the means of which investment, of which the interest should be safe and remu¬ the defendants' place of business is located. Lillie, the second witness, does not undertake to say that he had any distinct recollection of hav¬ nerative. Instead of buying bonds payable to bearer, there¬ ing entered the defendants’s premises. The first witness, Davison, says that he entered the defendants' bank he might, without any sacrifice of convenience, hav^e pre fore, from the ferred some taken the other form of Government obligation ; or, having Wall Street door, and that he placed one of these circulars on table, which he locates as being the first desk or stand on the left hand side as he entered, and which he says was marked “ Cashier’s Desk,” and he also says that he placed one on a desk on the opposite side. On the other hand, the Cashier swears that his dejk is not in either of a Seven-thirties, he might, at least, have endorsed them, so that nobody but himself might sell them in the market. Failing both these precautions, there was nothing those places, and that -the one which Davison swore was marked Cashier’s Desk ” is not so marked, but is marked “ Specie Clerk.” to prevent his laying up in some secure depository the pre Upon the evidence it will be for you to say whether the notice was ever cious evidences of his thrift—the pledges on which he was left, as the plaintiff claims, or whether the first witness is not in error in saying that he was in the It is depending for a provision in old age. He did none of these tion for your determination. defendants’ premises.circular p> rely a ques¬ If you find that the was delivered things; and, in an evil hour, his property as might at the defendants’ place of business, you will then consider the circum¬ stances under which it was delivered—the time—the absence of the have been feared, disappeared from his room. On officers of the bank, and say whether it iu fact ever came to the notice the night of the 12th of September, 1865, some thief of the defendants. If it never was delivered, or never came to the de¬ stole the old man’s whole fortune, which amounted, as fendants’ notice, unless that was preventea\by their own wilfulness io neglecting to read it, then, of course, the defendants must have a ver¬ we said, to $8,000, in securities payable to the bearer. The dict. If, however, you conclude that the circular was delivered, and that it came to the notice of the defendants, or might have done so but same evening he gave notice to the police, and had printed for their own act, and that, notwithstanding that, the defendants saw fit for distribution early next morning a quantity of circulars to buy these bonds, then they are not owners of them in good faith, and your verdict must be for the plaintiff, because the law does not permit announcing the robbery, describing-the notes, and cautioning parties to buy and retain stolen property upon the plea that to take the public. These circulars, before business hours on the 13th notice that it had been stolen would so interrupt their business as to he caused to be placed in the various banking houses in render it impracticable to conduct it. Wall street. His next step wras to communicate with the On this direction from the Court the Jury gave the plain Secretary of the Treasury, from whom, after some delay, he tiff a verdict for $2,297, the amount he claimed as the value learnt that two of his notes had passed into the possession of a of the notes, with interest. At present we shall refrain from Wall street institution, the National Currency Bank, where his comment on Judge Cardozo’s statement of the rule as to notice had been left within a few hours after the what is legally the serving of an available adequate robbery, and notice, before, in the ordinary course of business, any securities and what is required of a purchaser to exempt him from could have been offered for sale. liability to the charge of bad faith. It is enough for our Repairing to the bank he claimed his property, and was present purpose to note the fact that an appeal is to be taken told that nothing was known by the officers of his notice, but to the Supreme Court, where similar verdicts on similar that the securities had been, early on the morning after the grounds have been heretofore set aside. All that the unfor¬ robbery, bought over the counter in the usual course of busi¬ tunate plaintiff has at present gained, therefore, after two “ * ■ •■V, October another ex¬ pensive and protracted lawsuit. How much better would it years of anxiety and litigation, is the prospect of for him to have deposited his securities in secure place, and to have had them in such a form as to shield himself from the anxieties and losses which have come upon him. It is to be observed that only two of the eight stolen bonds seem to have been traced. The remaining six were no doubt so disposed of as to defy all attempts to follow their course. At maturity they were probably converted into bonds of 1881, which have since then, perhaps, changed hands many times, each successive innocent holder having a perfect title to them. We refer to this last point because many country investors have expressed to us'anxiety lest they should unknowingly purchase stolen bonds, and thus risk losing their money. These anxieties, however natural, have 485 THE CHRONICLE. 29,1866.] been a recently issued by the British Board of Trade. As regards exports, it appears that the declared value of the ship¬ ments of British and Irish produce to all quarters, in the month of August, was £17,450,156, against £14,957,834 in the previous month, and against £14,158,648 in the corres¬ ponding month last year. The total for the eight months is £125,265,820, against £102,400,696 last year, and £108,716,219 in 1864. The figures for each month from January to August, inclusive, in each of the last three years, are as ment under: A 1864. January February 1865. 1866. £10,413,586 £10,489,339 £14,354,748 15,116,063 17,520,354 15,366,414 15,870,131 14,630,120 14,957,834 March ’ April May — June 14,394,364 16,274,269 July August Total 14,158,64S 17,450,156 £102,400,696 £125,265,820 , £108,716,219 . 11,376,214 13,770,154 12,071,111 13,194,758 13,227,0(52 14,113,410 imports embraces a period of seven months, quite unnecessary; for an innocent holder who purchases viz.: from January 1 to July 31, inclusive. In July the in good faith bonds payable to bearer acquires as inde¬ computed real value of the principle articles imported* £3,feasible a right to them as to a bank note which he 650,000 less than in the previous month, the figures for June takes in his business. An additional safeguard to those and July, respectively, being £23,243,701 and £19,597,929. we have mentioned is never to buy except from per¬ The particulars of imports for each month in the year are sons or firms who are well known and of established rep¬ subjoined : 1866. 1865. 1864. utation. We ventured some time ago to predict that the £9,847,564 £6,398,922 £7,520,856 The return of are movement to convert coupon bonds into would go on very rapidly in consequence registered bonds of the frequency January with which losses and thefts of bonds were report ed. We learn from Washington that the anticipation was correct, and that the conversion by the public is taking place with a rapidity unknown before. In the law of June 30, 1864, this process of exchanging and ease 13.214,541 16,396,928 17,587,565 22,392,601 21,498,185 20,458,253 March April May.. J uly bonds into registered bonds was first authorized ; and, by the existing regulations of the Treasury, the conversion coupon Total 12,891,252 13,005,394 13,078,755 14,595,334 15,407,688 18,964,190 16,610,159 £119,068,429 February £94,305,062 £134,871,287 19,891,204 22,455,968 23,224,762 23,243,701 19,597,929 Great Britain and the United States, during the seven months ending July 31, was to the value of nearly ten millions sterling greater in the department of British and The trade of produce and manufactures than in the corresponding is made without any,charge, except that incident to transmis¬ period in 1865. In those periods, and in 1864, the declared back. The following is value of the exports of British and Irish produce, &c., was as sion by express to Washington and the section of the Act referred to /' : further enacted, That the Secretary of the Treasu¬ authorized to is me, upon such terms and under such regu¬ lations as he may from time to time prescribe, registered bonds in ex¬ change for and in lieu of any coupon bonds which have been or may hereafter be lawfully issued; such registered bonds to be similar in all respects to the registered bonds issued under the Acts authorizing the issue of the coupon bonds offered for exchange. And for all mutilated, defaced, or endorsed coupon or other bonds presented to the Depart¬ ment, the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized to issue, upon terms and regulations as aforesaid, and in substitution therefor, other bonds of Skc. 7. And be it ry is hereby Irish follows: 1864. “ Southern. , Pacific ports .. .. Total 1866. 77,402 661,487 ports, Northern 1865. £12,6b9,886 £7,469,832 34,755 342,274 £16,268,977 , 648,820 426,142 £13,408,775 To Atlantic £7,846,861 £17,338,939 COTTON. imports of cotton into the United Kingdom in August were about 200,000 cwts. less than in the preceding month, the falling off being almost wholly confined to the produce of like or equivalent issues. this country. Egypt shows a decline ; but as regards India, been suggested that the conversion under this act there is a slight increase. The total for the eight months, It has should be authorized to be done in New York, instead of at however, is nearly 4,300,000 cwts. in excess of the corres¬ The , place so remote as is Washington from the great metro¬ politan centre, where chiefly these bonds are bought and sold. This suggestion must certainly be complied with at no very distant day ; and we trust that if Mr. McCulloch does not feel justified in taking the responsibility of making the change it will be brought up before Congress at the next session. Every thing should be done which legislation and Treasury facilities can accomplish to facilitate the conversion, and to diminish the needless delay and expense by which at a present it is discouraged and hindered. ponding period in 1865, the imports from the United States showing an increase of 3,720,000 cwts., and India an aug¬ mentation of 1,500,000 cwts. nearly. In the receipts from Egypt, however, there is a diminution of nearly 270,000 cwts., but it seems probable that during the ensuing season, favorable accounts respecting the new crop in the arrivals from Alexandria will be on a much The im¬ more extensive scale than during the present year. ports of cotton into Great Britain for the eight months end¬ ing Aug. 31 were as under: 1864. 1865. 1866. owing to the that country, From TRADE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND THE UNITED STATES. COTTON, BREADSTUFFS, PROVISIONS, The British Board of Trade returns now ETC. begin to indicate cwts. United States Bahamas and Bermudas.. Mexico Brazil 109,863 158,604 275,550 845,212 Turkey Egypt British India China Other 108,670 218,818 163,769 234,147 147,932 ... countries >... 294,820 166,604 1,005,454 2,213,270 1,941,401 537,965 200,187 301,509 307,235 3,834,000 6,413 3,145 495,883 83,930 735,460 3,439,087 17,949 193,734 the Total 4,670,000 4,561,040 8,809,601 the The exports of cotton from Great Britain, owing to the month of August and the eight months ending August 31, ilose of the German War, are steadily on the increase, the just received, showing a very large diminution in the im¬ port trade of the country, whilst, on the other hand, the ex¬ shipments in August being 403,214 cwts., against 333,440 cwts. in July, For the eight months there is a balance in ports exhibit a considerable increase. A high rate for money favor of this year of about 700,000 cwts. The statement of has a tendency to encourage exports, but to operate as a ehe$k to imports, and this is the gre$t feature of the state¬ exports fpr eight months is annexed; panic rate of discount on the trade of country, the official statement of imports and exports for the effect of the " ; ■ C: ..<? -Ar*".-*-* - 486 THE CHRONICLE. 18M. To Russia Prussia cwts 1865. 196,848 9,628 40,937 370,762 312,233 597,508 1,526,916 Total... 1866 163,716 22,7S2 14,011 395,360 262,216 727,909 1,585,994 Hanover Hanee Towns Holland Other Countries PROVISIONS. 248,235 42,089 ' The imports of butter, cheese and eggs have increased; nevertheless, the value of these articles continues to rule high throughout the United Kingdom; and there seems toFe no prospect of a return to even a moderate range of prices for some time to come. The imports for eight months were: 5,618 516,477 347,865 1,127,323 2,287,6o7 The computed real value of the cotton imported in seven months, from January to July inclusive, was as follows: 1864. From United States Bahamas and Bermudas Mexico 1865. £1,345,647 2,505,379 1866. £650,601 £28,004,469 1,354,736 43,484 2,072‘438 28,59! 2,139,306 768,119 7,291,833 7,460,795 1,210,335 1,574,102 3,618,768 509,225 6,168,031 4,216.584 1,928,197 44,392,710 Turkey Egypt British India China 2,085,012 2,873,296 1,442,123 10,192,905 17,816,147 Brazil 24,5 4,839 Other countries Total 58,258 1,233,805 53,569,684 BREAD8TUFFS. might have been anticipated, the return relating to the imports of Wheat and Flour into Great Britain presents many features of great interest, and so far as this country is concerned, the figures in one sense, viz. in the diminished from most continental countries, Russia alone There is a slight increase in the excepted, are favorable. importation of Wheat and Flour total of those two articles in the from this country, month of the August beinj 46,692 cwts, against 12,214 cwts. in the previous month The total importation of Wheat and Flour in August was 660,000 cwts. less than in July. Prussia exhibits a,con¬ siderable decline, the falling off in the import of Wheat being 340,000 cwts. The following is the statement of im ports of Wheat, Flour and Indian Corn for eight months : WHEAT. 1864. From Russia 1865. cwts 2,144,753 3,089,589 555,914 Schleswig, Holstein, & Lauenburg 208,078 Mecklenburg 421,707 438,663 465,409 Turkey, Wallachia, and Moidavia.. 326,282 366,856 states!*!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 6,137,894 621,73S 280,653 4,610,396 2,898,506 354,108 141,078 545,365 cwts. 11,769 345,750 15,529,299 8,789 1865. 1,445,550 1,337,313 77,063 AND IRISH 2,123,704 266,228 Total..j. BRITISH 194,561 130,067 97,306 3,355,080 3,355,080 British North America. Other Couutiies 1,550,369 PRODUCE AND LIVE 1S66. ' 181,232 3,078,740 193,051 15,818 168,807 3,637,648 MANUFACTURES. 1866.' 521,119 148,362 123,<85 141,162 659,861 456,102 267,984,840 87,677 671,510 400,610 326,331,840 217,076 STOCK. The cattle plague in the United Kingdom has almost en¬ tirely died out, the cases reported by the authorities being always less than one hundred per week. The stringent regulations enforced by the Government have not been modi¬ fied, and as a large number of sheep infected with small pox were recently imported, it is expected that some time will yet elapse ere the cattle traffic of the United Kingdom will resume its normal position. Much attention appears to have been directed to the production of sheep since the cat¬ tle plague first broke out, and the supply of sheep in Eng¬ land has greatly increased during the last twelve months. Meat is still very dear in Great Britain; but there is a tendency to lower prices, and it is now stated that butchers’ meat has seen its highest point. The ports of Rotterdam and Amsterdam are still prohibited from sending beasts, sheep, lambs and calves to England. The imports of cattle, &c. for eight months were as follows: 1864. Oxen, bulls and cows Calves ,. Sheep and lambs Swine and hogs 82,447 29,373 256,694 37,630 1865. 1866. 119,323 122,603 35,553 427,439 64,559 19,851 590,549 47,076 SHIPPING. In the month of 329,738 11,505,473 154,401 242,472 162,835 596,886 440,284 242,339,280 142,979 * 3,305,024 R. From Hanse Towns.. ! 620,37S 2,358,398 1864. 228,921 Beef, salt, cwts..; Pork, salt, cwts. Butter, cwts Cheese, cwts Eggs, number Lard, cwts 1865. 509,909 161,558 IMPORTS OF LIVE STOCK INTO GREAT BRITAIN. 664,023 222,067 750,383 15,057,536 "1864. S98,607 hams, cwts 1866. 4,336,307 3,092,508 345,204 171,367 361,769 301,831 S62,052 457,962 United Bacon and 13,905,053 As exports [October 20,1866. August and the eight months ending Aug. 31, the following number of American vessels entered cleared at ports in the United Kingdom: Entered in August, 1866 do 1865 do 1864 Entered eight months ending do do do do do do Cleared in August, 1866 do 1865 do 1864 Cleared eight months do Go do do Number. : * : : Aug. 31,1866 1865 1864 52 45 35 314 195 287 44 39 48 ending Aug. 31,1866 382 1865 1864 212 291 do do and Tonnage. 57,700 49,125 37,612 324,845 212,952 320,940 43,301 41,206 49,837 376,699 212,764 318,344 The following statement shows the number of vessels of eight months is £23,000,000 greater than in the corresponding period last year. With all nationalities entered and cleared at ports in the United this country, a large business has been done, of which the fol¬ Kingdom from and for the United States in the above periods : lowing are the particulars: Number. Tonnage. The total of these for the 1864. Alkali Beer and ale Coals Cotton Manufactures— 1865. 1866. £275,017 33,313 87,245 £261,443 26,461 70,714 £615,117 Earthenware and porcelain 1,481,160 159,302 297,866 702,188 977,600 75,259 248,636 476,789 Haberdashery and millinery Hardwares • and Cutlery- Knives, forks, &c Anvils, vices, saws, &c 45,.544 62,095 Piece goo' Thread... Metals— Iron—Pig, &c Bar, &c Railroad Castings Hoops, sheets and boiler plates Wrought 78,096 69,530 218,929 53,490 155,660 190,773 68,827 461,207 1,619,106 87,364 70,851 193,988 767,134 13,082 203,639 366,992 507,809 12,242 43,496 203,064 654,496 3.023 209,326 Lead, pig. 391,01)3 12,982 181,864 50.398 plates 570,087 46,692 26,307 545,384 22,116 200,733 78,765 67,936 38,760 1,295 96,626 7,088 Copper, wrought.. Tin Oilseed Salt Silk Manufactures— Broad piece goods Handkerchiefs, scarfs, &c Ribbons Other articles of silk only Other articles mixed with other materials.. Spirits, British Worsted Manufactures— Cloths of all kinds 34,227 37,242 • 17,571 75,443 20,576 2,754 10,132 and Carpets and druggets Shawls, rugs, &c Worsted stuffs of wool only, and of wool mixed 17,022 27.538 73,393 10,140 Wool Woolen 2,144 682,836 262,890 59,473 1,869,191 290,548 435.451 31,793 96,931 1,018,4S4' 29,332 84,214 58,782 10,360 9,300 157,113 18,028 745,034 547,953 86,436 1,711,453 2,727,118 . do do do do , 18G5. 1864. do do do do do do 1865 1864...., 1,162 354 769 107 92 92 962 536 825 136, m 70,655 94,107 1,044.481 406,637 715,365 120,969 106,367 100,115 1,008,568 624,092 850,919 THE MEMPHIS AND CHARLESTON RAILROAD. 167,170 214,265 151,004 166 * 62 124 1865. 1864. do do 2,785,326 104,767 231,369 do do do do 929,090 90,196 184,109. 21,203 Steel—Un wrought do 514,340 92,141 1865 1864 do 2,446,194 241,353 1,905,040 151,597 Manufactures of Germaa silver Linen Manufactures— do do The Memphis and Charleston Railroad, from its geograph¬ position and direction, and from its eastern connections, continuing it to the great Atlantic ports, from Alexandria to Savannah inclusive, is evidently one of the most important ical lines of transit in the States south of the Ohio river. Com¬ mencing at Memphis, it traverses southwestern Tennessee, then passing south into Mississippi, striking Corinth, and thence eastward through Alabama, via Tuscumbia, Decatur and Huntsville to Stevenson, where it connects with the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad, a distance from Mem. phis of 272 miles; thence it is continued to Chattanooga by the latter road this latter a further distance of 37 miles. As is well known point is the most important between the Mississ¬ ippi and the seaboard, being a grand centre of converging 1 THE 20,1866.] October CHRONICLE. after some necessary forms of pro¬ cedure, they succeeded in obtaining the transfer. On the railroads, which come in from Alexandria, Richmond, 11th of September, 1865, the western division was surren¬ leston and Savannah. At Memphis the road is with the Memphis and Little Rock Railroad, nearly com¬ dered, only seventy-four miles of which (Memphis to Pocahantas) were in running order, the remainder 114 miles (Poca¬ pleted to the capital of Arkansas. At Moscow hontas to Decatur) being almost entirely destroyed, except the Somerville branch of 14 miles. At Grand Junction, miles east of Memphis, it is crossed by the Mississippi Cen¬ the road-bed and iron rails, and these in a very bad condi¬ tral Railroad; at Corinth, 93 miles east, by the Mobile and tion. What little machinery the war had left was scattered Ohio Railroad ; and at Decatur, 188 miles east, by the Nash¬ over the South, and had been run for four years with little no repairs. ville and Decatur Railroad, etc. There is also a branch from To supplement this, the company purchased of the United States military authorities sufficient rolling Tuscumbia to Florence. Thus, in whatever direction, whether Char¬ connected it gives off 52 release their road; and, or road connected stock operate the open portion of the line, for which they country, gave bond to pay $491,920 68 on the 1st of January, 1867 bond to be credited with all service performed by the the Gulf, line can¬ company for the Government. The Government also be without a vast significance in the railroad system both turned to the company eighteen locomotives that had of the present and the future, and hence its affairs, in a finan¬ been captured in the early part of the wrar, which added cial well as a physical sense, must command the attention largely to their ability to prosecute repairs and do such of all interested in the development and progress of the business as offered on the line. country traversed by it, and over which it throws its The work of construction, equipping, and reorganizing the road wide-spreading arms. prosecuted with all the vigor and energy that the The report of the President to the stockholders giving a of the company and the condition of the country and labor wrould admit. It was operated as fast as repaired, complete statement of the transactions of the Company for the five years ending June 30, 1866, covering the period of and the 6th of November, 1865, trains were run over the the has been sent to us; and from it and previous re¬ entire main line, except the single break at Decatur, where ports we compile such statements as will best illustrate the the bridge over the Teunessee had been destroyed. This eventful history and present condition ot the company and bridge, how7ever, was eventually restored, and trains passed their road. When the last annual report was published for it the 7th of July, 186t^ the year ending June 30, 1861, the country was engaged in From the above it would appear that the road in all the civil which had changed and disturbed every channel years covered by the report, has been in the hands of of trade and commerce, and utterly destroyed all natural the company but a few months at most. After April 11, and healthy business, leaving the railroad dependent for sup¬ 1862, and to September 11, 1865, it was in possession of, or port on a precarious war-created traffic. This road, how¬ interrupted by one or both contesting armies. After the continued in the hands of the company, though subject final release in September, 1865, and for two months there¬ military control, until April 11, 1862, when a large fede after, large part of the line was in no condition for use, ral suddenly appeared at Huntsville, Ala., capturing and that even at the close of the five years on the 30th June the road, offices, rolling stock, material, etc., belonging to last, the bridge at Decatur was not yet finished. These facts the company. Only five days previous to this capture the the necessary key to the company’s accounts, and as such bloody battle of Shiloh had been fought near the line north they are given in this connection. of Corinth, and the western division fell into the hands of the In the following tables we give an analysis of the earnings Confederate army. The seige of Corinth succeeded and con¬ from operations and other sources of income for the five tinued through the remainder of April, and to May 30, years ending June 30, 1866, and the disbursements for the withdrawal of the Confederate forces all the ordinary expenses, interest, dividends, &c., for the same when movtable property of the company within their reach was period of time, with the final disposal of net revenue and ordered to be taken down the Mobile & Ohio and the Mis¬ the balance to debit of this account. In this statement will found all the elements necessary to the understanding of sissippi Central Railroad. The destruction of property in these migrations was immense. Locating at Marion, Miss., the financial operations of the company from 1861 to 1866, temporary shops were erected for putting the machinery in and which in connection with the foregoing historical re¬ order but as fast as an engine and car was completed it was and the general balance sheet, (which is given here¬ ordered by the military authorities. This enterprise after,) will suffice to illustrate the consequences of the hostili¬ on this account, soon abandoned, and the agents of the which made the M. & C. R R.- and its vicinity the chief company were then allowed to hire out their rolling stock field of operations: ACCOUNT—1SG1-66. needy roads, and receive therefor stipulated rents, which 1863-64. 1864-63. during 1863-4-5 constituted the chief source of income to $931,305 11 $76,810 It $ $8,307 G5 the company. In the fall of 1802 the eastern division of 946,6% 70 43,358 11 west, north or south, we find the or intersected by the most important lines of the reaching with their combinations from the lakes to and from the Atlantic to the far interior. Such a looking east, to —this not over as men as w vast was means its on war, on over war a five ever, to a army are - on be ; sume, away was, ties to PROFIT AND LOSS 1861-62. Passenger evacuated by the Federals, and the company resuming possession, rebuilt and repaired the road sufficiently to brine that portion of the line into use again. Operations, how¬ ever, were soon interrupted, and on the 1st of July, 1863, the Confederate commander forced the com¬ pany to evacuate the line and carry the rolling stock South. the road ' between Stevenson close of the war, the property, or most of it, remained in the hands of the Federal army, but subject to frequent raids by the Confederates. The contest over this section of the country, indeed, was *so hot that neither party had been able to operate the \oad through after it was first cut in April, 1862." Subsequently to the From this ' and Decatur was time until the surrender of v http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ v-.. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Lee, the company applied to the President to $582,157 64 27,590 55 79,825 81 4,703 35 Freight Mails 58,466 84 Express Rents Suspense Materials 1865-66 1862-63. account. Drawbacks Other sources RR. mat. on hand Interest & exch’ge Total resources Against ... 4,279 09 477,562 45 28,119 79 1,984,105 S5 $567,101 Total exchange. disburse’nts. The balance 700 00 6,750 91 158,566 12 14 $84*029 37 $808,525 64 1,439,613 13 37,386 follows, viz: $631,002 34 $105,126 21 64,860 00 64,680 00 Int. on Co’s bonds 103,530 00 88,585 00 Cash divi’d (6 p. c.) 212,509 00 212,509 00 Stock div. (33i p. c) 1,330,841 67 Int. and 69,215 79 hb !!”!!!! which are charged as Road expenses. .. Int. on State bonds 703,41*165 301,953 77 24,127 16 238,73870 138,903 31 589,916 62 20,506 43 51,092 5U 29,933 91 $49,310 53 $60.850 46 64,740 00 64,740 00 90,930 00 90,580 00 $650,164 93 90,580 00 ■; 52,944 68 197,231 55 2,342,743 01 $470,900 21 $257,925 21 $413,402 01 $740,744 93 to credit of profit and Joss remaining over on 488 the 1st THE CHRONICLE. July, 1861, amonnted to. $993,198 53 /To which add— Income and resources, do do do do do do do do * 1861-62, 1862-63 1863-64 1864-65 1865-66 as above do do do do .. 841,029 57 808,525 64 1,439,613 13— $5,640,375 43 including balance From which deduct— $6,633,573 86 Cash dividend, No. 5, Disbursements, do do do do as Sept. 30, 1861 above, 1861-62 do do do do Coupon Bonds, (Tenn. War, federate 107,900 77 States Confederate Money on hand and in hands of Agents, charged off Loss on Cotton; purchases made in Confederate ‘ 237,973 78 469,476 67 , 414,332 78 1,380,000 00 848,639 53 (Memphis office* Profit and loss $5,643,561 74 322,648 32 34,589 66 6i,063 64 1,002,949 10 804,031 52 $7,207,045 58 $3,886,846 01 844,283 77 740,744 93 448,922 44 1,380,000 00 909,703 81 ) 804,031 52 - - $11,093,891 59’ The profit and loss debit, $804,031.52, was reduced by the1 1865-66, made July 1, to $111,914.23, as shown> in the account previously given. The changes made in the stock and bond account sAiee July entries for $2,255,357 49 91,850 00 41,396 57 and sales in Federal currency Deductions made on Railroad and Individual Ac¬ counts, reducing them to Federal currency Bank of Tennessee deposit, C. S. currency—worth¬ less Interest and expenses. Stock, property, &c Coupon bonds on hand Other assets $3,083,741 56 84,669 54 374,807 10 740,744 93 This account between the Memphis and Huntsville offices does not, oi’ course, enter the aggregate account. 257,925 21 repudiated and Con¬ $2,559,820 18 * 413,402 00 740,744 93- $4,378,216 37 Balance to be accounted for Due by Confederate States charged off charged, viz.: Equipment Total $152,501 00 $2,342,743 01 540,900 21 1862-63 1863-64 1864-65 1895-66 are Construction proper Incidental to construction $1,984,105 85 567,101 14 Total resources, Against which [October 20, 1866. 1, 1864, have been as 313,131 89 amounted to 287,156 03 idend 33 1-3 per cent tional paid in 63,577 50 follows: $3,812,525, and at that was date the capita? stock? increased by the stock ($1,330,841.67, less $10,641.67 frac¬ cash), and the conversion of 180 bonds ($180,000) to $5,312,725. The company bonds, July 1, 1861, amounted to $1,569,000, and were reduced by conver¬ rency 21,122 41 Railroad Supply Co. investment in Confederate sion ($180,000), and rency- assets received in gold by purchase with Confederate money 24,056 50 W. B. Vincent, tobacco lost 1,089 14 J. F. Pride & Co., (Negro hire) ($95,000). leaving the present amount at $1 >294,000. The ! 1,253 33 Sundry accounts on Books, (E. D.) reduced from debt to the State in 1861 was Confederate to Federal currency $1,080,000, and in 1866 $1,7,240 70 Interest paid the State of Tenuessee in Confederate 591,990, having been increased by a new loan of $300,000, money, which she repudiated, and interest accru¬ ing 1st Jan’y, ’66, in present liabilities, paid in and the tunding of coupons of the old debt from Jan. 1, 1862 currency 162,330 00 Losses to construction accounts, Road Materials to Jau. 1, 1866, $259,200, making the debt $1,640,200, lessand equipments by the war, and charged off so as to show the value of the property at the close of sinking fund which was paid previous to the report of 18611 the L 1,195,166 79-$ 2,367,271 72 $48,210. Balance against account July 1st, 1866 $111,914 23 The aggregate The following shows the lo^s and floating debt $1,462,314.37 (in $861 only damage to roadway, materials, rolling-stock and other property of the Company $259,634.11) is made up thus: bills payable $23$v111.25,. bills payable to United States $491,920.68, due individuals* by the war, from April 11, 1862, to July 1, 1865: $219,422.69, and sundries (chiefly current) $127,889.64. Bridging and trestles $223.6&3 00 Freight cars (593) $299,450 00 Premium Shelby Iron Co.’s stock, purchased in Confederate money Agents for C. S. accounts, and money on hand, in their hands, and reducing same to Federal cur¬ 50,000 00 cur¬ - war < Depot buildings 58,700 00 42,000 00 4,000 00 Division houses, sheds, &c. Tools Passenger and baggage.... Shop machinery Locomotives (48) Railroad materials On the other side of the account there appears an headed “ coupon bonds on hand” 81,500 00 36,642 00 150,009 00 30,100 00 item' $1,380,000. These con¬ $1,050,000, Selma and Meridian Rail¬ road 1st mortgage bonds $597,592 00 $200,000, South and North Ala¬ $597 574 79 Total amount of loss and bama Railroad 1st damage (as charged above) $1,195,166 79 mortgage bonds $100,000, and Mobile Tne table which follows shows the and Ohio Railroad 1st mortgage bonds $30,000. changes effected in the construction account from The assess of the Company July 1, 1861, to June 30, 1866 : other than the bonds as above Road,viz., gravel, wrecking, &c., cars Miscellaneous 23,250 00 245,941 79 .. sist of Tennessee 67s consist of Cost of At’ney’s fees <fe road, Damages to Exp’itures Cost of road, &c., to road, &c., in reb'lding, &c., Julyl’ 1861-65. July 1, ’61. 1865-66. 1866. $14,241 27 6,232 51 6,232 51 416,246 70 156,783 00 136,473 42 400,017 85 201,960 28 18,700 00 18,700 00 201,960 28 court costs. Ballasting Depot buildings,cotton plat¬ forms, and road crossiugs. Division and tool houses... 235,270,39 25,041 83 153,732 01 220,627 17 Engineering & conting’cies. Florence branch Fencing i, grubbing -.. 44,016 91 70 c15,668 66,900 00 315,300 00 1,920,261 27 57,005 75 230,378 22,788 156,678 153,727 above $909,703.87. Commenting on these matters the President’s Report to-* the stockholders says: “ One of the largest items increasing, your liabilities since last report (1861) as will be seen by 91 45 68 17 283,881 85 ,946,441 51 71,700 00 150,000,00 68,4^*21 184,750 00 115,688 42 47,542 65 36,642 00 33,174 73 81,500 00 40,140 00 57,005 75 ,944,709 61 467,947 79 116,014 43,775 71,434 46,393 21,019 64,169 236,607 24,756 68,568 97 38 71 00 42 82 11 05 57 receivable $122,782.73, individual dues due by agents $14,939.30, due by connecting $154,328.98, roads $469,761.92, due by United States $72,447.26, cash on hand $69,443.68, and cotton unsold $6,000—total as 5,098 42 190,780 96 ’ 1,936,481 78 453,697 79 hou-es Machinery for shops Passenger & baggage 20,000 00 4,047 58 408,214 02 Freight cars I... Grading, masonry, clearing, Salaries... Iron spikes, castings, &c... Locomotives j.... Machine shops and engine 58,700 00 bills the Treasurer’s • Balance Sheet and profit and loss account - © is— Accrued interest to the State of Tennessee “ k‘ on Company bonds •» ° $297,779 464,205 —total $761,984. This includes all interest to May 1866 7,400 00 company bonds and to July, 1866, on'State bonds. 9,683 75 The President states in his Track-laying 81,541 79 81,541 79 report that the holders of past Contingent expenses....... 59 23 W ood and water stations... due coupons have shown no 72.747 65 22,000 00 15,617 53 disposition to embarrass the Commissions 24,653 81 24,653 81 Discount Co.’s bonds... 199,696 26 199,696 26 company by pressing their claims; but some arrangement Stationery and printing.... 2,242 18 2,290 18 should be made at an early day to take up these coupons Totals $7,016,625 03 $1,087,166 79 $839,0ST 23 $6,810,488 83 and resume the payment of interest on the company’s bonds The cost of road, &c., in 1866, includes some permanent as it falls due. This, the Board thinks, can and should be work and equipment, added in 1861-2, to the amount of done by May next. They are of opinion that the holders of $41,943 36. these coupons would be willing to surrender them and take BALANCE SHEET—JUNE the company’s notes for them with interest from a 30, 1866. given The financial condition of the This on the time, payable during the fall and winter of 1867. company, as shown general balance at the close of the last fiscal year, is seen in done, it is thought that the company could resume payment the following statement: of interest by May 1st next. W est’n div. On the subject of dividends the President East’n div. Whole line. says: Capital stock Right of way Road and hand Real estate 115,194 39,648 18,885 67,072 236,305 24,696 cars.. cars 71 75 67 52 09 82 ' on on Company bonds State of Tennessee Floating debt (Huntsville office^ Receipts, 1865-6 Total $1,988,900 120,000 1,591,990 1,070,344 1,002,949 1,432,862 00 00 00 26 10 22 $6,204,096 48 $3,323,825 00 1,174,000 00 391,970 if $5,312,725 00 1,294,000 00 1.591,990 00 1,462,314 37 i’,432,'862 $4,889,795 11 22 $11,093,891 59 “ The question has often been asked me, When do you expect to pay This :s a very hard question to answer definitely. I sai 1 when the road was turned over to the company in September, 1865, that it would take two years’ receipts to rebuild the road and restore its buildings and equipment. I have seen no reason1 for changing this opinion, and without some arrangement to fund a mrge portion of your*' a dividend if . 5W •■'"■ October 20, r-Tk : '-•* *:ri ■ dividends cannot safely be counted upon before the fall of 1867 ; and I am of opinion that it will be wise policy to use the re¬ ceipts of the road to reauce this debt to a basis that it can be carried floating debt, dividends of with case without interfering with dividends before any paid. By this means you can also use a million of dollars your assets to reduce your funded debt, and you then have your road and its liabilities in a condition that you may rely with certainty upon al¬ per¬ ways realizing your dividends every six months which manence and stability to the value of your stock and greatly enhance its market value—objects so desirable, in my judgment, as to convince along are will give every stockholder of the wisdom of the policy anit Commercial (Sngliol) Nemo. ^TESOfIeXCHANGE AT LONDOIV^IND ON IiONDON, LATEST OATES. wheat, it will be necessary for us order to meet the enormous EXCHANGE ON OCT. 5. Amsterdam... Antwerp. . Hamburg Paris Paris Vienna Berlin *.. short. 3 months. 44 25.40 @25.45 short. 25.17X@25.25 3 months. 13.10 @13.20 6.26 @ 6.26X 30 44 Milan Genoa 44 Havana Rio de Janeiro Buenos Ayres. Madras Calcutta Sydney — 44 44 41 44 44 44 8 mo’s. * — - — — 4s. 5d. 4s. 5d. day’s 44 44 44 44 44 30 days io%<m lslOX<2@ lalOX<2@ is 1 p. c. - — — disc. - ©25.27X © 25.17X 25.12X — 3 mo’s. Sept. 28. 3 mo’s. — — 30X 53 — Sept. 8. Sept. 12. 90 days. Sept. 8. 60 days. Aug. 27. Aug. 17. Aug. 16. Aug. 23. 6 mo’s. Aug. 28. 44 Aug. 24. 44 Sept. 28. .. Sept. 26. 44 44 Sept. 27. Aug. 26. 80 days. breadstufis of * greatly embarrassed, and are not in a position undertakings. Land owners clamor for pay¬ ment ; cases are tried at the law courts, and some of the financial com¬ panies which appear to be in want of funds, and which hold railway stocks have pressed their securities upon the market during the present week ; the result being that in several instances, a heavy fall has taken place in prices. I subjoin some of the prices of railway shares and financial companies’ shares, those, for instance in which the two classes of un¬ bankrupt, or are to complete their other:—London, Chat¬ dertakings have had some connection with each and Dover Railway, stock, issued at £62, price £16|; Western, £100 stock, £52; Credit Foncier and Mobilier Great Financial, £25 paid, £9* This looks liko an far as these par ticular undertakings are concerned, and it is evident that there is not adequate remunerative business to be obtained for financial concerns. What is the actual position of these companies is of course not publicly known ; but if they are in a position to return the original capital, or a portion of it, to the shareholders, it would be satisfactory if the direc¬ tors were to follow the example of the directors of the British and California Banking Company, and effect a voluntary winding-up. We thus see that cotton, corn and financial undertakings are likely to have important bearing on the future. With regard to the latter, should they be compelled to close their doors, much inconvenience will neces¬ sarily be felt, but the good to be effected eventually can scarcely be overrated. Banking, when conducted on sound principles, is one of the safest and most remunerative of trades; but financial companies have traded recklessly, and have mademdvances of such a nature than when funds are required they are not in a position to realize immediately. paid, £3£; and London unhealthy state of things so — 60 days. to purchase every available quarter consumption in progress here. The national Financial, £6 i— — — Oct. 4. ■v>v;:>::^ v.-n ■ - ofvEngland (Financial Association) £8 paid, £3|; English and Foreign Credit. £7. 10s paid, £5 to £4 discount; General Credit, £5 paid, 8f; Inter¬ — — ?■ ':• ham — Oct 5. 44 IX p. c. disc, 11.77X@ _ 44 60 RATE. — — 44 — LONDON. 25.25 13.6 ;•-• • price of English wheat is about eleven shillings per quarter higher than at this period last year; consequently, for the we import during the next twelve months a much larger sum money than in 1865-6 will be required in payment. There is another un¬ favorable circumstance, viz., the position of several financial undertak¬ ings of recent formation, and of several railways. Financial under¬ takings have lately been very much interested in the formation of new lines of rail, and have made heavy advances to contractors. Many of these lines are yet unfinished; some of the contractors are either — 4k — — Valparaiso.... Hong Kong... Ceylon Bombay @29.20 @27.20 @27.10 — — Jamaica Pernambuco.. Singapore 27.10 27.10 27. 0 — short. 44 @46X 61X@ 51X 44 Naples New York.... @ 30X 47 Cadiz Lisbon TIME. Oct. 5. 1116X@11.17X 25.47X@25.52X 13. 8 @13. 9 Petersburg St. LATEST DATE. RATE. TIME. ON— • average AT EXCHANGE AT LONDON— , 489 n Cattst Jllonetora o ^v: ■■-■■-■ ; CHRONICLE. THE I860.] '■■: 160X 2X P- c. prem. 27X@— 23 ©23X 49X@— 44X@- 24X@25 4s. 7d. @— 4s. 4Xd.@— 6@7 p. c. dis. Is. 11 %d. Is. 11 %a. 2s. oa. IX P* c. prem. [From our own Correspondent.! London, Saturday, Oct. 6,1866. present week, although there jis abundance of money seeking employment in the discount market, whilst the rates for money downward, has been one of comparative gloom, which has to some ex¬ tent been intensified by the announcement received yesterday from Bombhy that circumstances, compelled the Directors of the Asiatic Banking Corporation to close their doors. This institution was formed in 1864, the authorized capital being £2,000,000, and the present paidThe tend or an The fact is there are there has been a has too many financial companies, and for that reason scramble for business, and consequently been obtained. The week has been an important one as much worthless business * regards the money market* capital £650,000. A dividend of 20 per cent, has been paid; but, A large amount of Indian paper has matured; hence, merchants en¬ undertaking is a corporation, the shareholders are liable for twice gaged in the India trade have required large advances. The fourth of the amount of their shares, or £40. It is no surprise that financial in¬ the month has also been passed over, and, with but one exception, the stitutions connected with Bombay are greatly embarrassed. For many bills maturing have been well met. These advances, however, were months, the position of affairs at that port has been most unsatisfactory, chiefly required in the early part of the week, and the demand for the rage for new companies having led to great losses in all quarters. money was then very active, both at the Bank of England and in the The new companies brought before the public at Bombay during the last two years have been beyond all precedent and all reason ; and at open market. The inquiry has since fallen off, and the rates out of doors, which, at one period of the week, were equal to those ruling at the commencement of the present year a collapse occurred, and the shares the Bank, are now about £ per cent, below those quotations. There is suddenly fell to a heavy discount. It is, however, a satisfactory circum¬ abundance of money seeking investment in the discount market, the stance that, although very numerous failures have occurred at Bombay available supply being greater than can be profitably employed by the during the present year, but few European houses have as yet succumbed discount houses and joint-stock banks. Of course, in times like these, these new undertakings having found favor chiefly among the native merchants and capitalists. Amongst these native merchants, failures money might easily be employed, but to make remunerative advances now requires much discrimination. Good paper is therefore readily are announced with liabilities varying from £500 to as much as £2,000,taken at rates about £ per cent under those of the Bank of England. 000, and even £4,000,000 ; the latter sum being the estimated amount Annexed are the rates for discount, so far as the best paper is concerned: of the liabilities of Mr. Fremchaud Roychand, the leading native mer¬ PerCent. PerCent. 3 months’ bills 4X@ — chant at Bombay, and the greatest speculator. Most of these losses, Bank minimum 4X@ — 6 & 4 months’ bank bills.. 4 @4# Open market rates: 4X@5X however, are unconnected with legitimate trade, or even with trade at 30 to 60 days’ bills 4X@ X 6 & 4 months’ trade bills.. all; for, with a failure for £2,000,000, which recently took place, there At St. Petersburg the rates tend upwards ; but in other part* of the were 101 creditors, of which only six were of the ordinary description. Continent very little change has taken place duiing the week. The The liabilities of the Asiatic Banking Corporation are about £3,500,000. At first sight it seems somewhat difficult to give reasons for the pre¬ supply of bullion held by the Bank of France continues to decrease, and is now £28,143,532, whilst, at the same time, the demand for accommo¬ vailing gloom over affairs here, when the supply of available capital is dation is augmenting. The rates current at the leading continental increasing, and the rates for money tend downwards. There are still cities are as under : Pank many persons who adhere to the opinion that the immediate future is Open Bank Open market. rate. market. rate. secure, and that we may yet see greatly renewed activity in most $ c. $c. 9 c. $ c. 6 branches of trade. At present trade continues to decline in extent, and Turin 3 At Paris 3 2X Brussels 5X Vienna 314 adv— apart from cotton and corn, which under present circumstances must be n Berlin 9" Madrid considered, in some measure, beyond the control of the money market, 4 Hamburg 4 3X Frankfort 7-10 7 the quotations have a slight drooping tendency. But, in the first place> St. Petersburg— 5X Amsterdam...: it may be observed, the future is very uncertain. Two most important The exchanges this week have been steady, and the rates are rather branches of trade—cotton and Lreadstuffs—which have a great regulat¬ Advices from Bombay, however, state more favorable to this country. ing influence on the money market, are likely to have an unusual in¬ that the exchange on London was rising, and, it seems probable, an fluence this year; for it is certain that as regards the one—cotton—we shall import a large supply at a high price, whilst so far as regards export of silver to the East will shortly take place, bat not until the ex* up as the t — .... 4* .... _ " .... 44 .... 1 .... — .yv.s*^ ■• S' -v-’ -^1 y~ »'••’ ' v-‘ ‘.a.'-'v: THE CHRONICLE. 490 ' . ports of cotton from Bombay are on a more extensive scale. The late rise hi prices here will naturally have the effect of stimulating exports. The Consol market, more especially towards the close of the week, has ruled heavy, and prices are now about ± per cent, lower than on Monday. The settlement in consols takes place next week, and as the future a fortnight since was viewed in a favorable light, whilst it was anticipated, in some quarters, that the minimum rate for money would be four per cent., there have been numerous speculators for a rise, and there Appears to be a large “.bull ” account open. The loss to those who are not in a position to take up their stock, or who do not desire to carry over their transactions to the November account, will be rather consid¬ erable. Annexed are the highest and lowest prices of Consols each day during the week: Week ending Oct. 6 Monday. Tuesday. W ed ’ day j Tli u’day. Consols for money. 89# # 89# # j 89# # 89 Friday. 89# # # Sat’day. 89# # shares, on large orders received from New York by telegraph, have been much firmer, and have considerably im¬ proved in value. The market for United States Five-twenty bonds has been tolerably steady, although occasionally weak. Illinois Central Bailway shares are steady. The aggregate business done in American securities this week is but moderate. United States Five-twenty bonds close this afternoon at 70 @ 70} ; Atlantic and Great Western consoli¬ dated mortgage bonds, 45 @ 47 ; do debentures, 64} @ 65£; Erie Rail* way shares, 61 @ 52 ; and Illinois Centrals, 78 @79. The highest and Erie Bailway Atlantic prices of American securities each day of this week are sub- lowest joined [October 20,186& probable the market will be rather quiet for the next few weeks, and it even possible prices may slightly decline. As a rule, at the present period of the year, farmers send large supplies of wheat to market to meet the Michaelmas rents, now due ; and such is evidently tha case this year. A decline in prices, however, can scarcely be permanent, for the advices at hand from France this week report increased firmness in the wheat trade in that country, with an upward movement in prices. whilst at present it does not seem probable we shall receive any iml portant supplies of wheat and flour from America doling the present year. The crop in Russia appears to be excellent both as regards quantity and quality, and large shipments will shortly be made to this is country. following is a statement of the closing quotations in the London market for consols and American securities on each day of the week ending 18634. on Thursday last: Fri. 12. Consols for money U. S. 6s (5-20years).... Illinois Central shares.. Erie Railway shares.... Sat. 13. 89# 71# 78# 48# 89# 70# 78# 49# : For week AMERICAN SECURITIES. Mon. Tues. ending October 6. Fri. Wed. Thur. Sat. 71 United States 5-20’s, 6 per cent, 1882.. 70# 70# 70# 70# 70# 71 71 71 60 44 50 44 50 44 71 50 44 71 50 44 71 Virginia65 per cent ao section, 1st mortgage, 1880 ——Pennsylvania section, lstm, 1877.. do cons’ted mort. b’ds, 1895. Erie shares, 100 dollars, all paid do Convertible bonds, 6 per cent Illinois Central, 6 per cent, 1875 do 7 per cent, 1875 do $100 shares, all paid.. Marrietta and Cincinnati, 7 per cent... New York Central, 100 dollar shares... Panama Rail, 7 per cent, 1872, 2d mort. 70 71 46 70 71 47 70 71 70 71 70 70 71 71 46# 46# 46# 49# 51# 51# 51 69 69 69 69 52 69 46* 51# 82# 78# 78# 78# 78# 78# 67 67 67 77# 78# 69 69 69 67 79 69 67 77# 67 78 69 62# 62# 62# 62# 62# 62# do ' do do , per 1881 — cent 101 101 101 -- 69 7*# 69 101 82# 34# 75# 82# 34# 76 34# 75# 82# 34# 77# xd75# $50 shares Philadelphia and Erie, 1st mortgage, 1881, (gua. by Penu. Railroad Co) do with option to be paid in Philadelphia Canada 6 per cent do 5 per cent do 50 44 101 101 82# 84# 82# &i# Pennsylvania R.R. 2d mort., 6 p. c— 75 82# • 92# 77 77 93 76 77# xd~5 92# 92# 76# 93# 77# 77# 93# 76 77# 76 76 Fri. Sat. PAL AMERICAN SECURITIES. -Tr¬ Mon ending October 6. Toes. Wed. Thur. 70# 69# 70# 70# 46 t Western 46# 49# 77# 46# 51# 46# 49# 78 78 70# 70# consolidated nds dollars, all paid 100 dollars, all paid 48# 77# — 46 45# 51# 78# 51 78# wing statement shows the state of the market for United twenty bonds on the Continent during the week ending Sep. 29. Sep. 28. . Franfcw&t: .. Berlin. - 73 5-16 74 9-16 74 73# , 74# 67# 74# - 67 >' Oct. 1. 72# 72# 73# 65# Oct. 2. 71 15-16 72# Oct. 4. 72 1-16 Oct. 3. 71# 72# 72# 73 73 65# 73 66 65# import of gold into the United Kingdom during the week ending officially stated at £455,512, of silver at £414,202. The ex¬ ports in the same period were—gold, £68,727 ; silver, £562,517. As regards ailyer,.the shipments were as follows; To Hamburg, 336,000 ounces; to Holland, 210,040 ounces ; to Belgium, 280,000 ounces, and to France, 1,880,200 ounces. The pricey current for bullion are as under : ] *• \ The Oct. 8 is C ' ' ’ 1 GOLD. .. United States Gold Coin 1 76s. last price 9d. 2#d. d. l#d. 4s. standard. do ll#d. per oz. per oz. per os. none here per q?. Spanish Dollars (Carolus) Five franc pieces Quicksilver £7 1 5s. 5a. per oz. gold Fine Cake Silver Mexican Dollars ... 10#d. silver. Bar Silver-. do contains: .5 grs. On at which it 89# 68# 78# 50# per o o «*• was Breadstuffs sustained to the latest dates. are tending upwards, the weather having again become Western mixed corn on the 16 th advanced unfavorable for late crops. to 80s. per cental. generally have been dull and the market easier, with clining tendency. a de¬ COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Imports show a and Exports for Week.—The the slight increase in dry goods but a imports this week large falling off in general merchandise, so that the total is only $3,934,154, against $4,407,005 last week, and $4,675,966 the previous week. The exports are $2,285,710 this week, against $2,930,151 last week, and $2,042,566 the pre¬ vious week. The exports of cotton the past week were only 1,198 bales, ‘against 2,999 bales last week. Included in the exports were 13,456 bbls. wheat flour, 172 bbls rye flour, 4,360 bbls. corn meal, 13,928 bush, oats, 985 bush, peas, 220,943 bush, corn, 312 pkgs candles, 1,410 tons coal, 400 bales bay, 10 bales hops, 728 bbls. spirits turpentine, 4,108 bbls. rosin, 7 bbls. tar, 46 bbls. pitch, 85 galls, whale oil, 7,497 galls, sperm oil, 20 galls, linseed oil, 200 galls, lard oil, 1,192,507 galls, petro¬ leum, 718 bbls. pork, 406 bbls. beef, 100 tcs. beef, 28,364 lbs. cut meats, 36,908 lbs. butter, 1,078,665 lbs. cheese, 134,846 lbs. lard, 100 bbls. rice, 257,683 lbs. tallow, 1,357 hhds. tobacco, 168 other pkgs. crude tobacco, 182,905 lbs. manufactured tobacco, 2,322 lbs. whalebone. following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry-goods) Oct. 12, and for tne week ending (for general merchan¬ dise) Oct. 13 : The FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK Total for the week $2,780,261 2,512,484 $1,995,336 1,938,818 $3,247,663 177,183,499 $4,288,947 144,685,121 $3,934,154 240,867,268 $180,431,162 $148,974,068 $244,801,422 1,400,976 140,209,059 January 1 In ou£ report $142,989,320 Since 1866. 1865. $2,279,936 2,009,011 $735,179 $1,379,385 General merchandise. FOR THE WEEK. 1864. 1863. Dry goods - of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry goods for one week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Oct. 15 : EXPORTS PROM HEW YORK POR THE 1863. 1866. 1865. $5,452,800 $4,161,096 135,386,184 Previously reported 169,797,396 120,219,890 $2,285,710 148,268,934 $175,250,196 $124,380,986 $160,544,644 .$138,266,601 January 1 Since WEEK. 1864. • $2,880,417 For the week department will be found the official detailed imports and exports for the week. The following will show the exports of specie from the port of New York for the week ending Oct. 18, 1866 : In the commercial Oct. 11—S.S. C. of “ “ “ Foreign gold&silver Dublin, Liv’l— For London— Mexican silver. American gold For Havre— Mexican gold $4,996 12—S.S. Teutonia, Hamburg— Mexican gold Silver com 12—S.S. C. of N. York, Gold bars Silver bars American gold during the week, owing to tbe^IljU$4 home-grown produce forwarded to market, and a tion from abroad, has ruled quiet, but, as regardsAU-gjeod atoff4l*jje wheats, the market has .continued to present ‘p firm- k£p**trtmce^ m ’ 15,000 50,000 Liv’l— 13,700 16,000 24,654 Mexican silver;.... Total for the week... i... Previously reported 12—S.S. Bremen, BremenTotal since Jan. bottle; discount 3percent;.^ > The wheat trade ' Liverpool cotton market has been active throughout the week. the 12th the price was advanced to 15d., and on the 15th to l&}d., , per oz. '; i V 9d. 9d. do South American Doubloons... r J7 77s. 77s. 77s. 74s. 6d. to 74s. Spanish Doubloons. i ...do , Wed. 17. Thur. 18 statement of the pcf oz. standard. last price do * do do do Bar Gold do Fine... Reflnable do ■ S9# 68# 78# 49 89# 70# 78# 49# The Previously reported ; Mon. 15. Tues. 16. Provisions HIGHEST PRICES OP :t Kr English Market Reports—Per Cable. The Same time in 1865 $54,113,933 1,1866 $23,808,975 ..... £5,806,051 Same time In 1858 1867..... 1856 36,007,878 45,811,727 1855 1862 v3661 3,283,282 1864. 860. r.40,059,472 1858 Vr4'.:, t. .V..; frft . 60,019,525 *198,050 $53,915,888 1852 .$22,513,748 . 83,216,727 29,090,584 24,784,768 * 17,680,854 ... v.V. i .1 HI ,922,987 ?, f^^Wifi^^$^f^^^r^:^^::-r--y •;•'•'■• ' Y - -:> :';.- Y Y ' / Y •' '-• /";Y/-'“ ■•*•:•. r ‘ '- • * • •-., •^*1 *:■'■ . 1 CHRONICLE. AT THE are Mon. Bank Shares Wed. Tues. 167 141 170 Fri’y. Week. 214 829 137 200 Chicago & Alton Chicago, Burlington & Q. 100 200 Chicago & Great Eastern. Chicago & Northwestern. 15,926 87,900 20,194 Chicago, R. Isl. & Pacific. 4,000 7.100 4,300 Cleveland, Col. & Cincin. 50 150 270 ‘266 'ioo 770 124 200 24 .... .... 150 . 17,960 25,800 37,435 2,700 7,600 1,200 155,155 26,900 41 293 202 .... 11,666 8,500 7,600 19 7.300 200 4,600 3,900 7,300 1,950 3.700 9,600 2,000 35.500 34,800 6,‘707 4,650 7,700 8,‘250 35,847 1*550 600 2.100 900 900 1.018 105 2,100 1,700 100 100 700 400 200 6,400 Cleveland & Pittsburg.... Cleveland and Toledo 10,400 15,400 8,400 9,800 Delaware, Lacka. & West Erie Railway Hannibal & St. Joseph Hudson River Dlinois Central Marietta & Cincinnati 1,340 500 200 400 - ... Michigan Central Michigan Southern Mil. & Prairie du Chien Milwaukee & St. Paul New York Central New York & New Haven. 300 200 900 1,250 900 .... .... 100 25 7,400 9,300 4,800 3,800 50 22,350 7,405 4,915 11,083 4,902 39,797 8 58 50 2',466 700 25,602 28,550 71,200 6,800 17,650 120 700 1,550 Norwich & Worcester .... “50 Mississippi (.$100) 5,192 7,410 2,900 6,100 l'eoo Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic. 3,300 6,500 7,600 8,150 4,900 Reading— * * 7,900 16,700 11,600 13,100 17,600 St. Lome, Alton & T. 2,800 1,100 100 8,250 3,200 700 150 400 200 .. 450 1,400 1,900 ‘300 Pacific Mail 309 * ‘800 soo 500 300 12 100 590 1,600 100 550 1,600 2,700 300 500 600 900 300 500 400 700 900 35 200 .... .... 600 100 1U0 700 200 500 900 3,600 5,140 1,420 1,400 50 2,442 250 900 2,000 1,100 ■366 200 7.400 230 8.400 2,740 100 .... 3,700 .... ioo 95 .... 100 5,800 200 .. 500 50 600 1,500 Spring Mountain Russian Wilkesbarre Coal 1.500 .... 1,266 300 Western Union Telegraph “ “ 3,700 ’266 1,266 2,200 1,'700 1,000 25 ‘900 1,500 18 200 600 1,950 92,09 " * 2,000 1,685 1,600 ‘ 200 100 .... Spruce Hill Coal Unien Navigation * 700 25 ... Rutland Marble Smith & Parmelee Gold.. 200 200 ‘ 50 Pennsylvania Coal Quicksilver 4 166 ... 400 800 500 400 r 625 • 800 .. Mariposa 300 ‘800 2 200 ,1000 400 1,200 4,300 800 300 .... 1,466 1,200 — 3,100 255 2 200 200 100 100 900 400 150 3,628 .... 1,700 1,330 58.500 9,900 1,402 50 H.. 6.500 .2,018 6,200 Ohio A . 17,385 1,900 1,500 600 1,500 3,700 15,452 1,830 3,200 The volume of transactions in shares at the two Boards, comparatively, each day of the two last weeks, and the total for the same weeks, is shown the following statement: -Reg. Board. Last week. Saturday Monday... Tuesday Wednesday.... • 49,090 68,989 30,540 36,303 39,010 62,290 Thursday Friday 299,236 „ The transactions in shares Prey’s week. week. 35,800 41,050 38,430 89,300 59,440 47,000 78,610 54,880 48,532 77,537 55,100 46,300 69,900 292,580 weekly since the 25th of May May are 5 12 19 74,734 80,810 107,390 94,832 147,437 shown in the ending Regular Open Friday. Board. Board. August 10.... 165,587 134,603 August 17.... 161,581 110,316 August 24....171,227 126,910 Aug. 31 (5 days)110,344 112,465 Sept. 7 107,208 165,050 14 21 28 71,590 664,266 576,793 Week 25....228,080 454,381 682,461 June 1(5 days).228,873 880,306 609,179 June’ 8 ...204,080 278,850 482,930 Jane 16.... 126,591- 268,910 396,501 Jane 22... 150,864 238,680 389,544 June 29....119,437 165,500 284,937 Sept. July 6 (4 days)113,413 110,300 223,713 Sept. July " 13....202,529 227,640 436,169 Sept. July . 20....167,471 260,300 427,771 Oct. July 27....121,265 185,552 306,817 Oct. August 3....225,075 204,156 429,234|Oct. - 84,890 158,289 120,693 92,535 115,102 92,757 41,800 284,213 365,030 following statement: Weekending Regular Open Both Friday. Board. Board. Boards . Last for by -Both Boards—, Last Prev’s week. week. -Open Board—, Prev’s week. 61,253 45,535 36,492 37,877 Total of week 133,403 150,914 189,497 223,170 198,822 245,400 ..386,276 454,600 284,213 292,580 ..299,236 365,030 Both Boards 300,189 271,897 298,137 223,309 272,258 284,317 412,667 444,222 840,876 576,793 664,266 The are Government, State, &c., bonds sold at the two Boards, daily, last week, given in the following statement: Sat. U. S. 6’s, 1881 $105,000 U.S 6’s (5-20’s). 485,000 U.S6’s (old) A. - 5,500 U.8 5’s (10-408) 10,000 U.SS’s (old) ' U. S 7-30 notes. 71,500 Mon. .. Tues. $74,000 . $10,000 $19,500 $110,000 $116,000 $434,500 235,000 219,200 152,900 468,000 1,970,800 5,000 19 000 12,866 83,000 25,000 231,000 5,000 l... 11,000 36,000 410,700 82,000 20,000 7,600 .... 736,850 State bonds, viz.: California 7’s. Illinois 6’s Kentucky 6’s. Wed. 33,100 5,000 2,'666 N.Y. State 5’s. N.Y. State 6’s. N. Y. State 7’s N. Carolina 6’s Tennessee 6’s. 2,000 10,000 Virginia 6’s,.. City bonds, viz.: Fri. *■ 5,000 1,000 2,000 1,006 2,000 12,000 4,000 2,000 13,000 26,000 55,000 15,000 i',666 .... Jerse: City 6’s >y 1*666 New York 6’s. 4,000 19,000 6 000 4,000 3,000 80,000 19,000 5,000 105,000 1,500 4,500 following is Week 185,000 1,208,550 15,000 5,000 Brookl4n 6’s.. The 174*&00 ; 19,000 2*666 15,000 22,000 Thnr. 0 .... Michigan fi’s.. Missouri 6’s.. 99,000 5,000 33,000 3,000 122,500 258,000 9,000 4,500 1,000 4,500 of the amount of Governments, State and City securities, and railroad bonds, sold on each day: ' «■ Sat. Mon. , Tues. Wed. Thnr. Fri. Week. U. S. Bonds.... $605,000 $586,700 $262*000 $332,700 $287,900 $603,000 $2,677,300 tT.8*Notes..... .71,500 7,6001736,850 83,100 174,500 1:35,000 1,208,550, •State* CRy b’ds r 49,Q00 J98,500 106,500 45,000 68.000 ‘ 85,500 549,500 Railroad a summary - _ , Bonds ; ► > 42,000 15,000 30,000 81,500 ^ Totalofweek.. ■yyyyy-yyy ivy' $4,827,200 April May $^67,500 1 ‘8S07,806J,*102,850 492,800 60,000 ________________ 28,000 - ____________ Bonds. $3,340,100 3,846,500 8,931,300. 5,798,300 March State, &c., Railroad , $952,900 2,591,900 1.691.500 2,903,600 1.679.500 1,236,600' 1,614,000 1,633,000 1,986,990 2,984,000 3,006,700 3,789,650 8,002,700 - 2,258,250 7,463,800 * 2,485,250 10,476,250 2,198,750 10,987, S50 2,577,000 6,451,300 ' 2.425,350 ' . July August September and for the weeks ending on Friday— $1*002,750 Sept. 7 Sept. 14 Sept. 21 Sept. 28 $2,354,200 5 '1.681,400 Oct. Oct. Oct. 1,456,000 1,174,800 1,254,300 12 . 19 $12,165,700 1,692,100 9,822,000 781.240 10,622,840 12,066,150 12,279,450 12,078,750 14,766,500 16,544,750 12,739,860 838,700 \ 781,900 5*5,700 455,500 993,000 879,200 $197,700 179.500 207,600 259.500 239,200 549.500 432,750 308,500 480,700 1,208,550 2,849,600 2,677,300 $3,035,500 516,000 791,000 1,061,500 768,000 814.500 261,500 . amount. $514,500 730,900 Total Bonds. 256.500 $4,069,105 2,912,400 2,424,800 3,008,050 2,997,109 4,264,300 4,691,850 119.500 6.400 3,015 3,245 7,692 Toledo, Wabash & West’n 4,500 Miscellaneous shares, viz.: Adams Express..'.... 100 19 .... 100 .. Ashburton Coal.; American Express Ashburton Coal. .< Atlantic Mail.... Brunswick Land.Boston Water Power t Butler Coal.. Canton Central Coal Citizens’ Gas Cumberland Coal Delaware & Hud. Canal January February June Railroad shares, viz.: Central of New Jersey.... fc Thurs. Governments Bonds. Notes. , STOCK BOABDS. The following shows the description and number of shares sold at the Reguar and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday. Sat. 491 The totals of each class of securities sold in the first nine months of the year shown in the statement which follows: ®f)c Bankers’ ©alette. BUSINESS -•?£: * October 20, 1866.] 256,500 _______________ 590,400 901,500 4,691,850 ’* Friday, Oct. 19,1S66, P, M. The Money Market.—The money market has exhibited in¬ creased activity during the week. The demand for loans from ’• speculative operators in stocks and gold has been quite active. The tightness of the Western money markets has also had a tendency to drain off the surplus means centering in the banks of this city. The Western bauks are beginning to economize their resources in anticipation of a demand for money for moving the hog crop, which may be expected to set in soon after the opening of November; and our own banks sympathize with this tendency ; in addition to which there is a perceptible demand for currency for moving the cotton crop, and for paying the tax upon that product; the latter demand being all the more important in its bearing upon the money market from the fact that the currency pu^es imo the Treasury, and is kept permanently out of circulation. These facts appear to have produced a conviction among the banks that the period of extreme ease has culminated, and that fcfr the remainder of the year money must range above the low rates of interest lately current. The result has been an advance of aboq£ one per cent, in the rate upon demand loans. A few booses hrfirifclass standing still borrow at four per cent.; and we have heard of instances in which round days ; sums have been loaned at that rate for .30 but the majority of transactions per cent. The rate of discount has not . on call done at five are . changed to any quotable extent. There is, however, much less done at the lower rates, and 5 per cent. be said to be the minimum for A 1 paper of short date, the being done at 5|{g)6 per cent. The following are the quotations for loans of various classes: may bulk of transactions Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 2 months Per cent. 4 © 5 6 <g> 7 Good endorsed hills, 3 * 5 do single names Lower grades , © 4months — Per cent. 5*© 6 . 6 @7 9 ©12 United States Securities.—The general course of the market steadily upward. Bonds have risen slightly in London, the Philadelphia Ledger canard notwithstanding; nor has the advance been interrupted by the decline in the premium on gold. An expectation that the proceeds of the coupons of bonds held in Europe will be, to a, large extent, reinvested iu bonds, backed by orders to so employ coupons already arrived here, has had the effect of inducing foreign bankers to buy up Five-twenties of 1862 which, being comparatively scarce, have advanced daring the week from 113 to 115f, closing steady at 115£@115£. Five-twenties-of 1864 and 1865 have advanced f to -g-, in sympathy with the improve¬ for Governments has been ment in the old issue. The new issue of 1865 show activity more the supply from the Treasury, in exchange for Seven-thirties, in¬ creases, and the bonds close to-day at 108J. Ten-forties have ad¬ vanced from 99f to par, following the movement in other securities. The improvement in Five twenties has drawn np the 1st series of as Seven-thirties to 107—an advance of f-rwhile in the 2d and 3d series the improvement is The Government has purchased from private holders, during the week, about $3,000,000 of the bonds of 1867 and 1868, the former gold, and the latter at 90 ; and is prepared to entertain offers for further amounts of these securities, upon the same terms. The price of the bonds, however, is at present so high as to forbid at 92 in further transactions. The following are the closing prices of leading securities, pared with preceding weeks : U. S. 6’s, 1881 coup U. S. 5-20’s, 1862coupons. U. 8. 5-20’s, 1864 “ U. S.5-20’8,1865 U. S. 5-20’b, 1865, Vi S 10-40’8, “ N. is».\ .’ ‘V U* S 7-30’s 1st series...4... U. S. 7-80’B2d Series U. S 7-30’s 8rd series. com¬ Sep. 14. Sep. 21. Sep. 28. Oct. 5. Oct. 12. Oct. 111* HI* 108* 108* 98* 106 106 a 106* 111* HI* 108* 108* 99 106 106 106 HI* 111* 109 109 ~99* 106* j 106* 106 112* 112* 109* 109* 112* 113* 110* 110* 19 113* 116* 110* .Ill* ^108* 99* .99* 4.99* 106* 107 106* 106 106* 106* 106* 106* 106* ... * - Yl 01 [October 20,1866. CHRONICLE. THE 492 The exports for the same Stocks.—The upward course ending October 13 were $510,320. period were $198,050. of stock speculation was arrested at the opening of the week by The transactions at the Custom House and the office of the the unexpected appearance of heavy amounts of gold on the market. United States Assistant Treasurer, for last week, were as follows : It was rumored (erroneously) that the gold had been sold by the Sub-Treasury Custom House. Receipts. Payments. Receipts. Government, and was to be succeeded by further sales. These state¬ $4,810,138 96 $3,415,061 94 :..... $453,109 28 Oct. 2,343,066 28 1,973,737 80 ments had the effect of producing an apprehension of stringency in 491,652 95 1,431,698 53 631,390 00 317,216 97 1.157,618 39 326,519 35 the money market, and the speculative holders of stocks at once be¬ 311,793 38 1,564,534 52 379,539 05 479.658 65 came sellers, the rush to realize causing a decline in price of 3@4 2,369,488 07 1,186,238 47 13 492,930 62 $13,681,534 72 per cent. The semi-panic, however, had the effect of drawing out $7,912,486 61 Total $2,546,361 85 90,288,601 41 a large amount of short contracts ; which formed the basis of another Balance in Sub-Treasury morning of Oct. 8. $103,970,136 18 upward movement; and prices have, consequently, since advanced, 7,912,486 61 Deduct payments during the week so that, upon an average, quotations range about the same as a $96,057,649 52 Saturday evening week ago. There is, however, some uneasiness among the large Balance 5,769,048 11 Increase during the week holders of stocks, and less confidence in realizing the extreme high Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $2,362,000. Included prices predicted a few days ago. The outside support has been in the receipts of customs were $371,000 in gold, and $2,175,361 partly withdrawn within the week, and a heavier task is thus in Gold Certificates. thrown upon the cliques. At the same time, there is some caution The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the Subabout putting out short contracts, in the face of the strong interest enlisted in favor of higher prices. The condition of the market is, Treasury since July 7 : Changes in Sub-Treasury Custom Weeks Balances. House. Payments. Receipts. Balances. Ending perhaps, not such as to prevent further strong efforts to force up Inc. $7,220,061 $25,259,144 $88,065,802 July 7.... $2,471,626 $18,039,0S3 Inc. 6,183,895 16.366.534 94,243,198 10,184,139 14.... prices, but, judging from the temper of operators, it would appear 2,486,296 Dec. 2,675,266 13,797,169 91,572,928 16,472.438 21.... 2,480,149 Dec. 6,668,66ft likely that such attempts will be spasmodic, and fail to inspire an 85,904,262 28.... 2,926,8S4 19,682,106 14,013,440 Dec. 8,436,628 Railroad Miscellaneous and on » “ “ “ effective confidence. Ang. 4 “ 11.... 18.... 25... 82,467,634 86,439,444 88,816,644 18,578,526 9,747,042 13, <539,422 22,015,194 5,825,232 11,262,202 16,709,883 47,807,365 16,820,266 19,047,272 5,680,903 25,238,192 7,766,499 7,912,486 2,794,658 2,676,331 3,971,810 Inc. 2,377,219 2,461,876 speculation has been in Northwestern common stock, Inc. 7,190,604 23.900,447 96,007,229 3,069,803 Dec. 13,712,686 which to-day has touched 5l£. 34,094,678 82,294,542 The speculation in Michigan Sept. 1 3,199,168 Inc. 2,269,462 19,0s9,718 84,563,995 8.... 3,222,265 Inc. 2,520,848 Southern and Ohio and Mississippi Certificates halts, and the 21,568,121 87,048,843 15... 3,105,457 Inc. 6,772,256 12,453,160 93,857,100 22,... 2,399,270 Dec. 6,014,268 cliques appear to be realizing upon them. 19,223,924 87,842,831 29.... 2,876,717 Inc. 2,445,769 10,212,269 90,288,601 In the Miscellaneous list, the chief activity has been in Cum¬ Oct. 6.... 2,266,334 Inc. 5,769,048 13.681.534 96,057,649 13.... 2,546,361 berland Coal and Quicksilver, both of which have advanced, but Foreign Exchange.—There has been decidedly a more active subsequently declined. demand for foreigu bills during the week, under which the price of The transactions in stocks at the boards show an important in¬ Drawers are disposed to sterling has advanced about 1 per cent. crease above those of last week, though not up to the large figures hold for higher rates in expectation of a large demand for bills for of the week preceding. The total number of shares sold at both remittance on account of November coupons sent from Europe for boards, for the last six days, compare as follows: The chief “ “ “ “ Last week. 299,236 365,030 Regular Board Open Board Prev. week. 664,266 576,793 The transactions in bonds at the Stock Exchange are also above those of last week, as appears from the following comparison : Last week. U. S. Bonds U. S. Notes State und City Prev. week. $2,677,300 1,208,550 549,500 256,500 $4,691,850 $1,681,400 .' Bonds Railroad Bonds Tota Cumberland Coal Quicksilver .... Canton Co Erie Hudson River.... Reading Mich. Southern.. Michigan Central Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern.... preferred .. 30% 116 9"% 122% 116% 80% 114 .... 112 107% 89% 122% 42% 73% 107% 108% 123% 128 .... .... 109 109 111 104% Rock Island Fort Wayne Illinois Central .... .... Mariposa pref.... New York Central “ 53% 55% 105 122 122% 105% 121% $2,997,100 The imports of gold at 154% Oct.’ 163% Oct. 150% Oct. 58 54% •56% 80% 118% 83% 122% 116% 90% 117% 93% 127% 46% 75% 108% 109% 128 17 147% 148% 19 147% 18... 5.27%@5.25 6.27%@5.25 Swiss 58% 55% — 29% 119% City Banks. — 120 51% 76 108% 109% 127 148% 148% 149 this port from foreign ports for the week 5.22%@ .... 6,30 @5.26% @5.18% 5.20 @5.*2% @5.22% 35%@ 36 5.25 5.25 • 41 41 @ — @ — 77%@ 78 71% @ -- -The @5.26% @ 35% 40%@ 40%@ 6.30 107%@ 108 10S%@ 108% 109%@ 109% 5.22% @5.20 5.18%@ .... 5.25 @5.22% 6.28%@5.22% 85 .... .... 77%@ 77% 71 @ 71% 30%@ 41 41 .... @ 41% @ 41% 78%@ .... 72 .... following statement @ shows tbe condition of the the week 13, 1866 Associated Banks of the City of New York tor ending with the commencement of business ou Oct. : Average Specie. $8,431,825 $1,024,516 Banks. New York Manhattan Mechanics’ Union. America Phenix City Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical Merch’ts Exchange National Butch. & Drovers.. Mech’s & Traders.. Greenwich Leather Manufact’s Seventh Ward State of N. York... 1,291,675 5,69S,444 11,974,644 3.486.257 Mercantile Republic • People’s North America.... Hanover. Irving Metropolitan Nassau.... Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather. Corn Exchange... Continental Commonwealth. . Oriental Marine Atlantic Imp. & Traders... 27,857 25,414 900,000 791,530 482,310 128,452 557,950 131,070 7,141 16,358 1,536,977 1,549,492 2,140,678 Citizens’ 5,518 170,571 174,846 10,374 988,017 5,445,585 2,873,649 2,789,960 5,681,800 4,026,433 4,129,061 3,147,935 1,214,236 2,003,348 1,515,076 3,043,8t2 2,783,539 1,707,000 9,833,555 141,000 250,305 * 11,731 159,663 16,587 12,797 79,075 37,610 3,000 47,581 16,347 80,997 44,942 11,660 7,100 18,457 79,101 28,898 9,511 1,933,826 5,296,148 Pacific Chatham 111,368 15,672 19,324 7,228 178,973 17,849 175,553 351,214 3,552,791 Ocean 667,708 19,834 18,152 452,855 498,911 240,722 295,128 23,940 1,157,862 Broadway 528,394 448.500 2,710 291,333 259,636 22,646 99,079 1,738,322 26.435,841 5,397,327 3,580,640 12,808 627,150 128,771 2,863,253 2,509,012 American Exc’ge.. Commerce $726,974 94,913 66,622 572,460 322,492 293,214 196,180 1,118,367 . •* 131,743 4,506 504,800 757,700 897,900 12,255 550,529 212,927 24,767 265,000 1,779,607 44,004 9.438 95.500 5,409,821 81,143 505,447 Net deposits. $8,902,179 5,079,322 6,215,474 tion. 315,829 440,883 6,643,669 8,203,275 5.915.257 4,718,660 9,919,963 4,674,817 3,482,809 2,962,989 2,931,941 5,496,482 3,774,193 Merchants’ amount of- Circula¬ Loans and discounts. — 91% 106% @107 107%@ 108 108%@ 108% 41 @ .... 41 @ 77%@ — 71%@ 72 83% 115% 90% ’ 35%@ Frankfort Bremen Berlin New York 105%@106% 106%@ 107% 107%@ 107% @5.22% 5.22%@5.21% 5.26%@5.25 5.22%@5.20 do short Amsterdam opening of this new source of supply had the effect of forcing down gold from 154J- on Saturday to 150f on Monday, without, at the same time, inducing any important short transactions. Subse¬ quently, the price fell to 147f. This morning the price opened at 149, but closed weak at 147£. The anticipation of the disburse¬ ment of twenty three millions of coin on the November coupons, within twelve days, has a depressing effect upon the premium; there are, however, few disposed to speculate upon the prospects of lower quotations. The rate on loans of gold has been “ flat ” to-day. The following have been the highest and lowest quotations for gold on each of the last six days: Lowest. Highest. Low’st Highest 152% 150% 147% 5.25 Paris, long Hamburg ..: Market.—On Monday large amounts of gold were offered in the Room, with accompanying reports that the Govern¬ ment was -the seller. It turned out ultimately that about three mil¬ lions of coin had come out of the Sub-Treasury iu payment for bonds of 1867 and 1868, bought up by the Government. The unexpected 13 15 16 bkrs’/ongr do short do do Oct.. 19. Oct. 12. Oct. 5. Sept. 28. 106%@ 107% 108 @ % 109 @ % London Comm’l.. 239,200 The Gold Oct. Oct. Oct. of Antwerp the closing quotations of to-day, compared with preceding wreeks : Oct. 19. Oct. 5. Oct. 12. Sep. 7. Sep.14. Sep. 21. Sept. 28. 48 55% 46% 46% 53% 57% 50% 54 54% 52% 30% 33% 28 30% 114% 106% 106% 103% 79% 71 75% 72% 124% 122 120% 120% 115 116% 114 116% 8)% 85% 84 83% 118 H4% 111 87 89% 86% 121% 116 117% 114% 37% 35% 34% 35% 71 67% 66% following are the closing quotations for the several classes foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : * * The 308,500 768,000 The following are those of the six collection. 284,213 292,580 Both Boards Inc. „ 4,817,428 3,621,183 9,013,691 3,763,254 2,215,784' 2,161,782 2,552,473 5,852,760 2,923,511 Legal Tenders. $4,237,560 1,694,608 2,818,633 1,941,661 1,112,062 3,215,034 980,884 740,809 1,029,629 2,182,674 3,131,722 825,380 1,124,250 1,861,606 1,542,107 949,682 616,635 3,072,276 891,231 1,528,041 5.372,617 2,549,583 8,683,355 5,539,587 1,792,616 1,140,193 1,169,654 437,746 1,597,862 552,628 285,669 1,267,610 894,975 1,102,005 10 085,020 4,686,887 3,117,693 3,248,641 1,565,106 4,719,105 1,957,081 1,416,368 3,115,383 1,628,985 1,669,000 6,703,616 1,471,214 1,820,273 2,439,713 1,480,349 3,690,500 2,845,029 2,680,606 3,456,056 1,060,482 1,672,147 1,376,097 4,691,210 468,608 345,581 239.665 639,135 435,000 3,387,000 470,797 823.666 943,956 818,248 1,250,800 368,000 900,000 943,561 248,272 667,660 498,524 % 416,000 1 &/■ {'5*'*:<f1> '. ':■ --■'■> /.;•>•.“ tf : • . . -,-%! '•••*!.*/; 7 ■;.■••'•' ;.v':v-y-!;-"V-;::/ v ";.•/:. / - .•*,'/ : t •/ ”-y -.- • r^j-- "*' -::V:- -"v'.-'-'yt;.-V V ’". **■’ '■'•-• ? ’ V- October 16,246,155 1,231,136 81,541 9,976 1,000,000 307,73S 1,261,031 1,598,783 1,028,660 6,146 19,583 76,500 14,958 928 283,500 1,622,807 17,431,141 14,535,695 1,337,860 7,289,781 2,912,558 3,814,509 826,422 2,632,400 5,970 1,100 55,296 33,991 2,823,255 1,626,624 270,000 945,585 447,401 796,529 598 268,218 2,700 4,667 7,117 912,800 Fourth National... Central Second National... Ninth National.... National Third National.... N. Y. Exchange... Tenth National.... Dry Dock Boll’s Head First 14,811 8', 852 33.514 162,414 1,273,921, 6,246,127 19,965,553 1,349,955 1,326,434 523,784 403,923 200,176 1,215,264 3,565,471 218,062 321,036 4,181,582 4,156,460 372,537 2,074,343 1,589,692 3,066,189 910,489 902,422 1,417,300 271,610 1,478,388 331,638 639,300 41,000 640,220 1,226,170 13,692,253 15,047,066 1,127,237 8,083,190 12,966 28,992 $276,443,219 $5,576,002 $30,176,908 $226,858,897 $83,180,422 Totals.... Clearings for the week ending Clearings for Hie week ending Balances for the week ending Balances for the week ending $829,081,759 58 770,350,908 78 Oct. 6, 1866 Oct. 13, 1866. .• 27,948,653 96 Oct. 6, 1866 Oct. 13, 1866 Inc. Loans Specie Inc.. Dec. $1,625,473 Dec. 2,159,257 Legal Tenders 627,696 Dec. Circulation 874,550 follows with the returns of previous The several items compare as weeks : ClrcnlaLoans. Specie. tion. Ju1jl7 ...$257,534,833 $9,S65,266 $27,296,530 July 14:. 259,133,434 12,451,684 27,804,172 July 21.. 255,965,018 10,860,147 27,579,020 July 28.. 256,612,071 9,701,046 27,249,812 Aug. 4.. Aug. 11.. Aug. 18.. Aug. 25.. Sept. 1 Sept. 8.. Sept.15.. 256,808,717 258,263,063 261,951,924 265,901,065 265,399,607 268,941,668 270,806,604 Sept.22.. 272,177,166 Sept.29.. 269,807,383 9,448,900 8,424,209 7,545.513 6,884,077 6,381,600 7,455,910 7,357,369 7,662,611 7,643,960 Oct. 6.. 274,210.161 Oct. 13 276,443,219 6.203,698 5,576,002 . Deposits. $205,799,611 27,311,549 27,528,522 27,796,904 27,958,464 27,807,834 28,506,288 29.360,371 207,190,043 213,049,073 Legal Tenders. $79,541,638 75,541,977 80,524,992 84,705,814 86,235,079 92,622,808 90,194,254 90.773,232 90,428,189 87,826,021 20,302,358 228.484,370 85,339,679 30,176,008 226,858,897 83,189,422 Aggregate Clearings. Philadelphia Banks previous weeks : on the 15th, 586,864,052 591,403,135 567,21)9,212 605,290,424 575,724,324 829,081,759 as compared Oct 13. $14,842,150 51,037,567 $14,842,150 51,242,282 $14,942,150 51,316,490 783,024 Specie Legal Tenders Deposits V 769,272 770,676 24,073,965 24,011,480 43,800,423 23,377,073 43,152,028 9,639,176 .- 43,693,875 9,598,497 Circulation 9,631,863 following comparison shows the condition of the phia Banks at stated periods : Piiiladel- Circulation. Deposits. $38,275,788 The Legal Tenders. Loans. $20,546,695 $48,892,594 Date. July July July July Aug. 7 14 21 28 20,311,668 21,312,504 20,992,376 20,393,826 20,060,536 19,863,635 20,412,323 4 Aug. It...'. Aug. 18 Aug. 25 Sept. 1 Sept. 8.....Wi.» Sept. 15 Sept.22 Sept. 29 24,040,254 24.134,918 24,528,358 24.906,925 24,073,963 24,011,480 23,377,073 Oct. 6 Oct. 13 B’ks. Capital. 49,493,405 Specie. $9,431,664 $866,981 852,773 49,009,316 48,935,067 49,6*2,529 49,164,321 48,530,454 *18,591,763 50,095,890 50,320,068 49,889,051 826,345 826,096 8-25,9:8 835,158 811,230 9,516,724 9,543,472 36,639,226 36,942,311 36,025.288 41,162,627 9.566,783 9,575,534 9,589 574 9,608,410 9,605,817 807,071 50,787,371 51,037,567 51,242,282 51,316,490 37,707,567 37,575,560 37.270,884 37,244,034 9,442,146 9,427,363 9,482,473 849,770 806,815 802,922 793,395 41,604,993 41,093,120 42,836,971 43,693,875 43,800,423 43,15*028 9,601,273 788,024 9,598,497 769,272 770,676 9,631,863 9,639,176 Boston Banks.—The increase in amount due to other banks of in deposits of $578,294 $70,627, and The $116,185 are as compared with the two previous Oct. 8. Oct. 1. $41,900,000 95,039,305 240,417 19,801,819 18,049,543 $41,900,000 M,703,912 $41,900,000 93,676,888 250,638 277,806 20,612,639 17,720,587 21,037,880 li,793,947 15,546,077 15.662,262 43,908,520 14,047,675 Oct. 15. Loans Specie Legal tender notes Due from other banks Due to other banks ; Deposits Circulation (National) Circulation (State). past following are * 43,330,226 24,339,751 337,656 ' Se^t. Oct. * 42,095,214 24,238,047 24,7329,124 340,977 the comparative totals for series a 343,480 of weeks of 6 13 20 27 3 10 17 24 1 8 15 Circulation. , Loans. Specie. Tenders. Deposits. Nationul. State. $96,672,749 $318,7 79 $22,432,317 $40,549,379 $24,116,795 $380,980 202,734 95,771,749 295,241 21,101,481 39,192,620 24,104,997 868,168 94,915,075 333,670 20,817,159 38,619,847 24,290,816 363,405 94,819,253 323,083 21,688,693 39,028,518 24,262,817 95,387,808 264,863 314,204 328,a30 316,771 277,806 250,638 22.071,251 21,580,730 , 39,856,550 39,149,497 24,240,925 24,295,875 20,303,41* 38,357,208 20,977,954 40,014,189 21,037,SS0 42,095,214 20,612,6739 43,098,520 95,039,305 240,417 19,601,819 43,330,226 24,345,328 24,344,545 21,238,047 24,329,124 24,339,751 94,878,709 94,788,268 93,825,673 93,676,888 94,708,912 344,773 356,075 351,401 336,465 343,408 340,977 337,656 No returns from the Traders’ Bank. National Banks.—National Bank circulation to the amount of $543,456 was issued during the last week; amount issued up B’ks. Capital. Circulation 1,656 $286,894,545 287,048,950 1,656 1,658 1,656 1,658 288,403,775 289,021,085 2S9,510,820 291,179,045 291,861,315 1,658 1,659 1,659 1,659 292,214,720 293,032 903 1,659 1,659 294,072,059 the return of the Bank England for the week ending Oct. 3, 1866 ISSUE DEPARTMENT. Notes issued £30,905,910 Government debt Other securities Gold coin and bullion.... £11,015,100 3.984,900 15,905,910 £30,905,910 £30,9**5,910 » BANKING DEPARTMENT. Proprietors’ capital Rest Public deposits Other deposits Seven day and other - bills. £14,553,000 4,111,404 6,169,451 17,209,6S5 660,323 Gov. Securities,(including dead weight annuity).. Other securities Notes Gold and silver coin £42,703,863 BANK 1 :—— • £12,219.043 22,941,313 6,570,280 973,227 £42,703,863 of Share. National.) to date $294,072,059. making the total Friday. Dividend. . Last Paid. Periods. Amount Par Bid. Ask. 5 138* 139 3,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 July ’66 — 100,000 Jan. and July 100 4 500,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 120 5 100 5,000,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66 Jan. and July... July ’66 100 300,000 6 50 —500,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 6 100 5 250,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66 25 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 12 50 5 300,000 Jan. and July... J uly ’66 50 July ’66 4 200,000 Quarterly July ’66 5 125’’ 25 800,000 Jan. and July Nov. ’66 6 118 * 100 3,000,000 May and Nov 50 July ’66 6 200,000 Jan. and July 25 July ’66 8 140 170 450,000 Jan. and July 100 July ’66 6 300,000 Quarterly 25 5 400,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 6 100 1,000,000 May and Nov.;. Nov. ’66 50 5 300,000 Jan. and July... Ju y ’66 100 10,000,000 Jan. and July. July ’66 5 120 120 Jan. and July... July ’66. 100 750,000 6 107 100 2,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 5 1-4 104 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’66 5 118 100 200,000 100 10 100,000 Quarterly..... Ju y ’66 30 200*,000 Jan. and July... July ’66.... .3% 50 350,000 Jan. and Juty... July ’66 4 100 5 250,000 Jan. and July... Jniy ’66 100 5 150,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 100 10 216 220 500,000 May and Nov... May. ’66 Jan. and July... July ’66.. 100 10 5 til’ Ill 100 5,000,000 Jan. and July... Jul ’66 5 30 600,000 May and Nov... -Nov. ’66 20 5 160,000 Jan. and July... July’66 5 105 100 1,500,000 Apr.and Oct... Oct. ’66 6 200,000 Apr and Oct.. Apr. ’66 5i. 5 300,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 10C 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 6 110 113 100 1,500,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 5 no 5 lu7 JOS 5t 500,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 50 6 600,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’66 50 5 400*,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’66 50 2,050,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’66 5 5 100 30 252,000 Apr. and Oct... Oct. ’66 100 5 108 500,(XX* Jan. and July... July ’66 160 ia 6 400,000 Jan. and July... July ’66. 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 5 112 25 2,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’6 » 5 5C 6 140 150‘ 500,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 50 500,000 May and Nov,.. May.’66 5 no 5 25 600,000 May and Nov... Nov.’66 100 1,000,000 May and Nov... May. ’66 5 5 lio ” 120 June ’66 50 3, (XX), 000 June and Dec 5 113 50 1,2:35.000 Jan. and July... Julv ’66 ISO 6 120 10C 4,000,000 Jan. and July... Ju'v ’66 no Julv ’66 5 :08 100- 1.000,000 Jan. and July 5 100 300,000* Jan and July... Julv ’66 113 5 no 50 1,500,000 April and Oct... Oct. 66 100 3,000,000 Jan. and Julv... July ’66 5 120 9 145 100 200,000 April and Oct... Julv ’66 10C* 6 300,000 Jan. and Julv... July ’66 100 1,000,000! Jan. and July... July ’66 5 lis” 5 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... iJulv ’66 125 50 5 400,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 50 1,000,000* Jan. and Jnljr... Juiy *66 4 105 ” 108 50 300,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’66 5 125 50 422,700 Feb. and Aug., 100 2,000,000 Jan.and Julv... July ’66 7 150 25 5 412,500 Jan. and July... July ’66 108 4 107 20 1,800,000 Jan. and July... Jul ’66 115 100 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’66.. 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’66 C 100 500,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66 — no Nov. ’65 5 109^ 100 800,000 May and Nov 100 1,500,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66 5 112 113 6 105 100 200,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’65 114 5 100 2,000,000 May and Nov... Nov. ’66 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 5 102 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 6 40 1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66 7% ...5 130 50 1,500,000 May and Nov... Nov ’66 500 000 Jan. and July.. July ’66 ♦ •*50 3* 100 America* America (Jer. City) . American American Exchange. Atlantic Atlantic (Brooklyn). 25 .... ... .. .... .... ; .... .... .... .... .... Bowery Broadway .... .... Brooklyn Bull’s Head* Butchers & Drovers Central Central (Brooklyn).. Chatham Chemical Citizens’ City City (Brooklyn) i. f . .. 1 .... .. • .... • • • .. .. .... .... .... • .. • • 1 Commerce • - • • • ■ • . • I .... . Commonwealth..... Continental Corn Exchange* Croton • . Currency Dry Dock*. • .. • • • • • • • • • .... East River • • . • . . , f ’ -;j V/. ' J .... Eighth Fifth • • First First (Brooklyn).... Fourth Fulton Far. & Cit.(Wm’bg). LeatherManufact’rs. Long Isl. (Brook.) .. Manhattan* Manufacturers’ Manufac. & Merch.*. Marine Market • • • . • } . .... • . • • .4 . • • • • • • • » » .... ... ... • ••« • • • j • V*. .... ... .... • • .... .... • Mechanics’ Mechanics’ (Brook.). Mech. Bank. Asso... Meehan. & Traders’. Mercantile Merchants’ Merchants’ Exch.... Metropolitan Nassau*... Nassau LIST* ( (Marked thus * not STOCK Capital. Companies. (Brooklyn) . . • • Ninth .... .... .... • • • • .. .... •« North America North River* Ocean • • .... Oriental* Pacific. Park Peoples’* .... Republic St. Nicholas’ . • • • . • • ■j ... • Phoenix • .... Seventh Wa rd. Second Shoe & Leal her Sixth State of New York., Tenth. Third Tradesmen s Union. s ..... . • «... • . National New York New York County.. NewYorkExchange. : Legal Aug. o : , The decrease increase in National circulation the footings, Capital I ; a decrease in State circulation of $3,321. a following statements ; au Date. July 21.. Aug. 4.. Aug. 11.. Aug. 18.. Aug. 25.. June 9.. 1,650 278,905,675 Sept. 1.. June 16.. 1,653 280,263,890 Sept. 8.. June 23.. 1.653 281,234,460 Sept 15.. June 30.. 1,653 282,555,440 Sept 22.. July 7.. 1,663 283,627,605 Sept 29.. July 14.. 1,654 ......... 284,566,675 Oct. 13.. Foreign Banking.—The following is 1,650 $271,262,165 1,650 272,876,895 1,650 274,653.196 1,650$414,921,479 276,540,510 June 2.. 1,650 277,379,660 footings of the last weekly statement of the Boston Banks are given below. A detailed comparison with Gallatin the previous week shows an increase in loans of $330,393 ; a de¬ Greenwich* Grocers’ crease in specie of $40,221 ; a decrease in legal tender notes of Hanover $810 820 ; a decrease in amount due from other banks of $328,956 . Importers & Trad... Irvmg au Circulation. 5. 12.. 19.. 26.. 637,655,787 598,705,726 430,324.808 523,226,814 Oct. 6. Sept. 29. Loans Date. May May May May $511,182,914 770,359,908 following statement shows the condition of the Capital following comparison shows the progress of the banks since May 5,- in respect to number, capital, and circulation : 214,582,926 214,156,705 214,232,263 86,861,834 494,810,975 214,310,576 84.800,071 554,655,346 218,119,450 86,283,483 617,950,320 225,191,282 225.107,991 224,814,647 28.770,381 224,394,663 29.213,950 223,336,785 Banks.—The Philadelphia The previous week are as fol¬ Deposits $2,233,058 493 24,003,987 72 The deviations from the returns of the lows: with the ^'••Mv.Vr'' : THE CHRONICLE. 20,1866.] Park Hech. Bank’g Aa’n Grocers’ North River....... East River Manuf. & Merch’ts 'C ' — ■ ''t^^gTj^^'r^''':''^' . ... Willinuvsburg City*. .. ... j « . '' .... , , • . . . • • .. • • • • • • • j ■ ;■ '■.»■, T • ■• ■ • s.'•■■•*■ . ... •’-- ■'• -,:; ?■: • THE CHRONICLE 434 :% [October 20, 186«. SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.4 , : „ tSEBPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19.) STOCKS AND Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. Tuea. I hurs vVeu. I ri STOCKS AND SECURITIES. American Gold Coin.. Railroad Stocks. Central of New .National. United States 6s, 1867 do do 6s, 1868 do do 6a, 1868 do do 6b, 1881 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 . registered. 140 coupon. registered. coupon registered 112% 112% 113% 112% 113 113% 113% 113% 114 113 113 ii2%;ti3% 112% ill 3 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 .100 Jersey Chicago and Alton do do preferred Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago and Milwaukee Chicago and Northwestern do do registered 6b, 5-20s preferred a;. .. 110% iio% iio%; 110% | Chicago and Rock Island 100 6s, 5-20b (2d issue) coupon 110% Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati 6b, 5.20b do registered 100 1 H>% iio% 110% 111 Cleveland and Pittsburg 6s, 5.20b (3d issue) coupon 110% 110% : 50 106% Cleveland and Toledo 50 68,5.20b, do ....registered 5.208 (new issue) 108% 108% 108 108% 108% Delaware, Lackawanna and Western...-. 50 6s, Oregon War, 1881 Eighth Avenue 100 Ene 100 68, ao. do. '(i yearly) 111% do preferred coupon 5b, 1871 100 Hannibal and St. Joseph registered 6b, 1871 100 do do 5s, 1874 coupon preferred *..100 105 104 Harlem 50 6s, 1874 registered. 99% 99% 99% 99% 99% 99% do 6s, 10-40b coupon 50 preferred, 99% 99% 99% 100 Hudson River.. P. 100 6b, 10-40b registered. Illinois Central 100 6s, Union Pacific R. R.. .{cur.). 106% 1C6% 107 7-30s Treas. Notes—1stseries. 106% Indianapolis and Cincinnati 50 106 106% Joliet and Chicago do do 2d series. 105% lf,5% 105% 106 do .100 106 106 105% 1^5% 105% do do do do 3d series Long Island 50 100 McGregor Western State. Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred 100 120 California 7s... do do 2d preferred 100 100 Connecticut 6b. Michigan Central ' 100 Georgia 6b. Michigan So. and N. Indiana 100 do Illinois do do do do do Indiana do 6s, 1881 6s, 5-20s i,. •. -.. ,>v coupon ii4%i 115% 1106 106 .. . “ (new) 7s Canal Bonds, 1860 do Registered, 1860 6s, coupon, ’79, after 1860-62-65-70 do 1877 do do 1879 War Loan *. 90 Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 96 Louisiana 6s Michigan 6s do 7b, War Loan, 1878 * - do 63% 63 63% 63% 64 - 73% 73% 73 73% 67% 73% 57% 97 95 do do 5e 84 Miscellaneous Shares. ....100 63 Coal.—American 65 67 50 Ashburton Butler Central 57% 100 56% 57 100 ..100 58% 58% 57% 156 157 100 155% 156 Hampshire and Baltimore 70 34% 37% — Consolidation Cumberland Delaware and Hudson 58% 158 5S% ‘59% 100 50 50 100 100 Lehigh * Susquehanna Pennsylvania Schuylkill Spring Mountain Spruce Hill 158 75 10 65 100 Wilkesbarre Wyoming Valley Gas. ^-Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) 100 preferred. 300 100 100 100 100 avenue 63. 63 62 125 20 Williamsburg Improveme)U.—Boston Water Power City .50 20 100 Canton 100 Cary Telegraph.—American 100 100 United States Western Union 100 100 8% 56% 55 54% 32% 218 100 54% 54% 54% 54% 216 9S 216 114 97 110 114 ...100 100 TViisrf.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust New York Life and Truest 25 100 100 Union Trust United States Trust 100, Express.—Adams — * .. do do do do Interest Extension 1st mortgage..... consolidated... . Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage do m do Cleveland and do do 3d mortgage, conv.. 4th mortgage Toledo, Sinking Fund Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort. do do do 2d mort Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 do 4th mortgage, 1880 do 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended do do 2d mortgage. Great Western, 1st mortgage Mortgage McGregor Western, 1st mortgage Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 do do 8s, new, 1882 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund do do 2d mortgage, 7s do do Goshen Line, 1868 , 54% 100 112% 112% 113% <.. 32% 54% 32% 8% 55% 97% Western Union,Russian Extension.100 97% Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 100 111% 112% 110% Nicaragua i>... < 50 100 50 Manhattan Metrooolitan New York Income do Consolidated and Sinking Fund 2d mortgage, 1868 do Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885 do 3d mortgage, 1875 do convertible, *1867 Hlinois Central 7s, 1875 ' and Western Bonds Lackawanna 20 American Merchants Union United States do Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage.... Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund.... Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72 50 Jersey City and Hoboken Pacific Mail Union Navigation 7ransit— Central American Western, let mort Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1 st mort., 1877... Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund do do 1st mortgage do 4 do 2d mortgage Hannibal and Si. Joseph, 1st 100 25 Harlem 102 — 100% 100 92 100 100 Wells, Fargo & Co 100 100 13% 13% 13% 33% 29% 29% 100 29% 29 29% Minnesota Copper 50 New Jersey Consolidated Copper... 15 Quartz Hill 25 Quicksilver 100 55% 54% 54% 56% 56% 55% Mining.—Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort.... Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage do do Income...... Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage New York Central 6s, 1883 dodo 68,1887 : do do 7s, 1876 do do 7s, convertible, 1876 do d<> 7s, 1865-76.... ..... Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage Peninsula, 1st mortgage .• Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort.. do do do do Sti Louis, do do do do 2d mort... 3d mort... Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort .. do do 2d, pref.... Toledo and do do 2d, income. Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended. Rutland Marble 25 do do $mithAad Parme lee 10 14% cl# do do Stonington do do do do 96 6s .. 100 -.50 St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute do New York 7b * 100 100 100 100 Atlantic and Great 73% 6a, Improvement Stock Brunswick 100 100 Railroad Ronds: 72% 72% ' Jersey City 6s, Water Loan do 100 *100 „> 6s, Water Loan 6s, Public Park Loan do 100 Toledo, Wabash and Western 50 do do do preferred.... 50 Virginia 6a, coupon Municipal. Brooklyn 6b do do do Milwaukee and St. Paul do do preferred Morris and Essex New Jersey New York Central New York and New Haven New Haven and Hartford Norwich and Worcester Ohio and Mississippi Certificates do do do preferred Panama Third 68,1870-75 68,1881-86 Rhode Island 6s Tennossee 6b 1868 do 6s 1890 do 6s, (new) do pref.. .100 2d pref... 100 Second avenue Sixth avenue 107% 1C7% x 62% do 100 1st Reading ,00 93 5s, 1868-76 7b, State Bounty Bonds do Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago 100% 100% 100% North Carolina 6b do 6b. (new) Ohio do 81% 85 81% do 6b, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 do 68,1867-77 do 81 81% St. Joseph RR.)... do dp War Loan Minnesota 8s Missouri 6b do 6b, (Hannibal and guaranteed. ..100 do do os, 5b do - Milwaukee and Prairie dn Chien 2 <P mortgage Interest Bonds •4 M, 18S56.J October THE CHRONICLE. NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL Amount DENOMINATIONS. Oatst&bdiug. INTEREST. Rate. Bid 1858....» do 1861 do do do do do 8,908,342 7,022,000 coupon.) registered. \ f coupon. 138 135 135 Jan. & July 1871 112% li3 registered. \ coupon. ) 20,000,000 registered, f 1,016,000 Bonds (5-20s) of 1862... coupon. 1 do do .registered. ; do do : do do do do do • do do do i do do (10-40s) do do coupon. , do .registered. V 773,422,800 1865 ...coupon. | do .registered. ! J .coupon. { 171,069,350 -do .registered, f 1866 1864 .. Union Pacific RR. Bonds of 1865 Treasury Notes (1st series), 769.518.900 (2d series), (3d series), do do do do 8,202,000 . siate Securities 2,109,000 648,000 688,000 Alabama—State Bonds......... v do do (Sterling) do do do do CAuroRNiA-State Bonds-.do State Bonds large do i 2,472,000 8,000,000 Connecticut—War Bonds 2,073,750 2, OX, 000 1,288,887 1,758,406 1,386,570 2,371,725 1,778,677 241,000 1,157,700 236,000 2,058,173 1,225,500 200,000 300,000 200,000 447,000 3,204,000 516,000 3,942,000 5,398,000 532,000 4,800,000 8,171,902 Georgia—State Bonds do do new 7s .. do Illinois—Canal Bonds.... ..... do do Registered do Coupon Bonds do do do. do do do War Loan Bonds.. Indiana—State Bonds do ‘ do do do do ' .. . do do War Loan Bonds... Iowa—State Certificates do War Loan Bonds Kansas—State Bonds Kentucky—State Bonds..... do State Bonds Louisiana—State Bonds RR)... do State Bonds RR)... do > -StateBonds: >r B’ks Maine—State Bonds do War Loan Maryland—State Bonds do do — ... . —.... — — do State Bds .coupon. \ do StateBds incited j do State Bonds.cw/ptwi. Massachusetts—State Scrip — do do do do War Loans State Scrip, do3 do do do do War Loan.. 3,192,763 1,727,000 672,000 220,000 6,429,000 1,150,004 2,450,000 1,088,000 250,000 Michigan—$2,000,000 Loan .. do do do 1,750,000 do Renewal Loan 216,000 do War Loan 1,122,000 do War Bounty Loan.... £45,000 Minnesota—State Bonds 250,000 Missouri—State Bonds.. 602,000 do State Bonds for RR... 13,701,000 do State Bonds (Pac. RR) 7,000,000 do State Bonds (H,&St.J) 3,000,000 , .. ... do Revenue Bonds....; New Hampshire—State Bonds do War Fund Bds New Jersey—State Scrip do War Loan Bonds.. New York " Geperal Fund 431,000 535,100 1,650,000 _ 95,000 731,000 700,000 1,189,780 500,000 800,000 909,607 442,961 900.000 800,000 Bounty ds coup"ns “ “ 25,566,000 regist’d" 702,000 3,050,000 6,000.000 North Carolina—State Bonds.. do State Bonds Ohio—-Foreign Loan do do ’ do do do de (i)ew). Foreign Loan Foreign Loan. Foreign Low Foreign Loan Foreign Loan. Foreign Xoan Domestic Loan Bonds .... Pennsylvania—State Bonds do • ; do : do Railroad Bonds. New Bonds Vermont—War ... Loan Bonds,.... Virginia—-Registered Bonds... do v Coupon Bonds.-...,, jWL f 'i New Bonds $0 1882 May & Nov. 1884 May & Nov. 1885 Jan. & 13.911.900 i,650*,b66 21,888,398 12,972,000 ........ Bonds..T. Certificates. Jr..... 3.691,000 2,347.340 2,115,400 -S.951*200 ^800,000 f j I 6 7.30 Feb. & Aug. 1867 7.30 Jun. &Dec. 1868 7.30 Jan. & July 1868 106 106 do 117% 121 do ’7*2 *’92 &July Jan. & July 1880 May & Nov Jan. & July do Jan. & Jnly Jan. & July do 1886 1870 1870 ’60 ’65 ’69 ’70 >76 >77 101 1879 1879 101 96 90* July JAJ&O 192* 103* 81 81% 8i* 33*! 85* 1(34 pleas. 1868 1878 pleas. May & Nov. 1868 Jan. & July 1875 do 1878 Jan. & 97 var. ’71 ’72 1870 1877] 1866 1872 1873 1874 1875 1877 Jan. & July do do do do do * do do do « var. 1900 I860 92% 107.’ * lOO * loo 100loo 93 63 ieo : It I’67 ’83 t’93’99 20,000 256,368 50,000 650,000 319,457 400,000 125,000 Park Bonds Railroad Bonds., Water Bonds.... 130,000 500,000 375,000 122,000 118,000 N. J.—City Bonds, City Bonds, ^ Water Bds. 650,000 ’65 ’74 ’78’79 ’65 ’85 >67 ’-rc ’72 ’78 ’70 ’78 dan. & July ’66 ’71 do ’65 ’95 1869 do ’81 ’97 do 1897 do ’65 ’79 ’65 ’82 do Apr. & Oct Jan. & July 911,500 219,000 100,000 425,000 ; 60,000 150,000 200,000 3,000,200 2,147,000 900,000 100,000 483,900 1,878,900 190,000 402,768 399,300 3,066,071 275,000 2,083,200 1,966,000 600,000 1,800,000 2,748,000 150,000 W’r S’k of ’54 Bu. S’k No. 3. Fire Indem. S. Central P’k S. Central P’k S. Central P’k S. C.P.Imp. F. S. C.P.Imp. F.S. Real Estate B. Croton W’r S. Fl.D’t. F’d. S. Pb.B.Sk. No Docks&SlipsS 600,000 Pub. Edu. S’k. 154,000 Tomp.M’ket S 102.000 Union Def. L. Vol. B’nty L’n ‘ 895,570 490,000 1,000,000 2,500,000 1,400,000 2,000,000 949.700 Vol.Fam.AidL Sol.B’ntyFd. B RiotDam.R.B 4,996,000 1,442,100 552.700 739,222 2,232,800 7,898,717 1,009,700 1,800,000 985,326 1,500,000 600,000 500,000 Railroad B’ds . City Bonds... Railroad Sacramento, Cal.—City Bonds... do County uounty B’ds St. Louis, Mo. -Municipal. Real Estate Sewerage Improvement.. - Water Harbor Wharves Pacific RR O. & M. RR Iron Mt. RR . 73* SanFranci8CO, Cal.—City Bonds, do City Fire B. 13% 73% do City Bonds 73 , do> do 47 47* do do Wilmington, C.&Co’tyB. C.&Co’tyB. C.&Co’tyB. 97* 1881 1876 ’79’87 do do 1888 99* do do do do June &Dec. Apr. & Oct. Jan. & Jnly Various. Jan. & var. 1879 1890 1871 ’69’79 1866 1871 ’66 ’72 Jnly ’76’77 Various. ’66’80 Feb. & Aug 1882 Jan. & July 1876 June &Dec 1883 Various, ’66 ’81 do ’66 ’75 Jan. & July ’77 ’83 94 var. var. 1887 Jan. & Jnly do June &Dec. 1894 Feb. & Aug ’70’83 Jan. & July 1873 Apr. & Oct. ’65 ’84 Jan. & July ’67 ’87 Apr. & Oct. '73’84 & July ’70 ’81 Fj.A.&N, 1870 1880 do 1890 do 1890 do do ’75’79 1876 do 92 do ’70 ’73 Feb. & Aug. 1868 F. M.A.&N. 1898 1887 do 1898 do 1887 do do 1876 1873 do 1883 do 1878 do 1866 do ’67 ’76 do 1873 do ’66’69 do May & Nov. 1864 1867 do 1866 do ’66 ’73 ’ do May & Nov. ’75-’89 73-’76 do '80-’81 do ’83 ’90 do do-- v. 77-’82 Jan. & Jnly ’66 ’81 do ’65 ’82 ’65 ’93 do '66 ’99 do Jan. & Jnly var. do 1913 '66’83 Various. May &Nov. .. Railroad Bonds. - 98* 98* Apr. & Oct. ’65 ’82 do City—Water Stock.. do Water Stock do CrotonW’rS’k do CrotonW’rS'k do W’r S’k of ’49 do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do f do 1890-j Various, Water Bonds do do do do do do do do do do do July 71 ’94 July 68’90 Apr. & Oct. 1868 - J .,A.,J.&0. M.J.S&&D. 1890 City Bonds.... New York do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do Jan. & Jan. & .... Io.—City Bonds Railroad City Loan.. Rochester, N. Y.—City Bonds... 63% var. -. 3 Jan. * July Water Bonds... Dubuque, do do Feb. & Aug. 1871 ’86 '95 City Bonds - do var. 4o •'* do do 1 Portland, Me.—City Bonds... do Railroad Bonds, Providence, R, I.—City Bonds... May & Nov. ’68-’71 do 1868 Jan. & July long do Jun. & Dec. ’71 ’78 Jan. & Jnly ’84 ’95 Cleveland, O—City Bonds do Water Bonds.... do Sewerage Bonds. Detroit, Mich.—City Bonds do City Bonds Philadelphia, Pa.—City Bds,old do CityBds,new do City Bds,old do CityBds,new Pittsburg, Pa.—City Bonds... 100 1870 : 99 1875 99 1881 100 1886 101'- do May & Nov 1870 1870 873 875 Jan. & July 1886 Water Bonds.... do do 108* 1865 1868 Various. do Vol.Fam.AidL NewYorkC’nty.—C’t House S’k do do Sol.Sub.B.R.B do do Sol.S.&Rf.R.B 1866 1868 1871 1874 Jan. & Jr A eke 4 97* Apr. & Oct. 1895 Jan. & July .. 1894 Jan. & July Jan. & July J, Ap.J.&0. Jan. & July do do do ao Cincinnati, O.—Municipal Marysville, Cal.-^City Bonds do City Bonds... Milwaukee, Wie.—City, re-adj’d Newark, N. J.—City Bonds./... " do City Bonds New Bedford, Mass.—City Bds New London, Ct—City Bonds... Newport, R. I.—City Bonds New Haven, Ct.—City Bonds Jan. & Jnly ’71 H4 May & Nov. .. Water Bonds do do Various. ’68 ’74 May & Nov 1880 Jan. & July do Jan. & July do do ’72’85 do 1866 Jan. & July 1874 1869 360,000 918,000 1,030,000 Louisville, Ky.—City Bonds var. ’75 ’78 1883 1868 ’73 ’83 1878 1886 1890 1867 1883 ’71 ’89 ’72 ’87 City Bonds. : Sewerage Bonds do do do Jersey City, do do do do 1890- do do Jan. & July do do do do do do ' Hartford, Ct.—City Bonds 1870 do Stg. Pub. Park L’n. Water Loan Pros. Park L’n do July ’80 ’89 Quarterly Quarterly Quarterly do do do ^101 1866 1866 1868 1868 1881 ’76 ’78 ’66 ’73 '68 ’72 dem. 67 .69 City Bonds 5,000,000 554,000 197,700 740*000 : 583,205 6,580,416 1,265,610 1,949,711 993,000 634,200 1,281,000 121,540 5,550,000 150,000 216,000 299,000 571,000 Bid J.,A.,J.&0. r Mar.&Sept ’66* *’67 Jan. & York&Cmn.R. B.&O.R.wun) Buffalo, N.Y.—Municipal Bonus do Municipal Bonds Chicago, HI.—City Bonds Jan. do Water Loan... Brooklyn, N.Y.—City Bonds..., do Improve’! St’k 106% 106% 1876 ’72’80 do Jan. & July do do do do do do Jan. & July 4,963,000 820,000 1,500,000 3,500,000 1,000,000 N.W.Virg.RR. Water Loan Water Loan FRIDAY. Payable. Jan. & July 65 ’69 do 70’82 * do 1879 Jan. & July var. do 1913 *"6d6,b66 RR. Bds. Miscellaneous, do do ■do 106* 107* May & Nov 1877 Jan. & July 1876 .. do do do do do do do do 113 99* 100 99* 100 19041 Jan. & July 1895 1 City, Pa.—City Bds. Baltimore, Md.—Improvement.. 105% Mar.&Sept. j ; Alb. Nor. RR... 111% B. & O. RR.. f 115* 115% Park 106 106% Bangor, Me.—City Debt do no* no* Railroad Debt..... 105* Boston, Mass.—City Bonds ' do 110* City Bonds Jan. & July 1886 ( do $225,000 850,000 300,000 Water Loan..... Alleghany do 118% 113* Jan. & July 1S81 . Tenitossee—Improvement Bonds •do ; ; Improvement Bonds do _ 500,000 900,000 192,585 1,163,000 167,000 4,500,000 9,749,500 3,0"onon 636,793 634,653 379,866 2,183,532 1,600,000 4,095,309 2,400,000 679,000 6,168,000 r*-‘ State Stock.;.. 29,209,000 ; : Military L’n Bds 3,000,000 3,889,000 Rhode Island—State (War) Bds. South Carolina—State Stock... : 113 July 2,250;000 Canal Bonds. do. 1881-j 18S1 Jan. & ., - do July July.... May & Nov. ) 282,718,800 ..registered. j coupon. 1874 do do 112 105 105 INTEREST. Hnte., Municipal SecuritiesAlbany, N. Y.—City Scrip 141 ft Outstanding. A eked Jan. & July 1867 Jan. & July 1868- 9,415,250 ..registered Amount DENOMINATIONS. Payable 149 national «ecurltiei. SECURITIES LIST. FMDAY. Gold Coin -.... Bonds of 1847 do 1848....» do do do I860 do do 495 1 300,000 200,000 150,000 260,000 1,496,400 446,800 1,464,000 523,000 425,000 254,000 484,000 239,000 163,000 457,000 429,900 285,000 1,352,600 178,500 329,000 1,133,500 300,000 960,000 Apr. & Oct. *68’71 Marv&Sept. Jan. & July do Various, do Jan. & July Jan. & July do Jan. & Jnly do do do do do do do ; do c.-fcCo’tvB. 1.000.000 338,07* 1885 1876 1893 '66 ’82 ’65 ’82 ’65 ’76 ’88- 98 1884 '65 ’33 ’66 ’90 ’79 ’88 ’71 ’87 ’71 ’83 65 ’86 67 ’81 ’71 ’73 72’74 74’77 do May & Nov. Jan. & Jnly do do »* * Del.—City Bonds.. 00 1871 1866 1875 1888 « ’77 ’TO ’ Jan. & Jnly 1884 various • - do - April & Oct. 1883 88 86 [October 20, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 496 $l)t Commercial Exports of Leading Articles from New York. ©imeo. £ g8S88ggg£8§ 35 ooT-.SjooTr«Ti*Oi5«03t- 2 s 0 g “ : .•o«i*ioociSo«oo51c®®OtiW!0'<jio • oo ?• © ©S •«!'« a'a'sg^s's'ggssWs's ’ssss *5© C9 CO ■• " ~ r-t COMMERCIAL EPITOME. ■H i Frtdat Night, Oct. 19. Trade is in a very unsettled condition, and the returns of g r-T SJSJth*3^©t-ooeo CO ® O 21 C @ o-i^ Ot OP t- 5 ^ 0S 3 o , p I PI as ' • • ' SS £■ S 22 ©Vrgf ©*»oy?i-©*©*ooo■»*©©«©e*oocp©e*^ -os® OD — oo y—t C© CO GO o c— S O CN ®5_co .-135 oo r-^»o 3S to ac^os ©*56 cow^t^ •,a'ea • ©29 t-Tcio t-T co © oo 06" r-oft-tfeo frft-T oo go • io c© • © 9*00 i-1 <0 £ £ 8588 8 S S J2 SB *2 SJ 5? !8 <x> go oo ©« t-rH ^ ©*>h o t- © 001- © i S $ S S1 5 S3 53 8 S 5 3SJ rH i c© 00 © 50 oo o* co ©* t- 05 .h S SS 81P S ? 3 o 5 to o t: “ a tH e3 ©* •05 •C*J -O •IO T-t • e<5 • • ©*' rH .O0©r-t<—> V?^*«00 •«©« CO TO * • . § £ s " 5§ : .< • 'OiOrtt- ■ • *rH • • • • • 73 s t- 05 *O -• • m • : cf ’ ©J O CS Tf yo • O ■ . IQ QO O • r- •T-ICOO HO( co •Wa32WH©oecOQ® .QC0005005 l6i5p CO O • 3 Hj'rUOHl' .'Hop •< • •< •( •05 CO GO rH W3 rH iO : !l • • • t-Tco"cT rH-rHOT * : THg I goo : «Tl • . ' :8 : ‘co :S :S :s :SSSf2 :835 :*»i( tiO ■ • l*M • .co©»«0©*ihto®ineoeot-t-05«ot-350»gooTH(NCOrH Hf 2C (59 r H t-OOrH®COTH5J®^»H<S*QC2^,<?* C- CO CO 00^ rH rH O^tS M CO_rH_Hf «lOX <3i<?a<>»c> • :!S8? : : •:S • •(St"Ol • • ‘Off* ►» ' -iot-rH Id :p : :8 ■ aj • -HH • • } © CJ w HO CO 9ir-l eo . pentine selling to-day at 85c., and Common Rosin at $5 25. The movement is mainly speculative. • • O <V ;0© • • * 00 50 CD • 11 u 05 • • 00 ’ _ *4 * to l— Hi co C3 :'-:8S§ : : :S : :S :SS :§S •:||S :•§§* :• -ONS* OH «qo6 • TT L— •S8 •®» r? o 8 •OQt- § I £ 149,260 qo -©»rH • 61,23 'O rH •ta « advancing, Spirits Tur¬ e;©«oPSgia c- rH •lO •eoo ■ • t- ’ 1 « • •S • P-H limited to lie., !Ort =58 : : -j J S §4 O 8 ©f cf 0© The stock of Coffee has been much reduced. Naval Stores have been active and 1-t a gold, for prime. Bacon and cut meats have slightly declined. Hogs are lc. a pound lower. Beef has declined a dollar a barrel, and butter and cheese are lower. At the cattle mar¬ ket to-day Beeves declined $5 to $8 per head, and were dull. Groceries have been without important transactions until to-day ; about 3,000 hhds. of Molasses were taken on the spot and to arrive, mostly for distilling, at rather better prices. There is some peculiarity in the Federal Excise Law, or its administration, which renders Molasses a favorite article for distillation. «« ©t r-t et generally pronounced unsatisfactory. Except where speculation steps in, the demand for goods is below the av¬ erage at this season. Cotton has been very irregular. Breadstuff's have advanced on a speculative demand. Provisions have been exceedingly depressed, except Pork, which has advanced 50c. per bbl. since yesterday, on the manipulation of speculative holders towards a “corner,” against those who have been selling “ short.” Lard has de¬ lie. in currency, with shipping orders t-Itm - -H • co o oo business clined tH N rt ^ ||S : ■ ' ' 09 g -35 : :is Hj* -rH of Oils have been dull. *8 gold prices for foreign Dry Hides have been better supported. The sales to¬ day include 5,000 Dry Buenos Ayers, 23 to 25 lb. average, at 20£@21fc., gold. Leather is steady. Petroleum has further declined, but the business yesterday and to-day has been quite large, and the close is firm. Tallow has slightly declined, closing steady. Tobacco has been fairly active for leaf and brisk for manu¬ Hides have been more x> d active latterly, and T-t S. .o6<»t-o5 rlHO CO ci CO H? •C'3'QOQ©lOeO-3'rHC505®»Q 'OCh^C* t— 09 OO • > . • c S ^ fl . o ■ • • 25 .t-io •»»HHt*»-»aO »C0Ct- £— CO hJ< Q> t}< CO CO TT O tH •WHOC*COOO • 09 eo 8 * W CO O C9 O :SS8g •wJ5rt • h^' t-T ’ ' OiT 09 09 * :S5S • ' Jx 'o Bn C5C- rH : • O * 1 S 15 CO T}< • _ :g : : :«55 • OJ • ‘ -r-T ‘ 00 • • CO_ rH_ * ' ccTr-T • IO 09 09 eo • • S^ «8 *8 • J rH • :|8 : : :8 O • • ec • o • <oT 8 : ■ Hf rH • • >« . • . • :S8S£!] • * ( 00 • co te • ■ 09 : .S8g' 00 • • • 05 M w : • X3 CO to :BSS :g :3 *t-< :Si 09 -rH • rH % : • : : :< ' 09 o factured. Wool is dull and depressed. ” irregular, Iron and Tin receding a portion of the late advance, Lead being heavy, and Copper fairly ac¬ Metals have been S. 11 °0 con • :g : t- *05 t- • • oo09 ’»■ * • • rf :S •© ‘co tive and firm. goods are quiet. Freights have been depressed by the speculative advance in Breadstuff's. The limited shipments embraced to day Corn to Liverpool by steamer at 4d., and Flour to London by sail at 3 East India 2s. fci To Great Britain... France Holland & Belg. Germany Other N.Europe Spain Other S. Europe This week. The July 1,1866 To $959,053 $23,054,066 Cubs, 242,992 2,483,341 1,411,679 2,787,263 12,711 249,815 8,660 199,583 648,670 50,526 2,582,997 11,705 154,381 6,750 644,255 1,126,773 88,435 Hayti Other W. I Mexico New Granada... Venezuela Br. Guiana Brazil Others. A. ports All other ports. week. $31,116 34,365 262,027 321,904 23,65S 904,129 2,548 1,126,263 398,727 487.903 following table shows the exports of leading articles from the port of New Yoik, since July 1,1866, the ports of destination and the total since January 1, and for the same period in 1865. The export of each article to the several ports, and the total for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount in the last number of the Chronicle from that here given ; of commerce i ©» rH « OTf QOOO O >* 0 • • o a 2^C5 -^l S ’ • T • w 1 Cv rH • 105 CO *rH( •to* ^ cd W I- • S QJ (JQ Cf g • rH 05 ' T-T * G* CO <?f ' •••••• ••■••• • CO 05 o tr* OCO ‘ . .t- :S IS ’ ^ • : cooo i©» ‘CO" CO ” W •« S v. op 1 :Si2j "rH CO 05 05 • C9 • • •05« 05 • .050© i: i; i: T-tl© ■«THt-o©oo»2*Ja5 • rH CO •CO 05 • rH • CO 05 •oospo'Qt- CO rH •1050 b:8 .... ;s| • • 2,033,450 1,299,199 j 241,212 155,509 31,327 110,018 : : *3 H-3 S3 O H July 1. $2,257,308 12,891 j Cu Since 1,679,858 East Indies China Australia Br.N A Colonies This Since : : s xi . (exclusive of specie) for the past week, and since July 1, is shown in the following table: ’ <u tH <U 0) exports from this port to different countries ' - tH The value of j" j j jS ft* i o* GO tH F4 -M a oo co ©* O *°^53S £ 8 rH '88 8 PQ •‘S '°952!S®£2®a: • *0 o f «o5S 3 S § '*%**%% *§ * Jg CO* rH October CHRONICLE. THE 20,1866.J 497 COTTON. Leading: Articles. Imports of following table shows 5,019 week. Buttons 57 ...... 320 13,281 Coffee, bags .. Cotton, bales Drugs, &c. Bark, Peruv Blea p’wd’ra show a still fur¬ against 17,386 bales receipts since the 1st of September 73,001 bales. The gradual increase in the weekly receipts this year may be seen in the following: receipts the past week at all the ports having reached 28,202 bales, the previous week, making the total ther increase, 17 5 ... Gambier.... Gums, 50 47 Gum, Arabic Indigo 989 Madder Gunny cloth . Hair ....... Hemp, bales.. Hides, &c. Bristles 659 29,613 9,131 94,489 12 13 30 614 Jewelry Watches.... 852 110 Linseed Molasses Metals, &c. Cutlery 4,661 637 95,208 51,816 2,049 343,973 January Week Since Jan. 1. time’65 Pitch...,.,.. 65,3551,934,2732,540.860 Oil cake, pkgs 2,253 5,595,259 147,8306,022,0437,248,875 Oil, lard.: 22 318,45719,655,84210,428,360,Oil,Petroleum. 29,125 Peanuts, bags. 91 39,194 589,150 316,140 Provisions— 14,400 423,734 Butter, pkgs. 8,695 402,401 775,247*1,454,200 Cheese.. 36,425 121,406 Itye. Malt Barley .... 554 Grass seed... Flaxseed .... 154,765 184,728 +244,365 1,805 231,779 675 Buckwheat & 8,437 115 140 Copper, bbls... plates. Dnedfrmt,pkgs 1,068 11,484 5,945 202 Grease, pkgs... 2,604 46 Hemp, bales... 284,764 Hides, No 776 10,245 Molasses, & bbls 1,060 Lard, Lard, 94.640 1,354 627 813 875 .. pkgs... kegs... 74 bols 154 SEPT. Florida, Oct. N. 7,071 2,250 67,555 7,327 11,905 57.297 53,970 96,775 73,011 i 1,383 21,732 17,108 4,535 2,665 473 6,375 • • . . .... • .... • • • • • , , • 24,724 2,166 826 .. • • 1,883 .... .... . , • • .... . • . • ... • • .... .. * . . • • • . • 25,214 93,398 7,950 23,270 5,768 2,620 13,977 5,509 832 6,573 70,000 .... • 1,976 4,120 .... 261 462 2,900 50,877 201 7,201 163 173 «, , 40.776 STOCK. .... .... . . * *48,000 60,010 247,533 the advices from Liverpool, received immediately subsequent to our last, and an appear¬ of better trade in our market for cotton goods, caused a The favorable character of ance renewed 81,769 .... 665 15*. Total and prices advanced 3 cts. per Tuesday* at 43c. for Middling Upland. Since speculative demand, lb., closing that date the dulness rough, Rice, p’ts, Oct. 10,260 4,5&5 2,665 NORTH. PORTS. for’gn. Britain 1,976 4,120 Carolina, Oct. 19. Other 136 616 No 1. 173 12+ Virginia, Oct. 19 66,711 109,731 8HIP- m’nts TO Total. France Other ’ 210,045 79,600 48>24 92,355 84,556 Whiskey, bbls. 2,042 Wool, bales.... 1,013 Dressed Hogs, Great . 30,594 9,431 <8,709 13,429 1,352 2,562 Oct. 12.. Mobile, Oct. 12 Charleston, Oct. 12.. Savannah, Oct. 12.\ Texas, Oct. 5....... New York, Oct. 19*. N. Orleans, 97 726 pkgs. 3,389 983 Tobacco, 20,825 Tobacco, hlias. since PORTS. 501,185 95,505 2,967 5,163 1 TO— SINCE SEPT. EXPORTED rec’d 97,428 3,569 Tallow, pkgs.. 11,744 219 6i give our usual Same 134,245 hhds & Sugar, 54,4951,846,0671,722,500 6,530 hhds table of the movement of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing at a glance the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept. 1, and Stocks at Dates Mentioned. Below, we 348,487 515,735 198 Rice, pkgs 76,584 472,620 519,170 Starch Stearine 16,273 Spelter, slabs.. 6,168 850 B.W. flour,*,bg Cotton, bales .. Hops, bales.^. Leather, sides . Lead, pigs Eggs. Pork. Beef, pkgs. 44,328 382 bales. 40,103 9,008 2,390 85,586 5,130 3,900 838,378 416,379 9,923 512,693 from all the ports since Sept. 1 50,877 bales, Jan. 1. 1,362 Cut meats.. 61,368 4,329 Beans Peas C. meal,bbls. C. meal.bags. Copper, 105 16 Tar 1,207 same since 1,374 308,503 Rosin 14,260 9 r v foreign exports 1,198 *i against 86,138 bales for the time last year. ,The last few weeks the movement has been very limited, because ot the failure of the Liverpool market to respond to the rise in prices here. Stocks are, therefore, increasing, now reaching at all the ports 247,532 55,830 141,96.0 208,26 Since week. week, bales amount to now week ending Oct. 19, since follows: made.] time’65 Same 75 4,518 Ashes, pkgs. Breadstufrs— Flour, bbls.. Wheat, bush.283,630 2,410,687 Oats Com The total 283 238 677 8 New York Boston... 221,553 292,495 856,259 480,344 Exported this week to British P’s. Total. Hamburg. Bremen. Liverpool. Exported from :p< 1. receipts of domestic produce for the and for the same time in 1865, have been as [Of the items left blank in 1865 no record was This week. and Total this and 73,011 September 1 523,527 113,614 and this week from all the ports are very small, having reached only 1,207 bales, of which 685 bales were to Liverpool, 238 bales to Bremen, 283 bales to Hamburg, 1 bale to the British Provinces, as follows: 2,289,155 25,148 4,858 6,029 Receipts week ending Sep. 21... Receipts previous to Sep. 21 since Sep. 1 19.. 28,202 12... 17,386 5... 9,950 28... 6,591 exports for The $600,459 121,966 1.35.811 277 Produce for the Jan. 1, This Total since 79,582 46,466 40,232 Manoj ogany. 2,154 Domestic Receipts of 11,964 706 Saltpetre .... 67,573 Woods. Fustic 132,942 Logwood.. 921 199,313 113,195 « • • • 17,^16 23 260,276 330,128 480,459 21,928 8,663 5,262,890 3,780,938 1,085 Hides,undrsd. 58,477 7,429 617,723 964,196 4,030 Rice 20.959 Spices, &c. 128,548 102,884 2,170 Cassia 29,267 45,747 Ginger 46,166 202,827 512 Pepper 78,532 .136,919 690 Jewelry, &c. 351,962 340,932 650,984 804 Raisins 2,005 8,776 17,955 Ivory The 3,939 22,562 3,857 94 89 176 Hides.dres’d India rubber.. 26,947 $2,610 $1,186,562 52,455 Cigars 2,284 136,011 9,801 Corks 22,901 Fancy goods.. 78,748 3,429,118 24,552 648,S53 9,753 Fish 4,171 Fruits, &e. 1,856 442,473 2,535 Lemons... 284,529 2,316 Oranges 19,884 727,427 50,915 Nuts 6-44,574 32,778 5 68 37,411 52,915 15 reported by value. 542 Articles 113,687 10 78 Flax Furs 85,761 Receipts week ending Oct. do Oct. do do do Oct. do do Sep. 66,495 468,954 5,170,230 3,? 65,877 146,375 637,368 971 2,158 Wines 27,999 Wool, bales... 3,638 ' Steel Tin, bxs.... 5,276 Wines, &c. 3,468 Champ, bkts 2,801 7,381 *147 Oils, ess ... 200 Oil, Olive... 6 Opium Soda, bi-carb 4,940 Soda, sal.... 2,512 478 Soda, ash... 7,555,915 1,116,142 22,400 1,862 14,322 Spelter, lbs. 855 Sugar,bxs&bg 201 Tea 3,857 Tobacco 2,907 Waste 1,079 22,617 II,025 3,700 ’i78 crude .... 7,091 Lead, pigs.. 3,624 175,027 148,747 203,828 325,097 Tin slabs,lbs 3,274 1,163 15,570 Rags hhds, 1,603 7,964 Sugar, 1,838 tcs & bbls.. 400 47,262 19,720 14,450 ' Iron,RRb’rs 28,392 time 1865. an. the Jai 1, week. 1866.10,920 258 Hardware... 551,021 I,905 195 Brimst, tns. Cochineal... Cr Tartar 2,852 259,324 3,601 385,559 13,073 561,124 3,691 Coal, tons .... Cocoa, bags... Same time 1865. 19,1866. The unce Since Jan. 1, 1866. For the P. M., Oct Faiday, the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port for the week ending Oct. 12, einco Jan1, 1866, and for the corresponding period in 1865 : [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Same Sii For The of the spinning demand, and the de¬ sire of speculative holders to realize, together with reports* Including barley malt. + Including bags reduced to barrels. of fine wreather at the South, have gradually weakened the EXPORTS FROM BOSTON, PHILADELPHIA AND BALTIMORE. market, and the improvement has been in part lost. To day i; The following table shows the exports from the aboye ports, of some z month of Sept .>-and from Jan. there w ere 1,821 bales of Georgia cotton sold at auction on leading articles of commerce for the 1 to Oct. 1, 1866 : Government account, bringing prices rather above the mar¬ (Coal oil and kerosene are included under petroleum.)Baltimore ket. Strictly Middling sold at 42 cents; Low Middling at -Boston.Jan.1 to Jan. 1 to Jan. 1 to Oct. 1. Sept. Oct. 1. Oct. 1. Sept. Sept. 22,170 39f; Good Ordinary at 371; and Ordinary at *1,513 12,138 *158,167 1,394,071 1,239 Bread, bbls Since this sale the market has improved, and closes firm at 120,822 Breadstuffs— 11,208 77,478 90,013 139,786 12,969 20,712 the following«quotations. 26.707 1,607 Flour, bbls Sales for the week are about 13,3,712 26,361 2,038 Cora meal, bbls., 18,422 Naval Stores— trp,bbl Spirits turp. Crude 33,229 124 413 46,616 26,770 14,677 bush * 34f@35^. * . . . 478 Wheat, bush 2,048 . 4,03) . 5,551 23,782 40,350 41.556 755,246 *57,800 442,650 722 10,060 377 71 902 Naval stores— s Spts turpenl Rosin, bbls 9,101 1,735 1,751 . . 300 402 208,815 27,713 1,271,161 1,323 . 16,5)6 510,308 *8,711 33 23 .... 4,293 30 , , , 200 790,489 457,844 10,428 ! 6,027.407 3,207,184 18,423,957 .... Butter, tubs, Cheese, bxs, Lard, kegs & &c &c .... bbls... Tallow, bbls Tobacco, pi Tobacco mfd lbs. 698 278 266 6,917 4,780 1,145 7,702 3,711 8,782 33 1,477 Total val of exports$2,386,887 * Pounds. 3,448 .... 18,407,678 130 83 *12,284 *2,501 *263,800 *110,066 *55,167 5,416 2,464 694 6,314 1,124 100,158 73,265 1,579,534 *274,048 1,442,228 212 228,682 28,802 not reported ... ... ... 43 247,279 1,267,018 72,486 *22,389 5,936 *21,912 2,869,991 Upland. lb Good 273,000 792 75 2,082 1,895 N. Orleans 9,148 1,119 ' Provision s- 000 bales. 375 84 451 , *480,940 2,008 *36,000 ... Middling $708,094 $8,274,980 Mobile. 33 35 34 36 41 43 46 32 35 39)4 42 44 44 Cotton from New York decreased, amounting to Exports of still further which 677 were to Liverpool, 238 to Hamburg, as follows : 30,555 40,547 Florida. 40 42 45 ATe 34 37 42 44 47 the past week have only 1,198 bales, of Bremen, and 283 to ■ * ports are only the shipments from Tennessee, enumerated. + These are the receipts at all the ports of Florida, except Apalachicola. * The receipts given for these Kentucky, &c., not otherwise $ Estimated, • * 4981 THE CHRONICLE. To Liverpool per steamer*: City of Dublin, 600; City of New York, 77. Total bales To Bremen per steamer Bremen, 238 bales. Total bales To Hamburg per steamer Teutonia, 281. Total bales Below we give 677 238 283 Rec’ps. Sales. Exp. Stock.-Mid. July 6.. 41 our 13... 44 . 20... 44 . 27... . Aug. 3... 44 . 10... 44 17... 24... 44 44 . . . 31... 14... 21... 28... Oct. 5... 44 12... EXPORTED TO Sept. 2. 5,174 2,290 Liverpool Other British Ports .... Total to i t. Britain.. Hamburg • • 21,713 . .... .... 75 521 1,159 760 408 203 16 .... 9,410 By steam. t firm, the sales 188 495 Ail others .... 1,371 Spain, etc 771 / 683 July 44 795 Grand Total • 44 .... 1 2, .25 following are 2.299 1,198 the receipts of Colton week, and since September 1 24,724 47,035 at this port 44 Since week. Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. 2,521 15,132 2,024 2,042 9,788 From New Orleans Texas Savannah...Mobile Florida 3,897 621 week. From South Carolina North Carolina Norfolk, Baltimore, Per Railroad Since Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. 1,628 6,790 '. 263 1,962 &c.. 1,704 4,238 279 Foreign 2,527 51 8,437 the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ delphia, and Baltimore for the last two weeks, and since September 1 : are /—Boston.—, Last New Orl< leans Texas Savannah Mobile... Since 2 weeks. Sep. 1. 1,199 YY'YYYYY.Y. 42 -Philad’phia.-s Last 2 weeks. 4,178 113 651 2,322 Florida South Carolina North Carolina Tenncsee, Kentucky, &c.... Total receipts bales 2,902 12,760 Since Sep. 1. 184 207 829 194 7,605 169 39 162 6 5,789 . . . •• 5.919 20@21 20® 21 20® 21 20@21 143@146 *@ * *@9-16 *@9-16 1 *@9-16 1 — — 5,870 5,S26 nominal. * 1 6,427 24@25 *@9-16 1 ex-revenue tax. @- 143@146 @- 140@143 @X 141 @143 @X 142®... @X 141@143 @X 143@145 t Per steamer. 997 6 295 1,458 - 60 474 44 44 1,676 2,212 Reshipment. The total exports 44 1,070 10... 17... 25.... 31 850 672 826 702 687 815 734 3.... 20.... 27.... 1,900 2,750 2,750 1,543 1,420 .... Sept. 7.... 44 Price of To To New mid. L’pool. York. Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. Stock- Aug. 8.... 44 * we Freight Date. 44 3,160 . 1,263 1,860 have received oae week’s later dates from Mobile. The receipts for the week ending Oct. 12 were 2,847 bales, against 3,086 bales last week, and the shipments were 1,927 bales, of which 1,320 bales were to to New York, and 607 to New Orleans, leaving the stock on hand and on shipboard, not cleared, of 23,270 bales.* The following are the weekly receipts, sales, and exporte for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week: 44 560 50 Mobile, Oct. 13.—By mail 665 4,291 Specie, . The market has been less stagnant the past week, but no great ac¬ tivity can be looked for before the new cron comes in freely. Under the advices from Liverpool and New York,, prices advanced about 8 cents, specie. 44 4,946 148 1,630 388 13 8i ... Baltimore.-^ Last Sep. 1. 2 weeks. 184 1,229 37 120 108 690 July 6.... 36 419 New York, <fec*. Since * • - 47,030 Receipts from— Oct. • , 145 14. 21. 28. 5. 44 This 194 . 7. 44 44 Total lor the week. Total since Sept. 1. following for 31 Sept. : This Virginia 44 .... 44 The The Aug. 795 .... 44 6,245 •— the 16 being 10,400 bales. Date. 44 Total for the week Fr eigb ta. , Price To Liver- To New Price Rece'ts. Sales. Exp. Stock. mid.* pool. York.t gold. 6.. 725 616 7,584 nominal —@9-16 1 @— 147®... 13 388 100 957 7,015 21@— —@9-16 1 @- 145@146 20.. 583 1,004 6,599 21®—@9-16 1 @— 145® — 27.. 205 200 1,202 6,602 21®— —@9-16 1 @- 143@144 3.. 401 150 771 9,401 21®— 1 @- 143@143* *@— 10.. 307 784 8,924 20®— 1 @— 143@144 *®~ 17.. 286 ' 150 37 9,173 20@21 1 @- 145@147 *@X 24.. 187 100 686 8,674 20@21 *@X @- .... •. Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar Price York.* gold. &4@36 • X@* *@— 162*®— 34@35 *@— X@— 150*@151 35@86 *@* *@* 148 @149 85@88 *@1-16 *@* 148 @... 34@36 *@— 1*@1* 144*@144X 35@36 *@— 1 @1* 145*@145* nominal. *@— *@ — 148X@149 35@36 X@*@ — 145*®— -@-@-@ —@— 34@35 9-16@* *@ — 144 @— 35@36 *@— X@ — 144 @— 36@37 *@- X@ - 143 @143* 37@38 9-16@* 1® — 142*@148 40@.— 9-16® X 1® — 147*@l47 40®— 9-16® * 1® — 148*® 149 pool. - mail from Galveston. .... 826 .... 7,566 12,662 10,400 9,186 108,566 4,476 106,783 9,499 98,904 5,998 03,597 7,497 88,115 6,378 83,221 9,119 112,087 3,176 110,715 3,777 99,337 4,682 9,605 91,804 3,311 91,623 4,612 92,008 17,009 83,839 3,103 93,398 » To Liver-To New Galveston, Oct. 6.—We have received one week’s later statement by The receipts for week ending Oct. 5 were 690 bales, against 108 last week, and the shipments were 6 bales, against 162 last week Below we give the receipts, sales, ai^d ship¬ ments for a seres of weeks, and the stock, price of midding, rites of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week: 1,159 .... 238 283 , 930 45,193 .... . . 6.880 2,P43 10,960 4,163 12,660 The market closed 44,263 21,732 .... • 771 * 826 .... 251 .. prev. year. 19 677 75 • Europe 677 2,299 144 .... Total to N. date. .... 251 Other ports 16. 144 49 Bremen and Hanover.... to .... .... Total Frencli... Oct. 2,299 2,290 49 ... Oct. 9. ... 5,174 Havre,.... Other French ports.. Total Oct. 25. Same time 3,700 3,620 2.013 44 41 ENDING 1,046 1,547 . Sept. 7... (bales) from New Trork since Sept. 1,1866 WEEK 3,277 4,500 2,509 6,000 1,386 6,7.10 1,461 8,300 1,765 6,800 1,*54 5,025 1,603 10,000 1,479 5,150 . 44 of Cotton Freights , Price Date. 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 1, 1866 ; and in the last column the total for the same period of the previous year : Export* [October 20,1860. 640 14... 479 3,200 1,500 1,600 5,018 4,310 1,017 572 2,927 1,350 1,627 30,496 25,267 34,978 35,108 82,868 32,333 31,440 1,860 3,320 29,663 1,900 3,547 29,009 1,300 3,802 25,847 2,900 1,540 24,786 122 25,436 4,000 3,500 3,888 23,155 3,650 3,891 22,350 3,800 1,927 23,270 30@— 29@30 31@32 31 @32 32®30®— 30®— 30@31 30@31 -@30 30@31 32@33 35®37@— 37@— » Price of gold. * 1* © X 151@152 * 1* @ X 150@152 * 1* @ X 149@151 *• 1* © X 148@149* * 1* @ X 145@146* % 1* @ X 145® 146* % 1* ® X 149®X 1* @ X 150@152 X 1* @ X 144® 145 X 1* @ X 142@144 X 1* @ X 143@144 1 * @ X 142@145 * 1* @1 143® 144 X' 1* @ix 143@144 X 1* @ X 150@151 ot Cotton from these three cities 21 772 during 28 the past two weeks were as follows 1,607 : From Oct. 5 3,086 Boston, 8 bales Oct. 13.... to Liverpool and 1 bale to the 2,847 British Provinces : Total from The market closed firm Boston, 9 bales. From Baltimore, 10 bales to good ordinary at 33c.; low middling, 85c Liverpool. and middling, 87c. The Growing Crop.—Our accounts the past week from Savannah, Oct. 12.—The receipts the South are very satisfactory, showing as they do that the 5,939 bales, against 2,847 bules last for the weekending Oct 12 were week, of which 5,487 bales were weather could not have been more received by the Central Railroad, 301 bales by the Atlantic and Gulf favorable for maturing Rail*4 bales from White Oak the later growth of cotton and River, 99 bales from Augusta per gathering such as is in con¬ cteau.i» and 48 bales Sea Island from Jacksonville, Fla. The shipments dition to be picked. Of course what has been this wet* -Tere 3,726, of which 2,257 bales were to New York, 551 destroyed by bales to i ii the rains and worms cannot be 'adelphia, 497 bales to Boston, and 421 bales to Balti¬ restored; but the present more. Below we give the receipts, shipments, prices, Ac., for a series of clear, cool, dry weather serves to demonstrate that the dam¬ weeks : 44 . .. 44 ... — .... age done was not exchanges tell so great as anticipated. Our Southern that with continued sunshine and late frosts a much better yield will be realized than *most in the South dared to hope for a few weeks since. This now us is in July 44 44 44 Aug. 44 ac¬ 44 cordance with own own ad vices and the opinion we expressed when the gloomy accounts of the destruction of the crop were first published. The new cotton is now 44 coming forward freely, and with diminished export? the stocks creasing. more \ are in¬ 44 44 673 3 1,909 10 5. 17 24 31 14 21 28 Oct. 5 “ 12 44 2,198 2,146 4,299 13 20 27 Sept. 7 “ Receipts. Shipm’s. 6 1,197 ; 1,440 3,279 1,433 1,631 2,'67 2,377 1,782 Stock. 12,374 12,013 10,800 11,270 3,274 6,509 1,237 1,433 1,799 — 9,900 3,726 1,543 Trice Mid. 30 31 32 32 11,096 10,309 9,349 8,144 5,205 4,156 3,950 ,3,623 3,296 494 1,472 J @32 @32 @— @@32* 32*®— 30 @— 31 @— 29 @30 .. 30 @31 30 @31 31 @31* 34 @84* 38 @39 36 @37 Charleston, Oct. 13.—The receipts,for the week N*w Orleans, Oct. 18.—The mail returns for the week ending October 12 U^show the receipts to be 12,662 bales, against V,6 66 bales ending Oct. amount to 2,663 bales, against 2,096 bales last week. Shipments for this last week week amount to 3,857 “be shipments for the last week were bales, against 1,076 bales last week, of which; 8,103 bales ; of which 1,826 were 2,702 were to New New York, 1,177 to Bostou, and 101 to Baltimore. Stock on hand has been active but York, 654 to Boston and 495 to Baltimore. Market closes about Sc, lower./ Sales for the 12 was 93,898 bales. The receipts, sales, and week amount exporte for to 1,163 bales. The receipts, sales, and a series of weeks, and the exports for ai series of weeks, stock, price of middling rates of freight to and the stock, priee of middling,-rates of freight to “Jverpool and New York, and price of gold ftt the close of each Liverpool and W$©k New York, and price of gold at the clow of escti lace July 0, we tw iplfowi: week wade ' 8, were as follows; " • .«r:.*:vi * *iriy& ^'rT-’U <zy&y-;kl >2rj-. mww?^ October P&ICES CURRENT OP -Freight for Upl’d-> !i ' To Liver- . . . European 2,620 Price York. gold. X@— 146@148 X@- 149@150 x@- 149@150 X@- 148@i49 x@— 145@149 x@- 144@146 x@- 1<*4@147 x@- 145@143 X X ©X @X X X @X <§>X x x x @39 @36 38 35 3,148 1,076 3,851 1,500 1,153 2,096 2,663 . To New pool Price of mid. Recto. Sales. meats. Stock. 320 350 3,822 Unset’ed 125 723 3,852 Unset’ed 267 280 314 3,883 80 @557 480 638 4,274 31 @729 628 943 5,535 30 @31 355 794 480 5,105 30 @31 690 1,683 2,872 31 @32 1,089 645 3,176 950 2,300 33 ®— 2,285 £4 @1,431 1,088 1,361 Ship- . I43@145 145@148 148@150 x@— x@— x@- @@@- these mar¬ Indian Cotton Markets.--In reference to and 499 THE CHR0N1CL 20, I860.] * Very low. New Orleans.. Mobile 170 165 =•' .... .... AMERICAN COTTON. Very 185 1-0 Georgia....... 1865. Good ord. 225 Ord. 210 ord. ' 195 190 1S5 Low. Middling.Very Low 230 22S 235 to 250 200 192 ' .... Bombay, Sept. 28.—The shipments of cotton during the past fort¬ night have beeu confined to 10,000 bales. The cotton trade is quiet at the annexed quotations: Broach 8 l-86d, Dhollerah 8 9-25d per lb , including freight. Freight to Liverpool, 20s per ton. The shipments from January 1 to Sept. 8, were as follows : Liverpool. Clyde Continent. America... China 18,314X 20,533 718,729* 800,781* 2,438 To London 1866 hale*. 1865. hales. 1866. hales. 1865. bales. Destination. 26,923# 16,018 800 2,279 correspondent in London, writing under the date of Oct 6, gives the following full review.* Total Great Brit’n 850,676* 737,044 823,752X Grand Total. . . 756,141 Liverpool, October 6.—The demand for cotton in the early part of Alexandria, Sept. 26.—The crop accounts are favorable in every the week, under the influence of unfavorable advices received from respect, a large yield being fully expected, whilst the quality of the New York by Atlantic Telegraph, was very active, and a rapid advance produce is much superior to last year. A few parcels of new produce then took place in prices. The actual demand for consumption, how¬ had been received, and had realized 18$c cost and freight, the quality ever, was but moderate, the greater proportion of the sales being for being “ fair.” Annexed is the statement of exports: speculation and for export. Since then toe' inquiry has fallen off, and EXPORTS OF COTTON FROM ALEXANDRIA FROM NOVEMBER 1 TO *EPT. 25. holders of produce have been compelled to accept less money, in order Great Britain. Continent. TotaL kets to our conclude sales. As compared ... with Saturday last, the advance in 1866. Fair and l“l~* —1 r- Ordinary and middling. “ 26 18 32 22 .11X@13 ..12 @13X Mobile New Orleans ...12 @13# 14^ 14X 15X 15 X 16X l'X Upland . 15 Texas The following is cotton for a Sea Island.. Mobile • . . . . . 24 . COMPARATIVE PRICES OP COTTON. 1863. 1864. 1865, R66 1863. 1864. 1865. 1866. d. d. d. a. d. d. Middling— d. d. 27 15 Pernambuco. 26 35 22X 22 41 35 14 X 20X 12 Egyptian .... 26 X 24 26X 25X 24 14 16 9 20 Broach...... 26X 25 X 24 9 16 Dhollerah... 26 19X 14 27 24X 15 . .. . .. Orleans . .. The available and immediately prospective supplies are as under: 1866. 1865. bales. London 44 Havre, 737,040 97,850 34,420 151.389 60,000 293,720 18,803 28,000 260,530 12,568 664,613 “ 217,960 39,710 ..i. Liverpool Stock at Afloat to Havre Total of cotton for The annexed statement shows the * sales and imports the week and year, as well as the stocks of each on the evening of Thursday : SALES, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. /Total Total Same principal description ' Specula- this „ this west Indian..... East Indian...... China and Japan.. 3,011 320 60 416,090 87,9(50 240 710 80 390 7,970 American Brazilian 1,555 459,369 150,953 329,026 19,045 1,321,576 806,512 11,032 120,290 65,020 25,660 1,095,744 18,030 866,300 125,871 8,010 87,340 7 ,411 253,020 334,068 411.328 113.328 .... 147 23,070 2,939,5571,795,343 2,539,708 Total London, Oct. 6.—This 3,960 7,440 1,850 17,*80 110 22,690 15,840 30,460 5,580 128,210 15,180 737,040 217,960 143,722 36 004 1864. Deliveries same 4,971 period 1865. ' 1866. Havre, Oct. 4.—There has been a week, but the market to-day is somewhat quieter. Very low New Orleans is worth 180f the 50 kilogs. The subjoined particulars embrace the -DELIVERIF8- Brazilian Indian Total, inclnding other kinds.. . 13,124 212,496 20,646 151,632 American., hales. 172,713 209,754 1865. 1866. 1865. 56,767 462,358 12,239 21,762 164,766 223,824 -STOCKS- 1866. 1865. 1866. 144,200 41,380 1,125 77,867 238 17,500 142,139 32,445 51,302 344,516 34,420 151,389 the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph patches at the close of our London, letter in a previous part oi this paper.— ♦For latest news respecting Coxxurcul <fc Financial Chronics, The following are current quotations in currency : Heavy West'll Light & Leaf. Common do Common Leaf Medium do Good do Fine do Selection* Good - 5C 5 @ 5X 6.@ 7X 8 @10 11 @12X 13 @15 -16 @18 I . Clarksv’le. 4c@ 4Xc Ky. Lugs '. . \ des. @@ 7c. ixoiox @14 @17 @20 11 15 18 21 @22 Seed Leaf. “ Average , and Common 44 hinders Fillers N. Y. 7X@10c. 6 @ 7c* lots.. 44 .. 45 ®60c. 30 @45c. Ohio.—Good running 16 @25c. 10 @12c. Conn.—Prime wrappers Penn.—Punning lots Average 3 Fillers \ Fillers @ 5c. 6 @12c. 3 @ 5c. State.—Wrappery lots 12 @20c. ‘k 7X@12c. Running 4*@ 6c. Fillers. Manufactured. " Western and Black.-6s, 10s, X and X lbs., Common Navy X lbs. and lbs., Common 30c.@ 40c. Common 35c.@ 45c, 50c.@ 60c. X lbs. and lbs., Bright.— Medium Good and fine 3dc@ 40c. 60c.@ 70c. > 35c.@ 60c. 46c, 50c.@ 75c.@$1.00 75c.@$1.15 27c.@ 30c. 23c.@ 25c. 20c.@ 22c. 25c.@ 30c. 25c.@ 35c. 50c.@ 50c.@ 80c. In bond- Black.—Common Good and fine 25c.@ 35c. 75c. 75c.* Bright.—Common ~ Good and fine 60c.@ 70c. 60c.@ 72c. 60c.@ 72c. Good and fine..: v 30c.@ 40c. 45c.@ 56c. 30c.@ 40c. 45c.@ 56c. Medium .......... Good and fine...:'.... Virginia. City. Tax paid , , demand, parti¬ cularly the better descriptions, and prices steady. Common Leaf con¬ tinues neglected. Of Ohio we report sale9 of 400 hhds. for export*, at prices rather favoring buyers, though without any quotable change. Nothing doing in Kentucky worthy of remark. Inspections this week, 844 hhds. Maryland, 556 Ohio, and 6 Kentucky—total 1,406 hhds. Jan. 1, 1866—Stock in warehouse and on shipboard not cleared—hhds. 22,600 Inspected this week 1,406 Baltimore, Oct. 17.—Maryland Leaf has been in fair 38,474 Inspected previously period from January 1 to Sept 30 : —IMPORT8- good. 370,275 150,400 281,317 219,755 218,341 39,711 97,847 good demand for cotton during the Stock, Oct. 4 quotations. In Virginia tobacco there has not beeu much done, and the offerings are very light. In Seed Leaf, only about 200 cases have been sold, part for export; but prices rule firm. tobacco is very dull. Manufactured tobacco has been Havana very active the past week. The excise seems to be more uni¬ formly collected, and buyers have taken hold with more cour¬ age for the home trade. The export demand has also been 144,759 249,251 210,850 82,599 bales. movement.. The one-third was for The accounts from the crop are generally favorable, respecting the prospects of the ex¬ port trade. The market is, therefore, merely nominal, at late 31,023 9,796 pool market, and in the middle of the week prices showed an advance of l^d per lb. Since then the market has been quieter, and the market closes at an improvement of ^d to fd per lb from Saturday last. The following particulars relate to East India, China and Japan Cotton :— — Friday, P. M., Oct. 19. and little is known as yet 3.760 market has followed the course of the Liver¬ Imports, Jan. 1 to Oct 4 178,481 export. —StocksSame This date Dec. 31. 1865. 1865. day. Total 1865. 2,323 1,030,365 210,291 350,220 241,884 Egyptian 37C.6 active the past week, but without important sales have been about 1,200 hhds., of which 1865. 4410 2,794,740 2,864,050 47,110 38,800 To this To this date This date week. 1866. 1865. East Indian...... China and Japan 1,530 270,520 -lmports- West Indian 3,470 26,930 25,690 22,590 75,210 1,197,9201.557,310 17,550 60,540 34,200 31,830 126,570 Total.. 18,650 5,800 1866. 1865. 252.860 157,550 75,410 3,970 3,210 170 140 weekly sales 279.310 port. tlon. week year. American. ...bales. 18,310 5,240 7,480 31,030 1,055,160 8,570 2,500 1,370 12,440 300J80 Brazilian 3,480 Average period Trade. Egyptian 29,145 63,458 307,192 1,287,377 American cotton afloat Indian “ Ex¬ 149,336 Kentucky hogsheads has been moderately The market for 25X 24X . .. 6,213 178J2f>6 , 24 . • • • comparison of the prices of middling qualities oi a 400 28,745 TOBACCO. 24 • • 35 23 70 24 series of years : MiddlingUpland • Fair. ( 42 25 Mid. fine. 52 23 38 20 2,513 Good and good fair. Sea Island.... ..24 ..16 Stained 2,7CO .... 4,8’3 144,523 period last season -1865.- w 2,300 2,513 — bale*. bales. 400 bales. hales. prices, according to the rates current-to-day, is as under : America, £d From Sept. 6 to Sept. 15 to ^d, Brazil $d, Smyrna $d to Id, East India $d to £d. and China ^d From Sept. 16 to Sept. 25. from lb. In Sea Island cotton there is no change. The total sales of Total the week amount to 126,570 bales, of which the trade has taken Previously from Nov. 1, 1865. 60,540 bale&, exporters 34,200 bales, and speculators 31,830 bales. Total Annexed are the prices now current: Same 62,480 : Total Cleared for foreign ports ^ 31,107 31,373 % Stock in warehouse.. * EXPORTS. ously. Where to— Bremen Amsterdam...*. • .. • • • • • Rotterdam Hajvre and Dieppe ; * i «0rttWlW[tt.r:* W**. ((miimi'MIHMii. , • 10,535 10,321 2,001 2,884 13,119 6,829 2,001 • ,, HI «*•♦ S’e time 1865. 10,535 • 1,037 Total. Previ¬ This week. .0 V *M9 . , - 1. 1.306 , * * . - ’• 7* ?,'•' •- /V:\ [October 20,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 500 Marseilles The movement at ihis market ha3 been — — 530 530 952 818 818 5,379 225 England '225 134 30 Russia Spain Antwerp — West Indies Other ports — , *••• .... 1,087 Total. 30.670 32,187 31,100 Manufactured Tobacco.—Receipts have fallen off ; the demand is also less active, and. though prices are without quotable change, may be re¬ garded as slightly favoring buyers. N*w Orleans, October 12.—There has been some inquiry on foreign account, but without resulting in any sales. The stock on hand is very email and is very firmly held, faclors refusing to make any concession whatever from previous prices. i; Arrived since the 6th instant, 48 hhds. Cleared since the 5th instant for New York, 14 hhds.; Valencia (Spain), 650 hhds. Stock in ware¬ houses and on shipboard not cleared on the 9th instant, 6.301 hhds. Louisville, Oct. 16.—Prices are more satisfactory than for two or days previous. The sales of the week were 575 hhds., with 95 three rejections. The market is somewhat stiffer for all desirable leaf for curing and manufacturing purposes, as these descriptions continue scarce, and are in demand. Mahogany and bright wrappers of the old crop are also very scarce, while common sorts are abundant and not materially changed. We continue the classification as follows: Light. Heavy. $4 00® 5 00 5 50® 6 50 $3 25(a) 3 50 4 00® 5 50 Common lugs Good lugs Common leaf Medium leaf 6 00® 9 00 9 50® 12 50 7 (K>@ 9 10 00@13 13 50®16 17 00® 19 20 00®21 13 00®17 00 Fair to good Good to fine Selections 18 00®30 00 35 00®45 00 00 00 00 00 00 Manufacturing wrappers, $38@$63. The stock on hand Oct. 1, 5,623 hhds.; received from the country 407 hhds ; local 108 hhds,, total 6,038. Deliveries 566 hhds.; stock on hand 5,472 hhds. l !! Tobacco Sales for September—The sales of leaf tobacco at the four auction warehouses, and the value for the past month, has been as follows : Warehouses. Hhds. 790 $76,618 39 68,408 55 60,132 65 924 582 573 Total 59,040 46 $264,200 05 2,669 BREADSTUFFS. I 1 Friday, P. M., Oct. 19. 5 I s A strong speculative feeling lias prevailed in the market since Monday, which, in the face of the decline in gold that took place early in the week, has Flour is held back and current forced up prices. supplies are quite moderate. There were large purchases by speculators on Tuesday and Wednesday. The trade has also supplied its wants liberally, and an advance of 2o@50c. per bbl. on our last quotations is established. We observe that New Orleans is distributing flour quite liberally to the coastwise markets. No accumula¬ tion of stocks is needed here preparatory to the close of navi¬ gation, for the railroads are abundantly able to deliver suffi¬ cient for the wants of the market. Wheat has arrived more freely, rather in excess of the the market, and prices declined early in the week, wants of looking strongly toward shipping figures, but speculation has caused most of the arrivals to be sent to For. the w’k. Since Jan. 1. For the w’k. S’e Jan. 1. 2,540,860 75,206 121,770 1,923,820 244.365 1,615 228,060 1,515 5,595,250 257,445 2,369,890 121,120 Flour, bbls Com meal, bbls Wheat, bush Corn, bush Rye, bush Barley, <fec., bush Oats, bush 569,160 1,251,045 193,920 5,920,695 365,970 30,090 271,050 EXPORT8. Rye, “ “ Oats, bush. bush. 7...- 2,495 26,285 Br. N. A. Col. this week 4,759 since July 1 114,923 Britain, this week.. “ since July 1 Gt. bush. bbls. Corn, bush. Flour, C. meal, Wheat, bbls. 10,428.360 316,140 1,454,260 7,248,875 934,790 29,165 18,957,565 FOREIGN ’316 217,105 13,928 6,128,353 236,006 156,542 1,272 “ 500 22,697 21,729 3,438 Indie*, this week. 4,729 2,978 “ 600 since July 1 73,540 32,294 42,167 17,336 4.350 Total Export, this week 13,526 2-’0,943 13,928 since July 1 5,300 6,287,286 254,122 270,356 54,745 164,95i “ since Jan. 1,’66 296,445 204,500 10,333,81*6 999,300 754,086 121,101 same time 1865..1,066,122 97,285 1,656,839 155,496 2,326,276 61,462 Wed “ “ “ “ Lake Ports.—The following shows tbe ceipts at the following lake ports for the week ending Oct. 13 : Weekly Receipts at Oats. Flour. bbls. Corn. bush. 902,242 40,935 44,424 793,383 4,722 30,856 9,522 306,114 8,547 38,389 7,046 701,829 34,056 Totals 1 revious week Com sp’g week Since Jan. 1, ’66 Same time, ’65 5,644 11,640 4,451 140,305 1,494,821 2,800,801 19,314,267 2,442,626 20,147,830 Eastward Movement by Canal.—Tbs following what there was afloat last Saturday on canals destined W%eat. 3,6b5 Tot’l, Buffalo 14 d. 331,710 396,470 508,910 728,180 48,013 798,710 21,500 2S3,970 820,210 776,193 606,963 1,370,191 413,116 2,467,718 283,970 3,665 16,513 Oswego, 9days. Total afloat Previous week 20,173 2,9S8 Corres’dingtime,’65. 21,914 Corn. Oats. Barley. Rye. 291,800 Liverpool, 6th October.—Up to the 101,290 182,680 66,430 2,550 78,080 .... 332,315 426,355 84,050 80,630 159,480 569,862 720,342 466,580 534,263 80,630 124,545 53,650 end of last week the weather but since the commencement of this it has been continued wet, 104,387 11,133 3,830 will show about for tide-water : Flour/ .... Rye. bush. 360,096 188,310 119,350 183,097 229,170 84,350 981,283 439,786 210,817 88,001 34,783,149 10,606,778 1,037,202 1,618,909 24,597,303 11,272,575 1,191,909 1,664,000 ... From Buffalo, week ending Oct. 15 Oct. 8 166,575 re 838,433 613,696 152,696 1,6S9,430 142,876 1,374,629 ’65 Barley. bush, bush. 31,594 Milwaukee Toledo Detroit Wheat. bush. 63,460 23,586 Chicago F’m Value -1865.- -1866. o Austria follows: as RECEIPTS. uninter¬ ruptedly flue, euabling farmers in the later districts to complete their harvest. Ttic change of weather has had the usual effect on the market, which has entirely lost the animation which has characterized it of late. At Tuesday’s Market there was a small attendance, and quite a pause in buying, but as holders of Wheat and Flour showed no disposition to give way in price, the few transactions reported were at the advanced quotations of Friday. Indian Corn partook of the general dullness, and wjts 6d per qr. lower. At to-day’s Market, the business in Wheat and Flour was rather of a retail description, at There was but a moderate demand lor Indian Corn, and with some pressure to seil, ex quay, prices gave way about 9d. per quarter; M.xed having been sold at 28s. 9d., down to 28s. 7>£d. per quarter. Quota¬ tions : Flour nominal. Wheat, Chicago and Milwaukee,-per 100 lbs., 9s. 6®lls. 6d.: Amber Iowa, 12s.®12s. 4d.; Red and Amber Winter, 11s. 9d.®12s. 3d. Indian Com, per 480 lbs., Yellow, 29s.; White, 34s.@34s. 6d.; Mixed, 28s. 9d. Tuesday’s prices. farmers’ Week ending Sept. Same time 1865 DELIVERIES of wheat. 83,748 qrs. at 51s. 5d. 73,883 40s. lOd. “ 29,1866 IMPORTS. -—Flour. sacks. bbls. Wheat, - qrs. I. corn, qrs. 2,599 United States and Canada. Total for week Total since 1st January Same time 1865 657 19,268 2,607 377,166 369,340 ;. 657 70,S29 91,065 20,747 273,673 246.735 914,345 229,689 Liverpool, (by the Cable.)—For the latest news by the cable with regard to Breadstuffs see telegraph despatches at the close of the London letter in a previous part of this paper. store, and extreme GROCERIES. prices rule at the close. The receipts of wheat at Chicago Friday Night, October 19. last week (902,000) were the largest ever known in one week, The trade in groceries has been quite liberal during the yet prices have advanced in all the Western markets. Corn has advanced. The long expected falling off in the week, although prices were for a short time disturbed by receipts has been realized, and speculative holders have taken the fluctuations in gold. Some articles which are sold only advantage thereof to put up prices. The actual trade is for specie felt this fluctuation so as to check trade to some The movement on the upper extent; but with the more settled condition of the gold very slow at the close. lakes toward tide-water is agai n on a very large scale, but ten days or a fortnight must elapse before there can be market there is a very steady fair business doing in the lead¬ any large resumption ot deliveries here. Stock, about 3,000,- ing articles at the close. 000 bushels. Teas Oats have become dull, although sharing in some extent in the speculation, which has also extended to Rve and Bar¬ ley, causing some recovery from the decline which took place early in the week. The following are the closing quotations : Flour, unsound $ bbl $8 50® 8 75 Superfine State & West. 10 00®10 50 .. Wheat, Chicago per bushel Spring $1 90® 2 45 Extra State Milwaukee Club 1 2 Extra Red Winter Amber do White 10 60® 12 25 Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 11 50®12 25 Western, mon to com¬ good 10 50®13 00 2 90® 3 00 2 80@ 3 25 Double Extra Western and St. Louis..*... 13 60®17 00 Southern supers 12 20®13 60 Southern, fancy and ex. 13 75®17 00 Com, Western Mixed.... Canadat Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State common choice extra Rye Flour, fine and ' super¬ @ .. L 6 75® 7 75 meal, Jersey and Brandywine.1; 5* 25® 5 60 fine Pom to . Western Yellow Western White Malt Peas, Canada White beans.. 1 00® 1 02 1 03® 1 05 1 08® 1 10 Rye Barley 95® 2 40 40® 2 80 - 1 12® 1 35 69®„ 62 62® 65 1 14® 1 32 1 30® 1 ... 40 ® I 80® 2 60 were only moderately active up to the middle of the week, since rather better demand buyers being willing better prices. The sales of the week have been 3,250 half chest3 Oolongs, 1,050 half chests Japans and 1,650 half chests Greens, the market closing steady and firm at the following quotations: which ti^oe there has been a to pay lyson, common to fair. Superior to fine Ex fine to finest fo’g Hyson, com to fair. Superior to fine Ex fine to finest jJun & Imp, com to fair. Superior to fine Ex fine to finest tTn Skin k Twan, ctof. Superior to fine. Sugar was Ex fine to finest 80 ® 1 05 1 16 ® 1-85 1 40 ® 1 65 85 ® 1 10 1 20 ® 1 40 1 50 ® 1 80 I 10 ® 1 25 1 35 ® 1 50 1 60 ® 1 90 60 ® 75 ® Ex fine o finest lolong, Common to fair. Superior to fine Ex fine to finest Souchong & Cong, e to f Superior to fin* 70 80 95 Ex fine to finest I 10 ® 1 15 80 ® 90 95 ® 1 20 1 *0 ® 1 70 70 ® 80 90 ® 1 G5 1 15 ® 1 70 firm at the beginning of the week, but not very active. with the settled state of the gold Later, the pricts receded a little, and, market there 85 ® Jnool’dJapau.oomtofair 95 90 ® Superior to fine 1 00 ® f 05 came abetter business. The sales Of the week are about Refined sugar has been moderately active at a decline of £c. on crushed, powdered and granulated. The market doees steady and fairly active at these figures: 6,630 hbds. and 5,850 boxes. rrkV^^^’ $Hv "." • . 1866.] October 20, Porto Rioo Cuba, inf, to com. refining do fair to Rood de fair to Rood grocery dodo prime to choioe... centrlfngftl do Melado 7 ffavana, Bores D. ft. Hi© IS*© »i© 6 © Noa. 7 to 9 do 10 to 12 do 10*© 9*© 104© mi© 14 ■ 10| 11 12 18 12* S do do do do jOftf ••••••••• 3rfi.mi1n.tAri do do do do • 12 © . 18 Hi© 14*© IS to 15 IS to 18 19 to 20 white 15$ .. _. Crushed and powdered Vbite coftee A 17* 16* 1H 14* .. .. IP* Hi © © © .. •♦»••••• . 16* ® 14*© .. less active thab last week. The fluctuations interfered with business, and the market has been during the entire week. The sales for the week are only about bags, against nearly 25,000 last week. The market closes quiet Coffee has been much in gold inactive 1,150 at the Rio. have much following quotations : ip*© p’d..gold prime, d’y Java, mats and Naiive is*© do good do fair do do it*© do ordinary do fair to g. cargoes do do 17i© Ceylon bags . do Co Marite&ibo do Laguayra do 501 CHRONICLE. THE 19*© IT*® 17*© 16<& .•v^v-A* blue 22, Homestead browo 21, do Peabody blue 17$, Woodland 16* 19,Charter Oak 81 25. Print Cloths are not very abundant, but the demand is lighter, with very little change from last week. Prices are generally on an average of Burlington 14$, Madison brown 19, Providence blue Albany 17$, and Wauregan 22, Yantic21, Arlington 14$@14£ for 64 Square Cloth. demand is very small* this market is very small. 9old at 17$c. Merrimac W 22, D 20, Garner’s 22, Amoskeag pink 21, do purple 20, do shirting 19, do dark 19, Swissruby 20, Dutchess B 17, Lowell dark 18,light 18, Naumkeag 16$, York Mourning 17$, Springy alley 18$, Wamsutta dark 16, light 16, Dusters 16, Hamilton purple 20, do Chocolates 19, Sprague’s fancy styles 26$, Double purples 26$, Shirtings 26$, Solid colors 19, Canaries 19, do Chintz 19, Orange polkas 20, Indigo black and green 20, do green and yellow 21, do blue, greeu and yellow 20, Madder rubies 19, Prints do not accumulate in etocks, but the indeed. The production coming to Prices are the same. Arnolds were last colors 19$, Spices have been also inactive from the fluctuations in gold, end very umbia, full madders 16$, Concord madders 17, do purples 18, do pinks 18, do plain shades 18. Glen Cove full madders 13$, Wauregan fancies little business has been done. The sales are limited to 320 cases nut¬ megs, 750 bags pepper, and 750 cases cassia. The market is still quiet 18, do rubies 19, do pinks 19* do purples 19. Jaconets in light request, but without decline in prices. White but steady at our quotations ; 17 © St. Dominaro do Purple do 20, Staple style light Shirting 21$, pink frocks 21, do dark colors 20, German light colors 19$. Col¬ plaids* 19$, Fancy style x are Cassia, in mats,$ lb.(gold) &inger, race aud African. 44*® 21 © •opper .’luiento, i (gold) Jamaica..(gold) doves ..(gold) 21-1® 20® © 22 22* 27* Rock, high colors 20, do plain 21. Ginghams are less called for, and there is no tions. Glasgow sell at 26, Roanoke 19, and call to change quota¬ Lancaster 27. Milton Mills Fruits have been inactive for the entire w eek, and business is 12$, Hallowell 14$, Pacific 14, and Adriatic 14. pally confined to small sales for immediate uses. The market Mouslin.de Laines are hardly as active, but the demand is sufficient quiet and unchanged. to prevent any accumulation of goods. IB © 18 Dates Prises are steady. Pacific and Raisins»layer..., ..$ bx © 4 SO >8 ® 89 Almonds, Languedoc Manchester are sold at 28, Pacific armuers 30, do Robes de Cbambre tfc 14*® 15 Sardines ..# * bx. 19 © 20 Citron Leghorn 3**6 and 42$. Figs, new 3? lb 20 21 32$@35, PacificfairlyManchester all Woolsold up. Miners Flannels 45, Turkish prunes 18 © 19* Linskys active and closely Molasses has been rather quiet, until the last two days, since which Stillman <fc Co’s 35$, C. S. & Co’s 32, Black Hawk 82$, Saco 40, S. C. there is a better business doing. The sales of the week are about 5,060 Carr <fe Co’s 80, Saxony Mills, all wool, 40$, Wool Filling, 32, Laurel Dale, 31$, White Rock 32$. hhds., at very steady prices. The market closes quite active. , Cuba, olaved 42 © 45 Flannels are in very light stock, and with the active demand which $1 gall. New Orleans © 58 © 60 has Porto Rico 55 © 70 Rngliah Islands. prevailed prices are firmer. Cuba, Muscovado 44 © 60 Cloths and Cassimeres are still dull. The market for wool i9 slug¬ gish, and while this enables manufacturers to reduce prices, yet it does not at all stimulate demand. Prices are wholly nominal. THE DRY GOODS TRADE. Satinets and Kentucky Je^ns have been reduced in price, and there Friday, Oct. 19,1866, P. M. has beeu some demand for the latter goods, bat prices are still declin¬ The trade in dry goods has continued dull and inactive dur¬ ing. American Linen is steady at former quotations. ing the entire week. The advance in cotton strengthened Manchester Cotton Yarn and Cotton Goods’ Market.—In refer¬ holders, but discouraged buyers; and the latter part of the to the trade for cotton and woolen manufactures in Great Britain, week the decline in gold and dull market for cotton has added to the quietness, and buyers are holding off, confident of a correspondent in London, writing under the date of October 3, break in prices. On the contrary, holders expect a light crop thus alludes: of cotton, and consequent high prices, and this, added to the Manchester, Oct. 3.—The activity of the Liverpool cotton market, and the advance in the value of the raw material, has necessitated an very light stock, seems to keep agents and manufacturers very The bulk of the fall trade is over, and the usual light advance in the price of cotton yarn. The demand for this article during firm. the present week has been considerable, and rather an important amount trade is cut off by the uncertainty that attends the market for of business ha3 been done for export to the Continent. Hence, shipping material. yarns have been in active request, and prices are Id. to l$d. per lb. Brown Sheetings and Shirtings have been advanced in price by a higher than at the close of last week. For home trade yarns there has also been a good demand, at strengthening prices, and the quotations few houses, especially for the standard makes, and there are now very few bales changing hands. The last sales of standards were at 23-$, must be considered about id. per lb. higher than on Saturday last. The and Atlantic A was sold last at 24. Indian Head A were last cloth market is in a somewhat unsettled state ; manufacturers demand money, but at present are operating with the greatest caution, sold at 28$ cents, Indian Head B are held at 19, do E 34, Nashua X X 28, do fine D 21, Waltham F28, Wachusetts4-4 23, Atlantic A 24, A H and although the quotations are virtually higher, it is difficult at present to give exact figures. and P H 23$, do A V heavy shirtings 19, do fine shirting 23, Massachu¬ The amount of business transacted is moder¬ In China the trade for goods has recovered from the depression setts A 20, do B 22$, Medford 22$, Newmarket Mfg. Co 83-inch 22$, ate. caused by the recent panic in this country, and all hough some descrip¬ do heavy do 24,^Appleton A 23$-. tions still low in price, the most important goods are selling at sat¬ Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are inactive, excepting for a few isfactory prices. Throughout the East confidence is being restored, and makes of leading goods, which are still scarce and wanted. Lonsdale is sold at 84c, Rockdales are active at 31 cents. York Mills are the rates for money are steadily giving way. The price of the principal sold up at 45, Wamsutta 40, Washington 7 8, Hallowell £, 14, Gvtoe 27 descriptions of yarn and goods are now as under : TWIST FOR EXPORT. inch 13 Grafton £, 14,do 7-8, 15, Auburnville 4-4 27$, Aquidnecks 4-4 38 to 42 28 to 32 21. do 7-8 19$, White Rock 36 inch 83, O J Rathbun 7-8 19, Social Mill 16 to 24 6 to 12 Numbers d. d. d. d. Co. N. Y. 4-4, 21, 80, do C 7-8 18, ManvilleR 24, do XX 4-4, 26, Boston 22 20 18 10 18 inch, Kent River 3-4 12, Rockdale B 4-4, 81, Gold Medal 4-4, 26, Har¬ Common quality 24 21 19 11 26 vard 35 inch 22, Montemaire, 7-8, 21, Uxbridge imperial 4-4 27$, Wal¬ Second quality 23 21 IT Best quality tham L 72 inch 62$-, do X 33 inch 23, do W 42 inch 30, do M 81 FOR inch 77$-, do N 90 inch 85, Bartlett Steam Mills 33 inch 24, do 7-8 22$, do 100 90 80 if ace Nutmegs,No. 1 (gold) (gold) 92 © 92© f l .. princicloses Cambrics are very quiet for the present. Saratoga 10$, Currants . are .. .... . ence our raw more are WATER MULE •- Newmarket 83 inch 22, do 36 inch 25. Drills are quiet excepting a fair demand for 4-4, 30$-, export. Massachusetts fine sell at 20 cent9, do heavy 25, Indian Drills 25. . Canton Flannels are in good demand for the leading finer makes, while poorer grades are over abundant and dull. Globe A A sell at 27, Columbia 26, Mount Vernon 25$, Nashua A 27$, Young America 24, Clay 22, Excelsior 22, Eagle 22. Corset Jeans are less active than last week, but there i9 a fair business doing in those goods, Indian Orchard sell afU6 cents, Canoe River 15, Hallowell 15, Uncas 16, Newmarket colored 17, and Silver Lake brown 20. Stripes and Checks are very quiet, but there is no concession iu prices. Hamilton Stripes sell at 31 cents, Willow Brook Checks 22$, Wauregan 3x3 23, do 6x3 24, Albany 3x3 18, do 6x3 14, Louisiana plaids 22$, Ringgold fast plaids 20$, Simpson’s Chambrays 22, Phila¬ delphia 16. Ticks are quiet, with the exception of some heavy goods, which are called for in small quantities. Amoskeag A C A are steady at 62$. Willow Brook Ticks 47$, Farmer’s and Miners 62$, Albany 18$, American 20, Glen Allen 8-4 13, Chattanooga £ 16, Concord 4-4 22, Pa¬ cific Extra $ 30, Pacific 4-4 40c, Willow Grove 80 Sacondale $ 13, West Branch 4-4 32$, do No* 2 $ 25, Windsor $ 21, Henry Clay 3-4 19, Su4-4 23. Denims and Cottokapes are moderately active for denims, but rather dull for cottonades, Ashton Glenn brown sell at 20 cents, do blue 21, wanee 40 d. 6 to 12 16 to 24 30 Numbers d. 16 17 18 d. Common quality .. Second quality .... Beat quality 10 11 16 END GOLD EXPORT. TWIST d. 17 18 20 GRAY 19* 20 22 SHIRTINGS, • , Reeds. . Weights.., . 56 lb. oz. 8 4 45 Inches— 64 lb. oz. 9 0 66 lb. oz. 10 0 50 d. 22 23 24 60 d. 25 28 26 28 • 70 d. 30 32 lb. oz. 10 8 84 36 d. 34 36 38 37$ YARDS. •_s 72 33 d. 32 34 d. 30 56^ lbrbz. 8 12 —50 Inches 66 64 lb. oz. lb. oz. 11 0 10 4 72 lb. oz. 11 8 Od. 19s. Od. 21s. Od. 15s. 9d. 18s. 3d. 21s. Od. 23s. Manufacturing Districts.—Generally speaking, wool trade is very quiet, aud as regards medium and Prices Wool 15s. Od. 16s. Od the in the inferior qualities, The best descriptions of inclement weather has had the position of the money market is satisfactory, .prices have been characterized by a fair degree of firmness. Iu woolen goods there has been a moderate amount of business, and prices have a slight tendency to improvement. slight tendency to lower prices. wool, however, are still firm in price. The considerable influence on the market, but as there is a IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS The importations of dry goods at 18,1866, and the follows: . AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK, this port for the week ending Oct. corresponding weeks of 1864 and 1865, have been aa , THE CHRONICLE. HTT11ID FOB CONSUMPTION FOR THXF1XK ENDING OCTOBER 1864. > Value. Pkgs Pkgs . 622 42 217 848 43 . do do do cottou. Bilk ... flax... . l. Total $150,714 13.430 WITHDRAWN FROM 360 $427,142 WAREHOUSE AND 619,016 537,684 431,157 123,359 6509 THROWN $2,557,676 INTO do do do MARKET $517,785 260 96 29 265 73 $68,963 32,815 51,439 60,676 15,074 330 107 61 65 269 427,142 723 6509 $228,467 2,557,67b .Total thrown upon mak’t 8595 $1,230,569* 7232 $2,786,143 101 142 eilk.... flax.... Miscellaneous dry goods. Total Add ent’d forconaumpt’n1 - 376 53 , ... 32,781 145,513 86,434 18,915 1823 1772 $803,427 Soda,bi erb 4,940 18,200 do sal...2,512 10,070 do do do 417 109 35 319 cotton.. silk flax .... .... Miscellaneous dry goods. 123 13 73 326 23 75.076 21,562 266,936 63,016 14,064 44,313 989 3903 1159 6509 $845,976 2,557,676 Total entered at the port 2706 $786,511 7668 $3,403,652 78,698 10,746 1 DETAILED STATEMENT. is a detailed statement of the movement the past week, : ENTERED manuf’s FOR Pkgs. Value. of wool. Citron Currants Dates 2,419 5,551 Figs 4,608 662 Lemons Nuts Prunes Raisins Sauces and pres. 16,884 5,4^3 40,235 19,671 543 Woolens Cloths 286 62 $148,835 87,045 Carpeting... .307 94,417 2,445 80,848 10,483 284,826 13,962 10,007 Blankets 21 40 20 Worsteds... 592 Hose 44 Merinos 23 Shawls Gloves Worsted y’rn.12 Braids & bds. .41 Cot. A worst.283 3,259 19,882 107,243 CONSUMPTION. 201 1731 $763,252 of cotton. Cottons......157 $63,083 Colored 26 7,061 Ginghams ..... 1 406 Muslins 7 2,268 Emb’d muslins 5 Velvets 17 Laces 27 2,743 Total of 44 85 25 Gloves 1 Cravats 1 Braids & bds.. 12 Silk & worst.. .7 Silk & cotton.52 Silk & linen. ..5 306 557 Carpeting.... 82 Braids & bds. Gloves Oilcloth 357 102 2,231 9,816 Total 107 Total $7,780 4,653 Prints 4 Velvets 2 354 890 manuf’s manuf’s Linens of 2,679 8,519 flax. 11„641 1,215 65 $13,235 379 Velvets Ribbons Laces 999 810 Vestings Silk & wos’d. $38,960 2,688 24,861 317 751 4 2,466 do Matting 3 8 .. $2,566 897 132 1 2 Clothing 1,419 468 Embroideries Straw goods.218 Feath. & flow 1 Sus. &elas... 9 1,916 8,922 317 3,353 6i $70,043 • 28* Is.* ttu H 23J 37 36 21* 20* V3 3J . 21* 15 93* Total 669 $19,858 28 B Z.... 36 ie* Trem.mt Salmon Falls A 86 8T O. 5 6 87 do Nashua, extra Superb r, I XL.. .... 22 FOR Pkgs. Value. manuf’s of wool. Woolens ...*..89 Carpeting $43,862 6 8 Cloths 2,428 1,358 5,056 Shawls—,..,..12 Worsteds.... 222 Hose..' ...1 ‘ 98,509 Total 444 1M1 3,657 41,254 $197,701 of cotton. Colored 78 16 liughams .6 Cottons Velvets Laces Pkgs. Value. 3 $1,298 1 Braids & bds.. .2 Hose 16 Poets et, H..... do K.... 86 40 do Newmarket, A . 36 88 Total hub. muslins..! $29,436 4,647 1,823 759 f manuf’s 1,663 4,543 123 Linens Hdkfs Thread $44,313 Hemp yarn Total manuf’s Laces Braids Silk & Silk & 14 6 37 6 A bds.. .1 worst... 6 cot 8 Total flax. 273 2 2 49 ' 326 of silk. Silks Velvets Ribbons . of Pkgs. do H Shannon 36 Gr«. at Falls, M.. 86 do S... 83 37 Appleton, A.. d> C 86 do I>... 3* do E... 27 do N.. ?•» Live Oak, J.. 37 do C... 36 Snetucket, A.. 3 > do B 27 Lam el, C 30 73 $25,271 8,730 34,290 5,671 Embroideries.. 2 4,218 $1,512 Sasp. & elas...8 $75,076 1,747 $78,698 MISCELLANEOUS. Corsets 10 Straw goods.. .2 Feath. & flow.. 1 384 662 . . . . . 21 lotal 28 $1,973 4,2.! 5 817 363 3,338 $10,746 8PKCIE) NEW YORK FOR THE 12, 1866. 21 ware— Bottles China 100 663 32,974 Earth’nw’e.1,131 45,282 Glass 4,080 11,084 Glassware.... 808 10,069 Glass plate.. .218 32,689 Drugs, Ac.— Alkali .......336 Acids.»6 ✓ 7,509 770 Ammonia, sal.25 2,512 3,043 Argols 49 Anoline 2,987 Alum.... Albumen 834 773 Bark, Peruv.195 2,249 Barytes 1,887 112 Chalk Cream tartar...5 Cochineal 17 18. » 126 1,083 4,832 Cudbear. 20 Cutch 277 Gums, crude. 178 do arabic..50 510 1,742 8,118 Gum copavi. .105 Indigo 47 Leeches 3,628 1,698 4,323 6,685 13 Lie paste 190 40 Magnesia .468 4 1,919 5,889 Gypsum Lie root 186 1,689 277 Wool, bales...15 007 937 129 Total York, Oct. 19, 1866. de do do R. do dc i? 22* . 36 O, fine 83 N, One 80 Portsmouth, E.. 32 do do Lanark Park Wach sett Standard F.. 82 P 28 Indian Rir. X.X, Mahville. X.X do • Harr 23* 23* 21* ' Bates do *— Hilt sSerap. ldem8H d* 83 .. Tip Top do 28 F..—• do P B 36 33 31 36 86 3i Androscoggin ■to No 81 24 36 > 40 Conestoga extra. 36 Cones tog* 30 24 83 Amoskeag A.C.A do do ■ 1 Amoskeag .... 65 26 Pemberton X 9-1 10-4 60 95 do red 4-4 do do R 4-4 Q 3-4 20 40 28* do 30 do Queen. 86 Indian Orch.BB. 38 do A 40 do N.... 36 do C.... 37 do L.... 80 do P.... 27 do W... 83 85 Laconia, H do B 40 do E 86 do O 40 19 Lawrence C.... 86 do G..., 83 Lyman C Pittsfield 20 26 22* 17* i« 28 21* Brunswick Blackstone Hamilton 25* Somerset 38 28* 36 36 82 29 Mattawauikeag .6-4 do Blackstone Siaterville Karos. XX. 9-4 86 4-4 Ballon....do ..........7-8 •••••• ....... W %’f-/ gut...... York..... 22 35 ’ 90 28 do do 37* 82* . 9-4 20 28 60 .. 45 40 85 .. • * . ~ m J* 1 tit A Omega. D. do 0....„,, do /' B....,..* a- 14 S3 21 30 Bunkerhill 82* 25 30* 23 25 ^ do ,7-8 82* .. D Easton A do B 28* 45 40 SO 36 .. Manchester 0 20* 4-4 36 6-* a. 80 Oriental Harvest Hanoock AA... Holyoke OC Pittsfield 83 do ‘ Z.... J. 6l W. Slater Forestdale Bates BB... Home 1 32 [) 80 c 80 4-4 stripe Thor mil ue Pearl River Newburyport.. .4-4 AmoskeSg, A... 4-4 do a .. 50 45 A. A. 30 do 29 Lonsdale 84* Mason ville 84&36 Williamsvil 1 e... 86 87* Edward Harris .7-8 ....... 7-8 do P Excelsior do Whitten ton 47* 86 B 32 - 6-4 8-4 Dwight A — n A... 82 do do do do >6 6 TICKS. 221 5-4 Clarks — 2.....31 Cano* do Attawaugan,WT 36 Attawaugan,XX 36 36 Hope .. Harris, No, 1,. Lan^don 2i* 17* 821 22* .— do 45 22* ... Pepperolls 84 ^ 45 .35 ...a Portsmonth E. BLEACHED SHEETINGS. 33 31 12* Red B nk. do 23 36 36 21* Tusomra .’36 White Rq k.;...86 Bay Mills 86 d .. 26* Uxbridge 25 28 21 20 16 17 14 New York Mills. Wamsutta Bartlett’s do do Arkwright James Mills do 05 95 — Social A........ :tf. M 36 0 86 97* — Plymouth A Everett, A A ....33 28) 21 O H W s ... ... • en 44 55 Washln ton Reynolds, A A..’.86 86 84 4-4 . .. Step 87 . 5-4 6-4 ...9-4 10-4 ... do 28 do C... 40 Pacific A. 37 do H.... 37 do L, hne 37 do ' E, fine 38 Width. Price Utica Augusta 4-4 do 7-8 Black Hawk. ...4-4 Boott, S........ 40 Randolph 1,608 $1,938,818 12,478 do do 25'399 Other 2,368 86 Naumke&g, AC. .... 36 ... [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value. China, Glass £ E. Ammonia.... 12.480 191 do do 27,490 237 Tobacco .....804 Waste 23 Agawam, F ...... AT THE PORT OF WEEK ENDING OCTOBER . . Indian Head, A. 87 IMPORTS (OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND • .. Massac ussetts J do O do B 3 do F Medford LL.... 23 . ... H 8,473 1,370 Toys 20 . do 6,590 Width. Prlc 4-4 15 Kennebec 22 . $74,925 1,364 Sugar, boxes & bgs 400 Trees & plants.. Tea ,971 wholesale net cash Jobbers pnets.) are do do . Value. 144 230 Worsted yarn..5 Braids & bds...7 Cot. & worst. .99 kanufa’s WAREHOUSING. ‘ Logwood... .40 Stark, B... 87 36 36 80 . A 71 820 Seed, castor7,850 28,092 Sugar, hhds, tes andbbls..1,603 84,040 28,062 Pepperell, E fine 40 . ENTERED 156 Books 42,459 Width. Price. 87 24 .. Total 1,701 Seeds New E, fine Howard, A 12 NEW YORK PRICES OF DRY GOODS. N do 10 Furniture Engravings... .4 1,654 575 22,060 Paper 30,701 Other... 2,190 Woods- LL, flue Medforl 8,428 ga* Fish. 839 .. P do do Feathers 5,453 Cork 89 V L do do do do $141,518 62 2 1 2 BROWN SHEETINGS. Pkgs. Value. Hdkfs Thread Kid 19 2 33 2 1 75,651 52,514 Auioske&tf A Leath. Gloves of silk. 13 30 (The followin'} do do do do .'.13 1,560 8,157 Corks 83 2,284 Cocoa, bgs... 820 7,616 Coffee, bgs13,281 229,077 Fancy goods.... 78,748 1,507 1,428 2,963 47,117 2,924 37,180 88,567 Stationery, &c.— Other... ed 68,477 Miscellaneous— Patent leather.3 1,532 Alabaster Orn Baskets Liquors, Wiues, &c.— 220 Atlantto, A 662 2,610 ... Zinc Hides, undress¬ 29,092 14,688 miscellaneous. 1.699 39,923 81 16 3 $27,944 134 Wire Hides, dress¬ 19,673 Susp. & elas. .23 Millinery 250 gf cotton. 35 Clothing 25 Embroideries. 29 Total 48,959 830 $129,582 60 WAREHOUSE. 36 Silks manuf’s Matting 17,347 2.094 4,688 10,335 9 Clocks 304 1,758 Bristles 94 Boots & shs... 18 $31,513 647 1,268 Coal, tons..3,691 92,S24 7,958 Watches $247,315 Leath. gloves. 26 Kid gloves....15 $322,044 10 Hose 9,488 20,850 15,170 1,185 2,272 17,920 Cigars 3,467 Tin, bxs.,.14,822 2 Jewelry ed .14 258 Burr stones Cheese 5,119 31,318 Silver ware.... 1 :. .48 Optical Jewelry. <fec.— miscellaneous. 8,046 1 Spool 862 Corsets 74 Straw goods.. 51 Feath. Allow.. 13 3 8.699 $200,623 Hemp yam....9 1,120 9,889 5,963 33,706 Pkgs. Vane. 4 $1,196 2,091 6,518 ., Cottons Colored 814 FROM Laces $20,752 Blankets 18 Shawls... 5 Worsteds....108 Hose 1 Wors. yam .. 1 Braids & bds. 4 Cot&wos’d. 92 Total.... 37,618 77,839 20,136 3,856 0.669 68 1 Hdkfs Thread 3,202 6 Total flax. 778 12 26 37 Laces $119,855 Sewings Pkgs. Value. Woolens Cloths of silk. 66 2 Ribbons. 11,571 of wool. Pkgs. Value. Total manuf’s Silks Plushes Velvets WITHDRAWN manuf’s $219,774 169 Hose manuf’s Linens 1,063 55,312 53,815 650 Spool Laces Total manuf’s $13,698 1,482 1,866 Leather, Hides, <fec.— Pkgs. Value. Braids & bds..30 Hdkfs 5 Gloves 5 43,771 Instruments— & to 110 57 Bnilding stone.. 593 595 - Pkgs. Value. Boxes Buttons - 78 Musical The following ending Oct. 18, 1866 1,182 4,299 Mathematical. .3 1 4 .52 1,036 6,949 1,581 » 24,562 3,817 Grind stones 1,083 tons. 37 2,116 Hair ...5 1,516 Iron, pig, “Haircloth... .38 9,985 tons 195 2,737 Hemp 68 3,878 Iron, sheet, Ind. rubber.. 176 21,74c tons 25 1,540 Ivory 12 0,462 Iron tubes... 160 523 M achinery... 193 10,539 Iron, other, Molasses 852 28,287 tons., 887 36,274 Oil paintings.29 14,991 Lead, pigs..7,091 36,667 Perfumery.... 14 3,097 Metal goods ..61 18,400 Pipes 1,268 Needles 28 0,735 Provisions 10$ Nickel 10 6,731 Hags.* 1,163 22,817 Old metal 1,773 Rice 7,429 Per. Caps 1 478 Salt 3,220 Steel. .....1,862 26,042 Statuary 439 Spelter,... 22,400 1,021 Sago flour 447 299 Fruits, &c.— 154,480 an. Hardware.... Iron, hoop, 614 110 Furs 411 165 234 200 104 75 Guns 1,506 3 Furs, *fcc— 28,598 27,553 77,925 Beer Cutlery 638 Yellow berries.. 444 161 Bronzes Chains & 18,520 2,429 Other $347,480 $359,369 427,142 Vermillion Whiting 736 Total 934 Add ant'd lor consnmpt'n 1772 ash 478 caustic 112 Sugar of Lead.10 SuTph Copperl04 13,235 19,858 $203,731 54 do do 27,944 70.043 ENTERED FOR1 WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAMS PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... D. do prus.,23 R. Antimony.61 Shellac. 7 $129,582 100 Brandy 811 Cordials 4,038 Porter 27,072 Whiskey.... 202 2.781 Wines 2,049 2,252 Champagne, 4,037 baskets... .637 1,997 Metals, &c.— 138 Brass Goods.. 11 6 Potash, bid DURING 4735 cotton., olive...200 Pkgs. Value Ale 10,802 linseed.428 41,380 Paints 832 3903 do do do 467 Plumbago...... THE SAME PERIOD. Manuflictures of wool... 1151 14 147 ess Opium 3903 $1,693,903 THE Pkgs. Value, Oils . $846,460 1713 30,965 18, 1866. 1866.— Value. Pkgs. 1731 $763,252 650 219,774 306 322,044 862 247,315 354 141,518 , Value. . 2034 1866 356 90,797 141,236 1772 1865. , [October .20,1866. 82 86 40 ■ 502 — ~ an ri.:de S' 'A .i'.Vjv'11—i'*- SO 4* C Vi he, G. ,j sjr-. ir: #i d<U. do n October Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstono, $10 # ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and PRICES CURRENT. tJF' In addition to the duties noted below, a discriminating duty of 10 per cent, ad vat. is levied on all imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. PF* On alt goods, mares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Oood Hope, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Oood Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ dition to the duties imposed <m 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 all eases to be 2,240 lb. Ancliors^-Duty: 2* cents # ft. 01 2091b and upward# ft 9|@ Ashes—Duty: 15 # cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort...# 100 ft *♦ 75 @i0 (0 13 00 @18 .0 Pearl, 1st sort.-. Beeswax—Duty,20 $ cent ad val. American yellow. # ft 41 @ 42 Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 # ct. Rio Grande shin # ton @33 00 Bread—Duty, 30 # cent ad val. Pilot # ib .. @ 6| Navy 7 @ 0i @14 Breadstuff*—See special report Crackers Bricks. Common bard, .per Croton M.12 00 @13 00 16 00 @17 00 Philadelphia Fronts.. 45 00 @5'» 00 Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair 1 # lb. Amer’n,gray &wh. #lb 75 @ 3 00 Butter and Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. N.Y State—Fresh palls 45 @ Fir a ins Half illktn tubs... Welsh tubs, prime. 35 @ 88 @ 43 85 @ 40 Welsh tubs, second quality North Pennsylvtma — Frkins Western Ee.erve—Firkits Western States—FirkUs, yell w Firkins,*nd quality Choose 82 @ 55 43 34 57 @ @ 4 70 26 25 @ 85 75 @ @ 8t 9’» f5 @ .. 18 Bleaching Powder Borax, Reilued 30 @ *2 @ Stearic Adamantine Assafoetida Balsam Copaivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru....(gold) castle Bi Chromate Potash 14 @ 14 @ 10 @ 16 174 16 14 81 23 Cement—Bosendale.#bl .. @ 1 75 Chains—Duty, 24 cents $ ftOqe inch & upward# ft 8 J@ 9 Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 ft to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents # 2b # bushel. Liverpool Orrel. # ton of 2,240 1b @15 00 @17 00 Liverp’l House Cannel .. Anthracite 8 50 @ 9 50 Cocoa—Duty, 6 cents $ Ib. Caracas (in bond)(gold) 52 @ 23 V Ib Maracaibo do ..(gold) .. @ .. Guayaquil do ...(gold) 13j@ 14 Coffee.—See spec al r port. Cooper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2%; old copper 2 cents 38 ft; manu¬ factured, 35 $1 cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square foot, bushels of 80 lb % lb. @ 24 @ 83 @ 8J@ ..... Berries, Persian Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ ton @ @ ' 84 @ phur Camphor, bond) 44@ 44 5|@ i lor Brimstone 6 Sul- .... de, (in ...(gold) Campnor, Uollned Cantharido Carbonate in bulk 11 22 74 36 @ 42 00 . Roll Am. . # ft.... 45 .. ..(gold) .. Brimston .. 84 80 @ * *7* @ 2 25 2 50 @ 2 75 48 46 @ llj@ Crude Brimston 25 @ 324 25 40 1 @ 80 97i@ @ 1 75 • .. Ammonia, 39 @ 21 25 90 60 Cardamoms, Malabar.. 8 0<> @ 3 Castor Oil < !ase9 # gal 2 85 @ 2 Chamomile F ow’s# 1b 50 @ ' Chlorate Potash (gold) 36 85 @ Caustic Soda 10i@ Cochineal, Hon (gold) Cochineal,iViexic’n(g’d) Copperas, American... Cream Tarar, pr.(gold) Cubebs, East India.... Cutch 11 @ (@ @ 95 85 .. • .. 2» 2P4@ 294 4) @ 50 17 164@ Epsom Salts @ 44 Extract Logwood 11 @ 60 Flowers,Benzoin.# oz. 80 @ 6 Gambler golu # ft 54 1 76 @ 2 00 Gamboge 1 76 85 @ 1 0» Ginseng, South&West. 80 70 @ Gum Arabic, Picked.. 42 @ 45 Gum Arabic, Sorts... Gum Benzoin ..(goid) 55 r. 82 @ Gum Kowrie Gpiq Gedda... .. Gam Damar .. Gum Myrrh,East India - 87 .. ® @ @ Bolts Braziers1 Baltimore. Detroit @ @ 45 32 45 45 31 814@ # lb Tarred Russia Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia..... 22] @ @ @ .. @ 234 19 24 Corks—Duty, 50 # cent ad val. Regular, quarts# gross 55 @ 70 70 Mineral 60 @ Phial. 12 ®/ *0 Cotton—See special report. Brays and Byes—Duty, Alcohol, a 50 p-r gallon; Aloesr6 cents # lb; Alum, 60 cents # 100 ft; Argols, 6 cents # lb; Arsenic and Assafoedati, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regulua, 10; Arrowroot, 80 # cent ad val.; Balsam Copaivi, 20; Balsam Tola, 30; Balsam Peru, 60 cents $ ft; Calisaya Bark, 80 # cent ad vaL: BICaxb. Soda, 14; B1 Chromate Potasn, 3 cents $ 0); Bleaching Powder, 80 cents # 100ft; Refined Borax, lOsents# ft; Crude Licorice Paste Spanish Solid Licorice Paste, Greek. ...... ..... # . 40 @ 45 *84 8 75 tfV.... 4 50 @ 6 50 @ 9 50 2 95 @ & 25 8 25 @ Opium, Turkey.(gold) 7 25 @ 7 874 Oxalio Acid........ 45 @ . Phosphorus.1. Prussiate Potash 4t Quicksilver 96 Rhubarb, China-(gold) 8 OO 46 00 Ref (gold) 8*1 Soda, Newcastle*, v • ex dry 101 < fill 8 50 20 .. Rifle .... . 58 12 H>® Buenos do arpe > Cottun .. do House 1 irmer do Cross do Red dc Grey palo Mink, dark Musk rat, 20 @ Opossum ■ 1 oent 8x to i lx to 12x19 to 18x22 to 20x31 to 24x31 to 25x36 to 80x46 to 32x50 to Above 7 75 @ 6 00 10x15 9 25 @ 6 9 50 @ 7 11 75 @ 7 14 50 @ 9 16 00 @10 17 00 @11 18 00 @12 20 00 @18 24 00 @15 12x18 16x24 20x30 24x30 24x36 30x44 32x18 82x56 50 00 50 00 00 00 00 00 00 English and French Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th qua lit es. (Single Thick)—Discount 25@35 #cent 6x 8 to8x10.#50 feet 7 75 @ 6 00 8x11 to 10x15 8 25 @ 6 50 9 75 @ 7 00 11x14 to 12x18 12x19 to 16x24.... 10 50 @ 7 50 15 50 @12 00 20x31 to 24x80 24x31 to 24x86 16 50 @13 00 18 00 @15 00 24x36 to 30x44. 80x45 to 82x48.........20 50 @16 00 82x50 to 32x56 24 00 @18 00 Groceries—See special report. Gunny Bug’s—Duty, valued at 10 less, # square yard, 3; over 10, 4 cents # ft Calcutta, light & h’y % 26 @ 261 Gunny Clotk—Duty, valued at 10 cents or less # square yard, 3; over 10,4 cents # ft. cents or Calcutta, standard, y'd Jute. 8$ ^ 100 _ Manila..# ft..(gold)® 00@1S5 00 Sisal Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬ ed, and Skins 10 # cent ad val. Dry Hides— Puenos Ayres# ftg’d Montevideo.,... do do Rio Grande do GHnoco California gold California, Mex. do Porto Cabello do Yera Cruz do do x'amplco .. Texas do Wet Salted Hides— Bne Ayres.# ft g’d. Rio Grande do SI ® St 18 @ , 18*@ .. 16 @ . 12*@ . - . . .... do California Western Coutry sl’ter trim. A cured. do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip # 1b cash. - City do Sierra Leone do Gambia & Bissau do ... 22 20 18* 18* 19 16 14 11. @ 15* 15* 12* @ <2> 11 @ H 91 18* 12*@ 11 @ 14 14 28 80 8J 2D 1 . 14*@ i 29 19 & Honey—Duty, 20 cents # gallon. Cuba (duty paid) (gold) ; # gall. 90 @ 92 Hops—Duty: 5 cents # ft. Crop of 1866 # ft 45 @ 65 do '• of 1865 30 @ 55 65 Foreign 50 @ Horns—Duty, 10 # cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande. ..# C 18 00@ Ox, Buenos Ayres.... 12 00@ 14 00 India, Rubber—Duty, 10 # cent ad val. Pasa, Fine #ft Para, Medium Para, Coarse 90 @ 70 @ 60 @ 92* Indigo—Duty mx Bengal ( old) # 1b 1 00 Oude (gold) 75 (gold) 65 (gold) 65 (gold) 1 00 70 (gold) Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1* cents Railroad, 70 cents # 100 ft; and Plate, 1* cents # 1b; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to If cents # ft; Pig, $9 # ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents # ft. Pig, Scotch,No l(cash) # ton 51 00® 58 00 Pig, American, No. 1.. 49 00® 60 00 Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold).: 95 00®100 00 Madras Manila Guatemala Caraccas _ 8*ob*Paioxs—, . $2}@ @ 90 (0 375 00@ 85 00 Russia, Clean.: on Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th # ft. Undressed ;. do fvlass—Duty, Cylinder or Window Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches, 24 cents # square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents # square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents # square foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents # square foot; all above that, 40 cents # square foot.: # ft. dis. Amer.Dressed.# ton 870 00@876 09 80 unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding I Ox 15 inches square, 14; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 21x30, 24; all over that, 8 cents jt Hay—North River, in bales# 100 fts, for shipping 1 00 @ l 05 Hemp-Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $26; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 # ton; and Tampico, 70 @ 1 00 Raccoon List 10 Jt din List MdtlO ..... 5 00 @ 8 00 Otter list20 % dis. dxNewLlst 10 % dls. do Eng ish List 2ojt dls. Shovels and Spades... List 5 % dis. Horse Shoes 8 Planes List 80@35 Jtadv. 1 50 @ 8 00 3 00 @ 6 00 85 10 @ do * List 55 % dis. Cut Brads Kivet-, Iren... List v5A80 % dis. Screws American.. .List 10a21 % dis. 5 50 @10 50 Marten, Hark > Li-t 40 jtadv. Cut Tacks 60 @ 1 25 1 25 @ 8 50 Lynx List40 Jtadv. handled, Augur Bitts.., 10 Of @75 00 3 00 @10 00 I 00 @ 2 25 Fox, Silver List.' List 25 *adr. L St 20 % dis. List 40 % dls. in sets. Shm t Au?uts,per Ring do 50 5 00 @10 00 Fisher, - do in sets 00 50 no no 00 20 List 5 % 4is. Old List- 26)tadv. Framing Chisels 24 10 @ $5 less 20 % List to Jtodv. Screw Wrenches—Coe's Paten: List 20 % dis: ; do 'isfe’s List 56@6i) % dis. 8m ths1 Vis s # ft .. 126 @150 . Gins, per saw... . ... Bear, Black ...# skin 5 00 @i5 Jo 4 00 @ 8 brown. Badger 90 @ 1 Cat, Wild 90 @ 1 '84 txr’a A dzes,.... ...... Quid Prices—Add premium on gold forourreicy prices Beaver, Dark... #ft, 1 ?-0 @2 00 Pale... 17 OrtiTlaae and Tire Bojta Door L •o<> s and Latches List 71 f dis. Door Knobs—Mineral. list 7* “ Li t 7* % dis. Pore lain Pa.!looks New List 20&7{ * die. Lock s—Cabinet, Eagle ' : 5 jGadv. “ Ttunii List 10 % dis. St- cks and Dies Li 185 ft dls. Furs-Du*y,10 # cent. do 15 :«t Hinges'Wrcuttht, Door B Its, Cast Bbl. Mackerel, N o.l,Halifax 00 Mackerel, No. I, Bay..20 50 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay.. 18 00 M8 25 Mackerel, No. 2, Ha’ax ... Mac’elvNo^Mass. I’gel4 25 )14*60 Mackerel, No. 8. H’faxl4 25 )14 50 Mackerel, No. 8, Mass Salmon, Pickled, No.1.40 00 )4ioo \ 60 Herring, Scaled# box 50 @ Herring, No. 1 Herring, pickled#bbl. 5 00 @ 9 00 Flax—Duty: $15 # ton. Jersey # ft 18 @ 49 40 . Narrow Wrong at Butts Cast Butts—Fa3t Joint. Loose Joint.. 76 22 OO @ mixed ordinary i- Fisk—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 # bbl.; on other Fish. Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried, in smaller pkgs.than bar¬ rels, 50 cents # 100 ft. Dry Cod # cwt. 7 50 @ 8 874 Pickled Scale...# bbl. 6 tO @ 6 5 Pickled Cod....#bbl. 7 50 @ a 00 Mackerel, No. 1, Mass shore A yres, Hog,Western, unwash. Hardware— ;* Axes—Cast steel, best bia«d .^erd<s @ Fustic, Cuba @31 00 Fustic, Savanilla(gold)?2 50 @23 00 Fustic, Maracaibo do.22 50 @v8 i0 Logwood, Cam.(gold).25 £0 @ Logwood,Jamaica.... .. @ Ltmawood ., (gold) @llo 00 Featliers—Duty: 30 # centad val. Prime Western...# ft SO @ 8 4 70 @ @ 1 10 40 Hair—Duty RioGrande,mixed# ft .. Tennessee.. @ mi. .. Cam wood., (gold) #t*n 7 60 Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬ ters # ft....:... 85 Duck—Duty, 30 # cent ad vaL Ravens, Light.. # pee. 16 00 @13 09 Ravens, Heavy 20 00 @ Scotch, G’ck, No.l #y. @ 76 Cotton,No. 1... # y. 85 @ Dye Woods—Duty free. , . Salaratus SalAm’n ac, Acid..(g’ld)#ft Verdigris, dry Vitriol, Blue @ @ @ @ @ qualities. (9ubject to a discount of 25@35# cent.) 6x 8 to 8x10. .# 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50 .... Oil Bergamot... Oil Lemon..... .(gold) Oil Peppermint, pure. Tart’c 80 50 75 51 50 Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or less # ft, 6 cents # ft, and 20 # cent ad val.^ over £0 cents # ft, 10 cents # ft and 20 #cent ad val. Blasting(A) # 25ft keg .T @ 5 00 Shipping and Mining.. @6 60 3* 89 .. ... Sugar L’d, W’e(go:d).. Snip Quinine, Am# oz 2 Sulphate Morphine.... 7 60 56 @ @ 30 @ Madder,Dutch..(gold) @ do, French, EXF.F.do 7 @ Manna, large flake 2 Ou @ Nutgalls Bine Aleppo 45 @ OilCassia.. ....... American 55 @ 65 Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. 28 Gum Senegal @ (g, Id) 80 @ 40 Gum Tragacanth, Sorts Gum Tragacanth, w. 90 60 @ flakey (g »ld) Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng..... (gold) 8 85 @ 8 90 Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 @ Ipecacuanna, Brazil... 4 25 @ 2 40 @ Jalap Lae Dye 25 @ 55 42 Licorice Paste,Calabria 41 @ 25 Licorice, Paste, Sicily. 24 @ Oil Anise Seneca Root. Shell Lac Soda Ash (80#o.)(e,ld) 30 80 ' 27* .. 31 @ Portage Lake Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; untarred Manila, 24 other untarred, 34 cents . 45 @ .. Sheathing, new..# 1b Sheathing, yellow ® @ @ @ @ 4?*@ 31® Senna, Alexandria.. Senna, Eastlndia...:. ■ .. Argols, Crude Argols, Refined Arsenic, Powdered.... 40 33 24 18 50 Sarsaparilla, Hond Sarsaparilla, Mex .. Annato, fair to prime. Antimony, Regulua of ?1 27 Candles—Duty, tallow, 24; sperma¬ ceti and wax o; stearine and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents $ fi>. Sperm, patent,. ..# ft 50 @ Refined sperm,city... 40 @ (gold) # gall. Aloes, Cape # 1b Aloes, Socotrine 29 @ 26 @ 15 @ • Acid. Citric Alcohol 35 do Wett.rn Farm Dairies do Wester. do Common.... i # cent ad val'.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhnbarb, 50 cents # ft: Quicksilver, 15 # cent ad val.; Sal JSratus. 1* cents # 1b; Sal Soda, 4 oent # ft ; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 # cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; 8oda Ash, 4; Sugar Lead, 20cents # 1b; Sulph. Quinine, 45 # cent ad val.; Sulpn. Morphine, $2 50 # oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents # ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20: Blue Vit¬ riol, 25 # cent ad val.; Etherlal Pre¬ parations and Extracts,$1 # ft; all others quoted below, frkk. 27 @ 16 @ # lb. Manila, cent cents ?ieid, 4 ad val 33 ~ 1 3 cents I. 32 @ Factory Dairies . 15 # cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40 cents # 1b.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 # cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents # ft; Caster Oil, $1 # gallon; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6; Caustic Soda, 14; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, 4; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents # 1b; Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 cent ad val.; Epsom Salts. 1 cent ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers nzola and Gamboge, 10 cent.; $ cent Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum'Kowrie, and Gnm Damar, 10 cents per ft; Gum Myrrh, Gnm Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gnm Tragacanth, 20 $ cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬ limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents ;Oil Cassiajmd Oil Berga¬ mot, $1 Alum Butter— - '503 THE CHRONICLE. 20,1866.] Bar Swedes, assorted^• sizes V..... J-.'.t.i • . 2 @170 0Q Bar^English and Amer- loan, Refined 120 00®; do ^do CommonllQ 00® de . ^ 504 THE Soroll 150 00@200 00 Ovals and Half Round 145 00@155 CO Band ©150 00 Horse Shoe... 125 00© ICO 00 Bods, 5-8@3-16 inch..lv>5 00©ld0 00 160 00@220 00 Hoop Nall Rod $ ft 10 © 23 © Sheet, Russia Sheet, Single, Doable 11 24 and Treble 6j© Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 55 0 © do American Ivo ry—Duty, 85 00© 90 00 8 2- © Ball African, W. C., Prime African, Scrivel.,W.C. 375 4 50 3 60 2 50 8 50© 8 25© 2 00© Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 # 100 lb; Old Lead, H cents $ lb; Pipe and Sheet, 24 cents $1 lb. Galena # 100 lb © Spanish © 6 75 (gold) .. .. .. German (gull) 6 874© 7 00 English 1.. (gold) 1 net Bar..... © 7 00 ©II 00 .... .. Pipe and Sheet.. ..net ©11 25 Leatlier—Duty: sole 35, upper 80 fB cent ad val. ^-cash.^l ft.—> 83 © 36 Oak, Slaughter, light . do do | middle 38 © 45 do do heavy. 41 @ 49 do light Cropped.... 45 © 50 .. do do middle bellies do do 51 © 19 © .... .... Heml'k, B. A.,Ac., l’t. do do do do do 83 © 35 heavy 87 © 82 © 34 © 36 @ 80 © 82 © 88 83 31 © 82 30 88 25 86 83 do middle. do heavy. do do Orino., etc. l’t. middle do do heavy. do & B. A, do do do do poor do 88 Oak, Slaugh.in rou., l’t do 85 87 31* © 35 >ugn Slaugh.injrough do and m @ 22 © dam’gdall w’g’s do do 21 32£© 34 Califor., light. do 56 middle. . © mid. do heavy 38 © 45 Lime—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. -.*© 1 70 Rockland, com. # bbl. do heavy © 2 00 Lliitiker* Woods, St»ve«s©tc. —Duty : Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, free. Spruce, East. $1 M ft 20 00 © 23 00 Southern Pine White Pine Box B’ds White Pine Merch. Box Boards Clear Pine 40 00 © 50 00 80 00 © 82 00 38 00 © 88 00 80 00 @100 00 Laths, Eastern.« M Poplar and Whi e 4 00 © wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 © 65 00 Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 00 @ 90 00 Oak and Ash 60 00 © 65 00 Maple and Birch 85 00 @ 40 00 ... Black Walnut 100 00 @120 00 STAVES— White oak, pipe, ai. extia @‘500 @250 @200 @180 @250 @200 @12 > @100 @175 @140 .. do pipe, heavy do pipe, light, do pipe, culls . do hhd., extra, do hhd., heavy do hhd., light, do hhd., culls . do bbl., extra. do bbl., heavy, do bbl., light.. do bbl., culls.. Red oak, hhd.,h’vy. do hhd., light.. .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. . @110 © 60 @130 @ 90 ... _ _ 00 00 Ofl 0€ 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 OO 00 HEADING —White oak, hhd @150 00 Mahogany, Cedar, Rosewood—Duty free. Mahogany, St. Domin¬ 25 © 50 go, crotches, $ ft., do St. Domingo, 20 ordinary logs 17 © do Port-au-Platt, crotches do Port-au-Platt, logs. do Nnevitas.... do do do Mansanilla Mexican Honduras .. (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas do do do Mansanilla Mexican Florida. $ c. ft. Rosewood, £. Jan. $ lb do Bahia 20 © 30 12 © 12 © 12 © 10 © 16 16 16 15 14 @ 12 1» 10 60 5 4 20 16 14 14 @ @ © 1 00 © 8 © 6 Molasses.—See special report. horse shoe 2 cents $1 lb. Cut, 4d.@60d. $ 100 lb 7 00 © 7 25 Clinch © 8 50 Horse shoe, fd(8d)$l lb 82 @ .. Copper 50 @ 32 @ @ .. .. 20 Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30cents $ gallon; crude turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 W cent ad val. Turpent’e,soft.^ 280 lb 5 90 © Tar, American..$ bbl. 8 25 @ 4 25 Pitch..... © 4 50 Roein, common 5 00 © 5 50 do strained and No. 2 0 75 © 6 OO 7 00 © 8 00 Pale and Extra (280 lbs.) Spirits turp., Am. $ 8 25 @10 00 71© 73 g. Oakum—Duty fir.,$ lb 9© 12 Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val. City thin obl’g, In bbls. do West, thin $ ton.58 00 © in bags.55 09 @56 00 obl’g, do .... @53 oO Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1 : burning fluid, 50 cents gallon; palm, seal", and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other flsh (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val. Olive, quarts per case 4 00 © 4 25 do in casks.$ gall.. 1 SO @ Palm $ ft © 12 Linseed,city...$ gall. 1 HO @ 1 61 - ty: 2} Sperm, crude do do do Medium China thrown Paraffine, 28 — Kerosene 80 gr,. (free). Paints—Duty: on 60 68 .. white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ ft; Parie white and whiting, 1 cent $ ft; dry ochres, 56 cent* $ 100 ft: oxidesofzinc, If cents ft ; ochre, ground in oil, $ 150 $ 100 ft ; Spanish brown 25 cent ad val; China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red and vermilion 25 cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 $ ton. Litharge, Amer.. .$lb Lead, red, American. 12© 12© 13 13 white, American, do pure, do in oil. © 16 Hi© 15 white, American, dry Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1 puie, 10 @ 10© do white, American, No. 1,in oil Ochre, yellow, French, 12 12 dry ..$ iOOlb 2 50 @ 3 50 do gr’,1 in oil.*p ft 10 8 @ Spanish brown, dry $ 100 ft 1 50 @ .... do gr’d in oil.$ ft 8© 9 Paris wh., No.l$lU0Ib 3 75 © 4 00 Vermilion,Chinose$ft 1 45 @ I 50 do do do Trieste 1 10 @ 1 15 Cal. &. Eng . 1 35 © 1 50 American.... SO @ 40 Venet. red(N.C.l^cwt 3 25 © S f0 Carmine,city made $ lb 16 OO @20 00 China Chalk clay $ *on29 00 @3 ■ 00 $ LbL 5 00 @ $ ton @21 00 Chrome yellow...^ ft 15© 40 ... Chalk, block Petroleum—Duty: erode,20 cents; refined. 40 :ents ^ gallon. Crude,40@47grav.flgal. 3 @ Refined, free 57 © 58 in bond do 41 @ 41} Vaptha, refined 27 © Residuum..... ..$ bbl. 4 75 © Planter Pari**—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 $ cent ad val. Bine Nova Scotia^ ton @ 4 50 White Nova Scotia @ 4 b0 Calcined, eastern^ bbl @ 2 40 Calcined, city mills.. © 2 50 Otard, Dup. &Co.do Pinet, Castil. &Co.do @10 50 @18 00 .... .. . Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ct: tarns, bacon, and lard, 2 ts $ ft. Beef, plain me»s$ bbl.. 12 50 @18 5o do 18 00 extra mess @23 0 ?ork, *33 50 @33 75 31 00 © 1 2> 29 75 @30 00 Lard, $ft 16 @ 19 ' 17 @ 3ams, 19 14 @ Shoulders, 15 Rice—Duty: cleaned 2| cents $ ft.; paddy It) cents, and uncleaned 2 cents $ lb. Carolina ....• $ 100 ft 14 ro @15 25 East India,dressed.... 9 25 @iu i0 Salt--Duty: sack, 24 cents $) 100 ft ; bulk, 18 cents $ 100 ft. Turks Islands $ bush. 47 @ Cadiz © Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 1 5 0 © 1 95 do fine, Ashton’e(*’d) 2 55 @ do fine, N orthingt’s 2 90 @ 2 95 Onondaga.com.fine bis. 2 50 @ 2 60 do do 210 ft bgs. 1 90 © 2 00 do do $ bush. 42 @ 45* Solar coarse 62 © 55 Fine screened 4S @ 50 do Sj£ pkg. @ S 25 1 F. F 240 ft bgs. 3 00 © 3 25 mess, new do mess, Old do prime, do Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 24 cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft. Refined, pure Crude Nitrate soda ^ ft gold @ @ 4© .. 17 94 Seeds—Duty: linseed, 16 cts; hemp, i cent # ft; canary, $1 $ bushel of 60 ft; and grass seeds, 30 $ cent ad val. Clover $ft 13:@ 14 Timothy,reaped $ bus 8 2 > © 3 75 Canary ...$ bus 4 50 © 5 00 Linseed,Am.cleantee @ do Am. rough $ bus 8 20 © 8 40 do Calcutta ...gold 2 70 © .... .... do 5 1 @ 10 50 5 00© 10 00 5 "0© 10 50 do 5 10 CO do do 5 20© 10 00 45 8S © 44 UnitedV.Prop, do 55 Vine Grow. Co. do Matainoras.gold © 67*@ © 60 55 Psyta 41 © 44 .. .. gold . L-ger freres do do do do do do 5 00 4 4 4 8 2 4 bC 6 liO 4 Arzac Seignette 601 621 .. © 18© 61© 11 cents, 31 cents $ ft and 10 $ cent ad val. (Store prices.) ; 18|@ 24 English, cast, $ ft German 154@ 171 American, spring 11 @ 121 English, spring 114@ 13 do do 85© 1 15© do 4 8 00 do do do do in Champagne 1 76© 1 1 ’5© 1 1 10© 1 83 00©I50 2 25© 30 11 00© 25 ro do do cases. do .... 00© 75© 10 10 75 50 00 00 00 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered $2 to $3 5v $ 100 ft,and 15 $ cent ad val. No. 0 to 18 No. 19 to 26 No. 27 to 86 . Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Sicily $ ton.. 100 00 @210 00 2 60 6 00 Claret, in hhds. Steel—Duty: bars and Ingots, valued over 3 60 8 50 4 90 42 8 00 1 20 8 00 . Spices.—See special report. $ ft; 25© 5i'@ 90© 00© 45© 4U@ 41© 00© d> Sherry Malaga, sweet do dry.... 11* at 7 cents $ ft or under, 21 cents; over 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cts .... Madeira do Marseilles 6J © domestic do do 75& 25© Burgundy Port, 19 Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and plates, $1 50 # 100 lbs. Plateaforeign $ ft gold do Sherry cent $lb. 4 D<»m’c—N.E.Rum.cur. 2 Bourbon Whisky.eur. 2 Corn Whisky (in b nd) Wines—Port (gold) 2 Soap—Duty: 1 cent $ ft, and 25 $ ad val. Castile 7 00 5 00 J. Romieux do Other Rochelle, do Rum—Jamaica ..do St. Croix d> Gin—Differ, brands do 60 .. .. @ 5 0 @ 4 90© 4 90 4 95 4 95 60 41 @ © -.*© 57 © to © @ © Chagres ...gold Puerto Cab .gold do ... Whisky—8. & Ir. 55 40 Honduras.. gold Sisal gold Para gold Vera Cruz .gold .... 15© 10 50 85© 4 85© 4 85© cash Deer,San J uan $ ft gold do Bolivar ...gold 5 4 9< @ Madras,eac cash Cape ,...@ © ... Other br’ds Cog. do Pellevoisin freres do A. Seignette .do Hiv. Pellevoisin do Alex. Seignette. do 10 $ ct. 20 &5 %) c*. 25 « 5 $ ct. off list. .. .... .... off list. off list* Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain # ft 9 © 10 W ool—Duty: Teas.—See special report. costing 12 cents or less ^ ft, 8 cents $ ft: over 12 and not more than 24, 7 cents; over 24 and not over 82,10, and 10 ^ cent ad val¬ orem over 82,12 cents ft, and 10 $ cent ad valorem; on the skin, 20 Tin—Duty: pig, bars, and block, 15 $ Amer., Sax. fleece $ ft Tallow—Duty: 1 cent $ ft. American, prime, coun¬ try and city $ ft... 12i@ 12$ cent ad val. Plate and sheets and 25 per cent. aJ val. terne plates, $ ft (gold) © Straits (gold) ‘ 1J© English (gold) 22* © Plates,char. I.C.^ box 15 00 @15 Banca .. do do 24J ‘2 Tobacco—Duty: leaf 35 cents $1 1b and manufactured, 50 cents Cigars $3 per ad valorem. pound and 50 Lugs and Com. Leaf.. Seed Conn. Conn. Penn. & N.Y.:. Fillers. & \.Y„ Wrap.. & N.Y., R. lots. & Ohio, Fillers.. & Oh.o, Wrap . 18 24 4 Cuba, assort, (duty p d) Manufactured (in bond)— @ 10 nominal. 80 © 1 05 75 © 1 00 80 ©• 1 00 70 @ 80 gi nia & N. Y do 80 @ 26 © . Medium 82 28 fts—(dark) BestVirginia do do fts do do @ 48 © 60 © (Western)—Ex.fine, bright .. do do Fine fts (Virginia)—Ex.fine, .. 80 60 20 10 bright do do do do do do Medium Common 85 © © 85 70 30 86 30 26 28 © 25 © .... Cigars (domestic). Seed and Havana,per M55 00 ©80 Cleav Havana, do ....©.. di> Connecticut Seed. 25 00 @45 New-York Seed, Conn. Wrapper 20 00 @30 Penn, do do do 18 00 @25 Common Cigars 13 Ml @25 12 Polar $ ft .. . Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 $ 100 fts.; sneels 2£ cents $ ft. Sheet 1b 13 © 14 Freights— . 00 . 00 d. s. d. s. a© © 1 @4 ton 16 00 © @20 Heavy goods.. Oil Beef tee. Pork $ bbl. To London: .. 8 6 .. .. ..' .. .. ... 0 @ © © 2 4 5 6 9 @1 .. Oil @25 0 Flour $ bbl. . © 1 9 Petroleum @4 9 Beef ...fltce. @8 8 .. Pork $ bbl. @2 3 Wheat $ bush. @ 7 Corn © To Glasgow ( By Steam) : Flour bbl. @19 Wheat $ bush. © 41 .. .. Corn,bulk and bags.. 00 GO 06 .. @160 .... Wine* and Liquor*—Liquor* —Duty; Brandy, first proof, $8 per .. Petroleum © 4 (sail)^Dbl. ..@40 Heavy goods..$ ton. 20 0 @25 0 Oil Beef Pork To Havre : Cotton © @ @ To Liverpool: Cotton $ ft Flour $ bbl. Petroleum .. Whalebone-Duty: foreign fish¬ ery, 20 p. c. ad val. South Sea North west coast Ochotsk 48 45 80 25 45 25 25 45 22 © 85 @ .... washed . © © © © 24 20© do Heavy goods...$ ton 17 6© •• 82*@ Fine.... Medium. Common Navy fts — Best Vir¬ ginia & N.Y.. do do 474 87 28 85 @ Corn, b’k & bags$ bus. Wheat, bulk and bags .. Medium., Common., washed Smyrna, unwashed • 10s and 12s—Best Vir- 83 80 25© 15© .... Mexican, unwashed.... 20 8 Foreign. Hrvana,Wrap.(d’ty pd) Havana, ass. (duty p’d) Havana, fill, (duty p’d) Yara, assort.(du y p’d) @ @ @ @ © © 22© 43 @ 42 © 82 27 82 18 Persian do 40 25 45 25 15 African, unwashed 6 10 © Penn. Penn. & Oh o, R. lots.. 80© Donskoi, washed £5 @ pulled .. 9 4*> 12 Ok common...- Valparaiso, unwashed.. Leaf. tonn. 67 £0 45 S. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. do common, unw. Entre Rios, washed do unwashed.... S. American Cordova 104 © © 50 52 © 47 c© 38 © S8 @ 20 @ Peruvian, unwashed... $ ft. © 45 © do Texas’ per cent 8 15 70 58 do ; 4 - odium to Goi.d Fine to Select jv 52 © do do 221 2» I. C. Coke 10 50 @14 i 0 Terne Charcoal 15 25 @15 50 Terne Coke.... 10 5j @10 75 do 62 @ full bl’d Merino. i and i Merino.. Extra, pulled Superfine No. 1, pulled California, unwashed... val. ad cent .... ... (gold) 5 20© 10 50 Hennessy.... ..(gold) 5 20© 10 50 Renault & Co. J. Vassal A Co,, Jules Robin.... Marrette & Co. A...gold Vera Cruz .gold Tampico. ..gold do do do do do do 1 10 @ 45© @ 9 00 .12 50 J. & F. Martell Buenos do 85 @ 2 00 1 00 © 1 05 Brandy— ro @10 50 50 © 9 50 50 © 9 00 50 @13 00 Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. 40 @ Goat,Curacoa$ ft gold 1 . 121 All thrown silk. Taysaams, superior, No. 1 @2 :...io do medium,Nc.3@4 * Canton,re-reel.No.l@2 8 Japan, superior 11 unbleach. 2 90 © distilled 111© Taatlees,No.l@5.$ftll 00 @12 00 2 6'» © Lard oil Red oil, city Straits : gallon, other liquors, $2.50 Winxs— Duty: value net over 50 cents gal¬ lon 20 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over and not over 100, 50 cents $1 gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over $1 $ gallon, $1 $ gal¬ lon and 25 $ oent ad vaL c Silk—Duty: free. 35 # cent. .... Whale 1 30 © 1 35 do refined winter.. 1 45 © 1 50 [October 20,1866. Drop and Buck... $ ft . .. Nails—Duty: cut H; wrought 21; Yellow metal Zinc No. 1 Oils 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime East Ind , Billiard r- 8 do do CHRONICLE. $ tee. $ bbl. _ . $ # 1b bbl. 100© ton 10 CO @ Wheat, In shipper’s bush. bags Flour # bbl. Petroleum 0 b .. .. .. .. © .. .. © .. 5 60 Lard, tallow, but m’ts, ytom ▲afcea, pot and pearl. 0 $ $@ @ Hops Beef and pork.. $ Measurem. g’ds.fl etc ©30 @5 © 8 © 6 00 |@ .. © .. 10 ■■■,■ October 20,1866.] 505 The aggregate earnings of the same roads pared with those of September, show the , 1865. 1866. ; 7,182,414 $7,101,787 6,534,861 $530,535 $569,926 Railroads. Atlantic & Great Western Chicago & Alton. Chicago and Great Eastern 1865. Division) Increase in October do 125 252 • 108,338 429,160 429,191 4S6,S0S 228,020 Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien Milwaukee and St. Paul Ohio and Mississippi 320,000* 661.608 349.117 Western Union... 379,981 75,677 Total (16 roads) Dec. Dec. Dec. 84,462 795,938 Inc.. $7,762,949 ^$7,104,787 are earnings for the first nine following table : Railroads. Atlantic & Great Western 30,348 134,330 30,864 8,785 Dec. $658,162 months of the years as above * Chicago and Alton Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago and Northwestern Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Erie (including Buffalo Division)... Illinois- Central Marietta and Cincinnati 1866. Ohio and Mississippi Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago... Toledo, Wabash and Western Western Union (16 roads) 2,366,148 Mississippi.—An act for a bridge Mississippi to Quincy passed Congress a few days before its adjournment. The three railroads terminating at Qumcy, de¬ sirous of constructing the same, have made a contract to that effect, (signed Sept. 5th), and received the charter. It may, therefore, be $54,338,917 143,490 434,6S6 167,991 Dec. Dec. 10,644,721 4,690,515 1 852,771 3,043,217 3,386,871 1,354,558 1,661,606 2,527,079 5,466,179 2,639,339 584,017 5,377,644 890,516 3,237,315 3,455,086 1,837,410 1,621,580 2,723,515 6,337,234 1,942,582 497,059 Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien Milwaukee and St. Paul Inc. Inc. 6,175,981 2,534,139 .7. Another Bridge Across Difference. Inc. $352,455 Dec. 214,849 . $4,141,038 2,722,541 920,844 11,140,215 _ Michigan Central Michigan Southern Total 1865. 37,745 194,098 68,215 Chicago 17,148 40,026 196,436 871,055 696,757 86,958 Inc. $53,177,425 other continuous railroad route be Lake and California. 687,129 Inc. Dec.$l,161,492 the the concluded that the structure will be built at 495,494 Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. luc. Inc. Dec. Dec. and Iowa line of the early date, and an¬ completed toward Great Salt an Northwestern Railroad.—The track of the Chicago and Northwestern Company is laid to within 85 miles of O naha. The grading is well ahead of the track¬ layers, and will be finished in November, as the track is being laid at the rate of about, a mile a day. COMPARATIVE MONTHLY EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. Chicago & Northwestern Chicago and Bock Island.-Cleveland 1866. 1864 1865. 1S66. 18647 -Chicago and Alton. 1864. 1865. (257 m.) (280 m.) $100,991 $280,503 154,418 195.803 162,723 - 206,090 -224,257 312,165 354,554 320,879 307.803 252,015 Jan.. 207,913 .Feb.. 304,885. .Mar.. 275,282 368,273. Jane. 326,870. July. 381,559. ..Aug.. 318,549. ...Sep.. 749,191 546,609 7,960,981 1866. (657 m.) (797 in.) 1864. (708 m.) $984,837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188 Jan 934,133 947,146 983,855 ..Feb... 1,114,508 1,256,567 1,070,434. ..Mar... 1,099,507 1,458,455 1,153,295. .April.. 1,072,293 1,333,461 1,101,668. .May 1,041,975 1,177,372 1,243,142. .Jane... 994,317 1,202,180 1,203,462. .July... 1,105,364 1,381,046 1,290,310. ..Ang 1,301,005 1.336.615 1,411,347 ..Sep— 1,222,568 1.438.615 ..Oct— 1,224,909 1,522,472 ..Nov... . $327,900 ... 416,588 459,762 423,797 406,373 510,100 1,429,765 • ..Dec.... Year — Mich. 80 & N. Indiana.1864. 1865. (524 m.) (524 m.) $363,996 366,361 413,974 365,160 351,489 387,095 301,613 418,575 486,808 $256,600 304,445 338,454 330,651 267,126 *315,258 278,891 358,862 402,219 407,107 448,934 411,806 4,120,153 524,760 1866. (468 m.) $290,676 457,227 611,297 588,066 525,751 532,911 506,640 685,547 075,830 701, m 691,556 914,092 (468 m.) $102,749 115,135 88,221 140,418 186,747 . . 584,523 858,500 712,362 580,963 1864. ...Oct... .Nov.. . ..Dec.. ..Year — 1865. 1864. (234 m.) $98,183 ..Jan.. 84,897. ..Feb.. 72,135. ..Mar.. 106,689 146,943 110,664 1,985,571 (468 m.) (210 m.) $100,872 654,890. ..Mar... 606,078. .April.. 672,628. ..May.. 644,573. .June.. 554,828. July-. 641,848. Aug. 661,608- ,Sept„. . .Oct . Nov Dec year t . 147,485 160.497 . 221,638 198,135 129,227 . ..Dec.. .Year.. 1,402,106 -Toledo, " 1866. 1864. (210 m.) (210 m.) $170,078 $178,119, .Jan... 153,903 155,893 ...Feb.., 202,771 192,138 ...Mar... 169,299 167,301 ..April., 177,625 168,699 ...May... £173,722 167,099 ...June., 162,570 166,015 July.. 218,236 222,953 .Aug... 269,459 ..Sept... .Oct 222,924 . 157,786 149,855 155,730 144,942 218,236 234,194 203,785 202,966 208,098 1204,726 ,5 162,694 4,084,074 9,990,895 164,710 ...Oct... .Nov.. — 46,474 64,993 83,702 131,648 126,970 99,662 86,4-2 150,9S9. ...Sep.. 310,594 226,840 1866. • 262,172 .June 170,795. .July.. 116,224. ..Aug.. L., Alton Sc T. Haute.-^ 1864. - $51,965 108,082. .April. 267,488. ..May.. 224,838 217,159 170,555 228,020 ..Occ ..Nov ..Dec ... .Year.. ' (242 m.) $79,735 '95.843 182,896 123,987 127,010 156,338 139,6*6 244,li4 375,534 221,570 2,512,315 Michigan Central. 1866. 1865. (285 m.) Oct... .Nov... 410.802 . 116,146 105,767 — . 405,510 376,470 3,970,946 .. . 1,224,056 1866. (234 m.) $98,181 $131,707. .Jan.. 86,528 95,905 106,269 203,018 237,562 251,9 6 241,370 3''0,841 395,579 346,717 171,125 122,621. ..Feb. 124,175. ..Mar.. 121,964 .April. 245,511. ..May.. 242,560. .Jane. 209,199 ..July. 2,535,001 1864. . 1&S.223. 223.242 268,176 302,596 332,400 278,006 346.243 275,950 ..Aug... ...Oct.. .Not,., . ..Dec,.. ..Year.. 3,311,070 8,050,393 8,928,878 1866. 1864. .Nov...,. .Dec - L866. (340 m.) (340 m.l $259,223 $267,541 ' 239,139 813,914 271,527 290,916 304,463 349,285 344,700 350,348 372,618 412,553 284,319 8,793,005 246,109 326,286 277,423 283,130 253,924 247,262 305,454 — -Western Union. - . 265,154 1865 v 224,957 275,906. ...Sep.. (242 m.) (484 in .» $144,084 $226,059 ...Jan... 139,171 194,167 ...Feb... 155,753 266,407 ..Mar... 144,001 270,300. April.. 138 738 316,433. .May... 325 «91. .Jane.. 194,52* 304,917 July.. f271,798 396,248. .Aug... 4374.534 2379,981 349,117 Sept...; 875,534 .Oct Dec.,., 328.869 4,504,546 (340 m.) $210,329 260,466 309,261 269,443 Wab. Sc Weslern.T805. . 343,736 —-Ohio Sc (234 m.) — 365,196 335,082 324,986 359,665 45b, 160 365,663 329,105 413,501 460,661 490,693 447,669 40S,445 . 265,796 337,158 401,456 338,276 271,553 265.780 263,244 346.781 ..Year.. — m. 279,137 344,228 337,240 348.802 ...Dec... — 1866. (285 $306,324 $282,438 278,848 .. - f361,610 (.247,023 , 223.846 1864. 116,495 I860. 220,138 (286 m.) $252,435 220.209 ,Ye*r Pittsburg. 1865. (251m.) (251m.) $96,672 L $90,125. .Jan. 87,791 84,264. .Feb... 93,703 82,910. ..Mar... 82,722. April.. 78,607 76,248 95,664. ..May... 107,525 106,315. .Jane.. 104,603 96,"23. ..July.. 115,1S4 106,410. ..Aug... 125,252 108,338 Sep... .Nov;... - 310,443 ..Aug... 396,050 ..Sept... 1865. (234 m.) $121,776. 74,283 70,740 1865. 1,038,165 1866. (234 m.) 234,112 ..July... ^-Milwaukee & St. Paul.^ '"—St. . 712,495 795,938 74,409 89,901 72,389 83,993 78,697 91,809 94,375 93,078 90,576 96,908 95,453 1,711,281 $690,144 $555,488. .Jan... 678,504 474,738. ..Feb... 857,583 733,866 637,186 646,995 $77,010 512,027. ..Feb. 516,822. ..Mar.. 406,773. .April. 507,830. ..May. 560,025. .June. 467,115. ..July. 586,074. ..Aug.. 551,021 ..Sep.. 117,018 .Nov... .Dec... ^Yfear.. — 1866. $582,82S, ..Jan.. 212,209 139,547 113,399' 168,218 178,526 149,099 ...Oct.... Pittsb., Ft.W.,& Chicago 1864. 1865. (234 m.) . 495,072 351,799 4,826,722 $571,536 528,972 616,665 (251 m.) 7,181,208 1864. (524 m.) fan. $314,598. 283,177. .Feb... 412,393. .Mar... 409,427. .April.. 426,493. ..May... 392,641. .June.. 338,499. ..July... 380,452. ..Aug*.. 429,191. ...Sep... 3,313,514 1866. -Mil. and Prairie dn Chien.- . April.. May... . and (204 m.) (204 m.) $173,557 $168*7.4 180,140 151,93 222,411 167,007 196,154 173.782 215,784 198,082 245,627 195,138 226,047 189,447 243,417 217,941 243,413 170,879 202,857 193,919 203,514 210,314 214,533 264,637 242,171 248,292 220,0: 2 201,169 — -Marietta and Cincinnati.—> (708 m.) 460,573 617,682 578,403 747,469 739,736 641,589 643,887 518,088 423,578 586,964 .. 13,429,643 15,434,775 ..Year.. 1865. 799,236 661,891 657,141 603,402 .. i eb 3,095,470 .Nov... ..Dec., (708 in.) 6,329,447 . . .Itlarcb 321,818 244,121 306,231 389,489 307,523 270,073 *01,779 . 516,608 246,331 289,403 * 196,580 (204 m.) $139,414 .Jan— 224,980 271,140 331,494 324,865 336,617 321,037 ...Oct.., — $305,554 1864. 290.642 ..June.. . 923,886 (182 in. $241,395 183,385 257,230 197,886 264,605 . 767,508 946,707 1866. (182 m.) 2:44,612 . Illinois Central. 1865. 1,234,217 . 702,692 ..Year.. 6,114,566 — $158,735 175,482 243,150 185,013 198,679 243,178 . . . 747,M2 716,878 563,401 ..Jan.. .Feb.. ..Mar.. . 405,634 523,744 518,736 April. 735,0-2 ..May.. 922,892 .June.. 77o,990. ..July . 778,284 ..Aug... 989,053 . .: .Sep.., 468,358 585,623 .Nov.. ..Dec.. (182 m.) $523,566 499,296 729,759 . Railway.- (657 m.) 482,164 ..Oct... 3,840,091 (679 m.) $541,005 317,839 390,355 421,363 466,830 565,145 480,710 519,306 669,605 833,432. •May.. 307,919 236,824 1864. 1865. (609 m.) $273,875 270,889. .April. 357,956 —Erie (609 m.) $210,171. 299,063 258,480 322,277 355,270 336,985 409,250 401,280 178,786 2,770,484 (280 in.) 0.12* uses. across $3,788,583 2,937,390 777,354 5,741,295 $10,609' Decrease.... also be assumed that labor and materials have cost less in previous year, while expenditures for repairs and new roliing-stock have not been as great, and hence that larger net earnings have probably been made. These considerations poiut to a coniinuance of dividends, except in special instances, as with the Erie Company, where earnings have been diverted from their legiti¬ • shown in the 8.72 1866 than in the mate The 647,553. Decrease.... ’ showing that falling off, since many of carrying freight at reduced rates. It may 57,617 77,031 24,935 . $658462- the business of the country has not been the leading companies have been . 275,906 350,348 ...... 6,561 Dec. Dec. Dec. 150,989 300,841 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chicago.... Toledo, Wabash and Western. 42,346 Dec. '23,9:38 Dee. 188,715 Dec. 16,914 Dec. 31,501 551,021 460,661 Michigan Southern Inc.. 8.84 p. c.... Difference. anticipated. The aggre¬ gate decrease for the nine months from the figures of 1865 is now $1,161,492, or 2T4 per cent. It is evident from this 82,731 3,352 Inc.. 1,411,347 739,736 Michigan Central Dec. Dec. 103,037 989,053 396,050 do Decrease.... Decrease.... as com¬ This shows that the increase of business, for October has been; very nearly equal in the two years, and certainly is more favorable* for the curreut year than could have been Dec. $13,578 31S,549 1,4:35,285 :.... Illinois Central Marietta & Cincinnati Estimate. September Difference. $526,959 401,280 106,389 916,707 389,489 Chicago & Northwestern Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific * 1866. $540,537 . October exhibited in the following statement: jtfQetober, following result: $7,762,949 _ Railroad Earnings for September.—The gross earnings of the undermentioned railroads for the month of September, 1865 and 1866, comparatively, and the difference (increase or decrease) be¬ Erie (incl. Buffalo ■%s THE CHRONICLE. ®bc ftailroajj Jttonitor. tween the two years are v 1- . ..Year. ' (140 in.) $30,840 37,488 4 2 038 41,450 48,359 68,118 50,308 49,903 60,565 56.871 54,942 42,195 887,078 1865. (157 m.) $43,716 37,265 32,378 33,972 63,862 82,147 63,180 5’‘,862 75,677 92,713 61,770 37,830 1866. (177 m) 45,102 36,006 39,299 43,333 86,9 3 102,686 85,508 60,698 84,462 [October 20, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 506 BOND LIST. AND MISCELLANEOUS RAILROAD, CANAL FRIDAY. INTEREST. INTEREST, DESCRIPTION. CVq "o 03 Amount N. B.—The sums placed aftvr name of Company shows the Funded Debt. the outstanding. total FRIDAY- 73 «' . Payable. I •r- A A 2d ($1,745,000): 1st Mortgage Income Erie and Northeast 6 Jan. & 2,000,000 7 J’ne & Dec. 1877 May & Nov 1872 500,000 200,000 400,000 ($10,264,463): Loan Atlantic ($983,000): do inconvert.. Sept. 20,1860) Eastern ($5,600,000): Chicago dk Mortgage Mortgage Cleveland <fc Mahoning 8 8 Convertible Huntingdon dk Broad 1st Mortgage Jfcor 2d do Illinois Central 102* 104 105 6,837,000 2,896,500 2,563,000 Ap’l do Oct. 2,000,000 7 Jan. & 1,250,000 7 7 7 7 7 Feb. do Aug 1885* 1885 do May & Nov. 1863 Quarterly. 1915 Feb. & Aug 1885 484,000 7* ($1,752,400): 7 88 90 96 89 90 84* 7 7 Tan. & 850,000 648,200 7 7 8 900,000 500,000 ($3,880,848): 7 7 6 M’ch do Sep 1873 convertible 1,108,124 2,081,000 Jan. do Jan. & Extension 1st 1st 1st 104 M’ch do Sep 1878 800,000 J’ne & Dec. 1876 270,501* 8 8 8 7 7 Jan. & July do do do 96 1875 642,000 169,500 18— 18— 500,000 6 Jan. do July Western ($3,491,500): sinking fond. 1,500,000 7 Jan. do July 1875 M’ch lb Sep 1881 900.000 7 Jan. do July 1871 600,000 7 8 Ap’l do Oct 1887 Bonds Nashville ($3,297,000): 1,804,000 6 Feb. do Aug. ’90-’90 6 June & Dec. ’70-’71 6 Apr. do Oct. 74-’75 6 Feb. & Aug. 1874 314,100 681,000 „ £P.& K.RR.) Bonds.. 399,000 Bonds.. Central, ($7,463,489), l»t Mortgage, sinking fnnd May do Nov. 1886 1877 do 7 Feb. & Aug 1868 7 Jan. & 1,500,000 1,000,000 • —*. 695,000 108 97* July 1891 98 99 7 Jan. & July 1893 7 April do Oct 1893 91 81 93 82 7 Jan. &July 1875 1876 do 400,000 8 3,612,00C 7 May do Nov. 1877 do | Morris and Essex : 7 7 855,000 4,600,000 convertible do Feb. do Ang 69-72 April do Oct 1882 2,253,500 do do 1885 402,000 4 1st Mortgage, 2d do sinking fund 1st Land Grant Mortgage 2d &July 651,000 Sinking F’nd do Mich. S. dk N. Indiana: ($8,537,175) 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds. Milwaukee dk Prairie du Chien ; 1st Mortgage, sinking ftrnd. Milwaukee and St. Pam: 1st Mortgage 2d Jan. 8 8 2,242,500 4,253,500 Mississippi and Missouri River : 100 7 1,092,900 .. 7 Feb. do Aug 1892 7 May & Nov. 1888 1,000,000 mort 2,362,800 300,000 Western: do 1883 Feb. do Aug 1883 1883 do 7 300,560 .7 Cincinnati ($3,688,385): Mortgage May do Nov 500,000 6 Jan. <fc July 1870 225,000 7 May do Nov. 1890 .400,000Loan Bonds.. 1st do Nov. 1873 960,000 7n April & Oct 1877 Dollar, convertible 1867 1881 2,622,000 6 Central: ($2,733,800) 1,1<X),000 Loan Bonds Michigan Ap’l & Oct. 1904 283,000 1,300,000 Mortgage 2d 1886 250,000 6 May Maine 77 102 July 1874 1,465,000 sinking fund 1st Mortgage, Scioto and Hocking Valley 93 75 Jan. do 1882 7 May & Nov. 1872 7 Jan. & July 1869 903,000 Memphis Branch Mortgage McGregor 8 July 14)00,000 Mortgage Marietta dk 8 Jan. & 800,000 6 April do Oct 1870 1861 do 230,000 6 1862 do 250,000 6 ($932,000): Louisville and Jnlv 1885 do 300.000 7 ($1,280,000): do Mortgage April & Oct 1873 7 800,000 ($1,477,000): Mortgage, July 1866 7 Jan. & 500,000 , Milwaukee ($1,903,000): Long Island July 1890 1875 do Jan. & July 1892 1 1st 70 187,000 Mortgage, Eastern Division.... do 104 640,000 7 May & Nov. 1881 1st Mortgage , Little Miami ($1,400,000): 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill ($960,000): Feb. do Aug 1880 1874 do 1,129,000 1,619,500 2d do 3d do La Crosse & 2d Feb. & Aug 1873 M’ch do Sep 1864 1875 do 7 7 ($640,000): fnnd Indiana ($800,000): Lehigh Valley May & Nov 1893 475,000 500,000 ($500,000): mortgage Kennebec and, Portland let Mortgage 1st July 1867 May & Nov 1880 1,300,000 ($1,362,284) Mortgage, sinking 1st 1,397.000 7 Jan. & July 1870 379.000 2d Mortgage Joliet and Chicago 94* Joliet and N 6 103 1875 1890 do do 600,000 7 Jan. & July 1866 1870 do 364,000 10 Jeffersonville ($621,000): July 1898 April do Oct 1875 7 6 n Mortgage 1st > rt Indianapolis dk Madison 68* 6) 1867 do 6 Mortgage 2d do 7 ($475,000): Bonds........ 7 1st 1st Mortgage 1895 104*' May & Nov. 1875 May do Nov 1870 500,000 6 Feb. do Aug 1875 Sterling 101* 103 Feb. & Aug 1869 1869 do 1885 7 J’ne do Dec. 6 500,000 Redemption bonds Illinois and Southern Ioiva : 1st July 1877 Jan. do 523,000 convertible do * 1883 Jan. do July 1876 1876 do 7 7bp($l,436,082): July Feb. do Aug 1883 192,000 ($13,231,000): Mortgage, 1st 1st 1,907,000 sinking fund do do 5,600,000 ($1,300,000): Valley ($2,088,000): do 110,000 7 3,169,000 680,000 Ap'l & Oct. 1,250,000 do s 7 1st 2d 3d May & Nov. 1877 Jan. & July 1893 till 1870 2,000,000 Laakawanoaand Western Du ML .3,890,000 Mortgage 1st . • 6 1st Mortgage Hudson River ($7,762,840): July ’75-’80 7 7 7 3,600,000 do Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280): Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1866 Connecticut River ($250,000): 1st Mortgage Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($250,000) : 1st Mortgage utnberland Valley ($270,500) : Mortgage Bonds Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): 1st Mortgage do 2d do 8d Toledo Depot Bonds .; Delaware ($500,600): l»t Mortgage, guaranteed Sd 191,000 ($191,000): Housatonic Feb. & Aug 1S90 244,200 Deia.y Lacka. dk 1st Mortgage, 6 111 do de Ashtabula ($1,500,000): Pain. Dividend Bonds Sunbury and Erie Bonds do 7 1,000,000 Jan. do July 1883 18S3 do M’ch& Sep 1890 3d 3d 4th 1,037,500 . 356,000 1st Mortgage 2d do Cleveland & Pittsburg 2d Mortgage 7 6 May & Nov 1890 7 M’ch & Sep 1865 Jan. & 97 April do Oct 1881 Jan. & July 1883 7 633,600 927,000 Dollar Bonds Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,629,000): Cleveland, Col. and Cine. 3,437,750 ($927,000): 1879 6 76* 77 do Mortgage : Hartf, Prov. dk FishkiU ($1,936,940): 1st Mortgage 2d do sinking fund 6,000,000 Cincinnati dk Zanesville 1st 7 7 756,000 do > 95 1st 1st 1st 7 Feb. do Aug 1870 May & Nov. 1875 July 1870 6 Jan. do Feb. & Aug 1882 7 100 1868 1,000,000 10 April & Oct 1888 1,350,000 7 Jan. & July 1S93 do 1883 Chicago^Rock Island dk Pacific: 2d 7 1,100,000 Jan. & 700,000 July 1873 Ap’l & Oct. 94 Feb. do Aug 1882 May do Nov. 1875 927,000 6 1st 7 2.400,000 1st Mortgage Mortgage do (new) Cine., Ham. dk Dayton 1st Mortgage 7 7 Hartford & New Haven Jan. do 98* 99 94 94* July 1870 Jan. do 1,963,000 1,086,000 Division do 7 7 Indiana Central ($11,254,500): 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d do . Preferred Sinking Fund Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. Extension Bonds C. & N. W.): do 104 101 7. May 149,000 99 99 (consolidated) Northwest. ($12,020,483): Interest Bonds East. July 1873 ($700,000): New 96 95 519,000 Mortgage 1st Jan. & Convertible Bonds Harrisburg dk Lancaster July 1879 600,000 Milwaukee ($2,000,000): Chicago and 7 Hannibal dk St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Land Grant Mortgage 450,000 Cheshire ($600,000): Mortgage Bonds Chicago and Alton ($3,619,000): 1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref do •. 1st do 2d iucome Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): e Trust Mortgage (S. F.) convert do Bonds, (dated Chicago and Gt. 1st Mortgage do do 2nd 7 800,060 800,000 1,000,000 1888 3,816,582 convertible ($149,000): Mortgage West. 1st 600,000 E. Div do do 1st 2d 1865 1865 1870 1870 1889 909,000 - Mortgage 2d do Central Ohio ($3,673.000): 1st Mortgage W. Div 1st Ap’l & Oct. Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do do Grand Junction ($927,000): Mortgage Great Western, 111. ($2,350,000): 141,000 ($1,509,000): 7 1st 490,000 493,000 ($141,000): Mortgage Central of New Jersey 1st do Mortgage Gal. dk Chic. U. (incl. in Feb. do Aug 1883 May & Nov. 1SS9 J’ne & Dec. 1893 6 867,<MX) 6 4,269,400 6 1,700.000 598,000 & Nov. 1876 M’ch& Sep 1879 1883 do 6,000,000 7 7 April do Oct 1880 <441,600 926.500 7 June & Dec 1888 6 M’ch & Sep 1875 convertible Sterling 80 July 1872 Aug 1874 Jan. do 6 Feb. & 5 3,000,000 4,000,000 convertible do do do 1864 do 8 739,200 Erie and Northeast Ap’l & Oct. 1S66 Jan. do July ’69-’72 1870 do 7 7 7 do 2d 3d 4th 5th 9S* 400,000 1st Mortgage 2d do Catawissa Mortgage Erie Railway ($22,370,982): 1st Mortgage 1st 250,000 100,000 200,000 ($1,200,000): Consoldated ($5,000,000) Camden and CD ◄ PQ May do Nov. 1875 7 420,000 do do Pennsylvania ($598,000): Sinking Fund Bonds Williamsport ($1,570,000): Elmira Feb. & Aug do Jan. do July do do 380,000 7 Buffalo and State Line Rate. -a 1863 300,000 7 Jan. do July 1894 do 600,000 7 East 7 6 7 6 6 ($2,395,000): Sioux City ($900,000): ($1,798,600): convertible Mortgage, May & Nov. 1871 do do Sinking Fund Bonds Boston and LoweU ($400,000): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Princpal payble. Payable. 1876 734,000 7 Feb. & Aug Eastern, Mass. 6 j Toledo ($734,000): Mortgage, 1st section *do 2d section 1st 1st 150,000 2d 2d Bonds Buffalo, N. Y. and Ei'ie j $2,500,000 1,000,000 ao Dubuque and 6 364,000 * Detroit, Monroe dk 1st Mortgage J’ne do Dec. 1867 M’ch do Sep 1885 Feb. do Aug 1877 Corning ($150,000): Camden and Amboy Dollar Loans Dollar Loan 2d 589,500 Mortgage Bonds Boston, Cone, dk Montreal ($1,050,000): 1st Mortgage I ." J 1st do Mortgage, 1st 6 500,000 6 ($3.500,000): convertible Milwaukee Detroit and 1,000,000 433,000 Mortgage < Jan. & July ’70-’79 1870 do do do Blossburg and ing. name tc « 7 7 1,225,000 Belvidere J/etaware ($2,193,000): 1st Mort. (guar. C. and A. 2d Mort. 3d Mort. N. X Amount outstand¬ Railroad: Mortgage do 1st B.—The sums placed after the of Company shows the total Funded Debt T3 T3 es Railroad: Alexandria and Fredericksburg: 1S96 1,000,000 7 J’ne do Dec. 1st Mortgage (gold coupons) Atlantic dk Gt. Western ($30,000,000): 1877 $2,500,000 7 Ap’l & Oct. 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) 1882 do 1,000,000 7 ~do 2d do 1879 do 1,014,000 7 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y.) 1881 do 800,000 7 2d do do 1876 do 4,000,000 7 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio) 4,000,000 7 Jan. & July 1883 2d do do ) 7 Ap’l & Oct. 1884 1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex 2,000,000 7 1895 do 13,858,000 Consolidated Bonds 1,472,000): 988,000 6 Ap’l do Oct. 1866 Atlantic & St Lawrence Dollar Bonds 1878 484,000 6 May do Nov. Sterling Bonds Baltimore and Ohio ($10,112,584): 1867 1,000,000 6 Ja Ap Ju Oc Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834 6 Jan. do July 1875 1,128,500 do do 1855 1880 do 700,000 6 1850 do do 1885 2,500,000 6 Ap’l do Oct. do do 1853 Bellffontaine DESCRIPTION. 7 do 1883 3,500,000 7 May $ Nov. 1915 507 THE CHRONICLE. 20,1866] October (continued). RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST FRIDAY INTEREST. Description. INTEREST. Description. Amount Bams placed after the name of outstand ing. Company shows the total Funded The placed after the name of! outstand¬ ing. Company show the total Funded The earn* Payable. Railroad: Railroad: Naugatuck ($300,000); 1st Mortgage (convertible) ... New Haven dk N. London ($766,000) Jan. ($650,000) Feiry Bonds of 1853 ... New London Northern ($140,000)); 1st General Mortgage New York Central ($14,627,443) : Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ... Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal). Real Estate Bonds Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts). Bonds of August, 1859, convert... Bonds of 1865 Neio York and Harlem ($6,098,045): 1st General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage $500,000 Jan. A July 485,000 1st Mortgage New -Jersey ($805,000) : Feb. A Aug 140,000 Jan. & July May & Nov Feb. A Aug do April & Oct N Icork and New Haven ($2,000,000) : Mortgage Bonds Mortgage Bonds 1,000,000 N. Y.UProv. and Boston ($232,000); 1st 2d Mortgage Sinking Fund—... Northern New Hampshire ($151,400) Plain Bonds North Missouri: 1st General Mortgage ($6,000,000). North Pennsylvania ($3,105,785) Mortgage Bonds Chattel Mortgage North- Western Virginia: 1st Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore). 2d do by B. A O. RR.' 3d do (do do do 3d do (not guaranteed) Norwich and Worcester ($580,000): General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage - O^iar. Ogdensburg andL. C%am.($l,494,000); 1st Mortgage Ohio and Mississippi 1st April & Oct 1,500,000 1,000,000 Jan. A July do do do Jan. A July Feb. & Aug 1874 1870 1st 500,000 500,000 100,000 300,000 do Mortgage, guar, by Mo 1,494,000 April A Oct Jan. A July 1872 1874 do 350,000 Jan. & do do Feb & Aug. 346,000 1,150,000 1,029,000 4,980,000 2,621,000 2,283,840 Jan. & (general)! Convertible Loan Philadelphia dk Reading ($6,900,663) . do do do Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1861 do do 1843-^4-8-9 Sterling Bonds of 1843 Dollar Bonds, convertible Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible do Guaranteed 408,000 182,400 2,856,600 106,000 1,521,000 976,800 564,000 60,000 1st Mortgage 200,000 Philadel., y\ uming. dk Baltimore: 516,000 Mortgage Loan Pittsburg and ConneUsville : 1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.) 400,000 P'b'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) 1st Mortgage 5,200,000 2d do 5,160,000 3d do 2,000,000 Akron Branch: 1st mortgage. 200,000 Pittsburg and Steubenville: 1st Mortgage.’.^ 1,000,000 2d do 500,000 Quincy and Toledo :„ 1st Mortgage July Mortgage Rensselaer dk Saratoga consolidated : 1st Mort. Rensselaer A Saratoga 1st Mort. Saratoga A Whitehall... 1st Mort. Troy, S. A Rut. (guar.) R. Water, and Ogdens. ($1,60',908) : 1st Mortgage (Potsdam A Watert.) 3d do (Watertown & Rome) 1877 1881 1901 i Jan. A July 1st 1st Mortgage 2d do Sacramento Valley : 1st * Mortgage 4? , July Apr. A Oct. May A Nov. Mar. A Sep. Jan. A July do 1863 1867 June A Dec Jan. A July 1861 1867 Jan. A July 1883 Feb. A Aug 1875 399,300 554,908 •Jan. A July April A Oct 1873 1878 1876 Maryland Loan 1867 1880 1870 1871 1880 1880 1886 1886 April A Oct Jan. A July do do do do July 1875 Jan. A .uly do 1890 1890 175,000 25,000 500,000 May A Nov Jan. A July do 1870 1871 1877 •Jan. A July 1886 JaAp JuOc 1870 1890 1885 Ang Jan. A July 1878 641,000 Mch A Sept 1870 752,000 161,000 Jan. A July do 1865 1868 414,15S Mortgage, sinking fund Mch A 1870 1884 2,667,276 Monongahela Navigation: Mortgage Bonds Semi an’ally 1912 103 1912 97 do April A Oct 1912 89 Jan. A July 1884 Sept 182,000 Jan. A 750,000 98 Mortgage Bonds Pennsylvania dk New York: 1st Mortgage (North Branch).... Schuylkill Navigation: lstMortgage .’ April A Oct 2d 590,000 July 1872 1882 1870 1.000,000 1,1"0,000 326,000 Jan. A July 1865 Mortgage 2,500,000 May A Nov. Mortgage 450,000 Jan. A July 750,000 Jan. A July Jan. A July 1,500,000 2,000,000 Jan. &. July 600,000 Jan. A 600 000 Feb. A Aug *»00,00< 500,000 June A Dec Jan. A July 1,764,330 3 980,670 do 1890 1st 1,438,000 Jan. A July 1875 586,500 West Branch and Susquehanna; 1,000,000 250,000 140,000 Mch A Sept 1888 1888 1876 Wyoming Vculey: st Mortgage 800,000 Mch A 400,000 340,000 500,000 May A Nov. 1890 1st May A Nov. Mch A A Improvement Susquehanna and Tide-Water: Maryland Loan Coupon Bonds Priority Bonds, .... i Union (Pa.): Feb. A Aug 1881 do 1881 do do do Morris. 1889 — do S00,000 Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage Bonds Interest Bonds Lehigh Navigation : ($3,081,434). Loan of 1871 Loin of 1884 ..." 1884 Feb. A .... Preferred Bonds Delaware Division: 1st Mortgage Delaware and Hudson: May A Nov. 1868 Jan. A Mortgage Bonds Sterling Bonds, guaranteed r Sept July May A Nov. do do 1878 1864 Miscellaneous: do do Sept 1879 Cincinnati and Covington Bridge : 1st 2d 800,000 800,000 937,500 400,00010 Jan. A July 1875 329,00010 Feb. A Ang 1881 do Mississippi (Roch I.) Bridge: lstMortgage : Pennsylvania Coal: 1st Mortgage Jun. A Dec. 1874 Mch A Sept 1880 Feb. A Ang 1863 do 1863 Mortgage Bone's Mariposa Mining: 1st Mortgage 1890 1880 1884 April A Oci July 40 Quicksilver Mining ; 1st Mortgage 9d do Western Union Telegraph: let Mortgage convertible I .. . 103 April A Oct ’68-’7l| do Chesapeake and Ohio : 1865 Jan. A July do > 1,800,000 Rutlandand Burlington ($3,257,472). 300,000 300,000 650,000 200,000 188'* 1885 1875 1882 1876 Reading and Columbia: 1st do do Jan. A July Tan. A ipec 183,000 May A Nov. 1865 1884 1875 1875 1865 1874 2,000,000 4,375,000 1,699,500 . (Baltimore) Bonds.... 1875 Feb. A Aug do 2,356,509 1st Mortgage 1st do , guaranteed... York dk Cumberland (North. Cent.): 1st Mortgage 2d do 1884 900,000 2,500,000 1,000,000 1,500,001 152,356 600,000 Canal 1,000,000 1 April A Oci 5,000,000 5 April A Oci 4,000,000 j April A Oci Philadelphia and Trenton ($200,000): Bacine and Mississippi (W. Union) ;• 1st Mortgage Raritan and Delaware Bay: 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 3d do Convertible Bonds Sept June A Dec 696,000 200,000 Western Maryland: July 1880 April & Oct 1875 : Philadel., Germant. dk Norristown : Sterling Bonds of 1836 1875 1872 July 4,319,520 850,000 Dollar Bonds Jan. & 575,000 sterling Central ($575,000) Mch & ... , . Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000) 1st Mortgage (Sunbury A Erie)... do 1st (general) 2d Mortgage (convert.) Coupon do registered Western (Mass.) (6,269,520): Sterling (£899,900) Bonds July Jan. A .. Mortgage (guaranteed) 1st 2d July April & Oct 1870 416,000 Pennsylvania ($16,750,124): 1st Mortgage do 2d do 2d , Phila. and Bait. 1st Mortgage Verm. Cen. dk Verm, dk Can. Bonds Westchester db Philadelphia ($962,300). Jan. & 1,139,000 1,180,000 600,000 Mortgage do (no interest) Vermont and Massachusetts / 1st Sept 550,600 Mortgage 1st 91* 1st 2d Mch A 2,000,000 1,135,000 do Vermont Central ($3,500,000) ; 100 April A Oct 180,000 : Warren ($600,000) : Panama: 1st Mortgage, sterling 1st do do 2d do do Peninsula (Chic. dk N. W.): 1st Mortgage do July 500,000 Mortgage Troy Union ($680,000): Mortgage Bonds May A Nov. 225,000 Jan. A 1,391,000 2d do 3d do Convertible 1869 750,000 July Various. 60,000 : Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. & w.) Equipment bonds. Troy and Boston ($1,452,000) : . Aug Jan. A 1,400,000 * lstMortgage 72* July 200,000 ... Toledo TT abash and Wed ($6,653,868): 1st Mort. (Toledo & Wabash)... 1st do (extended)....-. 2d do (Toledo and Wabash). 2d do (Wabash and Western).. 1873 1878 1885 1885 do Tan. A Feb. A * Toledo. Peoria and Warsaw 1880 18S7 2,500,000 360,000 Aug May A Nov 2,000,000 1,070,000 lndianapolis{%60,000); 1st Mortgage, convertible ...... Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage July 2,900,000 ($3,650,000): Mortgage ( W.D.) Oswego dk Rome ($350^000). 1st Mortgage (guar by R. W. & O.) Oswego ana Syracuse ($311,500): 1st Mortgage Pacific, (8. W- Branch): 2d Jan. A Feb. A 700,000 t. Terre Haute & 100 .... June A Dec : Domestic Bonds Staten Island: 1st Mortgage 83*| 79 500,000 Sterling Loan April & Oct 149,400 1,290,000 Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191); 1st Mortgage ..... 1875 1886 201,500 ($791,597) : lstMortgage 105 May & Nov. 1,000,000 Mortgage South Carolina July irred. July 1885 83 Jan. & Jan. & 1,500,000 2,500,000 104 1872 1893 1868 1st 92 an’ally do April & Oct. do Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage Shamokin V. dk PottsviUe Semi 1,700.000 Sandusky, Mansfield and Neicark : Aug ’73-’7S Feb. & 232,000 Mortgage Northern Central ($5,211,244); State Loans 2d 96 94* June A Dec 1887 May & Nov 1883 1883 do Feb. A Aug 1876 1876 118 do 1876 118 do 3,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 2,200,OOC 2,800,000 Sandusky, Dayton and Cincinnati: 1st Mortgage (extended) I May & Nov 1883 6,917,598 2,925,000 165,000 663,000 1,898,000 604,000 1,088,000 Mortgage m. Louis. Alton'dk T. H. ($6,700,000); 1st Mortgage 2d do preferred 2d do income St. Louis, Jacksonville dk Chicago: 1st Mortgage '. do 2d M’chA Sep 1861 Jan. A July m's 200,OCT do N. Haven dk Northampton 3d AJnly 1876 800,000 450,000 let Mortgage „ Payable. Debt, Debt. 3d Amount ] f,000,000J 1873 1879 Nov. lt§7 96 .. 0 [October 20, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 508 Stock Companies. Harked thns (♦) are leased and have fixed incomes. roads, Railroad. standing.] preferred Atlantic & St. Lawrence* Baltimore and Ohio ogtc Jne Bellefontaine Line Belvidere, Delaware - Catawissa* preferred (preferred) Chicago and Alton Cheshire Marked thus (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. Feb.. 3 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3* 681,665 Jan. and July July .3% 60 113 X July. .2* 112' Sep.. .5 Sep.. .5 112% 114 132 *132* May .5 July. .5 St. Louis, 3,000,000 Apr and Oct. Oct...4 470,000 2,000,000 6,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. .4 1,036,000 May & Nov.|May..4 5,000,000 Jan. and July July.. 5 5,403,910 Jim. and July Jan. "65 5 116 U6 Cleveland, Columbus, & Cincin.100 Cleveland & Mahoning* 50 92 92* Cleveland, Painesville & Ashta. 100 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 4,841,600 April and Oct, Oct - ..8 :20* 121 Cleveland and Toledo... 50 Quarterly. jOct. ..2* Columbus & Indianapolis Cent.100 Jan. and July July. .5 Columbus and Xenia* 50 1,490,800 May and Nov May. .4 Concord 50 1.500,000 Jan. and July July. .3% Concord and Portsmouth 100 350,000 500,000 76 Coney Island and Brooklyn.... .100 392.900 Connecticut and Passumpsic.. 100 1,255,200 Jan. and July July.. 3 do do pref.100 Jau. and July July. .4 Connecticut River 100 1.591.100 1,582,169 Covington and Lexington 100 2,384,931 Jan.. .3 Dayton and Michigan 406,132 Jan. and Delaware* 50 10,247,050 Jan. and July July. .5 151 July Delaware, Lacka., & Western .. 50 Des Moines Valley 100 1,550,050 100 952,350 Detroit and Milwaukee do do pref..... 100 1,500.000 Dubuque and Sioux City 100 1,751,577 MarchMar 75.. do pref.. . 100 1,982,180 Jan. and July July. .4 111 do Eastern, (Mass) 100 3,155,000 Quarterly. July Eighth Avenue, N. Y* 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2% 500,000 Elmira, Jefferson, & CanandagualOO Elmira and Williamsport* 60 500,000 Jan. and July July. 3% Jan. and July do do pref... 50 500,000 Feb. & Aug. Feb. 4 84* S4* 16.570.100 Erie 100 84* 85 8,535.700 Feb. <fe Aug. Feb. 3% 118 do preferred 100 600,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug. 5 Erie and Northeast* . 50 Jan. and July. 3 Fitchburg 100 3,540,000 April andJuly Apr .5 Oct 750,000 100 . 45* 56 Terre 100 New Bedford and Taunton Now Haven, N. Lond., & Ston .100 New Haven and Northampton..100 New Jersey .; 50 New London Northern ... 100 Mew York and Boston Air Line,100 Western Union (Wis. & Worcester and Nashua W rightsville, York & Canal. 46 60 I}# w York Central ? f100 III.)— 75 1,141,650 June.3 51* Dec. 3* 74 1,575,963 8,228,595 1,633,350 50 100 100 100 50 Pennsylvania Spring Mountain. Spruce Hill June.3 June Feb. and 2,000,000 6,000,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 3,200,000 Wilkesbarre Aug Aug.. 3 130 WH im Jan. and July Jan...5 Oct... 5 Quarterly. 100 2,175,000 Wyoming Valley 100 OitL.t u* Harlem 25 20 (Brooklyn) Jersey City & 50 50 4,000,000 Jah. and " 56 58* 59* 157* 160 76 78 62 63*' 5 100 Cary (Boston) Teleqraph.—American 200 125 265 United States Western Union Jan. and July 100 28,450,000 Union, Russ. Ex. .100 10,000,000 100 10,000,000 Express.— Adams 500 3,000,000 100 20,000,000 100 6,000,000 American Merchants1 Union United States American Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 54* 55 32 32* 300,000 12,000,000 100 3,000,000 Wells, Fargo & Co . 100 1,000,000 Brunswick City 7't ansit.—Central .Nicaragua 55 July 20 100 4,000,000 Boston Water Power. Western 69 750.000 Jan. and July July.. 5 50 Williamsburg. Improvement.—Canton 100.(16} pel) 4,500,000 , 68 July July, .5 50 1,000,000 May and Nov May.... York 158* 160 644,000 100 2,800,000 Metropolitan New 1.*250.000 Feb. and Aug Aug..... 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.... 1,000,000 Jan. and July July..4 Hoboken:... 20 1,000,000 Manhattan 147 Jan.and July July. .5} Jan...2 ... J&n..l0 and 60 1,250,000 Jan. and July Jan...5 July 1,000,000 Jan. 10 Apr. and Oct Go*.—p~«oklyn 51* 74* 317,050 January. Gettysb’g* 50 Consolidation Central Cumberland :27* 738.538 Aug’.! 3* * Ashburton 76 65 Jan.and July July. .6 10,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. .8 2,528,240 Feb. and Aug Aug. 10 May. .5 and Lehigh Navigation 50 5,104,050 May and Nov Aug. .5 Aug 1,025.000 Feb. Morris (consolidated) 50 Feb. and Aug. do 100 1,175,000 Feb. and Aug Aug...6 preferred 6s. Aug 1,908.207 Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 do preferred. 50 2,888,805 Feb. and Aug Aug..6 Snsquehanna and Tide-Water.. 60 2,051,000 Union 50 2,787.000 Jan. aud July Jan...5 West Branch and Susquehanna.100 1,100,000 Wyoming Valley 50 760,000 Quarterly. Sept. .4 Miscellaneous. Coal.—American 25 1,500,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3* Feb. and Aug Aug. .7 500,000 June and Dec June.4 788 047 76 125,000 Jan. and July July.. 3* 607,111 274,400 Juneand Dec Dec ..3* 811,660 Jan. and July Jan ..4 103 2,860,000 Juneand Dec June..4 Jan. and July July.’.l* 66 2,860,000 1,408,300 Jan. and July July. .3 146* 5,627,700 Jan.and July July. .5 Chesapeake and Delaware....... 25 Chesapeake and Ohio 25 Delaware Division 50 Delaware and Hudson .. 100 Delaware and Raritan 100 1,100,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. .5 700,000 Mar and Sep. Sep... 4 100 100 .'. .100 100 .100 Vermont and Massachusetts—100 Warren* 50 Western (Mass). 100 ‘. 127* 128 1,010,000 4.395.800 preferred. 50 do do Tioga.* Troy and Boston Troy and Greenbush* Utica and Black River Vermont and Canada* 96 1(M) 1,500,000 Quarterly. ,Oct...IX Kennebec and Portland (new).. 100 835,000 Lackawanna and Bloorasburg.. 50 500,000 do pref. 50 do Quarterly. Oct... Lehigh Valley 50 6,632,250 Feb. and Aug'Aug.. 2% 2 Lexington and Frankfort 50 516,573 Jan. aud JulylJuly. .5 Little Miami 50 3,572,400 Jan. and July, July. .2 Little Schuylkill* 50 2,646,100 62 Quarterly. Long Island. 50 1,852,715 Feb. and Aug!|Aug..2 Aug. .2 Louisville and Frankfort.. .* 50 1,109,594 Louisville and Nashville. 100 5,527,871 Feb. and Aug: Aug..3% Louisville,New Albany & Chic. 100 2,800,000 Macon and Western 100 1,500,000 Apr and Oct April.3 McGregor Western* 100 1,447,060 Maine Central 100 Marietta and Cincinnati 50 2,029,778 Mar. and 42* 43 do do 1st pref. 50 6,586,135 Mar. and Sep Mar..3s 26 Sep Mar..35 4,051,744 do 2d pref.. 50 do 1,000,000 May and Nov May. .4 100 Manchester and Lawrence Jan.and 5 115* lie Michigm Central 100 6,9^2,866 Feb. and inly; July. .3% 90 * 90* Aug Aug. Michigan Southern and N. Ind..l00 9.381.800 Feb. and Aug; Aug. .5 do do guaran.100 1,089,700 50 ’ Milwaukee and Prairie Du ChienlOO 3,014,000 Feb. and 97* 98* do do 1st pref.100 3,082,000 Feb. and Aug; Aug.. 4 87 Aug! Aug. .3% 86 do do 2d pref.100 1,014,000 62 62* 1,000,000 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 2,400,000 Feb. and Aug|Aug. 8% 76* 76* do preferred 100 Jan. and July : July. .4 Mine Hill « Schuylkill Haven.. 50 3,708,200 82“ Morris and Essex 50 3,000,000 Feb. and A ng. Aug 3%s. 600,009 May and Nov|May. .4 Nashua and Lowell 100 100 43* 43* May. .7 Annually. Third Avenue (N. Y.) 100 1,170,000 Quarterly. Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw.. .100 1,700,000 do 1st pref.100 1,700,000 do do do 2d pref.100 1,000,000 June and Dec Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 2,442,350 June and Dec 984,700 50 1,997,309 Naugatuck.... .^ 81 100 5,819,275 Binghamton & N. Y.100 1,200,130 Haute & Indianapolis.... 50 1,929,150 Syracuse, pref. .100 Jeffersonville Joliet and Chicago* 80 106* 106* July..4 Aug. .4 pref.100 do South Carolina.: Oct...3 100 1,180,000 Jan. and July July. .4 do 100 preferred Hudson River 100 6,563,250 April and Oct Oct.. .4 494,380 Huntingdon and Broad Top *... 50 190,750 Jan. and July! July. .3% do do pref. 50 Illinois Central 100 23,374,400 Feb.and Aug Aug..5 Mar. & Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50 1,689,900 Jan. and Sep. Sep .4 412,000 Indianapolis and Madison 100 407.900 Jan. and Julyj July. .3 July)July. .4 do 33* 33* Feb. and Aug Aug.. 8 862,571 Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO Saratoga* and Hudson River 100 1,020,000 Jan. and July July.. 2* 50 576,050 Schuylkill Valley* and Oct Second Avenue (N. Y.) 100 650,000 Apr. and Aug Aug. .2 869,450 Feb. Shamokin Valley & Pottsville*. 50 130 750,000 Quarterly. Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)....... —100 Housatonic do 76* 100 2,989,090 393,073 Cincinnati do . Quarterly. 76 Jacksonville & Chic*lC0 Sandusky, and 71 6,500.000 April and Oct Oet , Jan. and July Feb. and Aug Louis, Alton, & Terre HautelOO 2.300,000 pref.100 1,700,000 do do St. 50 50% 50 * 13,160,927 75* 76 12,994,719 June & Dec. Ju. 63.3% 103/8 108* 5 Forty-secM St. & Grand St. F’y.100 Hannibal and St. Joseph 100 1,900,000 do do pref... 100 5,253,83* Hartford and New Haven 100 3,000,000 820,000 110 . Oct...2* 127* 128 2,250,000 Zanesville—.. .100 3,068,400 May and Nov May8&4z 4.518.900 Quarterly. Oct... 2 50 3,150,150 100 2.338.600 Jan. and July July..5 3,077,000 Portland, Saco. & Portsmouth. 100 July. .4 Providence ana Worcester 100 1,700,000 Jan. and July Raritan and Delaware Bay 100 2,360,700 April and Oct Oct. ..4* 800,000 Rensselaer & Saratoga consol. .100 Oct .3 Saratoga and Whitehall 100 500,000 April and Oct Oct.. .3 800,000 April and Oct Troy, Salem & Rutland .... 100 Jan.and July July. .5 Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb’glOO 1.991.900 2,233,376 100 Rutland and Burlington— Cincinnati and Chicago Air LinelOO 1,106,125 Cincinnati and 102 Oct...3 Quarterly. 100 3.609.600 50 482.400 Oct...6 Panama (and Steamship) 100 7,000.000 May and Nov May. .5 20.000.0UU 50 218,100 Pennsylvania Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentlOO Jan...3 5,069,450 Jan. and 50 20,240,673 Jan.and July July..5 115* 115* Philadelphia and Erie* July 50 Philadelphia and Reading Apr. and Oct Oct...5 ii4“ Phila., Germant’n, & Norrisfn* 50 1.476.300 114* 8.973.300 Quarterly. Oct...5 Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore 50 1,774,623 Pittsburg and Connellsville 50 Quarterly. Oct.’.2* lio* lio* Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne'& ChieagolOO 9,312,442 June and Dec June.3 182* 1,500,000 682,600 Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 'Cincinnati,Hamilton & Chicago.100 113 98 96 795,360 Colony and Newport Oswego and Syracuse 378,455 100 Chicago Burlington and Quincy.100 100 Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*.. .100 Chicago and Milwaukee* 100 Chicago and Northwestern 100 do pref.. 100 do Chicago, Rock Island & Paciflc.100 Ask 112 May. 5 July July. .4 July July. .4 Irregular. Jan. and Jan. and 1,508,000 Old 850.000 Jan. and July July.. 3# 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug. .5 4,988,180 Feb. and Aug Aug. .5 preferred.... 100 1,500,000 preferred. .100 do 366,000 1,150.000 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug 10,685,940 Quarterly. 2,085,925 Jan. and July 1,783,200 Mar and Sep. 2,425,400 Mar and Sep. 10,193,010 May & Nov. 4,390,000 1,000,000 Jan and July 5,000,000 5,085,050 Bid. Last p’d Periods. standing. Champlain.. .100 356.400 Apr. and Oct Oct...4 do preferred.100 Ohio and Mississippi.. 100 19,822,850 January. Jan. .7 2,950,500 Ogdensburg & L. 16* FRIDA Y Dividend. out¬ 100 50 50 &Bostonl00 .100 .100 50 492.150 1,000,000 roads, New York and New Haven New York and Harlem do Dreferred... New York Proviuence Ninth Avenue Northern of New Hampshire.. Northern Central North Pennsylvania Norwich and Worcester 4,500,000 Jan. and JulylJuly. .5 2,100,000 Jan. and July July. .5 100 100 Central of New Jersey do Last p’d. [Bid. Ask. )ct...l* 600,000 Quarterly. 250,000 June & Dec. June .2* 16 8,500,000 no* 1,830,000 Jan. and July; July. .4 4.076,974 Jan. and July1 July. .5 3,160,000 Jan. and July July. .5 60 50 50 Cape Cod...: do 997,112 preferred.. 50 do Periods. 4,434,250 Feb. and Aug 100 100 Berkshire* 100 Blossbure and Coming* 50 Boston, Hartford and Erie 100 Boston and Lowell 500 Boston and Maine 100 Boston and Providence.! 100 Boston and Worcester 100 Broadway & 7th Avenue 1 0 Brooklyn Central 100 Brooklyn City 10 Brooklyn City and Newtown.. .100 Buffalo, New York, and Erie*. .100 Buffalo and State Line 100 Camden and Amboy 100 50 Camden and Atlantic do Dividend. Stock Companies. FRIDAY. 100 153,0001 Quarterly. ,Oct...l* 50 11,52*2,150 1 50; 1,919,000 I 100 2,494,900: I 100 13,188,902 April and OctOct...4 1,050,000) April and OctiOct. ..5 Alton and St Louis* Atlantic & Great Western do ! STOCK LIST. AND MISCELLANEOUS RAILROAD, CANAL, ....100 2,000,000 100 4,000,000 100 1,000,000 100 8,000,000 July. 54* 54* Quarterly. 97 97* Quarterly. Quarterly. Aug. 3... 89 99 Quarterly. Aug. 3. .... Quarterly. Aug. 3. .... 20 110 215 uarterly. 100 25 iio* 216 7,000,000 quarterly. Sep... 5 2,000,000 Mar and Sep. Sep.. 10 127” 1,000,000 Jan.and July July. .4 1,000,000 Feb. and Aue Aug lOO” 106* 1,000,000[Jan. and July July .4 Jan. and July July 6 100 1,000,000 * United States Trust 18* 18* Mining.—Mariposa Gold 100 5,097,600 29* 29* Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100 5,774,400 Quartz Hill Gold-. 25 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...5 56* 56* Quicksilver 100 10,000,000 ,J*n, and July *.«.• 1,000,000 Rutland Marble ,, 25 2,500,000 Saginaw L, S. & M 85 Pacific Mail 100 Union Navigation 100 Trust— Farmers’ Loan<feTrust. 25 New York Life & Trust.... 100 Union Trust 100 .... , ♦ • Smitfe & Panacea QoI<L,. - 80 2,1500,000 ‘ f t ? • r •>*•! I t » I « « October THE CHRONICLE. 20,1866.] INSURANCE STOCK LIST.—Friday. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Dec. Marked thus (*) are Bid. Askd Companies. Bid. Askd Companies. write Marine Adamantine Oil par McClintockville 10 10 5 2 .10 6 90 6 5 Brevoort 70 1 00 10 Brooklyn 5 Buchanan Farm Bunker Hill 10 5 Cascade Central 100 2 00 .. 10 5 10 Everett Eureka... Excelsior National... New England New York N. Y. & Allee 5 5 Fee Simple 2 First National 6 Forest City 1 Fountain Oil 10 Fountain Petroleum 6 Fulton Oil Germania 5 Great Republic 10 G’t Western Consol... .100 Guild Farm 10 R... 5 10 10 10 5 Copper: Lorillard* 25 Manhattan 100 Market* ..100 Meehan’ & Trade’. 25 Mechanics (B’klyn) .50 Mercantile 100 Mercantile Mut’l*+100 Merchants’ 50 5 5 10 100 !!!! 4 )4 13 V • 17* 2* • • Caledonia.... Canada Central .... • • 66 15 • • • • • .... • • • • American Flag.. .. Atlantic & Pacific Bates & Baxter par— Benton Boscobel Silver Bullion Consolidated Bob Tail 5 Burroughs 10 0> Church Union 1 40 1 45 Cons. G.&S. Ore separating 42 00 50 00 Crozier Columbia 47 50 48 r o Consolidated Colorado... Consolidated Gregory.. .100 • - .... .... . • .... .... Annita. • • • 4 4 2 2 25 75 50 05 4 30 5 00 8 00 2 10 5 50 2 00 75 2 80 .... Copper Creek. .24* 1 Excelsior Flint Steel River.;... Forest City Franklin... French Creek Great Western Hamilton Hancock... .... 1 85 4 00 3* 5* Eagle River . . . Davidson Evergreen Bluff • • , 2* - 2 4 .... • 9* • • . . • « . • • • • .... ' ... m 1* >pe ids ,... — • 19 10 33 • ^ .... .... .... • • • 5 88 5* 5 , ... • 6* • • • 18 00 Minnesota... New Jersey C< New York.... 10 Norwich 11 — .... «... 47 00 8 1 2 Lafayette Lake Superior... - .... . ^ Ogima Hope Keystone Silver Kip & Buell 25 * * .... .... . . . . Liberty .... — Portage Lake. 10 L - 18 10 ftoperior. 2 (0 — • . ttt r Jan.’66..5 Julv ’66. .5 211,178 July’66 ..6 July’66 ..5 July ’66. .5 July '66 July’66... 5 July’65 .10 July ’65 ..5 July ’66..5 July’66..8 July ’66 ..6 July ’65.. 5 July ’66..6 Aug.’66. ..5 July’66 ..6 July’66 ..5 Apr. ’66..4 90* Juiy”66 ..5 July’66 ..5 July’66 ..5 Aug. 66..4 Jan ’66. .5 July ’65 .5 Jnly’66.3* July’66.3* Aug. ’66. .5 Aug. ’66..5 138.902 Jan. and July. Aug. ’66 .5 1,277,664 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66.8# 230.903 Jan. and July, July ’66 .5 do July ’66 ..5 217,843 177,915 Feb. and Ang. Feb.* ’66! .4 208,049 142,830 Jan. and July, July'66. .5 do July ’66 .5 350,412 569,623 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’66. .5 150,000 ? cr. . . . 105 lisii 681,689 FQb. and Ang. Aug.’66...2 151,539 Jan. and July, July ’66 ..5 do July’66...5 550,301 500.000 The rate for advertising in the Chronicle is 15 cents a A discount on this rate will be made as follows: When the advertisement amounts to— $25 10 — Ophir — Quartz Hill Rocky Mountain a A $100 — Oak Hill 25 — — — — . .... .... east 197.633 160,135 e40,ooc 1,322,469 200,000 228.644 $50 Nye .. 282,35 50 100 fonkers & N. Y.. 100 5 • - 704,308 50 1,000,000 200,000 200,000 100 200,000 Sterling * Stnyvesant 25 200,000 Tradesmen's 25 150,000 United States 26 250,000 Washington 50 400,000 Washington *+. ...inn 287,400 Williamsburg City.50 150,000 Standard Star — . .... - July ’66 ..4 do do do do do do do do do do do do do TERMS FOR ADVERT ISING. 1 95 10 . do, -V 1,000,000 1,182,779 Security *+ — .... • Feb.’65 ..5 ADVERTISEMENTS. Smith & Parmelee 13 80 Texas 60 9 00 Union 2 00 35 00 35 50 Lead and Zinc : •% Bucks County par 5 Wallkill.. 2 50 Miscellaneous. 50 CO Copake Iron.. par 5 Russell File 6 85 7 25 7 50 Rutland Marble ... 25 — Liebig Lymond’s Forks .... Pewabic Princeton Providence... 1 85 St. Nicholast — .... 3 50 129.644 260,264 ' Metropolitan * t.. .100 1,000,000 1,192,303 Montauk (B’lyn). ..50 150,000 150,646 Nassau (B’klyn)... 50 216,184 150,000 National 7* 200,000 235,518 New Amsterdam.. 25 300,000 311.976 N. Y. Equitable 3 35 210,000 244,066 Jan. and July. N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100 200,000 222,199 Feb. and Aug. 50 1,000,000 1,175,565 Jan. and July, Niagara do North American*. 60 500,000 601,701 North River 25 850,000 385,489 April and Oct. do Pacific 25 200,000 229,729 do 100 Park 200,000 194,317 do Peter Cooper 20 150,000 173,691 People’s 20 150,000 154,206 Feb. and Aug. Phoenix + Br’klyn. 50 1,000,000 998,687 Jan. and July, do Reliei 50 200,000 188,170 do Republic* 100 800,000 457.252 do Resolute* 100 200,000 208,969 Rutgers’ 25 200,000 206,909 Feb. and Aug. do St. Mark’s. 25 150,000 150,580 — Lacrosse . .... . — Manhattan Mill Creek 6 00 Montana Montauk New York • ... - 40 14 25 7 70 2 40 90 3 00 1 20 1 20 ... . 8 * 58 00 62 58 2 2 22 5G 22 75 .25 2* 1 00 3 00 July ’65 ..5 July '66 .6 July’65 ..5 July’65 .6 do^ 846,426 107 . Aug.’66.3* Aug. ’66..5 Sep.’66. ..4 July ’66 July ’65 ..5 July ’66 ..6 July ’66.. 5 July’65 ..4 do do do 279,864 161.252 500,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 200,000 Aug ’66..5 Apr. ’65..5 July ’66 3% July '66 . July’66.. 6 July'66 .5 July ’66 ..5 July’66 ..5 - .... — • 25 .... 17 .... • Corydon 00 Downieville 25 Eagle Echla* 25 00 Gunnell Everett Fall River 00 G. & S. Ore separating.. — — 60 Holman . Bid., Askd Gold: i 3 .26 3 100 25 Long Island (B’kly) .50 10 Companies. 150,000 300,000 150,000 200,000 Lamar Lenox 3 10 10 Bid. Askd ’ 280,000 50 Lafayette (B’kly).. MINING STOCK LIST. Companies. July'66.3* July’65 ..5 July ’66. .5 215,079 149,755 May and Nov. May.... 229,809 Feb. and Aug. Ang ’66 ..5 156,068 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 Knickerbocker.... 40 5 10 W.Virg. Oil and Coal Woods & Wright 150 do do do 149,024 , 5 10 10 Watson Petroleum Webster 25 . Union 10 United Pe’tl’m F’ms.... 2 United States 10 5 1 Liberty Lily Run tnwich 50 ers’ dian ilton Hanover 50 Vesta ... July’64 ..4 July’66 .10 Aug. 6 p. s, Aug. ’66 l 228,12. Feb. and Ang. 186,176 April and Oct. 172,318 Jan. and July, do 15 163,860 do 50 4S0,295 do 253,214 Harmony (F.&M.)t 50 do Hoffman 50 207,345 do Home 100 2,000,000 2,485,017 do Hope 50 200,000 152,067 do Howard 50 300,000 349.521 do Humboldt 100 200,000 201,216 do Import’ & Traders. 50 200,000 U8,828 Indemnity 100 150,000 138,166 Feb. and Aug. do International 100 1,000,00ft 1,024,762 do Irving 25 200,000 195,571 Jefferson 30 200,010 245,984 March and Sep King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20 150,000 359,721 Jan. and July, 3 Venango (N. Y.) Venango & Pit Hole Aug. ’66. .5 Ang. ’66..5 . Titus Estate 10 2 5 10 ’65. A Dec.’65...5 25 50 150,000 Gebbard 100 200,000 Germania 50 500,000 592,394 Jan. and July. July ’66 .5 Globe 50 200,000 195,875 Jan. and July. July’65 ..5 Great Westem*t. .100 1,000,000 3,177,437 Jan. and July. July’66.3* Fulton' Gallatin 1 70 2 50 Tygart’s Creek 30 Firemen’s 17 Firemen’s Fund... 10 Firemen s Trust.. 10 2* Terragenta 800,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 204,000 150,000 150,000 200,000 50 Excelsior Exchange 20 5 10 Titus Oil 20 Ivanhoe Ken. Nat. Pet &Min 10 Ang! ' 200,000 40 100 Aug. ’66...5 Sep. ’66... 5 891,913 Jan. and July, July’64.3* do July ’66. .5 212,594 440,870 Feb. and Aug. Aug. *66 ..5 244,296 Jan. and July. July’66 ..6 268,898 April and Oct. Oct. ’65.. .5 1,199,978 Jan. and July. July '66..7 86 ,970 March and Sep Mar. ’64..5 168,82 Jan. and July. July’64 ..5 861,705 April and Oct. Oct. '66..6 212,145 Jan. and July, July’66.. 7 do 258,064 July'66.. 140,324 Feb. and Aug. Jan. and July, July’66‘..5 230,3 200,000 250,000 500,000 400,000 50 Commonwealth... 100 Continental * 100 Com Exchange... 50 Croton ..100 10 Story & McClintock 10 10 5 1 100 (N.Y.). .100 (Alb’y).lOO Eagle Empire City 10 100 Tack Petr’m of N.Y Talman Tarr Farm....' Commerce Commerce Commercial. '20 .10 Sugar Creek Home.... Homowack Inexhaustible Island 15 10 Success 20 Heydrick Heydrick Brothers Hickory Farm High Gate 10 Second National Shade River 5 Sherman & Barnsdale. .2* Sherman Oil Southard 10 Standard Petroleum 5 HamiltonMcClintock Hammond... Hard Pan Columbia* 25 Rynd Farm 100 Clinton 4 50 1 ... 70 City 5 5 100 20 Citizens’ 10 Petroleum Consol Pit Hole C. No. 2 Pit Hole Creek Pithole Farms. President Rathbone Oil Tract Rawson Farm Revenue 10 Enterprise Equitable Central Park 25 25 17 Pennsylvania Oil Pepper Well Petroleum... Emp’e CityPetrol’m.... Empire and Pit Hole .... Enniskillen Bowery Broadway Brooklyn ... 47 Noble & Delancter Noble Well of N. Y North American Northern Light Oak Shade Oceanic Oil City Petroleum Oil Creek of N. Y Pacific Palmer Petroleum Clifton 10 Clinton .* ......10 Columbia (Pbg) 50 Commercial .100 Commonwealth 10 Consolidated of N. Y 10 De Kalb Devon..., 1 Eclectic 253,232 Feb. and Aug. 824,456 March and Sep 200.362 May and Nov. 181,062 Feb. and Aug. 820,111 June and Dec. 248,392 Feb. and Aug. do 241.521 123,577 Jan. and July do 878,440 314,787 Feb. and Aug. do 231,793 (Br’klyn)..50 25 25 N.Y.Ph. &Balt.Cons 10 Cherry Run Oil Cherry Run Petrol’m Cherry Run special 501,543 250,000 300,000 200,000 200,000 800,000 200,000 153,000 150,000 300,000 210,000 250,000 500,000 200,000 400,000 Baltic Beekman New York& Kent'y Oil. 100 New York& Kent’y Pet.. 5 New York & Newark. N. Y. & Philadel 5 100 & California 500,000 3 Mountain Oil.. Mount Vernon. Bradley Oil 200,000 5 20 Bliven and July. and July. and July. July ’66. and July. July’66..4 Jan. and July. Jan. 65. ..5 50 25 Atlantic 5 Montana Last paid Periods. Last Sales Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. 223,775 205.976 440,603 213,590 Arctic Astor. 10 5 Mingo Black Creek Blood Farm 5 10 10 10 Bergen Coal and Oil Knickerbocker Lamb’s Farms Latonia & Sage 2 Marietta Mercantile Mineral Point Bid. American Exch’e. .100 5 Maple Grove Maple Shade ofN. Y DIVIDEND. Assets. 25 $300,000 50 200,000 50 200,000 Adriatic iEtna ...; American* 10 Manhattan 10 Beekman Bemis Heights... Bennehoff & Pithole Bennehoff Run Bennehoff Run Oil Risks. Capital. par 10 McElhenny McKinley 100 Alleghany Wright Bainbridge.. Allen 31,1865. participating, and (+) Saginaw,L.S. AM.,,.. 85 $ TO INDEX Commercial Cards. Commission Merchants Cordage a a Fire.... 512 Life..., Marine 512 512 ^ 512 511 Metals.... 512 Pens (Giliott’s) Railroad Iron 512 Stationers Tobacco broker Steamship Companies. per cent. discount of 25 per cent. discount of 35 per cent. Insurance. 612 Cotton Duck A discount of 15 ADVERTISEMENTS. Drugs Dry Goods Express Company line for each insertion 512 512 612 and Inland Navigation 5U 511 fill Financial. Bankers and Brokers in N.Y. Bankers and Brokers— South Bust West Miscellaneous Finances 581 682 682 582 682 Bonds, Dividends, <fcc 510 “ “ “ - “ Miscellaneous. Lawyer (at Galveston Texas)612 m Office Lamps,,,, .vr.'-V-V'r./V i %Vf- ■.v* • [October 20,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 510 BONDS MORTGAGE FIRST Treasury, United States DEPARTMENT. INTEREST ' OF NEW YORK, THE CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD Semi-Annually, on H. H. VAN DYCK. Assistant Treasurer United States. the First days The Bonds have $7,336,000. Gold Coin in the In Coupon Bonds Thirty Years to run, of $1,000 each. and are secured by a First Mort¬ Road, Equip¬ Railroad Sacramento PACIFIC constituting an absolute prior lien on that portion of the ments, Franchises, and Entire Property of the Central Pacific Company, located in the State of California, and extending from City to the California State Line, forming a part of the GREAT RAILROAD ROUTE, adopted and aided by the UNITED STATES GOVERN¬ gage, MENT. The amount of these Office of E. S. Munroe & Co., No. 80 Broadway and No. 5 New st. New York, Sept. 22,1866. payable of January and July. Principal and Interest payable in U. S. City of New York. Amount of Issue, CO. of Six per Cent, per annum, Interest at the rate will CALIFORNIA. OF First Mortgage Bonds to be issued per mile, is by law to the amount of United States Bonds allowed and issued to aid the construction of the Road, and the Mortgage by which they are se¬ cured is declared by Act of Congress to constitute a lien prior arid superior WE OFFER FOR SALE IN favorable terms. more Office of the Panama Railroad Co., Tontine Buildings, No. 88 Wall St., New York, Sept. 24,1866. distance of 73 miles, FOUR PER CENT, out of the earnings of the road for the three months ending 80th inst., and TWO PER CENT, out of the earnings of steamers, sailing holders, or their October 5. vessels, etc., payable to the stock¬ legal representatives, on and after Transfer Books will he the 26th September until and the earnings for the three months ending August $66,115 83 67,429 78 86,000 00 May, 1866 June * July “ IN GOLD. City of Keokuk New 8 per earnings are steadily 20 cent. increasing, and are estimated at over Payable at the of the road is going vigorously forward—24 miles full operation to the the summer of 1867, when its earnings must be very large; as the entire trade of Nevada, and a of that of Uteh, Idaho, and Montana must pass over its line. It has been shown by reliable statistics that in 1863 over $13,000,000 in Gold was paid for freighting goods from California to Nevada alone. This part of the Great Pacific Railroad Route is destined to be one of the most profitable lines of railroad in the world, and its First Mortgage Bonds are among the best secured and most desirable investments ever offered. Oyer $1,000,000 has already been expended in grading beyond the point to which the road is now running, and the iron is bought and paid for sufficient to lay the track the entire distance to the State line. The Road has been completed and equipped thus far without the sale of a single dollar of its First Mortgage Bonds, and they are now offered to the public for the first time, after the earnings of the Road have reached the sum of $100,000 per month in Gold, only about twenty-five per cent, of which is required for operating large proportion - expenses. offered at 95 per cent, and accrued interest from July Currency. Orders may be forwarded to us director and Bankers in all parts of the country. Remittances may be made in drafts on New York, or in Legal National Bank Notes, or other funds current in this city, and the Bonds The Bonds are forwarded through the principal Banks Tender Notes, will be to any address by Express, free of charge. Inquiries for further par¬ ticulars, by mail or otherwise, will receive punctual attention. Fisk & Hatch, Bankers, No. 6 Nassau xi Bv—All / kinds of Government ^ exchange for the above 1st, in Bonds. Street, N. Y. Securities received at the full " market price in of New York. FULLY SECURED THROUGH PAYMENTS MADE AND COLLATERALS PLACED IN THE HANDS OF HENRY A. Total SMYTHE, Trustee. $300,000 Authorized Issue These Bonds adventure, and deemed secured beyond any per; unequalled as a are RELIABLE 8 PER CENT. A limited amount may INVESTMENT. be had at par only, by ap ptying to the CENTRAL SEVEN NATIONAL BANK, Broadway, New PER CENT. York. FIRST MORT¬ GAGE BONDS OF THE additional being nearly ready for the cars—and it will probably be in California State Line—156 miles from Sacramento City—during Central National Bank In the City received at this date. The construction Bonds! YEARS TO RUN. 320 $100,000 in gold for the month of August—the official report for that month not having been The closed from the evening of the morning of Oct. 8. HENRY SMITH, Treasurer. equal to this First Mort¬ viz.: 1st, were as follows, V ) DIVIDEND—THE BOARD OF day declared a DIVIDEND of 38th. gage) is economically and judiciously applied to the construction and equipment of the road, together with nearly $7,000,000, received from Stock Subscriptions The First Mortgage therefore amounts to but about 35 per and other sources. cent, of the actual cost and value of the Property which it covers. The road is now completed, equipped and running from Sacramento City to a ) Directors have this to that Alta, SUMS TO suit, Coupon Sixes of 1881, in denominations of $50 and $100. Interest payable yearly in gold. Also, same class of bonds! in $500, payable semi-annually Jan. 1 and July 1. These bonds are called the Ore¬ gon War Debt, but are precisely of the same rank and tenor as the regular Sixes of 1881, and will be sold on limited of the United States Goverement. The aid received from the Government (in amount October 9,1866. Schedules of (30) Thirty or more (5.20) Coupons falling due on the 1st of November proximo now be received lor examination at the Interest Depart¬ ment of the United States Treasury. North Rail¬ Missouri road Company. sale the Seven Per Cent. First Mort¬ Bonds of the North Missouri Railroad Com pany, having thirty years to run. Coupons paya¬ ble in New York on January 1 and July 1, in each year. ^ Before accepting the agency for sale of these bonds, we made careful inquiry into the condition and prospects of the road, which was examined bj Mr. Wm. Milnor Roberts and others, on our behalf, and their highly satisfactory report enables us to re We offer for gage commend the bonds as first-class safe and judicious investment. securities, and ,000,000 in all) wi. The proceeds of these bonds he used in extending a road, Iready completed 170 Sti " miles into North Missouri, to the l'owa State line, where it is to connect with the railroads of Iowa,t and also westward to the jnnction with the Pacific Leavenworth) and other railroads lead¬ that the mortgage of $£«», 000 will cover a complete and well-stocked road of 889 miles in length, costing at least $10,000,000, with a net annual revenue after the first year Railroad (at s' up the Missouri River, so $1,500,000, or a sum nearly four times be¬ yond the amount needed to pay the interest on these bonds, the income of the road of course increasing of over every year. of St. Louis, with the rich¬ The Railrocd connects the great City with its 200,000 inhabitants, not only est portions of Missouri, hut with the States of Kan¬ Pacific Railroads. The first 600,000 have been sold at 80 cents, and the remainder are now offered at fc-5 cents. At this rate they yield nearly 8>£ per cent, income, and add 20 per cent, to principal at maturity. Any further inquiries willlbe answered a on office. ! JAY, COOKE A CO. sas and Iowa and the great ■:$) •j.!s.'!j'- WS*-*'' THE CHRONICLE. [October 20,1866. 511 • Insurance. Insurance. Steamship and Express Co’s. The Mutual Life Insu- Queen Fire Ins. Comp’y PACIFIC MAIL 8TEAM8HIP COMPANY’S SINCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1865. over $13,500,000 00 FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President. R. A. McCURDY, Vice-President. j-THE0 w MORRIS. Marine & Fire Insurance. NO. 108 Cash CO., BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Capital Assets Nov. 1,1865, over , To £2,000,000 Stg. £1,885,220 Stg. - - Capital Sc Surplus ----- Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS. METROPOLITAN INSURANCE Authorized Capital Subscribed Capital California, And Paid up i ISAAC ABBATT, SflrmSiriftft Sectaries, THROUGH LINE OF LIVERPOOL AND LONDON. $1,000,000 1,600,000 way, N. GEORGE WILLIAM H. If Premiums are paid in Gold, Losses will be paid in Gold.. The Assured receive twenty-five percent of the net profits, without incurring any liability, or, in lien thereof, at their option, a liberal discount upon the 117 Broad¬ Y. ADLARD, Manager. ROSS, Secretary. COMPANY, ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. OCTOBER: 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City. 11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis list—New York, connecting with Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for capital.. Surplus $400,000 00 Gross Assets Total Liabilities $556,303 98 156,303 98 24,550 00 BENJ. S. WALCOTT, President. Niagara Fire Insurance 49 WALL STREET. ASSETS, Dee. 31, 1865 - - CASH CAPITAL, SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 NO. 175 paid in gold will be entitled to a return premium in gold. Premiums CASH Co., $500,000 O SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866 Sailing on the North America, Capt. 22d of every month. L. F. Timmerman...Oct. 22. South America, Capt. E. L. Tinklepaugh Nov. 22. Guiding Star, Capt. W. C. Berry Dec. 22. These fine steamers sail BROADWAY, N. CAPITAL, 205,989 83 Isaac H. Walker, $705?989 For fhrther information, of freights or passage, Apply to GARRISON & ALLEN, Agents, 83 RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President. JOHN E. KAHL, COMPANY. H P o Fire Insurance E Company, $1,366,699 Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866 ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. has paid to its Customers, up to the present time, Losses amounting to over EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS. The Company For the past nine years the cash dividends paid to Stockholders, made from ONE-THIRD of the net rofits, have amounted in the aggregate toj Hundred and Twenty-one and a linlfper cent. Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based on the principle that all classes of risks are equally profitable, this Company will hereafter make such cash abatement or discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, ana the nett profits re¬ maining at the close of the year, will be divided to fVia afapItVioldPTfl This Company continues to make Insurance on Marine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or at the Office York, or in Sterling, of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬ Currency, at the Office in New pool. Total Li abilities Losses Paid 1« 1865 - - - $200,000 00 - 252,55k 22 20,850 OO -201,588 14 This Company Insures against Loss or Fire on as favorable terms as any othar Company. ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS SOLICITED. Roard of Directors: HENRY M. TABER, JOSEPH FOULKE, STEP. CAMBRELENG, THEODORE w. RILEY, JACOB REESE, JNO. W. MERSEREAU, D. LYDIG SU YDAM, WILLIAM REM SEN, THOS. P. CUMMINGS, ROBERT SCHELL, WILLIAM H. TEKRY, FRED. SCHUCHARDT. JOSEPH GRAFTON, L. B WARD, JOSEPH BRITTON, AMO a ROBBINS, HENRY S. LEVERICH. JACOB REEvE, President. CHAS. D. HARTSHORNE, Secretary. Miscellaneous. Life Saving Freelana, Samuel Willets, James Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Watt, Henry Eyre, Aaron L. Reid, Ellwood Walter, D; Colden Mnrray, E. Haydock White, N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Cornelius Grinnell, Henry R. Kunhardt. Morgan, §. E. A. Schleicher, John S. Williams, William Nelson, Jr., er. Joseph Slagg, Charles Dimon, Jas. D. FishT A. William Heye, Geo. W. Hennings, Harold Dollner, C. J. JDuparp, i retary. OPENING OF STEAM COMMUNICATION BETWEEN NEW YORK AND AUSTRALASIA VIA PANAMA. , The service of the above Company will be com¬ menced from Panama to Wellington, New-Zealand, on the S4th June, by the Steamship KAKAIA, fol¬ lowed by the KAIKOURA on the 24th July. Passengers and goods will be forw arded from Wei- Damage by responsible Raft Comp’y. OFFICE 29 PINE STREET. steamers. Arrangements are in progress for the conveyance of passengers and goods from New York, at through fares and rates to all the principal ports in the Aus¬ tralasian Colonies. ^ The opening voyages of the Company’s ships, in conjunction with those of the Pacific Mail Company, will be as follows: - OUTWARD. From New’ York, June 11. » From Panama, June 24. From Wellington, N. Z., July 21. Arriving at Sydney July 29. Steamship „ . TIME. From New York to Wellington, 40 days. From Panama to Wellington, 28 days. To Sydney or Melbourne, 8 days additional. HOMEWARD. > From Sydney, 31st May or Jane 1. From Wellington, N. Z., June 8. From Colon , (Aspinwal) July 12. Arriving at New York July 20. TIME. Wellington to New York, 42 days. Wellington to Panama, 28 days. by this Com. From Sydney or Melbourne, 8 days additional. The service will be continued monthly in unison the steamers of the Pacific M til Steamship Company, the Havre Line, and other with the foregoing dates. Particulars of fares and freight on application to Pacific Mail Steamship Company, Office No. 59 Wall steamers and vessels, are now offered for sale at prices corresponding to their capacity. They occupy one-sixth the room of a boat, have far greater buoyancy, cannot he stove, swamped or upset, aud possess the greatest durability. They can be seen on the Henry Chauncey, the New York, &c., the Fulton, Arago, and other vessels, or at the Loft of 107 South street Orders may be left wiih Capt. WM. C. THOMPSON, President, 29 Pine street. Or I. H. UPTON, Secretary, 51 Wall street. St.,New York, or _ trustees. Joseph. Walken Assets, March ----9, 1806 - NEW-ZEA- ROYAL MAIL COMPANY. OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. Cash Capital- Bowling Green. LAND AND AUSTRALIAN OFFICE No. 35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. One No. 5 Secretary. PANAMA, The Mercantile* Mutual INSURANCE schedule time, arriv¬ Buenos Ayres. TOTAL, ASSETS ANTHONY, Vice-Pres't Secy, on ing at St. Thomas 29th, and making connection with steamship? of the French, Spaniso, West India, and Royal Mail Companies, to and from all ports of the West Indies and Spanish Main. Arrive at Para, Brazil, 8th; Pernambuco, 15th; Bah a, 17th; and Rio de Janeiro, 20th. Connecting thence by semi-monthly steamers to Montevideo and MOSES H. GRINNELL, Preset. EDWARD P. ST. THOMAS AND STATES MAIL STEAMERS. 270,353 Germania Fire Ins. Company insures against Marine Risks on Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland Navigation Risks. Medicines and BRAZIL.—REGULAR UNITED $1,000,000 DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT. This board. Steamship Company, FOR Secretary,. -$2,716,424 32 on Atlantic Mail COMPANY. Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Chartered 1850. Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, 253 per cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, President. P. NOTMAN, (INSURANCE buildings,) J Surgeon For passage tickets or fhrther information, apply it the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of Canal street, North River, New York. F. W. G. BELLOWS, Agent. NO. 12 WALL STREET. COMPANY. 1 st touch at Man¬ One hundred pounds allowed ewh adnlt. An experienced attendance free. or J. Remsen Lane, Secretary. FIFTY PER CENT. Sun Mutual Insurance Those Baggage checked through. January 1st 1866. Cash All losses JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, President, ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice President, JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, Jr., 2d V. P. Henry H. Porter, Secretary. o’clock Central American Ports. zanillo. No. 46 WALL STREET. premium. equitably adjusted a»d promptly paid. Scrip Dividend declared Jan. 10, 1855, ER, FOOT of Canal street, at 12 noon, on the 1st, 11th, and list of every month (except when those dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for \ Hanover Fire Insurance This Company insures at customary rates of pre¬ mium against all Marine and Inland Navigation Risks on Cargo or Freight; also against loss or damage by Fire. $1,392,115 Special Fund of $200,000, deposited in the Insur¬ ance Department at Albany. United Slates Rraitch No. Carrying the Ifnlted States Mall. LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV- The invaluable Rafts mannfhctured pany, and in use on -v New York, CHAS. W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William St., New York, WM. G. SEALY, Agent, Panama. May 23, 1866. Office of thi Chicago and Alton RR. Co.,» Chicago, Ill., Sept 20,1866. COUPONS OK f INiOME RONDS OF the Chicago and Alton Railroad Company, due Oct. Oct. 1,1866, will be paid on and after that date, at the office ot Messrs. M. K. JESSUP & CO., No. 84 Broadway, less government tax. W. M. LAKRABgK, Treasurer, i THE CHRONICLE. 512 Commercial Cards- Commercial Cards. W. H. Schieffelin 8c Co. J. M. Cummings 8c Co., Commercial Cards. S. H. Pearce 8c No. 353 Co., SUCCESSORS TO BROADWAY, CHINA DRUGS, HANDKERCHIEFS, Oiled FANCY Imitation Oiled Silk. Our “ Imitation" has costa but half as much ppearance and a as real GOODS, PERFUMERY, ETC., ETC., silk, which it equals in STREET, NEW YORK, BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their Joseph H Westerfied. William H. Schieffelin, Bankers, Merchants, William A Getxatly. William N. Clark, Jr. E. S. Paper Collars, ever HARNDEN Thackston, as Tobacco, Note and Exchange Broker. invented. No. 12 OLD SLIP, cor. WATER ST. e by the EXPRESS, 65 Broadway, they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and afe forwarding of GOLD SILVER, JEWELRY, & MERCHANDISE of every descnption. Also for the collection of notes drafts and bills, bills accompanying goods, etc. e NEW YORK. E.R.Mudge,Sawyer8cCo. AGENTS COTTON FOR All WASHINGTON HILLS, Widths DUCK, and Weights. BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO., A LARGE STOCK ALWAYS ON CHICOPEE HANUF. Co., THEODORE POLHEMUS Ac VICTORY MANIJF. MILTON remove about October 1st to MILLS, new Geo. E. White Ac Co., CO., 150 Front St. 59 Broad REMOVAL. Street, corner of Beaver. store Tracy, Irwin 8c Co., NO. 400 HAND, GUANO. 2,000 tons No. 1 Peruvian Guano. 1,200 tons Bruce#Concentrated Fertilizer. 2,500 tons Swan Island Guano. 600 tons Coarse Ground pure Bones. For sale in lots as wanted, by MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS. CO., Nos. 43 A 45 WHITE STREET. BROADWAY, Henry Lawrence 8c Sons, J.P. 8cE.Westhead 8c Co. MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE Smallware Manufacturers and General Commis¬ FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS 192 FRONT .USE, sion STREET, NEW YORK. Merchants, have OF including Metals, a superb stock of DRESS THOS. GOODS, AND HOSIERY and WHITE GOODS. DOURLEDAV & J. DWIGHT, West of 49 MURRAY Parasols, ST., NEW YORK. Files of this Paper Bound to Order. STATIONERY, ENGRAVING, PRINTING,. &C., &C Railroad Iron, Cooper 8c Steam and Street Roads, YOUR FOR SALE BY Jeremiah M. Ward well, Broadway. Commission Merchant, tention. Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, &c., •olicited. Best of references given if required. J. A. Bostwick, COMMISSION MERCHANT 45 Malden Cotton, Produce and Provisions, 40 and 42 BROADWAY and 53 P. Miscellaneous. NEW ST., N. Y Reference, Tilford & Bodley, Bankers, N. Y. ST. GERMAIN Merrill, Jr., Formerly of Mississippi. PATENTED Goodman 8c IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER OF Ladies Dress and Cloak Trimmings, Invite the attention of the trade to their samples of NOVELTIES JUST RECEIVED. GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANT 36 NEW STREET & 38 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK CITY. Advances made op consignments of Cotton, To¬ bacco. and other produce. Machinery ana Agricultural Implements of every Lamp, MARCH, 1863, BY C. A. KLEEMAN GILLOTT’S STEEL OF THE OLD STANDARD JOSEPH PENS, QUALITY. Or Descriptive TRADEMARK: GIL LOTT, Name and DeeigWARR ANTED. Dating Number NEW SERIES, GOOD AND CHEAP, from No. 700 to No. 761. JOSEPH TRADE MARK: GILLOTT, BIRMINGHAM. With Designating Numbers. For sale by JOSEPH GILLOTT & SONS, No. 91 HENRY OWEN, Sole Agent. F. A. HINRICHS, 150 Broadway, Sole Agents for the United States, Cuba, West Indies, Canadas, and all of North and South America. These Lamps burn Kerosene, and give a very steady light, without smoke or smell, are superi r economical in burning, easily managed and kept clean, and pronounced by highest authority safe against explosion. description supplied. Southern Real Estate mission. JOSEPH Merrill, STUDY AND OFFICE FOR SALE RY C." Street, Lane, New York. prompt attention. SUCCESSOR TO No. 101 Franklin Loutrel, We supply everything in our line for Business, Professional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders receive IN A. Julius Garelly, BY MANUFACTURERS. 46 CLIFF STREET, NEW YORK. All orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬ SOLICITED STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK (of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell & Co.) Importer and Dealer in Hardware, C?fcJSTOM Francis 8c W. HOPKINS & Co., 69 & 71 Sheridan, 26 EXCHANGE PLACE, Corner of William St FOR S. Broadway. BLANK BOOKS. cAMERICAN AND FOREIGN, Umbrellas 8c STREET, POPE, 92 John Street. Anthracite and Charcoal Pig Irons, Ingot Copper, Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New Railroad Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons. MANUFACTURERS OF and removed to 40 WHITE Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, and other first-clasi And others should send Patent Reversible / own Distilleries. Kentucky. durability. the most economical collar Merchants, New York. Agents for the sale of the Will Ofler for sale, IN 170 & 173 WILLIAM ST. superior finish, and very 58 BROAD INDIGO, CORKS, SPONGES, Silk, AND Commission IMPORTERS AND JOBBER8 OF SILKS, and Manufacturers of BILK AND COTTON DISTILLERS SCHIEFFELIN BROTHERS Ac CO., Importers of EUROPEAN AND [October 20,1866. Jobn-st., New-York Bought and Sold on Com¬ REFERENCES : Messrs. Duncan, Sherman & Co., New York. U. A. Murdock, Esq., New York. W. R. Dixon, Esq , Pres. Hoff an Ins. Dr. W. N. Mercer, New Orleans. Co., N. Y. George S. Mandeville, Esq., New Orleans. Messrs. Crane, B<eed & Co Cincinnati. a. E. Addison, Esq., Virginia. Geo. 8. Cameron, Esq., South Carolina. Hon. W. B. Ogden, Chicago. Ogden, Fleetwood & C Chicago. D. B. Molloy, Esq., Memphis. Messr-. Porter, Fairfax & Co., Louisville, Ky. Francis Surget, Esq.. Nntchez, Miss. H. B. Plant, E?q., Augusta, Ga. Hon. Milton Brown, Mobile. W. Mead Addison, Esq., Baltimore. A. P. MERRILL, Jb,, 88 New Street, New York City. . Marsh Glenn, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW. Strand Street, Galveston, Texas, Is prepared to attend to, and collect promptly, all Claims or other business committed to his charge in Middle or Southern Texas. J. M. Wardwell, ., >wer & Woodward, -New York & Co. City. Judge G. F. More, Austin, Texas. T.H. McMahan & Gilbert, ™ J. 8. Sellers A Co., j-Galveston, Texas, J. W. 6 T. P. Gillian, Homston, Texas. a