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A WEEKLY

NEWSPAPER,

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED
STATES.

VOL. 3.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1866
CONTENTS.

THE CHRONICLE.
Rumored Treasury Movoments..
321 Literature
Redemption of National Bank
Latest Monetary and Commercial
Notes
322
English News
Trade of Great Britain and the
Commercial and Miscellaneous
United States
823
News

825

...

826
827

THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES.

Money Market, Railway Stocks,
U. S. Securities, Gold Market,
Foreign Exchange, New York
City Banks, Philadelphia Banks
National Banks, etc.
Sale Prices N. Y. Stock Exchange
National, State, etc., Securities.

Commercial Epitome
Cotton

334
335

Breadstuffs
329

337

Dry Goods
Imports

838
339

332 I Prices Carrent and Tone of the

333|

Market....;.../.

340-42

THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE
JOURNAL.

Railway News
Railroad, Canal, and Miscellane¬
ous

Bond List

343

844-45

Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
Insurance and Mining Journal...
Advertisements

347
848-52

..

$f)e CfjronuU.
Financial

The Commercial

‘

and
Chronicle is issued every Satur¬
day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine,
with the latest news by mail and
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of the previous day up to
the hour of publication.

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RUMORED TREASURY MOVEMENTS.
The

large receipts of the Treasury from internal

specie payments, is contraction of the currency. Although
there is no proposition in financial science which is
better
established than this, we find the
public press teeming with
all kinds of
visionary projects for restoring the currency
without contraction. Such
schemes, however ingenious or
plausible, rest on a rotten foundation, and are utterly un¬
worthy of notice. Still, the causes in which they origi¬
nate may
fairly claim attention, and one of the chief of these
causes is the mischief induced
by contraction when it is done
unskilfully, or at the wrong time. The first occasion on
which

346

taxes and

NO. 64.

this

mischief

was

prominently. brought
history was in the
summer of
1863, when Mr. Chase, persuaded by per¬
sons who
urged him to give a check to speculation, suddenly
locked up in the Treasury a
large amount of greenbacks,
hastily gathered, by various expedients, in the City of New
York. Had the absorbing of this
money been slow, or had an
adequate previous notice been given, the equilibrium would
have been less violently disturbed.
As, however, this pre¬
vious notice would have defeated the
object in view, the
movement was made
suddenly, and fell like a thunderbolt
from a clear sky. A panic was produced which will be
long
and sadly remembered in financial circles.
A few specula¬
tors were made rich
by it; but thousands were impoverished,
and it was estimated at the time that the
Iqss by depreciation
into

view

in

our

recent

very
financial

of property was

106 millions of dollars. Ever since this
period we have had in the popular mind such a dread of con
traction of the circulation, that there has been a readiness to
listen to any proposals for
returning to specie payments with¬
out this
indispensable condition. All these schemes, how¬
ever, as we have said, are absurd, and attempt an
impossi¬
bility. Never in the history of nations has any depreciated

currency been restored to par except by contracting its
number of surmises volume. As well
might a boat attempt to go from Lake
as to what course Mr. McCulloch
may be expected to pursue Erie to the sea without
descending the whole depth of the
with respect to making some movement towards
resumption Falls of Niagara.
of specie
payments.
But if we consider the currency
This, then, is the difficulty. Contraction of the currency
difficulties which have to be surmounted, without
regarding is necessary. But to contract violently is impossible. To
others of a not less formidable
nature, we shall find that the make the leap at once would
engulph the whole, country in
return to a specie basis
is a work which defies the power of bankruptcy. We must, therefore, take the next best means.

from customs duties have

most of the remedies

given rise to

which have been

a

proposed.

What is the impediment to our
resumption of specie pay¬

ments ?

To this question the

of the currency

reply is that the redundancy
is the chief impediment. Take this stupendous

obstacle away and all others will be of small moment.
Contract the volume of the
currency to its normal limits,
and whatever else is needful will be
done with comparative
awe. The
greatest, the most necessary, the first step towards




As

we

cannot

descend to the level

we

want at

plunge, we
by gradual degrees. As a vessel
may safely go down by a series of locks to any required
depth, in its transit from the lakes to the sea, so may our
financial barque, if well piloted
through the successive slow
movements which are
needful, gradually reach the desired
haven of resumption.
There is then a right way and a
wrong way to contract the currency. The wrong way ia^to
must be content to do it'

one

THE

322

CHRONICLE.

and its end is inevitable failure.
The right way is to diminish the volume of our circulating
money by slow degrees.- This is the way decided on by
Congress, in prohibiting a greater reduction than four mil¬
lions a month.
And, if persevered in, this safe course will
bring us to specie payments in less time, and with less dan¬
ger of revulsion and panic, than any other.
If the testimony of history were not so full and complete,
that necessity of contraction is necessary to resumption, we
might infer it from the fact that depreciation is produced by
redundancy. Neither French Assignats, the Continental cur¬
rency, nor our own greenbacks, depreciated noticeably in
make the

plunge suddenly,

in excess. Now, depreciation
being-caused by redundancy, a recovery from the morbid
state is to be realized only by removing the cause—that is,
by correcting the redundancy. Of our paper money, a suffi¬
cient amount must be withdrawn to make the aggregate
what it would be on a coin basis. This normal amount is
value till

they were issued

rigidly stationary. Like the current of the
Mississippi, it varies responsively to various causes at differ¬
not

fixed and

[September 15,1866.

duty of a certain amount of greenbacks, which
released for active Use in the current of circulating money.

thus do the
are

intends
reports have been abroad that Mr. McC
shortly to repeat the plan which he carried out last Fall,
when 50 millions of Five-twenties were sold at 102, the pay¬

Some

ment

being taken in

interest

compound notes at par, with accrued

added.

which obtains rather more credence,
the Clearing-House certificates, which are held by the
at four per cent, interest, are about to be paid off.
Another rumor,

is that

banks
Some

shall be made at once, others

persons urge that the payment
that it shall consist of instalments.

however, it
would throw 45 millions of currency into the banks, which
would be tempted to lower their reserve, and either to lend
their surplus funds in discounting rashly, or to invest more
freely in Government securities. This lowering of the re¬
serve would be obviously a weakening of the position of the
banks.
At present they hold considerably more of legal
In

any case,

the twenty-five per cent, reserve required by
Some of the reasons why we have had so swift a re¬

tenders than
law.

cuperative movement after the monetary spasms which have
visited us, is to be found in this extraordinary strength in
are
currency
we
dimes in the reserve funds which constitute the buttresses and bul¬
warks of our financial edifice. Two *of the most powerful
coin, cannot be discovered by referring to the period before
the war and the suspension of specie payments.
At that inducements which have led and enabled the banks to
strengthen themselves with so ample a reserve, are found in
period, two hundred millions were enough. During the last the
compound interest notes and the Clearing-House certifi¬
five

ent

bounds which

parts of the year. But it varies within
ascertainable and self-regulating. How much
should want were the paper dollar equal to ten

have vastly expanded our financial operations, cates. There
are, consequently, grave doubts whether it is
and our productive industry.
safe and wise at the present moment for the Secretary of the
There is more need, therefore, and more use for the circu¬
Treasury to disturb the currency by any of these proposed
lating medium. The amount which is now required has methods.
Contraction is a good policy, a necessary policy,
been estimated at three hundred millions, and it probably
but to be of use it must be timely, and at this active period
could not safely exceed four hundred millions without being
of the year, a small perturbation of the circulating medium
reduced in purchasing power below' the level of coin.
as we found in the effects of the last Fall loan of fifty millions,
In England the average amount of current money is under
250 millions of dollars; in France under 300 millions.
But are apt to give a check to business. A reduction of the
currency which would have been very salutary in the month
the habits of various countries differ so widely as to the
of June, may work no small mischief five or six months
methods of doing business and of economising currency, that no
later.
Certain conclusion can be reached, save by experience. From
what has been said, however, three or four conclusions are suffi¬
REDEMPTION OP NATIONAL BANK NOTES.
ciently clear. First, a large amount of our 800 millions of
The three conditions essential for rendering our National
active paper money must be withdrawn before we can get
down to the level of specie payments.
Secondly, if high currency fit for general and local circulation throughout the
prices necessitate the use of a large volume of currency, and country, as contemplated by the wisest friends of the system,
redundant currency therefore puts prices up, the converse is are first, that the notes be secured by Government bonds
true, and a permanently contracted currency will produce deposited at Washington; secondly, that these notes be re¬
permanently lower prices for real estate, merchandise, and deemable at the counter of the issuing bank; and thirdly,
all other commodities.
Thirdly, the contraction being gra. that they be redeemable at the financial metropolis, New
dual, and extending itself over a series of years, the shrink¬ York. By the first, the notes are made sure of ultimate
age in prices will be almost insensible, or may, at any rate, payment, and by the two latter they are fitted for local
be adjusted with such quietude as to do but little harm. circulation by local redemption and for universal circulation
Fourthly, the debtor classes of our population, who will suffer throughout the country by metropolitan redemption. Such
by contraction, are those which are most sensitively exposed is the general idea of a bank-note circulation which shall be
to pecuniary injury, and which suffer most severely under it. as perfect- as, in the present state of financial science, it can
Hence the necessity for caution as to every successive step be made. We find that the Chicago Convention of Western
bankers, on Thursday, decided that they would prefer to dis¬
we advance in the path of contraction.
In view of these facts there is the most anxious watchfulness pense with metropolitan redemption because of its expensive
ness to them.
They would rather enjoy the full profits of a
over any of Mr. McCulloch’s movements which seem to look
towards interference with the currency. His power to call circulation throughout all parts of the country, while making
in greenbacks is limited by Congress to 48 millions a year. no provision at all for central redemption.
The following
He may withdraw less than this sum, but he is not permitted was the resolution on this subject, which is reported to have
to withdraw more.
But there are other parts of the currency been fully adopted:
as the sense of this convention, representing
over which Congress has left him unlimited power.
The com¬ theResolved, Unanimously, Northwest, that the proposed amendment to
National Banks of the
pound interest legal tenders he can withdraw as fast as he section thirty-two of the National Bank Act, as reported by the Hon. Mr.
National Banks of the
of Massachusetts, which
can buy them at par, first cost.
If the price were not two Hooper, to redeem their notes in requires all the New York or Boston,
Philadelphia,
country
per cent above par he would have the ability to act on the meets our earnest and decided disapprobation. We believe the effect of
such ammendment, if substituted for the provision in the law as it
currency by bringing these notes, which are largely held by the'
now exists concerning redemptions, will be to seriously embarrass and
banks as reserve instead of other legal tenders. Being so held
impede the commercial And financial interests of the entire West and
as reserve they perform one of the functions of currency, and
Northwest, by the forced concentration in the eastern cities of a very
years we

our

mercantile enterprises,




THE CHRONICLE.

September 15,1866.]
large portion of the means

returns for that

month, which we have just received, present
many favorable features. As regards that country, the re¬
sults show most conclusively the importance of the trade be¬
tween us and Great Britain, although it must be borne in

of the banks which the commercial necessi¬

of the We9t, required to be used at home. We can see
no good reason for ignoring the great commercial centres of the West
and Northwest in the manner proposed, and believe that the time has
come when it is alike our interest and our duty to demand a recognition
of the financial and commercial importance of our section of the country.
We therefore earnestly remonstrate against the passage of the proposed
amendment, and respectfully ask our Senators and Reoresentatives in
Congress to use their efforts to prevent any material alterations of the
existing laws concerning redemptions.
There is no doubt that it would be a great saving to the
banks of the West if they could get their notes into general cir¬
culation in the rest of the country, without the expense of

ties, especially

323

mind that transactions would not have been

on

the extensive

scale

loan without interest from the dis¬
would be able to
keep afloat a very large amount of currency in various lo¬
calities where it might be a costly process to send it home.
For every one would prefer paying out these notes, instead

reported had no fears been entertained in England that
higher rates of import duty might be imposed in this coun¬
try. Future business has, therefore, been anticipated, and
for that reason, in part, is so extensive a trade exhibited dur¬
ing the months of May, June and July.
The declared value of the imports of British and Irish
produce^ and manufactures during the seven months ending
July 31 was £107,815,664, against £88,242,048 last year,'
and £92,441,950 in 1864.
There is, therefore, an increase
during the present year, as compared with 1865, of £19,600,000, and of £15,400,000 as compared with the corresponding
period in 1864. For each of the seven months in each of the

of transmitting them across the country,

last three years

redemption in the great metropolitan centre. The advantage
of this is

seen

at once when we reflect

that the Western

banks would thus get a

tant banks wrhich hold their notes, and

at a great expense

the figures stand thus

:

1865."
1866.
and insurance, to the far off source from which January
£10,413,586
£10,469,339
£14,354,743
r
12,698,121
11,376,214
15,116,063
they were first emitted. Nothing is more evident than that February
March;
13,555,671
13,770,154
17,520,354
if this non-redeeming plan were permitted to be established April
12,071,111
13.225,039
15,366,414
May
14,176.640
13,194,758
15,870,131
June
13.978,526
13,227.0(2
14,630.120
an unfair advantage would be given to the notes of such
ob14,113,410
14.957,834
July
14.394.364
scure banks as are established in remote places, solely for the
Total
£88,242,043
£92,441,950
£107,815,664
sake of “ getting circulation,” and of enabling the specula¬
The computed real value of the principal articles imported
tive firms in Wall street and elsewhere wrho own many of
into the United Kingdom, during the six months ending June
these institutions to make an illicit profit out of the National
30, was rather more than £30,000,000 sterling greater than
Banking law.
in the corresponding period in 1865, and £16,600,000 in
It is for the interest of the whole country that all currency,
excess of 1864.
This great increase is chiefly to be accounted
whether consisting of bank notes or greenbacks, should be at
for by* the augmented importation of cotton from this
par from Maine to Minnesota and from the St. Lawrence to
the Gulf. This can only be attained by making the bank country. The figures for each month are subjoined :
1865.
1864.
1866.
notes redeemable in lawful money at New York, or what is In January
:
£7,520,356
£9,847,564
£6,398,922
February
12,891,252
16,610,159
13.214,541
the equivalent—at one of the three great cities; for every¬
19,891,204
March
16,396,928
13,005,394
April
17,587,565
13,078,755
22,455,968
body knows that a bank note which is at par in Newr York
22,392,601
23,224,762
May
14,595,334
June
21,498,185
15,407,688
23,243,701
is at par everywhere else in the Union.
Total
£98,610,176
£75,340,872
£115,273,358
The plea that redemption at New York necessitates the
As regards the United States, the value of the outward
keeping of funds there, and that these funds the banks want
trade in British and Irish produce and manufactures from
at home, is equally irrelevant and singular, for it amounts
Great Britain, for the month of June and for the six months
to no more than this: that these banks want the rest of the
country to lend them fifty or seventy-five millions of dollars ending June 30, was as under :
1864.

for express

.

without interest,

exempt from depositing the requi¬
fraction of the amount borrowed in such a way as would

handsome sum—shall be
site

keep their notes from falling to a discount.
banks

western

will

not

make

.

If the North¬

the necessary provision

redemption of their notes at the metropolitan centre
these notes can only pass freely at par in their own locality.
Elsewhere the people may refuse to take them, and they will
for the

become uncurrent money.

this,

Government, are secured by a pledge
of national securities, and will be paid by the Treasury in
case of the failure of the issuers, while they are, moreover,
receivable for federal taxes, and payable to any national
bank fbr debts due thereto.
The answer to all this is, that

bear the red seal of the

private individual may refuse a National Bank note, and
nothing is available as money which we cannot be cer¬
tain will be taken freely by other persons in payment of what
we owe.
If the Northwestern banks are wise they will take
any

that

the benefit derived from' the circulation of notes

having

a

popularity, and they will not run the risk of refus.
ing to provide for that redemption which can alone render
their privileges permanent and conducive to the public good.

national

TRADE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND TAB UNITED STATES...
COTTON, BREADSTUFFS, PROVISIONS, ETC.

Notwithstanding the Bank rate of discount was at 10 per
cent, during the month of July, the English Board of Trade




“

Northern

£1,978,363

1865.

1S66.

£11,435,269

£5,965,101

£14,279,198

65,951

22,562
227,274

559,274
389,148

£6,214,937

£15,228,220

Southern

Pacific ports
Total

98,403

COTTON.

imports of cotton into the United Kingdom in July
600,000 cwts; less than in the previous month. There
was a diminution of 354,000 cwts. in the receipts from this
country; and of nearly 220,000 cwts. in the importation
The aggregate supply received was
from the East Indies.
1,075,244 cwts., of which 404,113 cwts. were from this
country, and 509,9 A2 cwts. from the East Indies. In the
corresponding month last year the receipts from the United
States, including the supplies received from the Bahamas,
Bermudas, and Mexico, which were mostly United States
cotton, were only 45,000 cwts., and in 1864, only 54,400
bales.
Annexed are the figures for the seven months:
The

say some of the bank officers, is impossible.
National bank notes cannot become uncurrent because they

But

For the six months.
To Atlantic ports,

£1,259,504

526,263

Total

£1,822,901
57,059

1864.

Southern

ports

1865.

£1,189,363
614
69,527

£12,027,483

“

Pacific

1866.

1864.

ports, Northern

£1,503,023
10,488
195,435

£1,708,946

For June.
To Atlantic

while they—the recipients of this very

were

IMPORTS OF COTTON INTO

GREAT BRITAIN IN SEVEN MONTHS ENDING
1864.
1865.

From United States
Bahamas and Bermudas
Mexico
Brazil

Turkey

Egypt

British India
China

Other countries...
Total

The

186,858
157,086
218,070
'

138,558
796,853

1,889,997
483,328

155,050

£4,124,624

186&

•

£82,963
365,833

£3,635,202
6,931

155,826
904,319

£98,824

cwts.

JULY 31.

82,504
690,267

249,509
268*767

1,411,296
256,928
208,621

3,145
450,166

2,888,141
13,469
164,134

£3,694,062 £7,932,986

subjoined statement shows the' computed real value of

CHRONICLE.

THE

324

[September 15,1866.

imports of cotton into the United Kingdom during the being, as regards the United States, Canada and Brazil.
Cotton goods and Woollen goods have been shipped in enor¬
six morths ending June 30 :
1865.
1866.
1864.
mous
£534.213 £25,269,971
quantities to all quarters of the globe. The following
From Unf ted States
£1,215,054
43,486
1,320,109
Bahamas and Bermudas
2,038,809
table shows the value of the exports to the United States in
1,816,660
28,591
Mexico
1,830,783
3,299.310
1,750,714
Brazil
2,302,974
the seven months ending July 31:
'
490.221
747,676
Turkey
1,296.529
the

.

.

6,193,841

5.466,635

15,023,536
3,570,152
1,531,226

5,880.043
957,866
1,277,450

11,737,547

37,858,292

20,478,572

47,348,759

8,952,379

Egypt
British India
China
Other countries

Total

1,013,000

of cotton from the United Kingdom are on a
comparatively small scale, considering the greater abundance
of supplies in the Liverpool market, and the more favorable
terms on which exporters could be supplied.
The unsettled
state of Germany during the past six months of the year has
The exports

other branches
of trade. In July the export was confined to 333,440 cwts.,
against 218,105 cwts. in July last year. Our latest advices
from Liverpool, however, report an increasing demand, and
been

a

well

serious drawback to this as

future returns

In the

seven

as to

will probably show more satisfactory results.
months ending July 31, the exports of cotton

1864.

1865.

1866.

£251,218
33,268
69,667

£228,807

£544,915
39,715
51,970

1,428,382
147,124

831,905

porcelain...

269,609

Haberdashery and millinery..
Hardwares “and Cutlery—
Knives, forks, &c
Anvi'S, vices, &c

676,153

207,121
400,069

Beer and ale
Coals
CuTton Manufactures—•

Earthenware and

were as

under:

1866.

1865.

171,47S
7,137

522,516

119,500
18,012
13,802
355,280
283,696
660,230

5,618
426,949
285,452
945,249

1,341,342

cwts

To Russia
Prussia
Hanover
Banee Towns
Holland
;
Other Countries

1864.

1,400,470

1,884,393

37,173

830,760
272,278

Total

...

BREADSTUFFS.

76,944
46,440
115,465

62,229

205,092

168,706
62,046
397,096

Linen Manufactures—

1,780,499
141,057

1,395,362 2,466,273
78,769
145,247

Metals—

Iron—Pig, &c.

Castings.

45,942

21,938

plates

Broad piece gooris
Handkerchiefs, scarfs, &c

Ribbons
.1
Oth( r articles of silk only
Other articles mixed with other materials....

10,265
187,839
137,558

16,094

65,703
16,722
27,538

Oilseed
Salt
Silk Manufactures—

321,584

2,465

35,422
1,295

12,982
180,834
556,205

Copper, wrought.

38S.956

29,089
65,642
874,989
141,268
74,261

92,000
6,155
24,699
75,778

31,788
9,678

15,176
65,203
17,014
1,119

37,242

3,152

300

667,647

238,221
117,102

651,404
451,897

72.377

Spirits, British

W ool

Woollen and Worsted Manufactures—
Cloths of ali kinds

Carpets and druggets
Shawls, rugs, &c

r

486,281

35,411
84,950
164,905
20,119
25,407
464,583
1,744

204,994
869,406

Steel—Un wrought

34.295

173.701

93,530
179,099

198,414

Hoops, sheets and boiler plates.
Wrought

Tin

56,097

199,759
620,625
716,532
12,138

Bar, &c.

186,830

-

2,232,329
210.701
448,750
830,713

64,954

84.637

...

from Great Biitain

21,308
56,284

259,989
58,306

.'

Worsted stuffs of wool only,

and of wool mixed

1,767,3S4

42,941

8,174

18,016

-

27,986
2

1,283,617

838,995

of wheat in England appears to be rather below
PROVISIONS.
an average, and, as the weather during the progress of harvest
work in the southern and midland counties was very change¬
The imports in July were much below last year, notwith¬
able, the crop, so far as it had been harvested at the date of standing that prices continued to rule high at the whole of
our latest advices, had not been secured in fine or even good
The prices of butter, cheese and
the British markets.
condition, and was not ready, therefore, for immediate con¬ bacon were at a high point at the date of our latest advices
sumption. Beyond damping the produce, the prevailing from Great Britain. The imports in the seven months end¬
rains do not seem to have done any great injury to the crops,
ing July 31, were of the following magnitude :
1864.
1865.
1866.
farmers had forwarded considerable supplies of pro¬
and, as
o

The crop

•-

duce to market, the wheat trade had

been in

a very

inactive

3s. per qr. During
of the mail steamer
from Liverpool, on Sept. 1, there was more firmness in the
trade, arising from the circumstance, partly of the rumors of
a short orop in France, changeable weather in Great Britain,
state, and prices had given way about
the few days preceding the departure

Bacon and hams,
Beef, salt, cwts

464,268
143 850
113,52»
554,405
326,456

486,988
140,803
131,681
545,480
271,128

233,706,240

285,765,960
205,530

853,485

cwts.

286,109
148,908
490,857

Pork, salt, cwts
Butter, cwts
Cheese, cwts,

289,317

Eggs, number

207,790,320
125,336

Lard, cwts

«

LIVE

81,140

STOCK.

imports of live stock have fallen off from last year,
of heavy rains in arising chiefly from the circumstance that the import of
the Western States, and of the upward movement of prices stock with Great Britain from Rotterdam and Amsterdam is
here. The statements respecting the short crop in France still prohibited. In England, the cattle disease has almost
appear to be greatly exaggerated, for wheat and flour con¬ died out, but the stringent regulations relating to the cattle
tinue to be exported in considerable quantities from French traffic are still in operation. Scotland has been declared free
ports to Great Britain.. The crop of maize in Roumania has of disease. The price ot butcher’s meat is still very high
almost entirely failed, and the export has been prohibited in Great Britain, and the tendency of the quotations is in an
from that province. The annexed statement shows the im¬ upward direction. The annexed figures embrace a period
The

and accounts received from this country

flour and Indian corn into the United King¬
during the seven months ending July 31, in each of the

ports of wheat,
dom

last three years:

1864.

.cwts.

Pr nssia

Denmark

—

seven

1,603,580

2,746,198
469,425

1865.

1866.

3,510,484
2,729,900

3,988,969
2,459,102

297,112

244,952
117,530
455,222
489,720

Bchleswig, Holstein, & Lauenburg
Mecklenburg

181,896
858,254

159,211

Hanse Town*
France

864,761

437,394

Turkey, Wallachia, and Moldavia..

273,238
366.856

678,791
407,469

5,062.724

405,307
101,694

312,333
267,991

9,540,749

13,784,435

do
do

1865.

1866.

204,433
1,891,363

140,041
1,409,217
150,188
70,464

160,477
2,974,122
168,949

83,899

143,108

British North America.
Other Counties

8,090,662

Total,

1,408,500

taux Corn..

BRITISH AND IRISH PRODUCE

These exports




have been

very

189,834
26,609

1,853,S09
2,(‘>45,872

6,166

322,074

472,645
83,899

23,896

10,957

49,422

Number.

Entered

1,214,343

86,177

During the month of July, and the seven months ending
July 30, the following number of American vessels entered
and cleared at ports in the United Kingdom:

68,715

cwts.

1866.

' 92,116
27,475

SHIPPING.

Entered in

FLOUR.

1865.

64,186

Sheep and lambs
Swine and hogs

670,607

12,oo4,2o4

From Hanse Towns

INTO GREAT BRITAIN.

Calves

3,162,206
800,973
8,738
323,160
8,789
2,238,2?4

405,875
202 583

Total

.

1864.

211,828

United States
British North America
Other Countries

:

IMPORTS OF LIVE STOCK

1864.

Egypt

months

Oxen, bulls and cows

WHEAT.

From Russia.

of

-

seven

do
do

Cleared in
do

do
do

3,452.822

7,653,850

do

-

ending July 80,1866.
do
do

1865 ...:

The annexed statement shows

163.827

283,328

56

—

1864
uo

267,145

160
252

1865

Cleared seven months

36,739
51,457

262

july, 1866

do

34,633

33
50

1865
1864

months ending July 30,1866
do
do
1865
do
do
1864

.

Tonnage.

32

July, 1866

15
30

*£279

32,868

\

838

173
243

50,070

*

\
,

' 171,557
268,508

the number of vessels,

of

cleared at ports in the United
large, the greatest increase Kingdom from and to the United States, in the above periods:
AND MANUFACTURES.

all

nationalities, entered and

September 15,1866.]
Entered in
do

THE CHRONICLE.
Number.

July, 1866
"

do

Entered in

seven

do
do
Cleared in
do
do
Cleared in
do
do

1865
1864
months

do
do

do
do

59,959

109,420

996
292
645
116
78
96

887,617
517,725

1864.....

ending July 80,1866

do
do

do
do

1865
1864

:....

621,25S
118,871
85.184

101,101

444
733

750,804

Citerature.

/—Hands.—i
1855.
34,787

Cotton

Calico and Delaine.
I,.i57
Woolen
10,090

.—Capital employed.—, ,—Value produced.—,

1865.

.

,

8vo., pp. 805.

1 vol.,

imposing volume, relating to the general industry of Massa¬

chusetts, has

just appeared, and a copy has been sent to this office
by the Hon. Oliver Warner, Secretary of that Commonwealth,
under whose charge the information it contains has been collected
and arranged. Like all Massachusetts State
documents, its subjectmatter is given in sufficient detail and in
well-arranged form, attest¬
ing the importance the State authorities attach to the proper repre¬

1855.

1865.

1855

1865.

23.678

$31,961,000 $33,293,986 $26,140,538 $54,438.881
4,208
1,989,009
6,213,000 25,258,703
4,222.000

18,483
3,554

7.305,509

H.735,S30

2,564,500

3,785,300

Rolle I and slit iron
and nai s

2,630

3,025
Printing and newep 1,134
Clot ing
1,758
Tanning and ciirry’g 3.143
Boots and shoos... 74,326
Whale Fishery
11,364

3,194
2,409
24 722

2,312,825

2,827.300
1,919.100

8 847
65,1(>0

4,152,426

3 496

Fishery
Horses, oxen

10,551

11,518

12,105,514
4,141,^47

48,480,871
9,0 8,521

5,5’2,816
1,351,318

4,631.440

5.858,148

9 061,896

17.743 89*

4,944,9.33
10.067.474

10.9:14.416
87,489,923

14,546,548

6,879,862

7,666,996

15,821,712
52,915343
6,61*670

3,696,436

3,757,761

2,8 9,640

4,832,218

15.423,521
8,702,317

Paper

Macnered and Cod

Statistical Information
Relating to Certain Branches of Industry in
Massachusetts for the year
ending May 1, 18ti5. Prepared from
official returns by Oliver Warner,
Secretary of the Common¬
wealth.
Boston: Wright & Potter, State Printers.
This

interest, which is quite marked, will very prob¬
ably be accounted for by the introduction of labor-saving machinery.

335.982

855

the boot and shoe

906,173

1865

do
do

July, 1866
seven

126.127

ending July 30,1866
do
do

1865
1864
months

Tonnage.

148
67
130

325

19 154.790

719,550
2,770,6«)0
.

and

cows..

Hay

.

8.*38,50*

18.195,274
In the manufacture of cotton, the following is the order of the
counties: Bristol, $L1,836.681; Essex, $11,707 241 ; Middlesex,

$8,909,439

Worcester, $S,878,295

Hampden, $7,354,880 ; Berk¬
shire, $2:964.200, and Hampshire, $1,303,205. Barnstable, Nan¬
tucket and Dukes manufacture no cotton goods, and the others re¬
turn under a million dollars each.
It will be seen, therefore, that in
this respect Bristol takes the lead,
;

;

Iu the manufacture of calicoes and delaines Essex returns the

largest amount, $9,329,439 ; uext Bristol, with $7,020,000 ; Mid¬
dlesex, $5 356,322 ; Worcester, $1,853,692, and so on.
sentation of their home-interests and businesses before the world.
Worcester is the great woolen couuty, with a value of $12
The information contained in the volume was collected under
917,388 against $7,859,826 in Middlesex, $3,042,913 in
an Act of the
Hampden,
Legislature, approved April 24, 1865. This Act
requires statistical details relatiug to no less than two hundred and $2 683,625 in Norfolk, $11,450,818 in Essex, and $6,726,025 in
Berkshire. Worcester appears to be the leading county for the
seventeen different industries, which are
specifically named in it, and
manufacture of shoddy, returning $270,991 out of $653,799 in the
the extent of enquiry into each (according to its
importance) pre¬
scribed. This minuteness is remarkable in legislation, and, in connec¬ entire State. Berkshire and Plymouth are the two great pig iron
tion with the result, shows how great cure has been taken from enmities, the former manufacturing $776,520, the latter $748,275.
first to last to furnish full and reliable statistics in relation to. the
industrial resources and wealth of the State.

The present report

is the fourth of a series of such statistical
publications referring to the manufactures and other productive in¬

Sua ilk is ahead of all other counties in the manufacture of locomo¬
tives, steam engines and boilers, the value being $3,414,000. Bria*
tol

comes

next, with $1,103,550.

In the manufacture of

glass Barnstable is far ahead, with $640,•
The first was made up in 1838, and
hoop skirts, the
value being $257 768, with Norfolk next, $112,500 ; the total value
showed the value produced in that year to have been
$86,000,000.
The second issue referred to 1845, in which
year the value is stated throughout the State was $547,107. Essex is the leading boot and
shoe county, manufacturing $18,101,197; Worcester is next, with
at $124,000,000. In 1855,
according to the third report, the produc
tion in that year is set down at $295,000,000. The returns for 1865 $10,161,910; Middlesex follows with $8,778,463; Norfolk, $7,816,072 ; Plymouth, $6,422,660.4 In the mackerel and cod fishery
(contained in the volume now referred to) show for that year the Barnstable stands undisputably the first, with.a value of $2,224,403
aggregate products of industry have attained the enormous value of against $1,684,052 in Essex.
Id the whale fishery Bristol leads with $6,057,469. Middlesex
$517,000,000.. Thus, we find that in less than thirty years the
and Norfolk are the great brewery counties.
Middlesex produces
productive valuation has increased from 86 to 517, being six times the
largest value of fruit, and Worcester of hay. The latter county
as
large in 1865 as it was in 1838. The increase from 1845 to 1855 is also the foremost in horses, oxen, cows, &c. In beef,,pork, mut¬
was equivalent to 138
per cent., and from 1855 to 1865 equal to 75 ton, veal and swine Middlesex stands highest; also in milk. In
per cent.
The results of comparisons such as these cannot fail to fact, Worcester and Middlesex are two of the greatest agricultural
as well as manufacturing counties of the State.
strike the most casual observer. They indicate the ceaseless
pro¬
A few details respecting the more prominent industries will be
gress of the State in the development of its industries, and its march
appropriate:
to wealth and influence in the nation.
The results of the decade
Colton—Mills 214; spindles 1.913,756; hands 23,678, viz.;
8,892 males and 14,786 females; capital $33,293 986 ; cotton con¬
closing with 1865 are the more remarkable, since they were achieved
sumed 45 686,250 lbs.; gross value of stock used $49,683,919 ;
within a period, during the latter., part of which the
country had cloth manufactured 167.665 364
yards, valued at $46,554,041 ; yarn
been subjected to the strain of an exhausting war, when, of neces¬
(not manufactured into cloth) 3.558,875 lbs., valued at $3,794.758;
sity, a large proportion of the classes usually employed in industrial cotton thread 283,053 lbs, valued at $449 039; batting 952,327
lbs., valued at $222 910 ; pelisse wadding 73 950 bales, valued at
pursuits changed from being producers to become consumers.
We will now exhibit a few of the results of the enquiries made in $20,300 ; cotton flannels 3.210.570 yards, valued at $1,562,258 ;
quilts and counterpanes 42.247, valued at $180,887 ; value of all
1865. These may be stated thus—
other cotton manufactures $1,652,688. Total value of manufactured
terests of the commonwealth.

000.

Suffolk is the first in the manufacture of

>

Aggregate Capital invested
$17 \49\950
employed (in agriculture 68,636, and in manufactures 271,421)
340,057
Value of products (more than $1,500,000 a day)
517, *40,613

Persons

cottons

$54,436 831.

*

:

Calicoes and Delaines.—Establishments 12

; hands 4,208, viz. 5
capital $4 222 000 ; and as follows :
—facts well illustrating the indomitable perseverance of a
people Calicoes printed 53,489 434 yards; delaines printed 28,617,679
whose naturul productions have been said to be only “ ice and yards, and goods bleached and colored but not printed 7,3o5,90®
granite,” and whose industry, united with intelligence, has not failed yards. The value of the calicoes printed was $10,528,619 befoi®
and $13,951,691 after
to win substantial triumphs over the
disadvantages of soil and ation of $3,426,072, or printing, showing an increase from the oper¬
about 33 percent. The statistics of delaincf
climate.
_

The
values

following statement shows the distribution of manufacturing
by counties :

Barnstable
Berkshire

Bristol...
Duke’s..
Essex

The

$6,090,022
24,951,498
55,R38,314
545,310

81,107,926

Franklin

Norfolk

Hampden
Hamp-hire

Plymouth...

$7,938,522
28,016,816
13.143,957
Middlesex
83,102,442
Nantucket....
281,265

$36,771,897

17,632.246
86,849,174
Worcester.... 76,271,724
.

Suffolk

predominance of Suffolk, by far the smallest county of the
comes from the large amount of clothing manufactured
($15,186,183), the value of coastwise freights ($9,242,643), &c.
A comparison of some of the
leading products, as exhibited in
the abstracts of 1855 and 1865, is here
presented, which shows
largely increased results with the single exception of the whole
fisheries. The reduced number of hands
employed in cotton and
State,




2,506 males and 1,7<>2 females

;

aud of bleached and colored goods are

defective.

Woolen Goods.—Mills, 218; sets of machinery, 1,157 ; bands,
18 433, viz. : 9.583 males, aod 8,850 females ; capital, $14,735 830 ;
scoured wool consumed, 28,790 078 lbs.; gross value of stock used,
$35,374,296. Products, viz. : broadc'oth, 3.457,702 yards ($7.(100,-

650)

; cassimeres, 15.412,242 yards ($22,346,013) ; satinets, 6 471,yards ($4,080,719) ; Kentucky jeans, 628,680 yards ($754,686) ; flannel or blanketing, 20,037,875 yards ($10,096,135) ;
shawls, 577,556 ($1,212.054); table and piano forte covers, 99,833
($208,035) ; wool yarn, 1,420.879 lbs. ($1,037,828) ; and all other
woolen goods, $1,694,753.
Total value, $48,430 671.
Clothing.—Establishments, 601 ; hands, 24,722, viz. : 2,150
males, and 22,578 females ; capital, $4,630,440 ; Btock used, $11,092,434; product, $17,743,894.
Boots and Shoes.—Hands, 55,160, viz. : 42,626 males, and 12,534
females; value of stock used, $35,040,544; products—pairs o
642

[September 15, 1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

326
boots, 7,249,921,
915,243.

and shoes, 24,620,600 ; value of products, $52,- body

are

concerned, a decline in the demand for accommodation during
hence, a further fall in the value of money is in¬

the next few weeks;

With these selections, we close, recommending all persons inter¬
ested In such matters to procure the volume and study its wonder¬
ful developments.
It is one of those publications that will have a

evitable.

,

published this week, relating to the imports and
exports of gold and silver during the seven mouths ending July 31, cur¬
lasting value in American statistical literature.
rent year. The statement is an elaborate one, aud is of great impor¬
tance now that money is an almost all-absorbing topic of conversation
The features of the return are the large export of gold to France; the
Cattsi ittonctarji ani) Commercial (Eitglisl)
considerable supplies received from that quarter; the large imports
from Australia and the United States; the diminution in our exports of
RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON,
silver to Holland, the filling off in the importation from Mexico, and the
AT LATEST DATES.
increase in our shipments of the same metal to India, via Egypt.
In
EXCHANGE AT LONDON—
EXCHANGE ON LONDON.
other respects the statement does not present many striking results.
AUG. 31.
Annexed is a portion of the statement, so far as the principal countries
! LATEST
TIME.
RATE.
RATE.
TIME.
DATE.
ON—
are concerned, to which, for comparison, we have added the figures for
the previous years :
*'
11.82#®
short.
11.1.6#@11.17#' Aug. 31. 3 days.
Amsterdam
Returns have been

Netoo.

-

.,.

3 months. 25.55
4i
13.10

@25.60
@13.10#
Hamburg
25.42#@25.55
Paris
short.
25.25 @25.35
Paris
3 months. 13.30 @13.40
Vienna
6.28 @ 6.28#
Berlin
14
2S#@ 28#
St. Petersbhrg
44
Cadiz
4f>#@ 46
51 #@ 51#
Lisbon
Antwerp.

4...

44

44

44

Milan
Genoa

27.30
27.30
27.30

—

Naples
New York....

_

Jamaica
Havana
Rio de Janeiro
Buenos Ayres.

@27.50

@27.50

—
—

—

--

—

—

60

day’s
44

4$. od.
4s. od.

44

Ceylon
Bombay

2 p. c.

44

I5l0#d@

Madras
Calcutta

44
4;

lslOd
l5l0d

Sydney

30

days.

For latest news

disc.

@
@

3 p. c.

@ —
13.6#@13.7

—

—

_

25.21#
—

—

—

—

Aug. 27.

—
—
—

disc.

3 mo’s.
—

—

—

toy Atlantic Telegraph see end of

53#
—

_

—

this letter.

[From our own Correspondent.]
London, Saturday, Sept. 1, 1806.
The decline in the rate of

GOLD.

discount has been more rapi'd than was ex¬

pected, the Directors of the Bank of England having made a further
reduction of 1 per cent, this week, and were in a position, on Thursday
The minimum rate at
last, to have conceded as much as 2 per cent.
the bank is now 6 per cent., with the almost certain prospect that a fur¬
ther reduction will take place on Thursday next. In the open market,
the fall has been very considerable, and the best bills are inquired for
with increased eagerness, being taken as low as 44 per cent. The rates
out-of-doors vary, in fact, from 4£ to 6 per cent. The best paper,
irrespective of the length of time to run, being taken at 44 to 5 per
The supply of money in the discouut market is daily increasing,
cent.
and is even now in excess of the wants of commercial and other classes
of borrowers. But, notwithstanding the rapid fall in the rate of dis¬
count, the decline being fully 4 per cent, at bank, and, in the open mar¬
ket, of greater extent, trade does not show at present many symptoms
of revival. That such an event should take place immediately, could
hardly have been anticipated, and it now seems probable we shall have
to await the close of the present month ere we witness any material
extension of business transactions. Merchants have not yet recovered
from the recent severe shock they have sustained. Prices, during the
prevalence of a 10 per cent, rate ol discount, did not experience the
heavy fail which might have been predicted; and it is due to this fact,
probably, that so few commercial failures were recorded. Now that
prices have, in some instances, risen, and that accommodation is obtain¬
able on much easier terms, the position of the merchant has materially
improved : and it may therefore be expected that, after a few weeks have
elapsed and thoroughly assuring advices have been received from the
Cape of Good Hope, Australia, India, and China, the state of business

Imports

.

25.30
8 mo’s.

155#
Aug. 30. 60 days.
do
2# p. c. prem.
Aug. 9.
27#@—
Aug. 6. 90 days.
22 #@22#
Aug. 8. 60 days.
49 #@49#
do
July 25.
do
44#@45
July 17.
do
24# @24#
July 16.
Aug. 3. 6 mo's. 4s. 5#tf.@4ts\0tf.
4s. 7#c/.@.—
do
July 30.
do
J uly 28.
G@7 p. c. disc.
Is. il'^d.
do
Aug. 31.
Is. 11 %d.
do
Aug. 18.
do
Is. 11 %d.
Aug. 20.
July 26. 30 days. #@1 p.c.disc.

—

—

25.25

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

do
do
do

—

—

Valparaiso....
Pernambuco..
Singapore
Hong Kong...

@27.50

do

,

Exports

£7,415 £316,279
3,7S2
1,941

£35,848
2,999

100,382

30,353

185,360

358,899

20,192 -15,708 1,250,401
274,350
89,206 1,141,800
1,913,265 1,411,761 3,306,980
12
71,921
101,204
119,021
76,984

891,802
201,127

37,759
333,216

£195,375
2,174

3,213

Belgium

112.696

France

1805.

101,977

1S66.

£42,998 £566,970
81,447
999

277,072 1,726,730 4,821,971 2,207,072 7,378,493

9,504
32,902

Spain and Canaries..
Eirvpt:

1865.

,

1864.

Hanse Towns
Holland

Australia
B. N. America
Mexico S. A (except
Brazil & W. Indies)
Brazil
United States........
Total including

.

1866.

1804.

14,524
54,556

18,690
6,998

"

137,846

3,014,540 1,672.536 1,061,491
22,042
191,611
130,922
4,760,240 2,976,189 7,642,804

891,413
180,727

173,537

362,878

18,199

220,223

542,217
89.620

r

SILVER.

£

815,974
42,302

104,780

468,*352

Holland

*
5,612
2,161

£

214,244
137,702

Belgi

804,209

27,263

2,793

175,478

300,493

£

£
Hanse Towns
m
France
*

776,215

Egypt

Mexico, S. A. (except.

Brazil, <fe W. Indies
Brazil
United States
Tot. in minor count’s
*

To

£

207,753 1,066,980

452,581 1,481,350 1,126,539

377,433

£

304,570
215,114

435,730
585,192

3,756 3,729,219*1,180,739* 2,433,018
£4,058
5,915
3,926,419 3,074,693 1,905,750
30,961
633

37451
88,815

41,038
967,974

4G,116
56,225

97,139
4,631

62,378
51

52,972
300

6,074,603 3,754,986 5,387,844 5,669,965 3,489,626 4,246,088

Egypt.

imports of gold into the United Kingdam during the week end¬
ing August 29 are officially stated at £1,170,251 ; the import of silver
in the same period was £286,462. The export of gold was £112,386,
The

and of silver £124,192.

improved demand for silver, and the quotation has
within the last few days. Mexican dollars are
quoted at 4s. lid. per ounce, The prices current for bullion are subjoined :
GOLD.
There has been

an

advanced Id. per ounce

Bar Gold

per oz.

Relinable
American Gold Coin
South American Doubloons
do

Spanish

do

77s. 9d.
77s. 10#d.
76s. 2#d.

standard.

do

....

per oz
do

....

do
do

....

Brazilian Gold Coin
Russian Half Imperials

do

73s. 9d.@74s. Od.
74s. 3d.@75s. 0d.
77s. 7#d.
77s. 7#d.

SILVER.

Fine or Cake Silver
Bar Silver
with gold above
do
Five Franc Pieces
Mexican Dollars...:

per oz.
per oz.

5 grs. per lb..

standard.

do
per oz.

do

do

Spanish Pillar Dollars

do

Crusades

The demand for accommodation

erate, both at the Bank of

5s.
58.
5s;
4s.
4s.
4s.
4s.

5^d.@#d.
0#d.@#d.
0#d.
lid.
lid.
lid.
lid.

during the week has been very mod¬

England and in the open market. In the

early part of the week the rates out-of-doors tended stroDgly down¬
wards, arising from the circumstance that in consequence of large 6ums
of bullion having been paid into the Bank of England, and the greatly
improved position of the resources of the establishment, a reduction in
the rates was looked upon as certain. Hence but few bills were sent

undoubtedly been an in¬
creased demand for accommodation, but as the supply in the discount
will resume its normal activity.
Many of the Banks Directors’ supporters of the ten per cent, policy, market is being daily augmented, there is not the slightest pressure ob¬
servable in any quarter, and there are numerous anxious lenders at rates
are now of opinion that the rate of discount will descend to too low a
point, and that a spirit of speculation will thereby be engendered. Such, much below those charged by the Bank of England. The quotations in
indeed, seems to be a very probable occurrence, so far as the rate of dis¬ the open market now vary from 4£ to 6 per cent. Subjoined are the
count is concerned.
Since the cont inuance of a high rate for money for a present rates for the beat paper :
r
Per Cent.
Per Cent.
period of three months could have had no other effect than compel mer¬ Bank minimum
3 months’ bills
6
5 @—
6 & 4 months’ bills
5#@6
chants to contract their operations in every possible quarter, and to draw
Open market rates:
b @6 & 4 months’ bank bills..
4#@5#
30 to 60 days’ bills
all possible balances home to meet the numerous engagements falling
The Joint Stock Banks have reduced their allowance of interest for
due. The decline in the extent of trade has produced a falling off in
the demand foi accommodation, while, at the same time, the supply of deposits to 4£ per cent. The discount houses allow 41 per cent, for
capital at home has considerably increased, owing to the circumstance money deposited at call, and 4$ per cent, if with seven or fourteen
that with the renewed confidence which prevails, the small capitalists are days’ notice of withdrawal. The discount house now declines to take
more walling, and, indeed, more anxious lenders.
Large supplies of money at call.
The supply of bullion held by the Bank of France has been increased
bnllion also are on passage from India and Australia, so that, probably,
to £29,890,000, and the Bank rate has been reduced to 8-per cent.
In
the supply seeking investment williontinue to augment. But, with the
the open market at Paris money is obtainable as low as H per cent,
ncreaae of
supply, there will be, so ftp as the wants of the commercial




in for discount.

Since the reduction there has

...

.■

f

.

a

"2$ •*•>

K,

-f-

327

THE CHRONICLE.

September 15,1866.]

cent is .the more general quotation. In other parts of proaching twelve months, about 10,000,000 quarters of wheat; but fcs
the Continent the tendency is downwards. Annexed are the rates cur¬ produce continues to be exported from French ports, the reports of the
great deficiency of the crop are probably very much exaggerated. The
rent at the leading cities :
Pank
Open
Bank
crop, undoubtedly, is much below last year, but even in that event, it
Open
rate,
market.
rate, market,
it does not follow that France will be compelled to export any great
ag
sir
$ c.
$ c.
Turin
6
—
At Paris
2@2# Brussels
3'
quantity of foreign produce. The exports will probably be reduced to
6 bills 5
Vienna
5
6
a minimum, and we shall, therefore, be deprived of the large importa¬
6# adv—
Berlin
5 bills 5
Madrid
—
9
5# adv—
tions from that country, to which we have been accustomed for the last
Hamburg
—
8#
Frankfort
4
3#
St. Petersburg
5#
5
three years. In that case, a better market than has prevailed for some
Amsterdam
6
6
Large supplies of bullion will be received by the next Australian years will be found here for the surplus of the large crop which seems
to have been raised in the United States.
steamer, due about the 25th of this month. Telegraph advices state
that the amount is £914,000. In the consol market during the week
Euglish Market Reports—Per Cable.
there has been no animation ; but a most satisfactory tone has prevailed,
market reports received by the Atlantic Cable, since our last
The
and prices have, for the most part, been steadily on the advance. This
issue, are summed up in the subjoined statements:
improved state of things is necessarily caused by the more satisfactory
London Money Market.—The following are the official quotations for
position of the country in general, and by the favorable state of the Consols and American Securities at the close of each day’s business:
money market
The highest prices each day during the week are
Sat. 8. Mon. 10. Tues. 11. Wed. 12. Thur. 13
7
Fri. 7.

but 2 to 2$ per

c

,

“

**

subjoined

Consols for money.....
U. S. 6s (5-20 years)
Illinois Central shares..
Erie Railway shares....

:

Week ending Sept. 1 Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day

The market for

89

88#

Consols for money...

Thur’dayj Friday. jSat’rday
89#

89#

89#

-

*

and

an

im¬

in the quotations. The most unfavorable

the market is the prevailing flatness in Erie Railway shares,
but in other respects prices have ex} erienced a rapid improvement.
The Debentures of the Atlantic and Great Western Railway Company

feature in

change of quotation.

without

89#
72#

78#^
45

45

Liverpool Markets.—Cotton

American securities has been very active,

portant rise has taken place

89#

i

72#
78#

89#
72#
78#
45

89#
89#

89#
72#
79#
45#

89#
71#
78#
44#

89#
71#
78#
44#

ha? been steady throughout

Average Bales about 10,000

the week,

bales a day.

Average price 13d. per lb. Breadstuff's have been active and higher, the weather having taken
an unfavorable turn for the standing crops.
On Friday, the 7th, Wheat
advanced 4d. per cental, and Corn (Western mixed) 6d. per quarter.

active request, and business has been done as high as On Tuesday Flour rose Is. 2d. per barrel, and Wheat 3@4d. per cental.
62 to 65.
United States Five-tweuty bonds have been extensively dealt Corn was quoted at 27s. 9d. per quarter. The market continues firm at
in, and a large business has been done in Atlantic and Great Western the advance.
Provisions generally have been quiet, without change of price. Pork
consolidated mortgage bonds. Illinois Centrals have not been so actively
inquired for as other securities : nevertheless, the quotations have im¬ is dull. American Tallow continues firm.
proved. The Germans are the principal foreign buyers ; but, at the
same time, there is a good demand on Dutch account; and purchases
COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.
are also made for Austrian, and occasionally French capitalists.
To day
Imports and Exports for the Week.—The imports are increased
United States Five twenties left off at 73 to 73£ ; Atlantic and Great
Western consolidated mortgage bonds, 46 to 48 ; do. debentures, 61 to again this week, both in general merchandise and dry goods, being in
68 ; Erie Railway shares, 46 to 47, and Illinois Centrals, 79 to 80.
The the aggregate $5,890,871, against $5,757,168 last week, and $4,264,464
the previous week.
The exports are $3,042,586 this week against
highest and lowest prices of American securities on the days enumerated
$3,895,593 last week, and $2,728,713 the previous week. The export®
are subjoined:
of cotton the past week reached 8,146 bales, against 8,353 bales last
HIGHEST PRICES OP AMERICAN SECURITIES.
week. Included in the exports were—15,085 pounds beeswax, 11,650
Sat.
Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. Fri.
bbls wheat flour, 8,373 do corn meal, 28,246 Bushels wheat, 1,990 do
For week ending September 1.
73
73#
oats, 7,241 do barley, 1,465 do peas, 288,875 do corn, 880 pkgs candles,
72#
72#
72#
United States 5-20’s, 6 per cent, 1882..
72
72
73
72
72
do
do
do
1881....
3,425 tons coal, 598 bales hay, 6 do hops, 397 bbls spirits turpentine,
50
50
50
50
50
Virginia 5 per cent
47
48
47
48
47
do
6 per cent
6,852 do rosin. 25 do tar, 12 do pitch, 11*2 galls whale oil, 4,690 do
Atlantic and Great Western, New York
67
67
67
67
66#
67
sperm oil, 5.15 do linseed oil, 801,304 do petroleum, 917 bbls pork, 277
section, 1st mortgage, 1880
70
70
70
70
70
70#
Pennsylvania section, lstm, 1877..
47
46# uo beef, 6 tcs beef, 17,787 pounds cutmeats, 8,413 do butter, 1,711,901
47#
47
48
47#
do
cons’ted mort. b’ds, 1895.
46
46#
46#
46
45#
45#
do cheese, 148,102 do lard, 33,585 pounds tallow, 1.485 hhds tobacco,
Erie shares, 100 dollars, all paid
71xc
72
70xc
72
71
70
do Convertible bonds, 6 per cent
239 other pkgs crude tobacco, 60,340 pounds manufactured tobacco*
82
82
82
82
82
82
Illinois Central, 6 per cent, 1875
67
67
67
67
67
67
do
7 per cent, 1875
6,279 whalebone.
80#
80
79#
78#
79#
78#
do
$100 shares, all paid..
69
69
69
69
69
The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for
69
Marrietta and Cincinnati, 7 per cent...
62#
62#
62#
62#
62#
62#
New York Central, 100 dollar shares...
101
101
101
100
100
dry-goods) Aug. 31, and for me week ending (for general merchan¬
100
Panama Rail, 7 per cent, 1872, 2d mort
81
81
81
81
81
81'
Pennsylvania R.R. 2d mort., 6 p. c—
33# dise) Sept. 1:
34
33#
34#
32#
32#

have been in very

*

do
$50 shares
Philadelphia and Erie, 1st mortgage,
1881, (gua. by Penn. Railroad Co)
do
with option to be pa:'' *
Philadelphia
Canada 6 per cent
5 per cent
do
LOWEST

FOREIGN IMPORTS AT

73#

73
73

94#

!

76# |

73

94

77#

73

73

73
94
78

73

94#
77#

73

73
73
94

Drygoods

‘

....

General merchandise

78#

Total for the week........

Previously reported.,

PRICES OP AMERICAN

SECURITIES.
Since January

For week

ending September 1.

Mon. Tues. Wed.

Thur.

Fri.

Sat.

71#

United States 5-20’s

Atlantic & Great Western

consolidated

mortgage bonds
100 dollars, all paid
Illinois Central, 100 dollars, all paid...
Erie shares,

71#

72#

72#

72#

73

46
45

46#
45#
78#

46

46

46#

46#

45

45#
79#

46

46#

79#

80

77#

78#

NEW TORK FOR THE

WEEK.

1864.

1865.

1663.

In

our

1,937,893

1,875,558

$3,404,252
160,876,537

$1,657,000

$4,708,969
117,151,474

214,332,005

'

2,169,046

$3,726,046

112,063,0S4

United
States
prices.
The latest quotation is 75£. From Amsterdam, the last price received
intelligence at hand from Frankfort states that
Five-twenty bonds were in active request at advancing

is 75 3-16 ;

from Berlin 76 ; and from

Hamburg 68^.

$2,833,411

$5,890,871

$164,280,789 $121,860,443 $220,222,876
dry-god0s trade will be found the imports of dry

$125,789,130

1

report of the

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 Sept. 4 :
EXPORTS FROM NEW

YORK FOR THE

1863.

The latest

1866.

$3,136,719
2,754,152

$1,466,359

$3,112,397

For the week

Previously reported
Since

121,685,327

$124,797,724
commercial department

January 1

In the

$5,286,408

WEEK.

1864.

1865.

$2,323,660

1866.

$3,042,586

134,125,806
$137,168,392
will be found the official detailed
146,097,656 105,847,660
$151,384,064 $108,171,320

statement of the imports and exports for the week.
of harvest work during the week has been slow, and
The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclu¬
as the weather has continued changeable, the produce has been stacked
sive of specie) for the past week and since July 1, is shown in the fol¬
in but middling condition. The wheat, however, is of fine quality, and
those farmers whose resources allow them to hold their produce until lowing very interesting table we have prepared :
Since
This
I
This
Since
week.
July 1.
it is fitter for grinding, will be able to offer a fine sample for sale.
At
To
July 1,1866 |
week.
To
$117,768 $1,720,423

The progress

Great Britain... $1,965,198
bulk of the produce forwarded to market is in France.
105,872
46,943
poor condition, and can only be employed by mixing small quantities Holland & Belg.
323,267
Germany
with dry old English, or dry foreign wheat. Most millers estimate that Other N.Eur
Surope
Spain
only one quarter of new can be mixed with sixteen quarters of old wheat. Other S. Europe 110,763
In France, the crop of wheat is certainly much below last year, and East Indies
China....
42,*445
prices have risen materially at the whole of the French markets. In Australia
24J9i
pome quarter® it is estimated that France will require, during the ap- [ Br.NTcoionies
2*" - •’ -

present, however, the




-

‘

'*

•

i

”...

$17,371,054 | Cuba
1,759,130 | Hayti
698,075

1,640,666
188,533
470,043

1,887,730
6,750
632,550
551,333

1,234,528

Other W. I
Mexico.

New Granada...

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

40,065
134,980
1,210

6,530

37*454
22,835

ii;862

155,984
1,376,747

300,231
558,433
177,489
240,823
614,987
788,385

184,94$

THE CHRONICLE.

328

following will show the exports of specie from the port of New
York, for the week ending Sept. 8, 1866 :
The

Sept. 6—S.S. Persia, Liverpool—
Mexican silver....
$25,000

Sept. 8—S.S. America, Bremen—
American srold

Foreign coin

2.200

132

Sept. 8—S.S. Cityof N.Y. Livp’lAmerican silver
$72,000
American gold
16,730
Sept. 8—S.S. Allemannia, Hamb’g—
German silver
1,000
American silver...
40,000
..

...

$157,062

Total for the week

Total since Jan.

53,186,360

1

Previously reported

$53,343,422

1,1866

on

the market

[September 15,1866.

High prices are demanded, bnt it remains to be seer*

what opening rates will be. As far as we have yet examined, the make
and color of the leaf are not at all good, but the liquors are pale, Bweet,

and delicate. One chop has been reshipped.
cheats of old Tea still remains on offer, and

Pingsuey.

The stock of 1,000 half-

about 8,000 half-chests of

'

.

EXPORTS or TEA FROM SHANGHAI AND

To Great Britain, direct, 1866-7
do
1865-6
To United States, 1866-7
do
1865-6

,

YANTZE PORTS FROM JUNE 1 TO JULY 5,1866*'
KIap]?
Green.
Total.

lbs. 8,231,658
“

6,715,266

“

“

73,433
704,204

8,304,991'
7,419,470*

1,468,546

1,468',546.

Fuhchau, July 6.—Congou.—In face of the unfavorable advices from
Europe, prices are generally higher than at the date of the last report,
32,716,9>5jl857
32.451,183 the increasing scarcity of the finer grades having induced higher rates
24.5! 1.408
29.611,63111856
40,31»,517 1855
23,408,704 for these descriptions, and an active demand for the Colonies having
3.204,658 1854
1801
26,152,591 sent up the rates for common and medium kinds about tls. 1 per picul,.
1860
36.8;8.908 1853
14,184,141 The teas of the second crop are coming forward slowly, the teamen
1859.
51,956,345:1852
IS.775,311
appearing unwdling to invest their money, large sums being still due to'Treasure from California.—The mail steamship Henry Chauncey, them against first
crop teas.
Souchong—The stock having accumulated
from Aepinwall, Sept. 1, arrived at this port on the 9th, bringing mails to about 22.000 chests, the teamen became anxious to realise, and a few
days delay would probably have established a reasonable scale of prices.
and treasure. The following is her treasure list:
The dread ot losing some of the finest chops to otuer continentaf buyers,
PROM CALIFORNIA.
however, induced the settlement of 5 chops at tls. 43 to 48 per picul,
$69,175 00 the
Duncan, Sherman & Co..
$34,095 95 Dabney, Morgan & Co
equivalent say of 2s. 8d. to 2s. lid. per lb. Oolongs—The stock is
118,985 54
Panama R. R. C*
21,817 11 Wells/Fargo & Co
434,837 18 considerable, but the teamen continue firm in their demands. Flowery
Waiter Watson & M
211,410 28 Lees & Waller
520,000 06 Pekoe—A few fine district, teas have come forward, but of these none
Eugene Kelly & Co
122,100 00 Order
J. & W. Seligman & Co..
1C6 000 00
Total
$1,609,358 78 have yet found buyers. Scented Teas—The bad weather having des¬
Weill & Co
20,937 12
troyed the scenting flowers to some extent, prices have advanced for
from aspinwall.
medium and fine, but it is probable that these rates will not be main¬
$5,000 00
[Same time in
$20.723.125:1858

Same time in
1865
1864
1863.
1862

$1S,039.237

*

$750 00

Marcial & Co

Wells. Fargo & Co,
Trevor & Co’gate.

The
beeu

as

Order

tained.

..

800 00

3,122 00

$9,672 00

Total.

receipts of treasure from California since January 1, 1866,
follows

have

:

Canton, July

10.—Congous.—Since date of last circular nine chops:
to date ten chops..

have arrived in the market, making total arrivals
The majority of these teas are of medium quality,
ers have beeu found at the high figures which
are
teamen.
Canton Congous.—Settlements to a fair

as yet, no buy¬
being asked by the*

and,

extent are reported,,
probably for shipment to Australia. Prices again show a decline on
former quotations.
Pouchongs have been inquired for, and 2,000 half'
chests have changed hands.
Scented teas.—Scented capers are in some
request at tls. 21 to SI per picul.
Scented Orange Pekoes have alsohad a fair attention, and for both descriptions prices are somewhat
cheaper than before. Canton green teas.—Some 2,200 boxes have been
taken, probably for the Australian market. Country green teas.—There
are none of these yet on offer.
The following are the principle settle¬
ments of the fortnight, with present estimated stocks :—Congou, no sales.
Stock 10 chops.
Canton Congous, 800 half chests, and 1,000 boxes, at
Exports of Treasure from San Francisco.—The exports of treasure tls. 21 to 29; Souchongs, no sales ; Pouchoug, 2,000 half chests, tls. 29 ;
Oolong, no sales ; Scented Orange Pekoes, 6,600 boxes, tls. 29 to 86^ ;
from San Francisco from Aug. 1 to date hare been as follows:
Scented Capers 11,000 b^xes, tls. 21 to 81 ; Canton green teas, gun¬
Aug. 8—Per News Boy, to Shanghae
$75,904 73
powder, 2,200 boxes, tls. 25 to 27£ per picul. Country green teas, no
Aug. 10—Per Colorado:

Date.
Steamship. At date. To date.
$685,616 Mhv 9.New York.$l,072.820$12,977.019
Mav 21.Arizona
1,276,505 14,253,524
1,485,314
2.430,198 May 31.Costa Rica. 324.552 14,578.076
dune 9.New York..
949.906 15,527,982
3,879.266
892,365 16,420,347
Feb.21 .H.Chaunceyl,209.048 5,088.319 June20. Arizona
Mar. 5.Costa Rica..1,469,286 6.557,602 July 2.N Light.... 1,617.899 18,038,246
Mar.12.New York. .1,425.553 7,983,155 July 9.New Y’ork..1,429,833 19.468.079
3S9.S37 8,372,992 July 21. Arizona.... 2,051.456 21.519,5-' 5
Mar.23.Arizona
Mar.31 .H.Chauncey 673.615 9.046,607 July 31 .II.Cbaunceyl,655.4>l 23,175.016
Apr. 9.New York.. 729,862 9,776.460 Aug.21.Nor. Light.3.091.601 2b.26H,617
Apr.20 Arizona.... 809,459 10.585,901 A ug.31 .Arizona... .1,386,058 27,652,6 5
May 1.Costa Rica..1,318,271 11,904,199 Sept. 9.H. Chaun’y .1,669,359 29,322,034

Date. Steamship. At date.
Jan. 12.New York ..$685,610
Jan. 19.H.Chauncey 799,706
Feb. 1.Atlantic.... 944.878
Feb. 9.New York..1,449,074

To date.

....

$&36.058 14

To New York
To England
To France
To Panama

3,500 00

Total since \ug. 1, 1866
Previously this year

$1,502,233 63
27,708 653 11
$29,240,886 74

Total since January 1, 1866
Increase thig ye :r

1,342,586 90

112,535 00
1,207 00
-

,

No stocks.

forward to Europe on
Japanese account. The settlements for the season 1865-66 are 11,592
bales, against 16,631 bales the previous season. There are about 5,000;
bales in Yedo, and 1,000 bales on our own market, remaining in stock.
About 750 piculs of tea had been settled since the last report, principally
consisting of the new season’s crop. The prices for medium to fine
kinds ranging from $31 to $33. Export from Jan. 1,1866, 196,500 lbs.;
1865, 3,233,000 lbs. Stock, 2,500 piculs.
Telegraphic advices from China, dated Hong Kong, July 30, state
that the total export of tea from all ports to Great Britain had reached
Yokohama, June 27.—About 200 bales go

,

5,000 00—

Aug. 11—Per Cap Sing Moon, to Hong Kong...
Aug. 15—Per M. Taylor, to Sait Juan Del Sur....

Corresponding period of 1865

sales.

490.028 76

26,192,491 80
$3,048,394 94

following is the latest postal intelligence at
hand from the principal Chinese ports:

43,125,000 lbs.

July 2.— Black Teas.— After the departure of the last
mail, buyers held off the market; but, siuce then, owing to the eager¬
ness of holders, considerable purchases have been made, at a reduction
of Tis. 4 upon last mail’s rates.
For the last four days, however, buy¬
ers have kept out of the market, in consequence of the very unfavorable
advices received. Green Teas.—Only one small chop has been shipped
during the fortnight. Arrivals of new are looked for toward the close of
August.
Hankow, June 30.—Contrary to all expectation, the mail news of the
26th of April did not have the effect of reducing prices. Fora few days,
buyers held off, but a slight concession on the part of Teamen led to an
active demand, and a good business is reported at about previous quo¬
tations. Medium and fine grades had been chiefly selected, and tirst
crop Teas with quality were nearly exhausted.
The second crop
Oopacks were expected in about a week. Five ships had been dis¬
patched for London. Settlements for the fortnight were 89,100 chests
at the following prices : Oonams, common to fine, Tls. 19 to 20^ per
picul; sterling, per lb., Is- 5d. to 2s. Oopacks, fair to fine, Tls. 26 to 35^

Baltimore is good for a brisk fall trade. Our mer¬
generally have laid in an abundant stock of goods, and business
has already opened lively.
At present there are a large number of
strangers in the city from the South, particularly from the neighboring
States of Virginia aud North Carolina, infections of which tolerably
fair crops have been made, through the assistance, in part, of the
benevolent enterprise of the Agriculture Aid Society of Baltimore. 1 he
general trade of ihe city is therefore active, and the volume of business
ha3 been large during the week in nearly all branches of mercantile
pursuits.”
The Making of Steel.—Mr. J. G. Abbott, United States Consul at
Sheffield, England, sends to the Secretary of the Treasury an account of
a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement
of the Artfr
and Sciences, the subject considered beiDg the Bessemer process for con
verting iron into steel. Mr. Bessemer said that the iron of the United
States was peculiarly adapted to the manufacture of steel by his pro¬
cess.
Mr. Abbott says, in conclusion, Valuable as is the invention of
Mr. Bessemer, l cannot recommend it to American manufacturers, un¬
less they make use in the process of the very best pig iron, and that which
is comparatively tree from sulphur, phosphorus, and other impurities.”
Cotton Culture in Virginia.—The Richmond, Va., Dispatch says :
“We had the pleasure of seeing on Saturday a specimen from the first
picking, of the cotton crop of Judge Meredith, planted on his plantation
on the Pamunky River.
The sample is beautifully white, of long staple,
and will compare favorably with the be9t grades in the Southern States.
We learn that Judge Mereideth, Mr. Edward Ruffin, Mr. Geo. W. Bas¬
sett. r., and Dr. Thos, Carter, on the Pamunky River; Mr. Robert
Douthat, Mr. Wra. Burnell, on James River, and other gentlemen in
this portion of Eastern Virginia, are cultivating cotton quite extensively,
with a very fair prospect of success. Should the Fall be a late one, they
are sanguine that it will prove a remunerative crop/’
The Connecticut Tobacco Crop.—The Tobacco in this region, says
the Hartford Times, proves to be an excellent one, though from six to
ten days later than usual. The time for cutting the earliest portions is

The Tea Trade.—The

Kiukiang,

per picul; sterling, per lb.. Is. 9^d. to 2s.
Arrivals, 1866,186,000
chests; 1865, 128,100 chests.
Settlements, 1866, 169,000 chests;
1865, 110,000 chests. Stock, 1866, 16,000 chests ; 1865,17,000 chests.

July 5- — Black Teas.—There is a very limited business to
the fortnight, buyers having held off for the French mail ad¬
vices, which did not arrive until the 3d instant. The market can scarce¬
ly yet be said to have fairly opened, the only settlements being one
chop of fair Oonam at Tls. 25, 3 chops of flavory Howhow (Kaisow
kind) at Tls. 28 to 34, and a small parcel of fine Ninehow at Tls. 36.J—
prices which lay down Teas at about their London value. The above
show a very heavy los9 on Hankow cost. There has been more dispo¬
sition to operate to-day, and several offers at the equivalent of home
rates are likely to be accepted.
Arrivals have been numerous, but a
large quantity of Teas will probably be shipped on owners’account
rather than be sacrificed here.
Settlements, 2,300 chests as above ;
reshipments, .21,800 chests ; stock, 40,000 chests. Total settlements
with reshipments from Hankow, from the 1st of June to date, 47,600,
against 24,100 chests last year. Green Teas.—Supplies of Pingsuey are
beginning to arrive, and musters of three chops were yesterday placed
Shanghai,

report for




Business Prospects in

present prospect in

chants

Baltimore.—The Baltimore Sun says : u The

=v.:

'/■W-

THE CHRONICLE.

September 15,1866. J

usually about the 6th of September; this year, it has been a few days
later, and now, the 13th, the farmers are gathering the crop rapidly. So
far, they have been favored by mild weather. There has been no frost
to hurt the leaf, and fully one-half the crop is already gathered.
By
next Saturday night, most of it will be under cover.
There are some
very late pieces that need another week of mild weather ; and, if the
frost should not appear till the 21st instant, the largest crop ever
gathered in the Connecticut Yalley will be strung up, and its value in
Hartford County alone will be three-fourths of a million of dollars—we
think, indeed, a million. With this income, the farmers can buy all the
wheat flour they want, a silk dress for the wife, a pair of steers, and
have something to invest for good marketable stocks.

The
are

Government, State, &c., bonds sold at the two Boards, daily, last week,
given in the following statement:
r
Sat.

U. S. 6’s, 1881.
U.S 6’s (5-20’s).
U.S6’s (old)...
U.S 5’s (10-408)
U.S 5’s (old)..
U.S 7-30 notes

LOST

13,500

following shows the description and number of shares sold at the Regu¬
ar and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday.
Mon.

Sat.

,

Tues.

Wed.

95

55

180

152

Week.

Thurs. Fri’y.
295
86

869

Railroad shares, viz.:

Hannibal & St. Joseph
Hudson River...

200

27
100

450
200

*425
6,900

500
100
400
6.200

1,800

2,700

1,325
28,176
9,800

2',ioo

10,100

200

4.500

8,150

800

3,060
1,000

2,016
1,000

5.700
2,500

'200

1*500

1*500

2.700

2‘i66

200

800
9.000

2,100

400

800

10,071

15,400

10,850

'600

6

6,200
2,100
500

Ohio & Mississippi
Panama

194

3,175
46
100

2,800

4,030

3,345

8,200

5,700

200

11

300

1,445

6,900

7,600

....

....

21

900

1,466

800

10,500

7,780

100

100

50
....

St. Louis, Alton & T. H..

Stonington
Toledo, Wabash & West’n

*

....

.

.

.

46

....

100

400

8,400

32,745

4,25*0

22,561

.

532

5

13
500
9
950

....

(.$100)

Reading

....

....

....

...

Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic.

6

300
....

.

200
•

.

100

.

1,200

•

5
.

.

.

.

1,400
...

....

13

...

1,300

4,65''
9

....

„

450

320

700

3,120

3,100

2,600

1,750
5,400

....

....

....

....

....

....

io

....

....

200

200

....

4,970
32,500
200
10
500

....

Miscellaneous shares, viz.:
,

,

.

....

,

300
200

Cary Improvement.......

•

Central Coal

•

•

Cumberland Coal

ioo

....

....

....

....

1,350

Mariposa

Pacific Mail

Rutland Marble
Smith & Parmlee Gold....

•

•

•

.

•

40 )
600

4,400
1.700

600
500

ioo

*200

*300

200
•

•

•

100
700
800
800

....

•

•

300

200

....

....

•

4,900

1,300

16,250

100
200

100
200

....

•

«...

....

BOO

1,000

900

3,666

900

5,100

1,150

900

1,000

3J0

1,900
2,700

2,100

9.700

1,7U0

13,150

100

700

700

30

50

....

....

5,570

1,000

•

•

•

,

600
400

2,500

-

Union Trust
Western Union Telegraph
Wilkesbarre Coal

•

.

*

....

Pennsylvania Coal
Quicksilver
Spruce Hill Coal

1,950

.

400
400

100
100
100
100
300
50

•

.

....

l,5u0

100

....

..

400

1,000

....

Delaware & Hud. Canal
Manhattan Gas

ioo

400

American Coal
Atlantic Mail
Boston Water Power
Canton

114.000
11.000

13,500

109,000

83,550

730,900

16,000
25.000
10,000

7,000

5,000
30,000

2*666

20,500

12,500

32,i>00

13.000

5,000

20,000

3,000

79,000

•

1,000
4,000

•

.

3,500
6,000

....

•

•

-

3,000
15,000

•

20,000

10,000

74,000

Tennessee 6’s

•

•

.

•

12,000

43.500

18,000
137,000
5,000
255,000

6,000
20,000

.

50,000

135,000
30,000

500

..

U. S. Bonds
U. S. Notes

53.500

Tues.4 Wed.

Mon.

State&Citybonds

15,900
44,500

429,950
59,500

244,009

Railroad Bonds..

7,000

21,500

71,000

Total of week....

79,000

13.500
85,000
21,000

100

•

3,600

v* •

80

50
S70

Week.

109,000
87.000
!30,0u0

83,550
26,000

-

730,900
546,000

26,000

179.500

$185,400 $684,450 $557,500 $432,500 $495,500 $557,050 $2,912,400

The totals of each class of securities sold in
are

Fri.

Thur.

$118,000 $170,500 $163,500 $313,000 $269,500 $421,500 $1,456,000

the first six months of the year

shown in the statement -which follows:

...

Governments
Bonds.
Notes.

$4,S27,200

March

$3,340,100
2,591,900
3,006,700
3,739,650
2,258;250
2,485,250
2,198,750
2.577,000

3,846,500
3,931,300

April
May

8,002.700

5,798.300

June
10.476,250

July.
August

.

..

and for the weeks

Bonds.

10,937,850

Aug.
3
Aug. 10

Aug.
Aug.
AugSept.
Sept.

17
24
31
7
14

....

ending on Friday—
$2,085,400
$661,650

Total
amount.

$12,155,700

$952,900

$3,035,500

1,691,500

1,692,100

9,822,000

2,903,600

781.240

1,679,500
1,236.600

10,622,840

83S,700
781,900

12,056,150
12,279,450

1,674.000
1,633.000

5 5.700

1,986,990

993,000

12,078,750
14,765,500
16,544,750

455,500

$383,400

$164/00

605,350
670,850
655.400

408.500
466.000
467.500

$2,394,450

175,000

373.400

388,500

1,002,75 i

514,500

282.500
243.500
197.700

3,778,300
4,092,350
2,653,700
4,274,600
4.069,105

730,900

546,000

179,500

2,912,400

2.589.450

2.786,500
1,248 300
3.269,200

2,354,200
1,456,000

;.

Railroad
Bonds.

State, &c.,

*

169,000

Friday, P. M., Sept. 14.

lt)0

100

.

Mil. & St. Paul
New York Central
New York & New Haven.

Norwich & Worcester

827

5.500

100

...

Michigan Central

Michigan S. & N. Indiana

1,400

100
400
194

3,700

26,500
IS, 000

58,471

200
250
200

Indianapolis and Cin
Illinois Central
Marietta & Cincinnati

100

100
500

Central of New Jersey

Chicago <fc Alton
Chicago, Burlington & Q.
Chicago & Great Eastern.
Chicago <fc Northwestern.
Chicago, R. Isl. & Pacific.
Cleveland, Col. & Cine....
Cleveland & Pittsburg....
Cleveland & Toledo
Erie Railway...;...

185,500
5,000

Phio 6’s

January
February

BOARDS.

The

Bank Shares

429,950

-

•

Week

$1,0(10 $171,000
368,000
899,500
99,000
25,000
274,500
27,500

103,500

16,000

11,000

Sat.

STOCK

141,500

1.000

Missouri 6’s...
N. Y. State 6’s.
N. Y. State 7's.
N. Carolina 6’s

Fri.

Thur.

following is a summary of the amount of Governments, State and City
securities, and railroad bonds, sold on each day:

BONDS.

THE

Wed.

$6,000 $14,000 $100,000

124.500
35.000

53,500

/

AT

Tues.

$....

The

We give in our Bulletin
from day to day lists of bonds, &c., lost, and
dividends declared. These tables will be continued daily, and on Saturday
morning, such as have been published through the week in the Bulletin
will be collected and published in the Chronicle. Below will found those pub¬
lished the last week in the Bulletin.
U« S. 6 P-r Cent, of 18 SI, numbered6,092 for $1,000. Refer to Acker
Merrall & Co., 132 Chamber Street.
,

BUSINESS

Mon.

$50,000

15,900
State bonds, viz. :
Louisiana 6’s..
4,000

Virginia 6’s.

$l)e Bankers’ (Sa^ette.

329

The Money Market.—The

of monetary

affairs has varied
opening of the week there was a slight tendency
toward harder rates; but the week closes with extreme ease. At
the close of last month about fifteen millions of that portion of the
temporary loan on which interest ceased on the ‘26th of August re¬
mained uncalled for in the Treasury ; and this has since been largely
reduced, adding to the available supply of loanable funds. It is
understood, upon the best authority, that the Secretary of the Treas¬
but little.

course

At the

redeem the unpaid balance of the temporary loan,
As, however, this is
amounting to $-45,538,000, at an early day.
represented entirely by Clearing House certificates, which serve as
part of the legal tender reserve of the banks, and will have to be
substituted by either compound note3 or plain legal tenders, also to
be held by the banks as their reserve, it is not presumable that the
liquidation of this portion of the debt will have any important bear¬
ing upon the money market.
There has been less movement of currency Westward during the
week ; and exchanges with Chicago are about evenly balanced.
The demand for money for stock purposes has been only limited,

ury proposes to

and the rate

on

call

loans has ruled at four per cent,

for heavy

for smaller sums to second-clas3 houses.
requirements for discount continue very limited. The large
The volume of transactions in shares at the two Boards, comparatively, for
supply of currency, to a certain extent obviates the necessity for
each day of the two last weeks, and the total for the same weeks, is shown by
notes, and a material proportion of the current business is trans¬
the following statement:
-Open Board—, -Both Boards—n acted on cash terms.
^-Reg. Board.
The supply of paper is far below the demand,
Prev’s
Last
Last
Prev’s
Last
Prev’s
week.
week.
week.
week.
week. week.
and the rate of discount lor prime names ranges at 5@6 per cent.,
Saturday
20,202 14,979 16,150 17,100 36,352 32,079
19,600
40,875
445,941 according to time.
21.700
Monday
21,275 19,241
19,850
37,142
37,141
20,500
17,292
Tuesday
16,641
The foliowing are the current rates for loans of various classes :
Wednesday
26,644 18,398 35,264 25.700 61,908 44,098
1.395

1,962
..

•

766

•

•

1,855

15

....

.

•

1,34*0*
....

8,188
15

....

amounts, and five per cent,
The

*

26,301
22,340

Thursday
Friday
Total of week

21,221

133,403

107,208

16,077

48,300
29,400

45.477

150,914 165,050 2S4,3l7

272,258

weekly since the commencement
shown in the following statement:
The transactions in shares

Weekending Regular Open
Friday.
Board. Board.
January 5....181,&50 243,900
anuary 12.... 339,109 328,400
January 19.... 243,815 272,300
January 26.... 247,743 301,400
February 2....201,107 239,700
February 9....209,140 227,800
FebruarylO... .284,285 228,700
Febrnury23:... 187,913 183.200
<■

Both Week ending
Boards
Friday.

436.940 June

22

15.... 126,591
..

150,864

11. ...139,127 190,450 329,697




Call loans
Loans on bonds & mort..
Prime endorsed bills, 2
mouths

Per cent.
4 @ 5
6 @ 7
5

@

-

Per cent.

Good endorsed bills, 3
4 months
do
single names
Lower grades.

&
6

@ 6

6 @ 7
9 @15

United States Securities.—Government Securities have been

depressed during the week by lower quotations for Five twenties at
London, and by a prevailing supposition that the European market
will "be temporarily over supplied by the large amounts of Bonds
268,910 395,501 lately sent from this side. Under this idea, Five-twenties of 1862
238,680 3S9,544
165,500 284,937 have, during the week, touched llOf ; to-day, however, Bonds were
110,300 223,713 reported at 72* in London,'which had the effect of abating the ap¬
227,640 436,169
260,300 427,771 prehension and of causing an advance to 11 If. The late high quo¬
185,552 306.817
204,156 429,234 tations have brought out a considerable amount of Bonds trom
134.603 300,189
110,316 271,897 private holders, which has aLo been an element of weakness. The
126,910 298,137 opinion prevails very generally among the larger dealers in Bonds
112,465 223 309
165,050 272,258 that Five-twenties will realise much higher prices in Europe than
150,914 284,317
heretofore; and hence the brokers show do hesitation in takiDg

360,940 566,549
454,381 682,461
days).228,873 380,306 61*9,179
8 . . 204,080 278,850 482,930
18.. 205,609
25....228,080

462,985 June
29... .119,437
371,113 July 6 (4 days)113.413
March ' 2....217,961 221,500 439,461 July
13....202,529
March
9.... 206,849 211,300 418,149 July
20....167,471
March
16.... 206,312 213,450 419.762 July
27.... 121,265
March
23.... 261,106 335,910 597,016 August
3....225,075
March
30....122,5t'8 208.200 330.763 August 10.... 165,587
6.... 170,934 247,400 418,334 August 17....161,581
April
April
13....250,118 214,650 464.768 August 24....171,227
April
20....176,956 208,650 886,606 Aug. 31 (5 days)110,844
April
27... .242,738 226,230 468,968 Sept. 7
107,208
May
4....135,949 182,500 818,449 Sept* 14
..133,403

May

of the year are

Regular Open
Both
Board. Board. Boards

425,250 May
667,509 May
516,115 June 1(5
549,143 June
440,807 June

.

69,521

55,501
52,540

29.200
30.200

.

I-

.ft*

m

[September 15,1866.

CHRONICLE

THE

330

Low’st Highest.
145#
146#
146#
1-5#
144#
145#

Lowest. Hisrheat.

Ad¬

public may offer at a moderate concession of price.
European agents of banking firms here report a steadily
augmenting demand for our Bonds, and express the
that, in the event of the rate of interest ruling low at London, fur¬
ther supplies will be required.
The second and third issues of Five-twenties have been compara¬

what the

vices from

expectation

The

Cnstom House.

of Seven-

present too low, as compared with the first series
thirties to admit of any important amount of conversion

transac¬

»•

“
“
“

98@98$, and close
at the latter figure.
Seven thirties have been neglected, the pre¬
vailing desire being to realise, from a supposition that the current
comparatively high prices cannot be maintained.
The following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬
pared with preceding weeks:
Sept 14.
during the week, at

Aug. 3. Aug. 17 Ang. 24 Aug. 31

U. S. 6’e, 1881 coup —
U. S. 5-20’s, 1802 coupons
U. S. 5-20’s, 1804
“
U. S. 5-20’s, 1805
“
U.
TJ*
U.
U.

S 10-40’s,
S 7-80’s 1st

series..

8 7-30’s 2d Strifes .
8 7-80’a 3rd series...

Up#

Ill#

109#

no#
1(8#
108#
102

102

105#
105#
105#

112#

111#
108#
10fe#
108#

106#
106#
106#

107

107#
99#
1(15#
105#
105

Sept> 7.

112
.

109

...

108#
109#
102# x. C.98#
106#
107#
105#
106#
105#
106#

$5,038,072 70
944,440 87
3,697,254 04
4,335,609 44
1,354,93* 50

581,070 76
328,020 94

8...

Total
Balance in Sub-Treasury

$3,222,265 99
morning of Sept. 3.

1,449,954 60

$16,820,266 15

v

$2,265,646 75
2,675.887 99

6,668,335 02
4,752,100 08
1,711,065 32
2,017,183 09

$19,089,718 25
82,294,542 98

$101,384,261 23
Deduct

payments during the

16,820,266 16

week—

$84,563,995 08

Balance on Saturday evening
Iucrease during the week

HI#
111#
1(8#
1' 8#
98#

111#
111#

688,997 96
545,130 29
559,457 29

4
5
6
7

“

’

$519,588 75

3

Sept.

tions.

Ten-forties have ranged,

Sub-Treasury
Payments.
Receipts.

,

Receipts.

bonds of 1864
that of

is at

146#
145#

147# Sept. 12
146# Sept. 13
Sept. 14.....

146#
transactions at the Custom House and the office of the
States Assistant Treasurer, for last week, were as follows :

United

tively neglected. The expectation of shipments of
Europe has subsided, and the price now corresponds with
the issue of 1865, each closing to-day at 108$. The price of 1865’s
to

146#

Sept. 8.
Sept. 10
Sept. 11...

2,269,452 10

of Gold Certificates issued $3,005,000.
cluded in the receipts of customs were $356,000 in gold, and
766,265 in Gold Certificates.
The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the
Treasury since July 7 :
'
The total amount

Weeks

Ending

House.

7....
14...
it
21....
41
28....
Aug. 4....
ir
11....
44
18....
44
25....
6ept, 1....
44
8....

July

106
106
106

Payments.

inc
inc
dec
dec
dec
inc
inc
inc
dec
iuc

$2,471,626 $18,039,083 $25,259,144 $88,065,802
94,248,198
10,184,139

2,486,296
2,480,149

16,472.438
19,682,106
22,015,194
5,825,232
11,2(52,202
16,700,883

2,926,884
2,794,658
2,676,331
2,461,876

16,366,534
13,797,169
14,013,440
18,578,526
9,747,042
13,639,422

Sub-

Balances.

Balances.

Receipts.

$2,-

Changes in

-Sub-Treasnry-

Custom

In¬

91,572,928
85,904,262
82,467,634
86,439,444
88,816,644
96,007,229

$7,220,061
6,183,395
2,675,266
5,668,666
3,486,628
3,971,810
2,377,219
7,190.504
13,712,686

23.900,447
Stocks.—The stock market ha3
3.069,803
34,094,678 82,294,5(2
47,807,365
3,199,168
exhibited little spirit during the week. The prevailing tendency
2,269,452
19,0&9,718 84,563,995
3,222,265 16,820,266
of speculation has been toward lower prices, one party attempting
Foreign Exchange.—During the week, large amounts of com¬
to depress the market from a belief that stocks are too high, and
mercial bills and of bills drawn against shipments of Five-twenties
another and more influential class taking a like course from a de¬
have been bought up on speculation.
The withdrawal of this por¬
sire to get stocks, preparatory to a vigorous movement for a general
tion of Exchange from the market has had the effect of materially
advance in prices.
Un to the close of business yesterday the rail¬ strengthening the market, bankers’ sterling sixty-days’ bills having
road list was general’y lower ; but to-day buying has been brisker, sold
yecterday at 107$ and 107$. The sudden rise, however, has
and prices are $@1$ per cent, above yesterday’s closing quota¬ checked transactions, and to-day rates have been lower than yester¬
tions.
day, though about 1 per cent, above those of Friday last.
The chief activity has been in Erie.
Very large purchases have
The following are the closing quotations for the several classes
been made, preparatory to the election of directors next month, the of
foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks :
Aug. 24.
Aug. 31.
Sept. 7.
Sept. 14.
major portion having passed into the hands of the agents of the well
London Comm’l..
105#® 106#
103#® 104# 104 ® 105
105#® 106
known speculative director.
The price has ranged between 71 and
do bkrs'long
106 ® 107
105 ® 106
105#© 106# 106#® 107#
do
107 ® 170#
do ahoi'l
106#® 106# 106#® 107
107#® 108
72$, and closes at 72$.
5.35 ®5.30
5.38#®5.33# 5.38#®5.83# 5.80 ®5.25
Paris, long
New York Central has been stronger, under reports of import¬
do short
6.30 ©5 27# 5.35 ®6.82# 5.85 @5.8 ;# 5.27#@5.22#
Antwerp.........
5.8G#@5.31# 6.40 ©5.35 5.40 @5.35
6.31#@5.27#
ant changes in the management of the road ; the price closes 3$ Swiss
6.86#®o.3l#
6.40 @6.35 6.40 @5.35
6.31#®5.27#
35#© 36
85#® # 35#® ....
85#® 85#
Hamburg..
aboye the figures of last Friday.
Amsterdam
40#© 40#
39#® 40
40 ® 40# 40#® ....
40#® 41
4> @ 40# 89#® 40
40 @ 40#
The continued ease of money has a tendency to encourage large Frankfort
Bremen
77#® 78
77#® 77# 77#® 77# 77#© 77#
70#® 70# 70 @ 70# 70#@ 71
71 ® 71#
preparations fora Fall speculation in stocks. There i3 some diver¬ Berlin
New York City Banks.—The following statement shows the
sity of opinion among the larger operators, whether the drift of
speculation should favor higher prices or lower ; but the predomi¬ condition of the Associated Banks of the City of New York for the
nating feeling is very decidedly in favor of an advance move¬ week ending with the commencement of business on Sept. 8t

Railroad and Miscellaneous

.

1866

ment.

prices are

"

port.
The

.

those of the

are

Julv 27. Aug. 10.

Cumberland Coal

Quicksilver
Canton Co

Mariposa pref
New York Central
Erie

Hudson River....

Reading
Mich. Southern..

Michigan Central
Clev.

and Pittsb.

Clev. and Toledo.
Northwestern....

preferred

“

of to day, compared with

the closing quotations
six preceding weeks :

following

Bock Island
Fort Wayne
Illinois Central

46#
50#
52#
27#
104#
68#
121
112

47#
51

47#

....

.

•

*

•

.

•

106

1 4#

69#

69#

.

,

28
104
73

115#

115#

86

85#
111

114

67#
116#

87#
116#

37#
67#
103#

36#
67#

103#
73#

....

112#

87#
116

35#
67#

106#

107

105#
122#

104#
122#

steamship Henry Chauncey,
Monday, $1,679,030 in treasure.
The

85#

87#
116

36#
68#
109#
104#
123#

46#

4^#
49#
52#

—

121

1 o#

122#

Ang. 17. Ang. 24. Aug. 31. Sep. 7. Sept. 14.
46#

....

84#
110#

103#
..

47#
49#
62#

118#
84#
112

86#
115#

85#

50#
....

28

103#

67#
52#
80#
106#

120#

72#
122

114
84

115#
83#

71

•

•

•

•

86#
114#
35#

111
....

116

34#
66#

67#
108#
104#

104#

109
105

123#

122

122#

....

109

from Aspinwall,

brought, on

Gold

the rate on borrowed gold bas been “ flat” to 1-16th
per cent, per day during the week. The price closes weak at 145.
The following have been the lowest and highest quotations for

been freer;

gold

on each of




t

the last six days:

Circula-

Loans and

discounts.

Ba^ks.
New York
Manhattan

$8,831,425
6,520,703
7,815,874
6,270,796

Merchants’
Mechanics’

4,889,553

Union
America
Phenix

10,913,044

4,619,361

Specie.

$1,336,003
409,187
509,098
135,077
90,&8l
857,005
116,736

City
Tradesmen’s

8,881,348

Fulton

3,816,505
6,453,189
3,650,426

108,535
289,980
35,275
141,257
40,444
44,m

tion.
$743,388
12,889

353,938

3,070,255

Chemical
March’ts Exchange
National....
Butch. & Drovers..
Mech’s & Traders..
Greenwich
„
Leather Manufact’s
Seventh Ward
State of N. York...
American Exc’ge..
Commerce

2,735.910

2,660,671
1 787,104
944,900
8,631,708
1,294,578
6,560,174

12,070,538

23,758,2*2

6,140,571

Broadway
Pacific

Market.—The course of gold has been steadily
downward, the extremes of quotations having been 147$ on Satur¬
day last and 144$ to-day. The continued imports of specie have
the effect of weakening the premium, but have not drawn out nny
important “ short ” interest, the demand for customs being large
enough to absorb all the leceipts. The supply of gold for loans has
The

Average amount of

,

comparative quotations given

From the
that

below, it will be seen
generally higher than at the date of our last re¬

:

8,858,442
8,259,447
1,988,117

Republic

6,211,924

Ocean

Mercantile

1,800,852

Chatham

People’s..

North America....
Hanover

Metropolitan

1.569,158

Citizens’
Nassau....,
Market
St. Nicholas
Shoe and Leather.
Corn Exchange...

Continental .7.....

.

Oriental.....
Marine...

.

Atlantic....
Imp. & Traders...

Park.®

2,380,119
2,708,228

1,632,000
9,716,153

Irving

Commonwealth.

1,363,620

2,346,457 ~
2,77^,606

2,738,961
5.741,600
3,816,783

4.142,358
2,935.162
1,170,191
1 695 678
;1 814 010
5 256,154

14,944,657

21,831

627,398
514,316
441,000
2,715
295,000 '
610,458
19,325
18,465
454,164
498,390

Net

Lega 1

deposits. Tenders.
$8,341,918 $3,528,821
6,674,624 1,974,214
6,095,436 4,303,816
4,775,904 1,741,827
3,158,560 1,143,963
9,898,398 3,013,520

3,745,822

2,860,340
2,442,556

1,017,695
863,258
1,074,063
2,446,031
2,930,5 0
779,120
597,155

2,608,703 ,
5,209,905
3,817,472
1,033,S82
240,738 2,018-565
567,739
105,000 1,588,589
457,121
12,276
5,572
900,040
258,686 '
199,023
163,500 2,855,244 1,310,290
26,228
169,321
882,549
697,718
220,089
10.567 5,461.477 3,382,346
413,315 989,120 7,690,802 ‘ 8,959,706
419,373 4,821,890
9,163,091 6.187,515
65,758 900,060 ~ 4,851,815 2,184,941
46,766
798,697 3,187,649 1,060,926
34,262
482,323 8,247,818 1,411,083
18,667
128,764 1.615,679
511,912
134,673 557,920 4,267,507 1,273,467
181,182 1,882,957
700,296
25,811
15,078
7,165 1,417,418
424,809
90,842
814,196 2,651,309 1,208,028
452,903
64,964
298,491 1,702,418
16,000 196,300 1,326,000
405,000
60,536 1,064,050 6,786,720 8,220,500
21,330 132 459 . 1,395,032
497,631
785,781
128,893
4,520 1,916,600
61,842
504,^00 2,536,391 1,174,891
29,164 : 757,840 1,438,123
922,711
18,700 898,200 3,876,800 1,421,800
25,026 1, 13,320 ‘ 2,744,917
440,000
141,789 650,389 2,828,816
529,000
87,766 213,927 8,673,844 1»198,806
9,582
31,458
193,120
997,831
58,637 266,000 1,069,879
783,400
26,383
92,800
96i,063 , 850,883
63,857 506,190 '- 4,685,776 1,548,849
121,288 1,000,000 20,187,596 8,244,857
,

September 15,1866.]
1,116,672
1,191,528
1,571.930
1,011,011

Bank’g As’n

Mech.

Grocers’
North River
East River........
Manaf. & Merch ts
Fourth National...
Central
• ••
Second National...

1,419,280
18,059,646

1,777

280,500

9,012

uoo

6,146

»

31,370
77.014

945, S05

3,096,114
3,614,770

24,363

417,619

4,194.792

808,528
113,407

41,025
5,500
9,667

797,041
268,533

1,200,820

7,143

Dock

Bull’s Head

$268,941,668

849 730

294,059

253,944

64,000

41,566

1,405,116

Inc. $3,542,061
.Inc. 1,074,310

Loans

Legal Tenders

The

weeks

:
,

July 7 ...$257,534,833
Jnly 14 . 259,133,434
July 21.. 255,965,018
July 28.. 256.612,071

4..
11
18..
25..
Sept. 1Sept. 8..

Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.

with the returns of previous
Legal

CIrculaLoans.

.

256,808,717
258.263,063
261,951,924
265,901,065
265,399,607
268,941,668

Specie.

Deposits. Tenders.

tion.

!... 277,379,660
278.905,675

$280,263,890

281.234,460

282,555,440

286,894.545
287,048,950
288,403,775
.' 289.021,085
289,510,820
291,179,045

of the Bank

29, 1866 :

DEPARTMENT.

£11,015,100
8 984,900

£29,732,115 Government debt
Other securities.

issued

14,732,115

Gold coin and bullion....

£29,732,115

£29,732,115
BANKING

Rest
Public deposits,
Other deposits
Seven day and other

DEPARTMENT.

£14,553.000

Proprietors’ capital

3,815,693

4,137,0 48
18,473,050
603,926

bills.

Aggregate

Gov. Securities.(lncluding
dead weight annuity...
Other securities
Notes

1,099,905

£41,582,717

preceding accounts, compared

The

with those of the previous

week exhibit—
Increase. Decrease

Circulation
Public D posits

£295,292

£725,409

..

290,424

Other Deposits...
Guv. Securities...

BANK

Banks.—The following comparative statement
the average condition of the leading items of the Philadel¬

£10,711,728
23,937,484
5,833 605

Gold and silver coin

£41,582,717

Clearings.

$9,865,266 $27,296,530 $295,799,611 $79,541,633 $511,182,914
12,451,684 27,804,172 207,190,043 75,541,977 637,655,787
10,860,147 27,579,020 213.049.073 80,524.992 59 705, 26
9,701,046 27,249,812 214,582,926 84,705,814 430,324,808
9,448,900 27,311,549 214,156,705 86,235,079 524,226,814
8,424,209 27,528,522 214,232,263 86,861,834 494,810,975
7,545.513 27,796,904 214,310,576 84.800,071 554,655,340
6,884,077 27,9)8,464 218,119,4.50 86,283,483 617,950.320
6,381,600 27.807,834 225,191,282 92,622.808 586,864,052
7,455,910 28,506,288 225,107,991 90,194,254 591,403,135

283.627,605
284,566,673

Banking.—The following is the statement
ISSUE

Notes

Capital. Circulation.

7.. 1,653

14.. 1,654
21.. 1,655
4.. 1,656
Aug. 11.. 1,658
Aug. 18.. 1,656
Aug. 25.1,658
Sept. 1.. 1,653
Sept 8.. 1,659

England for the week ending Aug.

of

$83,291
2,428,554

Deo.
Dec.

Deposits

693,454
Inc.
several items compare as follows

Circulation

$586,864,052 55
591,403.135 94
25,699,433 11
22,347,721 28
previous week are as fol¬

414,921,479

2.. 1,650
9.. 1,650
16.. 1,653
23.. 1.653
30.. 1,653

Foreign
90,194,254

7,455,910 28,506,288

lows :

May 12.. 1,650
May 19.. 1,6)50
May 26.. 1.650
June
June
June
June
June

July
July
July
276,540,510 Aug.

$271,262,165
272.878,895
274,6*53.195

1,650

B’k8.

Date.

Circulation.

Capital.

B’ks.

Date.

May 5.

341,692
2.740.127
2,022,690

13.037

the progress of the banks since
number, capital, and circulation :

May 5, in respect to

1,260,159

Sept. 1, 1866
Sept. 8, 1866
Sept. 1, 1866
ending Sept. 8, 1866
deviations from the returns of the

Specie

8,432,022

3,554,761
4,831,338

3,134,654

Clearings for the week ending
Clearings for the week ending
Balances f <rthe week ending
Balances for the week

The

267 795
360.014

1*72,972

1,093,242
14,122,227
15,514,028
1,043,104

2,832,755
1,620,000
270,000

123,987

425,853
286,293

following comparison shows

The

642,066

1,320,89*2
1,232.818
1,2*3,710

14j03,93l
1,308,315
7,266,233

Ninth National....
First National
Third National....
N. Y. Exchange...
Dry

17,13)

307,771
77,000
12,094

20,642
’

331

CHRONICLE.

THE

Increase. Decras®

£950,674

Other Securities...

.£1,069,800

Bu lion

Rest
Reserve

80,667

1,343,405

LIST.

STOCK

Philadelphia
shows

the last and previousSept. 8. :
week
Sept. 1.

phia Banks for

$14,642,150

$14,642,150
50,095,890

Caoital
Loans

826,345
24,134,918

806.815
24 040,254
41,142,627

Specie

Legal Tenders

Deposits

41,604,903

9,608,410

9,589,574

Circulation

The

5 J,320,008

periods :

Legal Tenders.

Date.

not
Increase
Increase...
Increase...
Increase...

462,376

Increase...

18,346

20,530

94^664

Philadel¬

Specie. Circulation.

Deposits.

Loans.

$20,546,695 $48,892,594 $866,981 $9,431,664 $33,275,788
852,773 9,442,146 37,707,567
20,311,668 49,493,405
21
21,812,504
49,009,316 849,770 9,427,363 37,575,560
28
20,992,376 . 48,935,067
826,096 9,482,473 37.270,884
20,393,826
4
49,6*2,529 825,978 9,516,724 37,244,034
20,060 536
11
49,164,321 835,158 9,543,472 36,639,226
18
19,863,685
48,530,454 811,230 9,566,783 36,942,-411
48,591,763 807,071 9,575,534
25
20.412,323
36,025238
1
24,040,254
50,095,890 806,815 9,589,574 41.162,627
Sep. 8
50,320,063 826,345 9,608,410 41,604,903
24,134.91S
Boston Banks.—The footings of the weekly statement of the

July
July
Ju:y
July
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Aug.
Sep.

7

14

America*
America (Jer.
Atlantic
Atlantic
Bowery

Sept. 10.
$41,900,000
94,878,709

Capital
Loans

Specie

Legal tender notes

Due from other banks
Due to other banks

Deposits
Circulation

(National)

$41,900,000

314,204
21,580,730
12,523,647

22,071,251

16.343,306

89,149,497
24,295,875
356,075

Circulation (State).

Below

we

give the comparative

two months :
Jane

July
fct

41

Aug.

Sept.
*

Sept. 3.

25
16
23
30*
6;
13
20
27
3
10

.....

95,387,808
264,863

12,847,513
16.052,696

39,856,550
24,240,925
344,773

Chemical
Citizens’
City
City (Brooklyn)......

Commonwealth....
Continental
Corn Exchange*
Croton

No returns from the

Dry Dock*

East River

Eighth
Fifth

total

sum

Gallatin

100
30
20
100
25
50

Greenwich*
Grocers’. :

$41,900,000
94,819,253
323,083
21,688,693
11,784,5)2
15,709,456
39,0 8,518

24,262,817
363,405

the last

,

Traders’ Bank.

issued to date is §29 L,179,045.

100
100
50

Hanover

Importers &

Irving

Trad..

50

LeatherManufact’rs.
Long Isl (Brook.)
Manhattan*

Marine

....

...

6,000,000 Jan and July..
600,000 May and Nov..
160,000 Jan and July..
1,500,000 Apr. and Oct..
200,000 Apr and Oct.
300,000 Jan. and July..
1,000,000 Jan. and July..
1,500,000 Jan. and July..
600,000 Jan and July..
600,000 Feb. and Aug..
400,000 Feb. and Ang..
2,050,000 Feb. and Aug..

Mercantile

Merchants’
Merchants’ Exeh...

6
6 125
5
12
6
4
5
6 112
6
6
6

Republic

Nicholas’
Seventh Ward

St.

Second
Shoe & Lea.her

...

Sixth

-

of New York.

Tenth. ..
Third
Tradesmens.
Union

....
,4...

Williamsburg City*

100
100
100
100
100
100
100
100
10C
44
a

60

July.

Nov

.

1,500,000 Jan. and July.
200,000 May and Nov..
2,000,000 May and Nov..
1,000,000 Jan. and July..
1,000,000 Jan. and July..

Aug. ’66
July ’66
Nov. ’65

.

.

.

.

600

•

a

....

•

%

...

•

••*"'

•

• •

132

July ’66
July ’66

6

•

....

150

119

no

6
6
6

•

a •

•

.

6
6
6
6

.

•

•

•

•

6

•.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

a a a

•

•

•

129

•

•

*

113

•

•

•

• T-

.

•

6

••

•

6 190
9
6
5 113*
5 no
•

6

.

•

•

•••

.

a a a

a

a a

•

•

128
100

4

103
125

a a

a •

6
7

160

a •

• •

.5& «C
C

116

•

•

a a

1C6

•

-

a.a

6

—

....

6

119

C
C
C

108

4

8*

.

...«

a • •

•

6 109*

OOOiJan. and July.. July ’66
-

•

114

....

.....7^

.

•

110

115

July ’66
.May.’66

1,000,000 Jan. and July.,
1,500,000 May and Nov..

116

114
1 3

t

Nov. ’65
Nov. ’66

.

•

...

July ’66

.

•

•

•

5
’66....; .A 103

Ang. ’66..

.

•

...

.

.

•

•

.

5 100
6
6
.* 1113s

.

.

.

.

...

6
.6
6

and July..
2,000,000 Feb. and Aug..
1,000,000 Feb. and Ang..

a a

a

....

lM*

Aug. ’66
Aug. ’66
Aug. ’66

.Jul

a a •

•

.

.

...5

and July..

600,000 Jan. and
300,000 May and

•

....

Jan. ’66

.

Phoenix

.

a a a

106*

t 110

.

412,500 Jan.
1,800,000 Jan.

• •

•

...

6
6

.

25
20

• •

•

...

6

July ’66

•

•

Apr. ’66

July..

Peoples’*

•

...

5

Apr. ’66
July ’66
July ’66

••a

•

5

.

Pacific
Park

•

100

July’66

July..

Oriental*

•

•

•

6 106

.

••a

•

Jul. ’66
‘•i
’66

.

Ocean

l

5
10
1C

.

N’orth America.
North River*

L08
L 8

4
5

.

N^nth

18

106

10
3X

.

No wYorkExchange

117

6
6
5
5

.

New York County.

112*

190

6
5

.

Notional
NpW York

190

8

July..

Metropolitan
Nassau*... ■.*•*!
Nassau (Brooklyn)

119

5

July..

Mechanics’
Mechanics’ (Brook.).
Mech. Bank. Asso..
Meehan. & Traders’.

State

4

50
60
30
252,000 Apr. and Oct . Apr. ’66
500,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66.
100
100
400,000 Jan. and July.. July’66
100 1,000,000 -Tan. and July.. July ’66
July ’6)
25 2,000,000 Jan. and
500,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
50
500,000 May and Nov,. May. ’66
50
25
600,000 May and Nov.. May.’66
100 1,000,000 May and Nov.. May.’66
June ’66
50 3,000,000 June and Dec .
50 1,235,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
Ju y ’66
100 4,000,000 Jan. and
’66
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July . July
100
300,000 Jan and July.. Jnly ’66
50 1,500,000 April and Oct.. Apr. ’66
100 3,000,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
100
200,000 April and Oct.. July ’66
100
300,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
July ’66
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July..
July ’66
100 1,000,000 Jan. and
50
400,000 Jan/and July.. July ’66
Ju y ’66.
50 1,000,000 Jan. and
50
300,000 Feb. and Aug.. Aug. ’66
50
422,700 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’66
100 2,000,000 Jan. and Jnly.. July ’66
Julv ’66

....*.

Manufacturers’...
Manufac. & Merch.*.
Market.

by Treasurer Spinner in trust for National Banks
on the 8th of September amounted as follows : As security for cir¬
culating notes, §331,910,700; as security for public deposits, §38,565,000. Total, §370,475,700/




..

Fulton
Far. & Cit.(Wm’bg)

Banks.—The First

The Bonds held

(Brooklyn).

Fourth

National Bank of Fort Dodge,
Iowa, wat authorized to commence business on the 8th of Septem¬
ber, with a capital of §50,000.
The Acting-Comptroller of the Currency, during the last week,
issued to National Banks §1,264,025 in National Currency.
The
National

...

Currency.

First
FirBt

5

..

Commerce

Circulation. .
Loans.
Specie. Tenders. Deposits. National.
State.
$94,3:36,170 $323 335 $23,019,436 $42,537,020 $23,633,003 $507,371'
96,047,000 453,600 21,610,000 40,407,000 24,145,000
413.000
95,995,866 441,689 22,786,7-38 40,9:35,853 24,057,7.35
401,544
9-5,002,698 363,776 22,242,659 39,770.363 23,804,526
355,864
96,672 749 318,779 22,432,317 40,549,379 24,116,795
38o,9SO
202,734
95,771,749 295,241 cl,101,481 89,192,620 24,104,9-17
868,168
94,915,075 833,670 20,817,159 38,619,847 24,290,816
363,405
94,819,253 323,033 21,683,693 39,028,518 24,262,817
344,773
95,387,808 264,863 22,071,251 39,856,550 24,240,925
356,075
94,873,709 314,204 21,580,730 39,149,497 24,295,875
Legal

(Brooklyn).

Chatham

Aug. 27.

totals for each week for

(Brooklyn).

Bid. Ask.

Last Paid.

Periods.

Amount

100 3,000,000 Jan. and July.., July ’66
25
100,(KXi Jan. and July .. July ’66
500,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
100
100 5,000,000 May and Nov... May. ’66
100
300,000 Jan. and July.., July ’66
50
500,000 Jan. and July.., July ’66
100
25',000 Jan. a d July. July ’66
25 1,000,000 Jan and July . July ’66
300,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
60
200,000 Quarterly?.... July ’66
50
25
800,000 Jan. and July . July ’66
100 3,000,000 May and Nov . Muy. ’66
50
200,000 Jan. and July . July ’66
25
450,000 Jan. and July . July ’66
July ’66
100
300,000 Quarterly
25
400,000 Jan. and July.. July '66
100 1,000,000 May and Nov.. May. ’66
50
300,000 Jan. and July.. Ju y ’66
July ’66
100 10,000,000 Jan. and July.
100
750,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
100 2,000,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug.. Aug. ’66
100
200,000
Juy ’66
100
100,000 ..Quarterly
200,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
30
50
350,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
100
250,000 Jan. and July.. Juiy ’66
100
150,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
500,000 May and Nov. . May. ’66
100
Jan. and July., July ’66
100

.

Broadway

given below. A comparison with last week shows
a decrease in loans of §509,099 ; an increase in specie of §19,341 ; a
decrease in legal tender notes of §490.521; a decrease in the amount
due from other banks of §323,871; an increase in the amount
due to other banks of §290,610 ; a decrease in deposits of §707,063 ; an increase in National circulation of §54,950, and an increase
in State circulation of §11,302. The following are the footiugs as

previous statements :

City)

Brooklvn
Bull’s Head*
Butchers & Drovers

Central
Central

g

ojja

American
American Exchange.

Boston banks are

compared with those of the two

Q

National.)

$221,908

the condition of the

following comparison shows

phia Banks at stated

(Marked thus * are

Friday.

Dividend.

Capital.

Companies.

105
•

• •

....

105

190
..

.

119
•

a

••

no
a a a

•

•

140
..

• • >♦

*•••

• ••»

■

.

iv-

/

[September 15,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

332

'■§
SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE.
fSSPRESENTED EY THE LAST SALE
STOCKS

AND

REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY,
Tues.

Satur. Mon.

3KUUKITIK3.

Wed.

Th-jrs.

SECURITIES.

STUCKS AND

t ri.

K>alur

Railroad Storks.
Central of New Jersey
• • •

American Gold Coin

National.
United States 6s, 1867
6s, 1868

130

130

registered.
COujKHt

130

130
—
.12 :% 128
128
111
ill ; 3*

126

Chicago and A1 ton
do

do

3
9

.

preferreu........

}

-

105

3.07
—

45*

132% 136
‘>5% 46

138
46

46%

35% 35% 35% 85% 34% 134%
66% 65% 66%
66% 66
)! 67
5109% 109% 109% 109
108% 109
)
112%
>
86%
85%
115
3
115% U5% 116
—

3
3
3
3

70%

70%

76

76

71%
—

3
3
3

—

72%

71

72%

76

36%
-

J

3121% 122%
3 122
3
3
3

—

122

121%

122
75

122
122

—

‘

**

)

State.
do

Connecticut 6b

3
)

do

3
3

Michigan Central
Michigan So. and N. In

Georgia 6s

Canal Bonds, 1860

do

Registered, I860
6s, coupon, ’79, after 1860-62-65-70.

41

111% 111% 111%
84% 83% 83%

—

88

82%

83%

do

-

—

—

do 1877
do 1879
War Loan
do

—

do

—

do

War Loan
ICO

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....

100

Michigan 6s

7s, War Loan, 1S78
Minnesota 8s
do

Missouri 6s
•
do
6s, (Hannibal and St. Joseph
"do
6s, (Pacific RR.)
New York 7s, 1870
do
6s, 1867-77
do
5s, 1868-76
do
7s, State Bounty Bonds
North Carolina 6s (ex coup ns)
6s, (new)
do
Ohio 68, 1870-75
do 6s, 1881-86
Rhode Island 6s
Tennessee 6s 1868
;
do
6s 1890 (ex coupons)
do
Us. (new)
Virginia 6s, coupon

Municipal.

r?%

•

81

RR.)...

73%
99

99

105%
..

63%
63%

63%
63% | 63%

105% 105%
62%) 62%

70% 71

71

71% 71%

71

70%

70

52

52

52

! 46% 46%' 46% 46%
,152
155

!13S

50

20; 31% 32%
100
100

can

United Srates
Western Union
Western Union,

100
100

31%

52%

52%

14

58%

58%

58%

58%

58%!

58%
219%

100

1001
25

100
100

°

195

105

100

Mining.—Canada Copper
Co ake Iron

5

>

5

Gregory Gold

100
25

Mariposa Gold....
Mariposa preferred
Minnesota Cooper.

Qoarz Hill..
Quicksilver

100
100 28%
5

Batthiand Parmelee

11%
28% 2-% 30%

12

30%

30%

£5
10 »
25

t.

—

25

99%

10

43%

99
92
111

—

1st mortgage

do
do
Cleveland and Toledo,

4t h mortgage

do

88

87%

88% 88

81

101%

-

—

Sinking Fund
Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort.
do

93

95

consolidated
Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage
do
do
3d mortgage, conv..

—

—

—

2d mort

Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868
do 2d mortgage, 1879...,

103%
.00%
98
—

72

Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72
do
Consolidated and Sinking Fund..
do
2d mortgage, 1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869
do
2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885..

71%

72

72%

103

-

3d mortgage, 1S75
do
do
convertible, 1867..’
Illinois Central 7s, 1875
Lackawanna and Western Bonds

106

McGregor Western, 1st mortgage
Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage

Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72
do

Ss, newg 1S82.

do

do

99

2d mortgage, 7s

Mississippi and Missouri, Laud Grants.. !!!!!

Morris an.i Essex,
New York Central
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

93

90

51%
26%

53%
27

53% 51%
27% 28%

96

Toledo and

do

88
,

do

103

2d mort...
3d mort...

do

do

do

2d mortgage...

Interest

-—

102

.

—

91

80%

2d, income.

Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended.

do

—

1876!!
....*”!!

convertible,

7s, 1865-76

Louis, Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort ..
do
do
do
2d, pref....
•

90

61
96

Peninsula, 1st mortgage

do

90

95%

6s, 1883
6s, 1S87
7s, 1876

do
do

99
93

83

Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage
do
do

93 -

93

1st mortgage

7s,

■"

111

Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund

St.

25%

44

—

do

do
do

51

—

.

Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort..

•
5

Copper... 15
100

Rutland Marble...

Saginaw L. S. A M

..

rdo
do
Goshen Line, 1868
!!
Milwaukee and Prairie du ChieD, 1st mort... 1
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage
j **
do
do
Income.
**j]

lOOj

Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust
New York Lite and Tru t
Union Trust
United States Trust

—

44%

Interest.
Extension....'...

do
do
do

do

112

100!

Nicaragua

104% 106
114% 115%

■

-

52

Russian Extension 100J
Steamship.—Atlantic Mail
luo
Pacific vail
Union Navigation
Trans t.— Central American...

31%

32

5-%

100
100

Cary

—

71

3d mortgage, 1883.
4th mortgage, 1880
do 5th mortgage, 1888
Galena and Chicago, extended
2d mortgage
do
do
Great Western, 1st mortgage
do
2d mortgage
do
Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage

52

50
100
50

Canton...V

Montana Gold
•.
New Jersey Consolidated
New Jersey Zinc.

44%

do
do

4%

25
20
50
20

.1

29%

preferred....

Income

do

Delaw are,
do

1001

Williamsburg:.
Improvement.—Boston Water Power
Brunswick City..L

Benton Gold
Consolidated
Gunnell Gold

62

100

‘

29%

Railroad Ronds:

do
do
do
do

i

10

Wyoming Valley
(SkW.»-Bro<)klyn
..J
Ctlzeus (Brooklyn)
j Harlem
Jersey City and Hoboken

Telegraph. — *\ mer

do

Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort

60

100

50
100
100

J

Wilkesbarre

...

do

do

50

Schuylkill
Spring Mountain.|
8pruce Hill..

—

71%

Toledo, Wabash and Western.
71%

71%

100

Hampshire and Balrimore

29% 29

112

50
100
100
100;
100

Lehigh & Susquehanna..

107

260

Chicago, Burlington and Quincj', 8 per cent...
Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage
Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund....

j

—

—

do

Cumberland
Delaware and Hudson

114

*

37%

Buffalo, New' York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877...
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund
do
do
1st mortgage

Ashburton

Manhattan
Metropolitan
New York

29%

do

do

do

US

.

Miscellaneous Shares.
(Joed.—American




St.

6s
5s

—

-

—

63

6s, Improvement Stock
Jersey City 6s, Water Loan
New York 7s

Pennsylvania

—

.100 104% 104% 104% 105
115
‘14% 114
115%

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago.

98%

do

...

—

103% 103% 103% 105% 105% 106%

—

Brooklyn 6s
do
6s, Water Loan
do
6ss Public Park Loan

Central
Consolidation

69% 70

—

Louisiana 6s

■

70

70%

do

,

os,
5s

Kentucky 6s, 1868-72

do
do

128

5

106%; 105% 106
105% 116

California 7s

~

'

Wed.

105

105

5:131%

-jlOS n'08%1

Illinois
do
do
do
do
do
Indiana
do

Tues.

■

linin'

'

Mon.

0

6s, 1868
registered.
6s, 1S81
...coupon.
|1
6s, 1881
registered. 111^,111
.110% 111%.
%
6s, 5-*20s
coupon. HIM| —
do
do
-.108% *108)4
)
preferred x.
6s, 5-20s
registered. j 10s%; 10S%
6s, 5-20s (2d issue)
coupon\lW%\
do
6s, 5.20s
....registered
1
108% 108%; 108% 108% Cleveland and Pittsburg....
6s, 5.208 (3d issue)..... ..coupon, 108# 108
69, 5.20s,
....registered
do
—
6s, Oregon War, 18S1
68,
do.
(1 yearly).
do.
Erie,
5s, 1871
coupon.
104
do i
5s, 1871
registered.
coupon.
5s, 1874
do
do
registered.
5s, 1874
9S
9S
9S%!j
5s, 10-403
coupon 9)
do
98% 1 —6s, 10-403
registered.
6s, Union Pacific R. R.. \cur.).
106
105%. 106
7-30s Treas. Notes
1 stseries. 106 t!06 106
106
2d series. 105%'; 106
3d series. 105%; 105% 106

SEPTEMBER 14.)

80%

81%

m

SECURITIES LIST.

NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL
Amount

Outstanding

denominations.

Princi-)

INTEREST.

i

pal

I——

(Rate.

Due.

Payable.

|

7,022,000 , 5

)
coupon. )

;Jan. &

coupon.

;Jan. &

20,000,000

registered. \
coupon, i !2S2,718,800 j
registered, f

do
1861..
do

Bonds (5-20s)
do
do
do
do

!Jan. & July

registered. \

1858....,

r

8,908,342 6

registered. [

do
I860...-.
do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

9,415,250 ! 6

I

1,016,000

July! 1871 \ |

Uay&Nov'lSSaj:^
May & Nov. 18S»j ,108X1108^

<io

2,472,000
8,000,000
2,073,750,

f

State Bonds large

300,000!

200,000i
447,000'

516,000
3,942,000

5,398,000

1,122,000
345,000
250,000
602,000
13,701,000

7,000,000
3,000,000
431,0->0

535,100
1,650,000
95,000

800,000
909,607
442,961
900.000

800,000

25,566,000
702.000

3,050,000
6,000,000
2,250,000
500,000

7S

77%

78*

81

81%
98

100

do
do

'

.

103%
....

....

•

....

....

•

pleas.
May & Nov. 1S68
Jan. & July 1875

....

.

.

.

•

•

•

«...

•

•

•

,

1878

do

.

.

1868
.1878

Jan. &

7

July

6
6
6
6
6
6
5

)JAJ&O
do
do
do
r

do

4

167,000

5
5

do
do
do
do

4,500,000
9,749,500

5
6

Jan. & July

3.0^0 nnn

6
6

900,000
192,585

1,163,000

....

Pennsylvania—State Bonds
do
State Stock

536,798
631,653

South Carolina—State Stock...

Tennessee—Improvement Bonds

2,183,532

3.691,000

1,650,000
21,888,398
12,972,000

Virginia—Registered Bonds...
do
Coupon Bonds.......

’..

War Fund Bonds...
.

6

1,600,000 6
4,095,309 6
2,400,000 6
679,000 6

2,347,340
Improvement Bonds 2,115,400
Railroad Bonds.
13,911,900

do
do
do
New Bonds „•
Vermont—War Loan Bonds

5

379,866 6

6,168,000
29,209,000
do
Military L’n Bds
3,000,000
Rhode Island—State (War) Bds.
3,889.000




do

102

77%

J.Ap.J.&O 1870
Jan. & July pleas.

'

do
do State Bonds (new).
Ohio—Foreign Loan
do
Foreign Loan
do
Foreign Loan
do
Foreign Loan
do
Foreign Loan
do
Foreign Loan
do
Foreign Loan

\

6
7
6
6
6
5
5
5
5

97%
101

.

92

.

•

105% 05 %
165% 105%
•

North Carolina—State Bonds..

•

do
73 ’83:
do
! 1878
’1886
do
& Nov. ,1S90
Jan. & July! 1867
do
1883
Jan. & J uly ’71’89
do
’72 '87
do
’72 ’85
18(56
do
Jan. & Julv 1874
1869
Jan. & Julv var
Jan. & July '71 ’72

*800*,666
1,200 000

5
5
6
6
6
5

6
6
6
6
6
6
6
6

-j
1866

1877

1872
1873
1874
1875
1877
1866
1868
1871
1874

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
’nti
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
vYo
do
do
do
do

11883
Jan. & July 1868

216,000

500,000

loo

Newport, R. I.—City Bonds
New Haven, Cf.—City Bonds..
New York City—Water Stock..

100
97%

•

•

•

•

•

.

4.

do
do
do

•

.

do

....

LAN

do

CrotonW’r S’k
W’r S’k of ’49
W’r S’k of ’54
Bu. S’k No, 3.
Fire Indetn. S.
Central-P’k S.

1,878,900

5
5
5
5

CeutrafT’k S.

3,066,071

Central P’kS.

C.P.Imp. F. S.
C.P.Inip. F. S
Real Estate B.
Croton W’r S.
Fl.D’t. F’d. S.
Pb.B.Sk. No. 3

190,000
402,768
399,300

275,000
2,088,200

1,966,000

150,000
500,000
154,000

Pub. Ed n. S’k.

Tomp.M'ket S

102.000

Union Def. L.
Vol. B’nty L’n

Vol.Fam.AidL
Vol.Fam’.AidL
—C’t House S*k
Sol.Sub.B.R.B

Sol.S.&Rf.B.B

Sol.B’ntyFd.B
Riot Dani.R.B

91

62%

895,570
490,000

....

....

.

.

.

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

....

•

•

•

....

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

«...

....

....

....

•

•

...

•

....

....

•

....

....

.

..

.

.

.

.

....1

do

<\&Co’tvB.

,

985,326!
1,500,000j

600,000; 6
500,000! 6
300,000 5
200.000! 5
150,000 7

260,000 6

1,496,100; 6

446,800! 6
'’.1,464,000! 6

523.000, 6
6

254,000 6
484,000

6

239,000 6
163,000 6
457,000 6

429,900
285,000

6
6

1,352,600

10

178,500 10
829,000: 6

1,133,500; 6

300,000: 7
960,000; 7

1.000.000; 7

338,075%.

96

94

var,

100

100*

do
do
do

1864

1867
1865
*66 ’73

’75-’89

Jan. & Jnly
do
do
do
Jan. & July
do

1,8(H),000'

1U0

’65’ 69

’65 ’81

do
do
do
do

2,232,800
7,898,717
1,009,700

100*

var

May & Nov.

552.700
739,222

97

’67 ’76
1873

May &Nov.

1,442,100

425,000

97

May &Nov. 1887
Jan. & July
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
r’.M- A.&N; 1870
1880
CIO
1890
do
1690
do
’75 ’79
do
1875
do
’70 ’73
do
Feb. & A*ng. l868
F. M.A.&N.! 1898
do
1887
1898
do«,
do
1887
do
1S76
do
1873
do
1883
do
1878
1866
do
do
do

4,996,000

-

92%
91%

var.

do

949.700

93
63

....

6
6
5
5
5
6
6
6

1,400,000!
2,000,000,

Railroad Bonds.
Me.—City Bonds
Railroad Bonds,

....

6
6
6

1.000,000! 6
2,500,000 5

CityBds,new
City Bds,old
CityBds,new
Pa.—City Bonds

....

6

600,000 6

1,800,000
2,748,000

....

....

Jan. & July!’67 ’68
1’77 ’88
do

900,000 5
100,000 6
483,900 5

Docks&SlipsS

....

,

200,000 6
3,000.200 5
5

Railroad B’ds
do
do
City Loan....
62
1900
63%
do
Rochester, N. Y.- -City Bonds...
do
I860
do
City Bonds...
1865
do
Railroad
do
1868
do
Sacramento, Cal.- -City Bonds...
1870
do
County B’ds
do
1875
do
St. Louis, Mo.—Municipal
1881
do
do
Real Estate
1886
do
do
Sewerage
96
’68-’71
May & Nov.
do
Improvement,.
96
var.
Various.
do
Water
102
var.
do
'* Harbor . w
do
Feb. & An g. 1871
do
Wharves
Jan. & July; 71 ’94
Pacific RR
do
Jan. & Julv ’68 ’90
do
O. & M. RR
Apr. & Oct. 1868
do
Iron Mt. RR
1868
do
San Francisco, Cal.—City Bonds,
72
73
Jan. & July long
do
City Fire B.
71
71%
do
do
City Bonds
Jnn. & Dec. ’71 *78
do
C.&Co’tyB.
Jan. & July;’84 ’95
do
C.&Co’tyB.
69% 70
do
i’86'95
do
C.&Co’tyB.
40
!....
do
var.

4

60,000 6
150,000 5

CrotonW’rS’k

96

July

Various,
do

7'

2,147,000

Water Stock

....

....

6
7
7

219,000 6
100,000 7
425,000 5 -

do
City Bonds
New Bedford, Mass.—City Bds.
New London, Ct.—City Bonds...

do

1,750,000

700,000

’68 ’74

Itsl

101%

6
6

911,500

Milwaukee, Wis.—City, re-adj’d
Newark, N. J.—City Bonds

KX)

1890

„

250,000

1,189,780

..

City Bonds...

do

*

6
6
10
8

..

00%
99% 100

1879
1890
1871
June &Dec. ’69 ’79
Apr. & Oct. 1865
Jan. & July 1871
Various.' '65 ’72
Jan. & July ’75’77
Various.' '65 ’SO
Feb. & Aug 1882
Jan. & July 1876
June &Dec. 1883
*65 ’81
Various,
'65 ’75
do
Jan. & July ’77’83

6

122,000
118,000
650,000

100
100

1888
1895

do
do
do
do

6

125,000
1530,000
500,000
375,000

City Bonds....

Marysville, Cal.—City Bonds

Apr. & Oct.
Jan. &

650,000 7
319,457 8
400,000 7

Ky.—City Bonds
Water Bonds

do

20,000 8
256,368 7
50,000 6

City Bonds,
Water Bds.

do
do

993

May & Nov. 1880
do
1894
Jan. & July ’71 ’74
do
j’75’76

1,150,004

731,000

do
do
Louisville,
do
do

9S

-j
1870

Various.

2,450,000
1,088,000

do
do
do
do
Renewal Loan
do
War Loan
do
War Bounty Loan....
Minnesota—State Bonds
Missouri—State Bonds
State Bonds for RR...
do
State Bonds (Pac. RR)
do
do
State Bonds (H,&St.J)
do
Revenue Bonds.......
New Hampshire—State Bonds...
do
War Fund Bds
New Jersey—State Scrip
' War Loan Bonds..
do
New York'I
do
do
do
General Fund
‘
do
do
do
do
do
Bounty ds “ up’na
co
“
do
regist’d
do
do
do
do
Canal Bonds.
do
do
do
do
do
do

95

6
7
6
6
6
7
7
7

......

1

var.

Quarterly

220,000

—

•- $rew Bonds
Wraooiff m—State Bonds

Quarterly
Quarterly

6,429,000

....

97*

Jan. &

8,171,9H2
3,192,763
1,727,000
672,0 0

-

..

3GO,000!
913,0001
1,030,000

do
Sewerage Bonds.
Detroit, Mich.—City Bonds
'do
City-Bonds
do
City Bonds
do
Water Bonds..,
Dubuque, Io.—City Bonds
Railroad
do
Hartford, Ct.—City Bonds......
do
Park Bonds
do
Railroad Bonds..
do
Water Bonds....
Jersey City, N. J.—City Bonds,

Mar.&Sept. ’66 ’67
July ’80 ’89

532,000
4,800,000

....

^

July!’66

3,204,000 6

State Bonds.coupon.
Massachusetts—State Scrip —
do ....
do
do
do
War Loans
do
State Scrip
do
do
do
do
War Loan

Domestic Loan Bonds

do
1877
Jan. & July ’76 ’78
Jan. &
’73
’68’72
do
detn.
67 .69

7
7
5

7

do
Water Bonds....
Cleveland, O—City Bonds
do
Water Bonds....

1870
’60 *65j 98%
’69 ’70
’76 ’77
1879
1879
86
18CG
1866
1868'

236,000
2,058,173! 2%
1,225,500; b May & No^
200,000: 7 Jan. & July11878

O.—Municipal

6
_

571,000; 7

Bonds

97

& July
do
do
do
1897
do
’65 ’79
’65 ’82
Apr. & Oct. 1881
Jan. & July 1876
’79 ’87
do

oan.

216,000! 6
299,000. 7

Water Bonds

Cincinnati,

ICO

150.000

City Bonds

Sewerage Bonds

5

634,200 6
1,281,000 6
121,5401 6

Municipal Bonds

do
do
do

’05 ’82
’65’74
’78 ’79
*65 ’85
’67 ’77
’72’73
’70 ’78
’65’71
*65 ’95
1869
’81 ’97

1,949,711 4%

5,55Q,ii00

lS90-j'

M.J.S&&D. 1890

4
5
6

N.Y.—Municipal Bonds

Chicago, Ill.—City

J., A., J. &0.

583,205
6,580,416
1,265,610
993.000

83%

1870

July 1S73

May & Nov 1875
Jan. & July 1886

740,000

197,700

Pub. Park L’n.
Water Loan...
Pros. Park L'n

do

1870

do
Jan. &

6
6

.... ....

Improved St’k

do
do

105%ilG6

J.,A.,J.&0.

554.0001 6

Railroad Debt..«.

do

105.% 106

July ’72 ’92
July 1880 110
do
1872
& July: 1870

do
do
do
do
do
do
Jan. & July
do

1,778.6771 6
241,000 ! 6
1,157,700' 6

,

do

do

195%; 106

do

Jan.

2,371,725

Maryland—State Bonds
do
State Bds .coupon. {
do
StateBds inscribed f

flfrdo

Me.—City Debt

do

r

1,758,406! 6
1,^6,570

War Loan

do

do

f

Boston, Mass.—City Bonds
do
City Bonds
1*98% 108%
do
City Bonds
108
do
Water Loan Stg.
i 93% 98%
Water Loan
do
98%
Brooklyn, N.Y.—City Bonds—

Jan. &
Jan. &

1,288,887 ; 6

do
do
do
do
do
do
War Loan Bonds

Michigan—$2,000,000 Loan

)

525,000

Indiana—State Bonds
do
do
do
do
War Loan Bonds
lew a—State Certificates
War Loan Bonds
do
Kansas—State Bonds
Kentucky—State Bonds
do
State Bonds..
Louisiana—State Bonds (RK)—
State Bonds (RR)....
do
do
State Bonds for B’ks,
Maine—State Bonds

,

B. & O. RR..
Park

var
1913

1,000,00b; 6
5,000,000 J 6

B.&O.R.coup )

'

Connecticut—War Bonds
Georgia—State Bonds
do
do
do
Illinois—Canal Bonds
do
do
do Registered
do
Coupon Bonds

do

Water Loan...
York&Cum.R.

Bangor,

May & Nov 1877
Jan. & July 1876
do
il876
’72 ’80
do
{

2,109,000
648,OCu
688,000

(Sterling)
do
do
do
CALiPORNiA-St ite Bonds
i

do
do
do
do

N.W.Virg.RR.

Buffalo,

Securities.
Alabama—-State Bonds..
State

do

...

!l0S%

do

600,000! 4
4.963,000; 5
820,000 , 6
1,500,000 6
3,500,000 ; 6

98

1879

,

6

Miscellaneous.

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do

Jan. & Julv

300,000! 6

Baltimore, Md.—Improvement.

1881 *105

.j Jnly

of 1862... coupon. )
do .registered. |

do
do

...

••

1864—coupon. ) 1773,422,800
do .registered. J
do
1865 ...coupon. ( 127,549,150
May & Nov. 1885 i
do
do .registered, j
(10-40s) 1864 ...coupon. | 171,069,350
Mar.&Sept. 1904 J
do
do .registered, f
Jan. & July; 1S05
8,202,000
Union Pacific RR. 3onds of 1865 .
7.30 Feb. & Aug.{1867
Treasury Notes (1st series)
:769,518,900 7.30 Jun. & Dec.; 1868
do
do
(2d series)
7.30 Jan. & Julyj 1868
do
do
(3d series)

do

!

July|1874-|

*1 Jan. & July 1881

do

do
do
do
do
do

128

128
128

1863-j

Asked

Jan. & July ’65 ’69
do
’70 ’82

$225,000 6
&50,000 6

...

do
Water Loan
do
Alb. Nor. RR...
Alleghany City, Pa.—City Bds.
do.
RR. Bds.
do

It 30# (131

July;1867

Jan. &

Albany, N. Y.—City Scrip

Due

Payable.

=Iatex

Municipal Securities

|145%

Gold Coin
National Securities.
Bonds of 1847
registered.
do
1848....,
coupon. f

FRIDAY.

pal

Outstanding.

DENOMINATIONS.

Asteed

Bid

Princi

INTEREST.

Amount

FRIDAY.

|

American

-

383

THE CHRONICLE.

September 15, 1866.]

’73-176
’80-’81
’83 ’90
’77-'82
’65 ’82
’65 ’93
’65 ’99

Jan. & July!lS76
do '
11893
do

’65 ’82

|'65 ’82
July;'65 ’76

Jan. &
88- 98
Jan. & July "
1884
do
Jan. & Jnly ’65 ’83
’65 *90
do
’79 ’88
do
’71 ’87
do
’7i ’as
do
I’65 ’86
do
’67 ’81
io
’71 ’73
do
’72 ’74
do 5
’74 ’77
do '
May & Nov. 1871
Jan. & July 1866
do
1875
do
1888
do
’77 ’78

April & Oct. ;1SS3
Jan. & July 1SS4
various

99%

var.
1913

Various. ’66 ’83
Apr. & Oct. ’68 ’71
Mar.&Sept. 1885

Various.

96%

]

96
%

THE

334

[September 15, 1866.

CHRONICLE.

Articles from New York.

Exports of Leading

Commercial ®imco.

©I)c

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•

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~

55

Friday

s

«

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tH

!fi

COMMERCIAL EPITOME.
Night,

g

**

a

|

being done in this city. Goods
are going freely into consumption ; but, on the whole, protits
are small, and not likely to simulate efforts to extend business.
The prevailing opinion is that, in view of the very favorable
exhibit which is being made of the state of the federal finances,
the premium on gold is too high ; and is liable to decline ten
or twenty per cent, before the close of the business season.
Commission houses are therefore verv unwilling to make advances on domestic produce, and the new crops move slowly.

2

targe trade now

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eciooo^cios »^©ao

-oop*-.

398,30

c<ecao^r«©t-'©»o'V4Q''©5e«rodi-©‘ * nccV
8

00

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2

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cj

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; ©, J

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entertained by the
still threaten, and they

•

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•

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improved from the prices current last week.
Rather more uncertainty is felt respecting the supply for the j
coming year, and spinners have been liberal buyers.
In Breadstuff* we note a large advance in Flour and Wheat,
on a market nearly bare of the leading descriptions, and a
strong demand. But a portion of the advance was lost at
close. Corn has been active, and closed firmer, with some
speculative feeling. There are apprehensions of danger
Cotton has

—

!

the
from

essential change, but with
speculative confidence. Pork has an -upward tendency
at the close.
English box meats have also advanced. Lard
and pickled meats have declined.
In other Provisions there has been no new feature, except a
slight English demand for Butter at 15@16c,. gold.
Coffees have been inactive all the week; but to-day some
5,000 bags Rio being taken, showed, as far as transpired, full
prices; one cargo being taken at 13f, gold, in bond. Sugars
have met with a fair inquiry, but the market is wreak ; about
3,000 tons have been taken this wTeek by refiners and the
trade. Molasses has been dull, but at a decline of 2a3c. per
gallon; about 1,300 hhds. changed hands to-day. Rice, Teas
and Spices have been quiet.
Naval Stores have been irregular. Spirits Turpentine,
under a cessation of the demand, has declined. But in Rosin,
especially the better grades, there has been a large move¬
ment, part for export; about 8,000 bbls. low and medium
No. 1 being sold at $5 a $6 75 per 280 lbs.
Other Naval

a

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prefer to wait.

Provisions have

—

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a

Besides, extreme views as to prices are
farmers and planters, dangers to crops

frost.

e»©©©oo©©p*e«t,*oOTHaoio©aot—*t . © *h ■

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S «35S{as®s's'ia:sfsr

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There is a

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Sept. 14.

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t*

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been without

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abatement

of prices.

demand for Leather having
light, however, and there

* $
S

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Foreign Dried.
drooping.

Fruits'are generally better for
Fish are in increased supply and
Tallowr has advanced on the English
Metals arc without further advance,
rather quiet.
East India Goods are firm, but
■week are unimportant, except Gunny

-

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w

:

.

no

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Stores have been quiet.
Oils have been dull and heavy.
Hides have become quiet, the
fallen off. Stocks of Hides are
is

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•

:

p*cop$io iQ

• ■<*»

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8

advices.
and have become

transactions of the past
Bags to arrive, at 18c.,

Linseed at $2 55, gold, in bond, per bush.,
to arrive.
Building materials of all kinds are firm and active.
Hops have not as yet reached any settled state.
Whiskey is quiet and firm.
Wool has somewhat improved for Domestic. Foreign
Wools have become quite saleable, at prices that leave a
margin for profit. Our manufacturers are increasing their

ic oo

.©t-

t-M
t- 00

•

•

•

•

•

•

©

•

There have been increased ship¬
ments of Corn to Great Britain, but the quantity is still
small as compared with last summer’s shipments. Cotton
and Naval Stores have been shipped more freely; but, of
the former, there is less going toward the close. There have
been liberal shipments of Petroleum to the Continent.
The following table shows the exports of leading articles
of commerce 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 for
the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount in
are

•




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Chronicle from that here given :

■

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not active.

the last number of the

’r**o$'*

CO

gold, and Calcutta

operations.
Freights

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15,1866.]

September

Pork unaltered. Bacon rather dearer;
mor
better country demand have
there is a good inquiry. Cheese

foreign imports of certain leading
for the week ending Sep. 1, since Jan
corresponding period in 1865 : ♦
not otherwise specified.] Same
Since
For
Same
Since

table shows the

following

The

Sept—Beef— With reducing stocks pricf g are steady.
the shipments to the United States and
imparted
• confidence to h -iders. For shoulders
2s. lower, with le^s doing. Lard.—The im¬
provement noted fast week has not continued, and the business has been con¬
fined to small retail parcel> of American at 59s. to 60s.
Petroleum.—At the re¬
duced prices, buyers have taken 3,0»k> barrels refined, at Is. 9#d to Is. 10Md.;
nd
holders ask Is lid. per gall-*n.
Quer. Bark.—20 hbda. Philadelphia
have changed hands at 6s. 6d. to 6s. 9d. Nava Stores.- -Common rosin is scarce
Liverpool. 1st

Leading Articles.

Imports of

articles of commerce at this port
1, 1866, and for the
[The quantity is given in packages when
For
the

Buttons

Cotton, bales.
Drugs, &c.

•

•

•

.

3,304

499,706

27,184

*

10

p’wd’rs

Brimst, tns.

1S852
13,092

....

...

9,382

192
29
84
61
111
713

crude
Gum, Arabic

Gums,

Indigo

Madder.
Oils, ess ...
Oil, Olive...

704 Sugar,bxs&bg
201 Tea
2,665 Tobacco

16,019

....

8.292
569

cloth

.

Hair

bales..

Hemp,

27,497

8,966

3,243 Fruits,

3,429

3,759

86,112

44,238

501

1,800
7,999
16,348

858

34

618

109
60
65
414

Bristles......

Hides.dres’d
India rubber..
Ivory.

&c.

20
26

8,342
1,988
78

Molasses
Metals, &c.

86,783
327,821
49,247

32,548

&c.

5,486

417.279
283,982

5,152

666,437

Raisins

Hides,undrsd. 83.689

11,729

Cassia
Ginger

176,086
291,195
760,534

554,161

128,543

76,655

43,184

Pepper
—

15,289

159,905
131,947

2,715

Saltpetre
59,741 Woods.
Fustic
125,557
Logwood
1,760 Mahogany

338.352

4,697.402 3,005,040
575,827 861,013

75,701

2,088

22.152

40,96

130,889

108,42
185,51

103,430

Week, aiii
The receipts of domestic produce for the week ending Sept. 14, since
Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1865, have been as follows;
[Of the items left blank in 1865 no record was made.]
Since
Same
Same

Receipts of

for tlie
1.

Domestic Prodace

January

Since
Jan. 1.

This

week.

Ashes, pkgs.

This
week.

time’65

Tar.

Breadstuff's—
Flour, bbls..

Pitch
Oil cake, pkgs

59,7391,578,005 2,088,935
81,7511,573,155 5 022,870
Oats....272,4145,196,5366,053,295 Oil, lard
Com
895,42315,451.687 6,837,630, Oil, Petroleum
5,319 430.903 230,5401Peanuts, bags.
Rye
[Provisions—
3,426 383,926

Wheat, bush.

272,296

615
51

89,277
2,201

1,914

The receipts

terdam,

Exported this week to

0. 8,146
V.... Total.
...
2, 21
Mobile
3,035
8,035
692
Galveston
230
922
Total this week.. 11,041
19
262
230 14,324
2,248
524
Below, we give our table of the movement of Cotton at all
Havre. Bord’x. & 524
Rot.
289
...
262
1,959
...

Glas.

Liv

Exported from

19

7,314

New York
New Orleans

..

ports since Sept. 1, showing at
exports, stocks, &c.:
and Exports

mentioned.

Stocks at Dates

EXPORTED SINCE

'

SINCE

France! Other

Great

1.

SEPT.

—

9,983

302,111

—,

•

•

•

640

•

•

•

3,035

....

480
i

•

•

•

•

•

.

....

.

•

•

•

.

.

«

25,847

794

•

•

6 94

•

•

•

2,461 99.387

1,782

5,105
5,205
7,605
66,000
1,254

... *
.

•

.

....

.

....

•

....

....

1,440

PORTS.

2,221
3,035

2,221

•

.

....

289
•

•

•

•

8,146

524
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

,#i

,

•

•

•

....

•

•

•

•

964

.

■

760

.

•

STOCK.

NORTH.

Total.

•

.

#

•

SHIP

jfor’gn.

Britain

1,108

Orleans,‘Sept. 7..
Mobile, Sept. 7
Charleston, Sept. 7..
Savannah,. Sept. 7..
Texas, Sept. 1
New York, Sept. 14*
N.

SEPT. 1 TO—

M’NT8 TO

rec’d
PORTS.

1, and

(bales) since Sept.

of Cotton

7,666

4,945
3,820
31,267 695,391 337,310
50
9,442

glance the total receipts,

a

the

72,019

65

>

B’. IP.

time’65

71 641

203 to Rot¬

Bremen, 50 to Hamburg,
and 230 to Vera Cruz, as follows:

Bordeaux, 271 to

to

422,750
Butter, pkgs.
637
7,333
500
Barley
14,641 380,980 373,385
Cheese
94,180
142
93,659
Grass seed... 3,436 115,718
Florida,
....
Cut meats...
21.091
Flaxseed.... 10,517
2,056 125,690
964
Eggs
806
42,165
69
93,875 190,985 N. Carolina, Sept. 14
Beans
Pork
760
152,865
78,020 Virginia, Sept. 14.
46,616
125
Peas
Beef, pkgs. ..
89,170 Other
81,894
140
C. meal,bbls. 5.388 172,559 +236,110
Lard, pkgs...
p’ts, Sept. 12.
6,066
C. meal.bags. 2,900 230,988
Lard, kegs...
2,094
10,368
Buckwheat &
6,029
Total
Rice, pkgs
75.322
246
66,044
B.W. flour, bg
Starch
437,605 389^260
*
6.939
69
By Railroad, Canal and River. +
Cotton, bales .. 6,070
Stearine
50
15,436
2,833
Copper, bbls...
Spelter, slabs..
6,028
The market throughout
Copper, plates.
Sugar, hhds &
4i6
7,349
2,883
Drledfrait,pkgs
bbls
5,721
12
4.410
10,850 active.
217
Confidence
Grease, pkgs...
Tallow, pkgs..
5
2,328
122,567
Hemp, bales...
Tobacco, pkgs. 3,'40
3,803 277,466
the
47,643
14,650 Tobacco, nhas. 2,481
4,464
283
56,855 49.905
Hops, bales.^...
Whiskey, bbls. 1,040
64,4501,584,7501,540,100 Wool, bales.... 2,497 102,809 79,690
478
6,513
Dressed Hogs,
Malt.

*

Jan.l.

10,991

Rosin

13,4*25

4,113

63

P. M.

11,041

4,0S0
124,145 3,030,186 1 ,766,719
4,511 595,581 353,643

Nuts

411
555

4,261

Cutlery

139

Oranges

2,052

175,849
102,363

Watches....

Linseed

Friday, Sept. 14,

,

6,827

3.587

2,852 Rice
19,400 Spices, «fcc.

565
804

Jewelry

14,391

COTTON.

415.414
17.856

11,291

Lemons

2,198
1,953

17,823

....

Hides, &c.

Jewelry,

8,338 Corks
19,892Fancy goods..
9,420 F.sh

27,504

177
148

and medium in good request;

and much wanted,
15s. per cwt.

of Cotton at all the ports the past week have
55,279 reached 4,840 bales, against 6,103 bales the previous week.
5,579
1,643 Wines
39,368
21,660 Wool, bales
The exports for this week are 14,324 bales, of which
472 Articles reported by value.
43,268 Cigars
3,154 $1,154,380 $4S9.883 bales were to Liverpool, 19 to Glasgow, 2,248 to Havre, 262
120.951 106,966

84.161

Soda, bi-carb 6,648
Soda, sal.... 1,970
SS9
Soda, ash...

242,399
278,754

317.406
625.641

4,429

4,217 Wines, &c.
3,122 Champ, bkts

103,307

Flax
Furs
Gunny

826,019

447

2,213jWaste

2,780

2,564
7,306

17

Opium

2,827

2^2

hhds,
7,839 Sugar,
1,531 tes & bbls.. 4,744

746
921

10
5

Cochineal...
Gambier....

2,027
13,977 Rags

46.117

808

Bark, Perav

Cr Tartar

10,684
547,811
1,900

242

4,641

9,616

but fine sells slowly at 12s. to
128.586
Quotations for Provisions.—Beef—Indian mess, 301 lbs., 105s to 115s.;
Iron.RRb’rs 1,915 202.850
102,429 pr me mess do 102s 6d to 107s. 6 *. Pork.—Prime mess, ’ er bbl. 200 lbs., 77s.
298,122
Lead, pigs.. 11,900
fid. to 90s.
Bacon.—Shorr mid rib in. per 112 lbs.. 48s. to 50s.; long do do 46s.
7,257.691
Spelter, lbs.
54,547 to 47s.; Cumberland cut 40*. to 46s; Hams in salt 46s. to 52s.; shonlders 85s. to
132.938
Steel
3,928
390,244 37s. Lard.—Good refined, per 112 lbs, 55s. to 59s; flue to choice 59s. to 60s.
Tin, bxs
32,9:44 558.571
Cheese.—Middling to fine, per 112 lbs., 36s. to 68s.
Tin slabs,lbs 37,320 4,792,255 2,421,920
24,585
34,196

200,379
*

time
1865.

361

Hardware...

2,157

4.548
343,790

8,927

Coal, tons —
Cocoa, bags...
Coffee, bags ..

Blea

1866.

now

Jan. 1,
1806.

the
week

time
1865.

Jan. 1,

week.
183

335

CHRONICLE.

THE

....

....

—

....

....

....

....

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

• •

7,353 250,358

13,402

Estimated.
the past week has been strong and
in the coming crop is not so strong on

•

•

524

2,510

...

+40,000

•

*

....

•

States, and the
that quarter, have
In addition to this, the activity in cot¬
had much influence.
81,769
hhds
11,156
A...
rough,
goods, and more reliance upon the stability of prices,
trp,bbl
have brought spinners into the market very freely. Some
Spirits turp.
little speculative demand has also been developed, and since
barley malt.
+ Including bags reduced to barrels.
Wednesday, with an improvement in sterling exchange, the
BOSTON, PHILADELPHIA, AND BALTIMORE.
following table shows the exports from the above ports, of some export movement has been resumed with considerable free¬
leading articles of commerce for the month of June, and from Jan. dom. The advance is fully one cent per pound, and more
Sept. 1, 1866 :
the higher grades, which are relatively scarce. The sales,
(Coal oil and kerosene are included under petroleum.)
,—Philadelphia.—* ,— Baltimore—, including the Government offering at auction, amount to
Jan. 1 to
Jan. 1 to
Sept. 1.
Ang.
Sept. 1. Aug. Sept. 1. 17,000 bales, closing quiet under the decline in gold, but
1,470
10,899 *203.746 1,235,904 *3,599
bbls
20,657
•

•

•

•

higher estimates. The rain in the Atlantic
persistent adverse tone of the letters from

....

Molasses,
& bbls
Naval Stores—
Crude

95

.

*

No

...

32,065
39,600

1,084
3,044

Rice,
bush
23.079

ton

11,068

Including

EXPORT8 FROM

The

1 to

on

Boston.

,

,

Jan. 1 to

Aug.

Bread,
Breadstuff's—
Flour, bbls
Corn meal, bbls

20,619
2,907

Wheat, bush

3,652
5,665
687

Cora, bush
Candles, bxs
Cotton, bales
Naval stores—

Turpentine, bbls
Spts

turpentine, bbls

Rosin, bbls
Tar, bbls

*

..

159

544
42

864
183,253

Oilcake, bags
Petroleum, galls
Provisions—
Pork, bbls
Beef, bbls

1,932
842
Butter, tubs, &c....
332
Cheese, bxs, &c
391
Lard, kegs & bbls...
772
32
Tallow, bMs
Tobacco, pkgs
....
1,853
..

Tobacco mfd,

lbs

Total val of exports$l,848,258




*

Pounds

126,817
24,328
478
21.734
36,311
9,338
71
525
7,350
1,435
27,311
1,062,346
15,193
6,219
4,502
3,182
6.557
3,678
7,305
16,020,791

68,465 16,690
22,995 3,717
12,871
713,690 8,449
384,850 *98,980
501,597 ' t -206
....
33
375
....
23
19
4,263
853
1,165
451
36
*440,706 5,546,467
.
8,601,410 15,216,773 175,560
146
2,334 1,120
154
611
155
*6,184 60,202 *11,781
* 954
3,435 13,977
*202,657 1,315,734 *174,435
*44,907 2,759,925
20
*49,527 173,515 5,259
22,386
794
10,446
1,789
....
42,700
*34,000
*11,690

not reported

109,614
19,105
788,481
421,844
10,228
....
84
8,029

43
273,000a
1,019,73
5,522
1,049
77,769
51,363
1,168,180
212
28,473
38,702
$935,699 $7,566,886

quite firm :

Upland.
Upland.

Ordinary
Good Ordinary
Low Middling

Middling

$ 5)

;

Good Middime

Exports of Cotton from
amounted to 8,146 bales as

25
27
31

33*
86

Florida.
Florida.
25
27
31
34
37

N. Orleans
Mobile. & Texas

Mobile
25

35*

34*

40

88

New York the past
follows :

week have

City of New York, 627; Pennsylvania,
2 291; Great Western, 505; Aleppe,
Total bales.
Hibernia, 19. Total bales
To Havre per steamer: Napoleon HI., 289.
Total bales
To Bremen per steamer: America 271. Total bales
To
amburg per steamer: Allemannia 50. Total buleTo Rotterdam per brig: Ilarik Fleischeo. Total bales

Liverpool per steamers:
Persia, 987; Manhattan,
Per ship: St. Marie, 61.
To Glasgow per steamer;

To

’“25
29
88

28
32

1,695;
1,208.•• 7,814
19
;.

•

from

of Cotton
last four

give our table showing the exports
New York, and their direction for each of the

Below we

289
271
50
208

THE CHRONICLE.

336

[September 15,1866.-

of freight to Liverpool
the close of each week :

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.

rates

Cxporis of Cotton (bales) from New Work since Sept. 1,1866

July

weeks ;

t

Total

[

EXTORTED to

Sent.

to

11.

date.

Date.

;;;;

Other British Ports

Total to Gt. Britain..
Havre
Other French

....

7 314
19

7,333

....

....

....

7,314

13

7,333

....

Total French

2S9

289

Bremen and Hanover

....

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar

..

...

....

....

524

Spain, etc

|

524

1
...

....

The Growing Crop.—Our advices this week

Complaints of the

“

are

6,600

less favor,

the drought, the rain and the
quarter, but we have reason to be¬

worm,

rust, are heard from evert’
lieve that the statements of the damage being done

are exag-

gerated. The worm has certainly not worked any great in¬
jury as yet. The rain, however, if it should continue much
longer,- following as it does the long drought, would naturally
cause the cotton to sited, and be
productive of rust or rot.
Such injury, in fact, is already claimed to have visited many
portions of the South, and some newspapers report the cotton
mined in their districts—meaning, probably, (for such are our
best advices) that the picking had been interfered with and
the plant slightly injured, and could be destroyed if the rain
continued long enough.
On the other hand, a speedy return
of clear weather would leave little but benefit
the

as

the effects oi

In the article in the last number of the Chronicle

(page 291) in which

estimate of the coming cot¬
ton crop there was an evident misprint in the brat figure of
the statement giving the yields of Texas and Alabama for
1860.
It was printed for Texas 631,463 bales, and for Ala¬
we gave an

bama 889,955

bales, whereas we wrote 431,463 for Texas, and
989,955 for Alabama.
Receipts of Cotton at this market for the week, and since

September 1:
From
New Orleans
Texas
Savannah
Mobile
Florida

.

.

.

.

.

This
week.
Bales.
338
810

1,281
1,853
110

Since

This
week.

Sept. 1.
Bales.

2,424
943

From
South Carolina
North Carolina

619

3,651

Per Railroad

Foreign

Total for the week.
Total since Sept. 1.

1.465

113
365
582

Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.

'592

Since
Sept. 1.

Bales. Bales.

2.483

'964

....

771
784
37
686

.

1,263

9,173

20@21 X
20@21 X

To New
York.t
@9-16 1 ©—
@9-16 1 @@916 1 @—
©9-16 1 @1 @@—
.

@—

1
1

20©21 X

8,674
7,605

Price

mi
© %

gold.
147©...
145@146

145©

—

143@144

143@143X
143@144

@-

—

145@147

@—

143@146 ’
143@146

—

+ Per steamer.

Below

series of weeks

a

we

give the receipts, shipments, prices,

:

Shipm’s.

Stock.

2,198
2,146
4,299

12,374
12,013
10,800

673

1,909

3,279
1,433

11,270
9,900
11,096

1,785
2,086
1,143

832
639
51

3
.

....

...

844

1,631
2,’57
2,377

1,782

—

30
31
32
32

@32
@32
@@-

@32X

32X@—
30 @—
31 @—
29 @30
30 @31

9,349

1,410

Price Mid.

10,309

1,197
1,172

Sept. 7

8,144
5,205

New Orleans.

Sept. 8.—The mail returns for the week ending Sept.
1,1 OS bales, against 1,046 bales last week.
week were 4,682 bales : of which 1,959 bales
were to Havre, 262 to Bordeaux, 1,130 to New York, 1,331 to Bostou.
Stock on hand Sept. 7 was 99 S87 bales. The receipts, sales, and ex¬
ports for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of midJli; g, rates
of freight to Liverpool aud New York, and price of gold at the close
of each week since June 2, were as follows:
7 show the receipts to be
The shipments for the last

,

Price

Date.
June 2

Rec'ps. Sales. Exp. Stock.
...

44

4,112

9....

5,258

44

15....

“

23....

“

30.r..

3,S42
5,488
3,317
3,277
2,509
1,386
1,461
1,765

July

4,350

7,709 116,375

4,600
4.500

5.655 H 4,130

10....
17....
24....
31....

1,354
1,479
1,046

5,150
3,700

Sept. 7....

1,108

3,620

4,632

“

Aug.
44

“

44

*

.

.

13....
20....
27....

“

“

6

8,200 13,088 139,769
5,600 21,723 124,133
9,750 10.650 121,791

108.566
106,783
98,904
93,597
88.115
83,221
9,119 112,087
3,176 110,715
3,777 99,337

44

rain, reviving the drooping plant and developing the fresh

bolls.

.

151
100

10....
17....
24...
31....

44

—

8,146

9,401
8,924

.

6....

Aug.

.....

8,146

150

21©
2l@
21@— X
20@— #

5.602

20
27....

44

i

21@

6,599

.

13....

44

••••

....

7.015

•

...

'

....

••••! --I

....

Grand. Total

able.

July

44

....

—

1,004
200 1,202
•

850 bales to Baltimore.

44

....

All others

100

7,584 nominal

Receipts.
....

|

....

....

|

616
957

.

Specie, ex-revenue tax of 2c.

“■

Total to IV. Europe

Total

50
203

it

<fcc., for

271

271
50
203

i

Other ports

..

.

>

Price To Livermid:*
pool.

Stock.

at

Savannah, Sept. 8.—The receipts for the week ending Sept 7 were
1,440 bales, against 1,172 last week ; and the shipments this week were
1,782, of which 1,391 bales were to New York, 10 bales to Boston, and

-

Hamburg

it

6,600

....

....

....

....

tv

84

289

2S9

ports...[

Aug.

*

725
388
583
205
401
307
286
187
194

20..
27..
3..
10..
17..
2L.
31..

a

6 516

19-

Rece’ts. Sales. Exp.
6..

it

i

Liverpool

prev.
year.

Freights.

,

u

Same
time

WEEK ENDING

and New York, and price of gold

3.."

9,136
6,000 4,476
6,7 0 9,499
8,300 5,998
6.800 7,497
5,027 6.378

1.603 10,000

Freigh ts

To Liver- To New

,

Price

Mid.
pool.
York.*
gold.
40@—
X@X
139X@144X
38@39
X@—
1 @1X 137 @141
Unset’d.
1 ©1# 146X@147
39@40
X@X
1 @1X 145X@147 '
36©3S
%@X
1 @— 152X@153
X@X
34@36
%<&— 152X@—
34@35
X%~
%@— 150X@151
35@36
X@&
148 @149
35@36
#@1-16 VMK 148 @...
34@36.
#@— 1#@1# 144#@144#
35@36
X'<t— 1 @1# 145#@145#
nominal. #@—
#@ — 148%@149
35@36
%@— #@ — 145#@
-@—
——@
@—
34@35 9-16 @# -#@ — 144 @—

Ey steam.

Charleston, Sept. 8.—The receipts for the week ending Sept. 7
bales, against 943 bales last week. Shipments for this
week amount to 794 bales, against 628 bales last week, all of which
went to New York
Market has been dull, but holders are very firm.
amount to 4SO

Sales for the week amount to 355 bales. The receipts,sales, and
for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of
to

exports

freight
Liverpool aud New York, and price of gold at the close of each

week since June

1,

were as

follows

ShipDate. Rec’ts. Sales, ments. Stock.
626
620 1,274
4,708
July 5..
44
299
564
450
12..
4,433
44
308
350
362
19..
4,379
44
26..
866
3*20 1,121
4,158
350
586
320
3,822
Aug. 3..
4*
9U3
10
723
125
3,852
44
267
314
17..
280
3,883
44
480
537
24..
688
4,274
44
628
31
943
729
5,535
355
794
480
Sept. 7..
5,105
.

..

European

and

:

Price of
mid.
31
31

@32
@32
33X@34
34 @—

Unset’ed

Unset’ed
30
31
30

@—
@@31
30 @31

^-Freight for Uprd->
To Liver- To New
Price
York.
pool.
gold.
X ©#@- 152@15
X @—
x@>— 146@148
'

X @X @X @—
X @—
X @—
X @X ®X

Indian Cotton Markets.—Our

own

x@- 146@14
#©- 148@14
x@- 146@14
x@>— 149@15
x@- 149@15
x@- 148@l49
x@*— 145@147
x@- 144@146

correspondent in

6,070

London, writing under the date of Sept. 1, gives the following full
12,045
review of the Liverpool, Loudon and other cotton markets *
Mobile. Sept. 8.—By mail we have received one week’s later dates
Liverpool, Sept. 1.—A fair amount of business has been transacted
from Mobile. The receipts for the week ending Sept. 7 were 640
in cotton this w^ek, but as the market is well supplied, the transactions
bales, against 1,420 bales last week, and the shipments were 3,802
have mostly been at
bales, against 3,547 bales last week ; leaving the stock on hand and on American cotton showslower prices. As compared with last week,
a decline of ^d, Brazil £d,
Egyptian Id to 2d,
shipboard, not cleared, of 25,847 bales. Of the shipments during the and East Indian
£d per lb. The fall in prices, notwithstanding the
week 3,035 bales were to Liverpool, 594 bales to New York, and 173
decline in the value of muney, is to be accounted lor by the favorable
to New Orleans.
The following are the weekly receipts, sales, and
accounts respecting the crops of cotton in America, India,
Egypt and
exports, for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling,
Brazil, and as future supplies are likely to be increasingly abundant, it
rates of freight to Liverpool aud New York, and
price of gold at the seems
probable that in spite of a good consumptive and export
close of each week:
demand, the value of cotton will continue to give way. This week’s
fall in Egyptian cotton is heavy, and several successive heavy reduc¬
Price of To
To New Price of
Date.
Receipts. Sales, Exp’s. Stock* mid. L’pool. York.
gold.
tions have taken place during the last few weeks. The limited ship¬
•

30,496

30@—

%

4,310 25,267
1,017 34,978
572 35,108

29@30
3l@32
31 @32

#
%
%

2,927 32,868
1,350 32,333

32@30@—

#

1,500
1,600

1.627

31,440

30@—

6

1,070

13
20
27

672
826
702

2,750

Aug. -8

687

3,200

815
-734

July
“

“

“

“

44
44

44

10
17
25....‘....
31.

Sept. 7

850 5,018

1.900
2,750

1,850 3,320 29,663 30@31
1,420 1,900 3.547 29.000 30@31
640 1.300 3,802 25,847 —@30
1.543

%
%

%
%

%

1# @ %
l>j @ %

151@152
150@162
149@151
148@149#

1# ® %
1# @ %
1# @ % 145@146#
1 X @ % 145@146#
1X @ % 149©—
1# @ % 150@152
1 X @ Ja 144@145
1# © % 142@144

Galveston, Aug. 31.—We have received one week later statement by
mail from Galveston.

ments made from Alexandria during the season now
approaching its
termination were the cause of a rapid advance taking
place in the
value of this particular description of cotton, and in

consequence of the
favorable accounts from Egypt, and the almost certain prospect of
augmented supplies from thence next season, spinuers have not felt
disposed to make purchases at the recent high prices. The stock of
Egyptian cotton is still about 26,000 bales less than at this period last
year. The total sales of the week amount to 64,680 bales, of which
spinners have taken 40,720 bales, exporters 21,650 bales, and specula¬
tors 2,310 bales.
The prices current of American cotton are now as
very

The receipts for week ending Aug. 31 were 194
.*
bales, against 187 last week, and the shipments were 1,263 bales under:
-*
Against 686 last week. The shipments for the week ending August 31
*
were 1,268 bales, of which 692 bales to Liverpool, 230 bales to Yera
For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph des¬
CJruz, and 808 bales to New York.
Below we give the receipts, sales, patches at the close of our London letter in a previous part ol this paper.- Ed,

and

shipments for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling,




of Commercial <& Fir.ancial Chronicle.

fm®§ssss?©f«^

,

}<■■$?.r J.

^~~~^*^'•.^*^?*^^I-L«y I^!-. *iF*"“. *y >J» ,.'• k

'

*j?

.

.

•>.-.; >■ /■; ;,- ■ ;-:.:tr>'.,

.•

/

.

•

.

'

.

•

September 15, 1868.]

• ’ '.

.'o 'r.

*!«•v'i

-

■

'•

"

•

••

-.-

.

■'

•

-r

,^-. ’ •*.'•2*!'?:

-1865.

.“.

,%

- -'yr^■■^

;.
-

’-j" .,"»

■■yr^

'

^

■

_.

THE CHRONICLE.
1866.Fair and

«

-

1

337

realized

early in the week for choice, but latterly, with the
stoppage of the city mills and better supplies of new Winter,
28
34
39
25
34
42
54
1821
22
22
24
.16
prices have receded from the highest point fully 10 cents per
15
13%
10%@12
18%
Uplaru
11 ®12
13%
15%
1S%
Wnblle
bushel. Some 40,000 bushels rejected old Chicago have been
14
.11 @12
18%
15%
14
.11 @12
18%
taken for export to Great Britain at $1 50 a $1 56.
15%
But new
The comparison for a series of years, so far as middling qualities of No. 1 has been sold here at $2 42, and the
quotation at Chi¬
cotton are concerned is annexed :
cago to-day is $2 21.
New Red Winter State sold largely
COMPARATIVE PRICES OP COTTON.
1863. 1864. 1865. 1866.
1833 3884. 1865, 15:66
to-day at $2 70.
a.
d.
d.
d.
Middling—
d.
d.
d.
d. Middling—
Corn has steadily improved, on moderate supplies, and a
Pernambuco.. 23
30
16% 15%
Sea Island.... 35
43
34
28
Unland..
23% 30
18% 13% Egyptian
22% 28
35
20*
Broach
23% 30% 18% 13%
17% 1S% 50
7% brisk general demand.
Mobile
The business for Great Britain has
Dhollerah
17% 10
7%
Orleans
23% 31
18% 14
10
been larger than for the previous three weeks; and to-day
*Fair
The available and immediately prospective supplies of cotton are now some speculative feeling on Western account was to be
as under:
noticed.
More liberal supplies for some days to come may
1866.
1865.
411.760
Stock at Liverpool
880,210 be
bales.
expected. Oats have been dull and declining. There
93, *60
61,630
London
23,000
American cotton afloat
2u,l)00
were large
receipts of new to-day. Rye has advanced, with
Indian
“
353,383
446,173
a considerable home demand.
Barley, peas and beans are
Total
846,773
1,442,643
The stocks of grain in this market are as follows:
The subjoined statement shows the sales, and imports of cotton quiet.
Ordinary

and

middling.

Good and
fine. >
52
70
23
25

good feir.

•

•

•

Fair. Good

•

.

.

m

•

.

..

«

Mid.

.

•

•

.

•

.

.

•

.

„

at

of

Liverpool for the week and year, and the stocks of each description
produce when the latest return was made up :
SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS.
Total Total
Same
Ex-

Trade,

Brazilian

bales. 18,870
2,000

port.
4,810
1,040

Egyptian

1,910

Specula- thistion. week.
650 24.330

70

American

West Indian
East India

1,500

China and Japan

30

16,440 15,450 1,660
250

3,040
1,980
1,530
33,550

this
year.

1865.

14,190

80

3.880

Extra State

,,

This
week.

To this To this
date
date
1866.
1865.

Total
1865.

This

day.
313.190
87,3=0
30,860

Same
date
1865.

Dec. 31
1865.

143,722

34,480

36 004

56,150
13,b20
245, S70
31,460

75,444 2,673,8421,558,311 2,539,708 880,210 411,760

West India
East India

Total

The actual

459,369
334,068
411.328
113.328
1,095,744
125,871

20,300
423.190

5,340

export from Liverpool, Hull and other outports from Jan

1, to date was 682,928 bales, against 403,617 bales last year.

Of these
quantities 163,665 bales in the current year, and 28,945 bales in 1865
were American produce.
London, Sept 1.—The market he?e is dull, and East India cotton
has declined in value during the week £d per lb. The particulars of
imports, etc.rare subjoined :

The movement at this market has been

1,568,465

5,640

20S,560

78,815
790,040

2,105

FOREIGN

Flour,

146,725

254,591

bbls.

194,166

196,203

61,625

93,259

kilogs for delivery in December. The market during
heavy, and American cotton ha8 fallen 5 to 8 francs

Alexandria, Aug. 19.—The crop prospects are very favorable, and
the state of the cotton trade remained without essential change.
Good
and fine qualities of cotton are very scarce, and high prices were de
manded.
For inferior cotton there was very little inquiry.
The

shipments at. nd thus:

Great Britain, Continent.
bales.
bales.

From

Total.
br.les.

Aug. 11 to Aug. 16.
Previously from Nov. 1..

1,011
140,731

28^445

141,742
266,781

28,445
57,C87

170,187
•323,868

In Flour there has been

active, advancing market all
week, until yesterday, when there was a pause, but as
yet there is little reaction from the highest figures. The
extreme quotations reached this week make higher gold prices
than have been known in this market since the Spring of
an

market did not offer suitable assortments.

Our millers

have been able to do but

little, for the want of wheat. The
receipts show a slight increase. A feature of the market has
been the purchase of about 5,000 bbls. sour flour for the
London market, at $6 a $8 per bbl. The standard of inspec¬
tion has been raised in this market, and we revise our quo*
tations

accordingly.

Wheat continues extremely scarce.




607,695

625.950

4.953,690
EXPORTS.

C. meal,
bbls.

Wheat,

Rye,

bush.

bush.

Corn,

Oats,

bush.

bush.

“

kt

“

u

“

Milwaukee.—The

following tables show the receipts anil shipments
during the past week and since the 1st of January, with

of Bread stuffs

comparative statistics:
RECEIPTS.

,

«■

SHIPMENTS.

.

end’g Since Same time Week end’g
Since S’e time
Jan. 1.
1866.
Sept. 8. “ Jan.l.
1865.
Sept. 8.
389,086 296,453
5,9:33
239.817
173.726
9,499
139.873 6,331,601 5,014,686
126,473 6,185,8964,596,468
1,832,903 168,348
14,720 1,638,189
337,529
83,536
303,747
25,712
22,768
651,255 e 184,661
64,389

Week

Flour, bbls
Wheat, bush
Oats, bush

10,438

284,8'.-8

58,345

100,035

bush

69,048

70
....

188,S38
12,203

333

? 6,385

Chicago.—The following tables show the movement in breadstufls
during the week ending Sept. ..8th, and from January 1st, to date, with
comparative statistics:
■
i>
—Receipts.

r

88,707

..

..

448,242
1,335,447
123,775
59,422

..

1,017,180
4,909,501
26,967,819
6,175,181
873,542

37,137

..

5,106,283

17,433,454
7,103,009
553,385

484,697

244,925
FLOUR

1866.

10,200
286,872

Flour
Wheat
Corn

,

1,514,878

AND

-

-Shipments.

,

Same time.
1865.
Last w’]
34.091
686,222

Since
Jan. 1.

Last W’k.
...

t.

Since
Jan. i.

.

S’e time
1865.

971,273
676,481
457,296 3,943.612 4,274,374
940,376 25,948,877 15,899,554
73,769
7,394,654 6,197,900
750.257
30,354
259,165

30,631

309,624

133,992

GRAIN IN STORE.

1S65.

0

1866.
283.852

j

88,914 I Oats
401,040 I Rye

144,612
65,566

1,750,957 | Barley...:

1865.

916,04
180,96

166,39

Eastward Movement of Flour and Grain from Upper Lake
Ports.—The following will show the Eastward movement of Flour and
Grain from upper lake ports for the week ending Sept. 8 :
Flour.

Wheat.
636.852

Totals
Previous week

59,066
58,046

895,997

Corresp’g week

62,977

390,817

Eastward

Extreme prices

1,935
39,310
113,110

'

■

236,110

.

..

our

428,785

5,022,870
6,837,630
230,590
574,475
6,053,295

“

The demand has been from the local and Eastern

trade, with whom stocks were extremely low, and who have
been large buyers at Western markets, for the reason that

218,600

“

the

1858.

1,595,435
14,145,545

1,827
285,587 188,674
Britain^ this week..
“
since July 1 16,750
4,829,090
253
2l305
Mr. N. A. Col. this week
u
“
since July 1 91,368 13,115
500
15,094
4.210
2,920
We‘t Indies, this week.
3,292
1,790
“
since July 1 53,289 2i,039
26,957
15,526
28,246
Total Export, this week 11,250
3,373
288,879
1,990
since July 1... 199.055 34,809
103,969
4,940,132 204,980
“
since Jan. 1,’66 682,786 100,665
235,463 199,200 8,986,742 950,168
same time 1865 944,911 101,153 1 ,524,820
151,8i6 1,491,854
53,200

Parley,

Friday, P. M., Sept. 14.

1 15

1 50
1 80
2.60

28,246
97,264

Corn, bush
ftye, bush!

BREADSTUFFS.

92
1 20
49
85

2,088,935

Gt.

1,011
169,176

Total this season
Same period last season.

....

78,015
3,090

31,435
268,170

1866

the week has ruled
the 60 kilogs.

3 05
83$

follows:

62,880

Flour, bbls
meal, bbls
Wheat, bush
Corn, bush
Rye, bush
Barley, &c., bush
Corn

1865.

Havre, Aug. 30.—To-day very low New Orleans cotton has sold at
160 francs the 50

....

2 72

1866.-1865.For the w’k. Since Jan. 1. For the w’k. S’e Jan. 1.

75,199

Stock, Aug. 30

as

90®
85®
42®
50®
80®
1 20®
1 15®
1 80®

2 45
2 40

RECEIPTS.

194,283

Deliveries.

White beans

4 50® 4 9C

224,984

hales.

Bariev
Malt...

Peas, Canada

Brandywine

1864.

Imports, Jan. 1 to Aug. 30

Rye
Oats, Western cargoes...
Jersey and State

5 50® 6 50

370,275

Japan.

982,801 181,461
331,764 216,162
143,537 292,456
70,936 76,563
1,135,533 672,439
9,271 120,290

82 @
86®

Western Yellow
Western White.

•

..

Rye Flour, fine and super¬
fine !
Corn meal, Jersey and

1 50®
70®
@
2 50®
2 25®
1

Corn, Western Mixed

to

common

choice extra

31,023
9,796
144,759
4,9

4,496
2,032
1,043
58,676

Egyptian.

China and

29,980

9,197

American
Brazilian

Canada,

Spring

Milwaukee Club
Red Winter
Amber do
White

Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
13 00®,15 50
Southern supers
11 00@12 40
Southern, fancy and ex. 12 50®15 50

40,720 21,650 2,310 64,630 2,812,250 2,123,680 45,240 34,610
Stocks—
-Imports

Total.

Chicago
per bushel

Shipping E. hoop Ohio. 11 00®11 50
Extra Western, com¬
mon to good
10 50@12 50

1,720

:

Wheat,

10 75® 11 75

,6.920

1,400,000
250,000

the closing quotations

are

3,760

16,250

233,800
348,930

following

Flour, unsound....33 bbl $6 00® 9 00
Superfine State & West. 8 50® 9 50

18,580
5,440
3,310
1,580

208.150

200,00C I Oats, bush

1,250,000 J Bye, bush

iS65.
4140

1866.

141,060
65,450
69,350
919,6201,034,400
6,140 238,090

250

The

Average
weekly sales.

period

915,740
264,240

Wheat, bush
Corn, bush

were what there

Movement

w$s

afloat

on

Corn.

Oats.

1,194,746
1,602,147
1,097,466

164,105
173,233
282,566

Barley.

80,631

14,455
1,248

by Canal.—The following .will show
canals destined for tide-water ;

Rye.
30,420
19,842
1,708

abou^

>v.

'• -*T

338

<r

From Buffalo,
week ending

Flour.

60,824
98,504

d.
F’m Oswego, 9days.
Tot’l, Buffalo 14

14,585

2,326

370,860

6,053

....

....
••

113,089 2,600,562
92,537 2.593,602
278,772 1,694,052

651

week

Corres’ding time,’65.

18,250

268,410

60,000

2,326

Total afloat

Previous

2,540,662

Rye.
7,300
10,950

13,550

102.450

1,300,300
1,240,262

47,680

Sept. 10
Sept. 3

f

Wheat.

Barley.
13,550

Oats.

Corn.

18,250
18,450
7,738

13,550
31,856

370,860

517,350
501,769

18,764

Ports.—The following shows the receipts at the
following lake ports for the week ending Sept. 8, Oats. for Barley. : Rye.
and the year
Corn.
Wheat.
Receipts

at

Lake
/

Flour.
bbls.

42,352

Chicago

6.733

Milwaukee
Toledo
Detroit

17,714

24,404
90,203

Totals
Previous week

75,7-11
96,678

Cor. week, 1865
Since Jan. 1,1S66..
Same time, 1865...

Liverpool,

bush.

bosh.

bush.

bush

1,33 s,447
25,718

37,137

59.422

418,242
139,793

74,553
70,642

134,143

123,7.5
14,720
27,870

6,990

1,993

4,107

168,358

41,884

bush.

1,502,298

742,230
909,772

2,,121,943 13,137.901

31,272

1.—The weather

663,582

during: the past
-

--

71,860
57,584

i

p

i

Anbnrnville 4 4 27$, Aquidnecke 4-4 21. do 7-8
83, O J Rathbun 7-8 19. Social Mill Co.,
18, Manville R 24, do XX 4-4, 26, Bos¬
ton 18 inch, Kent River 3-4 12, Rockdale B 4-4, 81, Gold Medal 4-4, 26 ,
Harvard 35 inch 22, Montemaire, 7-8, 21, Uxbridge imperial 4-4 27$,
Waltham L 72 inch 62$, do X 33 inch 23, do W 42 inch 30, do M 81
inch 77$, do N 90 inch 85, Bartlett Steam Mills 83 inch 24, do 7-8 22$, do
4-4, 30$, Newmarket 33 inch 22, do 86 inch 25.
Drills are quiet and unchanged.
Globe Steam Mills.are sold at 20
cents, Massachusetts fine 19, heavy 25, and India 24.
Canton Flannels are still dull, with only a nominal business doing
Globe A A sell at 27, Columbia 26. Mount Vernon 26, Nashua A 27
Young America 24, Clay 22, Excehior 22, Eagle 22.
Corset Jeans are in fair request and prices are steady. Indian Or¬
chard sell at 16 cents, Canoe R»ver 16, Halloweli 15, Uncas 15, New¬
market colored 17,and Silver Labe brown 20.
Stripes and Checks are more active, and prices are firm.
Ham¬
ilton Stripes sell at 31 cents, Willow Brook Checks 22$, Wauregan 3x3 23. do 6x3 24, Albany 3x3 13, do 6x3 14, Louisiana plaids

|, 14, do 7-8, 15,
19$, White Rock 36 inch
N. Y. 4-4, 21, 30, do C 7-8

674,004

133, r.72
90,514
467,303 1 ,266.894

19,087,192 9,130,855

1,828,880 14,508,202

Sept..

640

585.063
1,933,412
31,240,692 9,537,897

789,645

10,738
1,700

....

233,086

1.944,388

phia 16.

week (except

o

the midland districts, and
still remains in the fields, but
quarter,) being higher than for
years past, farmers are hurrying their wheat ro market, ancT the Gazette
returns show a larger delivery in the last week than in the corresponding week
of any of the four prev.ous years ; the consequence is gr« at irregularity n prices,
with
general decline, var. ing from *2s. to 4s. per quarter, on the week. Since
Wednesday the weather has been a^ain fine and bright, with a drying wind.
Since Taesday, i" consequence of the rain, there has been more firmness, and
the extreme prices of that day have been readily obtainable f r wheat, flour,
and Indian corn. At t-'-day’s market, though the demand for wheat and flour
but limited, Tuesday’s prices were firmly maintained, and in some cases
sellers had a slight advantage. A good business was done in Indian corn at 20s
3d. per qr. for mixed, being the extreme price of Tuesday.
We quote : Flour—Extra State, per barrel, 25s.@26s. 6a.; Ohio, 26s.@27s. Gd.;
Canadian, 26s @28s. 6d. Wheat—Chicago and Milwaukee, per 100 lbs., 9s.@10s.
4d.; Amber Iowa, 10s. 6d.@10s. lOd. Indian Corn—per480 lbs., yellow, 26s. 6d.;
white, 31s.<&32s. ; mixed, 26s @26s. 3d. Peas—Canadian, per 504 lbs., 36s.@37s.

coontiee the crop is generally secured
this, probably about one-half
mostly cut. The average pric**, (50s. lOd. per
as

far north as

; in

some

a

plaids 20$, Simpson’s Chambrays 22, Philadel¬
*Ticks are in good demand, and prices are quickly paid. Willow
Brook Ticks 47$, Farmer’s andMiners 52$, Albany 13$, American 20, Glen
Allen 8 4 13, Chattanooga £ 16, Concord 4-4 22, Pacific Extra $ 30. Pacific
4-4 40, Willow Grove 30 Sacondale £ 13, West Branch 4-4 32$,“do No. 2
$ 25, Windsor $ 21, Henry Clay 8-4 19, Suwanee 4-4 23.
Denims and? Cottonades are in quite lively demand, but at unchanged
rates.
Ashton Glenn brown Denims eellc at 20 cents, do blue 21,
Ringgold fast

22$,

ga

southern

[September 15,1866.

CHRONICLE.

THE

-

Homestead brown

Peabody blue 17$, Woodland 16,
Providence blue 19, Charter Oak 81,
Yantic21, Arlington 25.
18$ for 64x64. The sales at Providence

21, do blue

22,

Burlington 14$, Madison brown 19,
Albany 17$, and Wauregan 22,
Print Cloths are

dull at

13$@13£for 64x64.
of the more desirable makes.
American, Pacific and Merrimack are taken as 6oon as they arrive in the
agents’ hands. Spragues are sold up for leading styles, and prices are
trifle firmer. But there is no disposition to advance prices while the
margin of profit upon print cloths is so great as at the present price of
material. Arnolds were last sold at 17 cents. Americans 1S$,
Oatmeal—Canadian, per 240 lbs., 28s.@29s.
Merrimac W 21,and D 20, Garner’s 21$, Amoskeag pink 20$, do purple
FATMERS’ DELIVERIES OF WHEAT.
19$, do shirting 18$, do dark 18$, Swiss Ruby 19$, Dutchess B 16$,
52,535 qrs. at 50?. lOd. Lowell dark 17, do light 17, Naumkeag 6$, York Mouruiug 17$, Spring
ending Aug. 25th, 1866
time 1865
48,026 “ 45s. 4d. Valley 18$, Wameutta dark 16, do light 16, Dusters 16, Hamilton pur¬
Wheat,
Flour.
I. corn, ple 20, do Chocolates 19, Sprague’s fancy styles 26$ Double purples
bbls.
sacks.
qrs.
26$, Shirtings 26$, Solid colors 19, Canaries 19, do Chintz 19, Orange
United States and Canada
3,072
4,069
44,548 polkas 20, Indigo black and green 19$, do green and yellow 20, do blue,
week
14,186 4.069
3,010 44,548
Frocks 21,
yellow 20, Madder rubies
since lBt January
355,393 68,460 272.878 807.953 green and 20, Staple s-tyle light priors19, Shirting 21$, Pink20, German
19$, do dark colors
1865
822,630 86,202 211,700 150,485 Purple do
time
Sept. 11.—(By the Cable.) The market is active and firmer, with plaids 19$, Fancy style light colors 19$. Columbia, full madders 16$,
all descriptions. The weather is unfavorable for the crops. Concord madders 17, d> purples 18, do pinks 18, do plain shades 18,
Corn—The market is firm r, aud mixed Western American is quoted at 27s. 9d. Glen Cove full madders 13$, Wauregau fancies 18, do rubies 19, do pinks
quarter. Wheat is firm, with an advance of 3d.@4d. per cental. Flour is 19, do purples 19.
firm, with an advance of ls.@2s.
are not very active. White Rock, high colors 20, do plain 21

was

the past week
Prints" are

were 34,500 pieces, at
less active, from scarcity

a

raw

*

Week
Same

IMPORTS.

,

,

qrs.

Total for
Total
Same

...

Liverpool,
advance on

an

per
also very

Jacconets

THE DRY

GOODS TRADE.
*

Friday,

Sept. 14,1866,

neglected. Glasgow sell at 26, Roanoke 19,
Cambrics are still quiet and unchanged.
Saratoga 10$, Milton Mills
12$, Halloweli 14$, Pacific 14, and Adriatic 14.
Mouslin de Laines are active and firm, with an upward tendency.
Pacific and Manchester are sold at 28, Pacific armurea 30, do Robes
de Chambre 82$@36, Pacific and Manchester all Wool 42$.

Ginghams are somewhat
and Lancaster 27.

P. M.

been a little less
Hebrew holiday on
class of buyers from Linseys still active, and prices are firm. Miners Flannels 45
as active since. Stillman A Co’s 35$, C. S. A Co’s 32, Black Hawk 32$, Saco 40, S. C.
There is, however, a very large business doing, and the lead¬ Carr A Co’s 80, Saxony Mills, all wood, 40$, Wool Filling, 32, Laurel
Rock 82$.
ing makes of almost ail kinds of goods are scarce. There is, Dale, 31$, Whitequite active, and prices are rather firmer.
Flannels are
however, little disposition to advance prices now, nearly at the
fairly active for leading styles, while more common goods
close of the season’s trade ; on the contrary, prices are perhaps
neglected. A fair business is doing. Slater’s black range from
trifle lower for some goods. With this softening tendency $3.5i @4 50; cotton warps $2.15 for No. 1, $2.05 for No. 2, and $1.95
No. 8, 6 4 Leicester ladies’ cloths $1.60.
of prices,'buyers continue to make purchases; while, was
Cassimeres and Satinets are active for leading styles of Cassimeres,
there even a trifling advance, it would materially check
but others are not wanted.
Merchants’ Woolen Company silk mix¬
The price of the raw material remaining steady ed cassimeres sell at $1 87$, Warumbo Manufacturing Company
business.
keeps goods more steady, while the price of gold does not doeskins $3, Broadbrook A $2, heavy fancy cassimeres $2 12. Swift River
change sufficiently to influence the market.
The trade is Co.’s heavy fancy cassimeres $1 37, Clenham Co.’s sackings $1 65,
and anvil
especially large for the South and Southwest.
The general plough, loom Monson <fe50c, Rockl nd satinets 75c@85c, Monson Wool¬
len Co. '5 6c,
Brimfield Snipsic Woolen Co.76, Evans, Seasteadiness of prices is quite noticeable as compared with the
grave, MA«»m A Co’s. $2 @2, 25, Evans, Seagrave, A Co., silk mix¬
$2(3)2 26, fancies $1 76(3)2 ‘26, double twist $1 87(3)2 25; S A
past.
Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are less active and a shade easier
H. Sayles, do fancies $i 25@l 75; Mechanicsville C., do fancies $1 75
Some large eales have been made for export during the week. Stand¬ @2 25, F. M. Ballou A Co., fancies 1 75(3)2 26.
ards
generally held at 22$.
Atlantic A is sold at 23.
Linen is steady at former prices. Crash bleached 15c, do
Indian Head A 37-inch 22$, do B 30 in^h 18. Nashua extra unbleached 16c, Huckabuck bleached 20c, do unbleached 21c.
A 86-inch 21, do fine D 36-inch 20, do XX 22$ Waltham F
Foreign Goods continue to move quite freely, and for leading styles
40-inch 27, Wachusetts 22 Bristol 40-inch 20, G. Washington of merinos, poplins, and the low grades of plain fabrics, prices tend up¬
heavy 86*inch 21, Griswold 3-4 12$, Indian Orchard W 33-inch ward. Some leading styles of woolen goods, shawls and silks are also
10, do B B 83 inch 20, do C 37 inch 22, do A 40 inch 24, Massachusetts active. The auction sales have been less numerous and less spirited.
A 4-4 21, do B 4-4 21, Medford 21, Newmarket Manuf. Co. -36 inch 21, The sale of dress goods, Balmoral skirts, linens, Ac., by Messrs. Hag¬
do do heavy D 36 in^h 22, Atlantic sheeting (P) A 37 inch
gerty A Co., on Tuesday, was quite spirited, and good prices were paid.
22$, do .(^) H do 87 inch 22$. (/>) H do 37-inch 22$, (A) D Medium
sale of silks, linen and fancy dress goods by'the same firm on Wed¬
sheeting 87 inch 20. (A) P do 37 inch 19, (A) V Heavy shirting 30 inch nesday was largely atteuded, and for Saxony woolen dress goods there
19, (A) L Fine sheeting 30$ inch 21$, (P) L do 36$-inch 21$, (A) E do
considerable competition. A special sale of shawls by Messrs.
inch 20, (P) E do 83 inch 20, (A) N Fine shirting 29 inch 14, Rox- Wiimerdings A Houget was very successful. A sale of woolens and
bury A 4 4 21$, Appleton A 36 inch 22$, do B 40 inch 21, do L> 20, do tailoring goods by Wiimerdings A Mount was les9 interesting.
W 48 inch 82, do shirt N 80 inch 19, Pocasset Canoe 89 inch 24. do K
Cotton Yarn and Goods* Market, London Wool Sales,
inch 19, do H 28 inch 14, Canton 28 inch 12$, Newbury port 28 inch
12$, Phoenix Cotton Manuf. Co. 39 inch 23$, World Wide 36 inch 13$, etc.—In reference to these markets, our own correspondent in London*
Grafton 28 inch 14, do 30 inch 15.
writing under the date of Sept. 1, thus alludes :
Manchester, Sept. 1.—As there is a great want of animation in the
Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings attract .less attention, and
quiet, with little or no change in prices. Lonsdale is sold at 84c, Liverpool cotton m arket, and as the tendency of prices there, notwith¬
Roekdales
active at 31 cents. York Mills are sold up at 45, Wamsutta standing the rapidly declining rates of money in the discount market, is
40, Washington 7 8, Halloweli f, 14, Canoe 27 inch 13, Grafton

Dry Goods Trade the past week has
active, owing to the occurrence of the
Tuesday, which took a very important
the market. Nor has the trade been quite
The

are

Cloths are

are

a

for

ture

are

American

c,

A

was

83

Manchester

P6

are




are

r

prevalent in the market
spinners and manufacturers have
; hence, trans¬
reduction in the
quotations. Shipping yarns, for export to China, have been more freely
enquired for, and rather a considerable business has been transacted.
This has arisen from the circumstance that the position of affairs in China
has greatly improved, and that a tone of greater confidence prevailed
at the date of our latest advices.
Goods had quite recovered the de¬
preciation in value caused by the failures in this country, and by the
stoppage of the branch banks at Hong Kong, Ac. German houses have
also being making inquiries, and have taken a fair supply of yarns suited
to their use.
In cloth, an increased amount of business has been trans¬
acted-, at slightly reduced rates, the inquiry, at the same time, being
somewhat general. As regards the amount of business done, the mar¬
ket has presented some favorable features, but it must be observed that
transactions would not have been on the scale reported, unless buyers
could have obtained the more favorable terms at which the purchases
effected.
London Wool Salks.—The attendance of home buyers is good, and

Hemp yam

a

greatly improved business

..

..

..

1864-5.

1863-4
1862-3

..:

1861-2

1860-1
1859-60

11,866
16,276
11,598
19,303
7,938
8,121
4,482

...

...

45,386
51,609
38,034
70,0:35
76,095
84,336
66,478

this port for the week ending Sept.
13. 1866, and the corrsaponding weeks of 1864 and 1865, have been us
follows :
ENTERED FOB CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK ENDING SEPTEMBER 13, 1866.
1865.
v
The

importations of dry goods at

1864

,

Pkgs^ Value.

318

Value.
$113,107

silk...
67
flax.... 388
Miscellaneous dry gooas.
66

44,607

918

86,703
34,141

1498
368

Pkgs.
Manufactures of wool...
do
cotton..
do
do

$1,602,858

3837
1897

34,936

127

965
from warehouse and thrown INTO
PERIOD.

WITHDRAWN

THE 8AME

wool... 1815
do
cotton.. 217
do
silk.... 174
do
530
flax
Miscellaneous dry goods.
70

Manufactures of

*

Total
Add ent’d for conaumpt’n

Total thrown upon

452
109

14,693

Total
Add ent’d for

313,604

port. 3376

$630,442

9001 $6,400,412

drygoods.

Total entered at the

35

detailed statement of the
ending Sept. 13, 1866 :




following is

a

ENTERED

Pkgs. Value.
manuf’s of wool.
Woolens.. ...351 $193,476
36,066
Cloths.... ...66
68,267
Carpeting. ...220
1,554
4
Blankets
15
15,611
Shawls...
4,813
...15
Gloves
693 829,635
Worsteds.
24,477
Hose
64
....53
29,733
Merinos
27,478
Worsted y’ml32
Braids A bds..44
23,769
Cot. A wor8t.384 168,886
.

..

....

...

..

.

.

Cottons.. ....236 $84,336

36,694
$1,375,753
1,803,245

$8,178,898

,

1040 $454,310
487 154,206
2'8 239,211
701 198,096
304
65,t04
2760 $1,110,827
3809 1,S03,245
6558 $2,914,072

Pkgs. Value.
14,188
Colored... ....44
....10
4,229
Prints
....

4

1,313

....1
Muslins
Emb’d mus’n. .8
...21
Velvets.
1
Shawls....
...45
Laces
Braids
bds. 16
..3
Hdk’ 8..
4
Gloves....
...45
Spool
..157
Hose

625

Ginghams
..

.

....

..

..

2,515
7,907
513

$26,714
^,090

i;si5
886

14,071
62,487
—

.595 $220,689
Total
manuf’s of silk.
.87 $139,461
Silks
...

(OTHER THAN

Plushes
Velvets
Ribbons....
Laces
Cravats
Hdkfs
Hose
Raw
....

-.2

1,282
22,358
78,927
16,706

1,810
310
868

8,473

.6
Braids A bds ...1
Silk A worst .47

Sewings....

Silk A cotton.32

5,657
1,119

34,979
19,231

—

..

..

...3
..26
..87
..24
...2
...1

Total

328 $334,649

8,805

9,487

goods. 34
Susp. A elas. 1

7,670
465

7.870

Straw

183 $33,694

Total

WAREHOUSING.
Pkgs. Valne.
MANUF’S OF FLAX.
654 $174,607
Linens
Laces
8
3,899
Linens A cot. .1
412
Hdkfs
25
10,974

9,002

WEEK

.

8PE0IE) AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE
V, 1866,

ENDING SEPTEMBER

otherwise specified.]Value.
Pkvs.

[The quantity is given in packages when not
Pkgs. Value.
Pkgs. Value.
Other
Pres’d ginger...
3,064 Woods—
China, Glass A E.
Prunes
5,439
ware—
3,339 Cork.
Bottles
1,885 Plums
7,716 Willow
730 47,674 Sauces and pres.
China
Other
235
Earth’nw’e.1,907 74,850 Other
Glass
16,389 42,249 Instruments—
Mathematical-.5
Glassware.... 685 14,663
Glass

plate...160 27,36

Drugs, Ac.—
Alkali

134.

Ammonia, sal.10
Arrow root.. 165

15

Argols
Anoline
Alum

3,010

jewelry
20 60,206
Watches..?...26 48,227
4,164 Leather, Hides, Ac —

1,071

633

19 >
2,491
powder.808 15,139
Copperas
’ 1,577
20

Gums, crude.
do
do
do
Glue

1,044
1,476
816

192 10,206

485

copavi.,16
copal.. 4

547
366

Gypsum
Indigo
Iodine pot
Lie paste

1

2,346

135

73

2,080

16

116

Magnesia

841
8,727
868

Oils
7
do ess
Ill
do linseed.563
do olive...718

58,270
8,270

17

8,896

Potash, hyd....6
bich..

Sh llac

38
5

11,506

32,683

844

16,001

6,539

5,869
188

Soda,bi crb.6,648 25,700
do sal... 1,970 12,150
389 12,242
do ash
do cau8tic.H0
3,122
Sponges
55 1,616
Sulph copper.220
6,854
Vermillion.... 11
3,793
Yellow ochre.2^5
812
7,497
Other
Furs, Ac—
Furs

148

Hats,goods, Ac.3
Fruits, Ac.
Bananas..
Currants
Lemons

Nuts

29,167
157

Hides, dress¬
ed
414 162,296
Hides, undress¬

83,689
1,497

ed
Homs
Ac.—

500

4,579

1,879

53,257

Ale

Brandy
Gin
Porter
Whiskev
Wines

120
3

1,552
972
- 272

5,579

71,229

141

Champagne,
baskets.. 3,587

100
849
84 14,810 Metals, Ac.—
Chains A an. 172

60
Lie root
Madder....... 63

do

Bristles
65
Boots Ashs... .2

46 Liquors, vVines,

arabic..29
101

2.301

514

Blea

Cudbear

4

Optical

121

1,695

Bark, Peruv.. 10
Barytes
377
Chalk
Cream tartar... 5

92
1

Musical
N‘ utical

83,630

<

39,269

utlery.......78 30,821

Guns

72 18,336

Hardware.... 361

Iron, pig,
tons

42,010
9,457

625

Iron, R. R.

bars
.1,915 13,652
Iron, sheet,
2.577
tons
27
1,162
Iron tubes.. .390
Iron, other,
713 37,322
tons
Lead, pigs.ll,900 69,310
Metal goons... 60 16,515
149
Nails
7
3,049
10
Needles
Old metal
Per caps

Saddlery

.*.

4,165

18
12

2,881
3,133

3,928
Tin, bxs.. .32,934
Tin, slabs...500,
37,320
5
Wire

Steel

Zinc, lbs.328,053

1,761 Spices—

Ginger

170 Stationery, Ac.—
185
4,239 Books
5,486 Engravings... .9
645
5,152 Paper

5,524

2,251
1,714

Alabaster orna¬

75,174

221,59:
t

5,786

1,440

20,170

2,716
28,181

1,229

45,450

63

ments
'
Baskeis
44
Bricks
Boxes
Buttons
183
Builuin:/ stones. ‘
do
burr....
—....

Clay

2,202
306
1,971
37,845
1,066
873

3,671

..

2,141

40

Cheese...

3,154
19,888

Cigars
Coal, tons.. 8,927
67

4,080
7,298

Cocoa, bgs...242

5.598

Corks
Clocks

83,016
107
Emory..
Fancy goods.... 124.145
Coffee, bgs 4,641
Firecrackers....

1,063

Flax
177
Feathers
Fish
Flour, sago
Furniture
Grain..
Grindstones ....

8,462
665
4,641

2,110

354
fc22

•

890

..109

2,919

Hemp
60
105
Hops
Inch rubber..501
Ivory
34
Machinery.. .298

2,092
9,749

7,429 ,Hair

4,827

Copper...

12,519

227

Miscellaneous-

1.301
13,674

912 Jewelry, Ac.—

1,950

Arsenic
Aluminous cake.

Rhubarb

Crapes

667

102

Clothing
7
Embroideries 12
Corsets
23 ‘

15,316

45

DRY GOODS AND

Regantimo’y.134
Satin

19

1,611

1

IMPORTS

Paints

Pkgs. Value.
...2
1,117
2,351

3

341
661

1

$2,219

3

...

Opium

CONSUMPTION.

FOR

—

MANUF’S OF COTTON.

114,763

movement the past week,

—

I Total... .2041 $923,965
.

360.641

STATEMENT.

DETAILED
The

121,624

SAME PERIOD.

$63,800

183

32,567
20,799
73,909
8,099

6750

$4,378,185

10252

$181,4’4

2941
3S09

$582,514
3,795,671

1734
8518

$316,838

Miscellaneous

$745,031

6,978

....

.....157
41,625
2,643
8,204
Thread .......28
6
2,622
487 $154,206
Total
Worsteds...,476 220,285
701 $198,096
Total
manuf’s of silk.
Hose
8
2,909
miscellaneous.
Silks.
;
20 $37,808
Worsted yam .27
6,835
7
5,142 Lea’r. gloves... 7 $4,802
Braids A bds. 29
14,608 Velvets
.2194
la,869
177 175,028 Matting
Cot. A worst.104
37,665 Ribbons
Laces....
8
6,320 1 Embroid’ries..22 10,700
4
689
46 | Millinery
Total
1040 $454,310 Shawls
84
16,827
Cravats
1
2,430 I Corsets
MANUKA’S OF COTTON.
1,174 I Straw goods. .40 12,490
Cottons
180 $62,732 Braids A bds...1
141
9,640 Feath. Aflow..l
Colored
57
19,990 Silk A worst. .13
486
1
1,623 | Suspdrs A elas.2
Emb. muslins. .7
4,406 Silk A cot
Velvets
1,175
3
Total
304 $66,004
Total
228 $239,211 |
Ginghams .... 11
2,691

i..8

Shawls
Gloves...

Cochmeal... .10

313,604

silk....
25
flax.... 1790

DURING

1646
406
302
404
183

172,153

,..2411
consumpt’n 965

cotton..

$1,803,245

MARKET

57
16,220
75
101,265
144
37,491
24
6,965
483 $224,741
8518 3,795,671

do
do
do

183,948
140,194

3809

18,213

WAREHOUSING DURING THE

wool...

334

117,582

736
186

2806 $1,143,655

965

THE

3-4,649

328
511

$259,973

666
59
87

-

mak’t 3771 $1,457,259

ENTERED FOB

Manufactures of

$749,068
10,871
194,203
95,429
33,089

220,689

595

521,212
1,062,113
446,347
163,141

$3,795,671

8518

$313,604

Total

1866.
,
Pkgs. $923,765
Value.
2041
,

,

>

473

do

Matting

802
5.787

26,342 Spool
Hose

81

Carpeting

1,093

Hdkfs

17,917

33

Cloths...*

Kid

BraidsABds. .A
13

268 $122,489

Woolens

Leath.gloves.

Pkgs. Value.
6,046
10

Laces

manuf’s of wool.

NEW YORK.

AT THE PORT OF

479

Total
404 $114,763
MISCELLANEOUS.

1,409
47,035
84,072

$5,029
880

4
2

Total
302 $360,641
manuf’s of flax.
Linens.
873 $99,879
Linen A cot.. 1
410
II
Hdkfs
9,087
Thread
19
5.887

8,S35

2
6

Braids A bds
Silk A worst.

1,790

1

..

ENTERED FOR

Telegraphic advices from Shanghae to July 25, state that the silk
trade was very firm, at advancing prices. The fortnights settlements
had been 1,400 bales.
IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS

..

13,006
21,385

89
3

.

11,679 Vestings.....

Pkgs. Value.

bales.

bales.

84
69
39
172
48
313

67
15
104
663
1,424
2,554
11,178

Plushes..
Velvets
Ribbons ....
Laces
Gloves
Cravats

..

Ginghams..
Muslins

824
258
493

6
1
51

Crapes

Total
.1,646 $745,031
manuf’s OF COTTON.
Cottons.... ..119 $33,961
30.340
96
Colored
36
7

4,055

406 $121,624
manuf’s OF SILK.
103 $187,120
SilkB
12
6,399
Pongees

..

..

Pkgs. Value.
Silk A cotton
Silk A linen..

Total

..

334 $140,194

Total

$3,354

.

..

..

9,763

8,669

WAREHOUSE.

FROM

11
10
Laces
3
Braids A bds
1
Hdkfs
3
Gloves
47
Spool
72
Hose

...

.

14.986

82,528

Velvets

..

Prints

27,222

Snsp. A elas. .28

Pkgs. Va ne.

Pkgs. Value.

.

64

Straw goods.. 40
Feath. Allow..65

Corsets

508

611 $183,948

manuf’s of wool.
Woolens......289 $132,654
12
6,902
Cloths
41,180
Carpeting.. ..142
740
7
Blankets...
14,201
9
Shawls...
5
2,350
G oves
Worsteds.. ..774 365,870
14
8,140
Delaines...
15
3,643
Hose
45
22,943
Merinos....
5,317
18
Wors. yarn
18.759
Braids & bds. 35
Cot A wos’d.281 122,332

is doing, as com¬

bales.

bales,

bales.

33,369
35,249
26,293
48,897
66,685
73,348
50,818

Colls. A cuffs.. .2

Pkgs. Value.
6
1,253

Millinery

10,250

WITHDRAWN

pared with la3t sales. This arises from the greater confidence that
prevails, and from the improved position of monetary affairs. Good and
fine Cape and Australian wools are eagerly competed for, and show an
advance in price of ^d. to Id. per lb. from last sales. French buyers
are taking a fair average supply ; but on German and American account
scarcely any transactions have yet been effected. „
The Silk Trade.—Shanghae, July 5.—About 300 bales Chinas have
been purchased on this market since the departure of the last mail,
which, with the addition of about 1,000 bales received from the country
on European account, and 194 bales from Japan, make up the settle¬
ments for the fortnight to about 1,500 bales.
Prices have advanced
about tls. 30 per picul on all fair to fine silks offering on the market, and
about tls. 60 in the country, where th ■ chop No. 3 'Isatlees are costing
about tls. 500. It is now generally believed that the crop this season
will not be larger than that of the past one, and that the proportion of
good silk will be much smaller. Settlements of silk from 1st June to
date amount to about 4,100 bales, against same time last seasou, 18,000
bales. The shipmeuts in each of the last thiee seasons have been as
follows :
Raw,
Thrown, Coarse, Japan,
Total,
1865-6

32
2,108 Clothing
Embroideries.40

.10

..

Total

were

consumption

Pkgs. Value.

Pkgs. Value.

I
MISCELLANEOUS.
MANUF’S OF FLAX.
Linens
400 $130,479 Leath. gloves.26 $20,170
9 13,037
Laces.........10
12,204 Kid gloves
1,589
20
Hdkfs
38
24,671 Matting
219
Thread
63
14,488 Oil cloth.......2

toward greater ease, there has been a flatness
for yarns and cloth during the week ;
shown a greater willingness to meet the views of buyers
actions have been on a more extensive scale, at a slight

for home

339

CHRONICLE.

THE

September 15,1866.]

Haircloth

8

4,407

85,186

6,687

17,994
Molapses... 1,988 47,004
Oil paintingB.16 12,158
Paper hangs.. 17
2,692
Perfumery.... 17
3,123
Pipes
Rag*
Rice
Salt

222

5.086
6,056

11.729

6,627

480

Statuary

2,843
Linseed... 3,342 23,355
Soap
1,103 3,230
Sugar, hhds, tea
andbbls..4,744 246,083
Sugar, boxes A
Seeds

bgs
Trees A
Tea
Twine

Toys

447

7,646

10

199

555
plants..
4,429 58,212
446 23,640

Waste
Other

139

7,691

Starch

:.

681
8,138

Total

$2,754,152

WTTOLESALE.

deposited iu public stores or bonded
■warehouses must be withdrawn therefrom, or the
duties thereon paid within one year from the date of
the original importation, but may be withdrawn by
the owner for exportation to Foreign Countries, or
may be transhipped to any port of the Pacific, or West¬
ern Coast of the United states, at any time before the
aspiration of three years from the date of the original
importation, such goods on arrival at a Pacific or
Western port, to be subject to the same rules and
regulations as if originally imported there; any goods
remaining in public store or bonded warehouse beyond three years shall be regarded as abandoned to
the Government, and sold under such regulations as
the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Mer¬
chandise upon which duties have been paid may re¬
main in warehouse in custody of the officers of the
customs at the expense and risk of the owners of said
merchandise, and if exported directly from said cus¬
tody to a Foreign Country within three years, shall be
entitled to return duties, proper evidence of such
merchandise having been landed abroad to be furnish¬
ed to the collector by the Importer, one per centum
of Bald duties to bo retained by the Government.
yW All goods

Braziers1

PearL, 1st sort

^ 1U0

Cordage—Duty, tarred, 3;
$ Sb.
Manila,
$

Tarred Russia
Tarred American
Bolt Rope, Russia

...

Anchors—Duty: 2$ cents $
Of 209 lb

^8 lb

and upward

lb.

Navy
Crackers

Breadstuff fs—See

Antimony, Crude and

Butter—
-<
New York State—Fresh
Firtins

©

palls

North

Heserve—Firkii s

..

3’ates—Firkins, yell »w

Western

Ftrkins., sccmd quality
Firkins, store packed..
Firkins, common

.

.

en

27
29
2d

..

©
@

32

..

.

@
<§>
@
@

23

..

to

..

Dairies

16

..

..

....

(gold)

(guld)

3J @
31 @

Bleaching Powder

17

...

adamantine, 5 cent
^ ®>
city

Adamantine

@
40 @
30
@
‘-2$ ©

53

@

1 75

50

..

43
31
24

Chains—Duty, 2$ cents $ lb.
and upward
$1 lb

Chamomile Flowers
Chlorate Potash
Caustic Soda
Cobalt, Crystals.. .in

..

^ gallon
fi>

50

American

Tartar,prime

@

^

28$ @

4> @
1!$@

Coal—Duty,bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels
80 lb to the bushel; other than bituminous,40 cents

Epsom Salts

..
@
It @

S28 bushels of 80 lb ip of 240 lb
verpool Orrel..<p ton bushel,

Folia, Buchu
Gambier

Liverpool House Oannel
Anthracite

,

@

,

© 15
@

00
9 10

Cocoa—Duty, 5 cents $ lb.

22 ©
22$
..(gold).(in bond).. $ lb
©
Maracaibo .(gold)..
do
15
14
©
Guayaquil .(gold) ..
do ......
Coffee—Duty: When imported direct in Ameri¬
can or equalized vessels from the place c>f its growth
or production; also, the growth of countries this side
the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in
American or equalized vessels, 5 cents $ B>; all other

Caracasv

$ cent ad valorem in
Rio, prime, duty paid

10

Laguayra.,..
ftUDoraiovo




.

..

(gold)
...

..

Myrrh, East. India

Gum, Myrrh,

'

Turkey

19

17$

Iodine,

17

@

26

Ipecacuanna, Brazil
lalap
JnMper Berries

18

©

21$

La** Dye ;

13
18

©

20

©
@

19$

©

#

75

..

19$

18$

r •

Gum
Gum

Resublimed

15

Fustic, Tampico
Fustic, Savanilla
Fustic, Maracaibo

;

/

Licorice Paste, Calabria
Liccorice, Paste, Sicily
..
LlooricePaste Spanish Solid....,

@

©

50 @

@
..
80 @
75 @

75
4($
55

87
25

^ ton

•

•

Logwood, Jamaica
Lima wood....

do

Harwood

•

13

•

•

-

.

©
® 23 CO
@ 23 00
©
©
©
©
© 22 00
©
©
©
•

•

•

r.

21 00

b0 00
•

SapanWood, Manila

•

•

..

•

*

•

*

•

..

..

Feathers—Duty: 30 38 cent ad val.
80
...$ B>

Prime Western
do
Tennessee

•

•

•

.

•

•

»

(gold)
..(gold)

■«

..

85

@
©

-

..

70

Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ; Salmon
$3; other pickled, $1 50 ^ bbl.; on other Fish,
Pickled, Smoked, or Dried, in smaller pkgs. than bar¬
rels, 50 cents $ 100 lb.
7 25
Dry Cod
$ cwt.
7 25 @ 7 84
@
@
Dry Scale
$ bbl.
6 50 @
Pickled Scale
$ bbl.
S 00 @
Pickled Cod
^ bbl.
22 (0 @
Mackerel, No. 1, Mass, shore . ...
--

@

Mackerel, No. 1, Halifax
Mackerel, No. 1, Bay..*
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay
Mackerel, No. 2, Halifax
Mackerel, No. 3, Mass, large
Mackerel, No. 3. Halifax
Mackerel,No. 8, Mass
Salmon, Pickled, No. 1

20 75 @
....
„

....

@

....

....

....

_

45 00 @ 46 00

...

4

^ bbl.

Herring,pickled

@ 17 75
@

14 00 @

.

@
@
..
@
50 @
00

@

..

..

.

..

70
55

ton.

Flax—Duty: $15
Jersey

18

@

24

Fruit—Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and
Prunes, 5; Shelled Almonds, 10; Almonds, 6; other
nuts, 2; Dates, 2; PeaNuts, 1; Shelled do, 1$, Filbeita
and Walnuts, 3 cents $ 2); Sardines, 50; Preserved
Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25 $ cent ad val.

^ $• cask
^ box,

Raisins, Seedless
do Layer
do

Bunch

Citron,
Prunes,

© 4 6i
8 65
© 3 20
15$ @
81
:-:o ©
18
19$
©
16
38
©
39
88 ©
,

Leghorn
Turkish

Dates

Almonds, Languedoc
do
Provence

>2
29
46

.

Sicily, Soft Shell

do
do

Shelled

do
do

©
©

19

©

28

©
©
@
©

.

$ hf. box
^ qr. box

..

©
©

88

box

Sardines.

8 75

....

4 40

$ fl>

Currants

Figs, Smyrna..
Brazil Nuts

.

,

.

12
10

Filberts, Sicily......
Walnuts, French
Drier Frtjit—

Apples

..

Blackberries

'

14
25
80
25
16
40

$ B>
*.

Black Raspberries
Pared Peaches

Unpealed do
Cherries, pitted,

new

Gold Prices—Add

5 50 @
4 50 @4 75
2 30 @ ....
..
@
25 @
55
41 @
42
24 @
25
40 @
43

.

54
55

©

•

•

•

•

..

v

.

£2 50
2. 50
25 50

•(gold)

...

Furs— Du„y,10

8 62$ @ 3 77$

•

.

@ 31 U0
•

60
..

•

••

free.
..

•

89
50

24
40

•

© 18 0)
©
76
©
©

16 00
20 00
85

..(gold)
Logwood, Campeachy
Logwood, Hond
...(gold)
Logwood, Tabasco
Logwood, St. Domingo...

4$

@

62$ @
40 @
@
88 @
..
@

Gnu Gedda
Gum Damar
Gum

Dye Woods—Duty
Camwood
(gold) t
Fustic, Cuba

80 @ 1 20

18$ @
17* ©
H$ ©
17 ©

.

.gold
.gold
gold
.gold
.gold

bl’d, in bbls ....
Western..

Senegal
;..(g<ld)
Tragacanth, Sorts
Gum Tragacanth, w flakey.(go’:d)
Hyd. Potash, Fr.and Eng. ..(gold)

addition.

do good
do fair
do ordinary
do &ir to good cargoos....
Java, mats and bags

Native Ceylon
Maracaibo

.

.

.

bales

Ginseng, Southern and
Gum Arabic, Picked
Gum Arabic, Sorts
Gum Benzoin
Gum Kowrie

2
29$
50

60 @
80
..
@
5$
1 75 @ 2 00

oz.

gola $ Sb

Gamboge
Ginger, Jamaica,

37$
6$

@
1 <0 @ 1 05
1 00 @ 1 05

@

...(gold)

60

..

Cutch

14 00
S 00

4$

" 5f
80

@ 1 75
@
17$

6$ @

e

Cubebs, East India.
Extract Logwood
Flowers, Benzoin

35

@ 42 00

86$ @

(gold)

Cochineal, Mexican

5$

8 00 @ 3 *5
2 90 @ 2 9*$

(gold)
(gold)
kegs. 112 B>s
Cochineal,Honduras
(gold)
Cream

9

@

..

-

.

22

..
@
1 10 @ I uo
..

Castor Oil Cases

@
@

4f @
..

Ammonia,in bulk

Cardamoms,Malabar

Copperas,
One inch

..

Camphor, Refined

and wax

Candles—Duty, tallow, 2$; spermaceti

crude.. $ ton.(sold)
Am. Roll
$ lb
HorSulphur

Camphor.On de, (in bond).(gold)
Carbonate

..

Herring, No. 1

.

•

Duck—Duty, 30 ^ cent ad val.

$ pee
Ravens, Light
Ravens, Heavy
Scotch, Gourock, No. 1 per yard.
$ yard
Cotton,No. 1...

50

@2 25
@ 187$

3$
85

12$ ©

Shad,Connecticut,No. 1.^ hf. bbl
Shad, Con ect cut, No. 2
Herring, Sealed
^ box

..

Cantharidos...

©

..

Ohio Dairies..

12$
25
40

B>
....

90

..

40 @

Brimstone
Brimstone,

4

oz.

35

Berries, Persian
Bi Carb. Soda, Newcastle.. .(,olu)
Bi Chromate Potash

17$

§

-.

80 @
..

55

@

34 ©
80 ©
2 75
©
7 50 ©
52 ©
50
©

...(go d)

25 @

Assafoetida
Balsam Capivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru

Brimstone*

@

70

24 @
3S @
3} @

Argols, Keflned

Arsenic, Powdered

25
75

8$ @

Argols, Crude

50
40
42
33
34
33
35
*1
27
25
22

lo

Western

C>minon

Refined sperm,
Stearic

24 @
50 @

...

Annato, fair to prime..
Antimony, Regulus of

iO

14

..

Farm Dairies....

<&
©
@
@

cent ad val.;

50 @
..
@

,

Alum

16
17
16
14

Western..,...*.

8; stearino and
Sperm, patent,

$ fl>

Aloes,Cape.'
Aloes,Socotrine

Borax, Rellned

Cheese-

Factory

@
<&

35
82

..

quali.y
Pennsylvin a—F rkins

Western

35

..

Halftiikin tubs
Welsh tubs, prime
Welsh tubs, Second

Tragacanth, 20

%} cent ad val.; Sal HSratus, 1$ cents $ Sb ; Sal Soda,
£ cent $ lb ; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 ^ cent ad
val.; Shell Lac, 10; :-oda Ash, £; Sugar Lead, 20 cents
$ lb; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad val.; Sulph. Mor¬
phine, $2 50 ^ oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6
cents $
; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vitriol, 25 ^
cent ad val.; Etherial Preparations and Extracts, $i
$ lb; all others quoted below, frke.
Acid, Citric
(gold)
57$ @
Alcohol...
$ gall.
4 55 @4 60

4 cents.

and Cheese.—Duty:

;

Hyd. Potash and Resublimed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and
Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil
Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil
Bergamot, $1 $ lb; Oil Peppermint, 50 $ cent ad
val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $ lb; Phos¬
phorus, 20 $3 cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yellow, 5;
Red do, 10; Ilhubarb, 50 cents $ lb : Quicksilver, 15

10 £0 @ 11 50
14 00 @15 00
Philadelphia Fronts
40 00
Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair, 1 $ flb.
American, gray and white...
lb
75 @ 3 00
Batter

Gum

White

.

Cutch, 10; chamomile
Flowers, 20 <j$ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent ^
lb; Extract Logwood, Flowers; Benzola and Gam¬
boge, 10 $ cent.; Ginseng, 20;l Gum Arabic, 20 $
cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum
Damar, 10 cents per lb; Cum Myrrh, Gum Senegal,
Gum Geeda and

2$ @
5o

...

Sulphate Quinine, Am...
Sulphate Morphine
Tartaric Acid
(gold)..
Verdigris, dry and extra dry
Vitriol, Blue.

Eegulus, 10; Arrowroot, 30

10; Cubebs, 10 cents ^

.

.

^ lb; Bleaching Powder, 30 cents $ 190 lb ; Keflned
^ lb; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll
Brimstone, $10
ton; Flor Sulphur, $20 $ ton, and
15 $ cent ad val.; Crude camphor, 30; Keflned Cam¬
phor, 40 cents $ lb.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad
val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents ^8 lb ;
Caster Oil, $1
gallon; Chlorate Potash, 6; Caustic
Soda, 1$; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, $; Cream Tartar,

M.

per

Senna, East India
Seneca Root.
Shell Lac
Soda Ash (80 ^ cent)....

70
40

Borax, 10 cents

special report.

iiard

50
12

val.; Balsam Capivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30;
Balsam Peru, 50 cents ^8 tt>; Calisava Bark, 80
cent
ad val.; Bi Carb. Soda, l$; Bi Chromate Potash, 3cents
cent ad

Wricks.

Common
Croton

70

@
@
@
@

..

..

(gold)

Sarsaparilla, Hond
Sarsaparilla, Mex..
Senna, Alexandria..,..,

Drugs and. Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, 5 50 p r
gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft>; Alum, 60 cents $ 100 lb;
Argols, 6 cents $ tt>; Arsenic and Assafoetida, 20;

5i
14

©
©

24

65

(gold)

Salaratus
Sal Ammoniac, Refined
Sal Soda, Newcastle

Cotton—See special report.

ad val.
American yellow
^ lb
.19 © 41
Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ cent.
$ ton
Bio Grande shin
© 34 00
Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
@
6|
$

-@

..

..

Quicksilver
Rhubarb, China

i9

@ 10 00
@ 3 25
@
@
45 @
@
41
©
90 @ 1 10
5 50 @ 5 87$
20
@
12$ @
..

Potash

Sugar Lead,

lleeswar-Duty, 20 $ cent

Pilot

©
©

..

v

(gold)

Oxalic Acid.

23$

©

9 50
75
8 25
7 25

(gold)

Opium, Turkey
Prussiate

©

8 50 ©
4 87$ @

...

Phosphorus

22$ @

Mineral
Phial

10

9$ @

Nutgalla Blue Aleppo

©

..

Oil Anise
Oil Cassia..
Oil Bergamot
;
Oil Lemon
Oil Peppermint, pure

untarred Manila, 2$

Corks—Duty, 50 38 cent ad val.
$ gross
Regular, quarts.
Short Tapers

© S 75
©1^00

....

31$ @
3i
©

other untarred, 3$ cents

be 2,‘240 fl>.

$ cent ad val.

..

Portage Lake

merchandise, of the
growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of
Oood Hope, when imported from places this side of the
Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 por cent, ad val. is
levied in addition to the duties imposed on any such
articles when imported directly from the place or places
of their growth o* production ; Haw Cotton and Haw
Ashes—Duty: 15
Pot, 1st sort

..

Baltimore
Detroit

goods, wares, and

Silk excep*ed.
The tor in all cases to

..

Madder, Dutch
(gold)
Madder, French, E. X. F. F. do
'
Manna, large flake

45
32
45
45
31
32

©
©
©
©
©

--

Bolts

In addition to the duties noted below, a discrim¬
inating duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all
imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties
with the United States.
On all

$ lb

Sheathing, new
Sheaihing, yellow

..

30
8
7
2 00

Licorice Paste, Greek

Co>per—Duty, pig,bar, and ingot, 2$; old copper
2 cents $ lb; manufactured, 35 $ oent ad val.; sheath¬
ing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long
and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 ® 34 oz. f) Bquare
foot, 3 cents 1? lb.

CURRENT.

PRICES

.

[September 15,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

340

prices,

...

,

.

89
20
80
17

32$
18
15
80
85
23
20

45

Western.
No. I.

No 1.

Beaver,Dark....# B> 1 *0 @ 2
do
Pale
1 25 @ 1
Bear, Black ...$ skin 5 00 @i5
do
brown.
4 00 @ 8
Cat, Wild
do House
Fisher
Fox, Silver

@
©
©

88
80
54

$ cent.
premium on gold for curroicy

(quotations nominal.) East.
North, ami

Badger

©
©

.

00

..

00

..

50
00

..

..

1 25 @ 1 50

1 00 @ 1 25

5 00 @10 0<»

4 00 @ 7 < 0

40 @ 1 00
40 @ 1 00
10 @
20
10 @ *0
00 @10 00 *. 8 00 @ 5 0
5
._.10 00 @75 00 ’.. 6 00 @50 00
90 @ 1 50
90 @ 1 50

..

..

.,

'3 00 @10 00
I OO @ 2 25

do Cross
do Red
do Grey

60 @ l 25
1 25 @ 3 50

rvnx

Marten,

5 50 @10 50

Dark

3 00 @ 6
10 @
-5 00 @ 8
20 @
70 @ 1

Musk rat,
Otter-...-...

Opossum

.1

Raccoon

00
85
00

8 00. @ 6
1 00 @ 2
50 @ 1
1 00 @ 2
4 50 @ 8
1 00 @ 2
3 00 @ 4
10 @
8 00 @.5

..

..
..
..

..

1 50 @ 8 00

pale
Mink, dark
do

..

..
..
..

80
00

20 @

..

65 @

..

0000
00
50

00'

50*

0025
00

80
90

Glas«—Duty,Cylinder or Window Polished Plato
not over 10x15 inches, 21 cents f square foot; larger
and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents 79 square foot;
larger and not over 24x39 inches 6 cents $ square
foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20
cents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents 79 square
foot; on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common
Window, not exceeding 10x15 inches square, 1*; over
that, and not over 16x24,2; over that, and not over
24x30, 21; all over that, 3 cents $ fl>.
American Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4th qualities.
(Subject to a discount of 25 @#30 $ cent.)
6x8 to 8x10.
79 50 feet
5 50 @ 7 25
8x .to 10x15
6 00 @ 7 75
llx •» to 12x18
6 50 @ 9 25
12x19 to 16x24
7 00 ' @ 9 50
7 50 @ 11 75
18x22 to 20x30
20x31 to 24x30
9 00 @ 14 50
24x31 to 24x36
10 00 @ 16 00
25x36 to 30x44
11 00 @ 17 00
80x46 to 32x18
12 00 @ 18 00
13 00
15 00

32x56

32x50 to
Above

@ 20 00

@ 24 00

Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and

Encr’ish and French

3411

THE CHRONICLE.

September 15,1866.]

4t^

California

1S*@

19

Clear Pine

80 00

California, Mexican.

16 @

16*

Porto Cabello
Vera Cruz

12* @

14
15 j

Laths, Eastern
79 M
Poplar and W. wood B’ds & Pl’k.
Cherry Boards and Plank

55 0ft @ 65 0J
80 00 @ 90 00

14*@
14*@
11 @

Tampico
Texas

.•79 lb gold.

Maracaibo
Maranham
Pernambuco

..

..

.

Tampico and Metamoras... do
Bahia
Chili
ret Salted Hides—
Buenos Ayres
Rio Grande
California
Western

..

..

..

..

@
@
@
@
@
@

Thick)—Discount 2* @ 30 per cent.
$ 50 feet
6x 8 to SxlO
6 00 @7
8x11 to 10x15
6 50 @ 8
11x14 to 12x18
7 00 @ 9
12x19 to 16x24
7 50 @ 10
20x31 to 24x30
12 00 @ 15
21x31 to 24x36
13 00 @ 16
15 00 @ IS
24x36 to 30x44.
80x45 to 32x48.
16 00 @ 20
82x50 to 32x56
13 00 @ 24
Gunny Basjs—Duty,

$ square yard, 3;‘over 10,
Calcutta, light and heavy

75
25
75
50
50

50
00

50
00

valued at 10 cents or less,

4 cents 79 B)
.. $ pee

*

@
@
@
11 @

9*
IS

12*@
11 @

14
14

28 @

79 Jb gold.

Gunny Clotli—Duty, valued at 10 cents or
f square yard, 3; over 10,4 cents 79 ib.
Calcutta, standard.'
..yard
86 @

less
86*

Gunpo wder-Duty, valued at 20 cents or less
$ lb, 6 cents f lb, and 20 f cent ad val.; over 20
cents $ lb, 10 cents $ !b and 20 $ cent ad val.
@ 5 00
Blasting (A)
$ keg of 25 lb
,

Shipping and Mining

t

#

m

7 50
40

Sporting, in l B> canisters. ..79 Ib

5 50

@

@
@

1

id

30

..

..

Coutry sl’tertrim. & cured

do
do
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio Qr. Kip
$ cash.
City

Gambia and Bissau

Hops—Duty: 5 cents f B>.
$ 1)
Crop of I860

86
70

40 @
30

..

@

60

50

of 1865

@

7Q
'T

Horns-Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.

18 00

$C

@

18 00

Ox, Rio Grande
Ox, Buenos Ayres

@15 00

$ cent ad val.
92* @
79 fl>
70 @
60 @

India Rubber—Duty, 10

Para, Fine

mixed..(cash)..$ lb
Ayres,mixed
Hog, Western, unwashed

Rio Grande,
Buenos

12

Indig-o—Duty free.

@ 1 65
75 @ 1 35

( old) 79®

Bengal

1 00

,(go!d)

Oude

(gold)
(gold)
(gold)
(gold)

Madras

Manila
Guatemala..
Caraccas

65
65
1 ftO
70

Lo >se Joint
List.
Hinge^mi ht, Strap anl T.... List 25 $ et adv.
Door B>lts, Cast KC>1
L st 2<* 39 ct. ris
Carriage and Tire Bolts
List
79 c . •"is.
Door L c s, Latches & Escutcheons.List 7* 79 >t. dis.
Door Knobs—Mineral
i ist 7* 79 ct. os.
“
Pore lain
Li t 7$ f ct dis.
Padlocks..
List 10@20&?£ f ct. dis.
Locks—Cabinet, Eagle
Lis .
Tains
List '0 $ ca dis.
Stacks aad Dies
Li t 30 f ot dis.
.List 20 f ct. dis.
■Screw WrencatS—Coe's Paten*.
“
Taft’s
L 8 5U 39 cr. dis
-

“

..

tirmer

handled, in sets

do

c.o

ling

..

.

.Li 140 79 <t aiv

List 20 79 ct. dis.

Augur Bitts
•hurt

26

..List 4 » 79 ct. aiv

insets.

no

@

Old List - 5 f ct a Iv

do

per

....'

3ut Tacks
^ut Brads

doz. New List 10 7*1
List 10 f
List
&10 f
Li a 55 79

ct.
»t.
ct
ct.
c .

List ?5&30 f
List V <»'/* 79 ct.
List 'ift f ct.
List 5 $ c .

3ivet', Iron
Screws, American
do

$ng is .
Shovels and Spades..

dis
dis.
dis
dis.

dis
ois.
dis.
dis

Swedes, assorted sizes
105 ( 0
Bar, English and American,Refined 125 00
do
do
do
do
Common 115 00

@170 00

1.5 00

@205 00

Bar

Scroll,

.....

150 00

Ivory—Duty,"10 79 cent ad val.
79 ®

African,Serivellos, West Coast..

Jut©

cash.f Sb

Oak, Slaughter,light
do
do
do
do
do

middle... do
heavy.'... do

do
do

light Cropped

Manila....
Sisal

(gold)

@ 175 0 >
@135 00
luf @

$ lb

..

Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry
10 79 cent ad val.
*

or

@

15

Salted, and Skins

Dry Hides—

Buenos Ayres
Montevideo
Bio Grande

Orinoco




...f lb gold

20 @
19*(@

do
do

do
do

.

8 50

Hemlock, B. Ayres,&c..l’t do
do

do

middle, do

heavy do
California,light, do
do

do

do
do

‘

.

.....

middle do

heavy, do

Orinoco,etc. Ft. do

do
do
do

do
middle, do
do
heavy., do
do & B. A, dam’gd

do
do

do

@

4 50

do

clo

36

@
@
@

45
49

50

,

56
21

@

@
@
@
87 @
82
©
34 @
35* @
81
@
83
31

@
@
@
@
@

33

85
86
32
>4

@
@

3ft
22
88
f5

34
36
3*1

82

all

all do
Slaughter in rough, .cash.

Oak, Slauirhter

83
38

51
1'
33
35

poor

in rough, light... do
do mid. & h’vy do

38

83
25
36
33
0

45

Lime—Duty; 10 79 cent ad val.

Rockland,
do

common

f bbl.

heavy

#

#

..

@
@

1 60
2 00

Lumber, Woods, Staves, Etc.—Duty
Lumber, 20 79 cent ad val.; Staves, 10 79 cent ad val.;
Rosewood and Cedar, free.
Spruce, Eastern
79 Mfeet 27 00 @25 00

18 @

do
..do

.......

..do

221

..

hhd., culls
bbl., extra...i
bbl.,heavy
bbl., light.

..
..

..

,

.

bbl., culls

_

oak, hhd., heavy
hhd., light.,

_

@150 00

Rosewood—Duty

Mahogany, St. Domingo, crotches,
79 f°°t
St. Domingo, ordinary
do
logs

25

Nuevitas
Mansanilla
Mexican
Honduras

Mansanilla
Mexican
Florida

<9>
@
@
@
@
@

20

@
@

20
16
14
14
1 00
8
6

14
12
1ft
10
50
5
4

f cubic ft.

Rosewood, Rio Janeiro

79 ®>

Bahia

do

50

10

(American

wood)
Cedar, Nuevitas
do
do
do

@

17
20
12
12
12

Port-au-Platt, crotches.
Port-au-Platt, logs.....

do
do
do
do
do
do

Molasses—Duty: 8 cents 79 gallon.
79 SaIL

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado
do

@250 00
@200 00
@I2i 00
@100 00
@175 00
@140 00
@110 00
@ 60 00
@130 00

@ 90 00

HEADING—white oak, hhd......

55
45
42
55

Clayed

English islands

@
@
@
@

@

30
16
16
16
15

@
@
@

75
CO
46

<§>

60

@

$ Ib
Cut, 4d.@ 69d
cents

Clinch
Horse shoe,

79 100 lb

....

@
@

^ lb

forged (Sd)

7 25
8 75

32

@

Copper

50

@

..

Yellow metal
Zinc

3J

@
@

20

..

spirits of turpentine 30
79 gallon; crude turpentine,rosin, pitch, and
tar, 20 $ cent ad val.
79 280
4 85 @ 4 90
Turpentine, soft.
Tar, American
.79 bbl.
3 0J @ 3 50
do foreign
..
@
Naval Stores—Duty:

cents

Pitch

8 25

Rosin,common

3 62* @ .3 75

201
184

Southern Pine
White Pine Box Boards

17i@

18

White Pine Merchant, Box Boards

-40 00
80 00

@ 82 00

38 00

@ 83 00

@ (0 00

@ 4 50
@ .7 00

7 ;0

9 60

69

9| @

..

@

66* @

lbs.)
Spirits turpentine, Am.... 79 gall.

12

79

Oakum—Duty free

@3 50

4 00
5 50

strained and No. 2
No. 1
Pale and Extra (280

do
do
do

Cake—Duty: 20 79 cent ad
City thin oblong, in bbls.... 79 ton
do
in bags
Western thin oblong, in bags ....
Oil

3 25 @ 3 75

43
45

do

middle
bel ies

@

860 00
110 00

....(gold)

@ 90 00

Ijcatlkcr—Duty: sole 35, upper 30 79 cent ad val.

weights

Russia, Clean

..

do

val.

55 00 @ 56 00

5 DO @
51 00 @51 15

Oils-Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 23
bottles or flasks, $1:
burning fluid,5ft cents 79 gallon; palm, seal,and oocoa
nut. 10 79 cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other fish
(foreign fisheries,) 2ft 79 cent ad valorem.
5 85 @ 5 90
Olive, quarts per case
do in casks
^ gall.
1 '5 @ ....
Palm
fib
11* @
12
Linseed, city
1 88 @ 1 85
f gall
ents; olive and salad oil, in

1 30
1 50

Whale

do

90

Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $25; Jute,
$15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 f ton; and
Tampico, 1 cent $ lb.
American,D rsed
...fton 875 00 @100 03
....

@160 00
@155 00
@1- 0 00

..

Hay—North River, in bales 79

Undressed

....

I/eaH—Duty, Pig, $2 79 100 tt>; Old Lead, 1* cents
79 B>; Pipe and Sheet, 2* cents 79
Galena.,
79 100 B>
..
@
Spanish
eo d
6 75 @ 6 87*
German
g<d.l
6 S77 @
English
gold
6 87* @ 17 25
Bar
nl*t
@ 10 50
Pipe and Sheet
net
..
@10 70

do

do

@

....

S 25 @ 3 60
2 00 @ 2 50

African, West Coast, Prime

do

@

S5 00

East India, Prime
East India, Billiard Ball

do
do

100 lbs, for shipping

150 00

American

do

List 25@30 79 ct. adv.

Planes

@

Rods, 5-8 @ 3-16 inch
Hoop

8*

8@

Horse Shoes

@180 00

..

/—Store Pricks—,

-130 00 @lc5 00
165 00 @225 00
Nail Rod
79 lb
10* @*
11*
Sheet, Russia
23j @
25
Sheet,Single,Double and Treble..
7 @
9
Rails, English.. .(gold)
^ ton 55 Oj @ ....

15

hhd., extra
hhd., heavy
hhd., light ...Q

Nails—Duty: cut 1*; wrought 2*; horse shoe
Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1* cents 7? ®; Railroad,
70 cents $ 100 lb; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents $ lb;
Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to 1| cents TP fl>;
Pig, $9 79 ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents 79 ®.
Pig, Scotch, No l(ca8h) 79 ton.... 46 00 @ 49 00
Pig, American, No. 1
48 00 @ 50 00
Bar, Swedes,assortedsize8(ingold) 95 00 @J<0 00

HorseShoe

bra'id*. ..ner doz 15 @ 17
d.>
or ‘inary makers
13 @ 15
Carpe 'ter’s Adzes, best quality
24 @ ..
do
ordinary..'21 @ ..
Cotton Gins, per s-tw
$5 loss r0 79 cent
N irrow V roug it Iiutis
List 5 79 ct rfisc.
Cast 3utts—Fast Jo n
: ....List U 79 ct. aiV.

f » 24

90
1 10
1 10
90

83

©
@
@

Hardware-

Framing Chisels

@
@
@
@

35

Axes—Cast steel, best

Smths’VIsu?

95
75
65

,

Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

..

@300 00
@250 00
@200 00

..

.'.

free.

85 @

@120 00

..

79 M.

pipe, extia
pipe, heavy
pipe, light

Mahogany, Cedar,

Honey—Duty, 20 cents $ gallon.
Cuba, .(duty paid).(gold).$ gall.

Foroign

81
20

29 @
19 @

do
do

Sierra Leone

^

Red

Band

-

34
82

100 00

pipe, culls

do
do
do
do
do

..

do

Ovalsand Half Round

flair—Duty free.

do
do
do*
do
do
do

.

@ 65 00

85 00 @ 40 00

Maple and Birch

•..

2CJ

26 @

60 00

Oak and Ash

STAVES
White oak,

qualit es.
(Single

..

Black Walnut

)ry Salted Hides—

do

154
12J

@100 00
4 00* @ ..

refined winter

winter, bleached
do
unbleached

Lard oil
Red oil, city distilled
do
saponified..
Straits
Paraffine, 28 — 80 gr
Kerosene

1 85

@

....

2 *5 @ 2 65

Sperm,crude
do
do

@

..

2 95
1 90

@

@
@

...

; 95

1 00 @
..
@

105

@

50

@

64

1 15
..

(free)...

..

@

IPalnts—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and
litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents 79
Paris
white and whiting, 1 cent 79 lb; dry ochres, 56 cents
10ft fl>: oxides of zinc, If cents f lb ; ochre, ground
in oil, $ I 5ft f 100 lb ; Spanish brown 25 79 cent ad val.
China clay, $5 f ton; Venetian red and vermilion#
2o 79 cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 79 tom
Lithrage, American
79
12 @
13
12 @
18
Lead, red, American
do white, American, pure, in oil
@
16
do while, American, puie, dry.
,.
@
15
Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1.
12
10 @
do white, American, No. 1, in oil
10. @
12
Obre,yellow,French,dry f >00 lb
2 50 „@ 3 50
do
groun.inoil
Spanish brow dry
do

Paris
do

fib

8

f 100 lb

ground In oil.79 lb
79
lbs
Am...'. ....f 100 lbs

Whiting, American
Vermilion, Chinese
do
do
do

Venetian

Trieste
California &
American

SC.)

..

f B>
*

English..

@

2* @
2*
165 @ 1 70
1 20 @ 1 £5
185 @140
80' @

79 owt

10

8 @
9
8 87* @„ 4 25

white, No. 1.
do

@

1 50 @

40

3 12* @ 8 19

•t;.

•

THE

342

cents

ft gallon.

59 ©
47
23
00 ©

;

©
©

44
24

90

gold # 1b
Ginger, race and African
Mace
!
(gold)

©

Pepper
Pimento,
Cloves

Jamaica....

454

-

"'■<»
y&'&fXSrZfilQ

'V:

.»

■-

•

i

•

©
214 ©
20 ©
27 ©

1 2 4 © 1 25
1 35 © 1 37
1 85 © ....
@ a 40

ft ft

and Liquors-Liquors— Duty.
Wines
Brandy,'first proof, $8 per gallon, other liquors.
WiNE»-«-Duty: value net over 50 cents # gallon 20
cents # gallon and 25 # cent ad valorem; over
and not over 100, 50 cents # gallon and 25 # cent

96

91

vaL

Whalebone—Duty: foreign fishery,' Op c ad
South Sea
North west coast
Ochotsk....
Polar

9->4

m

(gold)
(gold)
(gold)
(gold)

No. 1

Nutmegs,

29
60

©

# gall.

Crude, 40 © 47 gravity ..
ReOned, free
do
in bond

cents; nutmegs, 50
and pimento, 15; and

Cassia, in mats

.-: • ■*'- / £•/*

•

[September 15,1866.

CHRONICLE

Spices—Duty: mace, 40
cassia and clove;*, 20; pepper
ginger root, 5 cents ft ft.

© 20 00
© 83 lO
@ ....
@ 20 00
@ 40
refined, 40

$ lb 16 00
# *on 31 00
# bbl 5 00
# ton 17 00
Chrome yellow
15
# ft
Pctrnieam—Duty: crude, 20 cents;
made

Carmine, city
China clay^
Chalk
Chalk, block

-'.. '"" ':. ••:•• *•': ;; ' ' ‘

'■

■;•;•;-•

'. Jv2> ■';:

'

$2.50
50

21*
.

27*

ad Valorem; over
cent ad val.

© 10 50
© 10 60
& Co
(gold)
© 10 50
© 10 00
Pinet, Castillion & Co. ...(gold)
Planter
calcined, English, cast, # ft
....(gold)
© 10 60
Renault & Co
184 @ 24
20 $ cent ad val.
(r. 10 ( 0
German
154 © 174 J. Va-s.l <fe Co
(gold)
© 10 00
Blue Nova Scotia
$ ton.
@ 4 50 American, spring,
.
11 © 12| Jules Robin Co
Marrette &
.... ©
(gold)
White Nova Scotia
@ 4 80 English, spring
Hi © 13
United Vineyard Propr...(gold)
...
© ..
Calcined, eastern
@ 2 40
$ bbl
(gold) 5 25 © 10 00
Vine Growers Co
Calcined, city mills
i. . @ 2 50
Qb
Sugar—Duty: on raw or brown sugar, not above
Lgerfreres
(gold)
Other brands Cognao >... .(gold)
5 01 © 7 00
Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 cent; No. 12 Dutch standard, 8; on white or clayed, above
Pellevoisin frere6
(gold)
4 90 @ 6 00
No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refin¬
hams, bacon, and lard, 2 cents ft Tb.
(gold) 4 90 © 5 CO
over
Beef, plain mess..
$ bbl.
..
@ 19 00 ed, 84; above 15 and not1b. 20,4 ; on refined,5; and A. Seignette
Hivert Pellevoisen
(gold)
4 85 © 4 90
Melado, 24 cents $
do new do
H 00 ©
10| ©
Alex. Seignette
(gold)
4 85 © 4 95
..
©
Porto Rico
$ ft
do extra mess
9| ©
Arzac Seignette
(gold) 4 85 @ 4 95
do
do
new
19 00 © 23 tO Cuba, inf to common refining ..
10i ©
J Rornieox
4 75 fm
(§1
do fair to good
do
do India mess
..
11* ©
Other brands Rochelle... .(gold)
4 25 © 4 65
do fair to good grocery
.
Pork, mess, new
.
83 00 © 33 25
l-’i ©
Rum—Jamaica
(gold)
4 25 to 6 00
do prime to choice do
do prime mess
©
9# ©
St. Croix
(gold)
8 50 to 3 60
do mess, Old
do centrifugal
31 00 © 31 2i
30 00 ©
6 ©
Gin
Different bra»ds
(gold) 2 90 to 8 50
20
do
Melado
do prime, do
17* ©
94 ©
9
4 00 © 4 90
Lard, in bbls.
ft lb
HI Whisky—Scotch and Irish .(gold)
©
10? ©
do 10 to 12
D mestic—N. E. Iium
(cur.) 2 45 © 2 60
do
do
do kettle rendered
13
10 ©
12 ©
to 15
do 18
Bourbon Whisky
(• ur.)
2 40 © 6 00
do
do
Hams, pickled
19
HI
©
18* ©
do 16 to 18
.. © 2 25
Corn Whisky
(cur.)
do
do
do
dry salted
154
14* ©
l‘f ©
do 19 to 20
Wines—Port
(gold) 2 00 © 8 00
do
do
Shoulders, pickled
15?
34* ©
14» ©
white
do
(gold)
Burgundy Port
90 © 1 40
do
dry salted.
do
m
©
©
Sherry
(gold) 1 15 © 8 00
Beef hams....
ft bbl.
Loaf
©
Madeira
(gold) 4 00 © S 00
Bacon
Granulated
do
Marseilles
(gold)
80 © 110
Crushed and powdered
Sherry
d>
(gold)
85 © 1 15
White coffee, A
Raff*-—(Domestic).
1^4 ©
Malaga, sweet
(gold) 1 16 © 1 75
Yellow coffee
White, city
5
©
do
dry
(gold)
1 10 © 1 60
Seconds
* ©
Claret, in hhds
(go d) 8 - 00 @150 00
City colored
10 ©
do
incases
(gold)
2 40 © 30 00
Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Canvas
©
Champagne
(gold) 12 00 @ 25 00
Country mixed
8iclly
ft ton 100 00 ©195 00
lb.; paddy 10
Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered,$2to $3 50
Rice—Duty: oleaned 24 cents 1
# 100 ft, and 15 ft cent ad val.
cents, and uncleaned 2 cents # lb.
Tallow—Duty: 1 cent # ft.
12 *0 © 14 00
No. 0 to 18
10 # ct. < ff list.
Carolina
$ 100 fl>.
Amerioan, prime,country and city
9 75 © 10 00
12 ©
20 & 5 ft ct. off list.
124 No. 19 to 26
East India, dressed
ft ft
:
No. 27 to 86
25 *36 6 # ct. off list*
100 0); bulk, 18
Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain.# ft
9 @
Salt—Duty: sack, 24 cents ft
-Duty pa’d
cents $ 100 lb.
Tea—Duty: 25 cents per 1b.
90 © 1 05
50
Wool—Duty: costing 12 cents or less # ft, 8
Hyson, Common to lair
;...
Turks Islands
$ bush.
1 15 © 1 85
cents # ft; over 12 and not more than 24, 7 cents
do
Superior to fine
Cadiz
1 40 © 1 65
1 95
24 and not over 32,10, and 10 # cont ad valorem ;
do
Ex fine to finest'.
86 © 1 10
Liverpool ground
$ sack
82,12 cents ft ft, and 10 # cent ad valorem; on
Young Hyson, Common to fair ...
1 40
do
fin e Ashton’s ..f^old)
20
2 90
1
the skin, 20 # cent ad val.
do
Superior to fine
1 60
do
fine, Worthington's....
PO ©
1
American, Saxony fleece ....# ft
62 © 67
do
Ex fine to finest...
fine, Jeffreys & Darcy’s
do
1 10 © 1 25
62 @ 58
do
full blood Merino
1 50
Gunpow. & Imper., Com. to fair
fine, Marshall’s
do
1 35 ©
do
4 and 4 Merino
45 @ 50
do
do Sup. to fine,
90
1 60 © 1
Onondaga, com. fine
bbls.
Extra, pulled
52 © 67
do
do Ex. f. to finest
6.5
do
do
210 lb bgs.
55 ©
Superfine.
47 @ 50
H. Skin 4cTwankay,Gom, to fair,
75
do
do
ft bush.
70 ©
No. 1, pulled
88 © 45
do
do
Sup’r to fine.,
90
80 ©
Solar coarse.
California, unwashed
S8 @ 40
do
do
Ex f. to finest.
95 © 1 00
Fine screened
do
25
common
, 20 @
Uncolored Japan, Com. to fair ...
do
ft pkg.
05 © 1 15
3 00
do
pulled...,
'80 © 45
do
do
Sup’r to fine ..
20 © 1 80
F. F
j-240 ft bgs.
i
Texas
15 @ 25
Kx f. to finest.
do
do
91
80 ©
Peruvian, unwashed
82 @ ,83
1 >0
Oolong, Common to fair.
^
95 ©
Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2J cents; refined and
Valparaiso, unwashed
27 @
do
Superior to fine
1 70
1 80 ©
82 @
S. American Mestiza, unwashed..
partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent $1 ft.
do
Ex fine to finest
80
70 ©
do
common,unwashed..
18 @
ft lb
.. ©
18 Souchong & Congou, Com. to fair,
Refined, pure
L 05
90 ©
.. ©
Entre Rios, washed
do
do
Sup’r to fine,
Crude
9 ©
94
1 15 © 1 70
do
22 @ 24
unwashed
do
Ex f. to finest
do
Nitrate soda
gold
3f ©
4
43 @ 43
S, American Cordova
Donskoi, washed
32 @ 45
Seed*—Duty; linseed, 16 cents; hemp, * cent $
25 © 80
Tin—Duty: pig,bars, and block,15 $ cent ad val. Persian
lb; oanary, fl ft bushel of 60 lb; and grass seeds, Plate and sheets
African, unwashed
15 © 25
and tome plates, 25 per cent. al va .
30 ^ cent ad val.
washed
do
85 © 45
12
244 ©
1U ©
Banca
(gold)....# ft
Clover
#ft
'..*•©
22
Mexican, unwashed
20 © 25
8 76 © 4 00
(gold)
Straits
Timothy, reaped
$ bush.
21* ©
22
Smyrna, unwashed
22 © 25
4 60 © 5 00
English
(gold)
85 © 45
15 ‘.'5 © 15 50
do
washed
;...
Orary
ft bu h.
@ 29 <>0
Plates, charcoal I. O
# box 11 00 @ 14 50
American, clean... $ tee
Linseed,
8 70 © 8 85
do
I. C. Coke
do
American,rough.# bush
Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 60 # 100 ft; she
15 25 © 15 50
©
Terne Charcoal
do
do
Calcutta
©
Terne Coke
do
10 75 @ 11 25 24 cents # ft.
do
Bombay
Sheet
# ft
134® 144

Naptha, refined

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots,
or under, 24cents; over 7 cents and
3 cents # ft ; over 11 cents, 34 cents
cent ad val".
(Store prices.)

5 25

$ bbl.
Paris—Duty: lump, free;

Residuum

valued at 7 cents ft
not above II,
# ft and 10 ft

# gallon and 26 $

$1 ft gallon, $1

ft

Brandy—J. & F.
Hennessy
Otard, Dnpny

5 r0
6 80
6 *5
6 20
6 '5
5 0>
5 20

Martell ...(gold)
(gold)

on

—

..

..

...

•

•

.

....

..

over

over

.

g..

...

1

....

Shot—Duty: 2f
Drop and

cents ft lb.

Stilt—Duty; free.
Ts&tlees, No. I ©

11 ©

ft lb

Back
5

All thrown silk. 35
11 00
$ ft 10 «0

superior, No. I © 2 ...
© 4....
Canton, re-reeled, No. 1 © 2
Japan, superior
—
do
Medium

T&ysaams,
do

► P0
8 fO

medium. No. 3

Tampico
Matamoras
Poyta
Madras, eaon
Cape...-.

Deer, San Juan
do Bolivar
do

Honduras

do

Sisal

do
do
do
do

Para
Vera Cruz...
Chagres
...
Puerto Cabello

8eftp~-'Duty: 1 cent
Castile

gold....
gold...
goli....
cash....

osh....

g*ld#ft

gold
gold....
gold....
gold
icmd
gold....
gold....

© 13 00.

© 10 ;0
© 18 00
©
..

40
..

©
©
©

©
©
©
©
60 ©
60 ©
40 ©
57 ©
57 ©
f5 ©
55 ©
544 ©
4j ©

674
..
42
65

45
-

55
43
70
65
41
60
574
57
60
f5
474

Spelter—Duty: in pigs,

bars, and plates, $1 50

Plates,foreign
.gold..#
yt« domestic.™,.....

ft

64 ©
II ©

6|
m

ft

....
...

York and Ohio

fillers
Manufactured, On bond)—
10s and 12s—Best Virginia & N.Y.
Medium

do

fts—(daik) Best

Virginia

do
do Medium
do
do Common
fts (Western.)—Ex.
do
Fine....
do
fts (Virginia)—Ex.
do
do
Fine

fine, bright...

Navy
do
do

Medium
Common

do
do

fts—Best Virginia

dqars

©

9

75

©

80
26
48
80

Common

(domestic).

do

do

COBmOXl CigV».

>

do

82
S8.

414
85
•

,

•

#

&5

70.
30
21

85
30
26

824
28
26

©

© 80 00

©

•

00

New-York Seed, Conn.
Penn.

& N.Y..

80
60
20
10

1 00
1 00

©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©

Wrapper.
do

Mum*....

20 00
18 00

18 00

©

•

45
80
25
25

,

.

•

00
00

00
00

,

.

Beef
Pork...,
Wheat
Corn
To Glasgow (by
Flour

,

©
©

.

...ft bbl.

,

•

•

©
©
©
©

c.
•

•

# bush.

-a—

#

St*am):
ft bbl.

#

,

,

Oil

Beef
Pork
To Havbx:
Cotton

...

.

,

# bbl.

,

20 0
•

...# tee.

#

..# bbl.

.

*

# "bush.
..

Flour

Petroleum
Lard, tallow, out meats,
jUhot, pot and pearl

.

1 00
10 00
.

etc # to*

8
2

8

3

6*
6

$

....ft ft

Hops
Beef and pork.....

Measurement goods
Wheat, In shipper’s bags

5
6

© 1 9
4
©
4
©
© 4 5*
© 25 0
© 30 0
© 5 0
© 8 0

#

Wheat

Corn, bulk and bags
Petroleum (sad)
Heavy goods

2
1

© 20 0
© 2-5 0
@ 1 9
@ 4 9

6

17

.

.

,

,

bags..

Oil
Flour
Petroleum

10

©
©

00

Medium

Clear Havana.

9
25

,

,

balk and bags....

Wheat, bulk and
Beef
Pork
To London :
Heavy goods

45

4
80

fine, bright...

do
do

Oil
Corn,

8

Yara
Havana,

X

,

© 1 ’s
© 4 0
16 00 © ••
© 20
4*
©
6
©
,

«

Petroleum
Heavy goods

s.

8-x c©
,

10
18
2 i
21

©
©
15 ©
©
12? ©
©
©
5 ©
12 ©
,

.

fillers

....ft ft

Flour

10J

©

d

s.

To Liverpool :
Cotton

4
8

.

do prime wrappers
do fair wrappers
do fillers
New York running lots
Ohio
do
New

ft ft, a nd 25 $ cent ad val.
ft lb.
19 © 19

ft 100 fts.




@9(0

••

Skins—Doty: lo ft cent ad val.
$ lb (cash)
O-oat, Curacoa
do Buenos Ayres
god....
told....
do Yera Crux
do
do
do
do
do

© 10 50
© 9 50

12 50

cent ad valorem.
Lugs and Common leaf #
Medium do do
..
Good
do do
Fine
do do Selections do do
Conn, a d N Y. wrappers

Freights—

and manupound and 50

Ob ;

per

$ cent.HO
© 12

11 60
9 00
12 60

China thrown
Italian thrown

Tobacco—Duty: leaf 35 centi
factured, 50 cents # ft. Cigars $':

12

-

-

©
©
©
©
©
©

•

*

,,

•

•

5 6 © 6 0

.. ©
f
8 0 © 10 0

September

15,1866.]

343

CHRONICLE.

THE

The works on the Italian side, it is
October, while in November uninter;
)c
rupted communication will be established between Italy aud
France.
Although the gradients are as heavy as one in twelve,
Railroad Earnings for August.—We give below a compar¬
speed of ll£ miles per hour, on a recent trial, has been attained
ative statement of railroad earnings for August, 1865 and 1863, so
them.
Some of the curves are very sharp, being only fifty feet,
far as they have been reported :
Railroads.
Difference. radius.
1865.
18G6.
Mount Washington Railroad.—The opening of a section of
$597,498
$528,613 Dec. $69,1*0
Atlantic & Great Western
Chicago and Great Eastern
97,175
104,331 Inc.. 7,186 the steam railroad from the base of Mount Washington to the Sum¬
Chicjuro & Northwestern
767,508
778,2°4 Inc.. 10,776
Chicago and Rock Island
288,095
310,443 Iuc.. 22,848
Erie^
1,418,742 1,290,330 Dec. 128,414 mit was informally celebrated on the 29th ult. The engine drew
586.074 Dec. 161,395 with ease a load of forty passengers up an inclination of fifteen
Illinois Central.....
747,469
McGregor Western..
18,322
14,700 Dec. 3,622
Michigan Central
413,501
359,665 Dec. 53,836 degrees.
*
Michigan Southern
**24,206
380,452 Dec. 43,754
Railroad Freight Line.—The several narrow gauge railroad
Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien
170,555 1 116,224 Dec. 64,331
Milwaukee and St. Paul
241,370
188,223 Dec. 63,147 companies between Boston aud New York, and Cincinnati, Louis¬
Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chicago....
712,495
528,618 Dec. 183,877
874,534
396,248 Inc.. 21,714 ville and St. Louis, have entered into a new freighting arrangement,
Toledo, Wabash and Western
60,698 Inc..
Western Union...
59,862
836 to be called the “ White Line,” in contradistinction to the existing
The above table shows a large falling off in 1866, as compared
Red Line.” The trains on these are to bo pushed through prompt¬
with the previous year, but this we consider rather accidental than
ly, and will give a great advautage to local as well as through ship¬
otherwise, and due in a great measure to the delayed movement of
pers.
The arrangement was to go into effect, and probably did so,
the Fall trade. Even the slight increase in the Chicago and Great
the 3d of the current month.
on
Eastern and the Chicago and Northwestern are losses when com¬
Alabama and Florida Railroad.—The proposition to turn
pared with the increase in the previous months of the current year. over to a Boston house all the stock held by the corporation of
With regard to the Chicago and Rock Island, it is possible that
Pensacola in the Alabama and Florida Railroad, as a bonus for an
the amount for 1866 includes also the earnings of the Iowa portion
advance of money to complete the railroad in the course of three
of the line, which has only lately come* into the full possession of
months, was ratified by the lreeholders of that city, on the 23d ult.,
making good progress.
believed, will be completed in

to be

ftailt»ag Jltcnitar.

-

a

on

}

“

the company.

Railroad.—The receipts of this road for
August were $111,770 in gold. The receipts for May were $65,116, for June $67,429, and for July $85,000, on a distance of 73
miles—Sacramento to Alta, the latter being the present terminus
of the road. This constant increase in receipts must be cheering
news to those who are investing in the new gold-bearing bonds of
Pacific

Central

the company.
Mount Cenis

r—-Chicago
1864.

1

(280 rr )

317,839
390,355
421,363
466,830
565,145
480,710
619,306

.

154,418
195.803

162,723

822,277
355,270
335,985
409,250

178,786

206,090
224,257
312,165

833,432. ..May..
368,273. .June.
326,870. .July

.

..Aug..

357,956

307,919
236,824

3,840,091

.

Jan

.

..

304,445
338,454
330,651
267,126
315,258

278,891
358,862
402,219
404,568
448,934

411,806

4,110,154
*

(468 m.)

$290,676
457,227
611,297
588,066

525,751
632,911
506,640

625,547
075,330
701,3 >2

406.373

510,100
423,578

586,964
799,236
661,391
657,141
603,402

1866.

(708 m.)
$571,536
628,972
616,665
516,608
460,573
617,682
578,403
747,469
739,736
641,589
648,887
518,088

(524 m.)

(524 mi)

1865.

1864.

(234 m.)
$102,749

366,361
413,322
366,245

353,194
402,122
309,083

424,206
484,173
521,636
498,421
366,192

4,868,951

fan.

$314,598.

283,177.
412,393.
409,427.
426,493.

.Mar.

_

.April.

,Year..

..Year.,

3,095,470

.

(210 m.)

$100,872
147,485

1864.

(708 m.)

(251 m.)
$77,010
74,409
89,901
72,389
83,993
78,697
91,809
94,375
93,078
90,576

..Jan..

$582,823,
512,027. ..Feb.

..Sep..
...Oct...
.Nov..
.Dec..
.

.

.Year

144,942
218,236

.

234,194

.net....
Nov.,..
Dec.,.,

+»Year..

203,785

202,966
204,726

•

2,084,074 .2490,693

1866.

.Jan..

$121,776.

84,897. .Feb..
72,135. .Mar..
108,082. April.
267,4S8. .May..
262,172 June.
170,795. July..
116,224. .Aug..
..Sep..
..Oct...
.Nov.
.Dec...
-

Mlear

193,919
203,514
210,314
214,533
264,637
212,171

.

Ma

290.642

.5

.

«

.

ne..

uly...

.J

224, >2
310,443

*...

Aug...
.Sept...
.Oct
.Nov
.Dec

82,722.
95,664.
106,315
96,623

131,648
126,970
99,662
86,4 2
164,710
221,638
198,135
129,227

1,402,106

1865.

(234 m.)

$98,181

1864.

Michigan Central. 1866.
1865.

(285 m.)
$252,435

.

..May...

—

—

.June..

..July..
..Aug...
Sep...
..

—

—

...Oct...
.Nov
.Dec...

..

.

—

(242 m.)
.

.

192,138. ..Mar...

167,301. .April..
163,699. ..May...

167,t:99. ..June..
166,015. ..July..
Aug...

sept...
Oct
.Nov....
.Dec....

$79,735

95.843

.

3,986,946

—

.

132,896
123,987
127,010
156,338
139,6? 3

244,1x4

$131,707. ..Jan..

375,534

221,570

1865.

239,189

246,109

313,914

826.230

271,527
290,916
304,468
349,285
344,700
850,348
872,618
412,658

277,423
283,180
253,924

1864.

(140 m.)

194,167 ...Feb...
256,407 ..Mar...
270,300. April..
316,433. .May...

194,521
c

325 91. .June..
304.917 July..
396,248 A Jig...
.

Sept....
.Oct
.Nov...,,
.Dee

875,534

f361,610

(247,028

-

247,263

—

-Western Union.-

$226,059. ..Jan...

138 738

»

1866.

(340 m.) (340 m.)
$259,223 $267,041

3,793,005

..Year

(484 m.)

144,001

..Year., 2,050,828 2,986,678

4,504,546
—
Mississippi

3,311,070

...Sep..

139,171
155,753

265,796
337,158
343,786
365,196
836,082
324,986
359,665

284,819

188,223. ..Aug..

—

(285 m.)

460,661
490,693
447,669
828,869

275,950

.

1865.

265,154

413,501

..Dec,..

242,560. Juue.
209,199. ..July.

2,535,001

220.209

844,228
337,240
401,456
865,663
329,105

...Oct..
..Not..

245,511. ..May..

346,717
171,125

r271,798

(340 m.)
$210,329

*

$282,438

279,137

260,466
309,261
269,443
224,957
223.242
268,176
302,596
332,400
278,006
346.243

122,621. ..Feb.
124,175. ..Mar..
121,904, .April.

106,269
203,018
237,562
251,9 6
2-11,370
3"0,841
395,579

4374,534
2? 376,981

$306,324

Ohio A
1864.

1866.
(234 m.)

95,905

$144,084

(285 m.)

278,848
848.802
838,276
271,653
265.780
263,244
346.781
408,445
410.802
405,510
376,470

.April..

-

86,528

(242 m.)

—

1864.

.Jan...
84,264. .Feb...
82,910. ..Mar...

1,224,056

(234 771.)
$51,965
46,474
64,993
83,702

2,512,315

1666.

(251m.) (251m.)
$96,672 L$90,125

220,138

201,169

Cincinnati.—>

1865.

223.846

220,0 2

..Year..

—
—

i860.

(204 m) (204 m.)
$173,557 $168*799
151,931
180,140
167,007
222,411
173.732
196,154
198,082
216,784
195,138
245,627
189,447
226,<47
243,417
243,413

248,292

...

-Toledo, Wab. & Western
1866.

.Jan...
155,893. .Feb...

-

April..

226,251
197,886
264,605

3,223,088

87,791
93,763
78,607
76,248
107,525
104,603
115,184
125,252
116,195
116,146
105,767

1864.

(234 m.)

162,694

$139,414
170,879
202,857

...

Milwaukee & St. Panl.~>

(210 m.) (210 m.)
$170,078 $178,119.

157,786
149,855
155,730

(20* m.)
Jan...
.ft ei>
i*i arch

261,141
190,227

1,038,165

406,773. .April.
507,830. ..May
560,025. .June.
467,115. ..J uly.
586,074, ..Aug..

226,840
110,664

160.497

232,728
288,095
884,290
300,707

96,908
95,453

516,822. ..Mar..

310,594

153,908
202,771
169,299
177,625
*173,722
162,570
218,236
269,459
222,924
208,098

289,403
186,172
227,260
311,180

1865.

1864.

(182 in.
$305,654 $237,555
174,164
246,331

-Marietta and
1866.

L., Alton & T. Haute.—x
1S66.
1865.

.

Sept

-

...Oct..,
.Nov..
..Dec,.

271,140
331,494
324,865
336,617
321,037

..Sep..

1864.

.

8,489,068

170,556
228,020

224,980

.

1,711,281 1,985,571
St.

(468 m.) (468 m.)
$690,144 $555,488. ..Jan...
474,738. ..Feb...
678,504
654,890. ..Mar...
857,583
606,078. .April..
733,866
672,628. ..May..
637,186
644,573. .June..
646,995
654,828. J uly584,523
712,495
528,618. .Aug.,

7420,465

217,159

168,218
178,526
149,099
117,013

.

580,963

224,838

113,399

...Oct...
.Nov..
..Dec..

712,362

106,689
146,943

139,547

338,499. ..July..
380,452. Aug*.
...Sep..

795,938
868,500

70,740

186,747
212,209

..May..

392.641. .June.

—

(234 in.)
$98,183
74,283

115,135
88,221
140,418

.Feb..

io/*r

691,556

914,032

1865.

198,679
243,178

May..

.

7,181,208
—
-Mil. and Prairie dn Chien.*

-Pittsb., Ft.W.,&Chicago.
loJt!
1866.
1865.




416,588
459,762
423,797

1865.

$363,996

..

.

923,886
749,191

(708 m.)
$327,900

243,150
185,013

922,892 .Jane..
77 ,990. ..July
778,284 ..Aug..

6,329,447

Year.

13,429,643 15,434,775
Mioh. So & N. Indi&na.-

‘

767,508
946,707

1864.

—

(624 m.)

735,0*2

Illinois Central.

.

$256,600

..Mar..

7,960,981

.

.

..Feb..

.

-—Cleveland and Pittsb

1866.

(182 in.)

$158,735
175,482

518,736 . .April.

702,692

..Year.. 6,114,566

$984,837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188 ..Feb...
983,855
947,146
934| 133
..Mar...
1,114,508 1,256,567 1,070,434 .April..
1,153,295
1,099,507 1,458,455
May..
1,072,293 1,333,461 1,101,668 .June...
1,041,975 1,177,372 1,243,142 j uly...
994,317 1,202,180 1,203,462
..Aug ..
1,105,364 1,831,046 1,290,3:0 ..sep—
1,301,005 1.336.615
,..Oct—
1,222,568 1.438.615
..Not...
2,224,009 1,522,472
..Dee....
1,134,217 1,429,765

186-4.

.

1865.

(182 m.)

..Jan..

.

546,609

Erie Railway.*
1866.
1864.
1805.
m.) (797 m.)
(657 m.)
(657

•

405,634
523,744

747 942

563,401

.

—

1523,566

408,358
585,623

729,759
716,378

.Oct...
.Nov.
.Dec..

.

18647

679 m.)

499,296

669,605

...Sep.,

401,280

.354,554
320,879
307.803
252,015

(609 m.)
$541,005
482,164

RAILROADS.

OF PRINCIPAL

Chicago and-t one
Bock Island.
ioi.mu
1 OOL*

Oil/4

(609 m.)
$273,875

..Jan..

$280,503 $210,171. .Feb..
207,913
275,282
304,885. ..Mar..
299,063
370,889. .April.
258,480

$100,991

Cenis is stated

Supreme Court of Massachusetts de¬
cided, on the 3d inst, that the act of 1863, which imposed a tax on
the stock of corporations held by persons whose residence is out of
the Commonwealth, and which imposed a tux on the dividends of
non-resident stockholders, is illegal.
New Feeder to the Erie.—The railroad of the North Branch
Canal Company, from the Barclay raiues near Towanda to Waverly
on the Erie Railway, is nearly completed.

COMPARATIVE MONTHLY EARNINGS
Chicago & Northwestern
1S66.
1865.
and Alton.1866.
1864. w
1865.
(280 7H.)

(257 m.)

2,770,484

Railroad.—The line over Mount

a vote of 67 to 15.
Important Decision.—The

by

$30,840

37,488

4 2 088

41,450

48,359

1865.

(167 m.)

$43,716

37,265
32,378
33,972
63,862

54,942

82,147
68,180
5'',862
75,677
92,713
61,774

42195

1866.

(177 m)
45,102
36,006
89,299
48,388

86,918
102,686
85,508

87,830

68,118

50,308
49,903
60,565
66.871

..Year.. 587.0788 689,888

^

MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND
(

INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

placed aft r the
name of Company shows the lota!
Funded Debt.'

N. B.—The sums

do

do

1st

Mortgage S’k’g Fund

do

do

(Buff, ex!

TOO.OOi)

ApT &

Oct.; 1885

1,225.000

Man. &

($2,193,000):

Aug!

6

4,269,400

Jan. &

490.000 7
493,000 7

($141,000):

Mortgage
2d
do
Central Ohw ($3,673,000):

•

800,000*

do

800,000|

Cheshire ($600,000):

Mortgage (Skg Fund),

-

600,000 6 ;Jan. &

Mortgage Bouds

Chicago and Alton ($3,619,000):

Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406):
Trust Mortgage (S. F.) convert
do
do
inconvert..
Bonds, (dated Sept. 20, I860)
1st Mortgage
Chicago and Milwaukee ($2,000,000)
1st Mortgage (consolidated)
Chicago & Northwest. ($12,020,-183):
Preferred Sinking Fund.
1st Mortgage

Interest bonds..*%
Consol. S. F. Bonds, couv. till 1870
Extension Bonds
Chicago, Rock Island <fc Pacific :

!
7 ApT &

do

Cincinnati A Zanesville ($1,300,000) :

Mortgage
Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($475,000):
1st Mortgage
Cleveland <£ 'Mahoning ($1,752,400):
let Mortgage
.
1st

OO

1,397.000]

Jan. & July 1870

7

379,000

f

I Jan.

doV

Lackawanna and Western

DesM
Mor

e
a




Valley ($2,088,000):
Bond*

.

•

•

100

101#

A July; 1867

Feb. A
M’ch &
do

900,000]

Feb. &
do

1,129,000

M’ch &

1,619,500

1,108,124!

'Jan. &

2,081.000!
300,000!

J

July! 1885

do

250,000

■

JSS6

M’ch A

Sep11878

J’ne & Dec. 1876

800,000

ApT A Oct.! 1904

283,000 8 Jan. A Jnly:lS67
do
1881
2,022,000 8
do
18—
642,000 7
do
18—
169.500 7
.

500,000

6

Jan. & July j 1875

Jan. & Only! 1875
1,500,000
M’ch A Sep 1881
600,000
900.00' 7 dan. & July 1871
7

1,740,000 8 ApT & Oct, 1887

April & Oct
do
do

1875
1875
1890

.

....

«

•

•

•

102
•

•

•

•

+

^

m

m

....

«
•

•

•

•

102

.....

106
....

•

•••«

SO

Mortgage, sinking iund

500,000

8 Jan. &

July

1S82

mortgage

800,000

8

Jan. &

July

•

1874

($800,000):

($1,280,000):

*

•

•

•

..

•

.•

2d

do
3d
do
La Crosse A Milwaukee

($1,903.000):
Mortgage, Eastern Division....

2d

do

903,000
1,000,000

Mortgage

May & Nov.
Jan. & J uly

6

May & Nov.

6

May & Nov

r*

April & Oct

Sinking F’nd do

Mich. S. A N. Indiana: ($8,537,175)
«-

do

Goshen Air Line Bonds
Milwaukee A Prairie du Chien:
1st

Mortgage, sinking

fund

Milwaukee and St. Paul:
1st
2d

6

225,000

7

Jnly
May & Nov.

1,804,000
300,560

7
7

do

Mississippi and Missouri River:
1st Mortgage, convertible
2d
do
sinking fund
102# P2#
1st Land Grant Mortgage
99
2d
do
do
do
Morris and Essex :
let Mortgage, sinking

fond

...

•

7

7

Feb. & Ang
May A Nov.

7

•

••«

96
....

94

Feb. & Aug 1883
do
1883

Jan, A July 1885

83#

1892

....

1888

0 Feb. & Ang. '90-’90
6 June & Dec. ’70-’71
681,000 6 Apr. & Oct. 74-’75
399,000 6 Feb. &Aug. 1874

1,092,900
314,100

Ang 69-72

2.242.500

8

Feb. &

4.253.500

8

April & Oct

4

7
7
7

May & Nov. 1885

855,000

2.253.500
6)1,000

1877
do
Feb. A Ang 1868

7 Jan. A Julv 1893
7 April A Oct 1893
7 Jan. &Jnly
do
8
7 May & Nov.
do 7
„

»11#

1882

402,000 7 Jan. A July 1891

4,600,000
1,500,000

Mortgage

•

1870
1890

1

1,000,000

morit

•

1877

Jan. A

•

....

.....

1883

2,362,800
300,000

Mortgage

Mortgage, sinking fund

....

1S73

500,000

$1.1 '0,000 Loan Bonds
$400,000 Loan Bonds
1st Mortgage (P.& K.RR ) Bonds..
105#
2d
do
(
do
) Bonds..
Michigan Central, ($7,463,489) ♦
Dollar, convertible
;

2d

102

1872
1869

960,000

Leldgh Valley ($1,477,000):
1st Mortgage
Little Miami ($1,400,000) :

7

1,300,000

....

7

1,465,000

do

....

800,000 6 April & Oct 1870
1861
do
230,000 6
1862
do
250,000 G

Mortgage

1st

270.500

....

...

1873

1st Mortgage
Maine Central: ($-',733,800)

96

1867

April & Oct

McGregor Western:

'104

75

1875

7

1st

July!1 1892

Jan. A

■

1869
1869
1885

187,000

($500,000):

1st Memphis Branch Mortgage ....
Marietta
Cincinnati ($3,688,385):
1st Mortgage,
Scioto and Hocking Valley
..

11875

•

1881

Extension Bonds
Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000):

Sep 1873

do

•

Aug 18S3

500,000 7 Jan. & July 1866

Mortgage

1

•

•

75

1883

Feb. &

98
80
72

600,000 7 Jan. & July 1866
1870
do
364,000 10

Schuylkill ($960,000):
Mortgage, sinking fund
Long Island ($932,000):

] 1874

500,000

...

....

7
i

1st

Sep 1864
i 1875

July

May & Nov.

1st

Augj 1880

re

Jan. A

7

Kennebec and Portland
1st

1883

7
6
6

Little

Aug! 1873

648,200! 8

Mortgage, sinking fund

.

475,000] 7 I Jan. & July; 1890

do

Deia., Lacka. A Western ($3,491,500):

.

1,300,000! 7 ! May A Nov; 1893

3d

Mortgage, guaranteed

•

■

CO

(May A Nov ,1S80

1,250,000

i

8d
do
Toledo Depot Bonds
Delaware ($500,600):

38#

6,000,000

7

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Mortgage Bonds of 1856
Connecticut River ($250,000):
lit Mortgage
Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($250,000):
1st Mortgage
umberland Valley ($270,500):
Mortgage Bonds
Dayton and Michigan ($3,732,430):
1st Mortgage
2d
do
/

96

95
88

July

640,000

1st

244.200]

,

1st

•••

•

7

Mortgage

Joliet and N7 Indiana

!'

..

.

:

.

2d Mortgage
Joliet and Chicago
1st

j

] Quarterly. 1915
Feb. & Aug! 1885

850,000!

Dividend Bonds
Snnbury and Erie Bonds
Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,830,S48):
2d Mortgage
3d
do ' convertible
4th
do
Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280):

80

60

Jan. A

7

2,896,500
2,563,000

Indianapolis and Cmc. ($1,362,284)
1st Mortgage
Indianapolis A Madison ($640,000):
1st

(May & Nov. 1863

756(000!
2,000,000
484,000;

do

96#
94#

July 1870

1876
7 Jan. & July
1876
do
6

6,&37,000

($11,254,500):
Mortgage, convertible.

2d

97
96

500,000 6 May & Nov 1870
500,000 6 Feb. & Aug 1875

Jeffersonville ($621,000) :

Feb. & Aug 1885
do
i 1885

do

.

Oct.|lS95

i

2d

ClS'\, Pain. A Ashtabula ($1,500,000) :]

....

....

] Jan. & July 1 SOS

7

2,000,000;
j
J 1,250,000
3,600.000!

Mortgage

....

93

11883

.

Cine., Ham. A Dayton ($1,629,000):

98#

(M’cli & Sep 1890

5,000,000]

1st Mortgage
1st
do
(new)

1st

July! 1883

270p($l,436,O82):

1st
1st

1st

92

Jan. &
do

356.000,
3,169.000!
680,001);

Chicago and Gt. Eastern ($5,600,000):

....

(ApT & Oct.11883

1,100,000,

.

103#

....

July 1870

Feb. & Ang
do
6
7 J’ne & Dec.
192,000 7 May & Nov.
do
523,000 7

Mortgage...

Mortgage, convertible
do
Sterling
Redemption bonds
Illinois and Southern Iowa
1st Mortgage

6

3,890,000
110,000
1,907,000

97

102

191,000 6 Jan. A July 1877

2d
do
Indiana Central

08

'

2.400,000

income

Ju3yl'75-’80

May & Nov. 1877
!Jan. & July 1893

519.000

pref

S6

May & Nov; 1890
M’eh & Sep 1865

7
7

sinking fund....*...

c

927,000

do
Illinois Central ($13,231,000):

jFeb. & Aug 1S90

450,000; 7

Mortgage W. Div
1st
E. Div
do'

1st
2d

May & Nov.; 1875

i

do
do

7

700,000

do

«&»•■*

....

April & Oct 1881

7

633,600

($7,762,840):

Convertible
Huntingdon A Broad

Aug11870

Feb. &

3,437,750

Mortgage

1st
’2d
3d

July11873

7

600,000;

•.

1st

3d

1st

ApT & Oct. j 1879
I

7

909.000

1st

"

Hudson River

97

141,000 7 Feb. & Aug; 1882

($1,509,000):

7

1,037,500
1,000,000

98#

.

...

April A Oct 1868
Jan. & July 1888
1893
do

10

Han'isburg A Lancaster ($700,000):
New Dollar Bonds...;
Hartford A New Haven ($1)27,000):
1st Mortgage
Ilartf., Prov. A Fishkill ($1,936,940):
1st Mortgage
2d
do
sinking fund
Housatonic ($191,000):
1st Mortgage

95

Feb. &
1883
May & Nov. 1889
J’ne & Dec.! 1893

6
867,000 6

Jan. &

D

Convertible Bonds

Jan. & Julvj’69-’72
do
*; 1870
400,000 7

1st

l*t

1S89

»

....

Ang 1882
May & Nov. 1875

($927,000):

($2,.‘150.000):
Mortgage West. Division

#

•

-

....

Feb. &

7
7

do

East.
do
'
do
2nd do
do
do
Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600):
Land Grant Mortgage

200,000 7

Mortgage

1st
2d

1st

400,000 6 Jan. & July! 1879

1,700.000

Jan. &

7

Mortgage.

,

2.000,000 7 J’ne & Dec.! 1377
380,000 7 May & Nov 1872
I
500.000 7 ApT & Oct. 1868

1876
1879
1883
1880
1888
1875

•

1873

Great Western, 111.

1S65
11865
& July 1870
do
;1870

do

July

7 May & Nov.
7 M’ch & Sep
do
7
7 April & Oct
7 June & Dec
6 M’ch & Sep

convertible
do

....

1888

7 Jan. A

-.

2d
do
Grand Junction

do

j

2d

do
do

Sep 1S85
Augi 1877

& Aug

7 Feb.
6
250,000 7 Jan.
100,000 G !
200,000 6

364,000-j

Camden and Amboy ($10,204,463):
Dollar Loans
Dollar Loan..
Consoldated ($5,000,000) Loan
Camden and Atlantic ($983,000):

1st
1st
2d

84

;May& Nov. 1871

6

150,000

1st Mortgage.
Income
Erie and Northeast

2d

M’ch &
Feb. &

do
do
do

1

July 1872
Aug 1874

ApT & Oct.

Erie and Northeast

! J’ne & Dec. 1867

500,000
589,500

3d
4th
5th

....

Jan. & July 1863
1894
do

7

Sterling convertible
($149,900):
Mortgage.
Gal. A Chic. U. (incl. in C. A N. W.):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund

1870

do

I

1.000,009

Erie ($2,395,000):

Mortgage
Central of New Jersey

....1100#

July ’70-’79

433,000

do

Pennsylvania ($598,000):
Sinking Fund Bonds
Elmira A Williamsport ($1,570,000):
1st Mortgage
Erie Railway ($22,370,982):
1st Mortgage
convertible
2d
do

99

1864

do

5 Jan. &
6 Feb. &

East

100
97

IB

<

May & Nov. 1875

7
7

Eastern, Mass. ($1,798,600):
Mortgage, convertible
do

M

S

734,000 7 Feb. A Ang 1876

2d section

do

1st

11876

Ja Ap Ju Oc 1S67
Jan. & July; 1875
4880
do

($734,000):

r3

2

Ai

7
8

Dubuque and Sioux City ($900,000):
1st Mortgage, 1st section

11831

Payable.

s

So

Detroit, Monroe A Toledo
1st Mortgage

1879

5

2,500,000

.

Bufalo and State Line ($1,200,000):

do
Catawissa

Q

Mortgage, convertible

2d

& Nov. 1878

! May

481,000
1,000,000

f

1st

Ap’l & Oct.! 1866

1,128,500

(guar. C. and A
2d Mort.
do
3d Mort.
do
Blossburg and Corning ($150,000):
Mortgage Bonds
Boston, Gone. & Montreal ($1,050,000):
1st Mortgage
\

1st

<

July1188.3
Ap’l & Oct.-1884
do
jlS95

OSS. 000

1st Mort.

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

sums

of
Funded Debt.

Jan. &

13,858,000

Mortgage

do
do
do
Sinking Fund Bond*
Boston and Lowell ($400,000):

3

rincpal payble.

Amount

placed after the outstand¬
ing,
Company shows the total

B.—The

name

ce

i 1882

do
do
do
do

2.000,000

2d

1st
2d
2d

"2

ApT & Oct.! 1377

800,000

Beliefontaine ($1,745,000):

Mortgage Bonds
Buffalo, N. Y. and

"E p.

N.

Dec.!l89G

7 iJ’ne &

4,000,000!
)\ 4.000,000i

Baltimore and

do
Belvldere Delaware

"3

FRIDAY.

INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

Railroad:
Detroit and Milwaukee ($3.500,000):

Consolidated Bonus
Atlantic A St. Lawrence(% 1,472,000):
Dollar Bonds

Sterling Bonds
Ohio ($10,112,584):
Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834
do
do
1855
do
do
1850...
do
do
1853

P

Payable.

ing.

fund, (Ohio)

Ai

FRIDAY*
»

CJ

1,000,000
Mortgage (gold coupons)
Atlantic A Gt. Western ($30,000,000):
$2,500,000
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.)
1,000,000!
2d
do
do .
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ar. Y.) 1,014,000!
Mortgage, sinking

is

.£v=!

let

2d
1st
2d

■—*

Amount
outstand¬

Railroad:
Alexandria and Fredericksburg:

1st

[September 15,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

344

1875
1876
1877
1883

3.500,000 7 May & Not. 1915

..

99

93

96#
....

....

99
93
....

....

8i

90
84

60

70

....

♦4^

345

THE CHRONICLE.

September 15,1866]

(continued).

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST
INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

Description.

C,a>

Amount

0.2

Payable.

,

Debt.

"3

(9 si

placed after the name of outstandiagCompany show the total Funded

The sums

id

s>»

«

»f outstandsums placed after the name
ing.
Company shows the total Fund d

Debt.

<5

(convertible) ...
London ($766,000)

1st Mortgage
New Haven db N.

;

C;

1st Mortgage
New Jersey ($805,000):
Fei ry Bonds of 1853
New London Northern ($140,000))
1st General Mortgage.
New York Centred ($14,627,443) :

450,000

N^York ^and^New Haven ($2,000,666) :
Mortgage

Bonds

($232,000):

Sinking Fund
($151,400)

Northern New Hampshire
Plain Bonds
North Misseniri:

Lorwich and Worcester ($580,000):

Oswego db Home ($350,000).
1st Mortgage (guar by R.

1st Mortgage, sterling
do
do
1st
2d
do
do
Peninsula (Chic. db N. W.):
1st Mortgage

April & Oct

do

1,500,000
1,000,000
500,000
500,000

(general)'

do
do
do
Dollar Bonds of 1849
do
do
1861
do
do
1843-4-8-9

1st Mortgage

Philadel\\ timing. & Baltimore:

Mortgage Loan
Pittsburg and Connellsville :
1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.)
F'b'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500)
Mortgage
do

do

Jan. & July
do

Jan. &

•a

M

•H

«

....

....

Mortgage

7
7

Feb. Sr.

1,290,000

7

Jan. Sr.

* 500,000

7

June & Dec

1867

7

.

Mortgage

.

Feb. &

Ang ^

1872

201.500

letMortgage

....

90
....

....

....

92
....

....

96* 97

1,070,000

.

....

97

Syr a. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191):
1st Mortgage

1,400,000

.

Mortgage

Toledo and Vi abash ($6,653,868):
1st Mort. (Toledo & Wabash)....
1st do
(extended)
2d
do
(Toledo and Wabash)..
2d
do
(Wabash and Western)

1,000,000
1,500,000

.

.

152,355

Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. & ¥* )
Equipment bonds
Troy and Boston ($1,452,000) ;
1st Mortgage
do
do

600,000

....

....

...

....

....

....

....

....

April & Oct 1870
do
Feb & Aug.

1875
1872

Mch &

1884

575,000

1,000,000
6,000,000

4,000,000

408,000
182.400
2,856,600
106,000

July

Sept

Jan. &

July
April & Oct
do

1st Mort. Rensselaer &

Saratoga

1880
1875
1875

.

Saratoga & Whitehall....
Troy, S So Rut. (guar.)
R. Water, and Ogdens. ($1,60 ,908).*

.

Mortgage (Potsdam & Watert.)

(Watertown & Rome]

....

....

.

Mortgage
Mortgage—

2,000,000
1,135,000

.

do
(no interest)
Vermont and Massachusetts >

.

650,600

.

Veim. Cen. & Verm, db Can. Bonds
Warren ($600,000)

.

1st Mortgage (guaranteed)
:
Westchester dr, Philadelphia ($962,800):
1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon .
2d
do
, registered
Western (Mass.) (6,269,620):

•

•

•

....

....

....

90

76

160*
...

98*

•

....

....

July

1876

April & Oct
April & Oct
April & Oct

1877
1881
1901

Jan. &

July

1S65

Jan. & July
do

1867
1880
1870
1871
1880
1880

April & Oct
Jan. & July
do
do
do

•

•

...

....

....

....

...

96*

do

1886

....

....

200,000

May & Nov.

1868

516,000

Jan. So

1884

400,000

Feb. & Aug 1889

an’ally

April & Oct.
July

200,000

Jan. &

Feb. &
do

1881
189 >

Jan. &

1,000,000
250,000
140,000

Mch &

Mch &

400,000
340,000
500,000

May So Nov. 1890

1888
1876

do

Mch &

329,000

88

90

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

....

Feb. So Aug 1863
1863
do

Jan. So
Feb. &

July 1875
Aug 1881

67

1861
1867

6

1883
1876

Jan. &

8

July

118

35*

120
36

il02

July

1886

6 Jan. & >uly
do

1890
1890

Jan. &

76
96

2,000,000 6 JaAp JnOc 1870
1890
do
4,375,000 5
1885
1,699,500 6
....

800,000 6 Jan. & July 1878

90

641,000 7 Mch & Sept 1870
752,000 7 Jan. & July 1865
1868
do
161,000 6

:

414.15S 6 Mch & Sept 1870

1884

6

182,000

6

Jan. &

July

760,000

6

April & Oct

1876

syii
1st Mortgage

90

590,000 6 May & Nov. 1876

(North Branch).

:huylkill Navigation
1st Mortgage

usquehannaand Tide-Water:
Maryland Loan
Coupon Bonds
Priority Bonds,

98

85

1.000,000 6 Jan. & July 1865

1,1<;0,000 6
325,000 6

Union Pa.):
1st M ortgage
1st Mo:

6 Mch & Sept 1872
980,670 6 Jan. & July 1882
586,500 6 May & Nov. 1870

1,764,830
3

do

1878
1864

do

do

2,600,000 6 May & Nov.

61

1883

28*

450,000 6 Jan. So Jnly 1878

ge.

Wyoming

do

'Ue\
750,000

1st Mortgage.
Mor

Jan. &

July

1878

7 Jan. &

July

•

•

1st

•

•

....

Mortgage Bonds

•

Mariposa Mining;
1st Mortgage • ••••••••*••••»>*•
do

.....

.......

-w*

.....

•

•

•

1,500,000 7 Jan. & Jnly 18—
2,000,000 7 April & Oci *8 -

....

1st

....

.

#

38
....

96
40
....

Mortgage

....

Pennsylvania Goal:
1st Mortgage
1st Mortgage.
2d
do

Western Union Telegraph:
1st Mortgage convertible

600,000 8

Tan. &

July

1881

600 000 7

Feb. SO

Aug

1871

Tune So Dec
Tan. So July

1873

500,000

W

600,000 7

1879

3,000,000 7PU&y St Not. lc€7

.(.

•

90

1884

6

Miscellaneous:
....

‘

1876

Bonds'

Cincinnati and Covington Bridge :

•

1874

7 June & Dec
7 Jan. & July

2,667,276

2d

....

Sept 1880.

1875
1875
1865
1874

92* 94
92*
80*
80*

2,356,609 6 Jan. & July 1886

Lehigh Navigation : ($3,081,434).

2d
Jun. &Dec

400,000

98

1880

800,000

Burlington ($3,257,472) :
1st Mortgage
1,800,000
2d
do
937,500
Sacramento Valley:

101 *
96

1890

800,000

7 May & Nov.
7
do
7
do
7 Jan. & July

Mortgage Bonds

Sept 1879

do
do

.

West Branch and Susquehanna:

Sept 1888

do

.

.

Erie of Pennsylvania:
1st Mortgage Bonds
Interest Bonds

Mortgage

1875

1,438,000

.

.

Loan of 1871
» o n of 1884

....

....

July

...

Improvement

Aug 1881

1894

176,000 6 May & Nov. 1870
25,000 6 Jan. & July 1871
1877
do
500,000 6

.

Preferred Bonds
Delaware Divirion :
1st Mortgage
Delaware and Hudson:

Morris.

1912
1912
1912
1884

June & Dec

200,000 6

Mortgage, sinking fund

....

do

696,000

Cent.):

....

....

Semi

1870

7

.

Chesapeake and Delaware :
1st Mortgage Bonds
94*
Chesapeake and Ohio :
Maryland Loan
Sterling Bonds, guaranteed

1886

July

July

Canal
....

....

976,800
564,000
60,000

Jan. &

4,319,520 5 April & Oct ^’Tl
1876
do
850,000 6

.

Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds
Jan. &

.

Georgia..

1st Mortgage
1st
do
guaranteed
York (S- Cumberland (North.
1st Mortgage
do
2d

1866

....

•

....

5,200,000
5,160,000

.

.

Western & Atlantic:
1st mortgage, guar, by
Westefn Maryland ;

Sept

899,300 7 Jan. & July 1873
554,908 8 April & Oct 1878

.

Dollar Bonds

7 Mch &

600,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1875

.

Sterling (£899,900) Bonds
•

1876

,-500,000 6 Jan. & July | 1863
1867
do
180,000 6

.

do

1st

April & Oct

300,000 7 Jan. & July 18817
300,000 7 Apr. & Oct. 1885
7 May & Nov. 1875
200,000 7 Mar. & Sep. 1882

.

1st
2d

7

900,000 ,7 Feb. & Aug 1865
1884
do
2,500,000 7

.

.

Vermont Central ($3,500,000) ;
100

.....

68-74

7

,

Convertible

....

Various.

7

60,000

Mortgage, convertible
(N. Y.):
1st Mortgage
Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw :
1st

do

5

>:

Troy Union ($680,000) :
Mortgage Bonds

....

July 1875

200,000 7 Jan. & July ! 1871

Mortgage

2d
3d

Aug 1900
May & Nov 1975

2.000.000 5 Jan. & July | 1866

.

Domestic Bonds
Staten Island:

....

••

SIX

May & Nov. i894

'

South Carolina:

1st

81

....

1,000,000

.

.

Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark:
1st

April & Oct.

1,700,000

.

Sterling Loan.

....

r

Jan. &

800,000

Reading and Columbia:
1st Mortgage
Rensselaer db Saratoga consolidated:




Income

do

2d

1st

)

July

—

2d
do
Convertible Bonds

do

•

....

May & Nov. 1916

500,000

Racine and Mississippi (W. Union):
1st Mortgage
Raritan and Delaware Bay:
1st Mortgage, sinking fond

Mortgage

'

•

....

....

....

1872
1874

1,000.000

..

do

2d

•

1869

Quincy and Toled6 :

1st

102

|

....

1880
1887

April & Oct

2,000,000
mortgage.

Pittsburg and Steubenville:
1st Mortgage

do
Rutlandand

Princpa payble.

7

Sandusfo/, Dayton and Cincinnati:
1st Mortgage (extended) .

1st

July 1874

Tan. &
Feb. &

1,521,000

Sterling Bonds of 1843
Dollar Bonds, convertible .rr.. .
Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible
Philadelphia and Ti'enton ($200,000):

1st
2d

do

7

Shamokin V. & Pottsville ($791,697)

1870

183,000

Convertible Loan

1st Mort.
1st Mort.

.

.

Second Avenue:

#

1874

Ang

($575,000):

Philadelphia db Reading ($6,900,663):
Sterling Bonds of 1836

o

.

97

....

Jan. & July 1873
1873
do
18S5
do
1885
do

2,283,840

Philadel., Germant. & Norristown:

Mortgage

.

....

100

July 1896

April & Oct

2,621,000

Mortgage
Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000):
1st Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie)....
1st
do
(general)

1st

Payable.

2,200.00(. 7 Semi an’ally 1894
do
1S94
2,800,000 7
d.
1894
1,700,000 7

do

93

July irred
July 1885

Jan. &

4,980,000

1st

2d

Jan. &
Jan. &

1,029,000

.-

2d
2d

3d

151.400

.

!
.

Mortgage

94
93

8
Aug ’73-’78

Feb. &

416,000
346,000
1,150,000

Pennsylvania ($16,750,124):
1st Mortgage

Akron Branch: 1st

•

t. Louis, Alton db T. H. (i
1st Mortgage
2d
„< do
preferred
2d
do
income.
St. Louis, Jacksonville db Chicago :

Third Avenue

1,139,000

,

1st
2d

•

.

Panama:

do

April & Oct

1,088.000

.

95

1875
1886

225,000

($311,500):

Mortgage, guar, by Mo

2d

May & Nov.
3,000,000
Feb. & Aug
1,000,000
do
1,000,000 7

350,000

W. & O.

Mortgage
Pacific, (S. W Branch):

do '
do
, sterling
Phila. and Balt. Central

•

....

1876 102
1876 105
1876 105

2,900,000
750,000

(W.D.)

1st

do
Feb. <fc Ang
do
7
do
7

1,494,000

— .

Oswego ana /Syracuse

*

...

1S72
1893
1868

800,000

Ogdensburg andL. 6r/«zw.($1,494,000)
1st Mortgage
Ohio and Mississippi ($3,650,000):
do

1,398,000
604,000

100.000

1

General Mortgage
Steamboat Mortgage

»

.

1st Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore).
do
2d
(guar, by B. & O. RR.'
3d
do
(do
do
do
8d
do
(not guaranteed)....

Mortgage

663,000

2,500,000
360,000

Chattel Mortgage
Lorth- Western Virginia:

1st
2d

6

6,000,000

1st General Mortgage
North Pennsylvania ($3,105,785):
Mortgage Bonds

•

..

1S83
6,917,598 6 May & Nov 1887
2,925,000 6 June & Dec 1883
May & Nov.
165,000
1883

1,500,000
2,500,000
:

•

1st
2d

1885

232,000

Mortgage
Northern Centred ($5,211,244) :
1st

State Loans
2d Mortgage

Aug

Feb. &

1,000,000

Mortgage Bonds
N. Y.,Prov. and Boston

•

•

1873

140,000 6 Jan. & July

Consolidated Mortgage

•

2d

July

$500,000 7

!

Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks).
Sink. Fund B’ds (assumeddebts)..
Bonds of August, 1859, convert....
Bonds of 1865
New York and Harlem ($6,098,045) :
1st General Mortgage

•

1869

Jan. &

485,OOo!
:

Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ..
Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal)
Real Estate Bonds

*

July

1876

M’ch& Sep 1861
Jan. «fc July 1808

200, (XX

Northampton ($650,000):

N Haven db

Jan. &

300,0)10

.

let Mortgage.

do

Rate.

Railroad:

Railroad:

Naugatuck ($300,000);
2d

Amount

The

OQ

a

FRIDAY

interest.

FRIDAY

s!

*

*

346

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.

AND

RAILROAD, CANAL,

'

Stock

C01TPANIE8.

Marked thus (*) are

leased roads,

fixed incomes.

and have

out¬

Quarterly.

153,000
11,522.150
1,919.000

preferred...

and Coming*.

8,500.000

Hartford and Eri
Boston and Lowell

1,8:30,000
4,076,974
3,160,000
4,500.000

Br-adway & 7th Avenue
Brooklyn Central

Brooklyn City..
Brooklyn Citv and Newtown..
Buffalo, New'York, and

Jau.

492.150

leased roads, standing.
*

Feb. and

&50.000
2,200,000
4.988,180
378,455

Jan.

366,000

preferred

1<>0

2,085,925
1,783,200

795,360

...

....

.

•

•

July .3%

»

•

100 2,425.400 Maraud Sep. Sep.. .5
do
preferred.... 100 10,193,010 May & Nov. May ;5 137%
40%
Chicago Burlington and Qnincy.100 4,390,000
Chicago and Great Eastern
100 1,000.000 Jan aud July July. .5
Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*.. .100 *2,250,000
34%
Chicago and Milwaukee*
100 13,160,927
65%
Chicago and Northwestern
100 12,994.719 June & Dec. Ju. 63.3% 108%
pref. .100 6,500.000 April aud Oct Apr...5
do
do
Chicago, Rock Island & Paciflc.100 1,106,125
Cincinnati and Chicago Air LinelOO 3,000.000 Apr and Oct. Apr .4
Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100
470,060
Cincinnati,Hamilton & Chicago.100 2,000,000
100 6,(XX),000 Feb. and Aug, Aug. .4 112
Cincinnati and Zanesville
Cleveland, Columbus, &Cincin.l00 1,036,0(X) May * Nov. May.. 4
Cleveland & Mahoning*
•. 50 5,000,000 Jan. and July! July.. 5
5

pref. 106

do

do
St. Louis,

139%

Jacksonville & Chic* 100 2,989,090
Sandusky, Davton, and Cinein. .100
Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3
do
"
do
pref.100 354,866
862,571
Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO
1,020,000
Saratoga and Hudson River.... 100
Jan. and July July.. 2%
Schuylkill Valiev*
50 676,050
and Oct
Second Avenue (N. Y.)
100 650,000 Apr. aud Aug Aug. .2
869,450 Feb.
Shamokin Valley * Pottsville*. 50
750,000 Quarterly
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
:

46%

34%
65%
109

.

Painesville & Ashta.100 5,403,910 Jan. and July Jan". ’65
and Pittsburg
50 4,841,600 April and Oct! Apr. ..8

1,508,(XX)

100
100

South Carolina

5 $19

:i5% 115%

-

984,700

100
Eastern, (Mass)
100
Eighth Avenue, N. Y*
~~
Elmira, Jefferson,* Canandagua
Elmira and Williamsport*
do
do
pref...
pref

100
do preferred
. ..100
Erie and Northeast*
50
Fitchburg
100
Forty-sec’d St. & Grand St. F’y.100
Hannibal and St. Joseph
100
do
pref...100
do
Hartford and New Haven
100
Housatonic
100
Erie

do

nudson

do

,

Jan. and

Quarterly.

500,000 Feb. and Aug
500.000 Jan. and July
500,000 Jan. and July
16.570.100 Feb. & Aug.
8,535.700 Feb. & Aug.
600.000 Feb. & Ang.
3,540,(XX) Jau. and July

Broad Top *... 50
do
pref. 50

Aug.. 2%

1,900,000
5,253,836
3,000,000

do

pref. 50

Lehigh Valley

50

72

72%

74%

Feb.. 4
Feb.. 3%
Aug. .5

75%

lit)

317,050
June
1,575,963

Quarterly.

494,380
190,750

July. .3%
Aug. .5

Quarterly.

6,632,250
516,573
2,646,100

do
do

1st pref.
2d pref..

do

do

Spruce

*

98

Wyoming Valley
Gas.—-"Brooklyn

....

*

•

*

*

2,400.000
3,708,200
3,000,000

New York

Williamsburg
Boston Water




Northern

788,047

Power

Brunswick City

Cary
21

96

Feb. and Ang Aug. .4
Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3%

85
52
69
58

Feb. and Aug Aug. 3%
Jan. and July July. .4
Feb. and Aug Aug 3%s.

Feb. and Ang Aug. .5
700.000 Mar and Sep. Sep...4

24,591,000 Feb. and Aug (Aug.. 3

25 1,500,000

50
100
100
100

.83

41%
22
110

100
90
55

•70%
58%
85%

—

1

...

106

Feb. and Aug

2,000,000
6,000,000

84%
122
29%

37%
14%
25
68
68

Jan.. .5

50 1,250,000
10 1,000,000

06%

46%
156
80

JanVand July Jan...5

55

and
100 2,175,000 Apr. and Oct
Feb.

100 1.250.00°
25 2,000,000
20 1,000,000

Ang Atig
Feb. and Aug Aug....
Jan. and July July.. 4

140

644,000

50

Jan. and

140*

July July. .5

4,500,000

July

100 4,000,000
100 1,000,000

5

100
Union
Union, Russ. Ex..100

28,450,000
10,000,000

20*

52% 53
31% 31%

300,000

(Boston)

Telegraph—American.
Western
Western

61

2,000,000 Jan. and July
5,000.000
Quarterly. July. .5
50 3,200,000 Jangand July Jan.. 10

Improvemenf.—Canton 100.(161 pd)

4V
10

60%

100 2,800,000
May....
.50 1,(XX),000 May and Nov July.. 5
50
750.000 Jan. and July

Metropolitan

40”

111%
July. 5' 111
Aug.. 3% 82% 82%
106
Aug. .5

1,010,000
4.395.800

1,025.000
1,175,000
1,908,207
2,888.805
2,051,000

& Hjboken— 20 1,000,000
50 4,000,000

United States

Mar.. Ss
Mar., as
Mav. .4

50 5,104,050

Aug. .8

Aug; 10
May.. 5
Feb. and Aug Aug. .5
Feb. and Aug Aug. .5
Feb. and Aug Aug..6«.
Feb. and Aug Aug..6

Manhattan...

600,009 May and Nov May. .4
Feb. and Aug Aug..7
500,000 June and Dec June.4
738,538

New Tendon

(Brooklyn)

Jersey City

65%

1,100,000

IWw Jersey

Hill

Wilkesbarre

and Aug Aug.. 2
and July Julv. .5

1,447,060
2.029,778
6,586,135 Mar. and Sep
4,051,744 Mar. and Sep
1,000,000 May and Nov
6,9*2,866 Jan. and July
9.381.800 Feb. and Aug
1,089,700 Feb. and Aug

3,014,000
3,082,(XX)
1,014,000

& Schuylkill Haven.,

Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain

75

and July July.. 2
Quarterly. Aug. .2
Feb. aud Aug Aug. .2
Feb. and Aug Aug..3%

1,000,000
do
Mine Hill

Cumberland

July..3
July. .4

5,527,871
2,800,000
1,500,000 Apr and Oct April.3

Cincinnati

Consolidation

122"

Quarterly.' July. .2%
Fet>.
Jan.
Jan.

1,852,715
1,109,594

do
do

Ashburton

Citizens
Harlem

835,000
500,000

Feb. and Aug Aug. .3

1,0.33.350 Feb. and
100 10,000,000 Feb. and Aug
Aug
100 2,528,240 May and Nov

Aug.. 3% 55

122*

95

June.S

miscellaneous.
v
Coal.—American.;
Central

July ..i%

Mar .4

140*’

Jan...5
June .4

July..3

and July
Feb. and Aug
Mar. & Sep.
Jau. and July
Jan.aud July

Jan.

102%
49% 50

50 2,787.(XX) Jan. and July
and Susquehanna.100 i,100,000
Wyoming Valley
50 750,000 Quarterly.

8*20, (XX)

121%

8,228,595

Union
West Branch

37*

35

-

July July. .3%

811.660 Juneand Dec Jnne..4
2,860,000 Jan. and July July.’. IX
2,860,000 Jan. and July July.. 3
1,408.300 Jan. and July July..5
5,627,700
Jan. and July July. .5}
1 141,650 January
Jan...2

50
do
preferred
100
Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50
do
preferred. 50
Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50

46

July. .3%

and Hudson
and Raritan

Lehigh Navigation
Morris (consolidated)

50

3,572,400

Marietta and

‘

3V

.

Central
100 23,374, MX)
Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50 1,689,900
Indianapolis and Madison
100 412,(XX)
do
do
pref.. 100 407,900
Jeffersonville
50 1,997,309
100 1,500,000
Joliet and Chicago*
Kennebec and Portland (new).. 100
Lackawanna and Blooinsburg.. 50

Delaware
Delaware

July

July. .3
750,000 April aud Oct Apr .5

Illinois

do

July July. 4

Jan. and July July. .4
100 1,180,000 April aud Oct Apr...5
6,563,250
100

preferred
River

Huntingdon and

3,155,(XX)
1,000,(XX)

Jan. and

125.000
607,111 Juneand Dec Dec.3%
274,400 Jan. and July Jan. .4

»

do

275

Binghamton & N. Y.100 1,200,130 Jan. and July July. .6 200
Terre Haute & Indianapolis.... 50 1,929,150
Third Avenue (N. Y.)
.100 l,170,000 Quarterly.
Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw .. .100 1.700,000
do
do
1st pref.100 1,700,000
43%
do
2d pref.100 1,000,000 Juneand Dec June. 3
do
Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 2,442,350 Juneand Dec Dec. 3%

....

do

129

Syracuse,

50
y. 2%
Quarterly.
Cent.100 1,490,800 Jan. and July y..5
66
do
do preferred. 50
50 1.500,000 May and Nov y-4
ioga.*
100
Concord
50 350,000 Jan. and July iy..3%
Troy and Boston
100
Concord and Portsmouth
100 500,000
Troy and Greenbush*
100
Coney Island and Brooklyu
100 392,900
Utica and Black River
100
Connecticut and Passumpsic.. 100 1,255,200 Jan. and July July..3 *
100
107* Vermont and Canada*
do
do
pref.100 1.591.100 Jau. and July July.. 4
Vermont and Massachusetts... .100
Connecticut River
100 1,582,169
Warren*
50
100 2,384,931
Covington and Lexington
Western (Mass)
Barton and Michigan
100 406,132 Jau. and July Jan...*3 isi*’ 157 * Western Union (Wis. «fc Ill.) 100
Delaware*
50 10,247,050 Jan. and July July. .5
Worcester and Nashua
75
Delaware, Laeka., & Western .. 50 1,550.050
Wrigbtsville.York& Gettysb’g* 50
Des Moines Valley
100 952,350
Detroit and Milwaukee
.100
Chesapeake and Delaware
25
do
do
pref.. ...100 1,500,000
1,751,577
Chesapeake and Ohio
25
Mar 7*’..
Dubuque and Sioux City
100 1,982,180 March
Delaware Division
50
108
and Toledo...
& Indianapolis
and Xenia*

110,£
,

.

..

and Sep. Sep.. .5

Mar

1,500,000

Irregular. May. 5
July July..4
July July. .4
(Quarterly. July..3

Jan. and
Jan. and

....

....

and July July. .3%

682,600
681.665 Jan. and July

5,000,000
5,085,050

Bid.

p’d.

Last

3,0G8,400 May and Nov May8&4g
4.518.900 (Quarterly. July. .2
North Pennsylvania
50 3,150,150 Jan. and July July. .5
100 2.338.600
Norwich and* Worcester
3,077,000
29%
Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. .100 19,822,850
Ohio and Mississippi
100 2,950,500 January. Jan ..7 76
do
preferred.. 100
Jan. and July July. .4
108* ’ Old Colony and Newport.
100 3.609.600 Feb. and Aug Aug. .4
482.400
132.
50 7,000.000 Quarterly. July. .6 260 58
Oswego and Syracuse
Panama (and Steamship)
100 20,000-000 May and Nov May. .5
50 218,100
Pennsylvania
33%
jan...3
Philadelphia and BaltimorcCentlOO
5,069,450 Jan. and July
114%
Philadelphia and Erie*
50 20,240,673 Jem.and July July..5
60
Philadelphia and Reading
50 1.476.300 Apr. and Oct Apr. .4
56
Phila., Gemiant’n, & Norrist’n* 50 8.973.300 Quarterly. July..5
Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore 50
104%
50 1,774,623 Quarterly. July.. 2%
Pittsburg and Connellsville
9,312,442
103
June. 3
130 ’
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolOO
1,500,000 June and Dec July.
Portland, Saco, * Portsmouth. 100
.4
1,700,000 Jan. and July
Providence and Worcester
100
Raritan and Delaware Bay.. —100 2,360,700
800,000 April and Oct Apr...4%
37
Rensselaer * Saratoga consol. .100
Apr... 3
Saratoga and Whitehall
100 500.000 April and Oct Apr...3
800,(XX) April and Oct
125 ’ 129%
Troy, Salem & Rutland .... 100 1.991.900 Jan. and July July. .5
58
Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb’gl00 2,233,376
3S%
100 2.300,(XX)
Rutland and Burlington
165” 105
71%
107%
St. Louis, Alton, & Terre HautelOO
1,700,000 Annually. May. .7

AugjAug. .3%

Feb. * Aug. Aug. .5
Feb. and Aug Aug.. 5

Periods.

fixed incomes.

York and New Haven
New York and Harlem

....

...

00 1,150.000
y0 2,200.00 Feb. & Aug
50
Quarterly. July.. 2%
100 10,685,940 Jau. aud July -July.. 2%

Central of New Jersey
Cheshire (preferred)
Chicago and Alton

Cleveland,
Cleveland
Cleveland
Columbus
Columbus

out¬

100
50
do
preferred
50
New York Proviuence & BostonlOO
Ninth Avenue
100
lis ’ Northern ofNew Hampshire.. .100
50
Northern Central

....

and July!July. .4
and JulvjJnly. .5
and July July. .5
and July July. .5
and July jJuly. .5

1,000.000

.100
Erie*..100
100
100
50

Cape Cod
Catawissa*
do

Jau.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

2,100,000

10
100
ly

preferred.. 50

do

July..l%

997,112
600,000 Quarterly. * jjuly..l%
250,(XX) Juue & Dec. June .2%

Boston,

Buffalo and State Line
Camden and Amboy
Camden and Atlantic

and have

Ask.

p’d. !Bid.

2,494,000
13,188.902 April and Oct Apr. ..4
1,650,(XX) April and Oct Apr. ..5
Feb..3
4,434,250 Feb. aud Aug

Berkshire*

do

Marked thus (*) are

Last

FRIDAY.

Dividend.

Stock

Companies.

New

Railroad.

Blossbmy

Periods.

standing.

Alton and St Louis*..
Atlantic & Great Westt
do

FRIDAY.

Dividend.

[September 15,1866.

CHRONICLE.

THE

Express.—Adams
American

Merchants’ Union
United States

Co
Ti ansit.—Central American
Wells, Fargo &
Nicaragua

Steamship.—Atlantic Mail
Pacific Mail
Union Navigation

100 12,000,000 Jan. and July Ang.
100 3,000,000
100 10.000,000

fuartz Hill Gold& M
L. S.

*

100 6,000,000

100 2,000,000
100 4,000,000
100 1,000,000 Quarterly.
100 8,000,000 Quarterly. Sep... 5
100 7,000,000 Mar and Sep.
Sep.. 10
.100 2,000,000

July..4

1,000,000 Jan. and July Aug....
and Ang
1,000,000 Feb. and July July .4
Jan.

,1,000,060 Jan. and July July
United States Trust
100 1,000,000
100 5,097,600
Mining.—Mariposa Gold
Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100 5,774,400
nicksilver
utland Marble

fift

87
103
100

500 3,000,000
100

Ti'ust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25
New York Life & Trust.... 100
Union Trust

58%

Quarterly.
Quarterly.

100

000,000
25 1,2,600,0001
25

...100 10,000,000 Jan. and July
25 1,000,000 Jan. and July

Saginaw
Smith & Paijnelee Gold..,.

20 ^,600,0001

.

5

Jan...5

18

20

ii2
220
125

210
101

105

11% »
30%

80%

51% 51%

3

PETROLEUM STOCK

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.—Friday.
Marked thus

participating, and (t)
write Marine Risks
Adriatic..
iEtna

.. ••

American*....

American Exch
Arctic

200,000
500,000
250,000
300,000
200,000
200,000
300,000
200,000
153,000
150,000
800,000
210,000

6..100
;;;

25

Atlantic (Br’kiyn). .50
Baltic
Beekman—

g

••

-

Bowery

Broadway

Citizens’.

1($

City

250,000
500,000

Columbia*

200,000
400,000

Commerce (N.Y/k-lOO
Commerce (A1d y).10O

200.000

Commercial....... w
Commonwealth... 100
Continental *
100

50

paid.

85

McClintockville

10

10

5

Bradley Oil...

5

California

.10
5
100
5
100
10

v

/

Cascade
Central
.Y
Cherry Run Oil
Cherry Run Petrol'm
Cherry Run special

Jan. and July. July ’66 .
March and Sep Mar. ’64.
Jan. and July. July ’64

10

..

..

25

1 40

j

Enniskillen

20

10

5

2

.

1

10
5

Heydrick
Heydrick Brothers
Hickory Farm

.

90

i66‘

20
8 CO

10

5

10

Titus Oil
Titus Estate

15

Tygart’s Creek

3

..

Union
United Pe’tl’m F’ms.. j.
United States

10

Venango (N. Y.)
Veuango & Pit Hole

2 00

10|

2

10

10

1ft

Vesta

10

Wat son Pet roleum

5
5

....

Webster

5j
1!

.

2 00
15
7 9C

5

10

Terragenta

10
2
5

Knickerbocker
Lamb's Farms
Latonia & Sage R
Liberty
.'

4G
35
45

.

Tack Petr’m of N.Y
Talman
Tarr Farm

_

Ivanboe
Ken. Nat. Pet & Min

26
20
30

.10
.10
5

Sugar Creek

45

30

20 i

Homowack
Inexhaustible
Island

.

....50
....10

Success

10
10
5j
1

Home

8 00

..

20

High Gate

2 00

60

3

Story & McClintock.

!

Hammond
Hard Pan

75

2#

& Barnsdale..2#
Oil
.10
Southard...
5
Standard Petroleum.

10

5j

HamiltonMcClintock

30

20
5
10

Sherman
i Sherman

Great Republic
...10
G’t Western Consol... .100!
Guild Farm
101

75

12

10

RvndFarm
Second National
Shade River

5

.

.

10
100

Raw son Farm
Revenue...

40

39

15

..10

President...
Kathbone Oil Tract

10
5
5;

Fountain Oil
Fountain Petroleum
Fulton Oil
Germania..

to

4 50

4 00

5

Petroleum Consol.
Pit Hole C. No. 2..
Pit Hole Creek
Pithole Farms.

10

Enterprise

138

10
5

Pennsylvania Oil
Pepper Well Petroleum...

50

Emp’e City Petrol’m
5
Empire anil Pit Hole .... 2|

Everett
Eureka
Excelsior
Fee Simple..
First. National
Forest City

20

10

5 2 00 4 00

i.

Northern Light
Oak Shade
Oceanic
Oil City Petroleum
Oil Creek of N.Y
Pacific
Palmer Petroleum

60

1

Equitable

5
3

5
Philadel
N.Y,Ph. ABalt.Cons..... 1
Noble & Delaneter
8
Noble Well of N. Y. ...25
North American
10

**20

Eclectic

105

10

i N. Y. &

2 45

2 30

2
5

De Kalb
Devon

5|

York& Kent’y Oil. 100
j New YorkA Keut’yPet.. 5
j New York & Newark
5

10
10
Columbia (Pbg)
...50
...1(M)
Commercial
Commonwealth.,
10
Consolidated ofN. Y
10

.

6
10

; New

Clifton
Clinton

.

25

20

2

10 i National
60 i New England
50 | New York
♦
N. Y. & Alleghany
27

45
40
20

10

Brevoort

Buchanan Farm
Bunker Hill

.

10
5

Maple Grove
Maple Shade of N. Y

20

Blood Farm

10

Manhattan

10
10
5
2

Brooklyn

.

par

Marietta.
BenneholT & Pithole
Bennehoff Run
10 6 45 6 50 Mercantile
2 75 3 i 0 ; Mineral Point...
Bennelioff Run Oil. ...
1 Mingo
Bergen Coal and Oil..... 10
! Monongahela & Kan
Black Creek..
Montana
Bliven..,
Mount Vernon

60
65
225

April and Oct. Apr. ’66..
Jan. and July, July ’66
100 200,000 212,14
Empire City
do
July ’66...
Excelsior
50 200,000 258,054 Feb. and Aug.
140,324
Exchange
30 150,000 230,3 2 Jan. and July, Julv ’66'.".
Firemen’s......... 17 204,000 149,021
do
July ’66.3#
Firemen’s Fund... 10 150,000 156,063
do
July’65
Trust.. 10 150,000 215,079
Firemens
do
25 200,000 149,755 May and Nov. July ’06
Fulton
May
Gallatin
.£[} 150,000 229,309 Feb. and Aug. Aug ’66 ..
200,000
100
Gebhard
„an. and
July’66 ..5
Germania
50 500,000 592,394 Jan. and July. July’65
July.
200,000 195,875
Globe
°0
Jan. and July. July’66.3#
Great Western*t. .100 1,000,000 3,177,437
200,000 228,122 Feb. and Aug. Ang ’66..
Greenwich
25
April and Oct. Apr. ’65..
50 200,000 186,176 Jan. and July, July ’66 3#
Grocers’
200,000 172,318
Guardian
—
do
July ’66
Hamilton
15 150,000 163,860
do
July ’66
Hanover
50 400,000 440,295
do
July ’66
300,000 253,214
Harmony (F.&M.)t 50
do
July ’66
50 200,000 207,345
Hoffman
138
do
July ’66
2,'485,017
Home
• *100 2,000,000
do
July’65.. 5
Hope
50 200.000 152,057
do
July ’66 .6
Howard
50 300,000 3-19,521
do
July ’65
200,000 201,216
Humboldt
100
do
July ’65 .6
If 8,82-*
Import’ & Traders. 50 200,000 138,166 Feb. and Aug Feb.’65 ..5
150,000
Indemnity
100
do
Aug.’66.3#
International
100 1,000,000 1,024,76
do
’66
200,000 195,571
25 200,010 245,984 Ma'rcli and Sep Aug.’66. .4
Irving..'
Sep.
Jefferson
30
Jan. and July July ’66
King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20 150,000 359,721
do
July ’65
Knickerbocker.... 40 280,000 279,864
do
July ’66
Lafayette (B’kly).. 50 150,000 161,252
do
July ’66 .5
Lamar
100 300,000 346,426
do
July ’65 .4
Lenox
25 150,000 129.644
do
July ’66
200,000 260,264
Long Island (B’kly) .50
DO
Jan. ’66
do
1,000,000 1,182,779
Lorillard*
25
Julv ’66.. 5
do
500,000 704,303
Manhattan
100
do
July ’66
Market*
100 200,000 282,35 f
do
July’66 ..5
200,000 197.633
Meehan’ & Trade’. 25
do
July ’66. .5
150,135
150,000
Mechanics (B’klyn) .50
do
July ’66
Mercantile
100 200,000 211,178
do
July ’66.. .5
Mercantile Mut’l*+100 640,000 1,322,469
do
July ’65 .10
Merchants’
50 200,000 228.644
do
July ’65 .5
Metropolitan * t.. .100 1,000,000 1,192,303
Julv ’66 .5
do
150,000 150,616
Montauk (B’lyn). ..50
do
July ’66..8
216,184
150.000
Nassau (B’klyn)... .50
do
July ’66
7# 200,000 235,518
National
do
July ’65 .5 90
311.976
300,000
New Amsterdam.. 25
210,000 244,066 Jan. and July July ’66 .6
N. Y. Equitable 3 35
200,000 222,199 Feb. and Ang Aug.’66. ..5
N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100
Jan. and July July ’66 ..5
Niagara
50 1,000,000 1,175,565
do
July’66 ..5
500,000 601,701
North American*. 50
North River
25 350,000 385,489 April and Oct Apr. ’66. .4
do
July ’66 .5
Pacific
25 200,000 229,729
do
July’66 .5
Park
100 200,000 194,317
do
July ’66 ..5 75
Peter Cooper
20 150,000 173,691 Feb. and
Aug. Aug.’66. .4
People’s
20 150,000 154,206 Jan. and July, July ’66 .5 66*
998,687
Phoenix t Br’kiyn. 50 1,000,000
do
July’65.. 5 40
Reliei.
50 200,000 188,170
do
July’66.3#
100 300,000 457,252
Republic*
do
July’66.3#
Resolute*
100 200,000 208,969
200,000 206.909 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’66..5
Rutgers’
25
do
Aug. ’66. .5
25 150,000 150,580
St. Mark’s
St. Nicholas!
25 150,000 138.902 Jan. and July. Aug. ’66 .5
and Aug. Ang.’66.3#
Feb.
Security *+
50 1,000,000 1,277,564 Jan. and July, July ’66 .5
Standard
50 200,000 230.903
do
July ’66 ..5
Star
100 200,000 217,843
100 200,000 177,915 Feb. and Ang. Feb. ’66..4
Sterling *
Stuyvesant
25 200,000 208,049 Jan. and July, July‘66 .5
Tradesmen's
25 150,000 142,830
do
Tnly ’66 .5
United States
26 250,000 350,412 Feb. and
Aug. Aug. ’66. .5
Washington
50 400,000 569,623
Washington *t... .1ftO 287,400 581,689 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’66...2
’66 ..5
Williamsburg City.50 150,000 151,639 Jan. and July. July

Bid, Askd

McElhenny
McKinley

100

Anderson
Beekman
Bemis Heights

..

r

par

Alleghany
Allen Wright.

861.705

300,000

Eaitle

Adamantine Oil

75

LIST—Friday.
Companies.

Bid. Askd

Companies.

.

250,000
500,000 1,199,978
400,000 36 ,970
200,000 168,32

Corn Exchange...
Croton
1ob

Bid. Ask
ed.

223.775 Jan. and July.
205,976 Jan. and July.
440,603 Jan. and July. July ’66...
213,590 Jan. and July. July ’66 ..4
501,543 Jan., and J uly. Jan. 65.. .5
253,232 Feb. and Aug. Aug ’66...5
324,456 March and Sep Sep. ’66. ..5
200.362 May and Nov.
181,052 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65. .4
320, ill June and Dec. De»e. ’65.. .5
24S,392| Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’66. .5
I Aug. ’66. .5
do
241,521
123,577 Jan. and July II July’64 ..4
do
July’66 .10
378,440
314,787 Feb. and Aug. Aug. 5 p. s.
do
Aug. ’66 5 100
231,793
391,913 Jan. and July, July’64.3#
do
July ’66 ..
212,594
440,870 Feb. and Aiig. Aug. ’66.
244,296 Jan. and July. Julv ’66
268,893 April and Oct. Oct. ’65..

$300,000
200,000
200,000

tA

Last

Periods.

Assets.

Capital.

25

DIVIDEND.

31,1865.

Dec.

(*) are

347

THE CHRONICLE.

1866.]

September 15,

W.Virg. Oil and Coal
Woods & Wright

5;

Lily Run

25

10

100;

.

MINING STOCK

.

Companies.

.

oo

Copper:
Adventure..
Albany & Boston

Boston

Central

Atlantic 1864
do
..1865
do
.1866
Commer.1860
do
1861
do
.1862
do
.1863
do
.1864
.1865
do
do
.1866
Gt West’n’61
.1862
do
do
*1863
do
.1864
do
.1865
do
.1966
Merc'n'lel860
.1861
do
do
.1862

do

»

do
do

....

•

•

•

...

•

•

...

>*•

•

“

-

,

-

.....

do
do
do
do

....

.

...

.

n. Y.a

•

•

,,,

T

«

.

# •

120*
95

66'

.....

•

•

•

•

.....

.....

•

•

•

•

do

»

Orient

•. • • • •

•

•-*

•

* s •

• •

.....

•

♦

*'•

i«

r.

*

•
.

« •

• •

•

*_• *'

« •

....

•

do
do
do
do
do
do

•

•1861
.1863

.1865
*1866
.1860
.1861

Pacific

♦»»•.ji

do

•

••• •
•

•

•

....

•

.....

•

•

•

•

•

•

-

4862

'Bid.
I
i

3#

5#|l7 00

French Creek
Great Western

*

•

• •

•

•H*

•

•••

•

•

••••

•

866

1#

Hudson

-

19 |46 00
10

Huron

....S3

Knowlton

8

Lafayette
Lake Superior

New

Consol..-...lu

York

•

•

117 00

-

3#

Quincy,

Sheldon and

Rockland
•

? • • •

•

# • •

10

10

Oak Hill
1 50

Manhattan
Montana.
New York.

70

-

5

7 00

"32
2 00

2 10

Quartz Hill
Rocky Mountain
Smith & Parmelee

25 4 SO

Texas

—

Union

—

5 00
8 45
11 10
30
2 50

—
—

8 00
H 00
29
235

Virginia City

West Fellows

Bucks County
Denbo
Manhan
Phenix.
Redwood...v

5
—

...

—

—

Superior

20

—

Wallkill

Copake

Princeton

Providence
Portage Lake...,

75
38
60

—
—

Lake

Pewabic

12

Liberty
Liebig

Iron :

...11

Ogima

•

11

1 60
37
50

—

Lead and Zinc:
par

2
| 5#
5
6#,
-

Norwich
•

113 00

1

Manhattan
Mendota
Merrimac
Minnesota
New Jersey

.

~

2
2
25 |23 50
2#

Hope

IsleRoyale

Pacific.. 1863
do
..1864
..1865
do
do
..1866
Sun
1862
do
..1863
do
1864
do
..1865
do
1866
Union ..I860
do
..1861
do
..1862
do
..1863
do
...1864
do
..1865
do
..1866
Wash. ..1863
..1864
do
do
...865

do

Hilton

1 45

eo
10
00
44
so

Kip & Buell

-

90
75

35
59
09

Keystone Silver

-

00
20
60
36

"43

Holman
18 50 Hope.

8#|54 00

Franklin

25
20
50
30
75 17

25

Downieville
Gunnell
Gunnell Central

9#

Flint Steel River
Forest City

95
50
V5
80

25

Corydon

-

.-

Indiana

-

.1864

do

•

•

-

Companies.

lAsk
cd.

•

•

do

.18631




Companies.

ed.

Ask¬
Bid.
ed.

-

Bluff

3
1
— 1
— 1
—
.100 17
4
1
—
25 1
—

Consolidated Gregory..

2%

2
2
2
1

90
00
75
75

2
2
:
1

—

53 00! i Consolidated Colorado...

1

Hamilton
Hancock

Ask-4
Bid.

*

Evergreen
Excelsior

MARINE MUTUAL INSURANCE SCRIP.—Friday.
companies.

.24#|45 00

Eagle River

5

Benton....

OftjlCrozier
IS) 1 Columbia

-

Dover

July ’66.. .5

do

5

Copper Creek
Copper Falls
Copper Harbor.

115

7

I 5 00

-

Dacotah

...

1 00

—

—
—

..

Black Hawk
Bob Tail

Canada

.

550,301

17#
2#

Caledonia

.

500,000

1

13#

Bohemian

.

Yonkers & N. Y.. 100

—

Bay State

120
75

.

•American Flag....

'Atlantic & Piicific
Bates *fc Baxter

4#

Aztec

par

lAltona...:

26
3

Annita

.

Bid. Ask

Companies.

Gold:
i Ada Elmore

paid 3

Algomah

.

LIST—Friday.

Bid.', Askd!

3 80

2 34

.

par 5

100
50

Mount Pleasant
Coal:
Co.nmbian

10

Schuylkill
...10

Columbian

13

Superior.*'.10

52 50
10 00
3 75

■3*

Miscellaneous.

Russell File
Rutland Marble -'

Saginaw,L. S.

......

5
25

5 00
39 50

Co.,

H. Pearce &
No. 353

P.

A.

Formerly of Mississippi.

CHINA SILKS,

G EN ERAL COM MISSI« N

Imitation Oiled Silk.
Oar uImitation” has a very

ppearance

superior

finish, and

and durability.

Patent Reversible

Paper Collars,

the most economical collar ever invented.

FOR

AGENTS

KILLS,

BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO.,
CHICOPEE MANUF. Co.,

„

MILTON
remove

about October 1st to

new

store

Bros.

59

LEONARD

&

Co.,

STREET,,

OFFER FOR SALE

MILL RIVER Woolen Manufacturing Co.'8
FANCY CASSIMERES, new and desirable FaB

Styles, heavy weights.
HARDING’S 3-4
extra

and 6-1

Black

DOESKINS,

heavy and of unequaled finith.

POWH 4 TAN MILLS. COTTON
CLOTHS, superior color and finish.

WARr

ROCKINGHAM WOOLEN Co., Black CA^

3IMERES, all grades.
ROCKLAWNj all Wool
Cadet Mixed
SIMERES.

DOESKINS

Heavy Oxford and
and

UNION

CAS¬

FAIRVIEW CO., Extra Fine all Wool White
FLANNELS.

CLAIRM’NT MILLS, Fine Oxford, Cadet,
and Blue Mixed KENTUCKY- JEANS.
Extra Heavy 27 and 32 inch Blue and Brown JEANS1
manufactured expressly for Western i rade.

Cotton

OF

including

a

superb stock of

DRESS

GOODS,

59

Henry Lawrence & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

Speed, Attorney General U. S., Washington;
Smith Speed, Louisville.

J.

well,
Jeremiah M. Ward& Co.)
(of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell
Importer and Dealer in Hardware,

Mercliant,
45 CLIFF STREET, NEW YORK.
All orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬
and Commission

192 FRONT

Best of references given if required.

solicited.

BosTWICK,

COMMISSION MERCHANT

ST., NEW YORK.

STREET, NEW YORK.

James A. Robinson,
CALORIC ENGINES,
PORTABLE AND STATIONARY

Steam

Engines,

Jobbing.

164 Duane St.,

Cor. Hudson, New York.

Metals,
THOS.

J.

POPE, 92 John Street,

Pig Irons, Ingot Copper,
Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New Railroad
Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons.
-Anthracite and Charcoal

Railroad Iron,
AMERICAN AND FOREIGN,
FOR

Roads,

Steam and Street

IN

Cotton, Prodnce and
40 and 42

FOR SALE BY

Provisions,

S. W. HOPKINS 6c Co.,
69 & 71 Broadway.

BROADWAY and 53 NEW ST., N. Y

Reference,
Tilford & Bodley, Bankers, N. Y.

JOSEPH

GILLOTT’S STEEL

OF THE OLD STANDARD

J. M. Cummings & Co.,

PENS,

QUALITY.

JOSEPH
Or Descriptive
GIL LOTT, Name and DesigW AUK ANTED, rating Number

TRADE MARK:

NEW SERIES,

GOOD AND CHEAP, from No.

700 io No. 761.

Commission Merchants,
Oiler for

.

Mills, Pumps, Cotton Gins, Hoisters, and General

Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, &c.,

tention.

STREET, NEW YORK,

5S BROAD

Parasols,

USE,

ERICSSON

DISTILLERS

MANUFACTURERS OF

49 MURRAY

Street, corner of Beaver,

FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC

AND

Commercial Agents.
NOS. 38 BROAD AND 36 NEW STREETS.
G. N. CARLETON, A. M. FOUTE. New York.
R. B. SPEED, A. M. SUMMERS, New Orleans.
J. H. SPEED, W. B. DONOHO, Memphis.
W. M. COZART, J. J. STOCKARD, Mobile.
Consignments and orders solicited.
OaRLETON, FOUTE & CO.
Nkw York, Feb. 1, 1866.
References—Duncan, Sherman & Co., Bankers,
New York; I. B. Kirtland, Hill & Co., Bankers, New
York; Third National Bank, St. Louis, Mo.; Hon.
Thos. H. Yeatman, Cincinnati, Ohio; Hon. James

AND

Umbrellas &

Broad

General

AND

DWIGHT,

CO.,

MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS.

HOSIERY and WHITE GOODS.
DOUBLEDAY 6c

ON HAND,

THEODORE POLHEMUS 6c

COMMISSION MERCHANTS

J. A.

Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods,

Weights)

A LARGE STOCK ALWAYS

H n. Milton Brown, Mobile.
W. Mead Addison, Esq., Baltimore.
A. P. MERRILL, Jr„
36 New Street, New York City.

J

IMPORTERS AND JORRERS

Duck,
and

Widths

All

Ogden, Fleetwood & C ., Chicago.
D. B. Mol oy, Esq., Memphis.
Messr
Porter, Fairfax & Co., Louisville, Ky.
Francis Surget, Esq.. Natchez, Miss.
H. B. Plant. E q.. Augusta, Ga.

UNION CASSIMERES.

NO. 400

ETC.

William A. Gellatly
William N. Cla.uk, Jr|

Joseph H Westerfied.
William H. Schieffelin,

Co., N. Y.

Also, Black and White Heavy Double and Twist

Tracy, Irwin & Co.,
BROADWAY,

ETC.,

170 & 172 WILLIAM ST.

Messrs. Crane, B eed & Co . Cincinnati.
■». E. Addison, Esq., Virginia.
Geo S. Cameron, Esq., South Carolina.
Hon. W. B < >gden, Chicago.

CO.,
MILLS,

Nos. 43 6c 45 WHITE STREET.

Harding

GOODS, PERFUMERY,
New York.

York.

Carleton, .Foute & Co.,

VICTORY MAN UP.

Will

INDIGO, CORKS, SPOXGES,
FANCY

REFERENCES:
Messrs. Duncan, Sherman & Co., New
IT. A. Murdock, Esq., New York.
W. R. Dixon, Esq , Pres. Hoff an Ins.
Dr. W. N. Mercer, New Orleans.

-.

E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co.
'

DRUGS,

of Cotton, To¬

George S. Mandeville, Esq., New Orleans.

Agents for the sale of the

WASHINGTON

Advances made op Consignments
bacco. and other produce.

,

mission.

real silk, which it equals in

costs but half as much as

BROAD STREET,

36 NEW STREET & 38

Machinery and Agricultural Implements of every
description supplied.
Southern Real Estate Bought and Sold on Com¬

Silk,

CO.,

IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF

MER CH A NT

NEW YORK CITY.

HANDKERCHIEFS,

SCHIEFFELIN BROTHERS 6c

Merrill,

Goodman &

ancl Manufacturers of

Oiled

SUCCESSORS TO

SUCCESSOR TO

Importers of

SILK AND COTTON

W. H. Schieffelin & Co.

Jr.,

Merrill,

BROADWAY,

EUROPEAN AND

Commercial Cards-

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

S.

[September 15,1860.

THE CHRONICLE.

348

JOSEPH GILLOTT 6c
No. 91

Numbers.

SONS,

John-st., New-York.

‘

HENRY OWEN, Sole Agent.
Files of this Paper

Distilleries, Kentucky.

Designating

For sale by

sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE

WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class

With

JOSEPH

TRADEMARK: GIL LOTT,
BIRMINGHAM.

Bound to Order.

BLANK BOOKS,

E. S.

Thackston,

Tobacco, Note and Exchange Rroker.

Marsh Glenn,

,

ATTORNEY

AND COUNSELLOR AT
LAW.

Slrand Street,

No. 12 OLD SLIP, cor. WATER ST.
3
,

NEW YORK.

And others should send by the

HARNDEN EXPRESS, 65 Broadway,
they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and
afe forwarding of
GOLD .SILVER, JEWELRY", & MERCHANDISE
of every description. Also for the collection of notes
drafts and bills, bills accompanying goods, etc.

rs




STATIONERY,

ENGRAVING,
PRINTING,. &C.,

or

,

26 EXCHANGE

Wardwell,

3’1

BurtiSjFrench & Woodward
J. H. Brower & Co.,

New York City.

Campbell'** Reagan, ]New 0rle“8’ L“'
Strong,
J. H.
Palestine, Texas.
Hon.

Judge G. F. More, Austin, Texas.

t*’

QM£Mab£nn& GUbert’ j\- Galveston, Texas.
Co.,
■

J. a Sellers
S.
jr

w. jfe t. P. Gillian:

Houston. Texas.

PLACE,

Corner of William

YOUR

Southern Texas.
;s :
references:

J. M.

&C

Cooper & Sheridan,

Galveston, Texas,

Is prepared to attend to, and collect promptly, all
Claims or other business committed to his charge in

Middle

Bankers, Merchants,

'

CUSTOM SOLICITED

Francis &

St.

BY

Loutrel,

STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND

BLANK-BOOK

MANUFACTURERS.

45 Malden

Lane, New York.

Busine**,

We supply everything In' our line for
Professional end Private nee, at Low Prices.
recdiVfe prompt attention. '
,

Order*

rf.
Sf

|v

September 15,1866.]
Steamship and Express

THE UNITED

California,

Xo

And Carryingtlie
States Mall,

NORTH RIV¬
ER, FOOT Df Canal street, at 12
o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and

(except when those dates fall on
Sunday and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASPINwALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
»rithoneof the Company’s steamships from Panama
Jhr SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.
SEPTEMBER:
f\
(
.f—Arizona, connecting with Golden City.
list

ments ol' the

iUNITED STATES AND BRAZIL

St. Louis
Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with
steamers foy South Pacific ports • 1st and llth for
Central American Ports. Those or 1st touch at Man^Baggage thecked through. One hundred pounds
allowed eich adult.
An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and
attendance free.
For passage tickets or further information, apply
at the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of

llth—Henry Chauncey, connecting with
31st—New York, connecting with Sacramento.

North River, New York.
F. W. G. BELLOWS, Agent.
NEW STEAMSHIP

carriage of the Mails, will
their

each

ON

THE

over

2;nd

EACH

New-York
New-York
New-York
New-York
New-York

payable in coin:

No. 5 Bowlimr Green.

THE

Saturday,
P.M. from Pier 43 N.ft.
GARRISON &

YORK,

RUSSIA.

AMERICAN EMIGRANT
STEAD CO.’S

AID & HOME¬

STEAMSHIP LINE.

THE AMERICAN, SCANDINAVIAN,
SIAN LLOYD will despatch, from Pier No.
River, foot of Rector street, their
Iron Screw Steamer

& RUS¬
8, North

First-class A 1

ALLEN,
No. 5 Bowling Green

Capt. EDW.

Copenhagen, Denmark; GottenSweden; Christiana, Norway.

Connecting with Stettin and St. Petersburg, and
all tne German and Russian Ports
on the Baltic Coast.
The luxurious cabin offers first-class accommndotions for travelling to Euglan>, France, Germany,
aud all the Northern Ports of Europe.
Freight will be received on through bills of lading
to all the connecting ports in Ef>j*land, Russia,

Sweden, and Norway. Goons

Germany, Denmark,

England and Scotland to

hampton.
For
Office.

be discharged at South¬

freight or passage apply to
No. 62

the Company’s

Broadway.

Communications addressed to
P. C.

WRIGHT, President.

NEW-ZEA.
LAND AND AUSTRALIAN
iROYAL MAIL COMPANY.
PANAMA,

BE¬
AUSTRALASIA

OPENING OF STEAM COMMUNICATION
TWEEN NEW YORK AND
VIA PANAMA.
The service of the above Company will
com¬
menced from Panama to Wellington,
on the 24th June, by.t^e Steamship KAKAIA,
fol¬
lowed by the KAIKOURA on

be
New-Zealand,

Passengers and

the Smh July.

goods will be forwarded from Wel¬

lington to Anckland, Otago, Nelson, Canterbury,
Sydney, Melbourne, and other parts of New-Zealand
and Australia, by the Company’s Inter-Colonial
9t0ftm6r8

Arrangements are in progress

for the conveyance

from New York, at through
ports in the Aus¬

of passengers and goods
fares and rates to aU the principal
tralasian Colonies.
The opening voyages

Seven Per Cent. First Mort¬
Bonds of the North Missouri Railroad Com¬
pany, having thirty years to inn. Coupons paya¬
ble in New York on January 1 and July 1, in each
Wa offer for sale the

s

Before accepting the agency for sale of these
bonds, we made careiul inquiry into the
and
prospects
was
Mr. Win. Milnor Roberts and others, on our behalf,
and their highly satisfactory report enables us to re¬
commend the bonds as first-class securities, and a
safe and judicious investment.

all) will

The proceeds of these bonds ($6,000,000 in
be used in extending a road, already completed 170
miles into North Missouri, to the Iowa State line,
where it is to connect with the railroads of Iowa,
and also westward to the junction with the Pacific

Railroad (at

of over

Chronicle

^

of the Company’s ships, in

conjunction with those of the Pacific Mail Steamship
Companv, will be as follows:
OUTWARD.
From New York, June 11.
From Panama, June 24.
From Wellington, N. Z., July 21.
Arriving at Sydney

Jul^29.^

V ti 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.

THE CHRONICLE is

1st.

EDITORIAL

each num¬

ARTICLES—prepared

by competent writers, upon sub¬
jects relating to Finance, Commerce, and
other questions of general Interest to bus!"
with great care

The Railrord connects the
with its 200,000 inhabitants,
est
sas

of new books.
with gieat plea¬
se¬
sure we are able to announce that we have
cured the services of one of the editors of the lead¬
ing London journal—2 he Economist—who will, in 8
weekly letter report the foreign markets specially
for THE CHRONICLE, furnishing the freshest and
most reliable information with regard to commercia
2d. LITERATURE—Notices
3d. FOltJLiGN NEWS—It is

affairs.
4th. COMMERCIAL Sc

will be answered at our

Any further inquiries
office.

JAY, COOKE & CO.

$10,000 Reward!
STOLEN!

The following-described property, for which the
above reward is offered, or pro rata for any propor¬
tion thereof of the available securities recovered. .
11 U. S. 10-40

Bonds, of $1,000 each, numbered:

17,818,
98,504,

79,114,
38,598,

17,817,
88,392,

11 U. S. 7-30 Treasury

each, numbered:
1,620,
1,621,
3*. 981,
950,

35,129,
98,506.

80,100,
79,113,

Notes, dated 15th June, $5,000-

1,622,
951,

'

1,623, 3,328,
952,
953,
and two of

3,829,

$1,000 each.

15 U. 8. 7 3-10 Treasury Notes, $1,000 each,
J une 15, from 128,943 to 128,957, inclusive.
3 U. S. 7 3-10 Treasury

dated

Notes, $100 each, dated July,

351,673,
91,394,
84,368.
Bonds of 1862, second series, for $1,000

MISCELLANE¬

4 U. S. 5-20

RANKERS GAZETTE—Givlist of all Dividends Declared and
Bonds lost or stolen for the week; a review
of the Money Market, Stock, Geld, and

each, numbered:

6th. THE

ng a

Foreign Exchange

Markets for the week ;

Bank Statements for the week, with compara¬
tive statements; progress and condition of Na¬
tional Banks, Foreign Ranking, and a
Rank Stock List.

TABLE OF SALE PRICES, on
of the week, at the New York fctock Ex¬

change of Stocks and Securities sold.
7th. A TABLE OF NATIONAL,STATE
AND CITY SECURITIES.

COMMERCIAL TIitfES—Con¬

taining an epitome of the movements of trade foi
the week; complete tables of the Total Receipts
of Domestic Produce for the week and since

Also^of Exports and Imports for
articles o

the week and > ear of all leading
commerce, with a comparative statement
vious year.

of the pre¬

A special Report on Cotton, acknowl¬
edged to be the best and most complete published

in the United States.
A special Report on
A Dry Goods Report.

Breadstnfls

Pth.

and add 20

1865, numbered:

OUS NEWS.

Jan. 1.

500,000 have been sold at 80 cents, and the
offered at v5 cents. At this rate

are now

they yield nearly S)t per cent, income,
per cent, to principal at maturity.

and financial

8th. THE

great City of St. Louis,
not only with the rich¬

portions of Missouri, but with the States of Kan¬
and Iowa and the great Pacific Railroads.

The first

ness men.

6th. A
each day

$1,500,000, or a sum nearly four times be¬

every year.

divided into heads or de¬

partments, under w hich the contents of
ber are arranged. They are as follows:

of

yond the amount needed to pay the interest on these
bonds, the income of the road of coarse increasing

remainder

Commercial & Financial

Leavenworth) and other railroads lead¬

ing np the Missouri River, so that the mortgage
$5,000,000 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

FENN1NG, Secretary.

THE

condition

examined by

of the road, which

CONTENTS.

Southampton ;

for

P. G.

CAVENDY,

ON THE 15TH SEPTEMBER,
With Goods and Passengers to
burg,

NOTICE.-thk; UNITED S'rATE8
PETROLEUM COMPANY have this day declared
a Dividend of Three Per Cent., for the month of Aug¬
ust, payable on and after Saturday. Sept. 1.
Trans¬
fer-books will close on Saturday Aug. 25, and be re¬
opened again on Monday, Sept. 3. By order,

Ottawa,

The

America”

The elegant sidewheel steamship “ North
L. F. Timmerman, commander, will sail

United States Petroleum Company, |
No. 38 Pine street.
f
New York, Aug. 20, I860.

SCANDINAVIAN PORTS,
ANR

$80
$150
$170
$180
$200

Steerage at half these rates, meals included.
experienced Surgeon is attached to each vessel.
For further information, freight or passage,
Apply to
GARRISON & ALLEN, Agents,

BETWEEN

THE

rates

An

July 21,punctually at 3 o’clock

Company.

year.

First Cabin,
“
“
“
“

to St. Thomas
to Para
to Pernambuco
to Bahia
to Rio de Janeiro

Rail¬

gage

THlf PORT OF NEW YORK,
following named ports, at the following

COMMUNICATION
NEW

MONTH

FROM

of passage,

r

Missouri

North

road

commencing in July,
For the

i

despatch one o

2,000 tons burden,

OF

,

OF THE

Steamships,

First-Class

New

BONDS

GAGE

contract with the govern¬

Under

For the

FIRST MORT¬

PER CENT.

SEVEN

Steamship Comp’y,

Mail

of every month

Canal street,

STATES Sc BRAZIL

United

LEAVE PIER NO. 42

Miscellaneous.

Miscellaneous.

Go’s.

MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S
through line

PACIFIC
w

349

THE CHRONICLE

900 dollars in

5,619 dollars in

MISCELLANEOUS BONDS.
12th. A TABLE OF RAILWAY, CA¬
NAL AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCKS.

Gold aud Gold Certificates.

100 shares each, New
Railroad Stock:
Nos. 56,371 to 56,375.

Y'ork Central

for 100 shares each of Cleveland and
Pittsburg Railroad Stock, numbered:
208.
207,
6 Certificates of Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago
Railroad Stock, 100 shares each, numbered :
14,022 to 14,027.
6 Certificates Illinois Central Railroad Stock:
No. 8,951, 222 Shares.
No. 36,849, 20 Shares.
No. 32,065, 40
“
“
No. 21,902, 78
No. 29,698, 40,
“
No. 5,452, 100
2 Certificates

$1,050 in Atlantic Mutual Insurance Scrip for 1864.
$1,470
“
k‘
“
“
1865.
$710
“
“
1866.
“
“
Also, $8,500 U, S. 5-20 Bonds, numbers not known.

CROCKER, WOOD Sc CO.,
52 South St.

A Daily Bulletin

New York Market.

llth. A
NAL AND

5,350.
Compound Interest Notes.

5 Certificates,

RENT, containing full quotations of the prices,
on Friday, of all leading articles of Commerce in the
RAILWAY MONITOR.
TABLE OF RAILWAY, CA¬

3,749,
8,748,
11,002.
of 1881, for $500, numbered :

Coupon Bond

WHOLESALE. PRICES CUR¬

10th. THE

64,533.

Bonds of 1862, for $500 each, numbered:

11,619,
1 U. S.

58,539,

49,024,

9,458,
4 U. S. 5-20

And Price Current is published every morning and
served by carriers in New York, and mailed to all
other subscribers.
THE BULLETIN CONTAINS,
1. A list of Bonds Lost and Dividends Declared
2. Prices of Bonds, Stocks and Securities.
'

Wellington to New York, 42 days.
Wellington to Panama, 28 days.
From Sydney or Melbourne, 8 days additional.
The service will be continued monthly in unison
with the foregoing dates.
.
Particulars of feres and freight on application to

jnwific Mail Steamship Company, office No. 69 Wall
St.,New York,
_

or -

_

A W'.-

CHAS. W. WEST, Agent,
No. 23 William St., New York.

WM. G. SEALY, Agent, Panama.

New Tori, May JWJ&66.




13th. THE

INSURANCE AND MINING

JOURNAL.
TERMS OF

SUBSCRIPTIONS PER YEAR, EXCLUSIVE OP
POSTAGE*

THE CHRONICLE with DAILY BULLETIN,.$12 00
10 00
THE CHRONICLE without
do
THE DAILY BULLETIN, alone
600
William B. Dana Sc Co.,

PUBLISHERS,
60 WUUam Street, AewYorh

3. Prices of Gold and
4. Full Price Current

Receipts of

Foreign Exchange.
of the General Markets and

Domestic Prodnce.
Prices of Dry Goods for the day.

6. Jobbers

THE
WILL BE

DAILY

ISSUED TO

BULLETIN

MERCHANTS IN LARGS NUMBEBSCARDS PRQMI,

PRICE CURRENT, WITH THEIR
NSNTLY INSERTED AT THE HEAD.
A8 A

1st, 1865, over $13,500,000 00
FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President.

CASH ASSETS, Sept.

R. A. McCURDY,

Vice-President.

President.

LUCIUS J. HENDEE,

SHEPPARD HOMANS.

J.

NASSAU STREET, N. E.

$3,000,000

Capital

tISAAC w MORRIS.
fTHEO ABBATT,
Actuary,

1819.

INCORPORATED

All the Government

GOODNOW, Secretary.

DIRECTORS.

Marine & Fire Insurance.
METROPOLITAN INSURANCE CO.,
NO. 103
Cash

$1,000,000

1,600,000

1, 1865, over

of pre¬
Navigation Risks
damage by
Gold, Losses will be paid

This Company insures at customary rates
mium against all Marine and Inland
on Cargo or Freight; also against loss or

Fire.
If Premiums are paid
in Gold.

in

A. Alexander,

FIFTY PER

NEW YORK AGENCYr

45 WALL

Cash

-

156,303 98

Vessels, Freight,

Navigation Risks.
Premiums

$556,303 98
24,550 00

$2,716,424 32

return

paid in gold will be entitled to a

EDWARD P. ANTHONY,

equitably adjusted and

Chartered 1850.
253 per

Sec'y.

OFFICE No. 35 WALL

Mutual

Cash Dividends

New York.
August 16,

1866.

day, A. F.
unanimously elected President
order,

RICHARD L. HAYDOCK,

STREET, NEW YORK.

U.

Fisk,

SECURITIES,

S.

NASSAU STREET,
FOURTH NATIONAL

BANK,*J

Sell at Market Rates;

Bay and

meeting of Directors held this

Hastings, Esq., was
of this Company. By

COMPANY.

IN

NO. 16
UNDER THE

Security Insurance Co.,
At a

DEALERS

President.

OFFICE OF THE

119 Broadway,

D. C. & R. H.

paid in 15 years,

JONATHAN D. STEELE,
P. NOTMAN, Secretary.

No.

The Mercantile

RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

promptly paid.

cent.

Pres't.

Vice-Pres't

$1,000,000
270,353

SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865

premium in gold.
MOSES H. GRINNELL,

$1,000,000

CAPITAL

STREET.

'

CASH CAPITAL

Losses

,

BANK.
BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

NATIONAL

COMPANY.
NO. 12 WALL

Risks on
and Cargo; also, against Inland

INSURANCE

The Tradesmens

Secretary.

Niagara Fire Insurance

CENT.

WHEELOCK, President,

WILLIAM H. SANFORD, Cashier.

291

insures against Marine

Isaac H. Walker,

and Canadas.
WILLIAM A.

BENJ. S. WALCOTT,
President.

DIVIDEND THIRTY PER
This Company

Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United State

$400,000 00

Gross Assets
Totid Liabilities

STREET.

received

on terms mos

favorable to our

STREET.

capital

J. Rexsen Lane,

Bonds-

descriptions of Government

City and Country accounts

January 1st 1866.

(insurance buildings,)

-

$3,000,000.

Has for sale all

COMPANY,

COMPANY.

ASSETS, Dee. 31, 1865

318 BROADWAY.

Capital

No.

Bank,

Central National

Fire Insurance

Hanover

ROSS, Presiden t

Cashier.

J. H. STOUT,

ALEXANDER, Agent

JAMES A.

CENT.

Sun Mutual Insurance

Government.

D. L.

Street.

No. 62 Wall

Surplus

49 WALL

Designated Depository of the

244,391 43

Liabilities,

Bank,

BROADWAY.

No. 240

$4,067,455 SO

JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, President,
ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice President,
JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, Jr., 2d V. P.
Henry H. Porter. Secretary.

Dealers on best terms.

Tenth National

Collins,

twenty-five per cent of the net
profits, without incurring any liability, or, in lien
thereof, at their option, a liberal discount upon the
premium.
All losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid.
Scrip Dividend declared Jan. 10, 1855,

Loans for sale.

Collections made for

Robkrt Bukle,
Thob.
Ebknkzkr Flower,
Walter Keney,
Elipiialkt A. Bulkeley,
Oh as. H. Brainard,
Roland Mather,
William F.
Samuel S. Ward,
George Roberts,
Austin Dunham,
Thomas K. Brace,
Gustavus F. Davh,
Erastus
Edwin D. Morgan, of New York.
Assets, Jan. 1,1866,

The Assured receive

COR. PINE STRE

Drayton Hi£lyer,

JosEPn Church

Tuttle,

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

Capital

Assets Nov.

$5,000,000

Capital

Hartford, Conn.

NEW YORK.

RANCE COMPANY OF

Fourth National Bank.

Co..

Insurance

iETNA

Life Insu-

The Mutual

Banks and Bankers.

Insurance.

Insurance.

Secretaries
secretaries,

[September 15, 1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

350

U. S. 6s*of 1881.
U. S. 5-20 Bonds.
U. S. 10-40 Bonds.
U. S. 7-30 Treasury Notes.
U. S. Certificates <>f Indebtedness.
U. S. Compound Interest Notes.
And all classes of Government Securities.

John Munroe & Co.,
BANKERS, \
AMERICAN
NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS

Secretary.

AND

$1,366,699

Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866

Ins. Co.,

Germania Fire

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. !
The Company has paid to its Customers, up to the
present time, Losses amounting to over
EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS.
S3
For the past nine years me cash dividends paid to
Stockholders, made from ONE-THIRD of the net
p roflts, have amounted in the aggregate to§
One

Hundred and Twenty-one
lialf per

Instead of issuing a scrip
the principle that all

CASH

No.

be divided to

the stockholders.
This Company continues to make Insurance on
Marine and Inland Navigation aud Transportation
Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks

Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight..
Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or
Currencv, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling,
at the Office of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬

on

pool.
.
.

A

TRUSTEES.

Joseph Walker,
James Freeland,
Samuel Willets,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. Frost,
William Watt,
Henry Eyre,
Cornelius Grinnell,
E. E. Morgan,
Her. A. Schleicher,
Joseph Slagg,
Jas. D. Fisn,
Geo. W. Hennings,
Francis

Charles Dimon,

A. William Heye,

Harold Dollner,

Hathaway, Paul N. Spoftord.
ELLWOOD WALTER, President
CIIAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest.

C. J.Dkspard,




Aaron L. Reid,
Ellwood Walter,
D. Colden Murray,
E. Haydock White,
N. L. McCready,
Daniel T. Willets,
L. Edgerton,
Henry R. Kunhardt.
John S. Williams,
William Nelson, Jr.,

retary.

curities.

deposits of gold and currency
sight. Gold loaned to merchants

Interest allowed upon

subject to check at

favorable terms.

B. C. Morris
STOCK
■

Hope
OFFICE, NO. 92

Company,

BROADWAY.

Capital- ----- $200,000
Assets, Mareli 9, 1866 - - 252.55it

Cash

Se¬

President.

JOHN E. KAHL, Secretary.

Fire Insurance

ST.

Government and other

and bankers upon

when premiums are paid, as the general experience
of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬

Co.,

BANKERS,
94 BROAD WAY AND No. 6 WALL

Dealer* in
-

$705,989 83

TOTAL ASSETS

RUDOLPH GARRIGUE,

profitable, this Company will hereafter make such
cash abatement or discount from the current rates,
maining at the close of the year, w ill

205,989 83

SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1S66

in a
Also Crmrrercial Credits

Lockwood &

$500,000 O

and a

dividend to dealers, based
are equally

partsof Europe, etc., eto.

BROADWAY, N.

CAPITAL,

cent.

classes of risks

on

NO. 175

No. 8 WALL STRKET, NEW YORK,
Issue Circular Letters of Cred t tor Travelers

OO
22

26,850 OO
201,588 14

NO.

& Son,

COMMISSION HOUSE,
17 WILLIAM STREET.

Government Securities, Railways,
Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrip
shares of a 1 descriptions, bought and
different Stock Boards.

Petroleum,

Miscellaneous

Collections made In

sold at the

all the States

Canadas.

and

of all—both
will be con¬
ducted entirely on the basis of Certified Checks;
This Company Insures against Loss or Damage by none given or received unless certified.
Fire on as favorable terms as any othar responsible
To mure fully enable us to carry out this principle,
Company.
although starting with a sufficient capital, all parties
ONLY FIRST EL ASS RISKS SOLICITED.
giving orders for stocks, of whatever description or
amount, will be required to cover same with proba¬
ble amount at time of leaving order. Receipts lor
Board of Director*:
THOS. P. CUMMINGS,
such deposits given until stocks are delivered.
HENRY M. TABER,

Total

Tosses

Mobilities Paid i a 1865

-

-

-

-

-

-

ROBERT SCHELL,
CAMBRELENG, WILLIAM H. TERRY,
THEODORE W. RILEY, FRED. SCHUCIIABDT.
JOSEPH GRAFTON,
JACOB REESE,
’
JNO. W. MERSEREAU, L. B (YARD,
JOSEPH BRITTON,
D. LYDIG SUYDAM,
AMOS ROBBINS,
WILLIAM REM SEN
HENRY S. LEVERICH.

For the more thorough protection
Broker and “Principal ”—our business

JOSEPH FOITLKE,

No

STEP.

President.
HARTSHORNE, Secretary.
JACOB REESE,

CHAS. D.

w

Stocks

purchased or sold on
Option.”

complying
special ana

Out-of-town orders solicited, and those
th above requirements will receive

prompt attention.
Quotations can be had daily upon
will he famished if desired.

application, or

THE CHRONICLE.

September 15,1866.]

No* 8

REMOVAL.

Gillis, Harney

STOCKS,

Bought and Sold on

SECURITIES

Commission.

Brothers
BANKERS,

NO. 16

DEWITT C.

York Stock Exchange.

CYRUS J. LAWRENCE,
JOHN R. CECIL,
WM. A.
JAY
H. D

MOORHEAD, >

)

COOKE,

Draft.
ments

Sc

BANKERS.

in Philadelphia and
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.,
New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio,
In

connection with our houses

on

Keep constantly on
UNITED

York,

INCLUDING

STOCKS

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862,

“
6
“
1864,
6
“
u
* 1865
5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
6 Per Cent Currency Certificates.

Notes of 1864 Sic
Sold.

Duncan, Sherman

world; also,

COMMERCIAL CREDITS,
Tlnrnse in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope,
West Indies, South America, and the United States.

Drake Kleinwort&Cohen
LONDON AND

LIVERPOOL.

their representative and Attorue
in the United States, is prepared to make advances
on shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen
London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
credits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies, South America, &c. Marginal credits
of the London House issued for the same purposes.
SIMON DE VTSSER,
52 Exchan e Place, New York.




V.-Prest.
NATIONAL BANK

Stanwood,

FIRST

Sc

and SOUTH,
Capital stock,
$1,<>00,000. Surplus Fund, $250,000,
Direct rs.—John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L.
B. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M. Bishop, William
Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. S
all points WEST

promptly remitted for.

Winslow.

Edward M.

Tesson, Son &

Commission

Tesson.

Co.,

RANKERS,

(No. 45 Second Street, comer of Pine),
ST. UOUIS, MO.,
Founded in 1847, under the Style of
Te»sen Sc Panjen.

STREET, NEW YORK.

and sold

J B. Chaffee,
H. J. Rogers,

JL. Jt*. IVIorton &

Cashier.

Of; Cincinnati.
Collections made on

CO.

Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought
exclusively on Cojnmission.

FIRST

Co.,

V. Pres.

Pres.

sGeo. T. Clark, Cashier.

NATIONAL

BANK

Of Denver,
depository of thf. u. s.
- - $500,000
aid in Capital
- - - $200,000
designated

Bankers,
WALL STREET,
,

35

LETTERS

abroad and in the United
available in all the principal cities of the

The subscriber,

POWELL, GREEN Sc

Bankers

RANKERS,
OF PINE AND NASSAU STS.,

of Travelers

Panlrora

Edward P. Tksson.

Sc Co.,

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR
OF CREDIT,

'

Fr'est. Lewis Worthington,

The dore

and

ISSUE

States,

J.W. Ellis,

FANT, President.

Cashier.

117ootfivn

THE

nIsW

38 BROAD

VERMILYE Sc CO.

For the use

S. A. Glover,

H. G.

Agent of th

and all accessible

in this city

South.

YORK,
Receive Deposits from Ranks, Rank
Orders for the Purchase ir-id
ers and others.
Sale otGovernment Securities receive partic¬
ular attention. Special attention is given to the trans¬
action of all business connected with the Treasury
19 & 21

cent. Bounty Loan.

1865 Bought and

CORNER

Collections made

points in the

-

St A IV K E R S
NASSAU STREET,

RICHMOND, VA.,

Designated Depositoi'y and Financial
Government.

Securi¬

sight.

Bank,

National

OF

MERCHANTS,

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

r

York.

Sc Bankers

TORREY, Casbler.

J. W.

Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government
ties, of all issues, and execute orders for the pur¬
chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD.
Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cur¬

C.

2d, & 3d series

f

Attends to business of Banks
on liberal terms.

KIMBALL Sc MOORE,

subject to check at

j Capital,
} $500,000

)

NATIONAL RANK,
PHILADELPHIA.

First

Wall Street, New

HENRY SAYLES

Exchange

The Corn

Department.

STATES

Compound Interest

Sc

Co., Culver, Penn Sc Co.,

Sc

hand forof
immediate delivery a
issues

New Y6rk Stale 7 per

A.

BANKERS,

rency,

RANKERS.
44 Wall Street. New

CATTELL, Fres’t.
WHILLDIN, V. Pres’t

A. G-.

commission.

No. 14

BOSTON.

JAMES BECK,

DUPEE,

PINE STREET,

ADAMS,

Sayles,

Southern Bankers.

{^“Interest allowed on Deposits, subject to drafts
payable at sight, and all orders, by Mail, Telegraph,
or otherwise, promptly executed.

March 1,1866.

No.

JAMES A.

Travellers

the use of

STATE STREET,

No. 22

Merchan¬

BROKERS,

STOCK

J2$F’>A large variety of Securities, always on
hand lor sale, at the lowest rates for Investments.

attention to the purchase,
SALE, and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES 0l
all issues; to orders for purchase and ale of stocks,
bonds and gold, and to all business of National
Banks.
JAY COOKE & CO.

Continent.

Dupee, Beck Sc

NEW YORK,
(Established 15 years.)
Government Securities, Gold, City, County and
State Bonds, Insurance, Bank, Railroad, Gas-light,
Telegraph, Express, Mining and Petroleum Stocks
and Bonds, &c., &c., bought and snld at all the
Stock Boards, at Private Sale and Public Auction,
NO. 43

•

for +he purchase of

Credits for

Travellers’
abroad.

BROKER,

will be resident partners.
We shall give particular

Vermilye

Commercial Credits
dise in England and the

Nicolay,

AUCTIONEER, RANKER

Sc CO., PARIS.

I8SI7K

AL80

Dividends :»nd Interest collected and Invest¬
made. Orders Promptly Executed.

STOCK

EXCHANGE ON LONDO
AMD

JOHN MUNROE

Brothers,

Albert H.

( PITT COOKE.

Cooke

BIUUS OF

Government Securi¬
State Stocks and
Coal, Petro¬
Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to

Co,

(H. C. FAHNESTOCK,
■< EDWARD DODGE,

)

COOKE,

WM. G.

late Butler, Cecil, Rawson &
HALSTED.

,

114 STATE

Buy and Se’l on Commission
ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and
Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express,
leum and Mining Mocks.

LAWRENCE,

MeuiDer New

Page, Richardson Sc Co
STREET, BOSTON,

SECURITIES.

NO. 16

sight, as

received subject to check at

Deposits

of

BROKERS AND BANKERS,
BROAD STREET, NEW YORK,

STOCK

WALL STREET, N. Y
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,
'AND OTHER STOCKS, BONDS, &c.,
bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only.

St.

MERCHANTS, BANKERS
and others, and allow Interest on daily balances,
subject to Sight draft.
Make collections on favorable terms,
And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or
Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities.

Drake

O N.

B O 8 T

GOLD, STOCK, AND BOND BROKERS.
Personal attention given to the purchase and sale
Stocks and Bonds at the Boston Brokers’ Board.

Solicit accounts from

Co.,

&

with Banks.

UNITED STATES

AUU

Lawrence
*

Removed to No. 20 Broad
Buy and Sell at Market Rates.

Have

Collected.

BONDS,
GOLD, AND
GOVERNMENT

Sc Co.,

BANKERS,

PAPER

Bought, Sold and

Drake Sc Co.,

Burnett,

BANKERS,

Broad Street*

COMMERCIAL

Eastern Bankers.

Brokers.

Whittingham,

W. H.
,

Bankers and

and Brokers.

Bankers

351

NEW YORK.

Authorized Capital- l

Transact a General Banking
Blake and F. Sts. DENVER,

GUO* T.

prepared to draw Sterling Bills of
Exchange, at sight, or sixty day9, on the

Union Bank of
n

suit purchasers; and also to
Circular Letters of Credit, on this

sums

»ssue

London,

to

Bank, for Travellers* use.
Government Securities,
.•

Bonds

Deposits and Business

Stocks ana

O RDERS FOR SECURITIES EXECUTED ABROAD

Deposits, subject to

Cheques at sight.
Prompt attention given to the
lion of Dividends, Drafts, &c.

Co ec

BANKERS,

for

transacted by the House.

Gilmore, Dunlap &
108

Sc

110

Co.,

West Fourth Street,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.,
Dealers in GOLD,

bought and sold on Commission.

Interest allowed on

CLARK A CO.,

CENTRAL CITY, ’
COLORADO.
The Stockholders of the First National Bank ot
Denver, constitute the firm, and are responsible
all

Are

business comer of

COLORADO.

SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK

NOTES, and all kinds of

GOVERNMENT BONDS,

COLLECTIONS MADE at all
and remitted for on

accessible

day of payment.

Checks on UNION

BANK OF LONDON.
SALE.

.v--:'-

•

•

v-■

•

W?

7 •

THE CHRONICLE.

352

FIRST

MORTGAGE

BONDS

State

Interest at the rate

Semi-Annually,

on

of Six per

Cent, per annum, payable
the First days of January and July.

In Coupon Bonds of $1,000 each.

The Bonds have Thirty Tears to run, and are secured

by

gage, constituting an absolute prior lien ontbat portion of the

a

First Mort¬

Road, Equip¬

ments, Franchises, and Entire Property of the Central Pacific Railroad
Company, located in the State of California, and extending from Sacramento
City to the California State Line, forming a part of the GREAT PACIFIC
RAILROAD

PER

7

CERT.

COUPON

SECURED BY MORTGAGE OF THE WESTERN
AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD.

CALIFORNIA.

Issue, $7,335,000.

Georgia

of

BONDS.

Principal and Interest payable in U. S. Gold Coin in the
City of New York.
Amount of

TEARS

THE

CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD CO.
OF

4<

[September 15,1866.

20
OF

'f4v>

1

ROUTE, adopted and aided by the UNITED STATES GOVERN¬

MENT.

The undersigned, Agent of the State of
offers for Bale a limited amount of the above name
Bonds, having twenty years to run ; coupons pay¬
able in this city January 1st and July lt-t in each
year. These Bonds are issued in sums of one thou¬
sand dollars, with interest at the rate of seven per
cent, per annum.
The State of Georgia,

besides pledging its faith for
redemption of these Bonds and payment ct the
interest, has executed to three Trustees, George B.
Carhart and Robert H. Lowry, of the city of New
York, and Jeremiah Beall, of the city of Milledgeville. State of Georgia, a first and only mortgage upon
the

the Western and Atlantic Railroad as a Corporation.
On failure of the State to r deem said Bonds at ma¬
turity, or in case default shall be made in tbe pay¬
ment of any half year’s interest on any of the aloresaid Bonds, and such default shall continue tor the

period of six months after the said coupons shall be¬
come due and payable, then and thereupon the prin¬
cipal of all the Bonds secured thereby shall become
immediately due and payable, and the said Trustees
may proceed to foreclose and enforce said mortgage
lien at the request of the holders of said Bonds.
The Western and Atlantic Railroad is 187 miles

long, running from Atlanta, Ga., to Chattanooga,
Teun
making close connections with other rail¬
roads to the Southern Atlantic cities, the Northern
and Eastern cities, Gulf of Mexico, Mississippi and
Ohio Rivers, thus rendering it an exceedingly val¬
uable and productive property.
For many and im¬
,

The amount of these

First

Mortgage Bonds to be issued

per

mile, is

limited

by law to the amount of United States Bonds allowed and issued to portant reasons these bonds commend themselves
to investors and capitalists as a certain and reliable
the Road, and the Mortgage by which they are se¬ security.
Circulars containing full particulars will be furnish¬
cured is declared by Act of Congress to constitute a lien prior and superior ed, and inquiries will be answered at the National
Bank of the Republic, in this city; by
to that of the United States Goverement.
T. W. CHICHESTER,
Agent of the State of Georgia.
The aid received from the Government (in amount
equal to -this First Mort¬
New York, August 31, 1866.
gage) is economically and judiciously applied to the construction and equipment
proposed
mowing bi
of the road, together with nearly $7,000,000, received from Stock
Subscriptions fast due nonded its new ~the following Bonds’ dated
*
t will exchange debt on Seven
per cent ~basis, viz.
matured
and
and other sources.
The First Mortgage therefore amounts to but about 35 per July 1st, 18H6, for itsbonds fromBonds date Coupon,
interest
the new
that
accruing
to holders of Bonds and Coupons so funded.
Due
cent, of the actual cost and value of the Property which it covers,
notice will be given of time and place of exchange.
JOHN JONES,
The road is now completed, equipped and running from Sacramento
City to
Treasurer of the State of Georgia.
New York, Aug. 31, 1866.
Alta, a distance of 73 miles, and the earnings for the three months ending August
1st, were as follows, viz.:
aid the construction of

—

—

rw

—

——

—'

—

'-'i

***

JL/ 4.

S/U V V.

WV

A V ’ i-J V * 4.1

-

on

r

May, 1866
June

July

$65,115 83
67,429 78
85,000 00

M

“
IN

7 per

Cent,

Payable in Gold,

GOLD.

ON THE

The

earnings are steadily increasing, and are estimated at over $100,000 in
gold for the month of August—the official report for that month not having been
received at this date.

FIRST

MORTGAGE

Alexandria and

going vigorously forward—24 miles additional
being nearly ready for the cars—and it will probably be in full operation to the
California State Line—156 miles from Sacramento City—during the
summer of
1867, when its earnings must be very large, as the entire trade of Nevada, and a
large proportion 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.
Over $1,000,000 has already been expended in grading beyond
which the road is now running, and the iron is bought and paid
for

the point to
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
offered at 95 per cent,

and accrued interest from July 1st, in
Currency. Orders may be forwarded to us direct, or through the principal Banks
and Bankers in all parts of the country.
Remittances may be made in drafts on New York, or in Legal Tender
Notes,1
National Bank Notes, or other funds current in this city, and the Bonds will be
forwarded to any address by Express, free of charge. Inquiries for farther
par¬
ticulars, by mail or otherwise, will receive punctual attention.

Fisk &

Hatch, Bankers,

No. 6 Nassau

Street, N. Y.

N. B.—All kinds of Government Securities received at the full market

exchange for the above Bonds.




price in

Fredericksburg- Rail¬
Company.

way

“ The subscription books for the balance of the
poe milli n dollars of the above bonds will be open¬
ed at our office on WEDNESDAY, the 29th inst.
^

These

bonds, dated June, 1866, have thirty years
to run, and are secured by a first
mortgage and deed
of trust toD. R. MARTIN, President Ocean National

Bank, and ROBERT TURNLR, of Turner Brothers,
Principal and interest payable in
gold. The interest payable hall-yearly at the Ocean
National Bank on the 1st days of n une and December.
No. 14 Nassau at.

This is believed to

De the very best
opportunity
investment; this road, now rapidly
approaching completion, being the main artery of
communication between Washington and
Richmond,
and consequently between the Northern and South¬
ern States, is seventy mi 'es shorter than the route
now in use, which is 171 miles in
length.
now

offered for

Fisk &

Belden,

BANKERS,
No*

37

Broad

Money

expenses.
are

RONDS

OF THE

The construction of the road’is

The Bonds

Annum,

per

on

Street*

Bond

AND MORTGAGE.

-

The undersigned will give particular attention to
the loaning of money on Bond and
Mortgage; Es¬
tates or individuals having money to loan,
may
hear of application

by leaving at

our

office

a memo¬

randum of the amount they wish invested.
ADRIAN H. MULLER, WILKINS & CO.,
No. 7 Pine street.
UNION NAVIGATION COMPANY.
h
No. 9 South William street New York, l
street,

August 24,1866.

J

The Board of Directors of this Company have this
day declared a dividend of ten per centi (10 per cent.)

on and after the first day of September, at
the office of the Company. Transfer books will he
closed from this date until the first dayof September,

payable

inclusive.

JOSEPH B.

CHAPMAN,

Secretary

“**

1