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* failwatj P<mit0t, and ftwawc* fmmutl titammewiat ante’ A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states. REM O*V A L . REMOVED TO THE MORE COM¬ MODIOUS OFFICE, WALL STREET, No. 12 Directly opposite our tormer Office. Hatch, Foote & Co., BANKERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURI¬ AND DEALERS TIES, GOLD, Ac. R. P. Sawyers. P. D. Roddby, J. N. Petty, N. P. Boulett. P. D. Roddey & c Co., James D. Smith, Joseph A. Jameson, of the late firm of James Amos Cottino, Of Jameson, Cottiug&Co. Low & Co., New York St. Louis. & Louisville, Ky. Travellers’ Credits. Jameson,Smith&Cotting LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR THE USE OF TRAV¬ (PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.) BANKERS AND BROKERS. Gold. Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬ mission. Particular attention given to the Purchase and Sale of all Southern and Miscellaneous Securities. Collections made on all accessible points. Interest allowed on Balances. BANKING HOUSE OF ELLERS IN EUROPE AND THE EAST. BANKERS, NOS. 14 & 16 WALL Receive ISSUED for STREET, NEW YORK. Deposits la Currency and Gold, Messrs. J. S. per annum on for at fight. BY daily balances which may be checked Will purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks strictly and only on Commission. A. M. Dabney, Morgan & Co., 53 Exchange Place. W. W. Lorins. Foutb, Gayoso Bank, Memphis, Tenn. Late Pres. ▲GENTS & Foute Loring, BANKERS AND 83 (Established 1864.) Members of the New York Stock Exchange, Gold Ex¬ change, and Mining Board. Dealers in Government Securities. Special atten¬ tion given to Collections. Four per cent interest allowed on Bal iucjs, subject to check at sight. BROKERS, 56 WALL STREET AND 86 NEW STREET. Government Securities of sill kinds, Gold, BROAD WHITE, MORRIS & CO. - Ronds Bought and Sold. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to check at sight. Collections 22 WILLIAM Duncan, Sherman & Co., ISSUE Garth, Fisher & Hardy, No. Successors to BANKERS, 18 NEW STREET, Harrison, Garth <& Co. and Henry C. Hardy). Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc., bought and sold at the “ regular” Board of Brokers a id at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis¬ Foreign and Domestfc Exchange bought, sold and collected. BANKERS, 80 BROAD use of Travelers abroad and in the United For use in COMMERCIAL CREDITS. or Europe, east of the Cape West Indies, Good Hope, South America, and the United States. Drake Kleinwort&Cohen LIVERPOOL. STREET, NEW YORK. 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 STERLING EXCHANGE Notes sad Letters of Credit for Travelers* Use, on I<. P. MORTON, BURNS Sc CO.f same purposes. SIMON DE 52 At Sight or Sixty Days; also, Circular Attorneys in the United of the London House issued for the Graham, Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Southern Bills on London and Paris, Bill'* on Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile. CREDIT, For the The subscriber, their representative ana cy, subject to check at sight, and particular atten¬ tion given to accounts of country banks and bankers. DEALER IN NQTRflL AND CIRCULAR LETTERS LONDON AND L. P. Morton & Co., BANKER AND BROKER, 3 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, CIRCULAR States, available in all the principal cities of the world; also, STREET, NEW YORK. C. STREET, BOSTON. BANKERS, DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND OTHER SECURITIES. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Curren¬ A. STREET, NEW YORK, 28 STATE CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS„ sion only. John Bloodgood & Co., COMPANY, State, Bank, and Railroad Stocks and t„ . FOB BARING BROTHERS Sc White, Morris & Co., T, Ward,” S. G. & G? C. made in all the States and Canadas. 29 WAUL, STREE Morgan A Co., JLondon, and allow Interest at the rate of Four Per Cent Wall Street, N.Y., No. 2# BcQokers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. WE HAVE NO. 95. SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1867. VOL. 4. VISSER, Exchange Place, New York. John Munroe & Co., AMERICAN (58 Old Broad Street, LondonJ BANKERS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS AND Budge, Schiff, & Co., NO. 55 EXCHANGE PEACE. BROKERS IN UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD STOCKS, AND FOREIGN EXCHANGE. Are prepared to Bay United States Gold Coupons due May for Gold and Currency at liberal rates. AND THE UNION BANK OF Available In all the LONDON, No. 8 Wall STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers In all parts of Europe, etc., etc. principal towns and dtles of Europe and the East. > Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and -* PARIS Sale of Stocks and Bonds in London and New York. Lxyi P. Morton, Charms E. Milnox, Walter H. H. Cbttghb Oaklst. Burns, Hagen, BANKERS, AND DEALERS IN BULLION, SPECIE, AN] UNITED STATES SECURITIES. No. 1 Wall Street. Gelston & BANKERS Sc Bussing, BROKERS 27 WALL STREET -•* All orders receive our Personal Attention. Wh. J. Gelston, John S. Bussing, THE ; - UNIVERSAL AMERICAN — EXHIBITION. Norton & Co., AND BANKERS MERCHANTS, 14 RUE Cohen & Also Ccmmerclal Credits. COMMISSION AUBER, PARIS. Highest premium allowed for Exchange on don. .j ■_, Lon¬ ... Special attention paid to securing apartments for Americans visiting Paris, and letters of enquiry replied to by return mail. 482 THE CHRONICLE. Financial. Fisk & [April 20,1867. Financial. Bankers and Brokers. Southwest Hatch, Winslow, Lanier & Co., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND OTHER DESIRABLE SECURITIES, 1 No. 5 Nassau Street, .RECOMMEND PaciilcRailroadCompany New York, Seven BANKERS, Per Cent. 27 Sc 29 Pine TO INVESTORS THE FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF THE 3FIRST MORTGAGE DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE AND The Central NEW ORLEANS. $2,000,000 IN COUPON BONDS OF $1,000 EACH, Pacific Railroad Co., TWENTY YEARS TO This Company is constructing, under the patron¬ age of the UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT THE WESTERN lous section or Calipornia, and thence through ths GREAT MINING REGIONS «.F THE TERRITORIES, to the vicinity of Salt Lake City. It forms the sole Western link of the only route to the Pacific wh:eh is adopted by Congress and aided by ttie Issue of United States Bonds. already completed, equipped, and running for 94 miles lrom Sacramento to within 12 miles of tho summit of the Sierras, and a large amount of the work of Graaing, Tunnelling, &c., beyond that point has been accomplished. The First Mortgage Ronds of this Com¬ pany afford unusual inducements of Safety and Profit to Investors, for the following among other reasons, viz : First —The rate of Interest is Six per Cent. In Issue Circular Letters of Credit for RUN, able in all parts PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST GUARANTEED rates, mineral lands excepted. The climate of Southwest Missouri Is ty. Third.—The cost of the Bonds, Ninety-five Per Ceut. and accrued interest, is Ten Percent, les- than that of the cheapest Six Ter Cent. Gold Bearing Bonds of the Government. < Fourth.—Tbe United States Government pitovideM nearly bajf the amount ne¬ cessary to bu id the entire road, and look- mainly t » a small per-centago on tbe luture traffic for re-payuient. Fifth.—Owing to this liberal provision, accompa¬ nied with Extensive Grant- of Public Lands, by which tue Government fosters this great national enterpri-e. Its success Is ren¬ dered certain, and its financial sta¬ bility Is altogether Independent of the contingencies which attend ordi¬ nary Railroad emerprLes. Sixth.—The sit of Pennsylvania. Itself. Shtejtth.—The .portion tbe are Of the present issue of bonds a limited amount is offered for *ale at the rate of 80 per cent., sub¬ ject to advance at the option of the Company. now For further particulars apply to. Ward & net of earnings the completed already largely in Interest excess of obligations winch >he on twice the dis¬ Company will Incur tance. and are steadily increasing, rendering the nnlnterrupied payment of tbe Inte¬ absolutely certain. rest i«hth.—At V e present rate of Gold they pay near¬ ly SW Per Cent, per annum, Ttstsa. on the amount in- The Bonds are issued in denominations of $1,000 with semi-annual Gold Coupons attached, payable In New York, and are offered for the present at 95 Co., country. Remittances ury be made in drafts on New York, or in Legal Tender Notes, National Bank Notes or other funds current in this city, and the bonds will be forwarded to any address by express, free ol chaige. Inquiries for furiher particulars, by mall otherwise, will receive punctual attention. Fisk & or Bank of the Deposits received on Liberal Terms, •abject to check at sight. %ET Collections made throughout the country. tafMiscellaneou? Stocks and Bonds bought and and sold at the Stoca. cash. ffrehange on commission for Special attention giver, to the Exchange of SEVENTHIRTY NOTES of all the serus for the new FIVETWENTY BONDS Qf 1865, on the most favorable terms York, STATES fcJS TJO C K|S INCLUDING 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, 6 “ “ 1864, 6 “ “ 18£5, 5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, 6 Per Cent Currency Certificates. New York State 7 per cent. 2d, & 3d series* Bounty Loan. LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS 3 Compound Interest Notes of 1864 1865 Bought and Sold. A VERMILYE Sc CO. M. K. Jesup & Company, BANKERS AND MERCHANTS, 84 BROADWAY. Negotiate Bonds and Loans for Railroad Contract for Iron or Steel Ralls, Co*, Locomotives, all business connected with Republic, In accordance with the provisions of tbe National Currency Act and tbe Articles of Association of this Ba"»., it has been deternrned to increase the Capital Stock of this Bank to one million doll re ($1,000.0OO). Subscriptions from Stockhol.ers for the shares allotted to them in the proposed increase, w 11 be payable ou the second day of May next, and will be received at anytime prior to that date. A number of shares will remain to be sold, applications for which will be received from persons desirous of Railways. D. A. Given, of Watts, Given & Co., Paducah, Ky. D. W. Jones, of Boyle Co., Ky. L. M. Flournoy, Pres’t Commercial Bank of Ky. N. S. Ray, late Cash’r Com’l B’k of By., Lebanon, Ky BANKING HOUSE OF Given, Jones & Co., 33 BROAD TV1E MUMFORD, Cashier. CITY BANK OF N. O., NEW Orders for the purchase or sale of Government By order of the Board of Directors. JOSEPH P. STREET, NEW YORK. ORLEANS, LA. becoming Siockho’ders. Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold, promptly executed. Interest allowed United States Treasury, APRIL 8, 1867. VST" SCHEDULES OF (30) THIRTY OR MORE COUPONS, due May, 1867, will examination at the United States Interest now be received for Department ot the at on Deposits, subject sight. Special attention given to the to cheques Foreign Exchange Business. Given, Jone* & Co. are prepared to draw Sterling Bill*, at sight or sixty days, on the Bank of Liverpool, in s-ms to suit purchasers. The New Orleans House will make Collections in ihat City and at all accessible points South, and remit on the clay of payment. We refer to Bank of America aLd National Bank « f State of New York, New York City, and to any of the Ken tncky Banks. Treasury. H. H. VAN DYCK Assistant Treasurer U.S. P. Haslett McKim. Robt. McKim. Jno. A. McKim. McKim, Bros. & Co., BANKER*, Bankers and K B.—All kinds of Government Securities ie ceived at the full market price in exchange for the above Bonds. Also, collected. Street. New hand for immediate delivery all issues of UNITED Philadelphia, March 12, 1867. Hatch, hand, and Bought S<>ld or Exchanged. fcF1 Gold Coin and U. S. Coupons bought, sold, and on Cars, etc., NATIONAL RANKERS AND DEALERS IN Q 0 VERNMENT SECURITIES, NO. 5 NASSAU STREET, N.Y. All descriptions of GovernmentSecuritics kept constantly on Co., STREET, NEW YORK. 5«r cent,1st. and a^crutd interest (in currency) from annary Orders may be forwarded to us director through the principal Banks and Bankers in all parts of the & and undertake BANKERS, NO. 54 WALL Security of its First Mortgage Bonds is therefore ample, and their character for safety and reliao’lny is equaled only by tnat of the obligat ous of the Government No. 44 Wall Keep constantly remarkably By a recent arrangement this road becomes the Missouri division of the Atlantic and Pacific Rail r«>ad, which has a land grant of 55,000,000 acres, and will lorm a direct and continuous railway lrom St. Louis to San Francisco, shorter and of much easier gradients thaa any other route. matur Deposits. RANKERS. salubrious, the temperature even, and the winters short and mild. Its agricultural resources are not excelled by any part of the United States. Of its minerals, lead, iron and coal are found of euperior qualities and in great abundance. The famous Granby lead mines, on the Company’s land, are well known, and receDt developments show that iron ore purer than any yet known, IP s along the line ot the road in greater quantities than the total iron depo¬ Second.—The Principal is payable in Gold at York. Vermilye And secured by property valued at $7,500,000, con sisting of their completed road to tbe Gasconade River. 127 miles from St. Louis, and 330,000 acres of rich agricultural and mineral lands on its line. By a provision of tbe mortgage, so often as lands are sold to the amount of $4u,000, this sum is to be fund¬ ed for the redemption of a like amount of bonds, and the holders have the ri-ht at any time to take possession, in payment of the PAR value oi their bonds, of any of the Company’s lands at schedule The Company is now p epared to sell these lands at from $5 to $40 per acre. in on RAILROAD COMPANY. the City oi New (•old, payaole semi-annually Travellers, avail, of Europe, Interest Allowed B. Y THE A TLANTIC AND PA CIFIC END OF THE GREAT NATIONAL RAILWAY ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Their line will extend from Sacramento, Califor¬ nia, across the Sierra Novadas to tne California State line, traveling the richest and most popu¬ Their road is Street, New York. BONDS. Brokers. Hayden, 62 WALL STREET. Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft at eight, and special attention given to orders from other places. BANKER, AND DEALER IN BULLION AND SPECIE, i 24 Nassau Street, New Yo k. The Specie Department will be In charge of J. S. Cronise, (late of J. S. Cronise & Co.), who has my authority to sign the Firm name by procu¬ ration. C. POWELL, GREEN A Bankers CO. ' & Commission MERCHANTS, STREET, NEW YORK. 88 BROAD Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought and sold eocdusivdy on Commission. U . Warren, Kidder & Co., BANKERS, No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬ cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO ft ED on deposits, subject to check ut sight. J. Van ScnAicK, 38 Broad Street, BANKER AND STOCK BROKER. April 20,1867.J THE Financial. W. H. Bankers Whittingham, No. 8 Broad JAY COOKE, WM. 6. MOORHEAD H. Street, - mining, EXPRESS, TELEGRAPH, RAILROAD, Bought and Sold on D COOKE, and Commission. Orders promptly executed. on ■I &> Corner Wall and Nassau Fifteenth &c., BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION. Street, New York. BROADWAY, NEW YORK, balances. Street, Philadelphia. New ton Gilliss, Harney York, Mr. H. House, and Mr. BROADWAY BROADWAY. BOUGHT AND BOLD ON Co., ALL Government and DEALERS Jackson Brothers, IN GOVERNMENT NO. 11 BROAD NO. Bny and Sell BANKERS, GOVERNMENT &c. TILER, ULLMANN A CO., Chicago. ADAMS, KIMBALL Sc MOORE, BANKERS, No. 14 Wall Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securi¬ ties, of all issues, and execute orders for the pur¬ chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD. Rodman, Fisk Street, New York. & BANKERS, Dealers Watkins, . made in all parts of the United States Gold, Stocks, Bonds, &c., Bought and Sold at market rates on Commission, Registered and Conon Interest collected without charge. Agents for «ph°tie sale of First Mortgage 6 per cent. Gold Bear¬ ing Bonds Central Pacific RR. Co. M. T. RODMAN, ) D. C. K. H. FISK, y General Fartners. FISK, ( PLINY FISK, Special Partner. and British America. & Son, [BROKERS 82 Foreign Exchange, Bonds, Notes, PINE STREET, NEW YORK. Securities WALL STREET. , J our The WHEELOCK, President. SANFORD, Cashier. Tradesmens NATIONAL 291 BROADWAY, CAPITAL BANK. NEW YORK. $],000,000 400,000 RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. Tenth National Bank. Capital $1,000^000. No. 336 BROADWAY Cor. WORTH ST. Designated Depository of the Government. Bank¬ ers’ and J. H. Dealers^ Accounts solicited. D. L. Stout, Cashier. . Panama nave this d <y out of the on term* most WILLIAM A. WILLIAM H. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities, and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bahkers and Individuals NEVV on Collections made in all parts of the United States BROKERS, STREET, accounts received Correspondents. and Canadas. Tontine YORK. favorable terms: ROSS, President. Bank, Chicago. OFFICE OF THE Railroad Co., Buildings, 88 Wall Street. New York, March 23, 1867. 40th. Dividend.—The Board of Director* declared a dividend of SIX Per Cent, earnings of the road for the Three Months ending 81st instant, payable to the stockholder* or their References: J. H. Fonda, Pres. Nat. Mech. Ass. N.Y. C. B. Blair, Pres’t. Merchants’Banking Nat. favorable to 7 BROAD descriptions of Government Bonds— ’ BrowneU & Bro., BANKERS Sc received r 23,000,000. City and Country • L 28 best term*. BROADWAY. Capital Co., Government NO. 7 STREET, NEW YORK, Ac., Ac. In on Central National Bank, URPLUS^. Securities and Gold. In Government Loans for sale. Has for sale all Orders for purchase and Stocks. Bonds and Gold promptly executed. SECURITIES. John Cockle ..$5,000,000 Collections made for Dealer* & Co., 18 WALL STREET, at most liberal rates, ♦sECURITlKS, GOLD, sale of Sc GOVERN And Dealer InBANKER, all Classes of Govern ment Collection* All the AND AND L. S. National Bank. NASSAU STREET, N. E. COR. PINE STREET. Co., Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to check at sight. DEALERS IN No. 10 Broad Fourth on STREETS. WENT & Tyler, Wrenn COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED. NOS. 12 NEW Sc 14 BROAD IN 318 STREET. Commission. BROKERS, Capital Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency. subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. Securities, Stocks, Gold, bought and sold Ronds, STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, Sc HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 30 TO No. 36 Rroad Street. Office No. 16. GOVERNMENT AND OTHER SECURITIES. Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency,-subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. YAKnrrtKS. OTHER SECURITIES. BROKER, BROKERS, Barstow, Edey & Co., BANKERS No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. In Southern Securities and Bank Bills. BROADWAY & 5 NEW Sc others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight Draft. Make Collections on fkvorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State. Federal, and Rail¬ STREET. SECURITIES, BANKERS. NOTES. & Jones BANKERS Westervelt, and Co., COMMISSION, Lockwood g. Bell, New York. SECURITIES. MERCHANTS, BANKERS, i GOVERNMENT favorable terms, promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. t0 Rates, road Securities STOCKS AND BONDS And AND A 18 NEW at Market ALL UNITED STATES Solicit accounts from JAY COOKE & CO. & Co., Street, New York. Buy and Sell DEALERS ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from and others, and allow MERCHANTS, BANKERS interest on daily balances, subject to Sight draft. Nlake collections on BANKER our STOCKS, & No. 32 Broad Washing¬ Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, Satterlee NO. 24 BROAD STREET. Buy and Sell at Market Kates Epwin Pitt of and gold, and to all business of National TO BANKERS, BANK Fahnestock, & BANKERS AND BROKERS, Clark, Dodge & Co., C. March 1,1866. Co., BROKERS IN MINING 0. 6 NEW 8TREET and 80 Taussig, Fisher Philadelphia and have this day opened an office at No. 1 Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Banks. ROBT. M. HEDDEN. Riker & - _ In connection with our houses in bonds American, United Wells, Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union States, Express Stocks. All orders faithfully executed. JOSIAH HEDDEN. ISAIAH C. BABCOCK, LOCKE SOUTHERN on favorable term*. Interest allowed on depo«» its, subject to check at Bight. Telegraphic quota* tions furnished to correspondents. References : James Brown, Esq., of Metsn. Brown Brothers & Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬ ident of the Chemical National Bank; James H. Banker, Esq., Vice-President of the Bank of Naif York N. B. A. SALE, and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Oi all issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, Advances made on approved securities. Particular attention given to orders for the pur¬ chase or sale ol the Adams, W.WINCHESTER, sell ed particular attention to the purchase, rates, on commission on Sts., Street, will be resident partners. We shall give Bankers and Brokers. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and soM at Interest allowed Buy and Washington we Hedden, W inchester& Co only. Jones, Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Government Securities. Accounts of Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬ Opposite Treas. Department. paper, & BANKERS AND BROKERS, (Messrs. Brown Bros & Co.’s new building}, 69 & 61 WALL STREET, NEW YOhK: Washington. STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, market Pott, Davidson Co., BANKERS. ALSO, NO. 69 FAHNESTOCK. New York. FARNHAM, commercial Bankers and Brokers. EDWARD DODGE, riTT COOKE. J appli (Late of G. S. Robbins & Son.) 48 Pice H. C. I No. 114 South 3d GEORGE 483 Brokers. Jay Cooke AND ALL OTHER STOCKS, BONDS AND GOLD Quotations and sales lists furnished daily cation. CHRONICLE. legal representatives on and after the 6th April Transfer books will be closed on i he aiternoon of the 26th inst., and reopened on the morning of 7th proximo. HENRY SMITH, Treasurer. next. ,484 Southern and Biokers. Bankers JUllroad Stocks, Bonds, Gold, snd Jokx H. Jacquelu. Securities, Capital COMMISSION. Henry Dx Coffxt. Offers IN Bankers on BROKERS Benjamin Rowland, Jr., Samuel A. Bispham, William H William New York. subject to Check, and Intere allowed. HAWLEY HEATH. A. B. Josxpn • 114 STATE STREET, BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON and PARIS. Commercial Credits for *he purchase of Merchan <*t*e in England and the Continent. Tkayellers' Ceedits for the use of Travellers abroad. JOHN MUNROE Sc CO., ALSO ISSUE ' P. STOCK Ns. » STATE STREET, COLLECTIONS MADE at all accessible points Bankers. Southern Wilson, Conner & Agent of tne United States. and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and lmvc* cial with aitenrion to business connected She several departments of the Government. Full information with regard at all times Especial attention paid to Collection*. Refer to Duncan, Srermau So Co., New York; Drexel * Co_ Philadelphia; Thd Franklin Bank, Ud Johnston Bros, Baltimore; R. H. Maury So Co., gkhmoori. Va., Charles D. Carr * Co. Augusta. Ga. George BANKER AND Butler, COMMISSION MERCHANT, GALVESTON, TEXAS. Insurance. Metropolitan Company, .■Insurance NO. BROADWAY. 108 NEW Th s YORK, April 16, 1867. Company having reduced its Capital accord¬ ing to law, under the sanct;on of the Superintendent to the sum of of the insarance Department JA9. L. MAURY. BANKERS AND business to the President. ROBERT 91. C. GRAHAM, Vice-President. « . a Joa<ph B Yarn urn, Lottain Freeman, General Manager. Banking and Collections promptly attended to. NORTH-WESTERN STATES Bank of Charles D. Carr & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, GA. AUGUSTA, COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED FOR. Jas. M. Muldon &jSons, St», Mobile, Ala. Established 1848. Co., Haskell & BANKERS, ST. LOUIS, MO. Dealers in Government Securities, Cold and Ex¬ change. Collections made ou all accessible points and promptly remitted for at current rates of exchange. No. 52 St. Francis Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬ ernment Securities. Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt . a tention & Co., Underwriters Agency New York, Ch rles Wal>h. Pre-ident Bank of Mobile. Ilenry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Ala. ' T. H. McMahan & Co. COMMISSION MERCHANTS and Dealers In Domestic and Foreign JExc.li.fl.ULff ©• points in the State, and all &< REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGH' EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. REITER TO National Park Bank, Howes So Macy, and Spoffo 8econd Natio: Co., New York. Bank and J. W. Beaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel Co. and D. 8. Stetson So Co., Philadelphia. T. 1 Thirkield * Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bai and Jos. E. Elder * Goodwin, St. Louis. Fowli Btanard So Co, Mobile. Pike, lapeyre So Bn New Orleans. Drake, Kleinwcrth® Cohen, Lo 4ea axd LiverpooL Co., BANKERS, 54 CAMP Draw on 8TBEET, NEW. ORLEANS, York, and England. remittances promptly attended to, Merchants National Bank, New Bank of Liverpool, Collections and LOUIS, MISSOURI, ST. Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York. E. II. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. Byrd & Hall, New York. Martin, Bates & Co. Merchants, New York. Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolff & Gillespia. Henry A Hurlburt. late Swift & Hnrlbert. Home Insurance Company ot New York.New York Life Insnrance Company. Aetna Insurance .Company of Hartford. Burke & Co., Benoist & A. BANKERS, References: eessible L. given to Collections. B^cock Bros P w. Turney, William T. Blodgett. Chtries P Kirkland, Watson E. Case, John A. Graham, John C. Henderson, Edward A. S*anshury, James L. Graham, I I;. Boorman Johnston, Clinton B. Fisk. a gmnei D. Bradford, ° W.R, WADSWORTH, Secretary 7 Pres5dent. J. Young Scammon Robert Reid phia, and Bank of Montreal, Canada. Directors : F. H. Wolcott, Dudley B. Fuller, Franklin H. De ;a no, Gilbert L. Beeckman, Company OF CHICAGO. RICHMOND, VA. Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, Geo. C. Smith & Bro., State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &c., 48 LASALLE ST., CHICAGO, bought and sold on commission. Esr" Deposits received and Collections made on (Lake Bank of Montreal.) all accessible points in the United States. Special attention given to collection*. N. V. Correspondent, Vkrmilyb So Co. Tileston So JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM v ' ST., having prompt and reliable correspondents at Bank Building. Martin Bates, UNION BANK OF LONDON, The Marine & Co., Special attention given to Collections of all kind) city 9* New York and vicinity, and wiil also write Marihe Risks on Cargo only, at the office in the Metro poll an on FOR SALE.- BROKERS GALVESTON, TEXAS. $300>000> * ROB’T T. BBOOKX R. H. Maury ’ intends hereafter to confine its fire to Government loans cheerfully furnished. . BANKERS Sc DEALtiRS IN FOREIGN* DOMESTIC EXCHANGE.SPECIE, BANE NOTES, STOCKS, AND B -NDS. ? Checks Draw on— Drexel, Winthrop & Co., and-Window Lanier & Co., New York; Drexel & Co., FhlladfcJ Charleston, S. C., lie. i Broad Street, and remitted for on day of payment. We boy 1014 MAIN Sterling Exchange. HENRY SAYLES JAMES BECK, nXB'L DUPXX, GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BaNK HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Government Depository and Financial esp West Fourth Street, NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, H. D. WM. S. No. BOSTON. Dealers in Washington. BOB*T H. MAURY. Dupee, Beck & Sayles, BROKERS, 110 Sc CINCINNATI, OHIO. NATIONAL BANK OF WASHINGTON, COOKE (of Jay Cooke A Co.), Pres’t. & Co , Page, Richardson BOSTON, 108 Rhawn. FIRST : r Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Edward B. Oms, William Bnrisn, ~ Osgood Welsh, Frederia A. Hoyt, President, of the Central National Bank. Mumpord, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia National Bank. T. W. B. HUGHES. Stock Ex Bankers. A. Frazer, H. Rhawn, Member of N.Y. Eastern Glenn, R. M. Bishop, William Robert Mitchell, A S Harrison, William Woods, James Winslow. Late Cashier MINING STOCKS, 13 Broad Street, Deposits received, Collections made on all points WEST and SOUTH. for. nrt nrnmntlv rpmittftd f'lstTlltnl Vin.. I _ DIBXCTOB8 t AND RAILROAD AND GOLD, services to liberal terms. its Nathan Hides, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, ' Cincinnati. of • $500,000 Banks and Joseph T. Bailey, Heath & Hughes, BANKERS <fc COMMISSI ON Cashier. NATIONAL BANK THE FIRST PHILADELPHIA, OOTernmcnt SOLD ON Theodore St an wood, CHESTNUT STREET, 809 * 811 Lewis Worthington, V.-Prest J.W. Ellis, Brest. Republic, Bank of the NEW BOUGHT AND Western Bankers. Bankers, National Jacquelin &STREET, De Coppet, N.Y. NO. 26 [April 20,; 1867. CHRONICLE, THE Bny and Sell Exchange on all the of the United States and Canadas. London and Paris for sale. principal cities Also, drafts on National Bank. Second ST. LOUIS, MO. Capital..$200,000 | Surplus $150,566 Prompt attention given to the business of corres¬ pondents. E D. JONES, Cashier. & Co., Scott ^Late Scott, Kerr SC Co., BANKERS, LEAVENU ORTH, KANSAS. Collections made on all accessible points and re¬ mitted for on th-i day of payment, lees current rates ot exchange. J B. Chaffee, Pres. Geo. T. Clark, Cashier. V. Pres. FIRST NATIONAL BANK H. J. Rogers, of Denver, DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY Authorized Capital* Paid in Capital Transact a General Banking Blake and F. Sts. DENVER Citizens’ OF THE U. 8. - - * - $500,000 $200,000 business comer COLORADO. of Union Bank, (Chartered by the State of Tennessee.) MEMPHIS, TENN. Buy and Sell Foreign and Domestic Exchange Untted States Securities State of Tenne*fe£ Shelby County, and Memphis Bonds, anl past due Coupon0' Particular attention paid to Collections. 'THE t a> . V • * »• 4: XfMV.-S.'-'fc ’ » 1 .> ?*di *< ►? jt lo a <JV l!3- _ T * i i. ; ganfe*^’ feettc, Commercial dime's, gailuiay ponitor, anti insurance fonmal A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING TIIE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. fiscal system is so imperfect, machinery is so clumsily contrived, its pressure is so unequally distributed, its working is so waste¬ ful, it destroys so much more of the national wealth than it; brings into the Treasury, it crushes and maims so many of the productive forces which keep up our tax-paying ability and secure our growth in material wealth. We must first correct the evils of our fiscal machinery and prevent its impoverishing our people and crippling their business enter¬ prises before we can with safety use that machinery to gather up any large annual surplus towards paying off the national debt. Such are the opinions which one hears expressed on all sides by thoughtful, well-informed men; and it must be prodigious cost, because CONTENTS. our THE CHRONICLE. Reduction of the Public Debt European 485 .. and Complications American Interests Some Aspects of the Cotton Trade Rate of Taxation for New York in 1867 4S6 487 Southern Railroads Latest Monetary and Commercial English News Commercial and Miscellaneous News 48S 489 491 488 THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Cotton Money Market. Railway Stocks, T7. S. Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks. Philadelphia Banks 405 499 5C0 500 . Tobacco Breadstuffs Groceries.. National Banks, etc sale Prices N. Y. Stock Exchange Commercial Epitome 492 495 496 . .... Dry Goods Imports 591 502 Prices Current and Tone of the Market. 509-10 THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Railway News Railroad, Canal, and Miscellane¬ ous Bond List 603 504-05 Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. 500 Insurance and Mining Journal . 507 Advertisements 481-84, 508, 511-12 confessed that there Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ day morning by the ‘publishers of Hunt’s Merchants’ Magazine, with the latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all ■’he Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to the hour of publication. and TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, with Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, ana others.(exclusive of postage) For The Commercial and The Daily mailod to all Financial Chronicle, without. The Daily Bulletin, (exclusive of postage) For The Daily Bulletin, without Tii£ Commercial fl2 00 10 <H3 and Financial Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage) 5 00 Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers, 60 William Street, New York. Files for holding Price SI 50. the Chronicle or Bulletin can be had at this Office. The third volume of the Chronicle, from July to December, 1866, inclu¬ sive, is for sale at this Office ; price, unbound, $5 00. < REDUCTION OF THE PUBLIC DEBT. Mr. Gladstone in his is much to be said in favor of these obviously gaining ground among our on the policy of the Treasury and on the votes of the next Congress. Although, however, we cannot hope at present to pay off much of the principal of the public debt we are doing some¬ thing towards lessening the embarrassments and apprehen¬ sions which have arisen from that large part of it which ma¬ tures at short dates, and is represented by various descrip¬ tions of floating obligations. The compound notes which mature this year aie so provided for under the recent Act of Congress, that as Mr. McCulloch believes they can be met and paid off without the slightest perturbation in the money market. The only other trouble is from the Seven thirties, of which the first series mature in August next. These are now reduced below 100 millions, and the whole aggregate in two or three months will, at the present rate of conversion, be all out of the way. As the Seven-thirties are not convert¬ ible into Five-twTenties after maturity, and as these notes are now worth a handsome premium over the price which they will fetch in the market when deprived of the privilege of conversion, there is little doubt that the process of funding will go on with increasing rapid¬ ity. And we should not omit to mention that from the methods of conversion adopted by the Treasury, and from the skill and judgment with which these methods are ap¬ plied, the operations though so large in amount, produce less trouble in the money market than any negotiations of sim¬ ilar magnitude which have ever been conducted through the Sub Treasury. From this and other circumstances it is argued that we need apprehend no stringency in our money market from the Treasury negotiations of the next three or four months, and that any changes w hich may occur will tend rather in the direction of greater ease. However this ; may be, it is certain that so far as the floating government debt is concerned, the causes for apprehension have nearly all are citizens, and cannot fail to have their effect ®l)c Chronicle. Th* Commercial our tak opinions, which For NO. 95. SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 18B7- YOL. 4. eulogium of our financial position, a days ago, in the British Parliament, gave expression to some suggestive views on economy, retrenchment, and fiscal policy which well deserve to be pondered at present. We doubt, however, whether public sentiment here will fully co¬ incide in the opinion of the Ex-Chancellor of the Exchequer, when he says we ought to go on rapidly with the reduction of our public debt. It is true that, during 18 months, we have by immense effort contrived to pay off more than 200 millions of the principal of our National obligations, besides the heavy disbursements for interest; but it is also true that the existing depression of the productive energies of the country and the paralysis which is everywhere complained of in financial and commercial circles, is due in no small degree to those efforts. We have paid off a large amount of disappeared, now that nearly all the short obligations which our war debt by taxes • but we have raised this sum at a mature during the current year are provided &r. Although, few 486 THE CHRONICLE. therefore, we may doubt whether any large amounts of float¬ ing obligations will be paid off from the proceeds of taxation, vainest hope of Italians [April 20,1867. to achieve, eminently calculated family to the North we have the satisfaction of knowing that through the judicious of the Alps. But one thing was lacking to the Germans, a and far-sighted policy adopted by the Secretary of the Trea¬ man strong enough to seize the opportunity, and to mould it sury the National debt is being reduced by rapid funding to to its issues without too much hesitation over the machinery a more manageable form. by which he should bring this about. Such a man was given to Germany in Count Bismarck. EUROPEAN COMPLICATIONS AND AMERICAN INTERESTS. A statesman so astute and so capable of forecast as the Within the last ten days we have seen a sharp and positive remarkable Premier of Prussia could not fail to see that, effect produced upon our own financial markets by rumors w7hile the retreat of Russia from her moral supremacy in apparently serious and authentic of a rapidly approaching Germany, and the organization of Italy into a strong and crisis in the political affairs of the European Continent, and united state were eminently favorable to the consolidation of yesterday telegrams were received stating that the ‘pending the German power, there was one grave danger still remain¬ negotiations between Prussia and France have be£h “ broken ing which it would require the utmost exercise of tact and off.,, These rumors and their influence upon ourselves have judgment to combat and overcome. This was the inevitable made it important for the business community to understand opposition of France to the erection upon her eastern fron¬ as correctly as possible the actual condition of things abroad tiers of a powrer equal to her own, and controlled by a single at the present moment. will. To meet this opposition, and to obviate it, Count Bis¬ The German war of last year swept over the face of the marck, in the Spring of 1866, visited the Emperor Napo¬ Continent like a sudden whirlwind, and though it has left leon with propositions looking to the rectification of the fron¬ behind it very deep and real traces of its passage, American tiers of France on the Rhine in the event of a wTar betweep observers have for the most part been more dazzled by the Austria and Prussia. These propositions, it appears, the brilliancy than impressed by the bearings and tendency of Emperor declined at that time to entertain, but the course the results to which it has already led and is still leading. of the French policy during the Austro-Prussian war has The events of the present year have already awakened very plainly showrn that Napoleon fully expected to secure Europe to the formidable nature of these results, and we can such a position in the final settlement of the German diffi¬ no longer afford to be idle or indifferent spectators of a culty as wTould enable him to wrest from Prussia the posses¬ course of things out of which we may reasonably expect to sion of certain districts bordering on the Rhine, which are see evolved the most serious and enduring modifications of and long have been regarded by the French people as nat¬ the political state of the old world. ural appendages of the Frelich power, and necessary to the The adoption on the 17th day of the present month by security of France. the North-German Parliament, of a Constitution for Alter the astonishing successes of the Prussian arms had the political organization of the North German States, has defeated all expectations of this sort, it soon became clear formally introduced into the European system anew power, that the public feeling of France wTould not quietly tolerate wielding resources superior to those which Austria controllec the quiet agglomeration of the German States into a mon¬ before the late war had humbled the crest of the HaJ>sburgs, archy of forty millions of men, holding Central Europe from and connected with the rest of the world by commercial ties the Alps to the Baltic, and from the Vistula to the Rhine. only less extensive and imposing than those which make This feeling which might else, perhaps, have been confined France, England and America copartners for good or ill in to France, was extended into Holland, Belgium and Switzer¬ the fortunes of every race under every clime. land Whatever by the arbitrary and overbearing nature of the Prussian may be the title under which the King of Prussia assumes policy. Count tJismarck no sooner found himself master of the control of this new power, whether he be pronounced the situation than he proclaimed with a cynic sort of con¬ Protector of North Germany, or Emperor of the Germans, tempt for all the ordinary restraints of political ambition in as a matter of fact William I. upon and after the 17th. day our times, that whatever might be needed to secure the su¬ of April, 1867, may be regarded as the peer and rival of premacy which Prussia had won, Prussia would not hesitate the Emperor of the French in the West, and of the Emperor to take. Poles in Posen and Danes in Denmark might as of all the Russias in the East. It was the intention of the well make up their minds to become Germans smee Ger¬ sovereigns who framed the Holy Alliance in 1815 to prevent many was to become Prussian. the formation in Central Europe of any such preponderating With such menaces sounding in the air, the Swiss, the power as this which has now grown up as it were in a day, Belgians and the Dutch could not be expected to be easy as and to this end, while they hampered Austria, by giving her to their own chances of escaping absorption by this new and Italy as the most troublesome of wards, they restricted Prus apparently omnivorous neighbor. If Central Europe wras to sia by swelling the strength of Catholic Bavaria on the south, become a German Empire, Switzerland and the Low Counand by preserving the independence ot hostile Saxony in the tries which had once and again been held by German Em¬ east. The revolutions of 1830 and of 1848, which modified perors, and ruled as German fiefs, might not unnaturally the system of 1815 so profoundly in many other particulars, be levied upon as essential to the full developement of the left it untouched on this to excite was the emulation of the Teutonic ' . point. The humiliation of Russia new German idea, Out of the ferment thus excited in the by England and France, with the assent and complicity of smaller countries conterminous and with Prussia andGermany Austria in 1855, and the unification of Italy under the au¬ on the West, has arisen the specific point of controversy spices of Napoleon III in 1860, first opened the wTay for a on which the question of peace or war in Europe now serious attempt at the consolidation of the German powrer. :br the moment seems likely to hinge. The Duchy of Lux¬ Russia, which had overshadowed the smaller German states, emburg, a small territory inhabited by a race of German and linked their various petty sovereigns by a thousand dif¬ origin, but both by its habits and its history more nearly ferent ties with her own imperial policy, was practically paralysed by the blow which she received in the Crimean * struggle ; and the prospect of an Italian nationality able to assume and to assert for Italy such a place in the Areopagus of Europe as fo* a thousand years it had been the dearest but connected with the France than with the Germany of the day, occupies a geographical position which would make the possession of its main fortress by the Prussian arms a serious military inconvenience to France. It belongs to the House of Orange now reigning in Holland, and its present April 20,1867.] THE CHRONICLE. 487 ownership gave to the Kings of Holland a seat in the have fallen off materially during late weeks, the figures for German Diet while a German- Diet still existed. The des¬ last week being 31,995 bales, against 39,252 bales the pre¬ truction of the German Diet by Prussia was accepted by vious week, and 42,507 bales for the week next the King of Holland as a virtual absolution preceding. of any claims At the close of last week there remained 20 weeks tor the of the German Confederates upon himself in his capacity completion of the cotton year; so that, to fill up the esti¬ of ruler of Luxemburg, and regarding Prussia with more mate of two millions of bales, the future weekly receipts anxiety and jealousy than France, the Dutch sovereign now wmuld have to average 20,600 bales, while to realise the proposes to cede Luxemburg to the French lower estimate, the Empire. weekly average would require to be The exact state of the negotiations on this subject we 9,100 bales. In view of the recent ratio of have no authentic reason to believe is now receipts, the known to the larger estimate would appear to be too large, and the lower world, although if we are to believe the telegrams of yes¬ one to be below the probabilities. terday it would appear that the negotiations between France It would be altogether premature at present to form any and Prussia have been broken off. But there are apparent opinion as to the probabilities of the next crop. There are, grounds for asserting that if Prussia should undertake abso- however, certain facts, bearing upon the question, which lutely to prevent the annexation of Luxemburg to France, may properly be mentioned. Many of the cotton growers the attempt musit inevitably result in a great European war. have been sorely disappointed at the result of their last In the presence of this contingency all Europe is now arm¬ crop, the profits having proved much below their hopes; ing. Prussia and her allies, soon to be her subjects, being indeed, perhaps, less than would have been realised bent on establishing a upon preponderant influence for Germany in the production of cereals. The extensive culture of cotton Central Europe ; and France, with the good will at least of last year caused a neglect of the grain crops, and the South her smaller neighbors, as well as of the Italian Kingdom and has consequently to had supply itself with breadstuff's, at of Austria, being equally bent on preventing the establish¬ high prices, from the Western markets. It may, therefore, ment of any such preponderance. That it will tax be reasonably supposed that some who last year raised cot¬ European diplomacy to the utmost to reconcile these ton will this year place their profoundly con land under grain. The con¬ dieting purposes and tendencies is unquestionable, and it is tinued high cost of labor, as compared with former years, therefore, possible that the Old World may soon be on the and the difficulty experienced in procuring the advances brink of a war much more formidable than any which it requisite to the cultivation of cotton, may be expected to has seen since the grapple of the allies with Russia in operate against an extensive cultivation of this crop; nor 1854-55. must we forget in this connection the baleful influence of the Such a war, of course, since it would bring in the tremend¬ cotton tax, and the disadvantage our planters are thus com¬ ous naval power of France to cut off the commerce of Ger¬ pelled to labor under in their efforts to compete with other many with the rest of the wTorld, would for a time be countries. The steady decline in the seriously felt in all the great pric^ of cotton during centres of commerce, -and, perhaps, par¬ late weeks, and the reported prospect of a large crop in ticularly in this country, whose relations with have Germany India, are also likely to have the effect of discoiyaging cotton of late years swollen to so vast an extent. But under the growing. On the other side, it would be difficult to specify present rules of war with regard to neutral the dis¬ any considerations calculated to induce extensive nations, turbance would planting. probably be only temporary, and the ulti¬ The latest advices from India report the prospect of an mate effect to transfer the carrying trade to vessels of our unusually large supply from that source. These own represen¬ nationality. We need not, therefore, look upon this tations are certainly rendered credible from the continued threatening disturbance in Europe as endangering our pros¬ high price which India receives for her cotton ; from the perity even in this respect, while it is likely that the increas¬ diminished prospects of the Southern States ed demand for our rapidly recover¬ cereals, and the volume of European cap¬ ing their former rate of supply ; from the revival of the ital naturally flowing to this country through the want of commercial spirit in India, and from the opening of railroad confidence necessarily developed in continental communication with the cotton regions. securities, The possibility of would infuse renewed activity into our industries. an increased supply from India is the more important in view of the fact that, on the continent of Europe, there is a SOME ASPECTS OF THE COTTON growing disposition to use Eastern cotton. For the first TRADE. three months of the current year, the exports of India cot¬ It is not surprising that the question of the world’s cotton ton from Great Britain amounted to 93,710 bales, against supply should excite unusual interest. Upon the solution of, 80,946 bales for the corresponding quarter of last year; the problem depends the future value of the chief staple of while, in the exports of American, Brazil and Egyptian, our foreign commerce, the course of the foreign there was a decrease of over 50 exchanges, The same rule per cent. and the extent of our foreign importations. It would there¬ has obtained in the consumption of England. From Jan. fore be satisfactory were we able to present an array of facts 1st to the close of March there was taken for consumption, rendering it possible to estimate the future course of the at Liverpool, 15,200 bales less of American than for the cotton trade with a reasonable approximation to accuracy. I same time last year, and 5,050 bales more of India; indeed, The times, however, are beset w7ith uncertainties which in every class of cotton except that of India, the current render the formation of definite estimates unusually difficult. consumption of Lancashire shows a decrease. This fact is From Sept. 1st to the close of last week, the total receipts in singular opposition to the anticipation that, as the Ameri¬ i©F cotton at all the ports of the United States amounted to can staple recovered its former position in the market, India 1,588,152 bales, against 1,675,487 bales for the correspond¬ cotton would be displaced. ing period of last year/ During the same period we ex¬ But the future value of cotton must depend materially ported 1,050,496 bales, against 1,100,441 bales in 1865-6. upon tfye course of the British goods market. The year has What amount of last year’s crop remains to come forward, opened with a diminished demand from spinners, and the sales it would be difficult to estimate in face of the character of reports from the South. that the conflicting Liverpool to t-h« trade since January 1st show an average 3,500 bales per week, compared with last year. This diminished movement is due to the depressed The receipts condition of the Manchester market, and it musts be consid By some it is estimated year’s receipts will reach 2,000,000 bales ; by others, 1,750,000 bales is fixed as the maximum limit. at decrease of about ered somewhat uncertain whether this diminution SOUTHERN RAILROADS. of trade 1. Richmond * will be continued. in [April 20, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 488 radical unsoundness, growing out of a company mania similar to that which re¬ cently prostrated the finances of London. A cloud also hangs over the tea trade of Hong Kong and Shanghai, which forbids any hope of early improvement in the depression ex¬ isting in the goods market at those ports. Nor does the Australian market hold out any exciting hopes, the trade of that country being in a condition calculated to induce caution among English shippers. It is unnecessary to say that the depressed condition of the importing interest in this country forbids the supposition that the purchases of Ameri¬ cans in the British markets will be as large for the Fall as they have been for the Spring. The chief hopes of Manchester depend upon Europe, and European prospects are wholly dependent upon the question of war betweeq two of the great powers. If the war cloud should fortunately be dis¬ persed, there would seem to be no reason why there should not be a large demand for yarns and goods from the Conti¬ nental markets; which, after the reaction succeeding the late war, must be comparatively bare of goods, while the revival of confidence would naturally stimulate activity in trade. But, on the other hand, in the event of the probabilities of war continuing, commercial depression on the Continent would appear inevitable. The foregoing appear to be the contingencies upon wThich the future of the supply and demand in the cotton trade are chiefly dependent. Upon each point our readers must form their own opinions. For ourselves, the conditions affecting this question are so unusually uncertain as to their ultimate development, that we hazard no estimates. country a AND RICHMOND Perhaps little immediate improvement may be anticipated the demand from the large India market, there being at the financial centres of that and Petersburg. 2. Mississippi and Tennessee. * PETERSBURG RAILROAD. Petersburg Rfilroad forms one of the the south coast line of railroads, and may be describ¬ The Richmond and links in ed as follows : 22.50 miles. 2.50 “ Main Line—Richmond to Petersburg Branch Line—Junction to Port Walthall Tofal length owned by company Leased and .. operated —Clover Hill Railroad 25.00 23.00 “ “ connections with the Richmond, Frederick and Potomac Railroad at Richmond, and with the Hitherto the want of close Petersburg Railroad at Petersburg, has been detrimental to the prosperity of the company. To supply these a separate organization—the Connection Compauv—was chartered in 1865, and is now constructing the necessary works at Rich¬ mond, which will be completed this Spring. At Petersburg Company are constructing similar works, involv¬ ing a bridge over the Appomatox, to be finished at an early date. These connections, and a bridge, as projected, over Cape Fear River, at Wilmington, will give a line without breaks from Washington to Kingsville, S. C., and thence to Charles¬ the R. & P. and the South ton Hill Railroad generally. extended was During the year the Clover miles to Osborne’s, on the James River. reported to be in perfect order. ^The roll¬ ing stock consists of 8 locomotives (which were run during the year 67,004 miles), 8 passenger cars, 3 baggage and mail cars, 2 express cars, 42 freight cars, and 74 coal cars. The total freight carried (including coal, 1S,315 tons) was 26,822 tons.; The number of passengers carried was 49,793£. In the year ending 30th September, 1860, the freight (includ¬ ing 42,857 tons of coal) amounted to 57,269f tons, and the This road is now total number of passengers carried 77,599. The follow¬ was ing account shows the earnings from all sources 1859-60 and 1865-66 comparatively in the years • % • Passengers RATE OF TAXATION FOR NEW YORK IN 1867. .. Freight * ■ United States mail ..: 1&59-60. 1865-66. $80,260 $79,294 56,744 6,738 3,338 4,825 55,186 Increase. Decrease, $%« $ 1,558 4,601 2,137 3.706 7,044 Expenses and extra baggage... Comptroller of this State has written a letter to the Miscellaneous 19.395 24,220 Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee of the $ $15,976 $167,881 $151,905 Total earnings 40,073 107,097 67,024 Assembly, showing that a State tax of over one per cent, Operating expenses will be required this year if the measures now before that $24,107 $ $60,7S4 $84,881 Net earnings body are adopted. It may not be uninteresting for our The extraordinary expenses of the year 1865-66 amounted Legislature, in connection with this letter, and while they are to $250,421 25, made necessary chiefly by the great fire at considering the propriety of so largely increasing our bur¬ Richmond, on the 3d of April, T865, which destroyed the den, to examine the extent of last years imposts when the James River bridge and a large amount of rolling stock. State rate was only about 5 mills. The necessary data may These expenditures were provided for by an issue of 8 per be found in the following comparative aggregate of taxes cent, bonds to the amount of $175,000. (State, county and town) levied in 1860 and 1866, prepared The financial condition of the Company at the close of The . .. ,. from the official reports : State N. the official year LEVIED IN NEW YOBK STATE IN School. County. AGGREGATE TAXES Town. 1860 $1-13.35 mills. 25.50 mills. any (?) Great Britain ” and our own State may furnish food for reflection: INTERNAL TAXES : IN BRITAIN GREAT Excise AND IRELAND. or $100,000,000 9,550,000 or 47,760,000 or 17,500,000 6,000,000 or 30,000,000 £18,500,000 or 3,500,000 Assessed taxes Property tax $195,250,000 Total national for 18C6 County and other local Total on $287,760,000 all accounts INTERNAL TAXES United States internal IN revenue NEW YORK. (POP. 4,000,000.) $7,369,048 County and local taxes 33,199,202— on per capita “ $9.59 22.75 “ “ equal dividends, accour ted for at $847,100 bonds due June 1, 1875— $78,500 00 registered “ “ .... 52,000 00 coupon bonds due July 1 1875..... 13,600 00 “ due Sept. 1, 1870.... 175,000 00—319,000 10,086 shares entitled to Funded debt: 7 p. c. coupon “ “ “ “ “ “ 7 p. c. 6 p. c. 8 p. c. Bills payable Open accounts • $1/210,624 59 viz: Against which are charged as follows, Cost of road and property • •• by fire, April 3,1865 Branch road to Port Walthall Reconstruction of road. Loss Land SLfinS 604 09 254,318 SO—60S,504 09 oiq’SK 50 45’8<?_, 11 $979,273 94 purchase property less lire damages. Assets—Company’s stock Cost of —open 00 00 ^,055 41 23,4b9jio . - Total ~~ t±. acconuts 1067570 Profit and loss Total.- $89,508,811 all accounts Great Britain and Ireland New York 40,568,245 subscribed by “ “ “ $48,940,566 (1864-65) State taxes Total 92,500,000 $300,000 00 161,500 00—461,500 00 State, old stock, 2,000 shrs. 200,000 00 new stock, 1856 185,600 00—335,6(0 00 Capital stock, subscribed by individuals, 30;0 shares... converted loans, @,$50, 3,230 shares (POP. 80,000,000.) £20,000,000 Stamps 1866, is stated in the following account: “ desire to know how much more the camel’s bear, the following comparison between “ tax rid¬ now back will den 1866. Total. York, ’60 4,376,167 1,064,473 10,138,581 2,176,803 18,956,024 on ’66 7,369,043 1,148,422 22,816,127 9,734,652 40,568,245 If AND The following table shows the since 1854 : 1 $1,210,624 59 ' business of the - •••• road yearly 1 8 6 . 5 7 6649230.. 81 511886 THE CHRONICLE. April 20,1867.] TfU r ending/ ■ -r- -TonnageFreight. Sept. 80. CoA, 21,611 1854....68.479 1866 46,480 14,860 21,814 86,867 16,864 44,886 14,402 185d.. .49,022 14,740 44,992 14,413 42,867 16,176 1861....44.199 80,142 60,608 40,929 37,163 58,219 86,885 Total. 1866(3mB)4,748 8,507 1866....15.315 Receipts. 74,989 $67,000 65,000 61,412 63,327 62,226 59,780 ... 611 Tonnage 68,671 61,700 63,424 59,732 57,270 59,461 56,744 53,064 97,026 174,556 295,<06 11,474 55,186 59,874 80,750 78,092 94,604 6,384 26,822 MISSISSIPPI AND Number Passen- of Pas¬ ceipts,incl. ceipts. mails, &c. $63,383 $139,438 69,867 145,702 sengers. 80,760 78,037 88,920 99,896 re- 151,947 157,409 81,255 84.422 83,355 77,244 77,599 71,257 202,303 394,599 49,773 following table 74,985 150,432 300,981 1866 545,659 —more 157,542 Sep. 80, I860 : 33,100 167.881 RAILROAD. Railroad to New Orleans. Great Northern To get to Mobile from Memphis it is necessary to go east Memphis and Charleston Railroad to Corinth, 93 miles, and then south by the Mobile and Ohio Railroad 328 miles—making the route from Memphis to Mobile 421 miles. By an extension of the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroad from the on Grenada to the Mobile and Ohio Railroad at Artesia, a dis¬ of about 75 miles, a more direct route would be made? and the distance between the ultimate termini be reduced to 7 1 1860 and This improvement is in contemplation. When the late Railroad was a ended the Mississippi and Tennessee complete wreck, and literally without rolling war On the 1st May, 1865, only 30 miles were in opera¬ tion. The finances of the Company were in a most desperate condition ; not an available dollar on hand, nor assets on which stock. 68 38 39 62 39 Capital stock Funded debt. Mississippi 2 requiring repairs, and of of October 1, I860. 1866. Increase. $825,399 49 1,069,6''0 00 $4,872 80 283,900 00 785,700 00 20,949 07 209,916 67 . 2t,949 00 467,475 (9 43,223 49 218,434 65 ■ 122.028 96 367,352 17 1,943 84 Total Against which 1,553 61 $2,329,917 76 $2,989,400 34 are Equipment Interest and discount General and contingent ex¬ penses ' charged $659,482 53 follows, viz.: 74,292 31 79,854 68 21,887 70 210,979 362,437 2,359 119,463 52 03 75 14 4,623 81 12,915 05 379,787 11 53,454 61 . - 11,438 41 161,124 84 362,437 08 10^555 6^814 119,463 14 10 118 47 Total $ $1,603,427 11 $2,010,131 12 $406,704 01 168,203 09 185,332 84 17,629 75 379,787 11 Opera ling accounts Reconstruction Bills receivable Iudiv dual accounts Other accounts Cash on hand as $ 1,948 84 227,534 74 229,088 35 Construction Decrease. 257,528 42 115,141 95 78,805 47 148,917 52 115,141 95 . Cash 80 60 10,118 47 $2,329,917 36 $2,989,400 34 $659,482 58 The funded debt at the two dates stood $ comparatively as : Tennessee loan, 6 per cent First mortgage, 7 per cent.... Income bonds, 10 per cent— Mississippi loan, 6 per cent... Convertible bonds, 8 per cent Total (as The » 13 22 many $820,526 69 fund. p c. Bills payable Small nctes circulating Other accounts follows cars. 114 85 99 1866, compares as follows: tance 394 miles. . 37 Work’g » Total, refitting. Profit and loss occupying the space (about 100 miles) between Memphis and Grenada, the latter being the point where it makes connection with the Mississippi Central and Tennessee Railroad, which is continued by the New Orleans, Jackson and cars. The financial condition of the company as Tennessee Railroad is Tailroad chain, 1 3 than one-half of them Transportation past year link in the southern division of this *6 7 8 Memphis, Tenu., is connected with Louisville and the north by a railroad line of 377 miles, and with New Orleans by a line of 393 miles—making the length of the grand route from Louisville to New Orleans 770 miles. The Mississippi and, a Stock of train , Pass. Mail, &c. Box fgt. Platform. .... them entire on : Locomotives. 7 6 151,905 741.596 hand at the close of the 1864-65, and 1865-66, is shown in the rolling stock fiscal years 1859-60, 156.908 833,265 378,986 19,436 79,293 11 043 The amount of 80,521 83,227 80,260 167,9^3 400,260 TENNESSEE Total ger re- 489 above) I860. 1865. $98,000 400,000 88,500 199,200. $167,800 600,000 297,500 $69,800 200,000 209,000 4,300 4,300 $1,069,600 $283,900 $785,700 Increase. Decrease. $ 119,200 $ .... floating debt (viz., bills payable, circulation, and other accounts), as per ledger, amounts to Add coupons on 1st mortgage bonds past due 44 on income 44 44 * Total fundable in 8 per cent, $108,242 67 128,201 27— consolidated bonds $725,595 07 236,443 94 $962,089 01 could be realized. By pledging future’ freight, how¬ The income bonds, which fall due in 1870, will also be ever, some $65,000 were raised, and the work of reconstruc¬ fundable in the same bonds. tion commenced in the month of July. Inadequate as this When all this funding has been completed the total bonded amount was for the purpose, it afforded a basis of credit, and, debt will be $2,067,800, and the interest thereon $156,068. aided by the receipts from operations, which increased as the work progressed, the whole line was made fit for ordinary use The ability of the road to earn this amount cannot well be early in the ensuing January. The reconstruction and re. questioned, and before the funding is completed it should earn a much larger amount. The earoing3 over ordinary expenses stocking of the road, however, was chiefly the work of the fisas heretofore shown, for the year 1865-66, with an incom¬ cal’year 1865-66, the doings of which are covered by the 10th annual report of the company now before us, and were accom¬ plete road and a deficiency in rolling stock, amounted to money plished at a cost estimated at of $381,018. The total damages by the war $310,250, of which $117,650 is credited to the Federal, and $132,600 to the Confederate forces. All this destruction, and that incident to time and disuse, had to be replaced. This has been accomplished so far as the immedi¬ ate needs of the company require, but still much remains to are be done to make the road safe and durable. $173,729 48. Cateat Ullonetarjj anir dommercial (Snglisl) Neroa. RATES OF EXCHANGE AT AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON LATEST DATES. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— APRIL 5. The following statement compares the earnings and operat¬ ing expenses for the year ending September 30,1860 and 1866. In the first year the road was incomplete and only 81 miles in operation; in 1865-66 the whole road was not operated until Jan. 3, 1866, and probably the average length operated did not exceed that of 1859-60 Freight U. S. Mail Express : 1859-60. 1865-68. 44 150,056 06 “ 4,425 00 1,447 75 177 50 189,476 83 4,583 33 7,802 41 511 00 Increase. Privileges Gross earnings Gross expenses $233,704 59 106,692 41 Neteamiags TIME. Amsterdam... Antwerp.Hamburg ... RATE. short. 1116X@11.17X 3 months. 25.40 @25.45 44 13. 8X@13. 8X DATE. TIME. RATE. April 5. 44 short. 11.85 25.20 13. 6X ■f, 44 44 44 44 44 Paris 25.32.#@25.a0 44 short. Paris 25.15 ’@25.25 3 months. 13.20 @13.30 Vienna 44 Berlin 6.25X@ 6.26* 44 St. Petersburg 31 @ 31X April 6. 44 Cadiz 48X@ 49X 44 Lisbon 51%@ 62X April 5. 44 Milan 27. 0 @27.20 Genoa ?.. 27. 0 @27.20 4* 27. 0 @27.20 Naples New York.... April 5. March 13. Jamaica Havana March 7. Rio de Janeiro March 12. Buenos Ayres. Feb. 27. Feb. 17. Valparaiso.... Pernambuco.. March 15. 60 days. 4a. 4c?. Feb. 21. Singapore 44 4a. 4c?. March 10. Hong Kong... 44 1 p. c. dis. March 2. Ceylon.. .— 44 March 22. Bombay 2aOX<* ‘4 Madras March 20. 2aOXc? Calcatia March 21. 2a0*c? 80 days. March 8. 1 p. c. dis. Sydney 44 $127,012 68 39,420 82 -> 158 33 — — — — $114,325 83 $ 146,233 88 $12,686 30 extraordinary, which makes the ordinary expenses at $193,522 69, and the net earnings at $173,729 48, being an increase over those of 1859-60 of $46,017 30. as — 81@— — — 30 days. MX — — — — — — * — 333 50 $ — 3 mo’s. — — — — — — 252,926 29 25.26 - 6,354 66 $367,252 17 $1&3,547 63 26.17X 8 mo’s. — Decrease. Included in the expenses of 1865-66 is the sum of $59,- LATEST ON— — “ 403 60 checked EXCHANGE ON LONDON. 60 days. 9‘J days. 60 days. 44 L — — — — — — 44 108X IX p. c. prem. 14@14X prem. 24 @ — 60 47 24 44 44 44 4a. 44 4a. 44 (4 44 44 30 @50X @47 X @24X 6Xc?.@4.6 3Xo?.@~ 2X@3 p.^c. prem. 2a. 09 - 2s.0Xd. days. IX p. c. prest. THE 490 CHRONICLE. [April 20,1867. Fund when it is in operation for an entire year. The future annual charge will be £1,776,000—less, of course, the amount of the annual interest we are at present paying, which is £720.000, and therefore the In a financial point of view business has been much more active increase of annual charge in 1868-9 and up to 1885, when the annuity during the present week. The close of the financial year, on Saturday ceases, will be exactly £1,066,000. But I must remind the Committee last, the “fourth” of the month, and the matur'Dg of a considerable that the country will be totally freed during the year 1868 9 from the dead weight annuity, which is £585,740, so that practically tbe increased amount of Indian and other paper, have created rather an active de¬ annual charge up to 1885, by which we shall cancel this £24,000,000 mand for money, but as the supply seeking employment in the dis¬ of debt, will be less than £500,000. That, Sir, is the proposition which count market, notwithstanding the large amount locked up at this pe¬ we recommend the Committee to adopt. FFroin our own Correspondent.] London. Saturday, April 6,1807. is large, the best paper in the open market is taken at Tbe financial position of our railways shows no signs of improve¬ quite one-quarter per cent, beneath the Bank minimum of 3 per ceut. ment. On the other hand, each week fresh difficulties have to be re¬ The dividends are now being paid to the bankers, and will be dis¬ corded, and with them, a further depreciation in the value of railway bursed to the public in the early part of next week. These payments property. The prominent feature in railways during the week is in will set free about £4,000,000, and as there appear no sure methods of connection with the London and Brighton railway—a short main line of investing except in Government securities, bearing a low rate of inter ruther less than fifty miles, with blanches to Newhaven, Portsmouth, est, it is fully expected that the discount market will become so ahum, and other places. The traffic upon this line is enormous. Many of dantly supplied that circumstances will compel the Bank authorities our leading merchants reside at Brighton, while the nobility and many to reduce their rates of discount. The public still hold aloof from in¬ other persons of wealth possess seaside mansions there ; and it is un¬ vesting in public companies, and although it is admitted that many doubtedly tbe largest watering place in the kingdom, and probably in undertakings are transacting a large and profitable business, the value the world. However, the Directors of the undertaking have not been of the shares is, in most cases, at a low figure. Jn some instances the free from embarking in the construction of new lines, which were cer¬ best descriptions of paper ave taken at 2^ per cent., but the following tain to yield no profit. The expenses and losses incurred in these fresh may be considered the more current quotations : constructions have proved most detrimental to the ordinary shareholders. Per Cent Per Cent. It now appears that in order to meet the necessary expenses, viz: to 4 months’ bank hills 2% 3 (&— Bank minimum 3 (&>% 6 months’ bank bills Open market rates: pay off debentures, and to meet other expenses, in connection with the r 4 & 6 months’ trade bills.... 30 to 60 days' bills riod of the year 3 months’ bills main and the 2)i(&)i Exchequer delivered his financial statement on Thursday evening last. Notwithstanding the crisis of last year, the state of our finances is most satisfactory, and Government is still in a The Chancellor of the position to make further remissions of taxation. Only one change suggested, viz : the reduction of the Marine Insurance duties, whether on time or voyage policies, to an uuiform rate of 3d however, is per policies exceeding six months, on which the late cent., except time will be 6d. per Mr. Gladstone, who cent. was Chancellor of the Ex chequer at this period last year, estimated the income of the country for 1866-7 3t £67,01 S,00U ; but the actual income ha^ been £69.434,<>00 being £2.421,000 in excess of the estimate. This has arisen out of the derived from the customs and excise has produced a much larger return than Mr. Gladstone had anticipated. The actua fact that the revenue expenditure of the year was £66,730,000, being £251,000 less than was estimated by Mr. Gladstone. The estimated expenditure and revenue for the current financial year are as under: Interest on debt Other consolidated £26,000,000 fund 1,900,000 15,253,000 10,926,000 Property taxes Post office charges.... Army services Navy do Civil ' do Revenue departments Packet »emce Customs Exci>e St imps Assessed taxes... 8.263,000 ... 0,143,000 lands 807,(XX) t Miscellaneous 68,134,0001 Total i rovin Total £•22.000,000 26,700.000 9,55n,0i>0 3,560.000 6.000,000 4,650,00 340,000 2,600,000 69,340,000 Mr. Disiaeli proposes to cancel about £24,000,000 of debt, by creat¬ ing an annuity terminable in 1885. With regard to this operation, tbe Right Hon. gentleman observed: wish the committee to consider is the effect of cancelling thi9 debt of €21,000,000 by grauting a terminable annuity, which shall cease in the year 18S5, and which shall not he accompanied by any of ** What we those more complicated arrangements which would have extended it it up to 1890. Eefore, however, the committee decide upon the prop¬ osition which we recommend, perhaps they will allow me to give some figures which will show the manner in which it will operate Now, it is necessary to bear-in mind that this sum £24,000,000 consists of two amounts—-one of £18,000,000, and the other of £6 000,000—the inter¬ est upon them being payable at different times of the year—one in Jan¬ What we propose uary and July, and the other in April and October. is to convert tbe £18,000,000, now yielding an interest of £540,000 a annuity of £1,832,000, terminating on the 5th of July, 1885, half-yearly, the first quarter to be payable on the 5th of July, 1867. Th»»n we propose to convert the £6.000,000, which yields an interest of £180,000 a year, into an annuity of £444,000, terminating on the 5th of April, iS86 and payable half yearly, on the 5th of Apiil and the 10th of October, the first quarter to be payable in October, 1867. year, into an and payable The total of the two annuities will be £1,776,000. That being the total, it Is necessary that I should place before the committee the amount which will be payable the present financial year. There will, on 5 th of July, 1867 be one quarter of the annuity for £18,000,000. which will be £33 3,000. and half year of the Ian e annuity, will also on the 10th of Oct., 1867, be one quarter of the annuity for £6,000.000 which will be £111,000. We must, however, add to our liabilities this year the interest on these two capital sums of £18,000,000 and £6,0u0,u00 until their conversion. One half year on £18,000,000, due on the 5th of April, 1867, will he £270,000, and one half-year on £6,000,000, due on the 5th cf July, 1867, will be £90.00'>. Jhese sums make altogether £1,470,000. But then, of course, we must deduct from that sum the interertthat we are now paying during the year on the £24,000,000, and that amounts to £720,000, ao that the total additional charge for the year 1867 8 will b# £780,000, Now, it will be necessary m the next place that I should to the Committee what will be the effect of this operation in its entirety—what will be the complete charge on the Consolidated there will, on the 5th of January, 1868, he a which will, of course, be £666,000. There a sum of but little less than £2,000,000 will This announcement has caused a very heavy fail in the ordinary shares, a decline of about £3 having taken place ' during the present week. An independent meeting of proprietors will be held on Tuesday next, and one convened by the directors is announced for Tuesday week. The latter is likely to be of a very sto my character. The steamer which left Southampton for the East on Thursday, took value of the larger supplv of silver for Bombay than has been the case for It is still uncertain what is the r.ctual cause of the sudden rise in the exchange, and the great increase in the demand for silver for the East. Of these two facts, however, we are now certain. In the. first out a months. large supply of cotton has arrived at Bombay from the interior, unmitigated distrust continues to exist at that port As in periods of panic, business is more readily transacted in coin, in consequence of which a larger supply of coin is required to carry on trade, there seems every probability that further supplies of silver wij place, a while, secondly, from this country. The indebtedness of Bombay, so far internal debts are concerned, is very large, and an immedi¬ be withdrawn revenue. EXPENDITURE. branch lines, required. be as its own supply of ready money appears to be requiied to discharge the ex¬ isting liabilities. The effects of the new company mania appear to have by no means died out there, and as much distrust must exist amongst the ryots in the interior with regard to the position of maoy firms to whom their produce is consigned at Bombay, immediate pay¬ ment in silver appears t» have been demanded. Many of the Parsee ate be of the opinion that the dtain of silver will considerable export is inevitable. As yet, how¬ merchants here seem to continue, and that a gold has been sent to France for the purchase of silver for shipment from Marseilles on English account. During the week the imports of gold have been to the value of only £75,000. A iarge sum—about £310,000—has been sent into the bank out of recent arrivals ; nevertheless, the supply of bullien held by that, establishment, owing to the demand for money, incidental to the quarter has diminished to tbe extent of about £118,000. In the corresponding week last year, about £510,000 was sent, and yet the decrease in the stock of bullion amounted to £110,000. As affording a criterion of tbe contraction in tbe demand for money, it may be observed that the ad vance9 grauted by the bank during the last fortnight—a period which may be considered to embrace the whole quarterly demand—were con fined to £1,874,800, against £2,704,490 during the corresponding period ast year, being a falling off of Dearly £1,000,000. The supply of bullion held by the Bank of France continues to in¬ crease—tbe amount now being £31,248,950—an increaee of about £4,000,000 since the commencement of the year. Discounts amount to only £20,768,100, being a reduction of £7,400,000 since the first week in January. Money at Paris ia very easy, and the best descriptions of :>aper are taken at as low a figure as If per cent. At Frankfort and Hamburg the money market is also extremely easy. The rates of dis¬ count on the leading Continental cities are subjoined: ever, no At Paris Vienna Berlin “ Frankfort Amsterdam In the rates of Bank Open rate, market ^ c. V c. 3 2-2X 4 4 2% 1 3 3)4 adv — 2)4 3 2 1 \~2)4 Rank rate, $ c. 5 — 3 2*£ 84$ adv — Turin Brussels “ 6 Madrid Hamburg »t. Petersburg foreign exchanges ths tendency Open market. V c. .. — 7 - 13a 7@8X is less favorable to THE CHRONICLE. April 20, 1867.] -Bills have been this country. week. in demand than in the previous more 491 Liverpool Breadstuff* Market.—There has been great activity in the trade, and a general advance has been attained. Wheat is 6d. dearer market has been unfavorably influenced by the state of barley 2d, and oat9 Id. The market closes buoyant and firm. The The Consol politics. In the early part of the week prices were depressed by the daily reports supply the following figures : Fri. 12. Sat. 13. Mon. 15. negotiations said to be in progress for the cession of the Duchy of Lux¬ Firm. Firm. emburg to France, but since the announcement that Holland will not s. d. B. d. 3. d. Wheat (Mil. red No. 1) p. ctl concede the duchy, the dispatch of Lord Stanley to the Spanish Gov¬ 14 ’ 6 14 “ demanding the restoration of the Queen Victoria—a vessel unlawfully seized and condemned as lawful prize by the Spaniards— has produced an unfavorable impression. The tone of the market dur ernment nearly the whole of the week has been unsatisfactory. and lowest prices each day are subjoined: The highest ing Week ending Apr. 6.. -londay Tuesday. Consols for money.... 90#-l# 90 #@91 Wed’y. Thur. Friday.| Sat. 90#@'.*1# 90#@91 90#-l#|90#@91 Corn (Califor. white) “ (West, mx’d) p. 4S01bs Barley(American) per 60 lbs Oats (Am & Can.) per 45 lbs Flour (West.Canal) per bbl Peas.. .(Canadian) per qtr. exception of United States 6-20 bond?, in which there has been a steady upward movement, consider able heaviness has prevailed. Five-twenty bonds, however, have been U. S. 5-20’s ... Atlantic & G’t West¬ ern consol’d bonds Erie Shares ($100) Illinois shares ($100) . We 74#-75# 74#-75 74#-75# 75#-75# 75#-76# 23 23#-24 39 #-39# 39 -23# 22#-23# 22#-22# 22#-.... 22#-.... 39 -39# 3S -38# 37#-38 37#-38 78 -78# 78#-.... 78#-.... 78#78#-79 78#-79 on the Contin¬ Amsterdam 77£, at Frankfort 78, at Berlin 78f. are now enabled to ascertain the extent of our ending March 31. So far as wheat is concerned, the for¬ eign arrival in March was about 600,000 cwt. in excess of the corres¬ ponding month last year, but in flour, owmg to the limited receipts from the United States and Russia, there is an important decline. An¬ nexed are the particulars for the month and three months, compared with the three previous years: IMPORTS OP CEREALS INTO THE UNITED KINGDOM IN 1865. cwts. cwts. 1866. cwts. Wheat 1,924,546 782,150 1,493,262 Barley 377,557 301,095 679,803 30,195 10,991 49,419 840,266 596,183 17,771 Oats...3. Peas Beans Indian Corn 214.346 50.293 Flour IMPORTS IN THE Wheat THREE MONTHS ENDING MARCH 5,617,855 1,386,594 Barley 791.392 Oats Peas 171,954 Heans 291,820 Indian Com Floar 427,714 1,795,435 1,912,614 1,777,749 761,901 40,612 135,411 1,173,942 694,493 Lard (American), Cheese (mid. Am.) 2d. lower ; “ “ ; 574,794 48,706 161,476 474,223 244,694 80. 5,671,948 1,745,551 1,213,912 115,155 5,874.778 2,0^8,174 67,244 503,537 1,284,721 1,665,041 312,655 3,338.874 1,855,510 881,361 “ “ : U S. 6’s(1862) Fri. 12. 9 # 74 Sat. 13. 90# 74 76# 77# 36# S8 Illinois Central shares.. Erie Railway shares.... The Mon. 16. Tues. 16. Wed. 17. Thu. 18 91 90# 91 90# 74 x.72 x.71# x 71# 76# 88# 77# 87# 76# 37# as 49 0 60 0 The last quotations Ashes—pots follows: (com Wilm). (fine) Sp turpentine * * 1 i Clover seed (Am. red) 76 7Q# . 76# the week of 44.000 bales. 76# 76# This excessive supply, combined declining tendency of the Manchester trade, has had the usual effect on this market ; and, notwithstanding certain speculative demands prices have sunk below the lowest figures of the preceediDg week; nor is there any present prospect of recuperation. The course has been as with the follows: Tone of market bales sold Closing quotations. The stock Fri., 12. Heavy. 8,000 12d. Sat., 13. Mon., 15. Tues., 16. Wed., 17. Thu., 18 Firmer. Active. Flat. Quiet. Depressed. 12,000 15,000 10,000 6,000 8,000 ll#d. ll#@12d. 12d. 12d. ll#d. on hand is rapidly increasing, and yesterday (18th) •ported at 796,000 bales, of which 441,000 were American, 0 45 0 77 40 49 60 6 77 40 6 0 0 49 60 6 6 0 0 77 6 39 49 60 0 0 0 T7 39 50 60 • oil “ Sperm oil “ Whale oil (Icel’d).per 252 gall . • 52 65 £9 10 £39 0 £1310 on each day Steady. s. - 34 8 17 37 1 1 Quiet. d. n 3 0 0 6 Ashes petroleum Otherwise follows were as id. 34 0 8 3 16 0 8. 16 37 0 0 37 0 1 1 5 0 6 1 1 44 5 0 6 6 0 0 0 56 24 6 0 0 0 0 46 6 66 6 24 0 52 0 £410 £39 0 £3-3 0 Advices from Manchester g S : Quiet. Quiet. Quiet. d. 34 0 8 3 8. 44 56 24 0 52 0 65 0 65 £9 10 £9 10 £39 0 £39 0 £131 0 £131 0 , 6 o Sat. 13. Mon 15. Tn. 16. Wed. 17. Th. 18 a. 33 6 8 3 17 0 37 0 1 5 1 0 46 6 56 6 Sugar (No.12 Dch std) 8. 34 8 15 37 1 1 44 56 24 52 52 65 65 £9 10 £9 10 £39 0 £39 0 £131 0 £131 0 £39 0 £39 0 d. 8. 0 0 0 0 34 8 15 37 4 1 1 0 6 6 44 57 0 24 52 65 £9 10 £39 0 0 0 d. 0 0 0 0 4 0 6 9 0 0 0 £131 0 £39 0 unfavorable, the market there for goods being very dull aud depressed. Owing to the Easter Holidays there will be no markets at Liverpool London on Friday and Saturday. are and yarns or COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Imports decrease and Exports wa» for the Week.—The imports this week show a in dry goods, but a large gain in geueral merchandise, the total being $6,467,267 against $4,759,407 last week, and $4,242,200 the previous week. The exports are $4,458,700 this week, against $4,392,126 last week, and $4,650,390 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week were only 10,434 bales, against 20,640 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) April 12, and for the week ending (for general merchan Use) April 13 : ‘ FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK POR THE WEEK. 1864. 1865. General merchandise... $1,360,803 2,885,737 $894,134 1,498,441 $2,003,467 8,757,374 $1,407,926 fotal for the week.. Previously reported .... $3,746,545 63,569,236 $2,392,575 35,257,340 $6,760,841 87,354,312 $6,467,267 67,373,771 $67,315,781 $37,649,915 $93,115,153 $74,341,038 Dry goods .. In our 1866. > 1867, 5,059,341 report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry goods for one week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending April 16 : EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 1864. 1865. 1866. 42,734,973 $1,613,293 56,388,554 $6,267,431 66,941,941 $4,458,700 65,474,157 $45,916,861 $58,001,847 $73,209,372 $59,932,857 $3,181,888 For the week Previously reported.... Since Jan. 1 75# Liverpool Cotton Market.—The stock in port and afloat on the 12th (including 885,000 American), was estimated at 712,000 bales, an in¬ crease on I Rosin 87# Paris Frankfort 45 77 6^ 40 6 49 0 60 0 8. 76# daily closing quotations in the Paris and Frankfort markets for U. S. 6’s of 1862 have been 0 whale oil £2 lower; clover seed is higher. Since Jan. 1 Money Market.—American securities are firm, but closed in the middle of the week. The daily quotations were a? Consols for money 45 Fri. 12. Firm. 2,171.178 740,717 ISiiKlitth Market Reports—Per Cable. lower than 0 0 rosin is lower—common 3d. and fine 2s.: prices unchanged. 1867. of California Wheat having been purchased at Liver¬ pool for shipment to New York, rather more firmness i3 apparent in the wheat trade, but there is no activity. Prices have not materially varied since Saturday last. follows 45 45 4 10 Liverpool and London Produce Markets.—Generally quiet. have advanced Several cargoes London 0 6 8 5 cwts. 29,477 899,247 599,891 393,864 256,692 45 3 _ 6 6 43 MARCh. 1864. . 6 3 14 6 43 9 4 10 3 6 Firm. s. d. 13 9 14 6 43 6 4 10 8 6 8. Fri. 12. Sat. 13. Mod 15. Tuea. 16. Wed. 17. Thu 18 Firm. Firm. Steady. Quiet. 8. d. 8. d. s. d. 8. d. 8. d. s. d. 125 0 125 0 125 0 125 0 125 o imports of cereal produce into the United Kingdom during the month of March, and the three months 3 3 6 8 3 ... prices for United States Five-twenty bonds The latest ent are—At 71#-75 14 14 43 4 43 4 _ d. 13 9 0 6 8 6 4 HIGHEST AND LOWEST PRICES OF PRINCIPAL AMERICAN SECURITIES. Weekending Mar. 30 Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat’rday. 9 d. 13 9 s. Liverpool Provisions Market.—Prov sion9 are quiet, but firm, and generally without change in price, except that bacon is lower. Lard advanced yesterday from 49s. to 60s. 6d. per cwt. The closing quota¬ tions daily have been as follows: In American Securities, with the freely dealt in at rather an important rise in prices; but Eries, Illinois Centrals, and Atlantic and Great Westerns, have been depressed, and have given way in price. United States Five-twenty bonds close this evening at to 76£ ; Atlantic and Great Western Railway Deben¬ tures 31 to 82 ; do Consolidated Mortgage bonds 22-J to 23 ; Erie Rail, way shares, 37£ to 88, and Illinois Centrals 78£ to 7S£. The highest and lowest prices in the days enumerated are subjoined: 43 Tues. 16. Wed. 17. Thn 18 Buoyant. Quiet. 1867. The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in thefollowing table: of To Great Britain... France Holland & Belg. Germany This week. $2,214,316 $35,745,375 299,283 327,512 713,673 N.Europe 37.480 Other S. Europe East Indies China & Japan . Australia Br.N A Colonies 172,263 Other Spain Since Jan. 1,1867 14,976 9.378 39,164 3,758.761 1,514,063 6,435,991 211,244 185,560 895,981 765,978 736,679 562,761 This week. To (/1lbE> Hayti Other W. I $95,395 .... Mexico New Granada... Venezuela Br. Guiaua Brazil OtherS. A. ports All other ports. 7,839 84,271 74,928 86,404 11,686 23,258' 82,070 153,319 Since Jan. 1. $2,100,439 304,134 2,051,553 565,953 1,626,053 218,027 379,151 648,006 1,152,399 816,333 The following will show the exports of specie from the port of New 5Tork for the week ending April 13, 1867 : THE CHRONICLE 492 April 8—Brig Scio, Ponce— American silver... 9—Schooner Britannia, St. Johns, P. R— “ 11—St. 12—St. Foreign silver Columbia, Hav.— Total for the week Previously reported Total since Jan. 1, 1867 581 The $5,697,774 5.153,102 11,780,995 16,196.788 11,065,050 2,383,136 5,208,400 11,016,831 April 8—St. Columbia, HavanaGold 9—St. La Cayenne, Aux Cayes— “ 1,060 Carthagena— Gold. Silver 10—St. Parana, “ $65,703 260 1,418 Buenos, Total for the week 6,753,991 5,058,346 6,182,153 Treasure 3,431,025 7,177,128 Panama Railroad Co DuncamSherman & Co... Ayres— 94 Hav— 150 300 Mercedita, St. John, P. K— Eugene Kelly & Co -. $1,142,884 52 FROM ASPINWALL. $1,400 00 2,300 00 Total from both The $3,700 00 arrivals of treasure from San Francisco since the shown in the following statement: Date. Steamship. At date. Jan. 1. 10.Rising Star. $874,764 $874,764 Jan. “ 20.New York.. 525,956 1,400,72'» Jan. 31.H. Chauncey 1,072,17 ■ 2,472,8 5 Feb.lO.Ocean Queen 788,027 3,260,922 Feb.22.Ris ng oUr Since Jan. 1. Date. Steamship. At date. Mar. 4.H. Chauncey. 818,818 5,031,8*2 ‘‘ 13.Ocean Queen 244,888 5,276,710 “ April 1 H. Chauncey 952,082 4,218 004 . 24.Rising Star.. 14.0ccan Australian Gold Product.—The 833,151 6,109,861 891,992 7,001,853 Queen 1,142,884 8,144,737 Melbourne correspondent of the gives the following table, officially compiled, of the pro gold fields of Australia since 1851 : London Times duce of the Year. 1861 1852 185» Oz. (3 months). ' 145,146 2,218*781 2,676,845 2,150,730 2.751,636 2,985,991 2,762,460 2,528.478 1855 1856 1858 Value at £4 per oz. £580,584 8,375,128 10,70 v- 80 8,602,920 11,006.140 11.943,964 11,049 840 10,113,812 Year. Oz. 1859 1860... 1861... 1862... 1863... 1864... 1865... 1866. 2,280,950 2,155,680 1,967.420 1,658,207 1,626,872 1,544,094 1,543,80L . 8,365 1,300 10,200 2,000 • • • • • 500 300 210 . - 300 200 20 20 23 600 1,550 1,250 5,900 11 25 2,800 Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic. 3,800 1,690 2,700 Phil. & Reading St. L., Alton & T. H Tol., Wabash «fc West’n... 9,600 2,300 10,400 11,000 8,600 2,400 4,500 Mariposa Pref.. do “ 'lelegraph—West’n Union Steamship—Atlantic Mail. “ Pacific Mail.. Express—Adams “ 150 8 30 Wells, Far. & Co 100 2,085 . 350 1,330 2,400 3,143 1,000 1,827 250 100 10 90 • . 200 60 . 12,100 36 12,890 44,100 .... 100 750 .... 400 100 860 ... 1,400 1,000 2,300 .... „ . . .. .... 50 2,285 . 53 • 600 500 450 Trust—Union • 3,320 .... 10 1,650 • .... 350 200 100 200 300 100 700 200 700 • • 45il00 ioo .... 300 • • .... 1,450 • 32,007 4,400 1,350 150 • 100 500 900 600 300 400 600 300 1,400 650 920 817 r.... .... 200 400 4,015 175 American. United States... ... “ 400 ...■ Canton 100 ...» .... 100 100 500 400 300 10 97,225 m 17 .... 400 100 1,200 100 500 m 800 7,007 5,400 ... ... m. 300 100 387 ... 12,320 . m .... 25 .. 7,000 .. .... 17 .... 150 10 34,125 ... .... . 13,730 100 0 43,050 12,900 100 . 600 16,270 45,053 31,300 10 14,300 15,350 . 300 o .... .... .... £ 73 • 200 900 • • 7,420 1,250 .... 4,300 1,600 11,089 2,350 11,657 .... 100 715 18 620 830 50 _ ^ 65 15 .... .... City and other bonds^sold atJ the Regular Board, daily and for the week, are given in the following statement: The amount of Government, State and Sat. U.S. 6’s, 1881 "$26,000 U.S 6’s (5-20’s). 822,600 U.S 6’s- (old) U.S. 5’s (10-408) U.S 5’b (old) .. U. S 7-30 notes. 52,000 • ... State • • • Mon. Tnes. Wed. $152,000 $14,500 399,000 334,000 $ $13,000 335,000 225,000 1,000 86,000 1,000 1,00) Thnr. Fri. 2,115,500 8.500 2,666 10,000 80,500 66,500 Week. $205,500 ... 15,000 • 45,666 4,500 « c • • 54,000 11,000 • 87,900 322,800 Bonds, viz.: .... 6’s . . » .... 3,000 City Bonds, viz Brooklyn 6’s... Jersey City 6’s. 2,000 «... .... 48,000 5,000 34,000 New York 7’s.. N. Carolina 6’s. Ohio 6’s Tennessee 6’s., ,, , , 6,000 2,000 4,000 • • 1,000 50,000' % 7,000 21,000 5,000 21,000 1,000 , • .... 55,000 • .... 25,000 22,000 9,000 13,000 1,000 16 000 .... 20,000 • • • i • • • • • 2,900 2,000 1,000 200,000 ® 34.000 ...» 73,000 7,000 .... • 7,000 • • • . 55,000 .... , .... Company Bonds viz Railroad West. Union Tl. 2,900 .... Georgia 7’s Missouri 61s... Since 4,860 7,230 “ ment of the year, are 4,200 800 Connecticut 6’s commence 10,300 10 200 “ $1,146,584 52 sources 6,950 6,100 .... Total from Aspinwall 9,253 4,600 3.500 6,450 100 . Isaacs A Aech— Flint & Hall 1 600 .... 81 340 40 «3 'O .... 3,200 200 Quicksilver hnprovni't—Bost.W. Pow $69,491 85 100 ... .... 9,600 “ .. 430 .... 20 3,900 “ ; Dabnev, Morgan & Co Total from San Francisco Fri’y. Week. .... ...» .... 4,170 11,000 , Mining— Consol. Gregory. $12,460 23 30) Michigan Southern Milwaukee & St. P do do pref.... New York Central New York & N. Haven Ohio & Mississippi ($100) Panama ...• “ 323,419 93 500,000 00 Thurs. 44 32 100 5,500 13,700 Miscellaneous shares, viz.: Coal—American “ Central “ Cumberland 100 * $17,812 08 I Wells, Fargo & Co 71,511 87 | Lees & Waller.. 41,2.6 00 Order * 119,422 79 | .... Michigan Central a9 $489,800 SAN FRANCISCO. 4,000 10 6,500 2,600 Hartford & New Haven Hudson River...: Illinois Central California.—The FROM .... Wed. 134 20 200 300 . steamship “ Ocean Queen,” from Aspinwall April 4, arrived at New York April 14, with treasure to the following consignees: krom 7 600 Del., Lack & Western Erie Railway 11,625 Dubuque & Sioux C’y.pf 5,414,649 ... 200 1,800 Pref. Cleveland & Pittsburg.... Cleveland and Toledo 477,340 Total since January 1, 1867 do do $9,790,146 Previously reported Tues. 18 40 Chicago, B. Iel. & Pacific. Clev'and, Col & Cine $7,080,022 Gold 2C0 12—St. Mercedita, Laguayra— Gold 1,200 18—St. Corsica, Na.-sau— Gold 1,920 Silver 4,100 1,251 Jersey... Chicago <Sfc Alton do preferred.. Chic. Burl. & Quiacy Chicago & G. Eastern Chicago <fc Northwestern. 7,014,259 Gold Morro Castle, Gold Gold dust $507 Silver 9-St. N. Johnson, St. Tuni BayGold 9—St. C. E. Beatty, “ Central of New imports of tpecie at this port during the week have been Mon. 96 Railroad shares, viz. 23,372 .... Same time In 1858 1857 1856 1855. 1854. 1A)3 1852 Jollowo: “ 1,800 of Antwerp, Liverpool— gold American Sat. 124 Bank Shares 13—St. City 10,000 Same time in 1866 1866 1864 1868 1862 1881 1860 I860 15,591 12—St. Germania, Ham- “ Specie “ Spanish doubloons “ $15,000 [April 20,1887, .... .... 3,666 1,000 3,000 .... : 20,000 85,500 7,200 2,000 .... 76,500 38,000 .... .... 177,200 2,000 Value at £4 per oz. £9,128,800 8,626,640 1,480,597 7.860.680 6,622,828 6,607,488 6,277,776 8,175,204 6,9*8,948 We call attention to the card of Messrs. P. D. Friday, April 19,1867, P. M. The Money Market.—The market has shown, during the week, steady increase of ease. The Sub-Treasury has somewhat in¬ creased its balances, but the banks have been in receipt of deposits a and remittances from the interior, and loans at a slight reduction of rates. have met the demand for Roddey A Co., BankThere has been a more active demand for call loans, owing to the published on the first page of the Chronicle. This firm having a branch at Mobile, Ala., gives particular attention to the activity of stock operations, and the rate has ranged at 6@7 per cent, on stocks, and 5@6 per cent, on governments. The foreign purchase and sale of Southern and miscellaneous securities, and also bankers and private bauking houses have held liberal balances, and makes collections on all accessible points. have been lenders of sound amounts below the foregoing rates ; 4 per cent, having in exceptional cases been excepted. In the interior, money is generally close and rates firm, especi¬ ally in tho Western cities, which checks the downward tendency in DIVIDENDS. the late of interest at this point. At Cincinnati and Chicago ex-' We give In our Bulletin from day to day lists ot bonds, «fec.,„lost, and change on New York rules at 25@50c. premiu m. dividends declared. These tables will be continued daily, and on Saturday morning such as ha\e l««j> published through the week In the Bulletin Discounts are moderately active. Really prime paper is in very wilt be collected and published in tne Chronicle. Below will be found those published the last week in the Bulletin active demand, but in moderate supply. Buyers of paper, in the AHLJC. present unsettled state of business, naturally show a decided pre¬ HAMS OS COMPANY. BOOKS OL08ED. p. o’t. for names of unquestionable standing ; so that the market ference WHICH. WHKRK. is kept constantly bare of that class of notes. First class names Banks. National City Bank 6 At Bank. May 1. are current at 6^@7| per cent., the higher rate being mostly for 6 Fulton National..; 5 At Bank. May 1. Apr. 17 to May 2. Mechanics & Traders Nat’l 5 Lower grades pass at very irregular rates. At Bank. May 1. Apr. 20 to May 1. months notes. Railroads. The following are the quotations for loans of variuos classes : Concord 5 May 1. Companys Office era A Brokers, $1}£ Santure’ (Sa^eitc. PAY - Macon & Western, Ga BUSINESS The 4 AT May 1. THE Nat B’k Rep.NY Apr. 11 to May 1. STOCK BOARDS. following statement shows the description and number of shares sold at the Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday: Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 3 months Per cent. 6 @ 7 6 @7 0#@ 1 > Per cent. I Good endorsed bills, 3 & 4 months I do single names ! Lower grades 8 9 @9 @15 United States Securities.—The market for Governments has April 20, 1867.] THE CHRONICLE. 493 been active and firm throughout the week. The decline in the shares, at the regular and open boards on each day of Europe has not materially affected the the week, closing with this day’s businessconjointly, : market here. The advance in the gold premium has more than Sat. Mon. Toes. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Week. Bank shares 124 96 compensated for the fall in foreign quotations, and the price at Railroad 134 32 44 490 44 value of Five-twenties in home has advanced on all the issues of Five-twenties. There is a Coal 60,663 “ 10 1,400 600 650 Mining “ Improv’t 44 74,081 600 700 700 71,633 . 69,9 3 107,524 200 . 403,804 1,350 K <98 450 a-so 2,200 1,300 ■c 6,960 steady investment demand for bonds, the impression apparently 900 1,650 h 2,150 6,900 Telegraph44 1,400 3,320 2,585 3,143 gaining strength that the value of this class of securities is less de Steamship41 11,098 2,085 4,415 1,930 2.750 2,827 14,007 Express 44 313 1,100 450 215 pendent upon the fluctuations incident to commerce in the present Trust 163 0 2,243 44 50 50 condition of affairs, than other investments. Sixty-twes have ad¬ At Regular Board 25,009 25,512 35,067 35,510 28 353 vanced £ during the week ; Sixty-fours 4 ; Sixty-twos, 149,461 old issue, |, At Open Board... 43,156 55,250 45,550 43,125 88,800 276,881 and Ten-forties £. Conversion operations are still going forward Total current week. 68,165 80,762 80,617 78,635 116,653 424.832 very actively. Comparatively small amounts are now converted Total Previous w’k. 55,023 115,003 70,791 154,321 105,678 99,775 610,681 The transactions in shares through a direct exchange of Seven-thirties for Sixty-fives ; the weekly since the commencement of bulk being done through the purchase of the former and the sale the year are shown in the of following statement: * o .... .... .... .... . . .... the latter. Rail- The unsettled state of bonds at London and Frankfort have not been attended with any operations of consequence among for¬ ; nor is there any indication that orders have eign bankers here been received from have been lower Europe to sell Five-twenties. As a rule, bonds here than in Europe, but under the uncertainties as foreign markets there has been no disposition to ship them. following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬ pared with preceding weeks : Week ending— Bank. ro’d. Mar. 1 1,038 184.9S7 8 1,066 479,945 Apt. The The U. S. 6’s, 1881 conp U. S. 5-20’e, 1862 coupons. U. U. U. U. UU. U. S. 5-20’s, 1864 109% 109% 107% 107% 44 S. 5-20’s, 1865 “ S. 5-20’b,1865, N. iss... S 10-40’s, 44 8 7-30’s let series S. 7-30’b 2d Series S 7-80’s 3rd series.— Railroad 109 109% 107% 109% 107% 108% 107% 108 1 106% 97% 105% 105% 105% .. .. 109 107% 97% 106 1U5% 105% 98 106 105% 105% Apl. 5. Apl. 12. Apl. 19 109 J09 109% 109% 109% 109% 107% 107% 108% io;% 108% 108% 107% 107% 107% 98% 97% 98% 106 105% 105% 106 106 105% 105% 105% 105% Miscellaneous Stocks.—There has been con¬ siderable speculative activity in stocks during the week, but gen¬ erally at lower prices. The market appears to be in process of a change in the course of speculation, resulting from a disappoint¬ ment of anticipations. * At the close of March there was a eral and very gen¬ opinion that, considering the earnings of the roads and their dividends, stocks were selling at prices which warranted an current advance; and preparations were made for promoting an higher quotations, after the monetary de¬ rangements growing out of the preparations of the banks for their quarterly statement on the 1st instant. After the first week of April, operations were undertaken with a view, to that active movement for result, but the market found was the efforts, while counter movements for to a respond very feebly to decline 1,064 following is Itn- Tele¬ 2.283 4,8-'0 4,958 7,600 8.900 11,673 6.350 12,975 7,833 400,939 231,33 > 895,956 537,600 4.9l»0 403,804 1,35J Steam¬ ing. pro’t. graph. ship. Other. Total. 390,690 18,373 401 004 857 861 430 19,(5 days) to Mar. 15. Mar. 22. Mar. 2 15 22. 29 6 12 Min¬ Coal. 3,400 0,903 29,623 31,269 16,338 2,309 1,209 5,250 10 OOJ 7,5)3 8,542 3,911 7,902 7,70) 5,806 17,530 1,82» 5.350 3,500 8,055 26.302 8,02S 14.760 6.HO0 16,730 25,501 5,950 6.900 11,098 2,453 456,076 1.668 822 444,193 1,535 5,511 14,007 2,293 bonds City securities, and railroad and other Regular Board on each day of the past week : bonds Sat. _ State* City b’ds Company B'nds. Mon. 90,000 20,000 03,000 w’k.$l,010,500 749,000 614,700 Previous week.. Tues. Wed. 188,500 80,500 104,000 9,200 36,500 Thnr- Week 45,90 WfiSo 556,700 ending • Governments , ' 4 4,900 285,500 280,000 Notes. Mar. Mar. Mar. 1 8 15 $1,707,950 $330,000 1,068,650 1,289,500 Mar, 22 Mar. 29 1,231,300 1,750,100 823,000 1,397,000 285,500 315,250 261,860 138,480 299,750 166,000 2,390,500 322,800 April 5 April 12 April 19, (5days). The was “ new opened cided ... .... 3,274,400 2,835,700 Company City Bonds. Bonds. $512,300 $197,000 ' rai'qoq “3 of the year are State & , Bonds. ’*’* $2 890 500 * Wr!S l!” 38,000 533.800 469,500 ' $ * 87 900 46 000 » 73 900 weekly, since the commencement following tabulation : Friday. Fri $337,000 253,000 The totals, in the 610.581 of the amount of Government a summary }J. S. Bonds... .$848,500 $589,000 $36-3,000 U. S. Notes 66.500 52,000 Total Cur. 275,760 843,975 424,83 and notes. State and sold at the 235,892 640,620 1,355,500 194,500 1,008,000 159,500 738,< 00 687,000 297.000 631,500 38i,900 12 ,u00 183,500 1 38,500 121,200 179,200 shown Total amount $2,753,250 2,9o6,150 2,832,250 2,856,150 2,759,080 1.558,250 2,885,700 8,274,400 Government Department ” of the Stock Exchange Saturday, the 13th inst., and has been so far a de¬ on Our tables indicate success. a vast increase ernment stock?. in sales of gov¬ The Gold Market.—The gold premium has exhibited unusual fluctuations, owing to the increasing gravity of the relations be¬ tween France and Prussia, and the consequent fall in Five-twenties generally proved at London and on the Continent. On Saturday last, the wanting in these oper¬ price ations, and the strong downward tendency dispirited the “ opened at 136, subsequently the quotations fell to 134£, under the bulls,” abatement of apprehensions of war in and caused a more general co-operation in favor of lower Europe. Yesterday’s news of prices. the suspension of diplomatic relations between France and The failure of the efforts in the Legislature to secure an Prussia, advance of and cable dispatches to-day rates on New York Central has helped to depress the a decline of reporting £ in bonds at Lon¬ market, while don and Frankfort, and utterances in the on Erie also there has been a very general desire to speech of the King of realize. To¬ Prussia at the closing of Parliament, which creates distrust ward the close of the week there was a slight improvement in the through¬ tone of the market, but the prevailing tendency is toward lower out Germany—these grave developments in the European situation have caused to-day an advance to 139. figuresTo-day, being Good Fri¬ To-day, being Good Friday, there was a suspension of business day, there was no business in the Gold Room, but there was con¬ siderable activity on the Street, the price at the stock boards : on the street, however, there were a opening at 138f, declin¬ few trans¬ actions, which opened steady, but closed at lower prices. The fol¬ ing to 137|, and advancing at 1 P. M. to 139, but afterwards re¬ lowing were the quotations on the street for leading shares at 1 P. acting slightly. M to-day : Ohio Certificates 22$@22*, New York Central Opinion is now taking a very decided form in favor of the proba¬ 97]@ bilities of war, and the effects of its actual outbreak have been al¬ 97* Erie 55i@56, Michigan Southern 55£@56, Illinois Central ready to a large extent discounted. 112$@113, Rock Island 85*@85|, Northwestern 31^@31f, do. pre Some moderate purchases of double eagles have been made to ferred 581@58f. day for shipment to Europe, for the purpose, it is The following were the closing quotations at the supposed, of meeting regular board the demand for Americau coin from emigrants to this country. yesterday, compared with those of the six preceding weeks : successsful. The outside public were found , . , Double . Cumberland Coal §,uicksilver anton Co Mariposa pref.... New York Central Erie Hudson River.... Reading Mich. Southern.. ^Michigan Central Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern.... 44 preferred Rock Island Fort Wayne 30% 36% 45% 21% 102% 54% 139 102 71% .... 80% 17% 34% 62% .. Mar. 15. Mar.22. 85% .... 47% 23% 103% 69% „ . . 102% 74% .... 82% 119 85% 63% 96 «.«.»• Illinois Central The 8. 94% 114% 96% 115% 33% > 86 4 6% .... 105% 58% 138% 101% 75% 108% 78% 118% 35% 65% 97% 96% 116 following statement shows Uar.29 April 5. Apl 12. Apr. 18. 31 29 34 31% 46% 45 28% .... .... .... 105% 58% 101% 55% 136% 101% *101% 75% 71% . . . 108 108 79% 121% 86% 120 64% 76% 34% 62% 97%x.d.90% 96%x.d 93% 114% .... 43% 21% 99% 57% 29% 29 43 • . 66% 69% 107% 69% 87% 91% 114% are during the week closing with shown in the following table. Open- • 99% 68% 33% 60% Friday ,—* • S7% 55% .... 119 eagles are reported at London 72s. 4d. The fluctuations in the gold market 99% 112 31% 57% 85% 92% 113% the volume of transactions jo ing. Lowest, Saturday, Aprill3. 136 High- Clos¬ Range, ing. Tone. 136 % 135% Steady. 135% % 134% Hf-avy. 134% % 134% Dull. 136% 1 135% Firm. 137% 2% 137% Active. est. 135% 44 15. 135% 134% 44 16. 134% 134% Wednesday,44 1 7. 134% 134% Thursday, 44 18. 135% 135% (Good Friday—no business.) Friday, 44 19 Monday, Tuesday, Current week 136 .134% Previous week... 132% 132% Jan. 1 to date.... 132% 132% .... The movement of §odlng April 13, 137% 138 140% 3% 6% 137% 136% 8% 137% Market.— Loans: , (64ths). Carrying 0©2 2<ae p. c. 0©2 2<&3 44 0©3 2@5 0@3 2<&4 0©0 0@0 44 44 “ Firm. (X&0 Active. 0@4 0@0 1@4 44 44 specie and bullion at this port for the week was as follows: $8,138,813 Specie in banks Saturday, April 6 receipts from California Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports Coin interest paid from U, S. Treasury $ Treasure j Total 12,460 72,<00— 84,460 $8,223,273 reported supply Export of coin and bullion to foreign ports Paid into U. S. Treasury on account of customs >. Deficit made up $2,869,225 8,856,229 from unreported sources following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury since March 2 : The Weeks Custom House. March 2.... “ 9. . . 16 23.... ... “ “ 30.... April 6.... “ Changes in . Sub-Treasury Receipts. Balances. $3,152,288 $40,666,248 $17,580,658 $109,866,761 4,041.689 15.927,Sll 18,296,106 112,235.056 13.... Balances. Dec. $28,085,589 Inc.. 2,368,294 Dec. 573,789 Dec. 770,861 Dec. 10.256,279 Inc. 4.546,664 Inc. 3,368,049 Pavraents. 2,877,562 1,935,874 2,499,595 2,406,907 2,170,505 17,346.143 19,599,298 33.090.532 9,342,691 19,35!,508 16,772,353 111,661,266 18,828,437 22.834,253 13,889.356 110,890,405 100,634,126 105,R0,790 22,719,558 108,548,840 Foreign’ Exchange.—There has been rather demand for more cotton bills are not at present so availa¬ ble as usual, the actual supply has been limited and rates have ruled tirmer. j To-day the transactions have not been large, but rates have been very firm. foreign exchange and ; as The of following are the closing quotations for the several classes foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : March 29. London CommT. do bkrsV/i<7 do •• do shrt Paris, long do short Antwerp Swiss 107%® 10SJ* 108%© 109 10934®. 109% 6.173*® 5.163* 6.15 ® 5.13% 5.21 %@ 5.20 5.2134® 5.20 Hamburg 363*'® 36% Amsterdam Frankfort Bremen Berlin 41 >4® 41% 41 ®41% 79 72 @79%j ® 72>* April 12. April 5. 108 ®10S% 107%® 1083* 109%® 109% 108%® 108% 109 @ 109/a 109%@ 110% 6.17%®5.16% 5.163*@5.15 5.15 ®5.13% 5.13%@5.12% 5.20 ©5.18% 5.20 @5.17% 5.20 @5.18% 5.20 @5.17% 36%® 36%® 36% 41%® 41% 41%® 41% 41 413*® 41% 3 @ 41% 79 @ 793* 79%® 793* 72 @ 723* 72%® 12% April 19. 1083*® 109 109%® 110 @110% 5.15 ©5.13% .... 6.12%@5.113* 5.18%@5.163* 5.18%®5.163* 263*® 41%® 41% 41 %® 413* 79 @ 72%@ 723* New York City Banks.—The following statement shows the City of New York tor the ending with the commencement of business on Saturday, condition of the Associated Banks of the week April 13, 1667 : $7,071,153 5.049,966 7,933,578 5,254,490 4,208,111 8,472,073 3,569,052 281.232 6S1,284 189,645 110,073 1,225,657 City 4,084.000 1S2,020 390,050 Tradesmen’s 3,020,047 23.204 Fuiton 2,2)7,157 5,819,741 3,283,254 2,702,314 96,217 451,610 Chemical Merch’ts Exchange National Butch. & Drovers.. Mech’s & Traders.. Greenwich Leather Manufact’s Seventh Ward State of N. York... American Exc’ge.. Commerce tion. $847,802 12,262 885,308 2,070 290,315 78 ',874 2,341,980 453,101 494,445 244,031 1,798,284 20,973 195,720 3,094,898 1,231,715 4.714 4,993,323 10,449,043 22,541,234 5,532,179 154,850 27,258 338,412 428,393 257,539 6,890,255 5.922,179 9«0,< UK) 4,104.094 2,237,036 2,795,912 1.562.499 3.731,562 3,214.308 3,446,7-5 58,399 Pacific 1,853.660 Republic 5,886,938 19.935 376.552 1,834,714 1,438,314 50,945 31,308 2,456,297 142.110 839,330 2,427.709 1,558.000 10,490.349 43,096 290,067 15,000 69,759 195,9:10 2,205,344 132,039 4,383 652,800 759,175 947,0f9 9,758 676,666 243,727 11,084 353.000 99,061 503,744 People’s North America.... Hanover. Irving Metropolitan Citizens’ Nassau Market 8t. Nicholas Shoe and Leather. Corn Exchange ... Continental Commonwealth Onenuu Marine Atlantic . . 1,362,336 2.091,016 16,975 132,563 2,734.999 H 0.798 2,439,361 5,025,660 3,386,!33 23,562 1*211.424 ,990 17,234 91,782 35,155 11,090 1,790,053 33.173 1,303.035 16,473 3 797,363 2,832,612 2 Imp. & Traders... 6,699,817 139,095 Park Mech. Bank’g Ae’n Grocers’ North River East River Mannf. & Merch’ts Fourth National... Central Second National.., Ninth National.... First National Third National.... N. Y. Exchange... Tenth National.... Bull’s Head Croton 14.404.807 2:18,889 10,228 1,073,215 1 114,9 3 6.140 1.3>9,S83 1,060,436 1,301,156 16,853,866 18,965 7,453 19,564 47,930 12.035,497 Totals 530,166 2,214 5,062 6,983 l,f 06,464 671,559 386,344 667,194 767,863 1,311,162 7~3,246 the totals for Specie. a 6.. 254,)70,027 Apr. 13.. 250.102,178 Apr. 1,180,740 Legal Aggregate Clearire* Tenders. Tenders. Deposits. tion. IDS,018.914 200,233,527 197.958,804 192,375,615 188.4-0,250 8.13*,S13 33,774.573 183.861.269 8,856,229 83.702,047 182,861,236 . Inc. series of weeks past: 11,579,381 33,294,433 10.868,:82 33,409,811 9,S6S,722 83,490,686 9,143,913 33,519,401 8,522,609 33,669,195 Mar. 2.. 260,166,436 Mar. 9 262,141,453 Mar. 16.. 263,072,972 Mar. 23.. 259,400,315 Mar. 30.. 255,282,364 63,014,195 465,584.539 64,523,440 544,173,256 62.813.039 496,558,719 60.904,958 472,202,378 62,459,811 459,850,602 59.021.775 531,835,184 60,202,515 525,933,462 Through a typographical error, the deposits of the banks were last week stated at $188,861,2o9, instead of $183,861,269. totals of the Banks.—The following shows the .Philadelphia of the leading items of the Philadelphia Banks average previous weeks: Loans Specie Legal Tenders $15,517,150 51,233,776 4,190,617 Due from Banks Due to Banks 6,655,361 83,796,595 Deposits 10,651,615 Circulation . 16,188,407 4,705,921 7,098,407 34,827,083 10,645,367 ' $235,515 Increase Decrease. Ii crease. Increase.. Increase.. Increase Decrease. 546,625 664,719 15,sS2,745 * for last and April 13. April 6. 1 $15,517,150 50,998,231 Capital 118.094 305,662 575,304 443,046 1,031,CIS . 5,748 the condition of the Philadelphia ' series of weeks : Specie. Circulation. Deposits. Legal Tenders. Loans. The aunexed statement shows Banks for a Date. Mar. 2 Mar. 9 Mar. 16 , . • ... April 6... April 13 1 0,572,068 39,367,388 37,814,672 858,022 807,433 602,148 10,580,911 34,826,001 664,719 546,625 10,651.615 51,979,173 51,851,463 826,843 832,655 15,856,948 50,538.294 50,572,490 50,880,306 15,882,745 16,188,407 50,998,231 51,283,776 181 '.50.657 17,524,705 16,955,643 16,071,780 Mar. 23 Mar. 30 - 10,5S1,6G0 84,581.515 34,150,285 10,611,987 10,631,532 33,796.595 10,645,367 ' 34,827;683 footings of’the weekly statement of the returned April 15, compare with those of the Boston Banks.—The banks, Boston as previous week as follows :—Loans have increased $32,865 ; specie has decreased $86,408; Legal tenders have decreased $45,063 ; banks have decreased $556,838 ; amounts due to other banks have increased $224,553 ; deposits have decreased amounts due from other $40,250$; National circulation has decreased $12,703, and State 529,899 668,862 103,437 969.188 290.728 1,653,099 6.687.167 1,280,700 660,186 442,076 1,107,347 415,181 230.470 724,665 1,381,079 1,093,871 4.612,652 17,825,230 1.230.504 984.903 1.226.504 7'2,291 926,113 2,861,922 2,437,742 798.904 514,112 467,627 503,000 552,000 201,944 470,! 60 831,910 1,221,962 4,363,£50 540,458 222.729 208,772 260,409 138,686 4,460,110 8,410,174 311,242 1,876,544 1,143,1 76 905 028 f 00, j 60 558,700 90,000 1,125,100 1,397,067 305,838 489,681 225,000 690,590 245,5c 3 118,931 156,; 29 $250,102,178 $8,856,229 $33,702,047 $182,861,236 $60,202,515 !....*!!! : $531,835,184 71 525]933*462 89 20*506,881 19^235^698 91,712.414 Loans Legal tender notes Due from other hanks Due to other banks Deposits Circulation The 11,501,446 37,258,775 24,838,8;9 (National) following are the. comparative totals for a series of weeks : April “ —Circulation. Legal Tenders. Specie. 95,050,727 4... 11... 18., 25.. 1 8 15 92,078,975 93,156,486 92,661,060 91,723,347 91,679,549 91,712,414 950,8S7 15,988,103 695,447 15,719.479 568,894 16,270,979 516,184 16,557,y05 435.113 456,751 376,343 17,212,423 16,860,418 16,815,355 Deposits. 38,316,573 36,712,052 36,751,753 86,751,723 37,026,388 37,258,775 37,218,525 National. 24,675,767 24,346,631 24,t09,533 24,738,722 24,813,376 24,851,522 24,838,819 > State. 301,430 289,53S 299,133 299,091 296,625 296,011 287,205 National Banks.- -The condition of the banks of on April 1,1867 : following is an official statement of the Albany, Chicago, Milwaukee and Detroit RESOURCES. Milwaukee. Albany. Loans and discounts Real estate, lurni’e & Chicago. $5,749,104 72 $9,194,362 240,303 82 29,023 fix. Kxpeuse account Premiums paid Cash items, including rev¬ enue stamps Due from National banks Due from other tanks.... U. S. bonds to secure ci’n U. S. b’d- to secure depo. United states bonds and securities on hand Other stocks, bonds and .. mortgages . Bills of National banks... Bills of other banks 678,066 26 4,063,389 53 123,412 12,853 , 1,497,897 47 1,624,147 36 Detroit. . 16 $2,686,712 90 10 46' 240,922 86 412,285 46 77,92S 22 17,189 45 1,686 66 138,106 639,723 50,716 3,093,800 150,000 37 52 03 194,306 76 162.859 12 2,492,100 00 200,000 00 4,675,£00 00 £87,500 00 16,187 71 791,600 00 300,000 00 100,700 00 159,250 00 22,350 00 100,000 00 1,799,562 18 97,377 00 39,840 00 500,038 00 13,100 00 21,410 00 89,600 00 87.503 00 00 00 18 00 233 00 49,422 00 6,167 55 18,420 00 244,028 80 4,257 05 349,520 00 446,649 32 .$18,020,576 85 22,060,902 48 3,793,105 38 5,982,700 52 Other lawful money Aggregate 3,770 90 30,376 88 81 $1,463,532 6 -,970 51 32 8,114 04 6,878 44,575 63 1,908,390 00 1,358,780 00 484,737 07 2,057,645 17 Specie Compound interest notes. 58,627 00 19,205 13 LIABILITIES. $3,000,000 00 $5,200,000 756,0< 0 00 618,519 Nat. Bank notes ou’std’g. 2,196,673 00 4,070,750 do do Sure 71,180 00 I"dividual deposits ..... 9,556,558 97 7,743,8S0 United S ates deposits... 147,196 46 5.0,194 Deposits U. S. disbursing officers... 66 105,910 Due to National Banks... 1,396,593 08 2,221,733 Car it-il stock paid in Surplus fund Due to other banks and bankers Profits 72 70 12,590,178 11,725,999 ... Loans. “ 296,625 16,860,418 13,147,016 Circulation (State). March 296,011 456,751 Specie past 24,851,522 April 1. $41,900,000 91,723,347 435,113 17,212,423 12,862,652 10,818,419 37,026,388 24,843,376 April 8. $41,900,000 91,679,549 April 15. Capital 692.933 1.882.570 2.517.504 949,194 statements 1,082,502 2,584^620 908,457 2.961.500 following are the footings with those of the two previous The 258,881 847,372 632,348 496,058 1,026,000 615,000 6.649,686 7.100 905,092 1,772,979 1,971,494 43,662 2,312,100 1,178,475 914.469 395,475 11,434,831 447,379 792,92 L 269,533 908,400 12,110 180,000 are ' 1.862.167 270,000 906,035 Clearings for the week ending April 6,1867 Clearings for the week ending April 13, 1867 Balances for the week ending April 6, 1867 Ba-ances for the week ending April 13, 1867 809,096 81,450 11,750 283,500 $2,924,876 1,538,654 1,218,600 1.274.553 35,004 8,408 774,654 996.750 following Loans. Tenders. 1,264,116 2,135,730 1,436,146 1,456,000 4.760.569 13,762,719 69,471 13,283 Bowery National.. 6,895 1,705,114 2,966,881 1,670,417 3,191,411 1,047,232 313.366 858.750 132.006 941.846 2,530,307 National Currency. 794,616 482,097 141,673 1.000 1,190.772 6,662,949 731,306 166,000 986,227 Ocean Mercantile Chatham - 3,555,012 2,931,969 6,169,622 2,439.532 2,432,419 1,719.089 1,776,610 4,802.223 2,431,200 803,125 1,741,153 1,465,006 2,434,497 710,228 3,424.9:10 5,355,*'71 178,975 436,119 48,4-20 £6,114 Broadway 4,879,368 5*4.167 32,157 101,630 35,511 1,074.150 deposits. $6,362,745 3,870,420 489,806 Dec. $1,000,033 72,526 Circula- Legal Net Circula¬ Specie. $1,561,914 Dec. Circulation fol¬ as circulation has decreased $8,806. -Average amount ofLoans and discounts. Banks. New York Manhattan Merchants’ Mechanics’ Union America Phenix week are - 2.236,269 $5,987,004 Ending The deviations from the returns of the previous lows: Loans Dec. $4,367,849 Deposits Specie Inc. 717,416 Legal Tenders The $65,763 2,170,506— Apparent excess of supply for week Specie in banks Saturday, April 13 ....; “ [April 20,1867, THE CHRONICLE 494 Aggregate 343,511 92 447,012 76 00 00 00 $850,000 00 $1,550,110 00 262,073 40 162,6:2 30 693.450 00 951,157 00 630 00 905 00 00 1,517,525 35 2,600,294 81 84,542 08 69,939 39 68 *3 104,084 24 322,168 19 113,039 16 126,425 15 1,231,996 31 372,826 55 118,999 27 57,676 34 61,817 33 137,445 59 18,620,537 85 ^,060,202 43 3,793,105 38 5,032,709 52 THE CHRONICLE. Aprils 20,1867.] 495 SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. (REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE -I,, AND STOCKS . . — SECURITIES. Satur.|Moa. uea. . v»ed 135% 134% 131% 135% American Gold Com (G *** Room)... National: registered United States 6s, 1897 ,130 do 6s, 1868 do couiwu. do do do do do do do do do do do do de do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, Thurs jl09%{ — 106 li 6 106 1st series. 106 Hd series. 105%'105% 105% 105% 105% j 3d series. 105%' 105% 105%; do 7s (new) Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860. do Registered, 1860 do 68, coupon, ’79, after ! do 1877 do do do do 1879 do do War Loan Indiana os, War Loan do 6s 18G0-62-65-70. Michigan 6s do 7s, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s Missouri 6s 94% 94% 93% 93% 93% do 6s, (Hannibal and St. Joseph RR.)... 73 do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 103% do 68,1867-77 do 6s,1868-76 do 7s, State Bounty Bonds (coupon)., 108% 103% 108% do do do do 10S% 108% 108% (registered) 48 North Carolina 6s ex-coupon 48% 47% 47% do 47 6s. (new) 47 46% Ohio 6s, 1870-75 102 do 6s,1881-86 102 Rhode Island 6s .» Tennessee 6s 1890 do 6s ex-coupon 65 64% 64% do 6s, (new) 63 63 62% 63 Virginia 6s, ex coupon do 6s, new — 6s, Water Loan 6s, Public Park Loan 6s, Improvement Stock Jersey City 6s, tV ater Loan do do do " 94 Miscellaneous Shares Coat.—American Cameron Central Consolidated Cumberland Delaware and Hudson Susquehanna Sprncc Hill Wilkesbarre 41% 29% 20 50 Williamsburg 50 20 Brunswick City 100 Cary 100 Canton 26% 27% 100 Telegraph.—Western Union 100 Western Union,Russian Extension. 100 Mail Pacific Mail s. Am. Nav. & Mar. Railway American 7ransit.—Central ...,. 81% 100 27 Express.—Adams . American Merchants’ Union United Stites Co Gold.... Mariposa preferred Min aesota Copper New Jersey Zinc Quarts Hill Quicksilver Rutland Marble SmitJj and Panjjelee 28 42% 43% 43 36% 35% 36 82% 83% 83% 128% 124% 126% 125 114 55% 55% 55 57 56 57 67 f 7% 55 55 67 7 20% 22% 56 55 67 66% 7% 10 — 112 55% 56 100 1(H) 114%tU4% 118% 113% 113% 50 ....10O 50 100 100 100 107% !0S% 108 107% 100 100 63% 07% 67 67% 66% guaranteed. ..100 do 100 do do do « 1st pref.. .100 do do do 2d pref... 100 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 do da preferred 100 Morris and Essex .. 100 New Jersey 100 New York Central. 100 New York and New Haven 100 New Haven and Hartford .100 Norwich and Worcester. 100 Ohio and Mississippi Certificates do do do preferred.... Panama 100 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago — 26 49% 49% 100% 99% do do do 97% 24 23 256 53 do 97% 22% 18 — 91% 9?% 91% 99% 100% 99% 92% 99% cl% 36 38 preferred.... 50 — 94% 100 Income — Clticago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking F und do do do do 98 119% I 1 Railroad Bonds: Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877... Central of N w Jersey, 1st. mortgage do 49 ! 24% 100 50 Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund do do 1st mortgage 48 174 100 93% Stonington Toledo, Wabash and Western 48% 120 Reading 50 ICO St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute ..100 do do do preferred. 100 do do do do 42% 86% 87 86% Interest... Extension 1 st mortgage.... consolidated Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage.... Chicago. R. I. and Pacific, 7 ereent ila ' and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage Cleveland do do 64% 7a — 89 89% ~ — 3d mortgage, conv.. 4tli mortgage 90 — Toledo, Sinking Fund do new 7s, do do 2d mort. Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 do 4th mortgage, 1880. do 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended — 1 0 95 101 97 100 100 — 71% 71% 102 102 102 102 1.3 108 McGregor Western, 1st mortgage Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage Michigan Central 3e, 1869-72 do / do 8s, new, 1882 do do Milwaukee Milwaukee do — do 2d mortgage, 7s do Goshen Line, 1868 ....;. and Prairie du Chien, 1 st mort.... and St. Paul, let mortgage do 2d mortgage. Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage do do 2d mortgage New York Central 6s, 1883. do do 6s, 1887 do do 7s, 1876 do do 7s, convertible, 1876 d^ do 7s, 1865-76 New York and New Haven. Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage. 93 , — 30 29% 28 23% 29 9^% do do do do — — 2d mort... 8d mort... 94 94% do do 2d, income. Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended, do 3d mortgage... 85~ 102 102 — 94% 84% 90 _ .. do 96 95% Louis, Alton and Torre Haute, 1st mort do do do 2d, pref.... Toledo and do • 91% Peninsula, 1st mortgage....... Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort.. St. 25 25 55% 50 50 Long Island McGregor Western Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred do do 2d preferred Michigan Central Michigan So. and N. Indiana do do 20% 50 15 ion 7 69% 69 112% 112% 112 Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants 100 67 7% :..100 100 55% 57% 60 86% 85% Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund 100 25 100 100 100 100 500 100 100 and Trust New York Life and Tru-»t UQicn Trust United States Trust..' 37% 27% 28% 100 100 lru8t.~Farmers' Loan 38 100 Nicaragua j — 57% do Consolidated and Sinking Fund do 3d mortgage, 1868 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885 do 3d mortgage, 1875 do convertible, 1867 Illinois Central 7s, 1875 Lackawanna and Western Bonds 100 50 improoemeni.—Boston Water Power x Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1569-72 50 r. 113 do do 2d mortgage Great Western, 1st mortgage do do 2d mortgage Hannibal and Sc. Joseph, 1st Mortgage 100 25 20 Jersey City aud Hoboken 59% j 86% o © 32% 81% © .... 30 100 Harlem 32 100 ludianapolis and Cincinnati Chicago do 10 Wyoming Valley —Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) 33 Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort. 50 50 100 Pennsylvania Spring Mountain ! *1 ay lu 1 100 Joliet and o Ashburton Butler. 135 ®jj_J 100 do preferred Hudson River... Illinois Central : 100 50 10 50 100 100 100 100 119% 107 j 50 100 ? Harlem do do Cleveland and * wini/ig.—Mariposa 50 ; Erie do preferred Hannibal and St. Joseph do do preferred... 97 New York 7a do 6s do 6s Welts, Fargo 100 9% .100 100 3'% .100 60% luO 87% 100 99 50 69% Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Municipal: Steamship.—Atlantic 100' * preferred Cleveland and Pittsburg Cleveland and Toledo, f. do Louisiana 6s Manhattan Metronolitan New York .100; Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati — 114% 1 109 135 8 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 preferred Chicago, Burlington and Qnincy Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago and Milwaukee Chicago and Northwestern - t 1100 70 Lehigh 100x114% ...iuu.106 do Wed. Than. j do do . Georgia 6s Brooklyn 6s do Tuea Chicago. Rock Island and Pacific . California 7s Connecticut 6s „ o 5-20s registered.) j 103%! 5-20s (2d issue) 1C8 io8%; coupon\ do registered \ 5.20s 5.20s (3d issue).. .*.. ..coRpon.108%’108% 108%: 10S%i 5.20s. do reqistered\ j 5.20s (new issue)... c upon.|107%;1U7% 107%! 107% 107% r/’ntuf^Tt ri' 107 ( 5.20s do 107% ....registered 68, Oregon War 1881 .. 106 6s, do. do. (kyodfly). 109% 110 5s, 1871 coupon. 6s, 1871.... registered. 102% 5s4 1874 coupon. registered. 5s, 1874. 9S 98 >8 08% 98 6s, 10-40s coupon. 5s, 10-40s 9T% registered. 6s, Union Pacific R. R.. .(cur.). 7-30s Treas. Notes do do do do do do Railroad Stocks Centra] of New Jersey Chicago and Alton _ 1 FRIDAY, APRIL 19.) STOCKS AND SELL’ RI TIES _ £ T3 1868 registered. 1881 coupon. j 10‘)%1109 % 1881... registered.! 109 1109% :M9%j ; 5-20s (1st issue) ooupon.\ 109% 1-09% ii09%;109% State Gas. t ru 137%, WEEK ENDING ' . SO — 80 — ■7Q » [April 20, ^67- THE CHRONICLE. 496 ®imcs. &f)e Commercial Article* from New York. Exports of Leading g rH©td© 05 • : 5 O TT d © IPS! : . • 5e oo in C5 T-l IQ 05 •*—» T—» . . . <©00 < ■V tO vX> OD tH T-t 00 COMMERCIAL EPITOME. April 19. Friday Night, in gold which has followed, have quite unsettled the markets for merchandize, while prices are in some cases higher, the advance does not equal the rise in gold, and the general effect has been The warlike from news Europe, and the advance unfavorable to trade. o bacco , was more To¬ Breadstuff's have been irregular. Cotton has declined. active, but closed quiet. ^ ^ CG d Pork has caused generally are regarded as business cussion or slight fluctuations. as to - Of other hog 5 t what will be the effect of a but S ® S5 ^05 2 ... • • ■ « ©i- . • CO • • •< ; ;< • • • 05 CO » r • rfiOCOH Ven ¬ zuela, c» • * * 8“ :• :§ ■ : tj ; i \ ... • Granda. 01 • CCS* O r-* lOH • Montevideo at 19c., foreign Dry Hides wrere sold including gold. Leather is in demand and prices 63 499 •© .© eo • • •© . • • 00 ’th 12 6,670 • 00 0 m IDCh rr <X> tt • • • improving. Oils have been rather quiet, and Linseed drooping. oi-eco • the i—o • • in 00 . 00 © • t-« • T-l TH • 10 • ■<N ’ . Hf< rH • Tf • • <7* * :ss§ : i igreorHgooag^ t** CO ^ 0 • • • rH • 3,90 217 530 829 27 3,981 46 89 84 • * * * : " 00 (M Tf rH •J-M GOt- < * . • • CC Tf ■ • • • n<« 114 598 .®»© . Cl © m . • gold being neutralized by the attendant circumstances. The export movement for the week has been limited, and the re¬ . * • : © © © © © Tf "«l rH • • -rH £ ‘ cq^oo • © cf 2 • • • :3 : : tji ■ 05 in © *3 00 © © TH :g°°§S tii . hji -no<i - 22 2cf 'cf 'SK'* tH ©eornrH^rdaoeo •r-fflOOnJlt-HeJ Cl H t* cf .tH-hi .05;© .4 .5-5 05 . ;£>© . • d 05 • T-t . • -CO .|OQ •© . • • • T-l -O . • -OO • • • • • 05 * . j ifi • ft. • 0 1(50 enio <H © 50 t-rit00 CO rH - ez -fl « • -jo • c* • • • * •£- © • • -t-l * *&T A large line of Spirits without essential change, the advance . Sf ■ ’ci ©e« r— . advance. Tjl Tf* n • . • . fl r .£~OHt<o*t'ro©Ti,THrj''^'©THif-.dao©©©T-i©t»ao - : ej os k"> 4 ‘cf cf ' •p - -3v 2 There Turpentine was closed out at 77c., but the close is rather firm All other Naval Stores neglected and nominal. at. 78c. Tallow has been active, and with gold, closing at a currency j :ESI®?I@S''sIS”8PS-,"SSS ^ ©fcOO» t4" Tjl . Petroleum has been - '8 ' whaling fleets. been depressed. » . oT - ’ <r* : large arrivals of Whale Oil at New Bedford from Naval Stores have -00, n : ;8 • eo to in • • * ■ have been • • TH : *- ° V. t•’V oo . © • -T-l :||| ■’5 * ; • are Oj • 103,60 • • 1• . rH • :1111s : •§ . ;3 ; • 2 .© Tjl I— .©» TJ< -w ■ " % .in t- ’t-4’ i/h e« * o • 714,680;379,,4209 8,493 d : H ■ ■TH •« ■ t- IQ ;S : • -1 • • day about 35,000 C*C* T-l t-NrH . -Vh * 686 Mex¬ ico. 2,403 no • • OO 7T1 geo New 818*T some • ;op . iglgl | ; : T1.,r • - w dis¬ general European There is tt-ct t— t* cc in lO cf fi °- disposition to act for an advance. Beef has been dull and declining. Butter has declined, but Cheese remains comparatively steady. Hides have been very active. On Wednesday and Thurs¬ war, • PQ 05 and prices low, but it is impossible to stimulate infuse confidence into holders. • o> « t-c* large quantities coming upon the market, are 05 ^ . products Bacon only has felt in any important degree the advance in gold. The market otherwise is dull and depressed. There 50 Groceries have been quite active for leading articles, but prices have been irregular. Provisions have been dull. The usual speculative move¬ ment in -2 J;11769,8,379« -t-I wo •® c- 00 tH ';3 *cooo * -in • r » . • • * O as o m T3 GO © t-i G. © O .©* . .eo • • -Oi *Ct • ‘i-i • • • • • • r-t • ia • 18 *- • 'iHl* :88' ICO c- •©©»©! Wt-: ■ rH i—I « J* 0 © w © ( S’ eo in • r- ■ o» ■ © Cu .S :5 CO . 03 . . ©» GO ceipts liberal. Wool opened dull, with but closes firmer and more S5 the late, improvement mostly lost, active, the demand for ui © O. « o •d *£ p : o w have not varied materially. metals there has been no movement of importance, but room on In for American Ingots ; made to-day at 6£c. gold. Spanish Lead was East India Goods are a dull, and gold prices for all leading table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York since January 1, 1867, the principal ports of destination, and the total for the same period in 1866. The export of each article to the several, ports for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount fn the last number of the Chronicle rom that here given: : . . * * :* .©5 . . :S . CW1© © 05 Tf< : :S : : 'g ' **-’ * ' • © 05 • g: .©3 .2 pq 2 © 05 .c©tH . . . • eo« . 2co • •-rf • • .So corn • * 55 oSih : c© i-1 • Tf •© *o> *o • • 5© H .rHin-^eO' ,efo,3S vH -rf t- . .©©«©©»©©© Tt4 • .eiSwffiaDgH : : ; ;!e«THt^<N»o. . • • • ' 05" t- * ‘ in rf ^ tH • | >• .©in© ’ ^ O -SO© ©I© lrfr-T 2 ’©© * H . -rH ’8' * '' 8" ^ ti 9'TJ © © .© :g§ : 2rji :5 : : :• : :; :Sg • 00O • . • • • - in cf ‘ r-Tef' * th :gSP 00 :• .S3 -O^rH ; Tjf’ CO H intf (N th >«h «eo t-i co sale of staples under this head are tending downward. Fruit and fish have been dull and heavy. The following , | ia s the berth, rates Copper has advanced to 24c. : eo *eo • ‘rf A improved. Freights have been dull except in the shipments of Corn to Great Britain, which have been liberal, but with a good supply of :8 l consump¬ being materially tion : -h> p © m © in eorr © © . ■ Cl • © _g © A ® *C «f « ©© © , TjTeocjfoo'of^f th Scgf o» cf • .OOOOOTJI© . m co rH t” . CO •OO . •8 00 _ © c (£; wo oo©iriiri< > I © © © eo fc-TP Tt ©© t-rH m 497 THE CHRONICLE. April 20, 1867.] Imports of Leading Articles. 476 bales the The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port been checked previous week) the foreign movement having by the unfavorable advices received from Liverpool, and the difficulty of drawing against cotton ship¬ for the week ending April 12, since Jan. 1,1867, and for the correspondments. Below we give the details of the week’s shipments, ing period in 1866 : [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] showing 30,513 bales sent to Liverpool, 7,217 bales to For Since Same Same Since For time the Jan. 1, time Jan. 1, the Havre, 1,143 bales to Bremen, 672 bales to Hamburg, 808 week. 1867. 1866 1866. 1867. week. Hardware... 137 76 8,757 4,968 bales to 2,583 1,722 Buttons Antwerp, 451 bales to Barcelona, 410 bales to Iron.RRb’rs 4,561 215 47,727 18,684 13,069 67,453 C'oa], tons 25 4,316 5,769 Lead, pigs.. 11,304 128,929 134,443 Malaga, 1,429 bales to Cronstadt, and 281 bales to Genoa, Cocoa, bags... 682,828 3,021,361 89.381 236,548 191,696 Spelter, lbs. .... Coffee, bags .. 32 Cotton, bales. Drugs, &c. 557 * 1,006 258 252 2,093 115 Cochineal... Cr Tartar 46 ... Gambler.... Gums, crude Gum, Arabic 1,490 3,211 8,116 4,165 881 Bark, Peruv Blea p’wd’rs Brimst. tns. 138 ’**5 5,340 10 1,198 1,264 1,250 Flax 236 94 710 60 103 7 207 68 Furs 43 514 585 2,167 16,183 Madcler Oils, ess ... Oil, Olive... Opium Soda, M-carb Soda, sal Soda, ash... Gunny cloth . 7,845 218 43,626 3,971 11,402 61 964 8,514 40,550 Hide8,dres’d 135 188 2,864 India rubber.. 2,226 Hair Hemp, bales.. Hides, &c. Bristles.' Ivory Jewelry, &c. Jewelry • • Molasses 16,687 1,143 • 21 18 188 8,510 10,233 176,318 97 1,383 Watches.... Linseed • 432 285 38,402 Metals, &c. Cutlery.... Steel 75,800 51,708 161,910 212,501 907,334 2,409,406 19,456 18,139 1,777 Tin, boxes.. 13,395 Tin slabs,lbs 35,086 2,421 6,622 Rags 969 5,728 Sugar, hhds, 224 577 tcs & bbls.. 20,960 „ ~ 4,254 Tea..! 61,517 70,470 Sugar.bxs&bg 6,673 51,175 310,927 438 178 11,540 4,590 Tobacco 1,828 Waste 46,220 97,643 247,967 9,092 as follows :. -Exported this week toFrom pool. New York.... 6,887 Boston 179 Philadelphia Portland 31,347 40,039 6,445 Champ, bkts 2,412 Wines 86,029 1,701 3,125 33,925 12,506 34,821 Wool, bales... 1,281 22,974 341 Articles reported by value. 36,141 Cigars $16,751 $113,453 $382,191 34,053 54,702 6,691 Corks 8,9:33 13,796 Fancy goods.. 82,916 1,348,572 1,407,500 3,981 Fish 235,714 555,854 1,277 1,406 Fruits, &c. Lemons 161,606 7,411 84,917 15,120 2,264 Oranges .... 39,215 236,214 115,271 438,062 29,183 256,684 31,404 Nuts Raisins 341,194 48,341 227,815 608 Hides,andrsd. 121.737 3,121,266 2,104.715 93,357 3,590 Rice 73,632 12,706 8,178|Soices, &c. 669 104,235 50,800 Cassia 312 17,649 23,861 Ginger 236 134 49,674 78,994 Pepper 369 Saltpetre 16,966 57,445 92,165 Woods. 426 Fustic 14,625 22,149 39,151 90,162 47,462 Logwood... 8,631 Charleston... 5,028 Galveston 1,883 - - . .... 1,908 Mahogany. burg. 924 1,143 672 .... Ma- Cron- Gen- Ant- Barcewerp. Iona. 808 laga. stadt. oa. Total. 18,434 179 .... 220 103 6,293 451 .... 4101,429 Week, and for the Total exports this week.. 30,513 7,217 1,143 672 808 foreign exports from the United States since Sept. 1, now amount to 1,093,420 bales, against 1,144,710 bales for the same period last year, and the present stocks are 470,917 bales against 492,680 bales at the same time in 1866. Below we give our usual table of the movement of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing at a glance the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept. 1, and Stocks at Rates Mentioned. EXPORTED 8INCE SEPT. PORTS. since 1 TO— receipts of domestic produce for the week ending April 19, time in 1866, have 1 een as follows : since Ashes, pkgs... This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66 92 1,830 1,546 Breadstuff's— Flour, bbls.. 26,184 399,687 Wheat, bush.108,930 408,227 Com 10,981 455,070 Oats 3,090 224,570 Rye..... .... 3,434 Malt 3,375 203,742 Barley 37 15,630 Grass seed... 1,965 39,728 Cotton, bales .. Copper, bbls Copperplates. Dnedfruit,pkgs Grease, pkgs... Hemp, bales... Hides, No Hops, bales. .. Leather, '-1 sides . — Lead, pigs. Molasses, hhds 111,984 96,080 2,252 82,471 16,767 1.351 16,2(50 4,197 181,470 30,368 176,519 6,085 .... 8,405 300.424 251 389 30 3,900 .... 35,714 2,328 1,419 18,242 • 5,588 416 114.717 2,738 696,945 679 .... 30 and bbls Naval Stores— Crude trp,bbl ... 9,960 18 1,436 619 11,807 pkgs Butter, pkgs.. Cheese Cut meats. re Pori Beef, pkgs. Lard, pkgs.... Lard, kegs.... 6,045 Rice, pkgs ... 285,285 Starch 2,611 Stearine 927 Spelter, slabs... 4,836 Sugar, hhds & 1,086 300 Tallow, pkgs.. i 176,119 Tobacco, pkgs.. 3,324 Tobacco, hhds.. 667,001 Whiskey, bbls.. 65 215 35 19,041 16,514 10,328 8,522 2,589 13,5.33 1,460 27,759 1,018 23,626 2,107 267.827 300,706 365 9,730 6,001 8,031 144,772 95,002 993 83,740 42,117 1,942 65.039 70,828 12,567 54,297 46,205 4,811 90,428 76,226 1,690 22,320 42,382 1,360 76,203 64,334 422 5,728 3,447 58 7,511 1,335 657 15,823 36,646 243 2,927 3,062 547 2,161 30 304 618 318 3,657 3,106 28.415 1,986 50,544 1,824 3,570 13,031 48,623 15,141 27,144 28,000 79.873 81,769 3,964 15,704 380 2,413 Wool, bales Dressed Hogs, No 5,251 Rice, Spirits turp.. 1,118 427,854 Oil, lard 382,854 Oil, Petroleum. 13,880 Peanuts, bags. 174,511 Provisions— 7,072 13,565 8,827 180 174 150 Flaxseed.... Beans Peas C. meal,bbls. C. meal,bags. Buckwheat & B.W. flour,bg 462,095 70,410 Rosin Tar Pitch Oil cake, This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66 6.781 79,344 135,065 6.956 rough, bush COTTON. N. Orleans, Aj ril 12 Mobile, April 12 . Charleston, April 12. Savannah, April 12. Texas, April 5 New York, Apr. *19. Florida, April 12+... N. Carolina, Apr. 19 Virginia, Apr. 19 . p’ts, Apr. 19* Other - 1. The market Great France Other Britain 641,400 213,293 128,472 108,836 63,180 80,631 197,676 135,102 99,858 35,485 268,235 50,288 4,362 1,973 31,269 3,036 91 • .... ‘. ... 14,776 . . • 4,274 39,761 «... 492 .... • 92,316 9,739 .... .... 22,839 21,348 .... • 39,759 322,772 492 261 9,739 21,609 1S5,626 167,241 55,258 43,071 62,766 11,294 107,154 22,061 57,506 30,183 2,077 34,925 145,000 34,341 82,561 +50,000 .. .... •• STOCK. PORTS. 437,440 115,734 65,244 80,631 .... 34,833 was NORTH. Total. for’gn. 304,500 101,671 .. • • • • ... . 891,946 122,782 78,b92 1,093,420 1,616,077 Total 8HIP- M’NT8TO SINCE SEPT. Jan. 1, and for the same 281 42,924 4101,429 451 The total January 1 .• The 20,936 2,141 5,028 1,883 2,000 2,000 rec’d Receipts of Domestic Produce 281 . Norfolk, Va.. 76,73o 39,044 5,825 men. 108 New Orleans. 12,072 Mobile 2,141 . Ham- Havre, 220 . 3,890 3,710, Bre- Liver- 620,137 470,917 active and firmer last Saturday, (the Liv¬ erpool advices reporting more doing at 12d. for middling Up¬ lands) and continued to rule steady until Tuesday morning, when Liverpool being reported quiet and a heavy failure hav¬ ing transpired here, prices took a downward turn. On Wed¬ nesday the pressure to sell continued,^and yesterday prices were still lower, feverish, and almost panicky, middling Up¬ lands selling as low as 25c.; the cable quoting llfd. in Liver¬ pool. To-day there is great irregularity ; gold, under the in¬ fluence of the war news from Europe, has sold as high as 139, but this has failed to impart firmness to the cotton market, as it is thought the effect of war will be further to depress prices. The demand to-day is mainly for spinning, shipments being stopped by the difficulty of selling bills* of exchange drawn against cotton. The sales of the week are about 14,000 bales. Friday, P. M., April 19, 1867. . Upland. Florida. 22 Mobile 22 . N. Orleans & Texas 23 Ordinary $ 22 receipts of Cotton this week at all the ports show a 24 24 23 Good Ordinary ‘ 23 25 25 24 Low Middling further decrease, the total reaching 27,790 bales, (against 24 26 26 25 Middling 25 29 28 27 Good 27 Middling SI,995 bales last week, 39,252 bales the previous week, and The exports of Cotton this week from New York show a 42,507 bales three weeks since,) making the aggregate receipts since September 1, this year, 1,616,077 bales, against 1,708,- large decrease, the total shipments amounting to only 10,434 bales against 20,640 bales last week. The particulars of 197 bales for the same period in 1865-6. The details of the these shipments are as follows : week’s receipts are as follows: To Liverpool, per steamers—Virginia, 1,622 City of Dublin. 170— The Receipts. I Received this week at— Received this week at*— Receipts. Texas bales 439 8,405 j Florida 779 1,925 North Carolina 2,575 ) Virginia 2,567 3,737 I Total receipts for week 27,790 4,491 I Tennessee, Kentucky, &c 2,872 j bales New Orleans Mobile Charleston Savannah •. : - this week are less again, amounting only 42,924 bales (against 65,061 bales last week, The exports • in all to and 90,- > &c., we de iuct such port from other certain amount shipped receipts must be de¬ We are thus par¬ gome of our readers fail to understand it, * In this table, as well as in our general table of receipts, from the receipts at each port tor the week all received at Southern ports. For instance, each week there is a from Florida to Savannah, which in estimating the total ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. _ ticular in pie statement of this fact, as City of Antwerp 1,123 ...Olympus ter, 432 (additional) 126 — City of Manches¬ Foster, 1,013. Per ships—Daniel Webster, 2,401... James Total bales.. To Havre, per steamer—Ara?o, 924. Total bales To Bremen, per steamer— Hansa, 687 ...Per bark—Stella, 456. bales. To Hamburg, per To Antwerp, per bales.. Total ®.£87 924 1,143 steamer—Germania, 672. Total bales steamer—Ottawa, 601....Per ship—Tyro, 207. Total 672 808 Below we give our table showing the exports of Cotton from New York, and their direction for each of the last four * The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated. t These are the receint* at all the ports of Florida to April Apalachicola, which are only to April 5. X Estimated. The stock at New York is also estimated. Tennessee 12, except I 498 THE CHRONICLE. weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September 1, 1866; and in the last column the total for the same period of the previous year : Mar. [April 20,1867. 2.... 20,576 33,600 9.... 17,312 17,500 16.... 13,359 a\600 22.. 14,589 22,700 29 10,874 16,050 26,408 288,930 31 @31* 9-16®— 20,489 284,337 29 @— 9-16© — 25,895 219,971 30 @— %@9-16 “ 22,077 213,376 30 @— 9-16®— “ 40,010 185,954 29i@30 9-16®— April 5..9,751 16,500 18,710 177,864 29 @— 9-16@% 13.... 8,405 14,550 21,780 167,241 9-16@% “ “ ... Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1866 WEEK ENDING Total EXPORTED TO March April 26. Liverpool April 2. 16,074 Other British Ports 14,131 date. 6,057 14,131 15,550 578 2,070 .... Total French .... 485 Bremen and Hanover 16,029 6,SS7 268,235 336,262 924 14,770 27,358 6 8 .... 678 2,070 924 14,776 27,366 1,791 2,560 1,299 1,143 460 23,862 14,492 672 808 10,940 12,871 3,299 1,878 2,628 38,101 29,241 860 800 1,014 1,660 1,021 2,163 Hamburg «... Other ports Total to N. Europe.. 264 264 2,427 3,354 . .. 3,020 .... All others 800 .... Spain, etc 19.466 .. 800 .... Grand Total Receipts of cotton Sept. 1 : prev. year. 6,887 262,173 320,233 15,550 ' Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar 18.363 at the port ... .... i .... 110.444 20,640 7 393.890 322.772 of New York for the week and since From New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile Since week. Bales. Sept. 1. . 1,657 1,018 109,476 '40,919 8 ,015 987 . From 24,297 Florida s.... Total lor the week. Total since Sept. 1, South Carolina North Carolina Norfolk, Baltimore, <fcc. Per Railroad 29,496 — 8,405 532,120 The following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬ tember 1: .—Boston.—> Last week. 9.740 Receipts from— New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile Florida South Carolina North Carolina Virginia New York, &c*. Total receipts... * /—Baltimore.—, Since week. Sep. 1. 58,747 13,370 13,774 304 9,098 79 4,120 Last week. 207 45 27,662 si 6,794 40 1,972 78 660 8.603 6 743 242 16 . 4 6,152 459 '200 86 . 585 41,431 506 22,839 8,455 Since Sep. 1. ‘951 1,962 , ... Last Sep. 1. ... Tennessee, Kentucky, &c... Philad’phia.^ Since .... 192,9C6 429 .... 5,777 2,134 121416 .... tl6,892 .... 381 27,837 Reshipments. t This does not include the railroad The exports from these cities and from Portland this week have been as follows : Exported this week. Total bales. From Boston to Liverpool,-per steamer China, 179 From Philadelphia to Liverpool, per steamer Peruvian, 220 From Portland to Liverpool, per steamship Belgian, 103 179 220 103 making the total from the these cities for the week 502 bales. Shipping News.—We have given above the vessels in which the foreign shipments for the week were made from the at 148^(©I49 for bankers. Galveston, April 6.—We have received one week’s later statement by mail from Galveston. The receipts for week ending April 5, were 3,927 bales, against 4.751 last week, and the shipments were 6,919 bales,of which 1,883 bales were to Liverpool, 3,172 bales were to New York, 880 bales to Boston, and 984 bales were to New Orleans. Below we give the receipts, and shipments for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week : -Receipts-^, Date 1866. Feb. 1... 6,896 Northern ports; we now add the gard to the Southern ports : same information with re¬ Exported this week from— Total bales New Orleans—To Liverpool, per ships Nevada, 2,531 Elizabeth Leo 2.499 Cordelia Morris 2,932 — N. Mosher 2,631 per bark Carrie Wrighr 1,479 . 12,072 To To Havre, per ships Continent 2,581 Marcia Greenleaf 3,712.. Barcelona, per brig Vencedar, 451 To Malaga, per bark Espana, 410 To Cronstadt, per bark Hamingja, 1,429 To Genoa, per brig San Pasqnale 281 Mobile—To Liverpool, per ship North Wind, 2,141 Charleston—To Liverpool, per ship B. S. Kimball, 287 Sea Island and 8.682 Upland... per brig Susan E. Voorhes 126 Sea Island and 6,293 451 410 1,429 261 2,141 Upland 5 023 Galveston—To Liverpool, per ship O. Thven, 1,883 Norfolk, Va.—To Liverpool, per steamer Brazilian, 1,610 H. L. Gilliett 390 per 1,883 brig 2,000 . Total eTDorts this week from Southern ports New Orleans, April 18.—The mail '1 31,988 returns for the week ending April 12, show a further decrease in the receipts, the total for the week being 8.405 bales, against 9,751 bales last week, and 10,874 hales the previous week. The shipments for the last week were 21,780 bales, of which 12,072 bales were to Liverpool, 6,293 to Barcelona, 1,4*29 to St. Petersburg, 281 to Genoa, 44 to Havre, 861 to and 800 to Boston. Stock 8... 5,299 15... 7,351 22 6,096 “ “ . “ 2Q April 4,751 Philadelphia, hand April 12, was 167,241 bales. receipts, sales and exports for a series of weeks, and the stock, of middlit g, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and of gold at the close of each week since Feb. 1, were as follows: on The . 6,040 4,215 10,433 33,300 26,543 243,248 8i*®— wM 3,806 6,289 1,234 1,252 9,711 4.296 9,120 6,919 York, by sail, £c., and by steam l£c, To Boston £c. Mobile. April 13.—By mail we have received one week’s later dates receipts for the week ending April 12 were 1,925 bales, against 2,741 bales last week, and the shipments were 3,568 bales, of which 2,141 were to Liverpool, 100 to Boston, and 1,317 bales to New Orleans, leaving the stock on hand and on shipboard, not cleared, of 43,071 bales. The following are the weekly receipts, sales and exports for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the from Mobile. The close of each week: sollsi 9-16@— 1 Its*© ~ To Freight—, To New Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. Stock- mid. L’pool. 6,593 “ 8 15 “ 22 Mar. 1 “ 8 “ 15 “ 22 “ 29 10,072 8,450 9.400 6,581 9,701 3,050 9,911 9,500 6,900 9,100 12,095 5,037 6,800 7.476 3,137 3.400 2,472 3,387 9,950 4,587 3,576 6,850 3,429 2,611 5,350 21,735 2,741 3,300 10,049 1,925 3,150 3,558 Apr. 5 “ > Price of Date. Feb. 1. 12 74,633 30%@— 81,655 30 ®— 30 ®— 30 ©— 78,325 73,130 71,116 71,781 70,389 71,136 52,012 44,704 29$®30 28 @29 @- Price of York. % % % % % % gold. 1%®1% 134'® 135 1)4® l 1%©1 IX© % 1 © % 1 .. 9-16 28*®— 9-16 28 ©28% 9-16 26*©— % 24*@25 9-16 43,071 The market this week has been dull, — — — — drooping and 136 ©137 135}@137 136 ©133 1321 ©139* 135 ®— © % © % ® % © % © % © % un 1344®136 135 ©136 135 135 137 ©136 ©1354 @138 ettled. Our quotations at the close are about 2 cents lower than a week ago, but at that price factors are offering very sparingly, while on the other hand buyers are holding off for still lower figures. Freights show but little change, we quote Liverpool 9-16d. per sail, and per steam coastwise £c. Exchange, bankers’ on New York fc. premium, com¬ mercial £c. premium. Sterling exchange 144@145. • European, Indian and other Cotton Markets.—In reference to these markets correspondent in London, writing under date of April our 6, states:* Liverpool, April 3.—The supply of most descriptions of cotton on large, and as scarcely any business is passing of a speculative nature, prices have further declined. As compared with Saturday last, common and medium Sea Island cotton shows a fall of Id. to 2d.; fine American cotton, ^d., common and medium do., $d ; Braziliau, £<!.; Egyptian, Jd to 4d.; Smyrna, £d.: ai d East Indian, The per lb. sales of the week amount to 69,910 bales, comprising 780 bties on speculation; 12,860 bales for exp rfc, and 46.300 bales to the trade. The latest quotation for cotton to arrive, so far as regards American produce, ip 12Td. per lb., and from New Yoik, ship nuroed, basis of middling. The quotations for American cotton are now as under: sale is Ordinary and 19 13 Sea Island.... Stained middling. 11%@12 Annexed is ties of,cott« n 1867. Fair and good fair. 21 14 24 15 28 17 32% 14% 12% 14% 14% 15% 15% 14% 15% 13 13 15% — * For latest 1866.- Good and tiDe. Mid. 38 64 33 18 20 5 22 18 . , • • • • • . 24 18% 13% • 18% . news — respecting the Liverpool cotton market 26 19% , • -> Fair. Good 60 38 :»%' 20% • i0 a statement showing the prices curreut of middling at this date in each of the last four years : .. ss\m 36,163 24 ®— 1 30,621 21 @— (it— 31,400 22%@— %©— 1)4®— 136*@13S* 85,365 22 @— 9-16® % i %@- 137 ® _ 38,170 21 — % l%i<n— 138| 140 33,336 21 ®— 1 %@- 133 ®l: 5 41,386 20)4®—11-16®% 1 %@— 135J @1354 37,544 21 @%@ 1%@- 135 @1354 33,175 21 ®—13-16 @% 1%@- 134 ©1354 30,183 20 @-13-16®- 1%@- 134 @134* York.t gold. 1%©- 135 @137 1%©% 1361 ©133 pool. Specie. t Per steamer. The effect of the unfavorable accounts from Liverpool this week has been to check transactions almost entirely, holders not being willing to sell at the decline. Great confidence is felt that there will be an up¬ ward turn to prices before long. The market closes dull and quota¬ tions are nominal. Exchange—sight on New York we quote cotton bills Per cent. discount selling, and Bankers bills £ per ceut. premium. Freights to Liverpool are slightly easier the demand being very limited. Engagements can be made at 13-16, and a lower figure would have to be accepted for charter. To New “ jv 4,086 12/88 mid.* * Texas Price To Liver To New Price Date. Rec’ps. Sales. Exp. Stoek. Mid. pool York.* gold. Feb. 1.. 41,656 82,000 23, <43 251,727 31*@— 1 © - 135' 8.. @135)4 26,030 30,200 31,103 248,850 31 ®9-16©1 ®- 137%© 15. Price Exp. 2,597 11%@12 price Upland Mobile price New Orleans. 11%©12 11%@12 -Freights- v To Liver- To New Stock, 2,274 1,379 5... 3,927 Freights. Price 1865. 4,568 8.:. 6,494 4,134 15... 4,957 4,337 22 8,180 2,790 March 1... 7,766 2,721 . 933 were s receipts at Philadelphia. 137%@137% only 14,550 bales. Domestic Exchange has ruled firm, bank¬ checking on New York at £ premium. The rate for commercial has been |@7 16 premium for New York sight. Sterling Exchange closed Since Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. 1,245 45,080 531 28,941 601 68,443 2,366 103,453 134 ©135* 1S4%@135 184%@135 133%@134 ers week. Bales. — The market the past week has been very unsettled and irregular, the unfavorable European advices having an extremely depressing influence. Neutialized in part, however, by the rise in gold towards the close, but quotations were merely nominal, so we omit them. The sales for the “ This %©%@X®— %@- —@ —@ —% By steam. . This . * week 16,554 .. . to 16 .... 485 Other French ports April. 9. 480 Total to Gt. Britain.. Total Same time “ —@ — —@— • •• quali — see patches at the close of oar Loudon letter pj 3, previous part 0i CoxawftciAP & Financial Obwhiclx, Telegraph des¬ pqper.—[■£<?. 499 THE CHRONICLE. April 20,1867.] 1864. 1865. 1866. 1S6T. 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867.1 d. d a. d. d. d. d. Middling— 21 33 39 12# 18# 13# j Pernambuco. 26 7 10. 12 16 26 12# 1 Broacb 14# 18 12 7 10 16# 26# 14# 18# 12#i Dhollerah... The market for Kentucky Leaf was very active up to yes¬ terday. The absence of belligerent news from Europe early in the week caused a revival of the shipping demand, and the 26# 14# 18# 13 J sales foot up fully a thousand hbds., almost wholly for export. The following statement shows the stocks of cotton in London and Liverpool, and the supplies of American and Indian cotton at present The market was very firm throughout, and good heavy sorts afloat to Europe: improved lc. per lb. The prices paid ranged from 5 to 18c. 1867. 1866. d. Middling— Sea Island.... 38 . . .. . .. . - London “ American cotton afloat Indian “ 667,980 d3,‘ 90 663,840 .hales. Stock at Liverpool 58,584 160,000 688,960 120,000 3,511,324 1,157,450 - 326,180 d»>m, from January 1 to bales, against ‘208,594 bales last date, amounted to only 162,023 Of these quantities 70,519 and 37,417 bales, in 1866 and 1867 respectively, were American produce. year. Average ' weekly sates 1867. i860 17,710 5,060 3,980 4.560 4,250 3,580 1,320 11,040 12,810 16,540 has been ness This week. 60,782 5,080 American Brazilian 146 2.153 Egyptian "VYest Indian 1,700 Eastlndian China and 1866. 1867. Total This 1866. day. Sume date 1866. Dec. 31 1866. 465,598 466,341 1,156,130 369.890 307,430 167,270 153,049 107,518 88,231 30,049 23,785 101,313 302,742 404,865 83,7-20 41.760 200,083 90,274 1,544,675 12,993 64,330 21,260 127,010 1,770 87,390 47,680 207,740 2,680 23,180 11,620 270,100 2,840 3,409,020 667,980 663,840 516,770 110.814 4C Japan 10,920 we Friday, P. M., April 19, 1867. We Lave this week large exports of lihds. of to baeco from New York, in fact so large that the total shipments are more than they have been for several weeks, although the other ports have sent only 5 hhds. and 24 cas is. The re¬ ceipts at New York continue quite liberal, and at Baltimore they are increasing, so that we look for more activity on the part of shippers soon, especially at the latter port. The ex¬ again active, but firm. this week include 1,948 hbds against 937 hhds last week, 141 cases against 982 cases last week, 1G1 bales against 51 bales last week, and 406,970 lbs. manufactured against 75,175 lbs last week, as may be seen in the following statement: ' ports Pkgs. 5 Baltimore San Francisco 161 24 Light. Heavy. Common Lugs.. 4 (.0 4#c. @ Good Lugs :. 4#@ 5# 5#@ 6# CommouLeaf... 6 @ 7 7 @ S# Medium do 7#@ 9# 9 @11# . give (BOXES). ED LEAF .15 “ “ Old 406,970 65 S3 308 2 9 44 150 75.175 179 102,909 our @16 Running 9 Fillers: New York Ohio ber the United States since Novem¬ 1, 1866. ~ Cer’s& /—Stems—, Pkgs. Cases. Bales, tcs. Stps. hhds. bales. &bxs, 346 218 1,084 273 643 6 1,886 10,922 3,602 248 29S 3S 16 25 466 481 60 50 ' Hbds. To 3,441 Great Britain 13,592 Germany Belgium 2,845 5,382 3,697 3,629 Holland Italy * France Spain, Gibralt.&c 3,999 Mediterranean 1,086 ... 14 932 Austria Africa, &c China, India, &c. • , 166 99 470 1 Mexico Honolulu, &c All others . . .. • ... , . . ... . . ... 217 . 39 494 549 268 1 41 . . • 97 • ... . . 542 1,300 . 15 Australia B. N. Am. Prov.. South America... West Indies East Indies .. . ..., . 5 . • 1 T’l since Nv. 1, ’6639,403 * r. • . . . . • . • . . • ... • • . «... . % . • • • • • • , • . • ... ... • • • 7,793 254 273 2,184 .. 8,100 13,262 36,411 18,215 473,006 47,605 ‘k 104.966 253,772 428,449 3,3i2 50 8,906 3,404 -4,162,724 following table indicates the ports from which the above exports have been shipped : -Stems—,Bxs. & Lhs. The Tc«. & From New York Baltimore Boston Portland New Orleans Philadelphia Hhds. Cases. Bales. ..17,363 .18,032 . 20 .. . 21 Total since Nov,-1, ,39,403 Strp s. bhds. bis. pkgs. mant’d. 273 1,343 8,967,596 1,1 87 12 ' 150,703 1,097 30 1,511 erns. 195 ^ ... * • ... - ... f. . . 14 • • . 25 20 81 4 430 ... 3,125 Virginia 25 2,038 1,242 San Francisco V 13,101 6,526 ■ • • . ... ... ... ... . . • . . 44,426 8 ... 15,783 7,793 29 254 @20 .. “ @.. 30 @22 @ 6 6# @11 5 @10 5 @11 @ 8# 5 5 4 “ 8 .. 3 Pennsylvania Fillers Ohio and .. @15 @.. @. manufactured. Black work—com., tax good Fine, tax paid. 80 @1 96 work,medium, in bond 12#@18c 20 @3Cc g< od & fine Bright v ork, medium... “ 15 @4Gc good & fine “ 50 @S6c paid. 25 @30c 11 40 @-c’5c “ 60 Black @70c 25 @40c 45 @75c Bright work—common “ good “ Havana.—Fillers—Common. “ Good Fine “ The Nov. 1, Havana.—Wrappers 60@ 70 75@ 85 90@1 00 1 25@2 50 55@1 05 60® 70 Yara Yara, average lots receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since have been as follows: RECEIPTS AT SINCE YORK NEW Virginia Baltimore New Orleans hhds. pkgs. 107 1.360 92 1,664 1,824 Total 1. 1866. ^-T’l sin. Nov. 1-^ hhde. pkgs. plvL'S. hhds. 3.377 , 1,754 1,213 53 Ohio, &c NOVEMBER /—Previously—% /—This week—•, From 35,302 2,250 3,484 86,662 1,754 2,343 350 1,296 850 11,*47 11,306 13,249 1,402 9,642 252 124 528 124 780 3,106 16,140 50,277 17,964 53,383 following are the exports of tobacco from New York past week : The for the EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM YORK.* NEW Stems, Manuf., Hhds. Cases. Bales.Tierces hhds. 35 14 4r0 Liverpool ..., Hamburg.. . 2 60 706 439 ..... Leghorn Gibraltar ... .... • • . . . 4 ... ... 2,184 ... 100 Total . , . .. 273 3,104 4 ,102,724 1,943 , . 117 151 have been as follows exports this week, 14,269 •• 65 2 * The exports in this table to European ports are made up fests, verified and corrected by aD inspection of the cargo. The direction of the 260,652 16,019 2,340 1,352 9 • export for the week... 8,100 , , , 11,127 , 100 New Granada Mexico British West Indies British N. Ain. Colonies . .. . . *58 .... 41,662 . . 65 61 265 Malta lbs. 51,449 . . Antwerp 406,970 from mani¬ from other ports, : From Baltimore—To St. Johns, P. R., 3 hhds To Demerara, From San Francisco—To British Columbia, 24 cases. Kentucky.—At ''Louisville, last week, the market and buoyant, but the close indicated some concession 2 hhds. opened active on the lower The 6ales of the week were about. 900 hhds., on the basis of the following quotations—Common lugs 21 @3, fair to good 3^@5, com¬ mon leaf 5@7, medium 8@$1, fair to good 1‘2@16, good to fine 17@ 26, fancy wrapping 2u@oO. The aggregate sales at Louisville for the mouth of March were 3,870 hhds. Receipts for the week ending April 6th 845 hhds. Stock on hand 3,611 hhds. For the week ending the loth the offerings were mostly of the poorer sorts, for which there was little or no demand, but the market was active and firm for medium and better grades. The sales of the 18th were 167 hhd9, including 6 hhds. at $2 85@2 95 ; 28 at $3@3 50; 16 at $4@4 80 ; 4 at $5 25@5 90 ; 12 at $6@6 76 ; 18 at $7@7 90; 9 at $8 10@8 80: 15 at $9@9 90; 21 at $10@10 75 ; 9 at $1 l@ll 75 ; 3 at $12 25@12 75 ; 9 at $13@18 75: 4 at $14@14 75, 4 at $15@l5 75 ; 2 at $16 25@16 75; l at $17 25 ; 3 at $18($18 75. New Orleans.—There has been a considerable increase in the re¬ ceipts, but nothing of moment done, and quotations are nominally un¬ changed. Receipts of the week 165 hhds. Exports none. Stock on hand 1,695 hhds. Maryland.— At Baltimore receipts continue to increase, end we no¬ tice more activity on the part of shippers, favored by ihe advance in gold. New crop continues mostly in demand and very full 76^893 grades 5 ... ... 15,783 853,256 177,742 • ... . • lhs. 1,658,268 902 374 231 . . • Manfd, . 435 2 ... . - • . . ... ... • • ... ... ... . . • • • • ... • . •• 47 ... . ... ... ... • . ... . 2,438 • • , . ... • . ... 1,062 . . 30 . . . ... ... ‘ . ... @15 @ia Crop of 1865 6 @8# Running Lots Pennsylvania “ New York Fillers Crop. . Exports of Tobacco from 12 16 19 55 @70c. 25 @55 Selections Connecticut Wrappers, London Bremen usual table showing the total exports of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their direction, since November 1, 1866 : we Heavy. Light. 10 @12c. 13 @14 .. lbs. 406,970 65 _ 161 51 150 (HHDS.). Good Leaf... Fine do Selections .. Main’f, .... 141 98*2 701 1,948 Total this week 987 Total last week Total previous week.. 1,066 » .... «... .... -Stems hds. hales, . Bals. Tcs,&c. & bxs. 2 , CURRENCY. IN LEAF KENTUCKY very Exported this week from Hhds. Case. 117 1,943 New York In foreign Manufactured Tobacco is less sales. no 45 do. FOE RIGN. TOBACCO. Below hear of fine 815,2921,034,188 69,861 Total have only to notice we 6@b*^c.; Tobacco war¬ have again In Seed Leaf, the busi¬ sales of 31 cases State at 5-J-c.; 118 do. Ohio Ohio 9c.; 77 do. Pennsylvania on private terms. “ To this To this date date limited scale, and a ou 40 20 767,320 848,440 38,060 40,850 59,940 780 46,300 12,860 Total brought the market to a stand still. QUOTATIONS SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Total Total Same this Ex- Specula- this period I860. tion. week. vear. Trade. port. 293.890 375,040 350 28,410 American hales. 31,240 4.820 5.970 73,300 10 *,360 Brazilian 4,050 1,920 4.080 73,010 00,510 3,770 Egyptian 310 120 20,960 2,310 22,250 West Indian 1,010 580 310 19,04 > 303,710 207,970 East Indian 13,030 5,100 130 1,500 2,6U0 China and Japan 130 The for common to fine, and 20@22c. for selections. like reports from Europe, yesterday and to-day, * brings 500 THE CHRONICLE. prices, bat old crop, common and frosted neglected. Sales for the 400@500 hhds., within our range annexed. Ohio and Kentucky remain inactive, and prices nominally unchanged. Inspections for the week 679 hhds. Maryland (32 rein«pected), 231 Ohio and 6 Virginia— total, 916 hhds. We quote as followp, viz : ■week Maryland frosted to com’n sound common. 3.00 Maryland upper country.. $3.00®30.00 50® 4 00 ground leav. hew 3.00® 5.00 trnnd “ 5.00® 5.50 Ohio inferior to good com. 4.00® 6.00 middling........ 6.00® S.00 brown and spangled. 7.00®12 00 ood to tine b'wn 10.00®15,< 0 g’d & fine red & spgld 13.00©17.00 S'aucy 17.00@25.00 fine yellow & fancy.. 20.00®30.00 n 3 “ •• » “ TOBACCO Stockist Jan., 1867 Inspected this week do STATEMENT 19,595 Total t oastwise & reinspected 3,392 Lake Forts.—The at following lake ports for the Flour. bbls. 23,382 3,509 Chicago Milwaukee Toledo Detroit Cleveland shipboard Previous'week 41,516 41,799 63,723 not cleared 15,132 BREADSTUFFS TO From New York New Orleans 72,383 284,513 78.220 201,957 GREAT BRITAIN AND Friday, April 19, 1S67, P. M. To about do ' 60,523 41,738 16,352 18,992 5,494 885,912 176 565 period, 1866.. same do do 1665.. 1864.. THE 4,644,417 3,345 232,684 474,300 3,bl9 1865 1864 16,155 114,773 3,511,288 5,667,656 124,073 1,198,969 94,683 6,212,448 1,505,071 777,652 73,359 9,544,832 240,220 . . Rye, bbls. bush. 2,164 151,882 19 period, 1S66.. do do 3,143,718 16,332 Wheat, ' 151,882 221,836 33,147 13,965 it in France 73,971 6S,111 10,360 83,463 10,985 9,032 are progress, but much more with Wheat. The markets here and dull but firm. There are at sea from New York for this Average price of wheat - 60s. lid. 44s. lid . . Flour, Superfine.. $ Extra State Western, 12 25®13 00 com¬ mon to good 11 50® 14 00 Double Extra Western and St. Louis 14 50®19 00 Southern supers 12 25®13 40 Southern, fancy and ex. 14 00®18 00 Rye Flour, fine and super' fine Corn meal, Jersey 7 aud Brandywine Wheat, Chicago Spring per bushel Sept. 1,1866, to March 31,1867.. 5 75® 8 50 60® 6 20 Same time last year ..." 12 25® • Corn, Western Mixed.... Western Yellow Western White Bbls. • 7 Oats, w Western cargoes... Jersey and State 30® 2 80 RECEIPTS AT 890,565 3,570 42,250 79 1 20 35 1.25® l 40 1 75® 8 *5 as follows: YORK. 1867 For week. S’e Jan. 1. 33,830 i 3i 1 20® 1 White beans , Corn meal, bbls. 71® 78® 87® p?0Ialtn* ” ” "a Canada NEW 3c® 1 40® 1 58 B“le£ Peas 2 3 9{V7h 3 40 l 28® l .33 1 31® 1 33 1 105,005 303,575 488,585 1866 For week, 33,440 250 of articles in the 3,518,645 5 344 . Sacks. 10,544 5S0 11,124 32,064 299,232 66,662 403,646 UNITED KINGDOM. I. corn, Qrs. 1,432,059 1,620,096 Otb. grn., FI. & Ml. 2,854,060 2,179,915 2,255,541 Qrs. Cwt. 3,608,953 Friday, April 19, 1867—P. M. active market for all kinds generally less Grocery trade, more especially in first hands. a Jobbing bouses report a continued fair business. The fluctua¬ tion in gold renders prices almost nominal from day to day, and the liberal receipts of some articles have supplied the market and caused a slight decline. The business to day has been rather quiet, but the market closes generally steady. TEA. Tea has been dull and Jan. 1. 458,970 116,675 68,785 488,930 13,130 3,525 There has been , ; 3,203,890 339 GROCERIES. » so® 885 ® Jersey Yellow Wheat, Qrs Flour.——s / 2 80 6* Wh-.er w hite The movement iu breadstuff's at this market has been Flour, bbls. THE are Shippin^R. hoop Ohio. Extra middling at rather heavy. per qr. 59,813 qrs. 53,463 qrs. . closing quotations : bbl $10 15®11 25 SVw k?e Club11 .*;0®13 20 Red Winter 41.803 port about 10,000 quarters Indian Corn. On Tuesday we had a fair attendance, and some excitement was cre¬ ated by the purchase of 2,000 to 3,000 quarters California Wheat for immediate shipment to New York; prices of such advanced 3d. per cental in eensequence. Flour was scarcely more easily sold. Indian Corn was sparingly offered, apd Is. per quarter dearer. To-day our market was not largely attended, but a good consump¬ tive business passed in white Wheat at an advance of quite 2d. over Tuesday’s currencies. Flour steady. Indian Corn is again dearer, 41s. Sd.@41s. 6d., being the current quotations for mixed American, yellow 40s. 6d.@40s. 9d. days—millers taking small following 10,360 215,236 last year's good No. 2 Club at $2 60@$2 65 Last week's deliveries from doing heavy. farmers Corn has advanced on the war Corresponding week last year. news from the Continent to $1 .30, and has remained all the week near that FOREIGN IMPORT THIS WEEK. Yester¬ day a strong declining tendency was arrested infigure. the afternoon Wheat, I. corn, by the advance in gold, consequent on the qrs. qrs. intelligence of the 10,998 18,893 &c Europe, disruption of negotiations between France and Prussia. There 18,353 1.082 was an advance of one cent to-day. 29,351 19,975 The speculation in 429,812 350,118 rye having subsided, prices declined five 396,276 cents 447,455 per bush., but there is a brisk demand for 0 The bush. 62,185 .... 2,183 4,077 13,801 Com, bush. 11,786 Liverpool, April 5th.—-Spring sowing has made good is now too late to do continues close bush. 847,e93 291 Flour, Total same 313,985 200,518 CONTINENT. From New York, to April 12, 1S67. Other ports, to latest dates.. To about do do 1M>44 16,051 Corn, bush. 40,500 88,791 FROM SEPT. Wheat, 19,508 772 248 IRELAND 50,855 .... TO 20 cents per bushel above this market, with the demand fully for milling at those mar¬ kets exceeding the supply. Our business in Spring has been mainly restricted for some Barley 834 3,360 Flour bbls. 5,1867.. “ 12, 1S67.. “ 5; 1867.. “ 12, 1867.. ...Mar. 8, 1867.. do Wheat has sympathized with flour, especially growth. Early in the week an advance of flve cents perspring was bushel obtained for choice Winter Wheats4 with considerable activity, especially in California, of which the supplies mainly consist. This advance has since been maintained although business has nearly ceased. The Western markets have been excited, and Oats have been dull, and is unsettled and merely nominal. bush. 88,019 .... Total closed dull. the close. Rye. 11,910 2,825 2,752 5,460 .... Boston San Francisco Other ports irregular and depressed, except when stimulated by the rise in gold, strong reports from Liverpool, or the war intelligence from the -Continent. Flour has come forward moderately, and the trade has bought sparingly. All speculative confidence seems to have, abated; hut the fact that all Western markets are rela¬ tively higher, than this, with little prospect of any considerable shipments East—barely sufficient to meet our pressing de¬ mands—serves to maintain quotations. There is also some apprehension that in the event of a European war,” Liverpool may advance largely, and stimulate renewed in speculation this market; for till we have larger supplies we must keep above Liverpool. market lots of 50,750 Date. ...April 12, 1S67.. Baltimore BREADSTUFFS. Chicago and Milwaukee 6,650 Barley, bush. 149,5t<l 633,372 79,776 830,807 2,274,193 8,263,178 1,198,155 683,793j 2,726,584 4,232,040 1,428-031 Philadelphia The 16.627 6.467 Oats. bush. 32,459 17,027 1, 1 866. Manufactured Tobacco—G od common and medium Virginia, in sound condition, is scarce and in good request. The tone of the market has been 42,644 3,742' Stock to-day in warehouses and on Corn. bush. 113,971 7,629 101,314 7,849 4,279 Totals EXPORTS OF following shows the receipts ending &pril 13 : week Wheat. bush. 6,604 Since Jan. 1, 1S67 Same time, 1866 ..^ 9,196 24,328 Weekly Receipts at the Corresponding week, ’66 Cleared for foreign ports. 5,804 916 3,817 previously [April 20,1867. The business is unsettled in first hands principally from second hands, and during the week. Jobbers who are buying as their wants require. The fluctuations in gold unsettled prices and quotations are nominal. The sales for the week include 40,780 71.085 311.250 4,550 257,500 3,910 397,550 8,600 half chests Japans, 400 do Oolongs, and 2,500 do Greens. FOREIGN EXPORTS FROM NEW Tha imports have continued to be YORK FOR THE WEEK AND SINCE JAN. 1 large the details for the week are as follows: C. meal, Wheat. Flour, per ‘Galatia’ from Whampoa 700 lbs. Rye, Barley. Oats, To Congou and Souch Com, bbls. bbls. bush. bush. bush. bush. bush. ong. ‘'Per “ Portland ’’from Whampoa 41,600 lbs. of Oolong aud Gt. Brit week Niog* Per “ Empress ” from Canton since Jan. 1 265,471 2,076 34,-100 lb*, of Pouchong. Per <% Alba¬ 25 14,086 6,515 729,033 98,7842,209,119 tross” from Foochow 10,806 lbs. N. A. Col. week.. 2,100 Congou and Souch. 154,133 lbs. Oolong since Jan. 1 and Ning. Per “ Liston ” from Yokohama 502,910 lbs. 26,776 7,655 Japans. Per 12*,962 We-t liut. week. Bonda ” from Yokohama 457,751 lbs. 1,901 480 Japans. Per“Chas. Rankin” If'5 since Jan. 1 890 62,947 27,257 from Nagasaki 406,090 lbs. of 675 2,581 Japans. Per Srnst and Maria” 24,900 32,634 Total exp’t, week 6,697 lbs. of Oolongs, and 731 580 200 105 268.361 pkgs. per “Helvetia” from Liverpool. At since Jan. 1, 1S67 122,731 37,744 34,322 : Boston the * Renown ” from 751,621 103.190 same time, 1S66. 2,267,914 308,178 38,230 100,296 : Shanghae and Foochow has arrived with Since Jail, l.from 592,0781,970,401 10,415 packages, chiefl/of black. Boston The following table shows the 41,812 1,821 500 shipments of Tea from China and Japan 257,576 976 Philadelphia 11,256 8,069 to the United States, from June 5,943 j3,654 Baltimore 246,096 1, 1866. to Feb. 15, 1867, and importa¬ 31,878 9,754 600 514,511 tions at New York and Boston since Jan. 1; Rye, bush. Barley, &c., busn. Oats, bush 40,545 ' 305 3,3'5 180,145 5,035 425 .... .... “ .... THE CHRONICLE. April 20,1867.] -IKP’TS ATN. -SHIPMENTS PROM CHINA AND JAPAN.- —To Atlantic ports.To San Feb. 1 to J une 1 to Same FranFeb. 13. Jan. 31. in ’65, cisco. lbs. Ib9. lbs. pkg«. Congou & Sou. Pouchong •••••• 1,654,736 1,041,614 309,283 9,047,737 8,141,966 742,049 132,084 1,236,838 6,586,498 1,245,503 1,521,619 4,476,078 374,163 Oolong&Ning 611,184 Twankay Hyson skin 52,505 1,556,775 Hyson Young Hyson Imperial Gunpowder 6,236,478 l ,453,697 1,508,905 Japans 5,458,983 Total. T. * BOSTON.—. Direct Indir’ct At at New At N. BosYork, York. ton. , lbs. 5,384 762,962 8,303,828 754.379 .... 9,438 10,496 prices are about $c. lower for Rio Other kinds aro in liberal receipts and also easier. The sales include 8,000 bags Rio principally on private terms, 400 do Maraciabo, 500 Laguayra, and 2,500 do. St. Domingo. The imports of the week have been considerable, amounting to 12,500 bags of Rio as follows: Per ‘ Amor” 4,000. Per '‘Unci’ Per “Svanen” 4,500, and of Java 5,352 bags, of Singapore 4,000. 5,422 bags, of Laguayra 4,048 bags, of St. Domiogo 400 bags, and 463 bags of sundries. At Baltimore 12,684 bags of Rio have been received by the .* Wavelet,” “ Adel. Pendergast ” and “ Winifred.’ At Philadelphia 2,900 bags of Rio per “ Hilna.” The imports since January 1, and stock in first hands April 16, . , s follows: OF BIO COFFEE. Import. Baltimore New Orleans Galveston Mobile “ “ 4,710 2,900 8,000 At New York, At Bost. import Stock. Imports, bags 21,773 3,661 19,454 Java, Ceylon “ ““ Singapore, * Maracaibo, “ Laguayra “ St. Domimgo,“ “ 3,200 “ “ 6,(KX) 2,500 “ Savannah Stock. 37,511 52,144 44,214 “ OTHER 80RTS. 149,310 Other, Total 261,438 K 9,728 5,660 5-6 5,719 531 2,558 74,411 26,652 raw. Refined has been good demand at steady prices. The fluctuations in gold cause our quotations to be rather oominal. 1 he sales for the week include abou^. 5,500 bhds. Cuba and Porto Rico, and 2,300 boxes Havana. The imports of the week include 2,604 Havana boxes, 5,202 Cuba hhas., 1,412 hhds. from other ports, and 11,682 baskets Java. At other ports imports have been on an average scale in Cuba boxes and hhds., and in other West Indian sugar. Other At- 50,334 Imports since Jan. 1. 39,076 do Portland 1,073 Boston do 7,301 7,288 Philadelphia do Baltimore do 3,824 New Orleans do 8,646 Total import * *hhds. 62,713 35,009 30,616 .... 57,951 1,417 8,974 85 13,291 3,074 1,874 87,579 762 1,781 2,406 5,961 .... 19,834 • ♦hhds. ,,,, .... 9.972 follows : Brazil, Ma. <fcj For’gu, Orleans, Total bags. bags,&c . ... are as New 32,659 N. York stock Same date 1866 ' v §1 40 Oolong, Common to fair.. do Superior to fine... 80 © 85 95 @1 25 hu @1 ... Super, to fine. .1 30 Ex fine to finest! 45 unp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 00 do Sup. to fine .130 do do Ex. f. to finest. 1 ti5 H. 8k. &Tw’kay,C, to fair. 65 do do Sup. to fine 75 c 00 I 70 @1 @1 @1 © © 15 55 9.! 70 80 • • • 117 60 .... .... 262 67,010 2,179 11,870 15,757 9,035 1,874 107,825 do Ex fine to finest ..I Souc & Cong., Com. to fair do Sup’r to fine. do Ex £ to finest! . Porto Rico Cuba, inf to do do do do do com. <{9 lb refining fair to good do ... fair to good grocery... pr. to choice do ... centrifugal Melado Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7to 9 do do hhds 65© 75 85 ©l 10 25 ©1 60 do 10 to 12 19 © D$© 17.© 16 © U$© Java,mats and bags Native Ceylon 19$ 1-j gold 24$© 95$ ... © . 17$ Maracaibo 17$© 16$ 16$ Laguayra. 17*© 15$ 8t. Domingo18« 16 © 16$ Sugar. ^do do ' de 18 to 15 11$© 12$ 10 © 12$ do do do 16 to 18 12*© 13$ 9|@ 1$ do do do 19 to 20 131© 14$ 10 © 10* do do white 10J@ 11 13$© 14$ Loaf 11*© 12 © 16 Granulated 9 © 11 © 15 6 © ", Crushed and powdered © 15 White coffee, A 9]© 10 © 14 10*© 1($ Yellow coffee © 13$ .... .. ITIolasses, : 8 cents New Orleans Porto Rico Cuba Muscovado $ gallon. '. ..^ gall. @ . do . gold $ lb 41© 13$© 8-“» © 85© Clayed....*.,.*.. ...©.. Spices. I Pepper, 1* 9 1 I (gold) Pimento, Jamaica.(gold) (sold) Cloves 87 47 ©52 ..... B.trbad-.ts. © 70 50 © 51$ on Ginger, race and A f(gokl) Mace Isold) Nutmegs, No! (gold) 21i« 19 21$ (i_ *T$© 33 Fruit. Raisins, Seedless. $cask 8 '5 ©.... do Layer 80 ©.... box 3 f.ft @3 65 do Bunch Currants I 1H© u $ ft* 20 © .(0 Citron, Leghorn 2" © .'I Prunes, Turkish Dates 12$© 33 © 44 Almonds, Languedoc do Provence © 80 do Sicily, Soft Shell 2 $© 22 85 © 16 Shelled ! do Sardines © *p box 80 © 81 do ^ hi. box Sardines *19 qr. box go d ^ lb Figs, amyrna Brazil Nuts. Filberts, Sicily SValnuts, DriilO Fruit— Apples $ lb Raspberries © 12 © 34 45 © 48 Unpeeled do Cherries, pitted, 87 © 42 13 © 16 50 © 52 Pared Peaches .. 18$© 18$ 23 © 26 35 © 16 ll © 11$ 13 © 1« 9 23 Blackberries .. new.... THE DRY GOODS TRADE. 106,537 10,051 54,54 159 - * • . 4,056 14,107 54,699 has been transacted. The market closes firm. The following table shows the exports of sugar and molasses from all t he principal ports of Cuba for the first two months of 1867 and 1866. Molasses, hhds 85 ©l 75 , April 13.—Sugar (clayed)—The market has shown more signs of animation this week than during the previous one, in conse¬ quence of the slight concession in prices made by some holders, and on the basis of 6$ to 7 rs. per arrobe for No. 12, a fair amount of business Sugar, boxes 90 85© 90 00 @1 05 10 @1 20 Coflee, Bio, prime, duty paid ...gold do good gold do fair gold do ordinary gold do fair to g. cargoes .gold 101,669 Havana. 1867. 1866. 138,645 50,352 6a,703 123,965 41,525 66,153 molaIses. Molasses has been active for the lower grades at improved prices while high grades are somewhat neglected and rather lower from libe. ral receipts. The sales include 3,000 hhds. Cuba and Porto Rico, and 1,300 hhds. English Islands. Ihe imports of the week have not been larger than the average, but include more of Porto Rico than any preuious week of the year—de¬ 2,360 hhds. of Cuba, 3,016 hhds. Porto Rico, and 1,969 ofDemerara and other foreign. At Boston 1,393 hhds, at Port¬ land 3,103 hhds., at Philadelphia 4,386 hhds., at Baltimore 1,174 hhds, and at New Orleans 1,419 hhds. have been imported. are as §1 00 85 © V Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads tails Ex fine to finest,..1 30 do do /—Duty raid—, do do Ex f. to fln’st Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair. do Sup’r to fine! do Ex f. to flneatl 1 25 l 60 .. Stocks, April 16, and imports since January 1, Cuba. boxes. ♦hhds. ♦hhds. do Cassia, In mats in , ... 34,85 active than most other articles, bu^ more Hysbn, Common to fair 85 do Superior to line ...1 1*' Duty 48,411 at the close the market is dull and inactive for for r-Duty pa'd.- . 9*151 SUGAR. generally Fruits have been less active (W) 10,791 2,490 7,743 5,736 13,71611,621 “ Total Sugar has been closing quiet. Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair Coffee has also been inactive and bags Philadelphia in small parcels and chiefly upon private terms, the Tea, 772,157 Exp’tsoth.p’ts 2,447,703 10,416 28,859,017 25,469,476 J 44,360 16,928,997 New York, are foreign dried, but prices are not essentially changed, with one or two exceptions. Green fruits have 9,326 81 arrived very liberally and prices rule low. Domestic Dried fruits are in From Europe 112 moderate demand at steady rates. From E’tlnd. We annex ruling quotations : COFFEE. are as Sales FRUITS. pfcg. all sorts From G’t Brit 900,031 103,493 7,635,223 243,837 44,360 prices. market 501 follows: I bid ay, P. M., April 19, 1867. The Dry Goods trade this week has been moderately active with a good degree of encouragement to holders of goods and manufactures, considering the continued dullness of cot¬ ton and the market abroad. The stocks of leading styles have become reduced, and prices show but little change from last week. Lower grades are dull and pressed on the market at a reduction. To-day being Good-Friday there is a partial interruption ot business. The reduction in prices has caused a very liberal export demand for both dry goods and domestics as the following particulars will show : --FROM NEW YORK.- Domestics. Exports to Liverpool pkgs. D, Goods. Val. London Havre Hamburg Cuba New Granada Brazil British W. Indies. Mexico Clsplatine Rep.... Chile St. Pierre British Provinces. Totalthis week. Since Jan. 1 Same time 1866... “ s-“ 1860... packages. 1 76 $950 9,450 3 1,5<:0 2 806 005 3 2 72 1 303 It 262 FROM BOSTON. Yal. , Domestics. DryGoods Pkgs. cases. 2,251 12,214 69 48,573 2,<>00 41.987 10 4 585 $92,029 159 2,309 328,083 871 144,482 2,388 913 29,032 .... $27,886 503,580 868,673 .... 14 8,038 221 18,685 Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are moderately standard makes at steady prices. Lower grades are active for the dull. Atlantis N 8-4 12$, Massachusetts 0 do 15, Indian Orchard L do 18$, Common¬ N. O. Cuba. ♦hhds. ♦hhds. At ♦hhds. bbls. wealth O do 9$, Union do 12$, Pepperell N dc 14, Indian Head do 4,800 J 7, Atlantic Y 7-8 17, Atlantic E do 16$, Pacific E do 16$. Tremont i. 1.29,005 6,300 7,805 6,831 E do 18$, Bedford R do 13, Boott O do 14$, Indian Orchard W do 14$, 445 Portland 4 18,508 769 Boston, “ 1,122 Pepperell O do 16$, Indian Head 4-4 21, Princeton A do 20, Pacific extra 16,541 1,530 203 81 984 do 20$, do H do 20$-, do L do 17$, Atlantic H do 20$, do A do 21, do L Philadelphia “ 21,426 Baltimore 8 “ 532 4,720 do 17$, Lawrence E do 18. do C do 20, do F do 17, Stark A do New Orleai s “ 12,073 20, Amoskeag A do 21, do B do 20$, Medford do 19$, Pittsfield A do 16$, 8,127 S,937 Kenebeck do 12$, Roxbury A do 19, Indian Orchard B do 15$, Sussex 102,273 9,550 F do 17, Newmarket C do 22$, Nashua D do 16$, Pepperell E do 19$, * Indudes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads. Great Falls M do 16, do S do 14$, Albion do 15, Dwight W do 17, SPICES. Pepperell R do 17$, Laconia E do 16, Exeter A do 16, Shannon do 16$, Spioxs have been in fair Jobbing demand at essentially unchanged Laconia B do 18, Laconia O 9-8 18, Pequot do 24$, Indian Orchard A Stocks, April 16, and imports since January 1 are as follows: ,—Porto Rico-r-Other Foreign.—» .... .... • • • • “ “ “ “ * . “ .... .. .... .... * 502 THE CHRONICLE. — [April 20.1867. ■ —.. - ^ 40 inch 19, dodo O 16$, Nashua 5*4 do 424-, Pepperell 7-4 35, Utica do 10-4 29, 60, 62$, Pepperell do 67$, Utica 11-4 90. pose 75, Pepperell do 77$. Ticks are quiet and prices are declining. Conestoga C M 42$, Amoskeag A C A 32 inch 4 8, no A 32 do 38, do B 32 do 83, do D 30 do 28, do C 30 do 28, Pemberton A A 36$, Brunswick 20, Blackstone River 20, Hamilton 34, do L> 32$, Somerset 17$, Thorn¬ dike 21, Pearl River 46, Harvest 34, Hancock A A 29, Pittsfield 11$, Bunberhill 24, York 32 inch 42$, do 30 do 32$, Cordis A A A 40, Ev¬ erett 22$, Boston A A 31, Swift River 20, Eagle 4 4 87$, Winuebago 12$, Baltic 12$, Albany 12$. Stripes are dull and prices are reduced. Amoskeag 28 and 29, Uncasville 18 and 19, Whittenton A A 27$ do A 3-3 26, do B B 2<‘, do C 18, Pittsfield 3-3 11$, Pemberton Awn 42$. Haymaker 20, Evereit *7 inch 20, Massabesic 6-3 27, Boston 20, Chester Dock IS and 19, Blackstone 17 and 18, American 17 and 18, Eagle 15 and 15$, Hamilton 27, Arkwright 16$,'Easton 16$, Jewett City 18 and 19, Sheridan G 18. Checks in light demand, at unchanged rates. Park Mills Red 22, Lanark fur 18$, Union 50 4x2 32$, do 50 2x2 82, do 20 4-2 80, do 20 2-2 80, Caledonia 15 inch 32$, do 11 inch 26$, Kenuebeck 30, Star No 600 15$, do No. 800 2x2 21$, do No 900 4 2 24, Cameron No. 90 21$* are The Richmond 14, Arnold 14, Gloucester 16$, Wamsutta 12$, Pacific dark 17 and 17$,Cocheco 18, Lowell 14, Naumkeag 13, Humilton 16$, Vic¬ tory 14, Home 11, Empire ^tate 10$, Empire 10$, Wauregau 14. Lawns and Ginghams are not as active as usual at this season. Lawns are lower. Lancaster Ginghams sell at 23 cents, Hartford 18, Caledonia (new) 20, Glasgow 21, Clyde 16, Berkshire 21, German 20, Roanoke 16, Bates 22$, Manchester 18. Canton Flannels are dull and nominal. Elierton N, Bro. 35, do O do 32$, do T do 19, Laconia do 28, Siaterville do 24, Hamilton do 28$, Rockland do 17, Naumkeag do 25, Tremont do 21, Scotts extra do 20, Whittendon do 22$, Elierton N Biea 87$, do O do 36, do P do 82$, Sal’n Falls do 31$, Methuen A do 32, Naumkeag do 25, Nashua A 20, Chicopee 22, Extra Plush 24. Corset Jeans are in steady moderate demand. Androscoggin 14. Bates colored 18$, do bleached 14, Naumkeag 20$ and 21, Pepperell 22, Naumkeag satteeu 23$, Laconia 2(>$ and 21, Amoskeag 21, New¬ market 16$, Lewiston 14, Indian Orchard 16, Berkeley 22, Rockport 20$, Quinnebaug 12, Tremont 12. Cambrics and Silesias are in good request at steady prices. Wash¬ ington cambrics sell at 13$ cents. Victory 12, do A 13, do high colors 14, Fox Hill 10$, Superior 11$, Smithfield 13. Waverly 12, S. S. Sons paper cambrics at 17, do high colors 19, White Rock 17, Masonville 17, and Indian Orchard Silesias 21$, Ward do at 21. Woolen Goods are still without improvement. Prices of most goods are lower and still nominal. A few new special makes of fine goods are wanted, and prices are steady. Mocjslin Delaines are rather less active, and prices are easier. All dark 28, Hamilton Co. 23, Manchester dark 28, Pacific dark 23, .Armorea dark 28, High colors 23, Pacific Merinoe 40, Mourning 28, Shep¬ hard checks 28, Skirtings 80. American Linen is in steady demand at unchanged prices. importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending April corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866, have been i* ENTERED FOB CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK 1866. * Value. Pkgs. Manufactures of wool... 430 $127,160 do cotton.. 283 69,563 do silk... 165 118.547 do flax 357 67,681 Miscellaneous dry gooaa. 48 20,967 Pkgs. 609 . 1,2S8 WITHDRAWN FROM $403,908 WAREHOUSE * Manufactures of wool... do do do « cotton.. silk flax .... .... 424 ' 272.295 205.381 603 383 699 124,631 1,717 $109,251 222,486 258,850 163,943 141,617 3,826 $956,147 $1,229,381 THROWN 1867. Value Pkgs. 1 INTO THE MARKET DURINo THE SAME PERIOD. $44,811 948 25,383 21,035 $422,7 9 619 201 13,471 2,353 556 703 182,372 202.270 150.779 378 385 167 2.575 20,135 1,614 $155,579 130,675 161,;-,81) 80,805 28,287 $107,053 403,908 3,027 4,o71 5,119 $556,726 3,826 956.147 *510,951 7,393 *2,213,676 110 "89 23 45 Miscellaneous dry goods. Total Add ent’d AND 4,371 18, 1867. , * 253 813 l,5fc0 .. , Value. *281,021 346,053 1,116 „ Total ENDING APRIL 1866. , , 9 276 forconsumpt’iil,2S8 Total thrown upon mak’t 1,564 $984,295 1,229,381 8,945 $1,512,873 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manulactures of wool... -- do do do 3 27 $1,454 1.078 cotton.. $489,287 silk flax 7,503 4 28 182,519 6.394 571 233 607 176 .... .... 6,665 Miscellaneous dry goods. .... Total 62 Add ent’d for consumpt n 1,283 $22,016 403,908 Total entered at the port 1,353 $425,924 $1,108,566 1,229,361 3,826 176,942 2,665 4,371 176,232 48,585 127 150 95 231 63 $52,745 47,751 106,687 53,249 20,ob7 666 7,026 $2,337,947 $280,819 956,147 4,492 $1,230,966 i jtijp o it x s (OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND WEEK SPECIE) ENDING AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE 12, 1867. APRIL [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Pkgs. Value Pkgs. Value Pkgs. Value. China, Glass & E. Oranges 39,215 Engravings.. .9 6.0!5 ware— Preserved gin¬ Paper 620 30,325 China 238 .952 14,633 ger 42.976 Prunes Glass 24,299 Glassware ...877 Glass plate.. 129 50,858 22,326 18,705 Raisins Sauces and pre¬ Earth’nw’e . Drugs, &c.— Alkali Acids 112 20 Argols 26 Anoline Aunatto Alum. cake.. .30 Bark Peruv.. 881 Bleu powd.. .557 ..1006 tons 659 13,662 11,929 25,642 313 Camphor .... 100 2 Chalk Cream tartar.46 8' Chickory Cochineal.. ..115 Cutch.... 43 Gamboge do do Glue 3,092 256 746 S,304 386 .5 128 arabic .10 1,856 copavi..lO 1,022 105 7,019 27,643 Indigo .. 187 Opium 42,0'9 Baskets 18 43,438 Bags ed 183 ed 121,737 Ale.. 455 Brandy ......230 Beer Cordials Gin 8,088 40,0(59 2,291 4 Wmes ./..155 Cutlery .......97 Guns 103 Gas fixtures.. 1 Hardware.... 137 4,884 1,000 Iron, RR. bars, 2.230 1,5< iU Iron, sheet, 2,479 3.431 Iron, other, do sal.. do ash.... 207 do caustic 135 do Hyp...2o0 Safflowers Sponges 55 Sumac ......2582 Vermillion 9. Whiting... .175 Yellow ochre. ..4 Other 778 887 87 6,045 3,150 2,250 638 6.10" 16,650 3,594 333 , 80 4,006 Furs, &c— Felting 2,054 662 10,843 4561 23,585 119 7,143 1662 52,196 62,308 4,180 tons tons. Lead.pigs. 11,304 Metal goods .29 . Needles 8 Nickel 4 Old metal latina ..1 ated ware... 2 Per caps 10 Steel 1777 .. . Tin, bxs..13,395 do slabs..6u5,35,086 Zinc, lhs..l 1,088 Nuts .. 4,346 1,68 3,970 1,559 482 1.788 30,7(K 90,385 6,559 643 162 .. ..43 29,18c Books Boxes 2,572 62 4.271 395 370 ....... Buttons..,. 76 25.S26 158 10,017 16,751 Clay 1,910 Cheese Cigars^ Coal, tons....345 2,020 Corks Cotton, bales.32 3,933 1,134 40 3,693 Clocks... ... Cocoa, bgs.. ..25 279 Coffee,bgs.1-9,381 632,314 Emery... ...140 1,629 Fancy goods 82,9i0 Fire c ackers... 68 Flax Fish Furniture 29,130 7.^88 1,277 151 Gunny cloth2167 41,642 Hair .,..61 8,177 32 9,291 8514 129,277 125 4,987 .15 825 Ind. rubber .2226 82,932 Machinery.. .163 11,617 Matches.. 9,244 Molasses ..10,233 288,709 Oil paintings. 18 4,666 Paper hang. 2P9 3,463 Perfumery.... 33 4,876 Pipes 6,989 Potatoes 2,295 Provisions 1,178 Rags ........969 10,062 Rice 12,706 Salt 5,961 Statuary 1,672 Seeds 9,106 Linseed 8510 51,883 Soap 901 2,239 Sugar, hhds, tee, &bb s.20,960 1,116,330 Sugar, hxs. & bgs 6,673 125,314 Trees & plants.. 4,670 Tea 51,175 623,735 Hemp Honey. Hops Twine... To vs Tobacco 1,832 Spices, &c.—— 36,443 Cinnamon Fruits, &c. Ginger Dried fruit....,30C Pepper Pimento Figs 1,67 < Lemons 15,120 Stationery, &c.Furs. 391 24,333 ...42 tons tons 1,948 1,679 9,301 Haircloth 8,247 39,414 10,903 Iron, hm>p, Potash, hick,.70 harsaparilla. .182 Soda, bierb.. 105 82 Champagne, tons.... Phosphorous .30 Quinine 29 64 796 SO Whiskey Iron, Pig, Mnirl23 4,991 8,794 >..5 26 22,191 Prnss..8 82,973 Hides, undress¬ Paints :.... Paris white .178 * 216 Hides, dress¬ 25,12(5 do do 2,466 24,704 42,745 3,671 8,631 5,325 .. Bricks — Bristles 135 Boots & shoes. 1 60 * Other ..21 Leather, Hides, &c. . 2,032 Raitan Miscellaneous- ... Wratches chors lbs Mahogany.... Willow baskets ..2412 603 Logwood, M. 471 1,097 Metals, <fcc.— 102 Brass goods ...4 11,757 Chains & an¬ 612 4r>8 613 622 426 Fustic... 451 1,759 589 50,750 Oalup ... 4,131 3125 Ipecacuanha.... Lac uye *..20 Leeches 5 Lie puste....457 Manna .*... Madder. 236 Oils 63 do ess 94 do linseed..589 do olive....710 253 690 912 Patent Leather.'2 1,270 24,883 Liquors, Wines, &c.— 1,625 Gums,crude 2,842 Jewelry. &c. Jewelry 10,162 Cork serves Instruments— Chemical 1 2,231 Mathematical. .2 21 2,177 Musical Nautical 1,203 1 1,472 Optical 1 Bismuth Carmine 2,572 Other 126 4,833 Woods— 48,341 Brazil wood.... 617 Brimstone, still dull and prices are lower. Sales are re¬ ported at 9£c. for 64x64 square cloth. PaiNT9 are in good demand, and for leading styles rather better prices are obtained. Daik and unseasonable styles are lower, but considerable 9tocks have beeu placed during the week. American 16$ & 17, Amoskeag dark 15, do purple 16, do pink 18, do shirting 15. do palm leaf 16, Merrimac D dark 16, do purple 17, do W dark 19, do pur¬ ple 19,do pink 19, Sprague’s dark 17 and 17$, do purple 18, do shirting 18$, do pink 18, do blue check 18$, do solid 16, do indigo blue 17, do Swiss ruby 17$, Loudon Mourning 15$, Simpson Mourning 15$, Arnoskeag Mourning 14$, Garners light 18$, Duunell’s 16$, Allen 16$ and 17, of goods, and considerable Quantities have been disposed of tbr goods, and staple white goods and ^De 18, 1867, and the fullows : 47, PlowL <fe Anv. 50, Everett 47$, Whittenden d<fct 32$. Brown Drills are in light demand. Winthrop 16, Amoskeag 21, Laconia 21, Pepperell 21$, do fine jean 22$. Stark A 21$, Massabesic 18, Bennington 21, Woodward duck 32$, National bag9 31, Stark A do 60, Liberty dp 31. are t IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK, , Printing Cloths , the auction houses. Thin dress woolens are in fair demand. do No. 80 20. Denims and Cottonades are dull, and denims are lower. Amoskeag denims sell at 36c., Haymaker 21, York 35, Warren brown 20, Pearl River 33$, Union 24, Monitor 21$, Manchester Co"23$, Suffolk 25, Arling¬ ton 28) Blue Hill 18, Fort Moultrie 30, Mount Vernon 27, and Farmers’ and Mechanics’ cottonades at 46c. Pemberton d<fct 45, Rodman’s Ky J ' .»■ Foreign (Joods show an increased demand for seasonable goods ~ the dullness of the market at Manchester occasions some desire to Naumkeag W do 23$, Utica Pepperell 9-4 47$, Monadncc Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are firmer for leading makes like New York Mills, which are in email stocks. Mechanics 3-4 11, Keystone do 10$, Revere do 10$, Globe do 10, Kingston do 9$, Boott R do 13, do H do 13$, Waltham X 7-8 16$, PutDam B do 12$, Amoskeag Z do 15$, Great Falls M do 16,do S do 15, do A do 17, do J do 16, Lyman Cambric do 18$,Strafford A do 18, Lawrence A .do 15$, Hill’s Semp. Idem do 22$, Boot C do 16, James 81 inch 17$, do 83 inch 18$, Bartle.t 31 inch 17$, do 33 inch 18$, Greene G 4-4 15$, Lewiston G do 15, Pocumtnck do 15, Putnam A do 14, New¬ market A do IS, do C do 19, Great Falls K do 16$, Bartletts do 22, Constitutional do 14, James Ste^m do 22, Newburyport do 22, Indian River XX do 16, Attawaugan XX do 17$, Lawrence B do 17$, Foun tain do 17$, Hope do 20, Tip Top do 24, Blackstone do 17, Franklin do 20, Amoskeag A do 24, Boot B do 20, Forestdale do 22$, Masonville do 25, do XX do 26, Androscoggin L do 26, Lonsdale do 25, Wauregan do 25, do F do 20, Bates XX do 26$, Arkwright do 27$, Lyman J do 27, Wamsntta H 82$, do O do 32$, Mystic Lake do 30, Lonsdale Cambric do 31$, New York Mills do 40, Hill do 25, Amoskeag 42 inch 24$, Waltham do 22, "Wamsutta 9-8 87$, Naumkeag W 5-4 22$, Boot W do 24, Bates do 27$, Wamsutta do 42$, Amoskeag 46 inch 27, Waltham 6-4 32$. Pepperell do 85, Allendale do 32$, Utica do 50, Waltham 8-4 45, Pepperell do 45$, Allendale do 42$, Pepperell 9-4 57$, Utica do 77$, Allendale do 66, Baltic 10-4 65, Bates do 65, Waltham do 64, Allendale do 65, Pepperell do 67$, Utica do 82$, Masabesic 11-4 70, Amoskeag do - 2 67 438 178 295 Waste... 312 13-j Wool, bales. 1.81 367 3,920 12,475 Other 5,804 67,910 1,515 Total $5,059,341 5,914 70 8,225 Our General Price* Current will be found on pages 509 and 510. THE CHRONICLE. April 20,1867.] 503 akia—! Railroad.—ItfTs au¬ thoritatively announced that the Pennsylvania Railroad Company have purchased and are already in possession of the above named Pennsylvania Railroad Dividends, 1866.—The following line of railroad, giving the company a continuous route of the statement compiled from the annual report of the Auditor-Gene¬ same grade to Indianapolis. Negotiations for the purchase of the ral shows the date and rate of all dividends paid by railroad and Pacific Railroad of Missouri are also pending with every proba¬ canal companies in Pennsylvania in the fiscal year 1865 66 : Amount of Rates Dividend Average bility of terminating in success, and this purchase completed there Diriuends. Periods. per cent. Companies. Capital. will then only remain to be acquired the lines between Indianapolis 3x3 & Jan. $83,000 July. Bald Eagie Valley.. $550,000 2x12,000 and St. Louis to Bellefome & Snow-Shoe.. 000,000 Feb. & Aug. complete the grand central route as projected by 5x5 12,065 Chestnut Hill 120,650 Jan. & July. 6x5 500,000 the lev., Painesv & Ash-ab. 5,000,000 Jan. & July. originators of the scheme to hold under a single corporation a 4x215,653 Cleveland & Pittsburg.... 5,391,325 Jan. & July. 4x4 railroad 70.552 Cumberland Valley 881,900 April & Oct. measuring nearly half the distance across the continent. 3x3 98,001 Delaware Division Canal. 1,633,350 Feb. & Aug. Sxd Feb. 1,600,000 &Aug. Delaw ire & Hudson Canal 10,000,000 Evansville, Henderson & Nashville Railroad.—The latest 10*. & 5c.x5c. 2,162,315 Del., Lacka. & Western... 10,761,575 Jan. & July. Jan. & 3x3 23.553 report regarding this important enterprise is that the grading on July. East Mahaney 392,550 35,00‘t 3%x3X J com. 600,000 Jan. & July. Elmira & W mspor. 25,000 sixty miles of the line has been completed, extending from the -j pref 600,000 May <fc Nov. 6x52%x3X A 15x * 150,000 Ohio River to the extensive coal mines in Erie & North-east 600,OIK) Feb. & Aug. Hopkins county. The 4 081 19x1.9 Fayette County.. 107.400 Mar. & Sep. 5 October. 5,843 subscriptions along the route now amount to $675,000, and Evans¬ Hanover Branch ?.... 116,850 82,778 3%x3X Harrisburg & Lancaster... 1,182,550 Jan. & July. 5x5 161,500 ville, Ind., will subscribe $300,000, together sufficient to assure the Hazleton Coal 1,615,000 Feb. & Aug. 5x5 559,787 early completion of the line. Lehigh Coal & Navigation 5.597,875 May & Nov. Columbus ©fje Hailwag JHonitor. and Indianapolis Central t ! "Cl CL TC'mcnAi.* n 312,350 Jan. & July. 7,405,250 J., A., J. & O. Lehigh I uzerne Lehigh Valley Little Schuylkill 2,646,100 600,000 Lykens Valley, Mill Creek & Mine Hill.... Mine Hill & Schnl. Uayen. Mount Carbon Mt. Carbon & Pt. Carbon. Newcastle & Beaver Val.. Northern Central ,... North Lebanon. .. 323,375 8,724,500 200,000 282,350 181,982 4,483,211 300,000 20,000,000 Pennsylvania Jan. Feb. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. & & & July. Aug. July. <fc July. & Juiy. & July. J.,A.,J.&0. F.,M..A.&N. J., M., & J. May & Nov. Pennsylvania Coal .. 8,200,000 F. M. A.&N. Philadelphia & R ading,.. 22,742,867 June & Dec. Philadel, Germ.& Norrist. 1,484,122 April & Oct. Philadelphia & Trenton... 1 082,366 Jan. & July. Phil., Wilm. & Baltimore. 9,008,800 Jan. & July. Pittsb., F. Wayne & Chic. 9,692,900 J.,A.,J & O. August. Schuylkill Navigation. ... 4,797,185 576,050 Jan. & July. Schuylkill Valley 869,450 Feb. & Ang. Shamokin Valley & Pottsv. Southwark 58,452 .. Tioga Wyoming Valley Canal— 447, S0G 800,000 Paid 15 per t Including 10 pei cent, paid in 1866. (280 in.) (280 m.) $280,503 $226,152 222,241 275,282 290,111 299,063 . 335.985 409,250 401,280 357,956 307,919 236,824 142,947 ..Feb.. 238,362. ..Mar.. .April. ..May.. .June. 747 942 .July . ..Aug.. ...Sep.. 702,692 767,508 . 271.246 . I860. 987,935 1,670,434 1,580,31791,480.251 1,637,592^1,417,327 1,524,917£ 1,044.033 6,501,063 14,5S6,333 946,707 923,8S6 ..Oct... .Nov.. .Dec.. 323,030 l,538,3i3 1,153,295 1,425,120 1,101,668 1,252,370 1,243,143 1,274,558 1,203,462 1,418,742 1,290,3 0 1,435,285 1,411.347 9 1865. 1866. (524 m.) (524 m.) ..Year.. — 6-40,000 5x5x5x5 6x5*. or c. 2,274.286 133,571 4x5 (732 m.) $906,759.. Jan .. 917,639... Feb... ...Mar... — ..April.. ...May.. — — ..June... —- .July... ...Aug •• — ...Oct— ...NOV... ...Dec— — — — ..Year. $314,598 (524 m.) fan. i 302,714-. 302,437. .Feb.. . . 387,095 392,641 ..June.. 301,613 338,499 418,575 486,808 524,760 495,072 351,799 380,452 429,191 ...July... ..Aug-.. ....Sep... 500,404 4,826,722 4,652,793 . Mar. 379,761 ... April.. ...May... 416.690 339,417 — (468 m.) $690,144 $559,9S2 480.986 678,504 €62168 867,583 599,806 733,866 637,186 682,510 646,995 633,667 584,523 652,378 712.495 648,201 795,938 651,926 757,441 858,600 679,935 712,362 580,968 555,222 8,489,00) 7,11-7,213 “ Holland “ 2Xx2Xxi*x2k 969,290 Spain 6 287,831 28,S02 39,125 Portugal 2#x2tf 2x2X 3,507 3x3 111.950 25 stk. 4x4 64,000 “ “ “ Austria “ Saxony “ Switzerland Italy..’ Express trains. . April.. ...May... — .., .Aug... Sep... — . — ..Oct... .Nov... .Dec... - — — .. (708 m.) $603,053 605,266 643,887 518,088 7,181,208 6,546,741 (234 m.) $98,183 74,283 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,838 217,159 170,555 228,020 310,594 — — — — (234 m.) $143,000. .. Jan.. 85,000. .Feb.. 72,000. .Mar.. Nov.... (210 m.) (210 m.) $170,078 $178,H9 155,893 153,903 192,138 202,771 167,301 169,299 168,699 177,625 167,099 173,722 166,015 162,570 222,953 218,236 198,884 216,783 244,834 222,924 212,226 208,098 De€;.«« 177,364 ..Mar... .April.. ..May.. .June.. July. Align .Sept . . . Oct.... 162,694 >240,744 !2,251,596 3.3:19,447 1866. (234 m.) $98,181 86,528 (275 m.) 106,269 203,018 237,562 251,9(6 241,370 June — — — — . 95,905 .May.. — 150,989 1866. ” 831,006 .Occ .Nov .Dec ■ § 499 194 1S65. April. — ... .Year - ^3'!0,841 276,416 ..Oct... .Nov... .Dec.„ 395,579 416.359 §.171,125 JS-346,717 328,539 129,287 — — — Hear.. — * 2,535,001 1865. (242 m.) (210 m.) $149,653.. .Jan... $144,084 149,342.. .Feb... ~189,171 ..Mar... 155453 .April.. 144,001 138 738 ..May... June.. 194,521 July.. (271,798 Aug... i374,534 .Sept... 3379,981 — — — — . — . — — — “ • 84,652. April.. .May... June.. .July.. .Ang... Sep... .. ...Oct... .Nov.. .Dee... , • • • • 1.16 1.20 1.68 1.22 1.44 1.50 1.68 1.56 1.60 1.60 1.68 • • • • 1.80 1.92 .... - (484 m .f $296,059 194,167 4 256,407 270,300 316,433 325.691 304,917 896,248 349,117 436,065 &>4,830 . 130,000. ..Feb. 131,900. ..Mar.. .April. ..May.. .June. ..July. ..Aug.. ...Sep.. ...Oct.. .Nov.. ..Dec . .. of$ i 8,694,975 264,741 220,138 178,434 161,427 1866. (285 in.) (2S5 m.) $3UO,J 279,15 $282,488 265,796 344,228 387,240 3? r,i58 3 ,3,786 401,456 365,663 829,105 413,501 460,661 490,693 3u5,196 335,082 824,986 359,665 429,166 493.649 447,669 414,604 328.869 808.649 — 1867. (285 m.) $804,095 283,661 875,210 4,604,546 4,260,125 r 1866. $259,223 $267,541 239,139 246,109 813,914 271,527 290,916 304,463 849,285 344,700 850,348 372,618 — Mississippi (340 m.) (840 m.) 326,236 1867; (840 m.) $242,793 219,065 279,647 277,428 283,130 253,924 247,262 305,454 278,701 310,762 412,6oT* 302,425 284,319 ...Jan... ...Feb... ..Mar... $43,716 April.. 83,972 63,869 82,147 68,180 6<>,882 75,677 — . ..May... — ..June.. — — . July.. ..Aug... — . — 217,641 239,C8£ 1865. — — 189,447 281,613 — 1866. 1867. (157 m.) (177 m) (177 m.) • — 195,188 Weste m Union - (484 rn.) $237,674 200,793 — 198,682 3,798,005 3,880,683 ..Year 1867. — 173.732 243.413 223.846 1865. — 1867. (204 m.) $131,179 151,630 167,G07 180,140 222,411 196,154 215,784 245,627 226,047 243,417 --Ohio Sc (275 m.) $146,800. .Jan.. 1866. Tear*. f361,610 [247,028 ..Year.. 1867. 2,538,800 *375,534 < ..Jan.. .Feb... .Mar... 188.815 .Oct Nov-.. .Deo-... •<■ — 0.76 0.92 1.08 1.00 Michigan Central. 78.976. — (204 in.) (204 m. $178,567 $168741 1865 (251 m.) $94,136. Toledo. Wab. & Western 1867. $0.72 .. 1867. $131,707 123,404 12^,957 121,533 245,622 244,376 208,785 .July.. .Aug.. ..Sep.. ^-St. I*.. Alton & T. Haute.-^ 1865. .July... Aug... .Sept... -Milwaukee Sc St. Paul 1867. 72,135 1,943,900 J une.. . 224,1.2 310,443 ^396,060 1,222,017 1,186,303 uly.. ..Aug... ..Sep... ..J — 108,082 267,488 262,172 170,795 116,224 1,985,712 ..Year.. 290.642 , .. June.. — 84.897 110,664 April.. May... 197,886 264,605 .Year-. .May — 1866. (234 m.) $121,776 .Jan— .Feb.... .March 184,497 253,507 1866. 1866. 1865. (423 m.) $267,626 ...Oct.... .Nov... ..Dec... April.. — — 8d class. ^-Cleveland and Pittsburg.- (238 in.) $241,395 183,385 257,230 (251m.) (251m.) $96,672 $90,125 84,264 87,791 82,910 93,763 82,722 78,607 95,664 76,248 106,315 107,525 96,u23 104,608 106,410 115,184 108.338 125,252 150,148 116,495 11G.146 110,932 111,665 105467 ..Mar... — 2.40 1.92 2.16 1.80 2.40 1.68 1.80 2.40 1.60 2.16 2.50 -2.40 2.46 1.98 2.16 2.62 2 88 2.64 3.20 4 00 5.68 1867. 1865. (708 m.) $660,438. ..Jan..« 554,201. ..Feb. 3.00 2 84 3.12 2.64 3.12 2.40 2.46 8.36 2.46 2.88 3.50 3.18 3.12 2.64 2.88 3.36 3.84 “■ -Marietta and Cincinnati. 1867. 1866. $2.60 3.48 4 44 1866. 3,313,514 3,478,325 — 2d class. $3.46 OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. (228 m.) $305,554 246,331 289,403 196,580 2&1,012 321,818 244,121 306,231 389,489 307,523 270,073 i01,779 ..Jan... .Feb... 747,392 .' ..Mar.. — our 1 st class. “ “ Express trains 1865. (930 m.)(l,032 m.) $523,566 $690 832 405,634 586.743 — ... , r-Chic., Rock Is. and Pacific.- 1867. 523,744 518,736 735,0H2 922,892 77 %990 778,284 989,053 1,210,654 ...... France Great Britain and Ireland EARNINGS I860. “• “ “ “ 226,840 (468 m.) $660,115. .Jan... 522,821. ..Feb... - Belgium “ .Dec... -Pittsb., Ft.W.;& Chica$(L-> 1866. 1867. 1865. (468 m.) “ Bavara Deumark 245,7i-l 244,854 93,787 .. “ Express trains 900,880 ....Oct.... .Nov... .. “ “ “ Wurtembnrg.. 505,465 411,605 569,250 567,679 480,626 578,253 571,343 661,971 588,219 504,066 1865. “ “ Sweden -Mil. and Prairie dn Chien.—> 1867. 100 miles Norway AillHOlB vUublali (708 m.) $571,536 528,972 616,665 516,608 460,573 617,682 678,403 per 154.855 9,088,994 747,469 739,736 641,589 ...sep— — — Russia Prussia Rhine Prussia.. 10* & 5 5x5 7,960,981 1865. 351,489 1,800,000 5x4 1,005,680 6W8,679 ” 1867. 283,179 412,393 409,427 426,493 413,974 865,180 2x2x2x2 2Xx5x2X 546,609 840,354 Mich. So. & N. Indiana.- $363,996 366,361 12,00 • a3,882 2f»,928 358,656 30,000 MONTHLY (860 m.) $541,005 482,104 499,296 468,358 685,623 (280 m.) $240,238. ..Jan.. Europe.—To those of in 297.960 Stook. i860. 321,597 387,269 322,638 360,8213 (798 m.) (798 m.) $1,070,890 $1,185,740 1,331,124 54,000 32,337 citizens about Europe the following table, showing the fares on the rail¬ roads therein, will be useful: Railroad Fares to visit -Chicago & Northwestern^ 871.543 Erie Railway. 1,011,7:35 4XX4X 2Xx8x3x3 Dec., 1865. Sep. 1867. i 264.245 329,851 3,840,091 3,695,152 1865. 52,922 3x3 6x6 June & Chicago and Alton. 258,480 322,277 355,270 -x2 5r5 4x4 Feb. & Aug. COMPARATIVE 1865. 1,481,050 cent, ia Buffalo & State Line RR. bonds, * , 45,291 4^x10,s 112^x2^x2^x2f Sept.... ..Oct ..Nov...,. -+# D6C*t« • • —Year.* 37,265 32,378 92,713 61,77o 87,880 45,102 36,006 $89,079 89,299 43,333 86,918 102,686 86,392 27.666 — — — 85,608 60,098 84,462 100,303 75,248 54,478 689,888 814,081 — — — — 504 THE CHRONICLE. [April 20, 1867. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS Subscribers will confer a DESCRIPTION. If .B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount it not given in detail in the 2d col outstand umn it is expressed by the dgures in brackets after the Co’s name. INTEREST. thur’dat aS « £-3 C ing. Payable. ‘f £. ns M £ *< Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) do do Mortgage, sinking fund, (N.. Y.) do do Mortgage, sinking fund, {Ohio) do do ) Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex Consolidated Bonds AtlanticdbSt. Law .1st Mort.(Portland) 2d Mortgage Sterling Bonds do of 1864 Baltimore and Ohio. Mort do do do do (S F) 183t 1850 1853 Billifontaine ($1,745,000): 1st Mortgage 2d do Bdvidere J/ecaware : 1st Mort. (guar. C. 2d Mort. do 8d Mort. do and 1 Blossburg and Corning Bonds Boston Cone. A Montreal ($1,050,000): 1st 1st Mortgage I do | Sinking Fund Bonds Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000): 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Buffalo and State Line ($1,200,000): 1st Mortgage Burlington A Missouri ($1,902,110): General Mortgage . Bonds conv. into pref. stock Camden and Amboy ($10,264,463): Dollar Loans Dollar Loan Consoldated ($5,000,000) Loan Camden and Atlantic: 1st Mortgage Mortgage Catawissa : 1st Mortgage Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage.... Central of New Jersey : 1st Mortgage 9d Mortgage 1st mortgage ..... ! lit do income Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): Trust Mortgage (S. F.) Chicago and Gt. Eastern 1st Mort.. Chicago and Milwaukee 1st Chicago A Northwest. ($12,020,483): Preferred Sinking Fund Mortgage lit Interest Bonds Consol. S. F. Bonds, Extension Bonds • conv. till 1870 Mortgage (C. A R. I.) do .. Mortgage . Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($450,000): lit Mort.(payable $25,000 per year) Cleveland db Mahoning ($1,752,400): 1st 8d Mortgage Hubbard Branch de>,., Pain. A Ashtabula: lit Mort. Bonds 2d Mort. Bonds Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,872,860) : 2d Mortgage 8d do convertible 4th do Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280): Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1866. Connecticut River: 1st Mort Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000): 1st Mortgage 2d do 6 per cent bonds 1st Mort . Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): 1st Mortgage 2d 8d do do Toledo Depot Bonds Delaware: lit Mortgage, guaranteed DM., Lacka. A Western ($3,491,500): lit Mortgage, sinking fund do Laeka. and West. 1st Mort Des Moines Valley Sd Mortgage Bonds • ($2,038,009): J’ne A Dec. 1877 500,000 Ap’l & Oct. 11866 1,180,950 600,000 April A Oct 1870 867,000 4,269,400 490,000 493,000 141,000 7S«000 900,000 2,500,000 483,000 2.400,000 1,100,000 Erie 1st 2d July May & Nov Jan. & T3 -4-3 Payable. £ as ◄ Sterling convertible (£800,000) Jan. & July 873 90 July July Ap’l A Oct. 1883 1895 July 1898 81 87 Feb. & Aug 1885 do 1885 May A Nov. 1868 Quarterly. 1915 Feb. & Aug 1885 92 83 91 79 82 94 84 92 Jan. A July 1870 do 1896 May A Nov July 1880 1885 1895 1,300,000 May & Nov 1893 Jan. & 1890 July 85 100 100# 1,129,000 1.619.500 1,107,546 2,081.000 300,000 250,000 600,000 161,000 109.500 108,100 283,000 2,603,000 642,000 169.500 500,000 1.122.500 1,668 000 572,000 1,740,000 1st 1st Sep 1885 1886 1878 J’ne & Dec. 1876 Ap’l & Oct. 1904 do 1904 do r Jan. & do do do 102 July M’ch&April do July 1867 1881 1884 ’81-’94 1875 Apr MV.ch 1875 A Sep 1881 Jan. & July 1871 Ap’l & Oct 1887 May & Nov. 1875 1864 1875 1H78 1886 o various, various. Feb. & Aug 924,000 7 'Feb, & Aug .1876 7 388,000 7 1,963,000 1,086,00(; 7 7 6 Mortgage May & Nov. Sep 1876 1879 1883 April & Oct 1S80 June & Dec 1888 M’ch & Sep 1875 Tan. & Jan. & July July 96# 102# ... 100 97 90 88# .... 1870 70-75 Feb. & 98 99 • • - • • . i 72 . ... • . . • .... April & Oct 1881 Tan. & July 1883 .... .... Tan. & July 1883 Jan. & July 1873 7 do 1876 6 500,000 6 500,000 6 May & Nov 1870 Feb. & Aug 1875 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 ... do do do . ..... 102 102# .... .... .... .... April & Oct 1875 103 1875 1890 1875 300,000 300,000 7 7 Feb. & Aug 1882 May A Nov. 1884 600,000 7 Jan. & 364,000 10 500,000 7 do Jan. & 7 7 108 .... .... .... .... .... ... 1866 July . .... • • • > 200,000 7 May & Nov. 903,000 1,000,000 7 7 May & Nov. 1872 Jan. & July 103 107 .... 1875 500,000 7 1890 ..... 1869 6 May & Nov. 1873 95 79,000 6 Jan. & July ’69-’74 .... 1,300,000 6 886,000 7 500,000 6 175,000 7 150,000 6 May & Nov ...•. 1,650,000 280,000 7 7 Jan. A ... 2,362,800 300,000 7 7 1,000,000 7 - . ... 1883 July 1883 July May & Nov. var. . Mortgage bonds. Michigan Central, ($7,463,489) 1,294,000 1880 May & Nov. . . . . .... • • 103 Mississippi A Tennessee ($1,069,600): 1st Mortgage.......: .... • • * .... .... 92 97 July 1891 4,269,000 7 Jan. A July 324,00C 7 April & Oct 1,5(X),000 7 April A Oct 135,000 7 Jan. & July ... .... .... * .. • ... 863,000 7 Mav & Nov. 1885 do 1877 2,69:V’0C 7 651,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1868 Jan. & • 81 4 7 • 1874 1870 2,297,000 8 March&Sep. 1869 4,504,500 8 April A Oct 1882 402,000 , . ... Feb. A Aug 1892 1888 1885 •90-’91 ’70-’71 Mich. S. A N. Indiana: ($9,135,840) . .... May A Nov. Jan. &July 1,095.600 6 Feb. & Aug. 315,200 6 June & Dec. 660,000 6 Apr. A Oct. 300,000 6 Feb. & Aug. Sinking Fond do • var. $1,1'H),000 Loan Bonds $400,000 Loan Bonds 1st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds. 2d do (P.&K.RR.) Bonds.. Memphis A Charleston : 7 .... April & Oct 1877 Tan. & July 1875 Feb. & Aug 1890 May & Nov 1893 Tan. & 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee A Prairie du Chien ; 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Milwaukee and St. Paul: 1st Mortgage do (Mil. & Western) 2d do Income Bonds do Real Estate .... 1866 1870 March& Sep 1885 April & Oct 18S0 5 Valley mort July July Tan. A 68,000 McGregor' Western 1st Mortgage Maine Central: ($2,733,800) J Storing bonds. bonds. . . 10C 95 88 87 . 7 40i i 000 Cincinnati ($3,688,385): Income Mobile and Ohio Income bonds • .... M’ch& do Feb. & Aug 1869 J’ne & Dec. 1885 May & Nov. 1875 do 1867 900,000 . 1st Mortgage, Scioto and Hocking . 1,465,000 Convertible do Jan. A Mortgage, Eastern Division Memphis Branch Mortgage Marietta A 90 .. ... 485,(XX' 8 Jan. &JnIy 1882 800,00(1 H Tan. & July 1874 Mortgage do • 640,000 7 May & Nov. 1881 397,000 7 April & Oct 1873 612,50< 7 May & Nov 1831 2,000,000 7 April & Oct 1906 (Glen Cove Br.) State Loan Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000) M’ch& Sep 1873 do 1875 Jan. & July 1892 July * Mortgage, sinking fund do do Jan. & July 1874 do 1880 do M’ch & ceased) Lehigh Valley ($1,477,000): 1st Mortgage ; Lexington A Frankfort Little Miami ($1,500,000): 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill ($1,000,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund.... Long Island : 1st Mortgage.... Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point), Feb. & Aug 1878 M’ch & Sep 1876 Jan. A July 1875 Jan. A .... do Extension La Crosse A Milwaukee: 2d 149,000 358,000 Joliet and N\ Indiana: 1st Mortgage Lackawanna A Bloomsburg 1st Mort do Extensi n 2d ' 1,000,000 —_ Indianap. A Madison RR., 1st M.. Jeff., Mad. & Indianap., 1st Mort.. Joliet and Chicago : 1st Jan. & 500,000 80 1880 1862 700,000 927,(XX? . Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort 1st Tan. A July April & Oct . ... : 1st Mortgage Jeffersonville, Madison & Indianapolis. 1st Mortgage 40 7 5 6 Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284) 109# 1,000,000 570,000 6,668,50( 2,523,(XX 2,563,00- Redemption bonds <: Sterling Redemption bonds 99# 1888 7 7 do Illinois Central: Construction bonds, 1375 do do do 6 per cent 1877 1893 Ap 1 & Oct. 1883 Ap’l & Oct. 3,437,750 633,60< Mortgage.... ’75-’80 7 3,890,000 1,907,00< 192,OCX 523,000 ; 1st Mortgage 2d do ., Indiana Central: 1st Mortgage, (interest 2d do 598,000 2,655.000 Huntingdon A Broad Top{%1,462,142): 1st 2d Jan. & July 1872 Feb. & Aug 1874 do 1S85 .... : Hartford A New Haven : 1st Mort.. Hartf., Irov. A Fishkill : Hudson River ($7,762,840): 1st Mortgage 90# 2d do' sinking fund do 3d Convertible 394,000 750,000 160,OCO 6 6 e i Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds Harrisburg A Lancaster New Dollar Bonds 1870 Jan. & July 1883 do 1894 n Bonds unsecured 94# 7 7 Aug 1882 May & Nov. 1875 Jan. & July 1870 927>00( 1,000, (XX to April & Oct 1868 1,350,001 7 Feb. & Aug 1888 2.500,000 May & Nov. 1893 1868 326,000 7 July. do 1868 700,000 7 do 1868 (00,000 7 Bonds guaranteed by State 11872 1,250,000 500,000 56,000 121,000 {incl. in C. A N. W.): Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do do Grand Junction : Mortgage Great West., 111. : 1st Mort., W, Div. 1st Mortgage Whole Line 2nd do * do Greenville A Columbia : 1st Mort.... May A Nov. Jan. & July Jan. A 534.900 - Illinois and Southern Iowa 861,000 475,000 convertible do Erie and Northeast ($400,000): 1st 300,000 660,000 3,000,000 7 4,000,000 7 6,000,(XX 7 4,441,600 7 926,500 7 3,816,582 6 convertible Gal. A Chic. U. 1883 1889 J’ne & Dec. 1893 Jan. A July 1873 Ap’l & Oct. 1879 Feb. A Aug 1882 Mar. A Sep. 1875 Feb. A Aug 1870 May & Novi 1875 M’ch& Sep 1890 Jan. & 2,000,000 484,000 do do do do Mortgage Georgia Feb. & Aug May & Nov. 3,525,000 5,600,000 3,600,000 756,000 Bonds Railway ($22,370,932) : Mortgage 3d 4th 5th C Detroit and Milwaukee ($5,206,680): 1st Mortgage, convertible $2,500,000 2d do 1,000,000 1st * 2d Funded Coupon Bonds... 1,005,640 Detroit and Pontiac 250,000 do do 250,000] Detroit Monroe A Toledo ($734,000): UX awtgaft thub’day *3 ® : . 2,000,000 380,000 795,000 do Cumberland Valley: 5 per cent. Feb" & Aug 1865 do 1865 do 1889 Ap’l & Oct. 1879 6,000,000 do Cincinnati Richmond db Chicago. dnciniiati db Zanesville. lit <80 -<.00,')i ( 1.397.000 (new) Cine., Ram. A Dayton ($1,629,000): 1st Mortgage 2d Pennsylvania: Sinking Fund Bonds. Elmira A Williamsport 1st Mortgage 11866 Jan. A 1,250,000 Chicago, Bock Island A P icijlc: 1st 1st East 1895 444,00 1,700,000 do do do 1,000,000 6 J’ne & Dec.'1867 500,000 6 jM’ch & Sep 11885 589.500 6 Feb. A Aug 1877 150,000 6 May & Nov. 1871 364,0001 2d section.., ao * do do do do Mortgage, convertible 1,225,000 433,000 : Mortgage (consolidated) Tables. : Mortgage, 1st section Eastern, Mass. ($1,84S,4"0): Jan. & Julyj’70-’79 do |1870 673,200 do 2d 1882 1879 1881 1876 1888 Ap’l & Oct. 1884 : Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref 1st do do do do Jan. A July 1st 1st 7,336,000 1,!500,000 Convertible Bonds Cheshire Bonds Chicago and Alton Ap’l & Oct. 1877 915,280 1,021,750 628.500 1,852,000 600.000 Central Ohio : 1st Mort.. Central Pacific of Cal.: Dubuque and Sioux City May A Nov. j 1878 Ap’l & Oct. IS i Ja Ap Ju Oc|1867 Jan. & July 1875 do jl880 Ap’l & Oct.: 1885 200,000 Boston and Lowell: Bonds o Juy id >l do of Oct. ’864. 2d $2,500,000 1,000,000 1,014,000 800,000 4,000,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 13,058,000 1,5HO,O0l 268.900 619.036 Mortgage (S. F.) of 1855— INTEREST. is not viven in detail in the 2d col¬ outstandumn it is expressed by the figures ing. in brackets after the Co’s name. CO our Railroad: 484,000 .. nW«rrRTPT,TOV N.B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount ns 36 Railroad: Atlantic A Gt. Western ($80,000,000): 1st Sd lit Id 1st Id 1st BOND LIST. great favor by giving* ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In 93 .... .... 1893 1893 1884 1876 100 .... .... 76# 78# .... 600,00C 6 Jan. &Jul> 1876 do 1870 297,50C ► 10 • • • • .... .... • • • • ... ($6,133,243):.. 1 881,900 4,187,0(0 75,815 8 'W 8 May A Nov do do do 1867 1881 1882 11876 • • » • « • >♦ • * • •• r • • • • • April 20, 1867.] N.B.—Where the total Amount B.—Wh^re the total Funded Debt outstand¬ is not given in detail in the 2d col ing. it is nmu it is expressed by the figures! in brackets after the Co’s name. the Co’s name. brackets after in Rome, Watert. & Ogdens. Morris and Essex: Mortgage, . sinking fund 576.000! 224,Oi to' 180,000 450,0001 Naugatuck : 1st Mortgage (convert.) NewBedford & Taunton n. Haven dt Northampton : Bonds Hampshire & &July 1876 do Jan. & July 1869 Jan. 485,000! Bonds of 1853 Mortgage New Jersey ('$855,000): New London Northern: 1st New Orleans, Jackson & Gt. 140,000! New York Central.: Premium Sinking Fund Bonds .... Bonds of October. 1863 (renewal).. Real Estate Bonds 1=86 1890 ) )02% :05 1876 103% 1872 1893 1S68 May & Nov. Feb. & Aug do General Mortgage ($6,000,000). North Pennsylvania ($3,124,737): 50,000' Jan. & July 1896 • do 2d Extension or Oswego & Rome ($657,000). 1st Mortgage (guar, by R. Income Mortgage ($311,500): Pacific, do do Peninmla : 1st Mortgage . 4,980,0(X 4,904,84C Mortgage do Phila. and Balt. 2d Mortgage Central ($800,000): - ($13,000,000); (Sunbury & Erie)... Philadelphiaiand Erie 1st 1st Mortgage (general) 2d (general) PhiladeL, Germant. & Norristown : do do Convertible Loan Philadelphia & Reading ($6,900,663) Sterling Bonds of 1836 do do do Dollar Bonds of 1849.. .*. do do 1861 do do 1843-4-8-9 Pittsburg & Connellsville ($1,500,000) MorL(Turtle Cr. Div.) Pb'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) Mortgage do do Bridge O. & P. RR Akron Branch: 1st mortgage. Pittsburg and Steubenville: 1st Mortgage 2d May & Nov Aug .. do Portland & Kennebec ($1,394,661); 97 85 £8 do. Jan.‘& July Feb & Aug Mch & Sept 1872 6 Ian. & Jnh 6 April & Oc 1880 1875 1900 •Tan. & July 7 Jan. & July 7 June & Dec 1875 1875 1867 7 OO Op (consolidated).., Mortgage do Vermont and Bonds. 1st Massachusetts > Mortgage : Mortgage (guaranteed) Westchester & Philadelphia : 1st Mortgage (convert) Coupon registered 2d do 1st .. 7 6 6 April & Oci April & Oct April & Oct 1877 1881 1901 143, S0( 6 Jan. & July 1882 40S,0(X 5 5 6 6 6 6 Jan. & Jnh do 1867 1880 1870 1871 1880 Preferred Bonds Delaware Division ? 1st Mortgage.. Delaware and Hudson: Plain bonds (coupon) 1880 Erie 6 Jan. & Jnh 400,(XX 6 Feb. & 5,250,(XX 5,160,OCX 2,000, (XX 158,5(X 200,(XX 7 Semi an’alh 7 7 7 7 500, (XX 7 7 500,0(X 7 do 1912 1912 April & Oci 1912 May & Nov 1876 Jan. & Jhly 1884 Feb. & Aug do 1881 1«S1 1890 Mortgage, sinking fund Sept 1879 800,006 7 Mch & 400,00( 340,00( 7 7 7 May & Nov. 1890 7 7 Feb. & do 600,000 826, r 00 140,547 ; 130,600 175)000 do do 1890 1880 Aug 73 ’75 ’ 69 ’76 •!lune & Dec 1875 8|Jliar. & Sep, 1870 7 92%; Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds Canal • • • .... 90 81 76 90 .... 74 .... • • • « • « • ♦ .... .... .... — i . * .... — .... • • « c . • t .... • •• • • ... • • • • • • • • • .... .. .... « • • t . • . - qf Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage Lehigh Coal and Navigation : 100 Loan of 1870 I o-n of 1S84 • . Mortgage (North Schuylkill Navigation: 101% .02 1st Mortgage 94 94% 84 Branch).. Priority,Bonds 1890 1890 1878 1878 1883 1871 • • • ... 83 .... .... .... . . . "9 79 78 78 69 do 7 X 7 I 7 6 Jan. <fc July 188* Apr. & Oct. 1885 May & Nov. 1875 Mar. & Sep. 1882 Jan. <fc July ’68-’74 X 7 June & Dec X 7 Jan. & July 1861 1867 X 550,0(X 6 Jan. & July 18S3 .... 511,4015( 7 Feb. & Aug 1875 .... 7 b Jan. & July 1873 April & Oct 1878 H: 5 6 April & Oct ’68-’71 Jan. &, July ’70-’76 X' 6 April & Oct .1875 X> 6 Jan. & ^nly do 6 7 Feb. & Aug 1890 1890 1S96 May & Nov. 1870 1871 1877 3C X X Xi X) do 0 0 C 6 6 6 P Jan. & July •Ja Ap JuOc do 0 6 6 5 6 6 •Jan. & July 1886 1870 1890 1885 1878 0 0 7 7 Mch & Jan. & Sept July 1870 1865 S 6 Quarteily. Jan. & Julv do .... .... .... • • • . .... «... • -V • • . Apr. & Oct. 1 ( 0 • • • • • • • • • A • • • • .... • • • 63 62% 30 .... • ••• • • .... .... .... • • • . • • • • • t • • • • • • • • • • • • .... • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • - .... . • • , .... .... , , . . .... • ••• 6 i 6 April & Oct 690,000j 6 May & Nov. 1876 6 6 Mch & Sept Jan. & July 77 6 May & Nov. 1872 1882 1870 6 1865 1878 1864 64% 3 3 6 6 Jan. & Julv do do ) 6 6 May & Nov. 1883 Jan. & July 1878 b Jan & July 1878 ran. & July 1886 *•«* .... 1870 1884 1887 1876 J Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bonds Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage West Branch and Susq. :1st Mortgage Wyoming Valley : 1st Mortgage., -r- do Tan. & July 3 Improvement Susquehanna and Tide-Water: Maryland Loan Coupon Bonds T. W. Canal due • 7 7 do 2d 1876 1870 1894 .... .... 7 X X 6. Monongahela Navigation: Mortgage Moiris. Mortgage Bonds Pennsylvania & New York: 1st 1886 ... Chesapeake and Delaware ; 1st Mort Chesapeake and Ohio: Maryl’d Loan Sterling Bonds, guaranteed ... Aug 1889 1888 1888 1876 230,00( 92 1884 Mch & Sept do do Rensselaer dt Saratoga consolidated: 1st Mort. Rensselaer & Saratoga lsf Mort. Saratov a & Whitehall.... & Rut. (guar.) let Mort. Troy, Richmond & Danville ($1,717,500) : 4th Mortgage Interest Bonds Dollar Bonds Western Maryland : 1st Mortgage do 1st , guaranteed... . Western Union: 1st Mortgage York dt Cumberland (North. Cent.): 1st Mortgage do 2d 1,000,0(K 5,000,00( 4,000, (XX 7 7 7 2d do Convertible Bonds (Mass.) (6,269,520): Sterling (£899,900) Bonds Albany City Bonds 1876 450,(XX • 1871 b 125 .... 6 Jan. & July ‘70 ’76 ’70 'T2 ’65 ’6c B0 ... • • ... Feb. «fe Aug 1872 7 Mar. & Sept 1870 5 •Jan. & July 1886 68-74 Various. 6 Western Julj 1886 1868 • 7 X) 30 11 DO K .: Ian. & 1,000,90! 250, (XX 208,00C .... Feb. A Aug )(; 2d 1884 1883 1895 registered (Toledo and Wabash).... (Wabash and Western).. Equipment bouds (Tol. & Wab.).. Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. & W.) Troy and Boston ($1,452,000) : 1st April & Oci '7P-*75 do General Mortgage lc92 18S2 no do Vermont Central: 96 April & Oct Eigimond & Petersburg ($319,000) Bonds, coupon & 7 Jan. & July 1)0 7 June & Dec X) Mortgage (guar. byPeteisburg) do 0! 6 8d Mortgage do DO 6 Special Mortgage S. W. Pacific, Railroad: [Xi 7 Jan. & July Bonds guar. !>y At. & Pacific R.R.. 2,000,000 7 Southeim Minnesota: Land Grant B’d 00 7 Jan. & July Staten Island: 1st Mortgage Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191): 00 7 April & Oct 1st Mortgage X) 7 Jan. tfc July’ Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage DO 7 June & Dec Toledo,Peoria and Warsaw .1st Mort Toledo JT abash & Western: Feb. & Auer X) 1st Mortgage (old) \ do ^ , 1st do exteuded ( do X 1st do I,ake E. Wab. St. L. ext. H; 7 May & Nov. 2d do Troy Union ($680,000): Mort. 1885 6 6 bonds, ext Reading and Columbia : 1st Mortgage. April & Oct. 1S94 1st Mortgage 2d do do 3d July 70-’sn 300,001 88% 112% 1916 l°91 Consolidated bonds Raritan and Delaware Bay: 1st 7 May & Nov. 1)0 6 7 1,000,0> - Quincy and Toledo: 1st Mortgage.. 1st inortgige )0 1,372,000 Funded Bonds Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage Shamokin Valley dt Pottsvule: 1st Mortgage Shore Line Railway: 1st Mort. bonds South Cawlina : Sterling Loan. Domestic Bonds... .^. South Sid* ($1,631,900): Warren Ian. <fc April & Oct 2,661,60( Jan. & Julv 106,00( do 1,521,000 do 976,80< do 228,5(X 6 200,(XX 6 May & Nov 1st 1st 2d 3d OO 1894 1894 1894 Minn : (1st Div) Mortgage (tax fn e) Laud'Grant Mortgage (tax tree) 575,(XX 182,4(X Sterling; Bonds of 1843 Dollar Bonds, convertible Philadelphia & Trenton : let Mort.. Philadel., W liming. & Baltimore : Mortgage Loan Chicago: • July 1875 Semi an’ally do , Pennsylvania ($18,209,040): 1st Feb. & 762,001 1,150,001' 1,072,000 sterling Mortgage, 2d 1st 350,00< 200,00 guaranteed by Missouri.... Panama : 1st 570,000 19S,5(X 189,00 do 2d Bid. . *67-’69 67-’S4 '?5-’7(j May & Nov 1866 Ian. & July 1875 May & Nov 1S73 1863 1863 00 preferred Convertible 1.110,500 W. & O.) 1872 1874 7 Feb. & Aug do 7 (X, 1st . Oswego and Syracuse 1st var. 400,000 .... 98 00 OO 7 7 7 A Terre Haute: Mortgage 2d July var. 223,000 1,458,00( & Alexandria ($2,923,004): Mortgage .• or 1st Extension ... do April & Oct 1869 April & Oct 180,000 . 1874 1870 Jan. & do 2,900,000 750,000 R.R.: July Feb. & Aug Jan. & 1,494,000 Orange 2d 3d April & Oct 100,(XX 300, m Mortgage 1880 1887 Jan. & July 2,500,000 360,000 L.Champlain: 94 1885 1900 1874 1867 Fan. & July Sep. Mortgage v Ohio and Mississippi: m Quarterly. irreg. 1,500,000 2,500,000 724,000 ($580,000): 103 1891 1881 Sandusky a?)d Cincinnati: Mortgage bonds Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: Feb. & Aug 73-’78 18f 1 • an. & July 250,000 i;u, oo 1st 101 1875 April & Oct Mar. & 1st 1st 1st 7 Jun. & Dec. 10 Feb. & Am St. Paul & Pacific of 91% 1876 339,000 do 1st )0 K> 2d do income St. Louis, Jacksonville dt 91 91 Bonds... 2d Mortgage Old Colony & Newport Bonus do U | Jan. & July 1S80 |Jun. & Due. ’69-’72 X) 10 J*u Mortgage 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage 1887 1883 1883 1876 April & Oct April & Oct 1st ... , do •it. Louis, Alton May & Nov. 149.400 1st 1st 95 do Feb. & Aug do do Mortgage do Sacramento Valley: May & Nov 1883 June & Dec 1,000,000 Mortgage Ogdensburg and 1st Apr. &> Oct. 1SS9 3,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 Improvement Bonds Northern Central ($5,211,244): Mortgage Bonds Chattel Mortgage.. Norwich and Worcester General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage P\rincpal;payble. Payable. TO 7 00 7 1st Mortgage ($6,008,045) : do do Northern New Hampshire : North Carolina: Loan North Missouri: July pril & Oc 1,898,000 460,000 General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage 3d Mortgage N 1 ork and New Haven: Mortgage Bonds N. Y.,Prov. and Boston : 1st Mortgage mm Jan. & 165,000 606,000 1st „ 1873 1885 6,450.43S 2,925,000 Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts).. Bonds of August, 1850, convert.. ) 1st 2d 3d Feb. & Aug Jan. July ($1,848,000) Rome)— R. W. & O., sinking fund Rutland and Burlington: 1881 i North.: 2,741,000! 1st Mortgage Sinking Fund 423,000 2d Mortgage New Orleans, Opelou. & Gt. West.: 1,730,000 1st Mortgage Construction Bonds. Bonds of 1865 New York and Harlem 6 ing. Potsdam & Watertown, guar April & Oct 1874 200,000 Hamden R.R. do . Sinking Fund (Wat. & May & Nov. 1915 5.090.000 do 2d outstai'a- Railroad: Railroad: 1st. , umn Payable. expressed by the figures Funded Debt Amount i ... _ 0 THURSDAY INTEREST. Description. THURSDAY interest. Description. (continued). MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST RAILROAD, CANAL AND N 505 THE CHRONICLE. • • • • • ••A • • • • • • • • • •-> • • .... V .... • • 78 • • •• » • ■ .. • .. . t.VA .... , , • • • • ♦ • ••» ... Miscellaneous: American Dock & Improvement: (guir. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) Covington and Cincinnati Brulge : 1st Mortgage Bon8« Consolid. CoalCoAMd.): Mort.( conv.) Cumberland Coal: 1st Mortgage. Bonds 1,000,000 Mortgage 2d do 1st od Mort.,prin.&int.payable in gold do Western Union 1st Mortgage do Telegraph: convertible, 6 7 1 ran. A July ’ 74-’S4 .1Ian. & July 1S85 1879 r Jran. & July l ^pril & Oci 7 I<eb. <fe Aug 18— 7 18 R81 500,000 7 J une & Dec 7 J ao. & July 1873 1879 2,000,(XX Pennsylvania Coal: Mortgage Bonds. Qu U'.ksilver Mintvg : t ran. & J uly • Manposa Mining: 1st 7 2,000,009 •. 1 < /aIfty & Kqy. .... • • • • • • • .... -5 ... • • »■! • • • • • • • • .... t|>. « 9 * ^ 1 * » • ; ■m 506 THE a Companies. Marked thus (*) are leased roads, and have fixed incomes. giving ns Dividend. Stock Immediate THURSDAY out¬ standing. i Periods. loo 100 100 Washington Branch* Bellefontaine Line 10<' 100 100 100 Belvidere, Delaware Berkshire* JBlosBburg and Corning* 50 Boston, Hartford and Erie.... 100 Boston and Lowell Boston and Maine Boston and Providence 500 100 100 100 Marked thus (*) 4,076,971 are leased roads, and have fixed incomes. New Y<irk and New Haven... 190 New York Prov. A Boston 100 Ninth Avenue 100 Northern of New 153,000 Quarterly. Apr. '67 2,494,900;Feb A Aug; Feb. ’671 16,151,962; April x Oct Apr. '67; 1,650,0001 April & Oet Apr. ’671 4,42),i>00iFeb. & Aug! Feb. ’67i 996,617 j. 600,000 s Quarterly. |Apr. ’67 1% 250,000; June A Dec I Dec. ’66: 2% 11,877,000 1,830,0001 Jan. A July'Jan. STOCK LIST. notice of any error Companies. Last paid Date, rrate Bid. Ask. par Alton and St Louis* Atlantic A St. Lawrence* Baltimore and Ohio [April 20,1867. RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS confer {Treat favor by Subscribers will Railroad. CHRONICLE. ... discovered Stock out- * standing. 50 100 Periods. ' THURSDAT Last paid. Date. rate Bid.! Ask • 90 795.360! June A Dec Dec. ..[121 108% 4,518,900! Quarterly. Feb. 4,000,000 100| 2.469,307 50 3,150,150 t.... Norwich and Worcester 100! 2,363,600 Jan. A Ogdensburg A L. Cham plain. 100; 3,077,000 Feb. A July Aug do preferred. 200! 356,400 Apr. A Oct Ohio and Miss, certificates.. ’67; Tables. 6.000,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 5 1,755,2311 Jan. A July Jan. ’67! 3 Hampshire.100 3,068,400 Northern Central North Carolina North Missouri North Pennsylvania In our Dividend. Feb. Jan. Feb. 96 Jan. A July | Jan. ’67 Apr. 3,300,000 Ian. & July Jan. '67! .10C; 20,222,647 Boston and Worcester \mx 4,500,000 Jan. & July; Jan. '67! do 141 preferred. .10022% Broadway A 7th Avenue .1 0 2,100,000 Jan. A 3,u07,197| Jannaiy. Jan. ’67, 7 Old Colony and 70 July I Jan. VT Newport 1001 4,848,300! Jan. Brooklyn City A 10 1,000,000 Feb. & July Jan. 3 ’67! Orange and Alexandria Aug! Feb. ’67 100 Brooklyn City and Newtown. 100 2,063,055)..... 866,000 Oswego and Syracuse 50 Buffalo, New York, & Erie*. .100 482.4(X)jh,eb. A Aug Feb. *67; 4' Panama 850,000 Jan. & July Jm. ’67 ..100 Buffalo and State Line 100 2,200,000 Feb. A 7,000.000; Quarterly. Apr. ’67, 6 254 Pennsylvania Feb ’67 Aug Camden and Amboy 50 20,1X10.000 100 5,000,000 Feb. A May A Nov Nov. ’66 4 111 111% and Feb. Philadelphia Erie* Aug ’67 i'30 50 Camden and Atlantic y 5,083,700 Jan. A July Jan. 50 522,350 56 ’67] 3 Philadelphia and Reading .... 50 22,742,867 do 56% do Jun. A July Jan. ’67! 5 preferred 50 600,000 Phila., Germant. A 100% 100% Norrist’n* 50 1,507,8.^0 Cape Cod 60 Apr. A Oct Apr. ’67 5 721,926 120 Jan. A Phila., Jan. Wilming. A '67 July Baltimore. 50 Catawissa* ' 50 1,150.000 April A Oct Apr. Pittsburg and Connellsville. 50 9,019,300 do 106% 28 5 1,776,129 preferred 50 2,2O0,0CJ April & Oct Apr.' ’67 Central Georgia A Pittsburg.AFt. Wayne A Chic.JOO, 9,940,987 Quarterly. Apr, ’671 2% 57% Portland Bank’g Co.10 ) 4,666,800 June A Dec Dec. ’66 Kennebec 92% Central of New 92% (new)..100i Jersey 100 13,000,000 Portland, Saco A Portsm’th. 100 1,500,000 Juue Quarterly. Apr. ’67 114 Central Ohio A Dec Dec. ’66 114% Providence and *2,600.000 ioi ‘ Worcester... .100 1,800,000 Jan. A do preferred Raritan and Delaware 400,000 July Jan. ’67 April. Apr.' ’67 j Cheshire (preferred) Bay... .100 2,530,700 100 124,550 January Rensselaer A '67i Apr. 55 consollOO Saratoga Chicago and Alton 800,000 April A Oct Oct. ’66! 4y 100 3,836,500 Mar & Sep. Mar. ’67 Saratoga and Whitehall... .100 500.000 April do my \ preferred..100 2,425,000 Mar & A Oct Oct. ’66 3 Troy, Salem A Rutland Chic. Burlington and Sep. Mar. ’67; 109 .100 i109 800,000 April A Oct Oct. ’66! 3 Quincy..100 10,193,010 May A Nov Nov. Richmond and Danville 134 100 Chicago and Great Eastern... 100 4,390,000 135 2,000,000 ’b6j Richmond and Petersburg 9 %i 12 100 1,008,600 Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska*.. .10o 1,000,000 Jan. & Rome, Watert. A July; July ’66 Ogdensb’g..l00 2,385,600 jan. A July Jan. ’6 Chicago and Milwaukee* Rutland and Burlington lOoj 2,227,000 Jan. A July 58 100 2,233,376 Chicago and Northwestern .100113,160,927 St. Louis, do Alton, A TerreH...100 2.300,000 SIX1 32% do pref. .100; 12,994,719 Annually. Dec. do 5 31% 9 ’66; 7 >g 59* j St. prel’. 100 Chicago, Rock Iel. A Pacific..100! 9,100.000 55 Louis, Jacksonv. A Chic.*lC0 1,700,000 Annually. May 86%! My, Cincinnati, Ham. & Dayton.. KXi] 3,129,200 April A Oct Apr. ’6T; 5 1,469,429 Sandusky, and Cincinnati April & Oct Apr. ’67! 5 50 2,989,090 Cincin.,Richm’d A Chicago... 100 350,090 do do Cincinnati and Zanesville pref. 50 893,073 May A Nov Nov. 50 1,000,250 Mansf. Sandusky, A Newark.100 Cleveland, Columbus, A Cm..100 6,000,000 Feb. & 900,000 Saratoga and Hudson River.. 100 Aug! Feb. ’67! 4 Cleveland A 99 i Savannah 1,029,000 Mahoning* 50 2,044,600 A Charleston.* 10'* 1,0(l0,000 Cleveland, Painesr. AAshta.lOOi 5,000,000 May A Nov Nov. 66 4 Jan. & Schuylkill July Jan. ’67 5 Valley* Cleveland and 50 676,050 Jan. A July Jan. Pittsburg 50| 5,391,575 April & Octj Apr. ’67| 4 Shaniokin Val. A Pottsville*! 50 Cleveland and Toledo 869,450 Feb. A Aug Feb. 69% 11 Snore Line 50 Railway Columbus A Indianap. Cent..100 4,841,600 j April & Oct! Apr. -’67; 6 100 635,200 Jan. A 1113V Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) July Jan. ! .100 Columbus and Xenia* Quarterly. [Apr. ’67; 750,000 Quarterly. South Carolina.. 50| 1.786,S00 Jan. A July Ja^. '67; 52%j 120 ] Concord .100 5,819,275 50 1.500,000 South Side (Peters. ALynchb)100 1,36 viay A N ov May '67 i 5 Concord and Portsmouth 13S%! ,000 100 South W 350,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67! 3) osrern Georgia... Conn, and 100 Passumpsic.pref. .100 1,514,306 Jan. & July Syracuse, Bingli'ton A N. Y..100 3.203,400 Feb. A Aug Feb. Connecticut River Jan. '67! 3 1,200.130 100 1,650,0 K> Jan. & Terre Haute A July J;>n. ’671 4 Cumberland Valley Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,150 Jan. A 50 1,316,900 Third Avenue (N. July Jan. Apr. Oct & Y.) 100 Dayton and Michigan 100 2,384,9 JO 4 Toledo, Peoria, A Warsaw.. .100 1,170.000 Quarterly. I..... Delaware* 185 1,650,232 50 406,132 jan. & JuiyiJan. do 1st prel.100 Delaware, Lacka., A Western 50 11,288,550 ]67 1,700,000 Jan. & Des Moines do 2d pref. 100 >112 July;Jan. '67 Valley 90S, 176 100 1,550,050 Toledo, Wabash A Western.. Detroit and Milwaukee 50 5,400,000 10oi 452,350 do TT.?0 do 36% preferred. do 50 1,(XX),000 May A Nov Nov. Ltica and Black River pref... 100; 1,500.000 Dubuque and Sioux City 100 V ennont and 834,400 Jan. A 100 1,673,952 Canada* July! Jan. do do pref. ..100 1,984,170 \ermont and Massachusetts.. 100 2,250,000 June A Dec Dec. March. Mar. ’< 7 Eastern. (Mass) 98% 55 100! 2,860,000 Jan. A \ trgania 100 3,573,300 Jan. & Central 54 East Tennessee & G July Jan. July Jan. ’67 100i 3,353,679 54% 107% rorgia... 100 Western 2,141,970 East Tennessee A (Mass).... 10o 6,710,800 Viiginia 109 1,902.000 Western Jan. A July jan. (N. Cardinal 139* Elmira and ....".!!ioo! 1,860,000 Jan. A W estern Union Williamsport*.. 50 500,000 May A Novi Nov. '66 do (Wis. A Ill ) July Jan. do 60 2,687.237 pref. 50 Worcester 500,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 and I Erie Nashua... 80 75 ....100 1,141,000 Jan. A 16,570,100 Feb. & Aug: Feb. ’6 i ‘do preferred Canal. 56%: 56%:! t heuapeake 10U 8,535.700 and Delaware.... Erie and Northeast* January. Jan. ’67 051 1,575,963 70% ....I1 Chesapeake 59 June A Dec Dec 600,000 Feb. A Aug] and Ohio Fitchburg ’67 Feb. 25i 8,228,595 100 3,540.000 Jan. A Delaware ..! Division..: July Jan. ’67; ...] 117 501 Georgia 100 4,156,000 Delaware and Hudson 1.633.850 Feb. A Aug]Feb. 112 Hannibal and St. Apr. A Oct. Oct. ’661 lOO; Joseph 100 1,900.000 10.000,000 Feb. A Aug, Feb. Delaware and Raritan do 145% do 100 2.987,412 pref. 100 5,253,834' Feb. A Lehigh Coal and Hartford and New Haven. Aug Feb. Navigation j I... 6,137,000 May A Nov!Nov. ...loo 3,000,000 Monongahela Navigation Co. 50 Quarterly. jApr. ’67? 3 170 107 50! Housatonicpreferred... .100 1,180,000 728,100 Morris Jan. A Hudson River May A Nov j Nov. '66 j 4 July dan. (consolidated) in! 1,025.000 do 100 13,937,100 Feb. A preferred April A Oct jApr. '67 i 4 64 Aug Feb. [ .100 1,175,000 90 Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50 Feb. A Aug Feb. Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 494,380 do do 121 50 1,908,207 pref. 50i Feb. A Aug Feb. 190,750 Jan. A Julr'Jan. '67 3 Illinois Central. c do prefer.. 50 2,888,805 % 43% 100 23,386,4501 Feb. A Feb. Susq-uehanna & A AugiFeb. ’6? Aug Feb. 5 TideAVater.. 50 2,052,083 Indianapolis and Cincinnati.. 5u 60% Union, 1,689,900 Mar. preferred ’67 4 Jefl'ersonv., Mad. A 30% .50 2.907.850 S5 f West Branch A Susquehanna. Joliet and Chicago* Indianap. 100 2,000,000 Jan. A July J Jan. -'66 50 1,100,000 Jan. A 100 Wyoming Valley.... 300,000 Quarterly. ‘Apr. ’67 Jan. Joliet and N. Indiana. '65 July 50 800,000 Irregular. Sept. ’66 300,000 Jan. A July‘Jan. ’67 41% Lackawanna and ‘Miscellaneous. 112 Bloomsburg 50 1,335,000 Coal.—American... Lehigh Valley 25 1,500.000 50 Mar. A 10,734,100 Ashburton i 40 Sep.iMar. Quarterly, i Apr. '67 2% Lexington and Frankfort 50 119 100 Butier "HU 2,51X1,000 514,646 Little Miami 50 3,572,400 June A 500,000 Jun. & Dec. Dec. Little Schuylkill* Consolidation..... Dec; Dec. '66 inn 50 2.646,100; Jan. Central A July July ’66 .’.100 5,000,009 60 Dong Island 61 50 2,000,000 Cumberland * 3,000,0:90! Quarterly. Feb. ’67 Louisville and Frankfort 41 %qq 5,000.000 Jan. A Juiy] jan. 50 1,109,5941.1 an. Penn sylvan ia A July j Jan. ’67] Louisville and Nashville 29% 50! 3,200, (XX) 100 5,500,00; Spring Mouutain...., 11 Feb. A Aug Feb. '671 Louisville, New Alb. A Chic. .100 150 * 50 1,250,000 Quarterly. jFeb. 2,800.000 Spruce Hill ’* Macon and Western 10 1,000.000 100 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 5 1,500,000 May A Nov May ’67 5 WTilkesbarre McGregor Western* 100 '•'ll 100 3,400,000 Apr. A Oct Maine Central Wyoming Valley.' Ill! .'I ‘ *100 i.-i^n non Feb. A 100 1,600,860 Marietta and Cincinnati Cku.—Brooklyn.. Aug Aug. ’66 50 -2,000,000 Feb. A Aug Aug. ’66 Citizens do do 1st pref. 50 2,029,778 (Brooklyn)!!!.'!! 20 1,200,000 Harlem Jan. A 6,586,135 Mar. A do July Jan. ’67 Y’ Sep Sep. '66 3s.. do 2d pref.. 50 644,000 4,051,744 Manchester and Lawrence... Jersey City & Hoboken!! 20 Sep. '66 3s. 165” .100 1.000,000 Jan. ?86,00o Manhattan A July Jan. ’67 5 " Memphis and Charleston May A Nov \’ov. '66; 118 i gp 4,000,000 Jan. .100 5,312,725 A July Jan. ’67 5 Mar. '62 Metropolitan..!! Michigin Central 100 170’ 100 New York 2,800,000 Michigan Southern A N. Ind..l00 7,502,866 Jan. A JuiyiJan. ’67 !'.'.*/* 50 1,000,000 9,813,500 Feb. A do May A Nov Nov. ’66 Aug! Feb. " Williamsburg do g 65; 50 guar.100 750.000 787.700 Fob. A Aug; Feb. '67' 67%; 67% Improvement. Canton Milwaukee A Prairie Du Ch.. lOO.deind-) 4,500,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 5 .100 3,014,000 Boston do Feb, A Wrater Feb. do Aug; Power. 43 1st pref. 100| 43” ’67[ 100 3,082,000 February... Feb. ’67: do Brunswick City do july ’66 20 29% 29% ..." ino 4,000.000 2d S8 1,000.000 Milwaukee and St. Paul pref. 100 1,014,000' February... Feb. '67 Telegraph.—Western Union. 100 ,..100] 3,627,000; Jan. A July1 do 28,450,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 2 preferred We-teniUidm,, Russ. ExlOO 10,000,000 100 7,371,000 Jan. A 36% 36% Mine Hill A Express.—Adams Qnarterlv. ion Schuylkill Haven 50 3,775,900 Jan. A July Jan. '67j510: 10,000,000 American Mississippi A Tennessee.. .100 July; Jan, '67 Quarterly. Nov ’66 2 ! gqn 57 Mobile and Ohio 825,399 Merchants’ Union!!’.!!!”100 9,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66 3 57 100 3,588,300 20.000.000 Morris and Essex United States !".!'!! *100 6,000.000 18 50 3,500,000 Mar. Nashua and Lowell A Sep Mar. '67 Wells, Fargo A Co 58 ...100 10,000.000 Quarterly. Dec. ’66 3 100 600,009 May A Nov Nov. ’66‘ Nashville & steamship.—Atlantic Mail. 100 4,000,000 100 2,056,544 65% 69 Chattanooga Pacific Mail Naugatuck ! Quarterly. 83* 84 100 1,408,600 Feb. 100 S American New Bedford and A Mar. Navi Quarterly. Taunton ...100 ’67 3 Aug]Feb. ’67 ation’. IlOO 127% 127% Ntw Haven 500.000! Jan. A Union .... .... ’671 ... .. ... .. j .. j ,, jApr. '67; m , j ; , . . . JulyjJan. .. . , 113%;H3%j .... .... ,y jg j , - ... .... . 25^ . .. I ... *-• • • 108*1108V . . • • • . •• . . • • ...... ... - Navgation. Trust.-Faxmers' L. . . .! New York Central&,Gt.North. 100 4,697,4571.' I j 100'26,530 000 Feb. *lew York and A *A' Aug Feb. '67 Harlem 50! preferred 601 5,285,03:'Jan. A 1,500,00);Jan. A July;Jan. '67 July Jan. '67 137 97%j 97%> * inn A New York Life A TruVtV. 25 Trust 100 Union Trust United States Ti-nst . 100 ... * Il00 Mariposa Gold...... 100 Mariposa Gold Preferred. 100 Quartz Hi l! Goid... Quicksilver Rutland Marble ., 25 \\\'\\ ion 25 .... Quarterly. Dec. Jan. A July Jan. Feb. A Aug Feb. Jan. A JuiyiJan. Jan. A Julv 1 Jan. ....; i Julv Jan. '67 Northampton.. 100 1,224,100 New Jersey Jan. '67i 100 5,000,000 Feb. A Aug' Feb. ’h7 Ne'®’ t«OT.dnn Northern.. ion H95 000 Mar A N. Orleans, Sep.iMar. '67 Opel. A Gt. WestlOO N. Orl., Jackson 4,093,425 & * .... ... • • 'Feb. • - «_* ’65 5 &• Nov Nov.’ee5 5 • . • ’66 5 ’67 5 ’67 10 ’67 4 ’67 5 1 • * . 128 ... * * • • . • • • • . • • . » 7 7% 20 21% 28% *26 \ THE April 20, 1867.] CHRONICLE. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. ! Companies. Wright par .... 10 •••• 1 1 Allen Bcmis Heights Bid. Askd 1 5 .... .... 2 50 Bonnehoff Run Bergen Coal and Oil ....10 Bliven ... Bradley Oil ... .... .... 5 .... ...10 5 Brooklyn ....10 Buchanan Farm ...100 Central 2 Cherry Run Petrol’m 5 Cherry Run special.. 10 Clinton Oil 5 Empire City 60 .... . . 80 - .... 10 50 .... 20 1 25 .... .... .. .... 50 ... ... .... .... Excelsior ... 15 .... 5 5 Germania ....10 Great Republic G’t Western Consol. ...JO First National .... .... .... INSURANCE ITEMS. Revision.—We this week present the subjoined table of Insur¬ Companies. Bid. Askd Hammond par 20 HamiltonMcClintock. Ivanhoe 2 Manhattan 2 Mountain Oil .... .... .... • • • N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons . . . Oceanic Pit Hole Creek . . . is .... Rynd Farm Second National Shade River Union United Pe’tl’mF’ms 4 50 .... ♦ .25 10 10 • • • 1 00 5 .... .... R . . 10 . 75 10 10 5 00 4 60 .... ... COPPER MINING STOCK LIST. Bid. Askd Companies. paid 3 Adventure iEtna 11 25% Albany & Boston Algomah 3 American 1% 1 Allouez .. Amygdaloid 6 Lafayette Lake Superior 00| . . 5*00 4 50 2 4% 5 00 ..13%| Bay State Bohemian Boston Caledonia Calumet Canada Charter Oak 6 0C 17% — — Central 5 Concord 4 Copper Creek Copper Falls Copper Harbor 55 95 — 22 00 23 0C 1 Marked thus (*) 6 Medora Mendotat Merrimac Mesnard Adriatic.... zEtna American *. 5 6% 8 Arctic 1% 18% 5% 7 00 1 50 2 Naumkeag 2 00 1 Beekman.... Bowery (N. Y.) New Jersey Consol.... lu New York North Cliff 4 North western 11% Norwich 11 Brooklyn Central P Citizens’. 7 50 ... | 60' City Jan. 1 , ire \ 1 5% 4% 1% Ogima Penns3?lvania * *..-2% 3% Dacotah : Dana Davidson Delaware Dev n Dorchester grounds that burnings under Jewish premiums were so frequent as as a race liable to a suspicion of criminal con¬ nivance in the premises. Several resolutions were adopted con¬ demning the companies who have thus acted, and denouncing their proceedings as the efforts of proscription to reflect unfavorably on an ancient and oppressed religious body. There was also a gene¬ ral feeling expressed that the rights of the Jews to insure in any public company should be tested in the courts. — 2’56! .24% The Jews’ Protest —A meeting of the Jewish traders of New York was held a few days ago in relation to the action of several of the Insurance Companies of this city in withdrawing from this class of merchants the benefits of insuring with them, on the 4% ,. National Native 25 0G; 52 ( 1 90,; report. INSURANCE STOCK LIST. 2 Minnesota — through the courtesy of the head of the Insurance De¬ partment at Albany, who has kindly furnished us with the figures in advance of their general publication in his forthcoming annual paid 1 Milton 2% — Madison Mandan Manhattan Bid.! Askd Mass 17 Atlas Aztec Companies. do this to make the Jews . 2 Venango (N. Y.) .... 5 6 5 5 1 . United States • . — Natural N. Y. & Alleghany New York & Newark... N. Y. & Philadel Stocks in a revised form to make it correspond with the official reports made at the close of the past year. We are enabled ance to .— -. ... 10 Brevoort .. .... 507 1867. DIVIDEND. Ttiri > is. Capital. Netas’t s 25 50 50 100 50 25 .50 25 25 25 25 -17 LOO 20 70 $300,000 00. 300,000 200,000 200.000 500.000 250,000 300,000 200,000 200,000 300,000 200,000 153,000 150,000 300,000 210,000 250,000 500,000 Periods. Last 151,00 2 Jan. and July 325,23 3 Jan. and July 515,89 0 Jan. and July 222,07 3 Jan. and July 282.12 Jan. and July 257,75 3 Feb. and Aug 336,47 3 March and Se p 204,791 ) May and Nov 170,17 Feb. and Aug 345,74* 4 June and Dec 266,361 3 Feb. and Aug Last Sale. • Jan. ’67 5 J. ’67.3*x3 * Jan. ’67 Jan. 65... 5 . . . . ... . . 40% K Aug. ’66 Mar. ’67.. . i .... ...... Aug. ’65. d4 Dec. ’66. .1 3 Feb. '67... 3 Feb. ’67.. 1 July’6-4 .J Jan.’67 .!() . . . 238.5013 paid do * Jan. and July do Feb. and Aug Jan. and Julv 'do do Feb. and Aug Jan. and July 92,68, 3 384,2613 33S,87f 3 275,591 309,625 214,14r 424,181 228,69t 234,87; April and Oct l,2S9,03r Jan. and July 404,17t March and Se; 36,538 Jan. and July 424,29: April and Oct 203,99C Jan. and July 38% 150 180 Feb. ’67.73* Jan. ’67. .... 00 July'64.3% 00 Jan. ’67 ..£ 1 35 200,000 — Pewabic 5 63115 75 00 400,000 Aug. ’• 6 ..{ 20% Phoenix 15 .} 5 00 50 200,000 1 July’66 . .E Pittsburg & Boston... 5% 40 00 00 Oct.’65...f 250,000 1% Pontiac 62*: .10% Continental * 00 Jan. '67 ..r 500,000 Dudley . 1% Portage Lako — Corn 50 Mar. ’64..£ 400,000 Exchange. Princeton Eagle River 3% 2 25 00 200,000 Edwards July’64 ..f 1% Providence — 40 300,000 Eagle Apr. '67..t 25 00 26 00 10 Empire Quincy % 10 00 Empire City. 200,000 Everett 1 July’66 . .7 Resolute... 6% Excelsior 50 do 200,000 229,27b Jan.'67...£ Evergreen Bluff 5% Ridge 8 30 Exchange.... 134,061 Feb. and Aug. 150,000 Excelsior — Rocrland 8 25 12 17 204.000 241,840 Jan. and July. Jan. '67 .5 ...I Flint Steel River.. 10« 9% St. Clair 4 25 3 Firemen’s Fund... 10 do 150,000 121,468 Franklin July ’66.3% 8% 20 00 22 CO St. Louis 1 Firemens Trust.. 10 do 150,000 165,933 French Creek 83 — July'65 .5 St. Mary’s. 5% 25 do 200,000 250,766 Girard 5 Salem ’ July ’66 . .5 % 50 150,000 149,689 Great Western 2 May and Nov. Seneca 1 00 200,000 227,954 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’67 ..5 Hamilton 2 Sharon % 50 Jan. and July. July ’66 ..5 500,000 525,762 00 e 00 Sheldon & Columfcian.21 Hancock 17% 50 200.000 200.015 Jan. and July. July’65 ..5 50 108 South Pewabic Hanover 1% 1 00 1,000.000 2,335,657 Jan. and July. Jan. '67.3% Hilton South Side 2% 2 25 200,0001 255,657 Feb. and Aug. Ang ’66..5 Star 50 1 Hope 1% 25 11% 50 200,000 170,225 April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5 — 25 00 40 00 Superior Hecla 60 00 8 . Guardian. 200,000 177,173 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 3% Hulbert Toltec 21 % 25 15 do 150,000 Jan '67 ..5 162,571 Humboldt 6 1 25 1 50 Tremont 1% 50 do i 400,000 Jan. ’67 .5 419,952 Victoria Hungarian 1 1% 50 200.000 15-*.229 do Huron 19 8 50 8 75 Vulcan July’66 .5 6 90 2,000,000 2,271,387 do Jan. V .5 Indiana 10 1 Washington 1 50 do Hope 200,000| Isle Royale* West Minnesota Jnly ’65 .6 33 2% 50 Howard. do 1 Jan. '67 .5 500,000 Keweenaw 5 546,522 Winona 3 10 do 200,000 Knowlton 8 195,926 70 July ’65 . .5 25 Winthrop 4% do 200,000 Import’ & Traders. 50 167,833 July ’65 .6 * 30 1,000,000 800,604 Feb. and Ang. Aug.’66.3% Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares. t Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares, 25 do 200,000 206,179 Feb. ’67..5 i Capital $200,000, In 20,000 shares. 10 238.808 March and Sep Mar.'67 .4 200,010 Capital Lake Superior comnanies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares Jefferson. 20 150,000 176,678 Jan. and July. Jan.'67 5 10 Knickerbocker. do 280,000 Jan. ’67 .5 302,741>0 do 150,000 141,434 Jan.’67 ..5 HI do 300,000 863,006 Jan. ’67 ..5 Companies. Bid. Askd Companies. A Bid. Askd 150.000 do 121,(07 July ’65 . .4 0 200,000 do Jan. ’B7..5 284,605 Grass Valley par 10 A 1,000,000 1,118,661 par — do Jan. '67 ..5 — Alameda Silver. 8 85 9 do Gunnell 10 j 3 50; 4 60 10 500,000 610,930 do Jan. ’67..5 10 71 1 10 200,000 288,917 do Jan. '67 3% k 00, Gunnell Union Atlantic & Pacific Holman 2 11; A 17 Meehan’ & Trade’. do 222,921 200,000 Jan. ’67 ..5 & Ayres Mill Mining 0 Hope 25 do 150; 000 116,092 Jan. ’67..5 50 i uo l'70! Keystone Silver 0 195.546 — do 200,000 Jnly '66 4 5 1 00 1 10 Knickerbocker — 0 200,000 do Jan.’67.10 245,169 Bob Tail 0 1,000,000 Kip & Buell 2 60! 516,936 do Metropolitan * t.. Jnly ’65 . .5 Boscobel Silver LaCrosse — 40 0 60 Montauk (B’k'yn) 161,743 150,000 do Jan. ’67..5 Bullion Consolidated. 6 0 Nassau (B’klyn).. Liberty 150.000 — do 259,270 Jan. ’67..8 1 10 Burroughs 50 £ Liebig 200,000 do 228,628 Jan. ’67 ..6 12 Central... Mill Creek — 5 New Amsterdam.. 319,870 300,000 do Jan. ’67..4 Church Union — Montana 5 5 40 N. Y. Equitable 3 210,000 264,703 Tan. and July. Jan.’67 ..6 Columbia G. & S 3 55 3 60. Mon tank — ) 247.895 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’67..5 200,000 )... — 3 19 New York 10 651 ) 1,000,000 1 ,053,825 Jan. and 70 July. Jan.’67 ..5 ...100 8 85 8 90 Nye V 500,000 — North do 8 511,631 Jnly’66 ..5 25 5 95 6 05i Ohio & Colorado G.& S. 45 Corydon 5 North 350,000 379,509 April and Oct. Apr. ’67..5 1 Crozier 55 90 5 People’s G. & S. of Cal. 5 200,000 * 244,293 Jan and July. Jan.'67..6 Des Moines.... 15 Park 25 J Quartz Hill 25 do 200,000 212,521 Tan.’67 ..5 1 "2 6 Rocky Mountain 5 75! Peter Cooper 10 ... 150,000 do Jan.’67 ..5 185,365 Echla Sensenderfer ..'10 30 1 14-203 Feb. and Ang. 150,000 Fall River Smith & Parmelee 20 75) 5 00 Phoenix + Br’klyn. 1,000,000 1,077,288 ran. and July, tFan ’67..5 First National. 1 Reliei Symbnds Forks — do 200,000 190,167 July ’66. .5 Gilpin.. Texas do 300,000 453,233 ran.’67.3% Gold Hill Yellow Jacket — do i ruly’66.3% 200,000 185,952 200,000 216,879 1 I’eb. and Aug. 1 (’eb. ’67..5 do 1 ?eb. ’67..5 150,000 140.679 7 STOCK LIST. 156,220 d an. and July, i \.ug.’66 .5 150,000 1,000,000 1 962,181 I’eb. and Aug. 1 r,eb.,66.3% Companies. Bid. 1 Askd CO MPANIK8. Bid. Askd 200,000 226,756 J an. and July. Jran.’67 ..5 Star. do 200,000 195,780 Jruly’6G..5 . Copake Iron Tudor Lead par 5 par — 200,000 206,731 Foster Iron Saginaw, L. S. & M.. 25 Stnyvesant 25 200,000 198,182 F ’eb. and Ang. Jlug. ’66 5 Lake Superior Iron 100 Wallkill Lead 31 33 Tradesmen’s 25 150,000 158,733 J an. and July. J an.‘67..5 ioe Bucks County Lead Wallace Nickel 5 ;... — United States 26 do .1 an.’67 ..5 250,000 336,691 Denbo Lead Rutland “Marble 25 Washington 50 400,000! 630,314 F eb. and Ang. I’eb.’67...5 - ....: 115 Manhan Lead Long Island Peat — Washington *+... .100 398,700 190,206 F °b. and Ang. F'eb. ’67,..5 Phenix Lead — Russe\L File 5 Williamsburg City.50 179,008 J an. and July. J an. ’67 5 Iron Tank storage — Savon de Terre — Yonkers & N. Y.. 100. Petherick 2o6: 5% 3% . ... .. .... ... — ... • . . . . .... . ... . . . ,. m . m . - # t . .... .... . ..... . . , .... ,. .... % , ..... .... . .... GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. .... . . .. . ... ..... . . . ... ... ...... .... ... .... . ... . .... . .... .... ... " ■ .... .... . '351 ... . - . , . • •. • .... . .... . ... . . . . . • ... * ... — .... • • • • V .... .... .... , — .. . . . . MISCELLANEOUS .... . . ... T .... . — .. . .... r .... • • i . — — .... .... .... 2*66 4*00 .... .... • • • • . 150,0001 600,0001 501,244] .. do J uly *66 . .5 . .. . [April 20,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 508 Financial. Safes. Insurance. ^Etna IMPORTANT Marine Insurance. The TO Insurance Company, Bankers & Merchants. OF HARTFORD. ce Insurance Company of North America , of Philadelphia. 1 Charter Perpetaal. L. J. $3,000,000. HENDEE, President. $4,478,100 74 1, 1867 Liabilities 394,976 96 INSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DAMAGE BY FIRE. NEW YORK AGENCY, NO. 62 WALL JTAS. A. STREET. ($1,000,000.) FIRE AND INLAND A. F. Frank W. Dollars, HASTINGS, President Insurance. COMPANY. - on Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland Navigation Risks. Premiums paid in gold will be entitled to premium in gold. a return MOSES H. GRINNELL, Pres't. EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Prea't. INSURANCE COMPANY. YORK. $1,261,349 ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844 Daring the past year this Company has paid to its Policy-holders, CASH, arebatement on premiums in lien of scrip, equiva¬ lent in value to an average scrip dividend of TWENTY PER CENT. » Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based on the principle that all classes of risks are equally profitable, this Company makes such the stockholders. This Company continues to make Insurance on Marine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable Merchandise terms, including Risks op all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issu. d making loss payable in Gold or Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬ Works, ) Chicago, Ill., March 13, lg67. f William T, Frost, William Watt, E. Haydock White, N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Henry Eyre, R. Kunhardt. Cornelius Grinnell, Henry John S. Williams, Joseph Slagg, William Nelson, Jr., Jas. D. Fish, Charles Dimon, Geo. W. Hennings, A. William Heye, Francis Hathaway, Harold Dollner, ' Aaron L. Reid, Paul N. Spofford. Ellwood Walter, ELLWOOD WALTER, President CHAS. NEWCQM&Yice-Pre»t< C, j, D*8Tl*P>. Secretary. KAHL, Secretary. Niagara Fire Insurance COMPANY. NO. 12 WALL STREET. x $1,000,000 270,353 CASH CAPITAL, SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Losses Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, Chartered I860. 253 per cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, P. NOTMAN, President Secretary. Hanover Fire Insurance COMPANY, Cash $400,000 00 capital 156,303 98 Surplus Gross Assets.... Total Liabilities. Truly yours, drill. $556,303 98 24,550 00 BENJ. S. WALCOTT. President J. Rrxskn Lank, Secretary. The Mutual Life InsuRANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1866, over $16,000,000 00 FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President. Northwestern Man’f’g Co., ) Chicago, March 11, 1867. J Messrs. Murray & Winne, Office of E. A. McCURDY, Vice-President. Secretaries, } ISAAC ABBATT. a f J0HN Agents Lillie Safe and Iron Co., Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample you fur¬ nished ns (of a new combination of metals to be used in the manufacture of Lillie’s Safes) to the se¬ verest tests of our H Power Drill, and with the best tempered drills our skill and experience could P o E pro¬ duce. After operating upon it with different drills seve¬ ral hours without penetrating, it more than half an inch and at that point unable to make further pro¬ became saiisfled that if not utterly im¬ penetrable, it would at least require days of time, a gress, we number of drills ana machine power to pene¬ through it: and that it was entirely out of the power of even the most skilful burglar to penetrate a cafe made of this material. lame trate R. T M STUART. Actuary, SHEPHARD HOMANS. CRANE, President. Fire Insurance Company, . OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. Cask Capital- 00 Total JL1 <»bllitl' S Losses Paid! s 1865 00 14 ----$200,000 Assets, March 9. 1866 * - 252,550 26,850 - 201,588 This Company Insures against Loss or favorable terms as any other Fire on as 22 Damage by responsible Company. ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS SOLICITED. Lillie’s DOUBLE CHILLED AND WROUGHT IRON FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF Safes. Board of Directors: HENRY M. unequalled Burglarproof Safes constantly on band at onr Warerooms. Also, safes of every description, designed for both Fre and Bur. lar-procf security. The public are in¬ A full assortment of these vited to call and examine for themselves as to the merits of our Safes. ' Lillie Safe & Iron Co., -LEWIS LILLIE, President. 198 BHQ49WU, (NEW YORK. THOS. P. CUMMINGS, TABER, ROBERT SCHELL, " JOSEPH FOULKE, STEP. CAMBRELENG. WILLIAM H. TERRY, ; THEODORE W. RILEY, FRED. SCHUCHABDT. JACOB REESE, (JOSEPH GRAFTON, JNO. W. MERSEREAU, L. B WARD, JOSEPH BRITTON, D. LYDIG SUV DAM, AMO" ROBBINS, HENRY S. LEVERICH. WILLIAM REM SEN, D. Colden Murray, . - JOHN E. Agents Lidie Safe and Iron Co., Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample of new combination of metals for safes sent us by }’Oii to as thorough tests of the drill as we could, and fail¬ ed to pent trate the metal at all. We thiDk it won d be impossible for bu glare to enter the safes made of this metil by means of the drill during the longest time in ordinary business they coaid have acce-s to them—iu lact, that the metal is proof against the TRUSTEES. James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, RUDOLPH GARR1GUE, President Messrs. Murray & Winne, pool. » $740,482 43 TOTAJL ASSETS.......... No. 45 WALL STREET. Office Union Foundry cash abatement or discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬ maining at the close of the year, will be divided to on 240,482 43 SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1S67 Foremen in Messrs. Merrick & Son’s South worth Sec'y. Asaets, Jan. 1st, 1867 BECH1ELL, $500,000 00 CAPITAL, 8TRAHAN, N. S. BOUTON & CO. The Mercantile Mutual IN W. H. W. H. $2,716,424 32 STREET, NEW CASH January 1st 1866. DIYIDEND THIRTY PER CENT. This Company insures against Marine Risks No. 35 WALL Philadelphia, Pa., February 25,1867. Messrs. Lewis Lillie & Son, Gentlemen,—We have tried a simple of d' ublechilled iron similar to that sent to the Novelty Works, New York, and our experience with it is about the same, viz : that it can only be penetrated by a long continued operation of the most skillful Co., NO. 175 BROADWAY, N. Y. Foundry, Philadelphia, Pa. (insurance buildings,) 49 WALL STREET. - Germania Fire Ins. LTAMS mechanics and the best tools. \ cry truly, Sun Mutual Insurance Isaac H. Walker, Wl! WORKS, ) Boston, Msss*, January 22,1867. i "We having made an attempt to drill a sample of double chilie l iron furnished us by Messrs. Liliie & Son, and failed to penetrate it more than five-eighths (%) of an inch, after hours of labor, feel that we can endorse the above Novc.ty Iron Works’ certificate in all particulars. JARVIS WILLIAMS, Treasurer. AND INSURANCE. Ballard, Secretary. ASSETS, Dec. 31, 1865 truly, ISAA< J V. HOLMES. Supt. LYMAN G. HALL, Foreman. BROADWAY, Million r f Gentlemen,-We have subjected the sample of furnished us to the most se¬ vere tests (as resards drilling through it) we could bring to bear upon it, and w thout success. It is our opinion that it can only be penetrated by the use of a large number of drills, and the expen¬ diture of much power with days of time, and we think it impossible foi a burglar with his time and power to penetrate it at all. Youis Security Insurance Co., Capital, fOne 1666. double-chMed iron you UlNKLEY Cash 61 William Street. Works, } Messrs. Lewis Lillie & Son, ALEXANDER, Agent. No. 119 CATLIN & SATTERTHWAITE, Agents. % Office of the Novelty Iron New Yoik. 18th December, JT. GOOD NOW, Secretary. Awets January and losses adjusted and paid in New York. Company offer for the consideration of Bank ers, Merchants and those desiring the beat burglar proof security the fjllowing certificates: This 7. CAPITAL 1867, $1,763,287 23. Assets, Jan. 8, Risks made binding Incorporated 1819 CAPITAL $500,000. INCORPORATED 1794. BEEVE, President. JACOB CHAS. D. HARTSHORNE, Secretary. REMOVAL. The North American Life INSURANCE COMPANY. Will Remove to the r New Offices, 220 Broadway, corner of Barclay on »t., May 1st. The office now oacupied by them, 63 William Street, corner Cedar }» to Rent.. PRICES Bark. 80 $ can tad val.: CURRENT. /* a addition to the Bleaching Powder, 80 cents # 100ft; duties noted of 10 per Refined Borax, 10 oents # .•> is levied on all imports that have no reciprocal the United States, treaties with 15 chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places this of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 par cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ dition to the duties imposed on any such *f Raw tion ; directly from the growth or produc¬ Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The tor ir all oases to be 2,240 lb. . Anchors—Doty: 2! cent? $ ft. Ot209ft and upward#ft »i@ 1C Ashes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... $ 100 ft 8 5) @ 8 62 PearL 1st sort 12 75 @18 (0 Beeswax- Duty,20 $ cent ad val. American yellow. $ ft 40 @ 41 Bones-Duty : on invoice 10 # ct. ttlo Grande shin $ ton Bread—Duty, 30 # cent ad val. Pilot $ft •• @ Navy @ • ®1 H Breadstuffs—See special report. 9J Crackers.... Common @'2 00 17 £-0 @18 00 ©75 00 hard, .per M.ll O') Croton... Philadelphia Fronts Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair 1 w ft. 65 @ 2 50 Amor’n,gray &wh. #ft Butter and Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. Butter— N.Y State—Fresh palls Firming Half dr kin mbs... Welsh tubs, prime. WeL-htnbs, s-co id 28 @ quality North Pennsylvin a— 1 rkins..; Western Western 2G @ *0 @ *0 @ 30 10 @ so 18 © 25 15 ‘.0 JKe-erve—Flrkiis States kins, Fir¬ yell w @ @ 31 @ Factory Dairies....... i do Common Farm Dairies do Common I 18 @ 34 @ 18 @ 10 @ Assafcetida Balsam Copaivi Balsam Tolu.. Balsam Peru 20 Bark 18 . NewcastleGs jtSteqm .... .... Guayaquil do ...(gold) 144@ St Domingo.. ..(gold) 9*@ Coffee.—See special report. weighing 14 @ 34 oz. # square 3 cents # ft. ft Sheathing,new..# ft 8heathing, yelloi .. Bolts ... -5 @ 21 @ ..© 22® @ Tarred Russia. Tarred American ..... .. @ @ Corks—Pft^y, 50 # cent ad v*l. Regular, quarts# grow 55 @ Qolt Rope, Russia. Mineral 60 @ Phial 12 @ Cart away Cochineal, Hon (gold) Cochlneal,Mexic’n(g’d) Copperas, American .. Cream Tarar, pr.(gold) Cubebs, East India.... Cutch Epsom Salts 00 @42 50 2S @ 95 @ 1 60 @ .. Flowers,Benzoin.$ oz. foot, 85 Gamboge South&West. Gum Arabic, Picked.. Gum Arabic, Sorts... Gum Benzoin ..(gold) Gum Kowrie 4 33 191 191 22 Gum ?i@ 4i @ m (81 @ 10t@ 10»@ iy Myrrh,East India Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. Gum Senegal (gold) Gum T ragacanth, Sorts Gnm Tragacanth, w. Mink, dark 65 @ 2S @ 60 80 (gold) 60 @ 1 to Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng (gold) 8 80 @ 8 95 Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 @ Raccoon Skui k, B Brazil lalnp Lae Dye 70 Lioorloe Paste,Calabria Licorice, Paste, Sicily. Licorice Paste Spanish 70 40 Licorice Paste, Greek. Solid @ 4 00 1 7 @ 2 20 25 @ 55 36 @ 24 @ 25 88 @ 42 3G @ Madder,Dutch., (gold) 7j@ do, French* EXF.F.do r|@ Manna, large flake— 1 6* @ Manna, small flake.... 1 10 @ Mustard Seed, Cat S @ Mustard Seed, Trieste. 15 © Nntgalls Bine Aleppo 82j® Oil 4nia 5 00 Oil Cassia. -100 Oil Bergamot......... $ 60 . 71 . . . $ 12 35 12 ^ O •W 00 00 00 75 20 .... . 5 00 @ 8 00 Otter 15 @ 10 @ 80 50 80 @ 76 Glass—Duty, Cylinder or Window ack Polished Plate aot over 10x15 inches, 21 cents fi square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $ square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents $ square foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents $ square foot; unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding lOx on 15 inches square, 11; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not flakey Ipecacuanna, 1 to3 do ordinary.. 6 Broad » atch’s 3toS bst. 15 do i .dii ary 12 Coffee Mil s-IronHop’r 8 do Bri. Hopper 6 do Wood Back 4 over 24x30 ,2!; all over $ ft. American that, 8 cents Window—1st, 2d, 8d, and 4th qualities. (Subject to a discount of 8f @35$ cent.) 6x 8 to 8x10. .$ 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50 8x.. tol0x!5... 7 75 @ 6 00 llx <c to 12x 18 9 25 @ 6 50 12x10 to 16x24 9 50 @ 7 00 18x22 to 20x30 11 75 @ 7 50 20x31 to 24x30 14*50 @ 9 00 24x31 to 24x36 16 00 @10 00 25x36 to 30x44 17 00 @11 00 80x46 to 32x48 18 00 @12 00 - 32x50 to 82x56. Above.. 20 00 @18 00 ..24 00 @15 00 English and French Window-—1st, :VJU, and 4th qualities. Gins, Cotton 2d, (Bi b gle Thick)—Discount 80@85 fleer t $x 8 toSxlO.$50 feet 7 TO @ « 00 80 16 15 13 13 24 21 17 15 25 @ @ @ @ .... 00 @ 9 60 17 17 @ 7 60 50 60 @25 GO •0@ 75 @ 7 60 CO @10 00 .... 2 @10 60 > shw...$5@< less 20 % Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 % dia. per Cast Butt<—Fast Joint. 4 List 10 Jtaiv. Loose Joint.. List. Hinges^ r< a* ht, List 25 jfadv. Door Bi Its, Cast Br>! L st 20 % dia Cnrria^e and Tire Bolts List 40 % dia. DoorL c sandLatches List 71$ dia. Door Knobs—Mineral. ..List 7l % dig. 4* Pore lain List 7# % dis. Pa«ilocbs NVw List 25&7| % dia. Locks—Cabinet, Eagle 10 % -da. . . . “ Tiun^ List 10 % dia. St-cksanrl Dies Lit80£dis. 3crew Wrencnes—Coe’s Patent List 20* dis; do 'left's ..List 56@60j(dia. Sin tbs’ Vis s $ ft *4 @ .. Framing Chisels llrmer no Old List 871 % d do in sets handled, List 40 jfadv. Augur Bitts Phm t Ausrui s,per Rink List 20* 10 i dia. dz.NewList 20 ji dis. do a , a, List4oj(adv. insets. oO 00 2 « 0 @ 5 00 3 00 @ 6 00 8 @ 10 Opossum @ .. .. Musk rat, 55 36 27 4i 55 @ pale do . 80 @ 25 @ 40 @ Carpe * ter’s A dzes,.... do ordinary Shingling Hatchets, C’t Steel, best br’ds, Nos. Kivet 5 00 @20 00 Marten, Dark steel, best I er d< z brand do ordinary @ 50 @ 75 2 «0 @ 4 <0 Lynx - © 2 00 S5 @ 1 05 80 70 @ 88 35 @ Axes—Cast List 20 % dis. CutTacks Cut brads 00 821 29 @ 12 @ Hardware- @ 5 Of @50 00 3 00 @ 5 00 I 00 @ 1 50 do Cross do Red do Grey free. KioGrande,mixed# ft Bnenos Ayres,mixed. Hog,Western, nnwash. 50 4 00 @ 8 00 Fisher, Fox, Silver 4i 17 @ 80 @ , Hair—Duty 80 Furs—Du.y, 10 cent. Beaver,Dark..$ skin 1 00 @ 4 do Pale 60 @ 2 Bear, Black 5 00 @i* do brown 2 00 @ 8 Badger 60 @ 1 Cat, Wild 60 @ do House .* :.. 10 @ 11 18 60 .. - , @ 9i*@ H@ .. Fruits—See special report. 15 00 95 81© Gambler... Ginseng, 45 80 @ 10 @ £|@ 20 @ 14 @ . . $ ft, 6 cents $ ft, an $ cent ad val.; over 20 cents V ft, lo cents $ ft ana 20 $ centad val Blasting!A) $ 25ft keg .. @ 5 00 Shipping and Mining.. .. @ 5 50 Rifle 7 60 @ Sporting, in 1 ft canisters $ ft 40 @ 1 10 @ 5 25 50 @ .. .. Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. Jersey ft 281 1 70 20 60 20 @ 25 Herring, pickled^bbl. 5 50 @ 6 50 Herring, Scaled^ box. Herring, No. 1 4 .. Extract Logwood Fenueh Se d Drugs c|n4 Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, 2 50 p^r gallon; Aloes, 6 cents # ft; Alum, 60 cents # 100 ft; Argols, 6 cents 9 ft; Arsenic and AsaafcBdati, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regains, 10; Jlrrowrooi, 80 # ceqt ad val.; Balsam Oopaivl, 20; Balsam Tola, 30; Balaam Peru, 50 cents $ ft; Oallsaya . Seed Coriander Seed Cottoii—See special report. , 35 Ammonia, Caustic Soda Cordage—Duty, tarred,8; unv-Tred Manila, 21 other untarred, 31 cents # ft. Manila,.......... # ft v 51® cents or less Mackerel, No. 8, H’faxlJ 75 @ .... Mackerel, Na 8, Mass @ Salmon, Pickled, No.1.40 00 @49 CO 8a mon, »i kled. p. te.4 ^ x 0 @55 00 , , Sul¬ ChamomileFow’a#ft Chlorate Potash (gold) 10 2 4U 19 18 @ Cardamoms, Malabar.. 8 2* @ 3 50 Castor Oil Cases # gal 2 17 @ 23J Portage Lake... t lor Carbonate in bulk 15 # @ @ @ .. 20 (0 @20 £0 shore special report. valued at 1C square yard, 3; orei Calcutta, light & h’y * 20 @ Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 1C cents or less $ square yard, 3; ovei 10,4 cents $ ft. • Calcutta, standard, y’d @ 23 Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 90 Mackerel,No.l,IIalifaxl8 00 @.H 6» Mackerel,No. l,Bay..l 25 @1S .’0 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay.. 16 75 @17 00 Mackerel, No. 2, H3 axl5 75 @16 00 @i4 25 Mac’el,No.3,Mass l’ge • .im.~ Roll Cantnarido- 36 Braziers’.... Baltimore Detroit .. phur Camphor, «• «;de, (in bond) (gold) Camphor, Ucfined. 26 ,, 19 0 _ 84 84 • 3i@ # ft 14 Inches wide, long and @ • less, « 10, 4 cents $ ft Mackerel, No. 1, Mass .. $ (gold). 40 Brimstone bc @ 78 @ rels, 50 cents $ K>0 ft. Dry Cod # cwt. 5 00 ® 5 Crude Brimston -, Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 21; old copper i cents # ft; manu¬ factured, 35 # cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets42 inches 38 38 • 16 50 @18 00 18 00 @15 00 20 50 @1$ 00 24 00 @18 00 to 24x86 cents or • Pickled Scale...$ bbl. . Pickled Cod ^ bbl. 6 75 S T 00 50 @ T 50 50 @13 00 Gunny Bag's—Duty, Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $i :Salmou $3; other pickled, $1 50 bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried, in smaller pkgs.than fcar* m * gold ton @ ... @10 50 Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents # ft. 1 Caracas (in bond)(gold) # ft... 25 @ Maracaibo do ..(gold) .. @ v _ 25 @ 6 50 Groceries— See Feathers—Duty; 30 $ centad val. ’ Soda, New¬ Brimston-. 7 <0 @ 3 00 @ 8) @ ?l@ Prime Western...^ 1b Tennessee 8 9 10 15 24x36 to 30x44 80x45 to 82x48 82x50 to 32x56. 88 20 @ „ __ Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined Coal—Duty, bituminous, 11 25 # ton of 28 bushels 3u ft to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $1 28 bushels of 80 ft # bushel. Liverpool Orrel. # ton of2,240 ft @ .... Liverp’l House Cannel @ lGasCa-n-1 51 @ 21 20 @ w 75 85 75 @ 4 am 56 @ 1 26 1' @ 131 IS IS @ 2o 85 36 85 @ V 2 @ 25 @ 85 a @ 7j .3 1 25 @ 1 60 3 00 @ 3 121 60 60 \,u 4* Bi Chromate Potasn... Cement-Rosendale#bl ,...@ 1 75 Chains-Duty, 2* cents# ft. One inch & upward# ft 9@ (9 @ 18 @ Salaratus SalAm’n ac, Ref (gold) Sal Soda. Newcastle... • Petayo Bi Carb. castle stearine and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents $ ft. * Sperm, patent,. ft 48 @ Refined sperm, city... 3*i @ 40 Stearic 30 @ 31 13 @ 211 Adamantine 60 57|@ Berries, Persian 16 13 14 ceti and wax o; Liverpo> d Annato, good to prime. Antimony, Regulus of Argols, Crude.t Argols, Refined Arseni c, Powdered.... Caudles—Duty, tallow, 21; sperma¬ Anthraolte Cardiff steam u Alum .. Cheese— la b Aloes, Cape $ ft Aloes, Socotrine 8j — Firkins, nd quality , Alcohol SO ... v Caustic Soda, 11; Copperas,!; Cream Sarsaparilla, Hond 95 @ Sarsaparilla, Mex @ 23 Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft; Seneca Root «8 @ 45 Cutch, 10: Chamomile Flowers, 20 Senna, Alexandria...'. 27 @ 89 # cent ad val.; Epsom Salts. 1 cent Senna, East India..... 18 @ 80 # ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Shell Lac... 30 @ 40 Benzola and Gamboge, 10 # cent.; Spda Ash (80^c.)(g,ld) 2j@ 2! Ginseng, 20; Gam Arabic, 20 # cent ad val.; Gam Benzoin, Gum KowSugar L'd, W,e(goid).. 8U @ rie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per ft; Sulp Quinine, Am $ oz 2 20 @ .. Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum | Sulphate Morphine,... 6 75 @ Tart’c Acid..(g’id)^ft Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 $ 52 @ eent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub Taj»ioca 12 @ 16 limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, Verdigris, dryo ex dry .. @ 45 Vitriol, Blue 10 @ 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil ! Anls, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, Duck—Duty, 30 # cent ad vaL 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ Ravenj, Light. pee 16 00 @ mot, $1 # ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 Ravens, Heavy # cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic »8 Uu @ Acid, 4 centa # ft; Phosphorus, 20 72 Scotch, G’ck, No.I ^y @ Cotton,No. 1... ^ y. 70 @ $1 cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents $ ft: Quicksilver, 15 $1 cent ad Dye Woods—Duty free. Camwood..(gold)$ltniH0 0G@ val.; Sal iEratns.il cents # ft; Sal 30 0o @ 81 00 Fu8tic,Cuba Soda, 1 cent $ ft 5 Sarsaparilla and Fustic, Savanilla @ 28 CO Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac, Fustic, Maracaibo....2<S 00 @ ... 10; soda Ash, 1; Sugar Lead, 20cents » ogwood, Hon. 81 00 @33 00 $1 ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $1 cent ad Logwood, Laguna (gold)S0 10 @ .... val.; Sulph. Morpbiue, $2 50 # oz.; Logwood, St. D«mln..)9 00 @20 00 Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents Logwood, Cam.(gold).25 50 @ $ ft; Sal Ammoniac, 2o; Blue Vit¬ Logwood,Jamaica @16 00 riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etnerial Pre¬ Limawood..., @115 00 parations and Extracts, $1 $1 ft; all Barwood (gold)bO 00 @ .... others quoted below, free. Acid, Citric.... (gold) 81 11x14 12x19 20x31 24x31 .... Rhubarb, China.(gold) 2 75 @ 8 50 Sago, Pen led 7® 8 * @45 00 ... @ .. Quicksilver # cent ad val.; Crude camphor, rate Potash, 6; Citric Acid, 10; side articles when imposed place or places their Prns8iate Potash 8x11 to 10x15 to 12x18. to 16x24 to 24x80 @ 4 25 Opium, Turkey.(gold) 0 67f@ Oxalic Acid ' 8S @ Phosphorus 90 @ 30; Refined Camphor, 40 centa $ ft.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 # cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents # ft; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo¬ and mer¬ pjy On all goods, wares, ft; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 # ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 # ton, and die criminating duty tent, ad val. under flags OH Lemon 8 75 Oil Peppermint, pure. 6 00 Bl Carb. Soda 11; Bl Chromate Potasn, 3 cents # ft - below, >509 THE i CHRONICLE. April 20,48^7.] List 75&5 % dis ’.. List nn % dia. Iron List 26&80j< dis. Screws American... List 10&5£dis. do English List 80 % dta. Shovels snd Spades... List 5 % dia. Shoes Horse 71@ 8#ft List 30@35 %adv Planes IV ay—North for shipping River, in bales# 100 ft a 1 65 @ 1 70 Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $<&; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 # ton; and fampioo, 1 cent $ ft. Amer.Dressed.# ton 870 00@885 00 do 280 00 360 (0 135 00 Undressed.. 276 Russia, Clean Jute 3 5 0 (8°ld) Manila..# ft..(gold) Sisal Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬ ed and Sklna 10 $ cent ad val. Dry Hides— - Buenos Ayres# Montevideo Rio Grande ftg’d ^Hnoco do do do California gold California, Mex. do Porto Cabello Vera Cruz .. do do do Tampico do Texas Dry Salted Hides— th li (g°ld) California... do San wtch Isl’d do South & Wes*, do Wet Salted Hides— Bue Ayres.# ftg’d. Rio Grande .... do 13 @ 14. 10 @ @ 101 10 . do California Western Ooutryal’ter trim. & cured. do City do Uppe r Leather Stock— B.A. & Rio Gr. Kip # ft cash. Sierra Leona do Gambia & 3'ssi.u do ... .. @ 101 10i@ lo @ 10 @ 101 1.0 IS 11 1C1 28 @ 80 @ @ 28 101 11 27 81 24 Honey—Duty, 2 sent # gallon. Cnba (duty paid) (gr1 $ gall. 84 @ Hops—Duty: 5 $ ft. 70 Crop of 1866 .....# ft 45 do of 1865 Foreign 1 30 53 45 TO 510 THE CHRONICLE. H«nts—Duty, 10 # cent. ad v*L Ox, Rio Grande... $ 0 10 c0@ 10 25 Ox, American 8 00® 10 00 India Rubber—Duty, 10 # oent do # lb Carthagen*, Ac Indigo—Duty Bengal @ do do do do 70 65 @ @ East India @ frik. (.old) #ft 1 0» @ 1 70 (gold) 75 @ 1 85 (gold) 60 @ 5 (gold) 65 @ 1 00 Guatemala (gold) 1 00 @ 1 2. Oaraccas (gold) 75 @ i 0) I ron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1* cents # lb. Railroad, 70 cents # 100 lb; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents $ lb; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, If to If cents $ ft; Pig, $9 # ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents # fi>. Pig> Scotch,No 1. # ton 33 00® 41 00 Pig, American, N o. 1.. 0 00® Bar, Refl'd tuigA Amer 85 u @ 95 ( 0 Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold) 95 00® 100 00 Oude Madras Manila .. ,—Stobe Prices-, Bar Swedes, assorted sizes Bar ^English and Amer¬ @160 00 ican, Reflned 110 > 0@115 do do do CommonlOO 00®; 05 Scroll 1 0 10® 90 Ovals and Half Round 1 5 10®145 Band ®140 HorseShoe 135 00® Rods, 5-8®3-16 i nch.. 115 00® 172 Hoop 145 <)0@*05 Nail Rod # ft Sheet, Russia 9 ® Sheet, Single, Double 00 0 00 oO . 0 50 00 lu* 1?*@ 1 and Treble # 5J@ S Bails, Eng. (g’d) # ton 5< 0. @ 4 0> do American 92 50® 65 00 Ivory—Duty, 10 # cent ad val. East India, Prime # tt> 3 00® 8 2 > East Ind Billiard Ball 8 00® 8 50 African, Prime.. 8 00® 3 81 African, 8orivel.,W.C. 1 tO® 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 lb ; Old Lead, 1* oents # lb; Pipe and Sheet, 2* oents $ lb. Galena # 100 lb ® Spanish (eold) 6 45 ® 6 62* German (gul l) 6 £0 ® 6 62* English (gold) 6 £0 ® 6 8‘* Bar net ®10 00 PlpeandSheot net ®L0 25 Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper 80 # cent ad val. <—cash.# lb.—, Oak, Slaughter, light 84 ® 3* , .. .. .. .. . do do middle do do heavy, do light Cropped.... do middle ao do bellies do 33 4-i 44 47 '•« 8 .... .... Heml’k, B. A., Ac., l’t. do do do do do do do do do do do do middle, heavy Califor., light, do middle, do heavy, Orino., etc.l’L do 28® 19 ® 84 ® 3> @ do do ® 28*® dam’gdall w’g’s mid. 35 ® , ?6 21 83 40 3s 40 heavy 38 ® Lime—Duty; 10 # cent ad val. Rockland, bom. $ bbl. ® 1 85 do heavy ® 2 20 Lumber^ Woods, Staves,etc. —Duty : Lumber, 20 # cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $1 cent ad val.; Rosewood, and Cedar, free. .. Spruce, East. # M ft 21 00 @ 28 00 Southern Pine White Pine Box B’ds White Pine Merch. Box Boards Clear Pine Laths, Eastern. # M Poplar and Whl 40 00 @ 4> 00 80 00 ® 82 00 38 00 ® 89 00 80 on ®ioo 00 8 25 ® e wood B’ds A Pl’k. 55 Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 Oak and Ash 60 Maple and Birch 85 Blaek Walnut 100 ... STAVES— White •xLa do do oak, 00 ® 65 0J 00 @ 90 00 00 ® 65 00 00 ® 40 00 00 ®120 00 pipe, # M. @300 pipe, heavy @250 pipe, light. @200 .culls .120 00 @180 .. .. .. ‘ do hhd.,extra. hhd., heavy do do hhd.,light. do hhd.,culls. do bbl., extra. do bbl.,heavy. do bbl.,light.. do bbl.,culls.. J Red oak, hh<L,h’vy. do hh<L, light.. HEADING —White .. .. .. .. Hahogany, . _ _ _ @ 60 00 @130 00 @ 9G 00 @150 00 Cedar, wood—Duty free. Mahogany St. Domln> go, arotohes, # ft.. 00 0(1 0C @140 00 @110 00 . . oak. hhd * 00 @250 00 @200 00 @12 >00 @100 0 0 @175 00 .. Rose¬ 83 @ Mexican..;.. Honduras 40 12 @ 12 @ 12 @ 16 !6 16 1< 15® (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas Bahia cut 1*; paddy # lb. Salt—.Duty: sack, 24 7 5 Turks Islands # bush. Oakum—Duty fr.,# Ib Cake—Duty: 20 # @ 8?@ 50 240 ft * cent # lb; canary, 60 ft; and ad val. Clover Ilf # ton.51 00 @52 00 bags.4'1 00 @ obl’g, do 43 00 @49 50 Oils Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and r^pe seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $ 1 : burning fluid, 50 oents # gallon; palm, seal, and ... ^1 # bushel @ .... 35 # li CO @11 26 medium,No3@4. 9 00 @10 25 Canton,re-reel.Nol@2, 9 Japan, superior..!... .11 00 @ 9 25 50 @i3 00 10 00 @10 50 do Medium China thrown 14 00 @20 .... Buenos .... .... Bank Straits : SO @ 85 @ — 80 gr.. white, ... puie, American, dry 13 10 10 @ 11 14 @ 15 dry # iOO lb 2 3:*@ do gr’iin oil.# ft 8@ Spanish brown, dry # 100 lb I 20 @ do gr’d in oil.# lb 8@ Paris wh., No.l#lo0ft 2 75 @ ’Whiting, Amer 2f@ Vermilion,Chinese#lb 1 25 @ do Trieste 1 05 @ do Cal. & Eng.. 1 37 @ 3 00 oil Ochre,yellow, French, American.... 10 1 60 9 3 00 # ton Chrome yellow.. .# ft Barytes do do do 4> .. @ >5 4> 84 @ 47* @ 28 @ i 86 50 3) = 60 @ 51 Honduras..gold Sisal gold Para gold Vera Cruz .gold do do 57* . Soap—-Duty: 1 cent cent ad val. Oastile .. # ft, and 25 # # ft. Spelter—Duty @ @ .. Puerto Cab .gold I"*® in pigs, plates, fl 50 # 100 fts. : Plates, foreign # ft gold do domestio 4 4 8 3 Madeira do Marseilles do do Sherry d> Malaga, sweet do dry.... Claret, in hhds. do in cases Champagne 83 2 11 do 18 bars, and ,6*@ 9*@ .. 10 16*@ @ do in bond @ Saptha, reflned @ Residuum # bbl. 4 50 @ 40 27 .. Paris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 # cent ad val. Bine Nova Scotia# tox White Nova Scotia.... 5 00 ... .... .. . @ @ @ @ under, 2* German.4. American, spring Amer c n cast English, spring English blister 1 Sumac—Duty: .... # ft Brass (less 15 pcr 9 @ cent) do 4 6 2 2 50 60 40 50 Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ct: iams, bacon, and lard. 2 ts # lb. Beef,plain mess# bbl..12 00 @20 00 do extra mess ..19 00 @23 00 Pork.meaa, new.. .^..22 25 @22 75 do mesa Old *^...*.21 75 @22 50 10*@ 11* Teas.—See special report. duty as if imported unwashed. Amer., Sax. fleece # ft 62* @ full bl’d Merino, do 30 80 80 80 28 82 25 82 40 washed ' plates, 25 per cent, ad val. # ft (gold) @ 25* (gold) 22 @ English (gold) @ 22* Plate8,char. I.C.# box 12 50 @13 0o Banca Straits do do do I. C. Coke 10 50 @12 10 Terne Charcoal 11 60 @12 95 Terne Coke 9 25 @ 9 60 Tobacco.—See special report. Wines and Liquors—Liquors —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $3 fall on-, other liquors, $2.60. p«r W inks— >uty: value net over 50 cents $ gal¬ lon 20 cents # gallon and 25 # cent ad valorem; over 5i and not over 100. cents $ gallon and 25 # cent aa 'Valorem; lon sad 25 $1 # gallon, $1 # gal¬ # cent ad val. over @ @ @ @ @ @ @ _ washed Sheet # ft il . .. Heavy goods.. .# ton 10 Oil Com, b’k& bags# bus. Wheat, bulk and bags Beef i....#tce. Pork To London Flour Petroleum £0 40 40 27 32 88 80 84 27 48 46 80 40 27 82 58 50 @ # lif d. s. Petroleum s. @ r~*6 @2 0 @5 0 @15 0 0 .. # bbl. .. : Heavy goods...# ton sheets and terne @ SO So @ 20 @ 23 @ 85 @ .... Mexican, unwashed.... Smyrna, unwashed do @ @ 18 Peruvian, unwashed... Valparaiso, unwashed.. 8. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. 67 55 @ common Texas do 75 6i @ 63 @ 50 @ 40 @ * and* Merino.. Extra, pulled Superfine No. 1, pulled California, unwashed... Oil Tin—Duty: pig,bars,and block,15# cent ad vaL Plate and .. Wool—Duty : Imported in the “ or¬ dinary condition as now and hereto¬ fore practiced.” Class 1 Wools—The value whereof —Clothing at the last place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less # ft, io cents # ft and 11 # cent, ad val.: over 32 cents # 1b, 12 cents # ft and 10 # cent, ad val ; when imported washed, double these rates. Class 2.— Combing Wools-The value where¬ of at the last place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less # 1b, 10 cents # 1b and 11 # cent, ad val.; over 82 cents # ft, 12 cents # ft and 10 # cent, ad val. Class 3 .—Carpet Wools and other sindlar Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 12 cents or less # ft, 3 cents # 1b ; over 12 cents # ft, 6 cents # lb. Wool of all classes Imported scoured, three times the Freights — ToLiyibpool: Cotton. ..# 1b Flour # bbl. :1 cent # ft. ... 57 @ 19* 20 16 10 47® 10*@ @ 00 00 . Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 100 fts.; sheets 2* cents # ft. 10 # cent ad val. American,prime, coun¬ try and city # 1b... 4C@ 30 00® 26 23 16 15 J8j@ 00 70 00 00 1 60 1 60 1 15 00® 160 00 @ @ 12 @ 19 @ 11 nglisn machinery.... ’*88 .... prices.) 18 li 60 uncovered $2 to $3 5) # 100 ft, and 15 # cent ad val. No. 0 to 18 .*»• 15 &20 # cL off list. No. 19 to 26 25 & 5 # ct off list. No.27 to 36 80 <s 5 # ct. off list' .... cents; 7 cents and not above 11, 3 cts # ft; over 11 cents, 3* cents # ft and 10 # cent ad val. (Store . 60 65 75 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, African, unwashed . 50® 6 1 9 8 25® 25® do do . Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents English, cast, # ft @ 6 3 4 2 do Spices.—See special report. or 6<@ 5f@ 00@ ro . do do common, nnw. Entre Rios, washed S. American Cordova over .... 75® Whisky.cur @ Whisky (tnb nd) ^ 30@ Wines—Port (gold) 2 2.c@ Burgundy Port, do 95® Sherry do 9(@ do do @ .. Chagres ....gold do _ Tallow—Duty .... Reflned, free Calcined city mills.. @ 1 40 25 @ Crude,40@47grav.#gal. Calcined,ea.°*ern# bbl goll Madras,....gol .. I 35 1 10 @27 no 15 @ 85 40 @ 45 Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents; refined, 40 'lents # gallon. Plaster Matamoras.gold Payta 374 .. Tampico.. .gold 41 @ @ Sicily # ton.. 160 00 @226 00 Sugar.—See special report. 2* 80 Venet.red (N.C.)#cwt 8 00 01 3 25 Carmine,city made# lbl6 00 @20 00 China clay......# ton85 00 @?6 00 Chalk # bbL 4 00 @ 4 60 Chalk, block VeraCruz .gold # ft 9*@ white, American, No. 1,in oil do whi e, French, In do 84 do .. 12*@ Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1 do A...gold Cape g«-ll Deer,San Juan# ft gold do Bolivar ...gold . # 100 lb: oxidesofzim , 1#cents # ft ; ochre, ground in oil, | 50 #100 lb; Spanish brown 25 # oec tad val: China clay, $5 # ton; Venetian red and vermilion 25 # cent ad val.; white chalk, $ 10 # ton. Litharge, City. ...#lb 11*@ 12 Lead, red,City ll|@ 12 do white, American, pure, in oil @ 14* do uo Skins—Duty: lo # cent ad val. Goat,Curacoa# ft gold 38 @ do do do do do do do 85® 4 85® Bourbon Copper cent. do .... 4 Corn Plain .. All thrown silk. No. 1 @ .... Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Tsatlees, No. I@3.#ftl2 00 @12 75 Taysaams, superior, , cocoa .. ... # ft. # ft 10*@ Il4@ Silk—Duty: free. Cog. do Romieux.... 90® 10 00 5 25® 9 50 5 0i @ 10 00 4 76® 7 00 4 85® 4 85® 4 85® .. of cents Drop ... ....@ 4 j do Rum—Jamaica .do St. Croix d > Gin —Differ, brands do D■ m’c—N.E. Rum.cur hemp, 17 @ 19 8 50 @ ....' # bus 4 87*@ A 50 Shot—Duty: 2| sperm . J. cents; 16 cts; do do do ArzacSeignette 2 90 2 60 2 00 50 66 62 8 25 3 00 Am. rough # bus 2 85 @ 8 CO do Calcutta ...gold 2 60 @ .... - nut, 10 # cent ad val.; and whale or other fish (for¬ eign ilsheries,) 20 # cent ad val. Olive, qs(gold-per case 6 00 @ do in casks.# gall.. 1 60 @ Palm #ft t @ 11* Linseed,city...# gall. 1 29 @ 1 So Whale 73 @ 75 do reflned winter.. 9.* @ 95 ' Sperm,crude 2 50 @ do do unbleach. 2 90 @ Lard oil I 08 @ 1 IS Red oil, city distilled 60 @ 0 * #ft Buck in 2 Timothy,reaped# bus Canary do do . seeds, 30 # cent grass L^ger freres 00 «o 00 00 5 25@ 16 00 5 OuirA 14 (X) Pellevoisin freres do A. Seignette do Hiv. Pellevoisin do Alex. Seignette. do .. Seed#—Duty; linseed, do Other br’ds partially reflned, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent # ft. Reflned, pure #ft @ 15 Crude 9@ Nitrate soda gold 3*@ Linseed,Am.clean#tee do cent ad val. @ @ bgs. 2 85 @ .. Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2* reflned and City thin obl’g, in bbls. do West, thin # pkg. F. F 8 00 @10 00 79® SO Oil 60 do Pale and Extra g. 54 @ .i-r. Fine screened .. (280 lbs.) Spirits turp., Am. # .... Solar coarse..Is..):.. Renault & Co. J. Vassal A Co., Jules Robin.... Marrette & Co. Vine Grow. Co. . # 100 1b; 1 90 @ fin*', Ashton’s(rf’d) 2 60 @ flue, Aforthingt’s @ Onondaka.com.fine bis. 2 50 @ do do 210 1b bgs. 1 90 @ do do # bash. 45 @ 2i @ @ 20 Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30 cents # gallon; crude Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 # cent ad val. Turpent’e, f #280ft 5 62 @ 5 75 Tar, Am rict. bbl 2 7> @ 8 60 Pi ch * 4 UO @ 4 25 4 uo @ Rosin, common do strainedan .No.2...* 25 @ 4 87 do No. 1 5 00 @ 7 00 do H @ do do v4 18 . (gold) 5 *0@ 9 Hennessy (gold) 5 25® 1* Otard, Dup. ACo.do 4 9< @ 13 Pinet,Castil.&Co.do 4 F0@ 17 @11 00 @ 9 75 Liverpool,gr’nd# sack > 48 Yellow metal Zinc J. & F. Martell 52*@ Cadiz @ i 75 fd(6d)# ft / 28 @ 80 Horseshoe, pressed... 20 @ 22 Copper cents bulk, 18 oents # 100 1b. $ ft. Cut, 4d.@6ud. # lOulb 6 CO @ 6 25 Clinch Horse shoe, 6|@ Brandy— cents # lb.; 10 cents, and an cleaned 2 cents Carolina ....*.# 100 ftlO 00 East India,dressed.... 9 25 wrought^*; horse shoe 2 cents 18 75 @19 00 12 @ 13 @ 1 '* Rice—Duty: cleaned2f Molasses.—See special report. Nails—Duty; .!.?» Shoulders, 20 14 @ 15 14® 15 10 @ 14 60 @ 1 00 8 5@ 4 @ 6 Mansanilla Mexican Florida. # c. ft. Rosewood, R. Jan $ ft prime, do. Hams, 14® do do do do @ Lard, cent* 27*® Slaugh.inrough Oak, Slaugh.in rou.,l’t do and ® 2-i® do middle do heavy, do A B. A, # .. 10 45 @ 50 Kerosene (free). 46 @ Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents # lb; Partf white and whiting, 1 cent # ft; dry ochres, 56 ® 29 30 Nuevitas.... Mansanilla Paraffine, 28 30 ® 29 ® 2 * ® . do poor ® ® ® @ .ot do 7® logs 8> @ 65 Domingo, do Port-au-Platt, crotches do Port-au-Platt, ad val. Para, Fine Para, Medium Para, Coarse St. ordinary logs [April 20, 1867. 16 0 # bbl. @17 @25 @ . 5 0 6 0 ... @5.6 Beef # toe. @3 0 Pork ...# bbl. ..@20 Wheat # bush. @ 4j Corn @ *.* To Glasgow (By Steam): .. . . .. Flour Wheat # bbl. # bush. Corn, bulk and bags.. ..@20 @ 5 @ 5 Petroleum (sail)# bbl. ..@50 Heavy goods..# ton. 20 0 @30 0 Oil......... @40 0 Beef.. # tee. @6 0 Pork. # bbl. @8 6 To Havbi:3 v $ $ Cotton # lb I® Beef and pork..# bbl.. 1 00 @ Measurem. g’ds.# ton iO 00 @ 6 6 @ 6 0 Petroleum..., Lard, tallow, out m t .. .. . . .. .. ..#*> Ashes, pot and pearl 8 ® !»• i April 20,1867.] THE Commercial Cards, CHRONICLE. Steamship and Express Co.’s. STEAM U B p ^ O G B AIN, | S E £ D 8 TION MERCHANTS, WASHINGTON STREET. Chicago, Ill*. Yaeger & C COMMUNICA¬ Sawyer, Wallace & Co., BETWEEN iYORK. Blair, Densmore & Co., 165 Commercial Cards. NEW* AND AUSTRALA¬ SIA via PANAMA. and provisions. COMMISSION 511 o COMMISSION The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of each month from Panama to Wellington, N. Z., and the Australian Colo> ies, connecting with the steamer of the Pacific Mail Sreamshio Company leaving New-York for Aspinwall (colon) on the 11th of eacn month. First ana second class passer-ger* will be conveyed under throngh ticket at the following rates : From Ncw-York to ports in New-Zealand, or to Sydney or Melbourne, $340 to $364 for first class, and $218 to $243 for second class. * The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward cabins of the Australian steamer; after Cabin, latter $25 additional. Fares payable in United States gold coin. NO. 47 BROAD NEW YORK. J. M. Cummings os. 148. 150, 152,1*4, & 156 N. SECOND STREET BETWEEN WASHINGTON AVENUE AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 58 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Offer for sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their Distilleries, Kentucky. ST. LOUIS, Wilson, Son & Co., Late of Refer Lynchburg, Va., To Henry Lawrence MANUFACTURERS Carrying the 192 FRONT United Slates Mail, LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTn RIV¬ ER, FOO L’ 3f Canal street, at 12 o’clock noon, on the list of every month (except when those1st, 11th, and dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding for to Messrs. Jacob Heald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Baltimore. Tannahill, Mcliwaine & Co., New York. . APRIL: 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden Citt. 11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis HARPER Sc York, connecting with Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for ^entral BROTHERS American Ports. Those zanillo. Baggage checked through. Have just published BANKRUPT WITH NOTES, FORMS OF And a experienced Surgeon attendance free. For passage tickets BILL, Collection of all tbe use Ould & . of the AT English Bankrupt Act was pa9Sr d, and having himself carried through important amendments to the Bill. He w«*s James & Dunphy, a department 'n their office for tbe or agency in all tbe large cities of America, Consul¬ tations with Mr. EDWIN JAMES, from 3 to 5 o’clock daily. NO. 293 BROADWAY. Files of tkis Paper Bound to Order. BLANK BOOKS, * stati6nery, ENGRAVING, PRINTING,. &C., &C. Cooper & Sheridan, 26 EXCHANGE PLACE, Corner of William St PARASOLS, Loutrel, GOODS, AND BLANK-BOOK Lane, New York. THOS. J. POPE, 92 Anthracite and Charcoal Pig Sole PATENT LINEN THREAD. Agents for DICKSON, FERGUSON And F. W. HAYES Sc Floor Oil John Street. Irons, Ingot Copper, EDITION. The Mercantile United States Business Agency. 3-4, 34 and hamlet in the Union. It is an invaluable work for all persons having business relations IN lishers, R. G. DUN & or 6-4, M. 8-4, BA1L E Y OILED the pub¬ Smith & , Fans, GOODS, VARIETY* SILK. by Lawrence, * 157 Dnane Street. REM OVAL Strasburger & Nuhn, Importers of Fancy Goods, China and Toy*, • Formerly No. 65 Maiden Lane, HAVE REMOVED TO CO., Nc. 203 Broadway, JOHN F. TROW. No. 52 Greene St. wide. season, also For sale a. 10-4 MANUFACTURER, Reade Street, rvew York. Imported this throughout Copies for sale at the office of . COMMON AND FINE GREAT ever issned in the United country. 5-4, C ready for delivery. This work is the largest States, and 'orms a complete classified list of nearly all the traders, dealers, and manufacturers, not only in all the large cities of the Union, but in almost every town, village, the 4-4, Directory. exhausted within a few days of its issue, the pub¬ lishers beg to announce a Second Edition, which Directory Cloths, Palm Leaf The first edition of the above work havins: been is now Sc CO., BelfastCO., Banbrldge. AT -?REAT REDUCTION IN PRICES. Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New Railroad Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons. SECOND STREET, SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS, LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE BY Metals, COUNSELORS-AT-LAW, have established f 198 A 200 CHURCH We supply everything in our line for Business, Professional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders receive prompt attention. THE NEW BANKRUPT LAW. Edwin -1 George Hughes & Co., MANUFACTURERS. 45 Maiden BROTHERS, New York. Harper & Brothers wil send the above work on receipt of $ i 60. r Importers Sc Commission Merchant*, for many y. ars a successful practitioner in the by mail, postage-free, Hall, Manufacturers of , VA CUSTOM SOLICITED STATIONERS, PRINTERS English Bankruptcy Courts —Amer. Law Register. HARPER Sc Byrd & LAW. STREET, Francis & Mi. James has had unusual opportunities to be¬ come familiar with the Law of Bankruptcy, having been a Member of ParP ament at the time the Patterson, N. J. UMBRELLAS AND CcUTingtOD 11 3 MAIN RICHMOND, 8vo., Cloth, $3 50. > Mills at Medicines and further ATTORNEYS VOUR als BARBOUR BROTHERS, CHAMBERS STREET, NEW YORK. Nos, 12 & 14 WARREN ST., NEW YORK. By EDWIN JAMES, Bar, and one of the Framers English Bankruptcy Am ndment Act. on board. Threads, THREADS, SEWING-MACHiNE THREADS, ETC. Man¬ Miscellaneous. of the Lawyer and Merchant. Of the New York at information, apply it the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf,* foot of Canal street, North River,,New York. S. K. HOLMAN, Agent. PROCEDURE, American and English Decisions upon the Law of Bankruptcy. Adapted to the or 1st touch SHOE One hundred pounds allowed each adult. An THE NEW or , MURRAY ST., NEW YORK. Linen 21st—New OF Parasols, 5 49 USE, DUIGHT, Umbrellas & FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. Bankrupt Law. Sc MANUFACTURERS Saturday), The New OF CORDAGE STREET, NEW YORK. DOUBLEDAY ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN Miscellaneous. & Sons, FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC California, And RALTIMORE, MO. by permission THEODORE POLHEMUS Sc CO., MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS. 59 Broad Street, corner of Beaver.* PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE COMMISSION MERCHANTS, For the sale of produce and purchase of merchandise generally. (Offices, for the present, 63 EXCHANGE PLACE) Duck, All Widths and Weights. A Large Stock always on rand. . Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall-st, Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William-st., New-York. MO. and other first-class own Cotton years, quarter fare; under twelve years, half-fare; male servants, one-half fare : female do., three-quar¬ ters fare j men servants berthed forward, women do. in ladies’ cabin. * A limited quantity of merchandise will be con¬ veyed under through bill of lading. For further information, application to be made to the AND GREEN STREET. & Co., DISTILLERS to the newly-discovered gold region of Hokitika, New Zealand. Children under three years, free; under eight FLOUR, STREET, s Special steamers run RECEIVERS OF MERCHANTS, No. 394 Broadway, near Canal street. 512 No. 853 BROADWAY, CHINA SILKS, AND French Dress and Manufacturers ot SILK AND COTTON Mnslln HANDKERCHIEFS, oata but half as much as real silk, which it equals in LEONARD IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER OF 55 MURRAY H’dkft, Silk, Cotton, Organzinc Silk. ICo.',J t t FRANKLIN STREET, NEW Jobbing and Clothing YORK, Agents for the sale of BURLAPS, BAGGING, FLAX SAIL Anderson & Emb’s, Linen Han die’ft, Co., Munsell & DUCK, &C. Smith, PLACE, NEW YORK. 33 PARK d Co ntijiental. Importers of BELFAST, Cambric COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 119 CHAMBERS STREET. Company’s COTTON. Also, Agents for LURGAN, MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS AND SCOTCH LINENS, 40 Murray ST., NEW YORK. Silk Mixtures, E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. FOR Importers of WASHINGTON MILLS, Nos. 43 dr 45 WHITE HANDK’FS,AC. Church Street, New York. LINENCAMB’C 185 JOHN CLARK, Jr. dc Glasgow. CO’S. FOR HAND AND MACHINE IS UNSURPASSED MILLS, STREET. And Fancy SIX-CORD BEST A full Locaport, Ill. West Lockport. Ill. supply of our well known brands of Flour always on hand. prompt attention at low Our Chicago mills being si mated on the railroad track cars are loaded with Flour, Middlings, Bran, &c., to all points Ea^t, saving ex¬ Orders lor pur¬ pense and dama -e from cartage. chase of urain, Flour, or provisions in this market will be lalthfttlly ai tended to. price. E. W. Blatchford & Co., Manufacturers of Linens, Ac., Ac., dc JOHN HUGH MERCHANTS, STREET, NEW YORK. I. S. Bush & HIDE AUCHIXCLOSS, Street. John O’Neill & Sons, MANUFACTURERS OF Machine Twist . Embroidery, Organzine, and Tram. 84 CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK. MILLS AT PATERSON, N, J. t Co., BROKERS, 155 Klnzie Street, Chicago. Orders will receive careful and prompt TO Sewing Silks, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PAMS, CHICAGO, ILL. CABLED SOLE AGENTS IN NEW YORK, 150 ft 152 DUANE STREET, NEW YORK, Lane, Lamson & Co., LEAD PIPE AND SHEET LEAD, Thread. No. 108 Duane White Goods, Irish and Scotch Chicago, Ill. Lockport Hydraulic Mills, Sweepstakes Mills, J. & P. Coats’ Dress Goods, FT FRANKLIN ILL., LINSEED OIL AND OIL CAKE, CO., Staple, COMMISSION 138 LASALLE ST., CHICAGO, PROPRIETORS OF CO., IMPORTERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, t Co., (Established 1848.) est market Mile End, Lindsay, Chittick & Co., British Norton & Eastern orders w*ll have Spool Cotton. THOS. RUSSELL, Sole Agent, 88 CHAMBERS STREET, N.Y. BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO., MILTON Street, Mobile, Ala. Oriental Mills, IRISH LINENS, SEWING. VICTORY MANUF. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, AND GENERAL York. Thompson & Co., Wm. W. D. Simonton. CHICOPEE MANUF. COTTON FACTORS MILLERS ft COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Beavers. AGENTS Street, New o»ly. No. Fancy Cassimeres. England & Co., 65 Commerce FOB IRISH Woolen Co., W. W. Coffin, Treas. FACTORS, General Commission Merchants, 20 OLD SLIP, NEW YORK, Wm. G. GOODS. IMPORTERS AND MACHINE & SEWING SILK, BUTTON-HOLE TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C., 198 * 200 CHURCH BREWER & CALDWELL, Successors to AND Strachan & Malcomson, SPOOL Globe B. C. MORRIS, JR. CALDWELL. B. « Holt & Co., Offer to Jobbers McIlwaine & Co., of Petersburg, Va. Handkerchief Manufacturers LINEN Agents for the .Glasgow Thread Street, New York* if 105 Reade Street. C. No. 79 Front Mabtin & Tannahill, of Petersburg, Ya. Manufacturers. JAMES GLASS dc CO., HANDKERCHIEFS, Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS FOR THE SALE OF PRODUCE AND PURCHASE OF MERCHANDISE GENERALLY. COTTON SILKS, INDIA McIlwaine Caldwell & Morris, KIRK Sc SON, Linen And dealers in & SAM’L Agents for WILLIAM BROKER, Tannahill, % Broadway. TENNESSEE., E.M PHIS, AC. LINENS, WHITE Goods, an BY Cummins, COTTON M Trade. WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’ Importers of British Roads, HOPKINS Sc Co., W. L. A. LINEN GOODS, In full assortment for the Tram Mlk. George Pearce & FOR SALE S. STREET. IRISH Sc SCOTCH _ FOR 69 & 71 Oiled PONGEE AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, Merchahts, Importers Sc Commission Oiled AND Railroad Iron, Brand & Gihon, Pongee il’dkfs, CORNER FRANKLIN STREET Steam and Street 58 CHINA 364 BROADWAY STREET, NEW YORK. 73 LEONARD John N. Stearns, STRIET, Laces and Goods, Corsets, Ac. Reversible Paper Collars. the most economical collar ever invented. White French White GOODS, Stock of the above at Offers a new Imitation Laee», Patent v HOSIERY and MEN’S FURNISHING Real Brussels Laces, and durability. Agents for the sale of the 70 & 72 HAN DKERCHIEFS, Edgings, Swiss Sc superior finish, and appearance Cotton .and Lawn Draperies, Machine Silk. Imitation Oiled Goods, Lace Curtains. Oiled Silk, Our “ Imitation" has a very OF IMPORTERS Importers ot EUROPEAN *(late of Becar, Napier & Co.) Agent for S. Courtauld dc Co.’s ENGLISH CRAPES, And importer of Linen Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red & Co-, Delisle Napier, D. Alexander Oscar Cards. Commercial Cards. Commercial Commercial Cards. S. H. Pearce & Co., [April 20, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. . GRAIN SHIPPERS, attention. MILLERS, AND DISTILLERS. we are Manufacturing Shelters, from 50 to 1,000 bushels per hour; built of Iron, and warranted to shell clean In any condition of grain, and clean the corn in snperior condition for the Mill or Market. Over 500 in Daily Use. Portable Engines, Small Burr Mills, Farm Mills, &c. RICHARDS’ IRON WORKS, 190 ft 192 WASHINGTON STREET, €hicago} Ill, Richards’ Power Corn Of all sizes and capacity, ranging