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1 .02 'CjT $imfsv§attw»H gftfmtoL and fnatrawe: fnumal lattW fertte, tammiat NEWSPAPER, A WEEKLY REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. VOL. 4. ■t B FooteH’ [ Late wittl Fiek & Hatcl1* F. A. * ^ - * K r • Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. C Bankers, and Brokers. Satterlee & Co., Johnson, Jr., Hatch, Foote & Co., No. 44 Wall Street. New UNITED STOCKS AND BONDS STREET, Two doors from Now Street. NEW YORK. R^r^r^iiccs Fisk Jfc Hatch, N. Y. Jay Cooke & Co., Phenix National Bank. OTHER Interest allowed GOVERNMENT 6 SECURITIES, ALL YABTBTTBS. Morgan, Lathrop & Co., deposits of Gold and Curren¬ STOCKS, 3 BROAD L. S. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, on London and Paris, Bills on Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile. Compound Interest Notes of 1864 1865 SECURITIES, NO. 11 .Watkins, BROAD Western L. STREET, NEW YORK, Collections made in all parts of the United States STREET, Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, &c. Orders for purchase and sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly execated. and British America. Gilliss, Harney & Co., TYLER, ULLMANN A: CO., Chic&go. - BANKER STOCKS, 80 NO. 24 Solicit accounts from and others, and allow MERCHANTS, RANKERS interest on daily balances, lOake collections on favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or BROKER, Sale *of BROADWAY A 5 STREET, NEW New York. Iron or Steel Collections made on W. H. VIRGINIA. all accessible Southern points. Whittingham, No. 8 Broad mining, • EXPRESS, ; * • • Street, •>’ TELEGRAPH, RAILROAD, v •* AND ALL OTHER STOCKS, v < ! .:, BONDS AND GOLD Bought and Sold on Commission. * • \ Quotations and sales lists furnished daily on appli - cation.flOrders promptly executed. ~'A * Co., . - Company OF CHICAGO. J. Young Scamhon ....Pres’dent Robert Reid General Manager. Banking and Collections promptly attended to. H A S KELL Sc BANKERS, ST. Cars, etc., . OND, MERCHANTS, Ronds and Loans for Railroad Contract for .r STREET, NEW YORK. Harrison, Goddin Sc Apperson, Bankers and Brokers, R I C H M Jesup & Company, Negotiate BANKERS, - ■ 84 BROADWAY. Harrison, Garth & Co., No. 18 NEW Kerr Sc BANKERS, Established 1848. BANKERS AND Southern Collections. Co., Scott, LEAVEN WORTH, KANSAS. , State, Federal Rnd Railroad Securities. Gold, S M. K. piincipal cities Also, drafts on Collections made on all accessible points and re¬ mitted for on th day of payment, less current rates In Somthem Securities and Bank Bills. 80 Sc The .Marine subject to Sight draft. g. Bell, AND Late ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. NOTES. and Scott ot exchange. BROAD STREET. Buy and Sell at Market Rates «- BROADWAY. BANK Edwin BANKERS, Co., BROKERS IN MINING 8 O UT HERN Co., MISSOURI, on all the of the United States and Canadas. London and Paris for sale. BANKERS, STREET Bankers. Benoist Sc A. ST. LOUIS, BANKER, WALL Sc Bought and Sold. Buy and Sell Exchange Tyler, .Wrenn & Co., NEW ?d, & 3d series i ADVANCES And Dealer in all Classes of Govern* ment Securities and Gold. 5 ,1 BANKERS, Southern Bills NO. 1861, 1865, VERMILYE Sc CO. Nos. 32 New Street Sc 36 Broad Street, New York. Refer to JAY COOKE & CO., Bankers, New York. BROKER, Riker & . LIBERAL MADE ON GOVERN! MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS Bought and Sold on Commission STREET, NEW YORK, 18 . DEALER IN NO. ‘ 6 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, f i 3-10 Bee UeuL -1 i'Caau. y Notes, 1st, 6 Per Cent Currency Certificates. ’and Graham, AND RANKER ' GOLD, GOVERNMENT C. Wm. H. Catlin. T. A. Lathrop. AND cy, Bubject to check at sight, and particular uttenti on given to accounts of country banks and bankers. A. STorv« New York State 7 per cent. BountyJLoan. T. M. Morgan. SECURITIES. on STATES 4 N. Y. STREET, NEW YORK. GOVERNMENT « 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1884, 6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, John Bloodgood & Co., IN hand for immediate delivery on INCLUDING • 22 WILLIAM Co., issues of TIES, GOLD, &c. No. 11 WALL & BANKERS. Keep constantly GOVERNMENT SECURI¬ AND DEALERS IN Vermilye TO BROADWAY & 15 NEW STREET. BANKERS DEALERS NO. 85. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1867. Co*, Rails, Locomotives, Co., LOUIS, MO. Securities, Cold and Ex¬ change collections made on all accessible points and promptly remitted for at current rates of exchange. Dealers in Government and undertake all business connected with Railways. Second Haslett MoKim. ST. LOUIS, MO. Capital..$2OO,OOO \ Surplus .$150,566 Robt. McKim. Jno. A. McKim. Prompt attention given to the business of corres¬ E D.- JONES, Cashier. pondents. McKim, Bros. & Co., NORTH-WESTERN STATES BANKERS, 62 WALL STREET. Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft at sight, and special attention given to orders from other places. 1 r, ‘ Gelston- & fussing, All orders receive our Personal Attention. '1 ^bank, or Geo.eC, Smith. Sc, Bro., 48 LASALLE ST., CHICAGO, V (LakeBank of Montreal.) Special attention given to collections. .RANKERS Sc BROKERS Wm. J. Gxlston, National Bank. " John 3. Bussing, Drawop—Urexel, Wintbrop A Co., and Winslow, Lanier Sc Co., New1 York; Drexel Sc Co., PbUadel phis, and Bank of Montreal) Canada. THE CHRONICLE. 162 Southern Bankers. Bankers and Biokers. Fourth National Bank. $5,000,000 Capital. NAS8AU Burke & Bank of the 809 A 811 CHESTNUT best terms. Bank, 318 BROADWAY. $3,000)000. descriptions of Government BondsCity and Country accounts received on terms mos favorable to our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of the United State and Canadas. WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President. Oilers $500,000 Bank¬ ers’ and Dealers’ Accounts solicited. D. L. ROSS, President. Cashier. The Tradesmens 291 BANKERS, Osgood Welsh, securities Frederic A. Hoyt, States, available in all the principal cities of the world: also, COMMERCIAL CREDITS, Joseph P. Mumpord, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia C. POWELL, GREEN Sc CO. Bankers & Commission MERCHANTS, STREET, NEW YORK. 38 BROAD Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought and sold exclusively on Commission. BANKERS Sc Government Securities, Stocks, Ronds, and Gold, bought and sold on Commission. COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED. NOS. 12 NEW Sc 14 BROAD STREETS. Wilson, Callaway & Co., BANKERS AND COMMISSION No. 44 Broad MERCHANTS, Street, N. Y. Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Merhants, bankers, and others allowed 4 per cent, on eposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco, &c., consigned to ourselves or to our Government Butler, . on GALVESTON, TEXAS. 114 STATE (Established in 1847.) Collections promptly attended to and remitted for by Sight Drafts on Messrs. Duncan, Sherman & Co., Bankers, New York. References in New York AND H. MAURY. JAB. L. MAURY. Commercial Credits for +he purchase of Merchan disc in England and the Continent. Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers abroad. Broadway. ROB’T R. H. Maury & Dupee, Beck & Sayles, T. BROOKE STOCK Co., No. 22 STATE BANKERS AND BROKERS No. 1014 MAIN JAMES A. J.W. Ellis, Brest. Lewis Worthington, Y.-Prest. Theodors Stanwood, Cashier. in the United States. THE FIRST NATIONAL RANK Correspondent, Vebmilye A Co. of Jas. M. MuldonMobile, Ala, & Sons, St., Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬ Securities, Bonds, Gold and Silver. Trompt attention given to Collections. Winslow. Co., Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. A Durand, Bankers, New York. E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Byrd & Hall, New York. Martin, Bates A Co., Merchants, New York. Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolff & Gillespie. Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift A Hurlbert. Home Insurance Company ot New York. 108 Dealers in T. H. McMahan & Co. Special attention given to Collections of all kinds, having prompt and reliable correspondents at all accessiblepoints in the State, and and remitted for Checks REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. on on D. A. Given, of Watts, Given A Co., Paducah, Ky. D. W. Jones, of Boyle Co., Ky. I.. M. Flournoy, Pres’t. Commercial Bank of Ky. ‘ N. S. Ray, late Cash’r Com’l B’k of Ky., Lebanon, Ky BANKING HOUSE OF New Orleans. Drake, Kleinwcrth® Cohen, Lon* don and Liverpool. Given, Jones & 33 BROAD Charles D. Carr & Co., Co., STREET, NEW YORK. Ray, Given & Co., BROKERS, G A day of payment. FOR SALE. Co. and D. S. Stetson A Co., Philadelphia. T. F. Thirkield A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and Jos. E. Elder A Goodwin, St. Louis. Fowler, Stanard A Co., Mobile. Pike, lapeyre A Bro., , points UNION BANK OF LONDON. REFER TO National Park Bank. Howes A Macy, and Spofford, Tileston A Co., New York. Second National Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq,, Boston. Drexel A COLLECTIONS accessible 43 CARONDELET ST., NEW OR¬ LEANS. • PROMPTLY REMITTED FOR. Orders for the purchase or sale of Government Securities, Stocks, Ronds, and Gold, Conner & Wilson, 3 Street, Charleston, S. C., BANKERS Sc See* YORK. Rxrbznoss.—Moses Taylor: John Munroe A Co; Hon. F. E. Spinner, Treasurer U. 3., Washington. DEALERS BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND BuNDS. Especial attention paid to Collections. Refer to Dnncan, Sherman * Co., New York; Drexel * Co~ Philadelphia; The Franklin Bank, and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. H. Maury * Co., Richmond, Ya., Charles P. Carr A Co. Augusta, Ga. , C, Savage, U.S. Appraiser; W. Cockle, Peoria, Ill.; GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK COLLECTIONS MADE at all Exchange. GALVESTON, TEXAS. A V G U S T A West Fourth Street, NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, COMMISSION MERCHANTS and Dealers in Domestic and Foreign IN FOREIGN* DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE, NEW 110 CINCINNATI, OHIO. Foreign Exchange, Bonds, Notes, STREET, Sc New York Life Insurance Company. Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford. Underwriters Agency New York, Charles Walsh. President Bank of Mobile. AND Lewis Worthington, L. R. M. Bishop, William Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. S : & BANKERS WEST and SOUTH, Capital *iock. 11)000)000. Surplus Fund, $250,000. Directors.—John W. Ellis, B. Harrison, William Glenn, ernment No. 5 Broad PINE Cincinnati. Collections made on all points and promptly remitted for. No. 52 St. Francis „ HENRY SAYLE8 JAMES BECK, Western Bankers. Deposits received and Collections made on Babcock Bros DUPEE, BROKERS, STREET, BOSTON. RICHMOND, VA. ST., Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ac., bought and sold on commission. all accessible points CO., PARIS. ALSO ISSUE Dnncan Sherman & Co; Office in New York No. 71 {BROKERS 89 Government loans STREET, BOSTON, JOHN MUNROE Sc deposits, subject to check at sight. See* tuve BILLS OF EXCHANGE ON LONDON I. H. Frotbingham, Esq., Pres’t. Union Trust Co.; Moses Taylor, Esq.; K. H. Lowry, Esq.; Pres’t. Bank of Republic ; Henry Swift A Co.; H. B. Claflin & Co. John Cockle & Son, In the most favorable terms, and Page, Richardson & Co , BANKER AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, RANKERS, No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Orders for stocks. Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬ cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED on National Bank. correspondents, Messrs. J. EL. GILLIAT & CO., of Liverpool Warren, Kidder & Co., Depository and Financial Full information with regard to at all times cheerfully furnished. Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Son them Bank of Ala. Jones & Westervelt, BROKERS, BANK Eastern Bankers. References For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, South America, and the United States. to. ii o vernment. CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., ISSUE promptly attended especial attention to business connected with the several departments of tl&e Rhawn, President, N. Y. CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United and England. Agent of the United State*. We bny and sell all classes of Government Late Cashier of the Central National Bank. 400,000 ' Government William H Rhawn. William H. Bank, New York OF WASHINGTON, H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke * Co.), Pres’t. WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Edward B. Ome, $ I,OX),000 Duncan, Sherman & Co., J NATIONAL FIRST William Errian, BROADWAY, NEW YORK. RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. Co., Washington. and Hilles, Benjamin Rowland, Jr., Samuel A. Bispham, ROB’T BANK. CAPITAL URPLUS Ranks to Nathan George Designated Depository of the Government. NATIONAL services its DIRECTORS : Tenth National Bank. J. H. Stout, Collections and remittances Bankers on liberal terms. WILLIAM H. SANFORD, Cashier. $1,000,01»0. .No. 240 BROADWAY. t STREET, NEW ORLEANS, Merchants National Bank of Liverpool, on STREET, Joseph T. Bailey, Has for sale all Ca pltal Draw PHILADELPHIA, National Capital 54 CAMP Republic, Capital Central Bankers. RANKERS, All the Government I-nans for tale. on tern National STREET, N. E. COR. PINE STREET. Collections made for Dealers [February 9,1867. promptly executed. ' Interest allowed on Deposits, subject to cheques sight. Special attention given to the Foreign Exchange Business. Given, Jones A Co. are prepared to draw Sterling Bill*, at sieht or sixty days, on the Bank of Liverpool, in sums to suit purchasers. The New Orleans. House will make at " Collections in that City and at all accessible points South, and remit on the day of payment. We refer to Bank or America aid National Bank or State or New York, New York City, and to any of the Kentucky Banks. Financial. Southwest Company, $2,000,000 In FIRST MORT¬ Coupon THE Mutual Ins. Sun Insurance Co., Buildings, 49 Wall St. New York, January 80,1867. following statement of the affair- of this in conformity wth the re¬ The RONDS* GAGE Caution. OF OFFICE Pacific Railroad PER CENT. Financial. 1866. Financial. SEVEN 163 THE CHRONICLE. February 9,1867.J Company is published quirements or the 10th corporation : section of the Act of its In¬ Bonds of On Inland $640,311 71 212,103 14-2,595,349 21 Risks $3,235,660 92 Twenty Years to Run, Principal and Interest Guaranteed by the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad of rich agricultural and mineral lands on the line of the r< ad. (By a provision of the mortgage, of $40,000, it is Fund for the redemption of a like amount of bonds, which are also received by the Company at PAR in payment for land.) This land is now being disposed of at rates from $5 to $40 when lands are sold to the amount a per acre. The climate is remarkably salubrious, and the mean temperature the same as in Virginia. The winters last about six weeks, and the stock can be kept on the range the year through. For particu¬ lars respecting lands address Colonel A. ALBERT, Land Agent at St. Louis, Mo. This Company has recently been merged with the Company, having grant of 55,000,000 of acres, thereby adding fullest to the security of these Bouds. Atlantic and Pacific Railroad a land to the The road of the latter Company, when completed, will form a direct and continuous railway from St. Louis to New $2,882, 18 81 205,749 99 ance.. acres constitute the year : Expenses and Reinsur¬ Compau}', And secured by property valued at $7,500,000, con¬ sisting of 90 miles of completed road and 330,000 to $2,120,322 30 was.... San Francisco, shorter by 500 miles from to the Pacific than by any other York route. The assets of the 278,638 34 Rents of Real Es¬ 425, f43 42 91,778 04 943,564 68 84,245 25 ... yet collected.. Sundry Mutual Companies.. Scrip of Total The foregoing Insurance 3,103 00 $1,988,889 39 . statement has been made to con¬ strictly to the requirements of the Company’s form Charter. The RECEIPTS and EXPENDITURES of the Company for the year ending 31st December, 1866. have been as follows : Expenditures for Marine Losses, Re¬ turn Premiums, Expenses, &c $3,506,069 14 Receipts from Earued Premiums, Profits on Gold, &c 2,576,462 26 Excess of expenditures over The Company were liable at the end of the year, for receipts $930,606 88 ed low rate of 80 per cent., subject to ad¬ vance at the option of the Company. For ftirther $<13,426 36-- 235.1&5 07 CO., No. 54 Wall Street, New SEVEN CENT. FIRST GAGE RONDS PER MORT¬ Missouri- Rail¬ road Company. North We offer for sale the Seven Per Cent. First Mort gage Bonds of the North Missouri pany, having thirty years to inn. ble in New York on January 1 and Railroad Com Coupons paya¬ July 1, in each year. Before accepting the agency for sale of these bonds, we rnaae careful inquiry into the condition and prospects of the road, which was examined by Mr. Wm. Milnor Roberts and others, on our behalf, and their highly satisfactory report enables us to re commend the bonds as first-class securities, and safe and judieious investment. The proceeds of these bonds ($6,000,000 in all) wi., be used in extending a road, already completed 170 miles intQ North Missouri, to the Iowa State line, where it is to connect with the railroads of Iowa, and also westward to the junction with the Pacific Railroad (at Leavenworth) and other railroads lead¬ ing up the Missouri River, so that the mortgage of $6,000,000 will cover a complete and well-stocked road of 389 miles in length, costing at least $10,000,000, with a net annual revenue after the first year $1,500,000, or a sum nearly four times be yond the amount needed to pay the interest on these bonds, the income of the road of course increasing of over every year. The Railroad connects the great City of St. Louis with its 200,000 inhabitants, not -only with the rich est portions of Missouri, but with the States of Kan and Iowa and the great Pacific Railroads. The first 600,000 have been sold at 80 cents,land the remainder are now offered at 85 cents. At this rate sas they yield nearly 8% per cent, income, and add 20 cent, to principal at maturity. Any further inquiries will be answered a on per office. JAY COOKE & outstanding Scrip called in cancelled $1,165,791 95 $1,161,820 00 result, the Board of Trustees day ordered, that the outstanding Scrip or Certificates of Profits heretofore issued by the Com¬ In view of the above have this are York. OF THE c and pany, be reduced their entire amount, and the Cer¬ tificates issued therefor called in and cancelled. Holders of Certificates not heretofore redeemed, particulars apply to WARD & Amount of CO, are per office of the Company for cancellation. The Board of Trustees also resolved, 1,657, 1,668, 1,66*, 4,931,10,695,10,696, 11,341,12,950,12,951,12,952,12,953,12,954, 12,965, Nos. 1,656, 14,493,14,494, 15,160,15,161, 16,761, 16,766,16,767,16,768, 16,773,16,774,16,775, 16,780,16,781,16,782, 16,787, 16,788, 16,789, 16,794, 16,796, 16,796, 5,989, 14,026. 16,762, 16,763, 16,764, 16,765, 16,769, 16,770, ’6,771, 16,77 ', 16.776, 16,777, 16,7.8, 16,779, 16,783,16,784, 16,785, 16,786, 16,790, 16,791, 16,792, 16,793, 16,797, 16,798, 16,799, 16,800, 6 per cent. Coupon 1881 Bonds, $1,000 tiach. Act July 17, 1861. Payable to the order of Adam Norrie and Benja¬ min B. Sherman, Committee, and not endorsed. Nos.65997, 65,998, 65,999, 66,000, 66,001, 66,002, 66,003, 66,004, t’6,005, 66,006, 66,007, 66,008, 66,009, 66,010, 66,011, 66,012, 66,013, 66,0J4, 66,«»15, 66,016, 66,017, 66,018, 66,019, 66,020, 66,021, 66,022. $1,000 Each. 1st Series. August and February. 12,099, 20,899, 25,045, 25,046, 25,047, 25,940, 34,556, 75,599,116,634, 117,827,117,828, 117,829, 7-30 Ronds, IntereKt pay. Nos. 117,830,117,831,118,908, 124,719. 5-20 Konds, $1,000 Each. Dated No¬ vember 1, 1864. Act of June 3l>, 1864. Nos.36551, 28,870, 38,806, 38,805, 38,807, 88,804, 28,867, 28,868. 6 per cent. 1881 Bonus, $1,000 Dated June 15, 1864. A. 38,808, Each. Nos.8,902, 8,906, 8,«03, 8,894, 8,908, 8,910, 8,909, 8,911, %907, *‘,904, 8,899, 8,905, 8,901, 8,900, 8,898, 8,896, 8,897, 8,895. 1,267,1,266,1,264,1,265,15,486,15,487, $500 each; cent. 10-40. 36,289, 98,813, 98,814,102,542, $1,000 each. 35,275,35,276, 35,277,35,278, 35,279,85,280, 35,281, 35,282, $500 each. 7-30 per cent. Ronds. 2d series. Inter¬ est payable 15th of June A December. Nos. 1,782, 1,783, $5,000 each. 1,1273, $1,000. Registered Stock oi 1881. $10,000 each Nos. 9,662, 9,663, 9,664, acts of July 17 and August 5, 1861. Registered Stock of 1881, $5,000 each. Nos. 7,224, 7.278, 7,279, 7,280, 7,281, 7,282, 6,911, acts of July 17 and August 5, 1861. No. 2,618, act oi March 3,1863. Registered Stock of 1881, $1,000 Each. Nos. 17,404,18,338,18,339, 18,340, 18,254, acts of July 17 and August 5, 1S61. a sub¬ and not included in the above assets. No Fire Risks, disconnected from Marine, been taken by tie Obmpany; have Company, on the 3lst December, 1866, hetd Assets as above, valued at.$l,988,889 39 The total of all ascertained and estima¬ ted Liabilities on that day were, ex¬ clusive of the amount of Premiums on outstanding risks, $616,703 75).. 1,356,157 59 The Making amount of Assets remaining with the Company, exc'usive of the propo ed sub cription of notes in ad¬ vance of Premiums) $1,132,731 80 By order ot the Board, ISAAC H. WALKER, Secretary. TRUSTEES: Moses H. Grinnell, vv iliiam Toel, Edward R, Anthony, Roswell Sprague, Thomas J. Slaughter, John Chadwick, The road runs through one of the best portions of the State, and has been completed to St. Cloud, eighty miles, at an expense of over $3,000,000. THESE BONDS ARE ONLY $10,000 PER MILE. Government Bonds at the highest market price will be received in EDWARD R. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres. ISAAC H. WALKER, Secretary. payment. For particulars apply to TURNER BROTHERS, Banker® Corner Nassau and Pine Sts., New York. Bankers and Brokers. J B. Chaffee, Pres. H. J. Rogers, V. Pres. Geo. T. Clark, Cashier. FIRST NATIONAL of BANK Denver, DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF THE U. S. Authorized Capital- - - - $500,000 Paid In Capital - - - $200,000 Transact a General Banking business comer of Blake and F. Sts. DENVER COLORADO. Drake Isaac Bell, George L. Kingsland, cent., semi¬ payable in 1892. Josepn Gaillara, Jr., Lawrence, James M. Campbell. William Von Sachs, MOSES H. GRINN KLL, President. COMPANY annually, first January and July, free from Gov¬ ernment Tax, in the City of New York. Principal Alex. M. George G. Hobson, Percy R. Pyne, Samuel M. Fox, Joseph V. Onativia, Edward S. Jaffray, William Ootheut, Ernest Caylus, Frederick Chauncey, OF THE ST. PAUL AND PACIFIC uAlLROAD of Minnesota. Interest at Seven per $632,731 80 Capital subscribed, to be add d... $500,000 00 • FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS , that scription of FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLL ARS of notes in advance of premiums be taken np, in addition to the cash capital of FIVE HUN¬ DRED THOUSAND DOLLARS already subscribed William H. Macy, Samuel L. Mitchell, Fred. G. Foster, Peter Poirier, Louis Lorut, Samuel A. Sawyer, Elias Ponvert, Simon De Visser, Jacob R. Nevius, Isaac A Crane, A. Yznaga del Valle, John S. Wright, Bonds, cent Coupon 1874 $1,000 Each. hereby notified of the action of the Board, and requested to surrender such certificates at the Cash propor¬ Nos. Nos. Estate, Stocks, &c., and Deficiency present Issue of Bonds a limit¬ amount Is now offered for sale at tlie Of the for the recovery of said Securities, or in that tion for the recovery of any portion of them. U. S. Coupon Bonus A per 1st series. in value of Real for sundry Salvage, Re¬ and other insurance claims due the company estimated at Europe. The Royal Insurance Company will pay a REWARD OF 910,000 Nos. Unpaid Losses, Return Premiums, commissions &c., estimated at $648,611 43 Less, to be received for ad¬ vance effective United States at Washington, ana steps have been taken to make said securities unsaleable in 12,986, 32,987,12,988,12,989,12,990, 1866, were as follows, viz : Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages $440,650 00 United States Stocks, Loans on Stocks, Accrued Interest on Bonds and Mort ¬ gages and Loans, tate, Salvage, &c stolen from the Safe of the Royal Insurance Com¬ pany, on 10th December last, as the payment of the Coupons or Interest and the transfer or conversion of said Securities has been stopped by a Caveat filed 14,49% 14,496, 14,962, 15,159, $2,866,407 14 Company on the 81st December Cash Bills Receivable Premium Accounts not The public are cautioned against negotiating any of the fo lowing Goveinment Securities, which were 5 The amount of earned premiums dur¬ ing the year, lees return premiums, Losses paid during On Marine Risks On In and Risks Securities. Government and other against them in the Tieasury Department of the Premiums ou unexpired risks, Decemher 31st, 1865 Premiums received during the year to December 31st, 1866 : On Marine Risks $2,383,246 07 - $1,000 each, Bankers, Brokers and Dealers in To Brothers, STOCK BROKERS AND BANKERS, NO. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Buy and Se’l on Commission Government Securi¬ ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petro¬ leum and Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Orders Promptly Execute 164 X— ~ Bankers THE CHEONICLtL - L. P. Morton & ELLERS IN EUROPE AND THE EAST. STREET, NEW TORE. Letters of Credit for Travelers’ Use, on Dabney, Morgan & Co., S. G. & G. C. LONDON, principal towns and cities of AGENTS 56 WALL 28 STATE Lxvi P. Morton, Charles E. Walter H. H. Crugeb Oaklet. FOR COMPANY, STREET, NEW YORK, At the annual e’ection f>»r Directors of this Bank, for the ensuing year, the following gontlemen were duly elected: Directors. Edwin Hoyt, Joseph Smart, John M. Furman, Timothy G. Churchill Joseph B. Hoyt, Henry Swift, George Opdvke. Anthonv, For Inspectors of Next Election, E. L. Bolles, C. E. Detmold. At a subsequent meet’ng of the Board Mr. P, c Calhoun was unanimously re elected President, and Joseph Stuart, Vice-President. T. Belknap, Jr., B. STREET, BOSTON. Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and AMERICAN NATIONAL Drake Kleinwort&Cohen LONDON AND The subscriber, their LIVERPOOL. NO. 80 BROADWAY. Government Securities for sale. Deposit issued. JAY COOKE, WM. G. MOORHEAD H. D COOKE, ■I I EDWARD DODGE, PITT COOKE. Jay Cooke & Co., of the London House issued for the same purposes. V1SSER, Exchange Place. Now York. SIMON DE BANKERS. 52 AMOS A., PARIS No. 114 South 3d Street, Philadelphia. Norton & AMERICAN 27 Sc 39 Pine In connection with our houses in Washington we have this day opened an office at No. Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city, i ’Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., 1 ton Street, New York. We shall give sals, particular attention to the purchase, George orders for purchase and sale of stocks, and gold, and to bonds Banks. March 1,1866. Travellers, avail¬ JAY COOKE & CO. ‘ Deposits. BANKERS AND BROKERS, (Messrs. Brown Bros & Co.’a new bnilding), 68 & 61 WAI L STREET, NEW YOkK. Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Government Securities. Accounts of Banka, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬ ed on favorable terms. Interest allowed on depos¬ its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬ tions famished to corresoondents. i R«VSR*ncks James Brown, Es^., of Messrs. Brown Brothers & Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬ ident of the Chemical National Bank; James H. Banker. Raq., Vice-President of the N.bTa. " Heath & Bank of New Hughes, BANKERS, DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES and GOLD, RAILROAD & MINING STOCK BROKERS 13 Broad Street, New York. Deposits received, subject to Check, and Intere allowed. T. W. B. HUGHES. A. HAWLEY HEATH. Member of N.Y. Stock Ex 54 William AMERICAN NO. " ' * BANKERS, 7'RUfi SCRIBE, PARIS * * ~* - AND • 9 WALL STREET, HEW. YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers In all parts of Europe, etc*, etc. Also Ccmncercial Credits. ON AND COMMISSION. Street, corner of Pine. Lockwood & Co., BANKERS* 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. Securities, J. Van Schaick, BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION. Henry De Coppet. 38 Broad Rodman, Fisk *& Co., BANKER AND Street, STOCK BROKER. BANKERS, AND Dealers In Government Securities Taussig, Fisher & Co., NO. 7 WALL STREET. BANKERS AND Gold, Stocks, Bonds, &c., Bought and Sold at market rates on Commission, Registered and OonAgents for pon Interest collected without charge. the sale of First Mortgage 6 percent. Gold Bear¬ ing Bonds Central Pacific RR. Co. M. T. RODMAN, ) D. C. FISK, > General It. H. FISK, j PLINY FISK, Fartnere. STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities, and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received on favorable terms. J. H. Fonda, Pres. Nat. Mech. Banking Ass. N.Y. C. B. Blair, Pres’t. Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. Edey & Co., Sc BROKERS, HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 90 TO No. 36 Broad Street, MERCHANTS, BANKERS, others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight Draft. Make Collections on favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Office No. 16. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES. Sale of Gold,State. road securities. AND Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. Federal, and Kall- ADAMS, KIMBALL Sc MOORE, BANKERS, No. 14 Wall References: Barstow, Buy and Sell at Market Rates, Solicit accounts from BANKERS A BROAD Street, New York. and J. L. Brownell & Bro., BROKERS, 28 No. 32 Broad BROKERS, ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Special Partner. BANKERS John Munroe & Co., SOLD No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 0 WALL STREET DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND Stocks, Bonds, Gold, and Joiu* H. Jacquelin. - ' STREET, N.Y. Government Pott, Davidson & Jones, York NO. 26 NEW .Railroad PAPER, ALSO, STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, &CBOUGHT Jacquelin & De Coppet, all business of National * Farnham, (Late of G. S. Robbins & Son.) of Europe. Interest Allowed on and exchange of government securities of all issues; to visiting Paris, and letters of enquiry COMMERCIAL Issue Circular Letters of Credit for able in all parts Lon on replied to by return mail. House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will be resident partners. AUBER, PARIS. Highest premium allowed for Exchange NEW ORLEANS. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washing¬ New York, Mr. COMMISSION don. DRAW ON LONDON AND PARIS, MOBILE AND Philadelphia and Co., AND MERCHANTS, Americans Fifteenth Street, Washington. BANKERS 7“ EXHIBITION. Special attention paid to seeming apartments for BANKERS, Opposite Treas. Department, ~ UNIVERSAL 14 RUE Winslow, Lanier & Co., on BRADLEY, Cashier. TILE Corner Wall and Nassau Sts,, New York. Certificates of most favorable terms. representative ann Attorneys States, is prepared to make advances on shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile credits upon them for nse in China, the East and West Indies, Sonth America, &c. Marginal credits BANK^ Bankers accounts received in the United H. C. FAIINESTOCK SEAMAN, Cashier. ' Milhor, YORK. Billopp Seaman, Cash AnthoAy Lane, Ass.Cash. New York, January 9, 1867. * Philo C. Calhoun. Ward, BARING BROTHERS A Europe and the East. Sale ot Stocks and Bonds in London and New York. OP THR CITY OF NEW P. C. Calhoun, Prest. Joseph Stuart, V. P. Charles L. 53 Exchange Place. AND THIS Burns, Co., London, BY , (58 Old Broad Street, London,) Available in all the $5,000,000. I8SUED POR Messrs. J. S. Morgan A MORTON, BURNS Ac CO., BANK OF CAPITAL. Fourth National Bank At Sight or Sixty Days; also, Circular Notes and UNION Bankers and Brokers. LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR THE USE OF TRAV¬ STERLING EXCHANGE L, P. Brokers. Travellers’ Credits. Co., BANKERS, SO BROAD Bankers and and Brokers. [February 9f 1867. Street, New York. Buy and &ell at Market Rates Government Securi¬ ties, of all issues, and exeente orders for ihe pur chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Our rency, subject to check at sight. Jackson . Brothers, DEALERS IN STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, Sc MENT GOVERN SECURITIES- No. 19 Broad Street, New York. REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. VOL. 4. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1867CONTENTS. of THE CHRONICLE. The Report of the Public Debt.. Certified Checks —their Risks gad Remedy The War on the National Banks. Debt and Finances of Illinois... Money 165 ! Pnblic Debt of the United States Latest Monetary and Commercial 166 English News 169 167 170 167 Commercial and Miscellaneous News THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Market, Railway Stocks, Cotton tJ. S. Securities, Gold Market, Foreicpi Exchange, New York City Ranks. Philadelphia Banks National Banks, etc bale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange National, State, etc Securities. Commercial Epitome , Tobacco Breadstuffs Groceries. 171 171 175 176 169 177 178 179 180 181 182 Dry Goods Imports Prices Current and Tono of the Market 1S9-90 THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Railway News— 183 I Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. Railroad, Canal, and MiscellaneInsurance and Min ng Journal.. ops Bond List 184-S5 186 187 | Advertisements ...161-164, 18S, 191-92 $l)e 'tffyronicle. Thb Commercial Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ day maiming by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, with the latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all the Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to the hour of publication. TEEMS OF and SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE Commercial NO. 85. IN ADVANCE. Financial Chronicle, with The Daily Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, ana mailed to all othors,(exclusive of postage) $12 00 Tbb Commercial and Financial Chronicle, without The Daily Bulletin, (exclusive of postage). 10 00 For Tiik Daily Bulletin, without Tue Commercial and Finanoiai ani> honor, private self-sacrifice and devotion to the national unity which sustained us throughout the military struggle that is past, and will continue to sustain us in the political and financial struggles which may possibly lie in the future* The grand total of the debt, deducting the cash in the Treasury, shows an iiicrease of $24,574 during the month, the aggregate being now $2,543,340,748 56. Of this sum the coin bearing portion is $1,420,145,541 80, showing an increase of $19,654,799 ; while the currency-bearing portion has decreased $12,706,700, and now amounts to $819,672,740. So ample have been the customs duties that the coin in the Treasury has decreased no more than $487,364, al¬ though some 12 millions of January interest have been dis¬ bursed, and the currency in the Treasury has been augment¬ ed $11,173,422, with a view to the payment of the interest on the first series of Seven-thirty notes, which falls due next Friday. It is to be regretted that the new form in which, the monthly debt statement is made out does not inform the public as to the amount of interest due on the National debt, as was formerly done. Some complaints are made of this, and the defect, by a little additional clerical labor, might easily be remedied. As the statement stands we do not. know what is the amount of interest to be disbursed Seven-thirties on the the 15th inst., but the aggregate issue of was originally 300 mil¬ lions, and of the third series 230 millions, giving an aggre*. gate of 830 millions. On the 1st of May the aggregates WILLIAM B. DANA & OO., Publishers, were as follows : First series, $299,500,000; second series, 60 William Street, New York. $289,500,000; third series, $227,512,650. Since that date Files for holding the Chronicle or Bulletin can be had at this Office. 153 millions of Seven-thirties have been called Price $1 50. in, most of the part withdrawn being of the first issue, to which the can¬ The third volume of the Chronicle,from July to December, 1866, inclu¬ celling process has for some months been exclusively con¬ sive, is for sale at this Office ; price, unbound, $6 00. fined. The probability is, therefore, that no more than 175 Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage). 5 00 Canvassing Agents have no authority to collect money. Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $120 in advance. THE REPORT OF THE PUBLIC DEBT. It is scarcely possible to look at tho vast aggregate to public debt has reached without a feeling of con¬ fidence in the financial strength of a nation which is able to bear so prodigious and so suddenly imposed a burden. Five or six years ago a man would have been set down by his friends as an enthusiast, and by his foes as something worse, if he had foretold that the people of the United States, even if unweakened by the outpouring of blood and treasure in an internecine war, could by the utmost exertion of their financial strength have bought from their government, and paid for among themselves, without a dollar of timely aid from British capitalists, one-half of the 2,600 millions of public obligations which now represent the war debt of the nation. Mr. McCulloch’s monthly report of the state of our public obligations* is of great use if it only served to keep alive in the minds and hearts of the people those sentiments which our on each of the first and second series millions of the first series of Seven thirties ing, and if so, the interest disbursements outstand¬ next week will not much exceed 6 millions. The chief points of interest in the debt movements of the two: First, the greenback contraction has been arrested, and the aggregate of greenbacks is $929,248 more than on the 1st of January. This is, indeed, offset in part by the decrease of $1,836,200 in the Compound Notes. Still the fact is significant as it stands, and has called forth last month are much comment. For several months the movements ot the have all been towards contraction. On the 1st September, 1865, the aggregate was 433 millions; by the 1st December it had fallen to 426 millions, and by the 1st May last to 415 millions. On the 1st October, when the busy season commenced and currency began to be wanted to move the crops, the greenback aggregate was $399,165,292. It was urged by some of the soundest and most experienced advisers of Mr. McCulloch currency •, ' u ' are now ' THE 166 CHRONICLE. [February 9,1867. re-1 of this mutual confidence among the brokers, whatever it may sumed be, undoubtedly affords a reason why the banks should grant and greenbacks had begun again to accumulate in New York, I them liberal credits. the grand centre of the currency system. | But while all this must be conceded, there are yet risks This advice Mr. McCulloch, for reasons which seemed to attending this peculiar form of credit against which the him sufficient, thought fit to disregard. The contraction banks should adopt every possible precaution. The late afcontinued. The new year opened with a green- fair, in which the Bank of North America was virtually deback aggregate of $380,497,842, and the amount now is frauded of about $200,000 through certifying the checks of a $381,427,090. Opinions differ widely as to how far the firm without assets, is evidence that the honor of the stock financial depression throughout the country, and the recent boards is not an infallible protection against losses. Morepanic in Wall street, were due to contraction. But it can- over, in times of wide fluctuations in prices, and consequent be doubted that political causes helped to increase this losses to brokers, there are liabilities to failure, which make phenomena, as did also the languor induced by previous over-1 certification peculiarly risky. trading the derangements of our industrial system, in conseWhile, however, these risks attend the certifying of checks, quence of the transition from peace to war, and the exhaus- without security in hand, it cannot be said that they afford a tion cf productive power by a method of taxation the sufficient reason for the discontinuance, nor even perhaps the unequal, oppressive and injudiciously distributed which curtailment of the usage, at the same time they do require has been inflicted any people. that the practice be surrounded with greater safeguards Contraction of the greenback circulation has, however, against loss than at present exist. Nor is it at all impracbeen arrested for the present, and the danger is that we may ticable to provide additional protection without any material be tempted to run to the opposite extreme, and that the re- embarrassment to banking operations. The present arrangemembrance of recent troubles may obliterate from our merit we consider loose and unsatisfactory ; for, as business memory the evils of high prices, redundant currency and is now conducted, the bank assumes a debt for which it has wild speculation under which the whole nation was groaning no voucher, and, in the event of a borrower failing to defew months ago. The reception which certain inflating posit funds or collateral before the close of the day on which projects of legislation have recently met with is significant in his check has been certified, it has not even any evidence of this point of view. the transaction, except the hasty entry of the paying teller, The only remaining point of interest to be noted is the slow and certainly no legal claim until it has received the check progress of funding. Remembering the great success of through the Clearing House. It must, therefore, wait until the Five-twenty loan of 1862, and the rapidity with which the next day before recourse can be taken for recovering the people in the midst of the depression and exhaustion against the obligation. This loss of time, in the event of caused by the war purchased at par the six per 'cent, bonds fraud and in times of panic, is of great consequence to the of the Government it is impossible not to feel discouraged bank, and places it at a serious disadvantage in attempting and disappointed at both the present proportions of our un- to remedy the default of the borrower. should stop at that point, and should be in the Spring, when the tide of currency had turned, that contraction movement not our most on ever our a funded obligations, and at the slow process by which the As a means, then, of protection, the bank should, we during the prodigious mountain of floating debt is being diminished, think, hold some tangible evidence of the debt, We are approaching the third year of peace, and, neverthe- interim between the certification and the deposit of funds less, out of our 2,600 millions of debt no more than 1,420 or collaterals which it anticipates. How can such protecmillions, or very little over one-half, is funded into long bonds, tion be provided ? Many expedients may be possible; but . probably the most feasible are the adoption of a form of acknowledgement of the debt, left with the bank CERTIFIED CHECKS THEIR RISKS AND REMEDY. until the loan is covered ; or the retention of the check by Recent events in Wall street have directed attention to the the bank. The borrower might be required to leave with practice among the banks of certifying the checks of brokers the bank a promise to pay on demand the amount specified in anticipation of the receipt of deposits or collaterals cover- in the certified check, said promise to be surrendered upon ing the certification. Under the existing arrangements of the check being covered. The bank in this case would be business, there is doubtless good reason for the banks extend- at liberty to take instant recourse, upon the borrower fail¬ ing some such accommodation to their customers. The ing to make good his account within banking hours. In broker transacts his business chiefly upon loans. On pur- pursuance of the other plan suggested, the bank, instead of chasing securities he has to pay for them on delivery; so certifying the check, could retain it and issue therefor either that the money he has borrowed with which to effect a pur- a cashier’s check, or some negotiable form of certificate to chase has to be made available before he comes into posses- the effect that the drawer is “good” for the amount of the sion of the stocks. In other words, it is a necessity of the check and that the bank engages to pay said amount through cise that the banks should make itself responsible for the the Clearing House. In this case the bank would hold the money, as a means to the borrower for procuring the collat- borrower’s check for the purpose of recourse, if necessary, eral. An open credit must be granted for the period re- The proposed certificate should be so prepared beforehand, quisite to enable the broker to get possession of the secu as not to require longer to issue than would be required to rities purchased. Deny the dealer this privilege, and the certify a check. Some regulation uf this character would the large share of the transactions at the stock board comes effect an important mitigation of the risks of certification, to an end, from the lack of means for conducting it. But as a further remedy it is well deserving the consideraIt may be very properly urged that there is less risk in tion of both brokers and bankers, the former especially, this custom of granting uncovered credits than may appear whether means could be devised for largely obviating the at first sight. The members of the Stock Exchange, and of use of certified checks. Each broker is a seller of stocks the Open Board of Brokers are generally men of adequate as well as a buyer, and if an Arrangement could means, and of tried honor in business; they show the utmost be effected by which the members of the Stock Ex¬ confidence in each other upon obligations of honor to very change could mutually set off their sales against their purlarge amounts, and the attendant risks are found to be, per- chases, the use of checks would ’ be to a very large extent haps, less than those attached to ordinary credits. The basis I obviated. For this purpose, a Stock Exchange Clearing- ____________ temporary February 9, 1867.] THE CHRONICLE. 167 house has been suggested, answering in its main features to advisable to call the National Bank system into existence. Clearing-house and the Gold Exchange Bank. The When that system was presented to the opinion of the country scheme had progressed so far as to have insured subscrip¬ as a proposition merely we gave what we regarded, and tions for the required capital; but has since been abandoned what we still regard, as good and substantial reasons why it upon what we must consider a hasty conclusion that clear¬ should not be adopted. It is not worth while to revert to or ances of stocks would prove too complicated to be practica- to revive those reasons now ; the system has been, in spite of ble. Those who are entitled to be deemed the best judges them, established by law ; and we allude to our own original of the details ot Clearing-house business pronounce it per¬ views of it only because in advocating forbearance at this fectly feasible to effect daily clearances of every stock upon time we desire to be understood as speaking, not for the the call of the Exchange; and we have every confidence in National Banks at all, but for the solid and general interests their opinion. There is apparently a disposition not to allow of the community. the matter to rest where the projectors of the late scheme have Those interests have now become inextricably involved left it; and we hope yet to witness a Stock Clearing house writh the machinery of the National Banks. Throughout a as an accomplished fact. Without a Bank Clearing-house, vast range of country the movements, not only of trade and banking operations in this city wTould be reduced to a commerce, but of husbandry and production, absolutely de¬ nominal scale. The Gold Exchange Bank is found to save pend upon this great and widely-ramified system which has checking to a very considerable extent, and reduce the risks replaced the State systems destroyed to make way for it. of dealers. A Stock Clearing-house would simplify stock Above and beyond the direct wrong, therefore, which a sud¬ operations, obviate a large amount of unnecessary borrowing, den suppression of the right issue to notes of circulation would diminish work at the banks, reduce the opportunities for inflict upon the stockholders of the banks themselves, rises fraud, and render the brokers less dependent upon the banks the still more portentous indirect wrong which such a sup¬ for certification, which in times of speculative excitement pression would bring upon the traders, merchants, producers would be a most important advantage to dealers in stocks. and farmers of the whole North and West. The National This we conceive to be the true remedy for the risks and Banking system, having once been established, was accepted abuses connected with the existing system of certifying in good faith as a permanent financial system, upon which brokers’ checks. the activity of the country must mould itself. Its operation was openly announced upon the very face of the act estab¬ THE WAR ON THE NATIONAL BANKS. lishing it, as a fiscal finality for twenty years to come. If It is not a misuse of terms to describe as a war now this character of upon the permanency is taken from it by a National Banks certain measures now under consideration repeal of its most vital conditions, not only will a severe by Congress, and looking to the withdrawal from the Na¬ shock be given to the general reliance upon the pledges of tional Banks of the right to issue circulating notes. We the Government, but it will be made difficult to command do not mean, of course, in employing this phrase to imply the public confidence for a currency which may be provided that the congressional advocates of these measures have to take the place of the National Bank circulation, since any such a design, but simply to assert, what no well-informed such currency must necessarily be just as dependent upon man of business will deny, that the inevitable effect of the the variations of congressional sentiment and action as this passage ot these measures will be the annihilation of the which it displaces. We may already see in part what the present bank system. effect is certain to be of such a state of the bank In the great cities, such as New York, where the local banks which existed before the passage of the National Act have for convenience sake and under its operation, of Congress of* business and of finance. put themselves within its terms no such result would probably fob measures There were many causes concur¬ ring to bring about such a stagnation before the discussion low. The circulation of the great city banks is a small began, causes upon which it is not necessary for us now to matter in their administration. They are merely banks of dwell, and the nature and force of which must be well known discount and deposit, and would be affected by the destruc¬ to all practical men. But no one of these causes has been tion of the National Bank system only as all other business so potent in holding back capital from permanent invest¬ interests and the general financial system of the country ment, and enterprise from legitimate speculation, as the sim¬ would be. But of the sixteen hundred and fifty banks ple possibility of an unsettling of our national financial which have been organized throughout the country under policy has proved to be. Let that possibility ripen into an the provisions of the National Bank Act, the very large accomplished fact •” let the existing system of our cur¬ majority would be virtually rained by the withdrawal of rency, with all its relations to the domestic exchanges of the their right to issue circulating notes, and in this aspect of country, be suddenly subverted, and we shall find ourselves the case it ought to be plain to every reflecting mind that face to face with difficulties, both public and private, which the withdrawal of this right would be substantially an act it certainly is not the part of wisdom to provoke. of repudiation on the There is something worse for a part of the Government as against the country than unwise legis¬ stockholders and proprietors .who have entered lation, and that worse something is unstable legislation. If upon their present business under the inducements held out to them by unwise legislation be only stable enough, it is pretty certain, the National Legislature. This consideration should, of in a country of free discussion, to educate the popular intel¬ itself, suffice to make Congress pause before it takes a step ligence up to its judicious repeal. But if it be unstable as which could hardly fail to shake the foundations of that well as unwise, it takes from the prosperity of the nation confidence which the capital and the enterprise of the that sole and solid basis on which a nation’s prosperity can country now repose in the good faith of the National Gov¬ ever be made to rest—the possibility of precision and fore¬ ernment. cast on the part of individual men in the investment of their But this consideration, important as it is, is only one of, means and the employment of their energies. and closely allied with a number of others not less grave, by DEBT AND FINANCES OF ILLINOIS. which, it seems to us, that hasty legislation upon this mo¬ mentous subject The public debt of Illinois, as shown by the bi-annual reought to be averted. As our readers know, we have never accepted the position that it was necessary or port of the State Treasurer, amounted, on the 1st Decernb er, . “ „ things. The mere looking to such a state things has greviously increased the general stagnation of discussion in i [February 9,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 168 the follow 1866, to $8,638,252 21, and is accounted for in ing statement: Moneys and Cre¬ Claes of debt. Bank of Internal Improvement Internal Improvement stock “ 44 44 “ “ “ When dated. stock.. July 31,1837 j Jan. 1, 1838 July 1, 1839 May July July July July July July July 1, Refunded stock 1, “ Canal stock 1, “ stock. ..: 1, 44 1, 1, “ “ 1, 1, “ “ July 1, Normal University bonds July 1, Thornton Loan bonds March, War bonds July 1, “ July 1, “ July 1, n. A Mich. Canal bonds—coupon.... Jnly 1, “ “ “ 44 “ “ “ “ “ “ 44 “ “ “ “ “ “ “ 44 1859 1859 1859 1859 ia59 1859 1859 18'>9 1859 1861 1S61 1861 136! 1837 registered. July i, 1S37 coupon... July 1, 1839 “ regist red. July 1, 1839 coupon July 1, 1841 “ registered. July 1, 1841 “ coupon July 1, 1847 registered. July 1, 1817 “ (£225 btg.) coup April, 1839 reg.. April, 1839 44 (£100 stg.) coup June, 1840 “ “ reg.. June, 1840 “(£225 stg.) coop April, 1839 44 ' “ “ “ 1840 44 44 “ ... ... “ “ “ “ 44 44 44 “ “ 44 44 “ 44 “ 44 “ 44 “ 44 44 April, 1839 reg.. Payable. J'ter: 860 11 1870 U 10 1870 44 21 1870 1 In I860 44 17 1860 4; 1862 278 44 1865 13 44 84 1869 U 1870 840 44 89 1876 44 1877 439 4 64 1879 4 1879 143 4 1879 511 4 1879 524 4 1S19 1722 4 1860 150 4 1860 539 C 45 1860 4 !8c0 163 4 40 1870 4 62 1870 1860 122 1860 226 32 18:0 38 1870 1870 29 1870 40S 1870 698 1 1870 518 ' 43 1870 1810 549 ' (£300 stg.) coup Juue, 1840 reg.. June, 1840 Inscribed stock—New Internal Improvement stock, under act Feb. 44 28, 1817 Inscribed stock—Interest bonds, under act 44 44 “ 44 44 44 44 10,000 00 21,000 00 1,000 00 17,000 00 278,000 00 13,000 00 84,000 00 340,000 00 89,000 00 439,000 00 64,000 00 143,000 511,000 262,000 172,200 150.000 269.500 45.000 81 500 following is 90.666 67 69'.000 00 259,000 00 57,3:13 33 366,000 09 44 “ 44 44 (stg) bonds. Inscribed stock $31,000 00 42,000 00 in 1860 to 1877... 1,261.000 00 in 1879 64,000 00 143,0(0 00 945.290 00 .... ' in 1860 &> '70 in 1870 852.000 00 1,5:34,888 98 3,722,254 73 42,909 19 Scrip and unfunded indebtedness Aggregate debt, December 1, 186G $8,638,252 30 .... December, 1860, the entire bonded debt of the State amounted to $10,277,161 36; which debt was in¬ creased $2,050,000 by the war loan of July 1, 1861, making On the 1st in the aggregate The entire debt as Making $12,327,161 36 8,638,252 30 above, December 1, 1S66, was $3,638,909 06 reduction in the last five years of a And there further was in Treasury December 1, applicable to the $102,067,865 Total taxable 1847, for tax of 1848-49.. 1849, do 1850-51... 1851, do 1852-53... 1853, do 1854-55... 1S55, do 1856-57... under the census 119,868,538 224,716,963 325,159,633 386,189 331 $407,477,367 366,702,043 330,823,479 331,999,871 392,327,906 gives the following as the results : Personal Real Estate. Property. Total. True Value $81,524,835 287,2*1,940 Census 1350 44 I860 $.'33,257,810 101,987,432 $114,782,645 389,207,372 $156,265,006 871,860,282 Without‘any addition of value for the different circum¬ stances of the State in 1866, and-adopting only the true valuation of 1860 as given by the federal census of jtbat year we may estimate the real value as three times the taxable value. 'This allows a generous margin that of in case the taxes should have to be increased by Governor Oglesby at $1,200,000,000. The following synopsis, taken from the Treasurer’s report, shows the balance in the Treasury on the 1st day of Decem¬ ber, 1864, the receipts and disbursements during the two subsequent ^years and the balance standing to the credit of the several funds on the 1st day of December, 1866: Bal. Dec. 1, ’64. Revenue fund.... $3,263 50 State debt fund... 589,124 44 Interest lund 309;256 58 School fund...... 112,075 94 Ill. C. RR. fund.. 198,868 20 Delin. L'd tax f’d 33106 Unkn’wn A minor hears fund 701 66 10 76 War fund Hancock Co. in. f. Total of all funds Receipts. Total Means. 1,351,789 19 1,355,052 69 1,406,484 68 1,995,609 12 1,539,747 31 1,849,003 89 226,733 52 3:38,809 46 937,450 50 1,136,318 70 743 45 29,500 00 9,466 76 331 06 4 331 06 295 26 1,445 11 29,510 76 9,465 76 29,510 76 1,149 85 \ ’ 615 00 8,950 76 1,213,632 14 5,501,914 41 6,715,546 55 5,301,375 19 1,414,171 36 following rates to valuation: 12 cents per $100 value 20 “ 44 For the Revenue Fund.. For the State Debt Fund Interest Fund School Fund 18 20 “ “ 44 70 Total for all Funds 05 Paym’ts. Bal.Dec.1’66 1,288,629 18 66,423 51 1,264,020 63 731,588 49 1,310,455 42 538,548 47 41,782 82 297,076 64 1,102,436 54 3',882 16 The income of these several funds derived from taxation Railroad iund per cent, of gross earnings reserved to State) for 6 meuths ending Oct. 31, 1866 $221,574 And the Board of Trustees of the Illinois and Michigan (being 7 ten biennial periods 1857, for tax of 1858-69. do 1S59, 1860 61. 1861, do 1862-63. 1863, do 1864-65. 1865, do 1866-67. $105,432,752 $14,244,486 and personal property of the United States in 1850 and 1860 $731,5S8 49 33,882 16 balance Dec. 1,1866. entral Railroad fund Dec. 1,1866 Add estimated amount of Illinois Central + The valuation of the real estate $765,470 66 Illinois -664,967 .$116,302,293 The aggregate valuation for the last is shown in the following statement: is at the payment of the debt, as follow’s: State debt fund, +$13,579,471 2,987,945 198,372 00 42,909 19 after 1S60 after 1870 in 1879 in 1879 .$119,290,233 3,652,902 without altering the constitutional rates. In fact the property of the State is now assessed for taxation at only a third of its actual value. of The real wealth of the State at the present time is estimated 680,469 23 18, 1S57 the State debt: Bank and internal improvement stock—payable Internal improvement stock 44 Refunded stock 44 Normal University bonds 44 Thornton loan bonds 4t War bonds of 1861 44 Illinois and Michigan Canal (f) bonds.. 44 00 00 00 00 00 19,000 00 12,888 89 recapitulation of the above details a 00 00 00 31,000 00 122.000 00 113.000 eo 32,000 00 Liquidation bonds, under act Feb. 10, 1S49 Improvement scrip and nil unded indebtedness The .. .... 40,000 00 “ Internal Aggregate...... Deductions 11.000 00 1,765.526 43 1,077.886 47 Feb. 28, 1847 Feb. $31,90'00 U 16,643,657 $105,710,767 Unenumerated Amount. +714,916 +1,177.133 +2,206,749 . 866,960 14,4o6,908 Bonds, &c. 31 20,395,1 6 2,043,093 19,620,190 dits Bonds A Stocks 44 44 41 Governor, in his message, states the population o 1805, according to the census of that year, to have been Total applicable to State debt Jan. 7, 1S67 $1,110,211 36 2,141,510. This would distribute the assessed valuation of Which w ill reduce the outstanding debt by this amount property in 1865 at the rate of $183 20 per capita. The wealth of the State, as estimated by Gov. Oglesby, would give and to the sum of $7,528,040 94. The taxation on every $183 20, The Auditor gives a detailed statement of the valuation $560 35 to each inhabitant. at 70c. per $100,gives $1 28as the tax per capita; and such of real and personal estate in each county for 1804 and 1865, The Canal, have declared another dividend of 5 per cent. on the registered canal bonds, payable Jan. 2, 1S67... 123,1G6 G6— 344,740 71 is the rapid increase, in the population and wealth of the forming the basis of taxation for 1805 and 1800; and from this we take the general abstract referring to the whole State . State, "while its debt is decreasing, that even this moderate taxation may be reduced in coming years. The Governor Increase 1304 1305 Value of lands $199"577,508 $213,992,980 $14,415,472 of town lots. 48,121,328 42,956,824 5,164,504 already recommends the repeal of the constitutional tax of of lailroad property.. ‘,625,663 two mills on the dollar for the State Debt Fund, as the 12.285,610 13,911,303 of personal property, 102,057,865 116,302,293 14,244,428 source of an unnecessary burden. To'al valuation $392,327,904 $35,449,067 $356,878,837 As an instance of the continued prosperity of the State, The personal property assessed in the same two years is “ “ 44 !vdescribed . Froperty. we follows: as 186-4. Number. 1,606,144 ...2,044,8% A Wagons. 239,959 Car. Clocks AW^ches Pianos Goods A Merch Bankers’ and Broker’ pr- p Capital Stock of Banks 206,581 5,770 * Amount. Difference. 1865. , . Amount. Number. Amount. Number. , , 793,259 $28,055,559 + 69,508 14,285,863 + 197,497 2.267,194 + &S61 3,955,102 + 559,828 3,369.621-301,889 259,471 6,120,293 +19,515 215,576 958,054 + 8,994 7,610 548,056 +1,840 17,823,146' 1,568,280 * 48,058 2,876,696 2,165,972 2,799,158 1,743,005 5,428,178 789,466 515,416 14,506,971 ' _ + $2,907,151 .. few items compare the census of 1860 and 1865: 576,445 + 544, 85 + 1,007,406 +560,463 + 692,115 + 169,188 Population 1865. 1,711,951 2.141,510 Increase. 429,659 Live-stock, heads $57,586,8S6 $63,356,013 $5,769,127 72,501,225 Value of manufactures 123,772,554 51,271,329 + + 22 640 +3,326,175 -72 ,210 1,186,166 464,916 541,171 600,906 —40,266 1,563,852 1,929,072 + 163,220 Manufactured Articled... a I860. Horses 723,751 $25,148,408 Neat Cattle 1,370,783 13,709,418 Mules A Asses. 39,197 1,722,809 Sheep... Hogs in products in 1865 was $83,280,848, produced in the same year 1,078,495 tons of The value of agricultural and 380 mines coal. brightly with the condition of affairs previous to the definite liquidation of the debt in 1847. They show that what was a grievous burden then is now scarcely felt by the taxpayer* These facts compare THE CHRONICLE. February 9,1867.] 169 and it may be added that the fury of the crisis has at length spent it may hope that when the winter shall have eeased and the Abstract statement, as appears from the books and Treasurer’s returns navigation in the northern latitudes be resumed, a steady increase in trade in the Treasury Department, on the 1st of December, 1866, the 1st of may be observed. In China, with regard to which country much January, and the 1st of February, 1867, comparatively : anxiety was at one time felt, commercial affairs seem to be mending, DEBT BEARING COIN INTEREST. but at the same time it would appear that, in Jan. 1. Dec. 1. Feb. 1. consequence of the late 5 ner cent, bonds $198,091,350 $198,091,350 $198,091,360 heavy losses sustained in the sale of tea here, the public mind should of 1867 and 1868.... 15,837,94* 15,783,442 15,779,442 of 1881 283,740,000 283,740,860 283,745,250 be prepared for failures among second-rate houses in that department 5.20’s PUBLIC DEBT OP TIE UNITED STATES. self, while “ “ “ “ “ ■ “ Navy Pension 861,64»,300 891,125,100 910,029.600 11,750,000 11,760,000 12,500,060 Fund $1,371,068,592 $1,400,490,742 $1,420,145,642 of business The severe business. DEBT BEARING CURRENCY INTEREST. 3-vear Compound Interest Notes $10,302,000 147,387,140 $10,622,000 $12,922,000 144,900,840' 143,064,640 3-year 7.30 notes 699,933,750 676,856,600 663,686,100 $867,622,890 $832,379,440 $819,672,740 6 we percent, bonds DEBT ON WHICH INTEREST HAS CEASED. Various bonds and notes. $22,606,794 $15,791,454 $16,518,590 DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST. United States Notes Fractional currency Gold certificates of deposit $386,441,849 $380,497,842 28,732,812 16,442,680 28,620,249 10,636,500 $433,698,598 $381,427,090 28,743,734 19,992,980 $425,673,334 $430,163,804 Aggregate debt $2,684,995,875 $2,675,062,505 $2,685,773,540 Coin and Currency in Treasury...... 135,364,637 131,737,833 142,428,791 i • _______________ $2,549,631,238 $2,543,325,172 $2,643,349,749 The following statement shows the amount of coin and currency Debt, less coin and currency separately at the dates in the foregoing table : Jan. 1. Feb. 1. $95,168,816 Dec. 1. $97,841,968 40,195,821 Gold Coin 33,895,765 $97,354,604 45,069,187 Currency... Total gold coin and currency $136,364,637 $131,787,633 $142,423,791 Cutest fttonetarj) ant> Commercial (Sngtiat) Neros. RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON AT LATEST DATES. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— EXCHANGE ON LONDON. JAN. 22. LATEST TIME. ON— Amsterdam... RATE. DATE. TIME. short. 3 months. Jan. 22. short. 44 it tb it 44 1115X@11.16X 25.37X@25.42X 13. 8 @18. 8X Paris 25.32X@25.87X short. 26.10 @25.11X Paris 3 months. 13.60 @18.65 Vienna 6.25 @ 6.25X Berlin 41 31 @ SIX St. Petersburg 44 Cadiz 48X@ 48X 90 days. Lisbon 51%@ BIX Milan 3 months. 26.85 @26.90 26.85 @26.90 Genoa 26.85 @26.90 Naples Antwerp'. Hamburg ... 44 44 8 mo’s. — — RATE. 11.78 25.15 @ @ 13.6X@ 25.17X — — - 25.00 ■ — — 3 mo’s. — — Jan. 22. 30 days. the letters at hand @ — — have Germany also arrived. From Paris and cut off, and our internal But little business could firm tone has prevailed, and with now we were for a short time almost communications were exceedingly out of order. therefore, be transactedf However, a regard to several descriptions of agricultural produce high prices were obtained. The wheat tiade has been firm, but millers have shown no disposition purchases. A feeling seems to exist with that body that wheat has touched its highest point. Millers, therefore, are not disposed to run into stock, but are willing to await the arrival of the Spiing, when the navigation of the Baltic is re-opened, and when it is expected our supplies from foreign countries will be much more exten¬ sive than at present. Even now our importations of wheat are consid. erable for the time of year, and millers are, therefore, aware that by purchasing cautiously any important advance in prices need scarcely be apprehended. But, at the same time, the arrivals are not sufficiently extensive to cause a decline in prices, and it would, therefore, seem that for the next few weeks the wheat trade is not likely to be subjected to any important fluctuations. Millers will certainly continue tb operate with extreme caution, while holders of produce will at least demand full prices, and will endeavor to obtain a further advance. In the Consol market there has been a slight reaction, and to-day rather a heavy tone is apparent. The depressed appearance of this market has arisen from the withdrawal of considerable supplies of gold from the Bank of England, and from rather unfavorable political news from Paris, which has led to a decline in the French Rentes. The fall in Consols fiom the late highest point is now about 1$ per cent. An neked are the highest and lowest prices each day enumerated: to make extensive Three days ending January 23. Consols for money — 32 days has greatly interfered with sadly delayed, to-day being only to the 6th of January. All the New York steamers, however, — il Jan. 22. weather of the last few Postal communication with America has been Mon. 81 l| Tues. 90 Wed. @90X 90*<&»0% On the whole the market for United States 6-20 bonds has ruled 53X steady, with but trifling alterations in prices from the close of last week. Atlantic and Great Western Railway securities, however, are flat, and the quotations have given way. Erie Railway shares are dull and Jan. 21. 60 days. New York.... 109X Dec. 26. 90 days. Jamaica IX P- c. prem. lower in price. In Illinois Centrals but little business has been done Dec. 31. 60 days. Havana 20@23 Dec. 31. Rio de Janeiro United States 5-20 bondR close this evening 72$ to 72$, Atlantic and 23X@24X Dec. 14. finenos Ayres. 50 @50X Great Western consolidated mortgage bonds 86$ to 37$ ex coupon, do *>ec. 3. Valparaiso.... 46X@46X Pernambuco.. Dec. 31. 24 @24X debentures 49 to 51, Erie Railway shares 43$ to 43$, and Illinois Cen¬ 4s. 5X<?. 60 days. Dec. 6. 6 mo’s. 4s. 6X*L@— Singapore 4s. 5XdDec. 15. Hong Kong... 4*. 6Xd-@— trals 80 to 81. The latest prices for United States 5-20's on the Conti¬ 1 p. c. dis. Dec. 15. Ceylon 2X@3 p. c. prem nent are subjoined : Jan. 16. At Amsterdam 76 J, at Frankfort 76, at Berlin Is. UXd. Bombay lsl0X<*@ — Madras Is 10Xd@ — Jan. 12. Is li%d 76$, and at Hamburg 69$. Calcutta Jan. 15. is. l\yxd. lsl0X<*@ — Nov. 24. 80 days. 1 p. c. dis. 30 days. The demand for accommodation during the week has been to a fair Sydney 1X P- c. prem. extent. The supply seeking employment is very large, and there is [From our own Correspondent.] therefore no pressure apparent in any quarter. The bank minimum re¬ London, Wednesday, Jan. 23,1867. mains at 3$ per cent, and as nearly £500,000 has been withdrawn from Ip a commercial point of view January is usually a dull month, but it has the establishment for export to France, it is scarcely probable that a proved more than ordinarily so this year. The crisis of 1866 is still, in decline to three per cent will yet take place ; out of doors, however, some measure, felt now, not so much, indeed, in causing distress among the quotations are about one-half per cent, beneath the official mini¬ the mercantile classes, as in producing that caution so indispensable at mum, and as the commercial demand i9 small a decline to three per most times, and so prominently manifest during the last few months cent, is expected as soon as the present drain upon the bank has ceased. This great circumspection in trade since the commencement of the crisis in May last has enabled, we believe, many houses to regain a tolerably The rates for the best paper are now as under : Per Cent. I Per Cent stable footing, the sudden collapse of so large a number of financial es¬ Bank minimum J®3X | 3 months’ bills 8 @ tablishments having compelled many to retrace their steps, and to cur¬ I 4 & 6 months’ trade bills.... 3X@4 Open market rates: 3 @ | 4 <fc 6 months’ bank bills.... 3 @3X tail their operations in every possible quarter. Hence trade declined, 30 to 60 days’ bills and from the reduction which took place in the volume of trade in Great Bills on Continental cities continue in demand ; but in the quotations it — — — — t» — — — — — — — — — — — — — it 44 44 -- — 44 — — ti 44 it 44 it 44 it 44 it 44 Britain from June to the close of 1866, there is, as yet, no recovery, at present there are take place. no symptoms that an and improvement is likely to ^ The crisis of last year has extended itself in due course to all our colonies and dependencies. India, China, Australia and the Mauritius very little change has taken place from the close of last week. The bullion market is very firm. The supplies of gold and silver in small, and, as the demand for shipment to the Continent is considerable, all the recent importations have not only been absorbed, bat about £490,000 has been taken out of the bank since Wednesday the market are evening last. The supply of bullion held by that establishment has. therefore, undergone a considerable diminution during the week. The prices current for bullion are now as under: Parting gold, £3 18s.; fine bar silver, 60$d. to 6Id.; Mexican dollars, 4s, lld.@f, and doree lia, and lastly in China, the tendency which has occasionally been per¬ ceived of an improvement in business has been checked, and the mar¬ silver, 61 $d. per ounce. The Chilian loan has proved a great success. The sum required was kets have relapsed to their previously dull state. We believe, however, that ww ituessed the concluding failure of any importance, only £2,000,000, and about £17,000,000 has been applied for. The have each felt its effects, and in each of those countries mercantile and financial establishments have been compelled to succumb. As the news has been believed here of embarrassments, first in India, then in Austra. THE eerip has “touched” If to 2 premium. premium ; but baa since receded to l^@f been very quiet, with a cotton trade has The [“February 9,1867. CtiliONIOLE. tendency to lower prices. Same time In Same time in 6,121,695 1RR4 142, 121,064 1854 942,219 1,846,068 1853 1852 58.894 ...' 1860 1859 CaMe. $7,673,883 2,265,097 1856 1855 3,253,070 ' 1861 English market Report*—Per 1858 1857 $2,8*27,804 1866 1865 3,919,565 943,744 2,912,659 Imports and Exports at New York for January.—The details of Thursday, February 7th, the Bank of England has reduced its min¬ the imports at New York for January compare as follows during the imum rate to 3 per cent. Consols have varied little throughout the week and closed on Thursday at 90£. United States 0’s (5-20) are ■£ lower than past three years : 18C6. 1867. 1865. $18,556,7*26 $11,046,856 $5,217,495 last week, closing at 72£. Illinois Central shares are lower. Erie shares Entered for consumption., 9,087,702 10,241,576 Entered for warehousing 4,510,225 have gaioed on the lowest of the week 1±, closing at 39f. The following Free goods 1,238,757 747,810 840,129 72,771 126,719 Specie and bullion 52,268 are the daily closing prices: On Sat. 2. Fri. 1. -90 % Consols for money U. S. 6’s (1862) • Illinois Central shares. Erie Railway shares... . . Mon. 4. 7*2% 81 73 8lt% 80% 88% 39 ft) OC3" 72% The 80% 39% ‘>«iS ' 39% eO/a 90% 90% 7*2% 80% 90% 7v% ^•V4 quotations for U.S. 0’s, 1802, were at Paris (4th) 72-L and (5th) 7C£. The Liverpool Cotton market has been dull and inactive, with a fall of f@£d. on Upland Middling, which closed on Thursday eveuing at 14d@l4fd. Sales about 40,000 bales. Manchester goods and yarns heavy and lower. Breadstuff* are easier. Western mixed Corn closed on Thursday at Wheat has lost 2d. quarter. per $30,109,830 $20,979,087 7,424,385 9,380,484 1866. 1867, $34,171,617 *48,905,258 6,419,617 890,870 $108,898,483 56,171,603 6,025,882 1,144,299 $ SO, 087,723 62,894,173 '6,» 82,762 8,524,562 $90,387,338 $172,840,197 $164,189,240 46,321,906 59,627,912 1865. at Frankfort barrel. 5,653,554 imports for the seven months ending January 31st are as follows Entered for Entered for Free goods The latest 40s. per $10,620,117 Total entered at port Withdrawn from warehouse Wed. 6. Thur. 7. Tuos. 5. 90% 72% 90% consumption warehousing v . Specie and bullion Total entered at port Withdrawn from warehouse.. 40,294,595 all given at their cost in gold in the foreigu mar¬ ket, and the exports are reported at their value here in currency. To the former must hi added freight and duty and the difference between the gold and legal tender notes. ceutal, and Flour Is. per Below are the exports from New York to foreign ports in the month These of irregular. Beef is firm, and has advanced 5s. on the week. Lard lower, having fallen from 53s. to 51s. per cwt. Cheese Is. lower, but steady at the decline. Pennsylvania refined and Canada white Petroleum is dull at 1 Sd per gallon of 8 pounds. Spirits Turpentine i3 better at 38s. per cwt. Tal¬ low is quoted at 44s. per cwt. Rosin 9^@10s. per cwt. ‘Provisions have been imports January are : 1867. 1S65. do $19,784,997 38,301 3,184,853 2,706,336 114,207 422,751 2,551,351 $19,746,451 16,561,598 produce Foreign free goods 1866. $16,023,621 105,421 Domestic $22,814,543 20,108.207 $15,999,998 13,448,647 432,550 dutiable Specie aud bullion . Total exports i do exclusive of specie The New York exports , subjoined for . $12,911.1^0 2S4,9u9 months from January S>st seven : ' are 1865. COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Domestic and Exports for the Week.—The imports this week show dutiable. Total large increase in dry goods, and a decrease in general merchandise, the total being 14,207,960 against $3,663,970 last week, and $4,229,355 the previous week. Tho exports are $2,881,102 this week, against 3,210,976 last week, and $2,724,291 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week were 11,014 bales, against 11,705 bales last week The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry goods) Feb. 1, and for tne week ending (for general merchandise) do 24,858,353 Drygoods..., United States Mint $173,366,051 148,507,698 $142,602,381 127,808,121 for 2,363,866 $117,301,905 98,039,284 , January.—The following is an official deposits and coinage at the United States Mint for Jauuary, 18G7 : statement of the the month of , DEPOSITS. Ya’ue. Value. Gold deposits, all sources.. Total FOR THE WEEK. 1866. $885,328 73|Silver deposits iuc. purch. deposits .. $749,534 2,215,643 $4,38:1.620 Total for the week — Previously reported $3,152,814 1,055,116 our 3,598,025 . 2,841,953 $5,248,656 13,181,658 $2,965,177 $7,222 573 17,947,499 $18,430,314 $9,757,918 $25,170,072 Three Dollars Total $19,163,477 $11,297 08 $896,625 81 Halt Dollars Dimes Total 1866. .. $5,416,660 $5,917,607 Previously reported 10,015,680 14,900,512 17,405,006 Cents Two Cent $23,322,613 $20,317,172 pieces. 799,000 197,500 Germany Since Jan. 1,1867 $16,789,651 1,974,582 $11,059,855 743,836 86,673 59,122 873,9 9 *222,120 1,125,361 31,7S9 Other S. Europe East Indies China Australia Br.N A Colonies OtherW. I Mexico New Granada... Venezuela .... The 65,049 195,708 1 | 43,655 330,486 10,400 $123,333 Uayti Other N.Et iurope Spain This week. To Cuba 20*2,177 5,5(>0 119,763 Br. Guiana. 32,257 Brazil 1.800 [ All other ports Other S/A. 11,585 ports. the 24th of including Since Jan. 1. *2—S. City of Boston, Mexican silver Tota since Jan. 1,1867 .... American gold..... 2—S. Eagle, Havana— Spanish gold Total for the week Liverp’l— 100,750 00 3,312,500 $121,800 00 Previously reported 3,445,399 $1,18.2,023 84 January. coupons up was restore and maintain tne credit introduced in the Senate of Missouri on The bill proposes to fund all the railroad debt’ to January 1, 1867, into bonds running twenty at New York. The following provisions are included thereon, heretofore issued by the State, or guaranteed by the follows : For the $7,000,000 issued to the Pacific Railroad; for the $4,500,000 issued in ex¬ change or guaranteed for the same company ; for the construction of the Southwest branch ; for the $4,350,000 issued to the North Missouri Railroad Company ; lor the $3,501300C issued to the St. Louis and Iron Mountain Railroad Company; for the $660,000 issued to the Cario and Fulton Railroad Company, and for the $700,000 issued to the Platte County Railroad Company ; and the holders of the bonds aforesaid shall at any time after the passage of this act have the privilege of exchang¬ ing the same for consolidation bonds, and of funding the coupons due at the date of the passage of this act, when presented in sums of $1,000 ; provided that for any balance lees than $ 1,000 the State Treasurer shall give in exchange certificates of indebtedness, which shall be con¬ verted into consolidation bonds, whenever presented in sums of not less coupons State, in aid of certain railroad companies, as 38,102 $25,037 260,100 $685,098 2,f05,211 $3,190,309 31,093 52| thereon, and shall be issued only in exchange for the bonds and overdue 75,311 716,138 112,938 4ii ,589 42,565 91,177 195,470 219,444 25,000 $8,910 00 Sec. 2. Said bonds shall be used for the single object of consolidating the railroad debt of the State, now in default, with the accrued interest $642,898 2—S. Germania, Hamb’g— Feb. 67.805 years and payable in the bill*. following will show the exports of specie from the port of New ending Feb. 2, 1867 : $500 $31,09*2 5*2 $7,990 OOjThree Cent pieces 297,000 3,950 00,Five Cent pieces.2,019,600 Missouri State Debt.—A 1 ill “ to 101,511 50,070 54,249 270,142 192 52 non no pieces of the State of Missouri ” York for the week Fore gn silver Gold and silver bars Gold bars Silver bars $100 00 5 65,094 $1,029,130 3*2[Copper coinage...3,312,500 $1*21,SCO 00 .... department will be found the oflicial detailed statement of the imports and exports for the week. The value of exports from thi9 port to different countries (exclusive of specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the fol¬ lowing table: This week. 8,000 ;... Gold Coinage.... Silver do Total No. ol In the commercial To Great Britain... France Holland & Belg. $6,000 00 Half Dimes 23,900 00 Fine bars RECAPITULATION. $2,881,102 13,908,549 $13,1S7,47‘2 65,094 $1,029,130 32 COrFER. 1867. $3,171,842 Value. $8,000 00 5,200 00 6,380 32 67,805 6,000 47,SOU 6,000 Total For the week 3,200 5,200 9 2. Dollars EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. Since Jau. 1 [Denomination. No. of pcs. 30,900 OOjHollars 16,1350 00|Fiue bars 7,800 001 SILVER. 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 Feb. 5 : 1865. 2,600 Value. $954,500 OO.Aiuarter Eagles 14,955,517 report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry 1864. 3,090 3,270 Eagles.. Half Eagles $4,207,960 6,792,741 .. ..... Since Jan. 1 Denomination. No. of pcs, Double Eagles... 47,725 1867. $1,650,631 .. 1865. General merchandise., 19,322,621 1,582,297 1867. GOLD COINAGE. 1864. Feb 14.794,260 14,124,796 .. exports......: exclusive specie : FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK In $95,313,522 361 896 Specie and bullion a Feb. 2 1,189,214 $126,8S3,6S4 342,140 Foreign merchandise, free do Imports 1866. $132,492,688 produce I than $1,000. Sec. 8:. There is hereby appropriated to the interest and sinking fond February 9,1867.] . . THE CHRONICLE. of $4,500,000 out of the moneys to be received from the United provisions of the act of Congress entitled “ An act to reimburse the State of Missouri for moneys expended far the Unit°d States in enrolling and equi ping and provisioning militia forces to aid in suppressing the rebellion,” approved April 17, 1866, which appro¬ priation shall be disposed of as follows:, $1,500,000 to go to'interest fund proper ; $2,000,000 to be invested in United States six per cent, bonds, to be held as a/eserve fund to meet any deficiency in the semi¬ annual payments of interest on the State bonds, and may be used for abtaining temporary loans to pay interest, but for no other purpose, or so many as are necessary may be sold to make up any deficient in the interest fund, to meet interest as it becomes due ; but if any part of said bonds are sold, a like amount shall be the sum states under the again there is 1865. Plank and boards 1866. $18,662 .. Shingles $35,568 55S Other woods ore and scrap Pig Pickled fish Horses Horned cattle '.. iron 550 1.842 .. 10,768 .. 414,588 . 89,934 .. Swine 1865. Sheep 1,196 14,457 12,457 2,0GS 9,320 3^7,467 77,052 6,103 Cooper Poultry Butter Cheese Pork Wool purchased whenever 48,987 , 1866. , By rail. $3,392 11,917 235,732 1,122,660 1,4S9 Agriculture 2,749 57,005 19,973 whereJhe great increases particularly take place: By sea. $891 By v By rail. $14,895 sea. $35,080 9,329 667,798 459,447 147,608 1,049,838 1,444,949 1,945,288 1,560,083 405.5vT" 3.370,902 345,876 25,929 66,978 297,186 126,318 increase last year of $4G,687 in articles the r Manufactures 15,256 72,263 6,171 1365. , 32,685 262,690 128,087 4,862 Hides exports generally . $1,008 5.693 Eggs .. The mine The fisheries The forest Animals 1866. $81,688 '. 17,910 337,592 6.789 23,002 The following recapitulation will also show aud decreases of the surplus fuuds belonging to the interest or sinking fund, so ms to keep the reserve up to meet future emergencies. The remaining $1,000,000 hereby appropriated shall go to the sinking fund to be used in the purchase of outstanding indebtedness of the State. Sec. 9. Whenever there is, in the judgment of the fiscal agent, any surplus of the interest fund that will not be needed, it shall be credited to the sinking fund, and be used in the purchase of State bonds. The - m . These figures show an produce of the mine ; a decrease of $4,137 in fish and oil; a decrease of $216,465 in the produce of the forest; an increase of $20,739 in interest collected from the bonds animals and their products ; ;in increase of belonging to the reserve fund, and all $1,761,218 in agricultural interest accruing from the principal of sinking fund, shall go to the in-, produce, and an increase also in manufactures of $130,697. ' So far as terest or sinking fund, as the fiscal this port, therefore, is concerned, we have no reason to complain of the agent may find it necessary, and all moneys hereafter paid in the abrogation of the treaty, an increase instead of a decrease treasury on accouut of the purchase beiug re¬ of any of the railroads sold by the State, shall go to the sinking fuud. markably perceptible on the general result. Sec. 10. There shall be collected for the year 1867, and for every year thereafter, a special tax of £ of 1 per cent, on real estate and other property and effects subject to taxation, as provided for by the railroad ordinance in the constitution which shall be returned and over as a special tax, and, as fast We call $1,132,731 80 paid this collected, shall be deposited in as bauk to the credit of the interest fund, and shall be used to meet the semi-annual interest as it accrues upon the bonds to be issued under this act, and any surplus to go to the sinking fund as above provided : said special tax fund shall be used for the obligations of the State for edness, but for Taxes other purpose no paid the amon r those who 1864, 1865 and 1866 payment of all accruing plus Total NAME of Spinner reports the following taxes from National period : For 6 months Duty preceding Julyl, 18^4.. Jan.1, 1865.. Julyl, 1865.. .... .... July 1, 1866.. .... on $18,402 23 37,229 40 96,109 46 220,>-07 26 186,140 48 Banks for tho Subjoined is a Duty Total on deposits. $95,811 26 317,142 74 769,139 49 1,331,658 OS recapitulation of the aggregate taxation On circulation On capital On deposits... On prolits $167,310 45 589,015 62 1,363,853 06 2,428,031 75 2,717,369 52 on 55,361 | 412,954 | 2,103,797 I 2,20.,957 | (m03' six _ 734,005 Total taxes for 1865 $6,733,876 j °“ _ . 2,075,192 | *«>** Total taxes for 1360 *8,041,000 The aggregate taxes for the three years are : circulation I On licenses ) On On On capital ....... deposits * 1,759,124 — Total 4,604,959 | taxes for the 3yenes..$16,689,564 Canadian Trade Since the Abrogation of the Reciprocity Treaty —The Montreal Gazette say s that the exports from Canada instead of decreasing actually increased, the figures beiug : Total value of exports do. 1866, $8,699,030. There is a falling off in the exports “ by rail,” but thi9 is more than made up by the increased exports “ by sea,” and shows how we were driven to seek a new, and, we believe, more profitable—at all events a self-reliant—market for the balance of the goods thrown on our hands by the protective tariff of the United States. in 1865, $7,512 752 ; » In , 1866, for instance, the exports from Montreal “ by rail,” came to a total value of $2,977,135, and last year fell to $1,742,042. The exports by sea,” on the other hand, only amounted to $4,535,617 in 1865, and last year had risen in value to $6,856,988. We sold, Montreal alone considered, one million less to the Americans, but then found extra direct “ sale for two millions with the British and Lower Province consumers. We now propose to point out the items more immediately affected by the treaty, in order to show how our abrogation. This will be best shown in {interests were affected by its a comparative tabular form At Bank. Feb. 1 to Feb. 12. 212 Broadway. 67 Wall at, Feb. 4 to Feb. 15. Feb. 5. Feb. 6, Feb. 11. $5 5 5 Compuuys Office Companys Office Companys Office 172 Feb. 5. Fi*b. 5. Broadway. Feb. 5 to Feb. 11. Com pan vs Office IiOST BONDS, numbers of $109,000 United States 5-20 following are the new stolen from Leonard W. Jerome on the 5th inst. 5,251 to 5,255, inclusive. 24,326. 24,327. 24,568. 25,317 to 25,384, inclusive. 26,067 to 26,086, inclusive. were 5,138. 25,3 U. 28,401. 28,402. 28,405 to28,452 inclusive. issue Bonds, 24,569. 25,323. 26,404 to 20,413, AT THE STOCK BOARDS. following statement shows the description and number of shares sold at the Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday: The Sat. Bank Shares Mon. 15 300 700 250 Tues. 70 Wed. 265 500 Thurs. Fri’y. 152 27 900 200 Week. 183 57 747 400 166 2,900 i2 450 162 Railroad shares, viz.: Central of New Jersey Chicago & Alton do Preferred Chicago, Burlington & Q.. - .... do do Chicago, R.Isl. 5,150 8,180 2,600 JFPref. <£^aeific. Cleveland. Col. <$&Ciu Cleveland & Pituhnrg.... Cleveland and Toledo Erie Railway do Preferred Hannibal & St. Joseph... Hudson River Illinois Central Little Miami Michigan Central . . 11,700 . . 5,900 1,600 . 35,920 17,909 40 .... 100 500 .. , 4 V .... 1,200 1,900 100 800 100 .... 106 475 9,500 13,610 825 250 300 4,600 14 40' 50 .. m* « New York Central New York & New Haven. Mississippi ($100) Panama ; Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic. St. L., Alton & T. H do do pref... 7,125 7,400 5,0H0 • • • • 6,450 5,300 60,980 1,480 8,100 400 31 4.900 200 40,990 6,900 1,900 24.190 100 12,375 2,850 63 106,435 50 100 253 100 1,100 3,000 3,950 «... ... 100 200 © ♦ . 4,400 400 350 - 200 34,505 81 44,900 4,100 100 ^ 120 191 12,100 11,300 10 200 12,950 100 7,S00 200 200 17,400 600 200 6,000 25 5,800 56 1,650 147 100 500 5,500 2,100 1,925 41,400 500 350 4,450 4,400 2,850 3,150 1,900 6,200 1,000 1,830 150 16,373 34,180 50 400 100 200 3,400 .... 1,050 4,623 10,800 • • • 1(10 • 1,200 pref • .... 5,885 11,500 8,700 200 • . Toledo, Wabash <fc West’n • ' .... 27 400 m 1,300 3,800 Reading • 50 .... ... do 9,175 11,300 11,850 16,150 14,500 •"» . 13,200 Milwaukee & St. Paul do do pref. do 50 20.770 . 7,400 Michigan Southern Ohio <fc * I 100 Chicago & Northwe/tern. J-$10,265,578 | ) On profits The which $1,313,880 | 316.916 share Surplus Div pro¬ National per N.Y. Life Ins. & Trust Co. BUSINESS Total taxes for 1864 $1,371,171 I On licenses )a*t in ,; Washington City Fire, 5 5 CLOSED. where. Feb. 11. 3% Feb. 15. 5 Feb. 11 ,.. New York Fire | 175,774 381,780) • 5 National Lite St. Mark’s Fire inclusive. $287,740 I On licenses Ccapiialti0n I the On On deposits.!. On profits Batiks. St. Nicholas National duty each term. : On circulation On capital On deposits On profits BOOKS Insurance. 1,297,010 15 The duty for the six months preceding January 1, 1S67, being cess of collection, the amount thereof cannot now be stated. We estimate these taxes at three millions of dollars. Banks for three years o’t. p. wnsN. cap¬ ital in excess of U. S. bonds. circulation. $53,096 97 234,643 48 498,604 11 872,566 41 1,234,218 89 .... Jan. 1, 1866.. Duty on scrip, by the PAYABLE. ftATi company. $6,424,084 46 same to be cancelled DIV1DEN DS. We give in our Bulletin tram day to day lists ot bonds, &c., lost, and dividends declared. These tables will be continued daily, and on Saturday tnorniug such as have been published through the week in the Bulletin will be collected and published in the Chronicle. Below wifi be found thos* published the last week in the Bulletin. $381,780 33 175,774 OU— $557,554 33 2,207,987 81 731,005 (Mi—2,941,992 81 2,1*75,192 32 849,340 00 - 2,924,537 32 License Mr. scrip by must have been &i)e Bankers’ (&a?ctte. : 1S65—Dividend and surplus su discussion, but this whatever. License License The cancellation of only a conditional obligation, liable Company issuing it in time of heavy losses. purchase of outstanding State indebt¬ 1864—Dividend aud surplus 1866—Dividend and much assets to the amount of familiar with tho nature of insurance not were in hand. as now which is of Internal Revenue taxe9 the years shown are insurance columns of our Company—in which Company has occasioned Banks.—Mr. Rollins gives the following statement paid by National Banking Associations for by attention to the advertisement in the Suu Mutual Insurance 500 100 .... . 1,292 67,260 960 195 197 ■S ^ 1,300 • A 200 .... .... .... 100 Miscellaneous shares, viz.: Coal—American “ SCO Central “ Cumberland Delaw’e & Hud. Can Wilkesbarre “ “ ■ h .... 500 20 200 200 100 119 .... 300 930 92 100 800 2,200 3,700 1,100 300 150 400 300 100 550 200 200 500 100 50 Pref Quicksilver , '100: Mining— Mariposa . 200 ' ... V .... \ € 4 20 200 300 75 60 «... m • m m m • • • 1,710 220 1,130 356 660 1,500 7,000 1,400 [February 9, 1867.j CHRONICLE. THE 172 undoubtedly much influenced by the ease in money, and should malters at Washington assume such a shape as to give Bruns. Citj.. 750 4,250 400 '700 1,300 100 1,000 Canton 7,825 assurance to speculators of a long continued period of abundant 500 1,000 510 1,815 66 4,766 'JeUgraph—West’n Union 1,900 2,250 1,900 1,600 450 600 200 200 Steamship—Atlantic Mail. 8,578 100 373 money, there will probably soon be developed a more general spec¬ 665 865 135 1,440 Pacific Mail 310 110 200 S. Amer. Nav. ulative activity. The market closes feverish and unsettled. 465 160 10 70 120 100 5 53 Express—Adams 1 9 23 20 The total transactions in stocks for the last six days amount to American 110 60 25 '*25 United States... 263 5 148 530,108 shares, against 625,079 for the previous week. The 'iio Wells, Far. & Co 110 10 ’ioo Gas—Manhattan transactions include 106,435 shares of Erie; New York Central, The amount of Government, State and City and other bonds sold at the 41,400; Michigan Southern, 67,260; Reading, 34,180 ; Northwest¬ Regular Board, daily and for the week, are given in the following statement: Week. Fri. ern preferred, 60,980 ; do. common, 34,505 ; Thnr. Wed. Tues. Rock Island, 40.990, Mon. Sat. U. S. 6’s, 1881 $50,500 $13,000 $50,000 $50,000 $15,000 $25,000 and Cleveland and Pittsburg 44,900. 103,500 166,300 131,000 574,500 75,000 U.S 6’s (5-20’s). 119,500 25,000 25,000 The following are the closing quotations at the regular board to¬ U.S6’s (old)... 34,500 1,000 5,000 5,500 21,666 U.S. 5’s (10-408) 2,000 37,000 22,000 5,000 day, compared with those of the six preceding weeks; 10,000 U.S 6’b (old) 292,700 202,000 200 600 400 700 Improvm't—Bost.W. Pow “ 2,000 100 .... 10'V The market is 100 # “ “ .. “ • - . . ' . - "" 44 .. . • 44 44 « .... » • • .... .... .... .... . .... .... .... .... .. U. S 7-30 notes. State 22,200 143,500 60,000 18,000 bonds, viz.: Connecticut 6’s Georgia 6’s .... Ohio 6’s—... Tennessee 6’s.. 1,000 . . . . 18,000 Virginia 6’s... City Bonds, viz : Brooklyn 6’s.. Company Bonds, viz : 143,000 12,000 30,000 Railroad Other 33,000 9,000 3,000 22,666 . 34,000 . . 122,000 5,500 «... .... 104.000 .... 73,000 2,000 324,000 10,000 . 18,000 28 ,'666 2,000 .... • 2,000 • • 2,000 • 16,500 5,000 24,000 15,000 * 45.000 175,500 48,000 20,000 .... P. M. Friday, Feb. 8, 1867, Market.—There has been a gradually increasing monetary affairs throughout the week, opinion expressed in our last report of a return to lower rates for money seems to have been fully justified. The irregularity which characterized the market during the pre¬ vious weeks of panic, and doubt as to the standing of borrowers, have given place to a better feeling, and the banks are more disposed to accommodate with discounts, their rate on best bills being seven per cent. On demand loans the prevailing rate at the banks is 6 per cent, on new business, though some previous engagements are tendency towards ease in Reading Mich. Southern.-. Michigan Central Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern.... preferred The amount of loanable capital is accumulating, and if the ten¬ dency to increased ease is not checked by the action of Congress, (as, indeed, it has been checked to some extent during the week by various rumors concerning its action) we may have still lower On the street money is ottered as low as @5 on Government collaterals, but on mixed collaterals the prevail¬ ing rate is 6 per cent. The following are the quotations .for loans of various classes : rates for money. Prime endorsed months bills, 2 United States ^7 6 7 © — Good endorsed bills, 4 months do single names i Lower grades 8 & Wayne .. 8 8 Securities.—Government securities have © 8 © 9 ©10 .... 105* 8"* 107% 106% 88* 124% 45* 90% 82 . 123 102 71 127 104% 71* 103* 107 109 81* 83 120 42 120* 36% 79* .64% 98,% 96* 108 63% 125* 64 132 103 78 107 90 125* 123 103* 104* 41% 81% 102% 102% 121 40 46* 22* 102% 59* 130% 104* 75% 23* x.d.99% 101 56* 58% 23* 30% 30* 110* 119 44 45 46* 46 36* 64* 95* 95* 97% H2* 96% 120 114* 85* 120* 38* 68* 98% 98* 114% following statement shows the volume of transactions shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, on each day the week closing with this day’s business : The in of , Sat. 15 Mon. 70 Tues. Wed. 152 Thnrs. 265 188 Fri. 57 Week. 747 58,125 152,923 87,928 85,702 72,493 36,394 260 1,922 3,900 420 155 493,566 3,566 2,500 800 Bank shares Railroad 44 Coal 44 1,400 1,600 1,300 500 700 44 Improv’t T elegraph 44 Steamship44 Mining Express 1,900 1.600 510 3,890 1,175 44 100 .... .... 850 500 823 167 10 118 120 500 1,300 1,265 145 419 650 1,815 .335 115 44 Gas 1,000 750 166 226 .... 9,900 6,350 7,325 7,654 891 110 Regular Board.. Open Board... . 20,060 43,880 68,405 97,520 33,603 59,740 33,107 57,300 27,550 49,000 20,743 19,200 203.468 Total current week. Total Previous w’k. 63,940 165,925 136,128 93,343 134,614 90,407 76,550 91,694 39,943 72,116 530,108 106,606 At At 80,921 Rail- 11 18 27 44 44 Feb. •4 1 8... Min- Im- Bank. ro’d. Coai. ing. pro’t. 83 188.089 3,600 7,850 1,700 141 539,139 12,559 9,600 4,300 1,058 465,718 3,316 9,600 3,200 426 668,322 2,601 16,050 5,400 763 566,252 2,577 24,375 6,080 747 493,565 3,566 9,900 6,350 Tele- Steam¬ graph. ship. Other. 898 4,328 12,005 17,836 8,536 14,170 14,569 14,255 10,613 10,047 7,654 7,325 1,257 1,018 Regular Board on each day Sat. 596, &51 606,840 381 722,004 1,072 622,079 1,001 530,108 following is a summary of the amount of Government and City securities, and railroad and other shown Total. 200,715 V42 and notes, State sold at the 625,079 the commencement of shown in the following statement: b Week ending— Jan. (1 to 4).... “ 326,640 in shares weekly since The transactions the year are The 7 104% 82% 132 103% 1U7% US* Rock Island Per cent. Per cent. Gall loans Loans on bonds & mort.. 110% 67% 80 Erie Hudson River.... and the still continued at 7. .... 45 49 32 87% 124% 44* Mariposa pref.... New York Central Feb. 8 .... 108 Canton Co Illinois Central — 44* 46* 31* no* 68% 123* 105% S2* Quicksilver Fort Jan. 11. Jan. 18. Jan. 25. Feb. 1. 33 90 41 38* 43 .... 81 Cumberland Coal “ .... The Money 3,000 5,000 2,000 5,000 1,000 2,000 Jan. 4. Dec. 28. 17,000 18,000 3,000 29,000 47,000 2,000 83,000 2,000 55,000 1,100 30,000 10,000 9,000 1,500 3,000 .... .... .... Missouri 6’s... New York 6’s.. New York 7’s. N. Carolina 6’s. 1,000 .... 47,000 bonds bonds of the past week : Mon. Tues. Wed. Thnr. $111,000 $183,500 $221,800 $169,000 60,000 22,200 143,500 47,000 Fri. Week. $!»:), 500 $1,466,800 good degree of activity during the week, and our quotations show 202,000 492,700 642,500 241,000 184,000 87,000 38,000 60,(»00 an advance of from £ to per cent, on the whole list. There has Company B’nds. 12,000 30,000 21,500 39,000 45 000 48,000 195,500 been a demand for Seven-thirties from speculators, and for goldTotal Cur. w’k., $244,500 442,000 411,200 491,300 299,000 909,500 2,797,500 bearing bonds for investment, throughout the week. - To-day a dis¬ Previous week.. 176,500 3^,300 398,300 421,000 * 346,000 157,500 1,883,600 position has been shown to purchase Sixes of ’65, in anticipation The totals, weekly, since the commencement of the year are shown of a rise. Ten-forties are also strong. The steadiness of U. S. se¬ in the following tabulation : Total curities, notwithstanding the various conflicting rumors from Wash¬ State & Company -GovernmentsWeek ending amount. Notes. Bonds. City Bonds. Bonds. Friday, ington, has been very apparent during the last few weeks, while the Jan. $1,785,400 $207,500 $454,800 $146,100 $977,000 (1 to 4) 3,517,150 165,000 623.500 855,450 1,873,200 money and gold markets have been influenced toau unusual extent. Jan. 11 2,635,209 155,000 431.500 314.100 1,734,600 Jan. 18. The great confidence in these bonds as an investment has appeared Jan. 27 150.500 2,535,550 637.500 550,050 1.197.500 1,883,600 155,000 185.100 390,000 1.153.500 in the steady demand which has prevailed for them during the panic Feb. 1 2,797,500 195.500 642.500 492,700 1,466,800 Feb. 8 in the stock market, and the rumors of trouble at Washington. The Gold Market.—There has been a pretty active specula¬ The following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬ tion in gold during the week, founded chiefly on the action of pared with preceding weeks : Jan. 25. Feb. 1. Jan. 4. Jan. 11. Jan. 18. Congress, and, as is usually the case, based still more upon rumors 107* 108% 107% U. S. Bonds... .$182,000 U. S. Notes 18,000 State & City b’ds 32,500 a t .xc.108% U. U. U. U. U. 107% 6-20’b, 1862 coupons. 105% 5-20’s, 1864 44 106 5-20’s, 1865 44 5-20’s, 1865, N. Ibs... xc.104 99% S.10-40’8, S. S. S. S. • . 105 U. S 7-80’8 3rd series.. 104% 104% 107% 106% 105% 105* 104 99% 104 104 104 i08% 107% 105% 105% 104% 108 106* 104* 99% 104% 104% 104* - 99% 104 1G4 104 107% 108% 106% 106 106 107* 105* 100% 105% 104% 99% 104% 104* 104* 105* 105* as to its future action. closing price of to-day shows an Friday last. The The passage advance of 2 on that of of a resolution in the House of Representatives look, ing to the discontinuance of contraction is the principal cause of the rise within the week—added to which is the continued agitatiou Stocks.—The market for stocks of the question of impeachment, and the possibility of action being a general recovery from the panic prices taken upon it. of ten days ago, and our quotations show an advance on some The demand for customs has been considerable, averaging nearly stocks of fully 7 per cent, from the lowest points touched. In the half a million daily, which, in the absence of sales by the Treasury ? middle of the week an advance took place in nearly all the leading has had the effect of sustaining the price. stocks, but it was not maintained, and they subsequently fell off, The price of exchange is such as to forbid the expectation that since which the tone of the market has been firm, with some signs gold will soon be in any large demand for export. of speculative activity in one or two of the Western stocks. Railroad and Miscellaneous has been characterized by THE February 9, 1867.] following shows the fluctuations day by day The Saturday, Feb. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday, 2 4.. 5 6 7 . , .. . . • . • Opening. 136% 136% 137% . Current week Previous week 22,207,031 Broadway Closing. Ocean 139 138% 139 North America.... Hanover 137% 135% 136% Pacific Republic Week range since weekly ending. 4 (3 da^'s) January 1 has been Opening. 132% o “ 132% 133% 133% 136% 134 136% 11 1!) 25 “ Lowest. 134 January 134% 1363b 133% February 1 A* 8 The transactions at the urday evening were: Highest. 134% 135% Range. Closing. 2% 2% 4% 2% 2% 139 2% 2,674,008 1,441,989 59 $19,158,397 61 1:34 134 Corn 136% 134% 135% 137% 44 ft' 10 78 46 108,586,410 63 $122,483,856 95 19,158,397 61 payments during the week.... $103,325,459 34 5,260,951 29 . Total amount of gold certificates issued, SI ,625,000. Included receipts of customs were $120,000 in gold, and $1,974,760 in gold certificates. The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury since Dec. 1 : in the Weeks Custom House. Sub-TreasuryPayments. Receipts. Balances. $1,173,516 $15,277,328 $15,094,432 $102,455,273 1,419,2:35 16,155.328 20,383,460 106,689.404 10,7)3.385 1,471,199 12,793,157 108,689,176 Ending Dec. “ 1.. 8..., 4k 15.... 22 11 29.... Jan. 5. ’67. “ 12.... “ 19.... “ 26.... Feb. 2.... 11 5.318.500 2,360,714 2,399,315 10,525,233 29,541,684 12,304,498 24,387,977 9,450,690 8,601,270 2,004,760 19,158,396 1,332,919 1,584,037 1,944,622 15,915,183 12,814,763 17,565,951 102,613,658 101,164,996 104,823,359 13,109,053 12,364,321 13,897,446 Foreign Exchange.—For the Balances. Dec. $182,895 Inc. 4,234,131 Inc. 1,999,771 Inc. 5.389.950 Dec. 16,726,920 Inc. 5,261,452 Dec. 1,448,662 Inc. 3,658,363 114,079,126 97,352,205 22,939.314 108,586,401 Inc. 3,703,051 103,325,459 Dec. 5.260.951 Cunard steamer of Wednesday from this port exchange was quite inactive. steamer there has been very little activity, and For to-morrow’s prices have ruled low ; but at the close more firmness was exhibited. The receipts of cotton at this port have been on a large scale, amounting to over 30,000 bales for the week. The stock of cotton on hand is much increased lately, and heavier shipments abroad may soon be looked for. The total value of exports of produce to Great Britain for the week were $1,074,582. The of following are.the closing quotations for the several classes foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : Jan. 18. London Comra'l. do bkrsV/i<7 do do shrt 5.16%@5.13% 5.13%@5.11% 5.18%©5.16% " ©5.16% 36%© 36% aris, long Clo short.. Antwerp Swiss 108%@ 109% 109%© 109% 110%© 110% - Hamburg Amsterdam Frankfort Bremen Berlin 41%@ 41% 41%@ 78%@ 72%@ 41% 78% 72% Feb. 1. Jan. 25. 108 @ 108% 107%© 10S Feb. 8. 107%© 108% 108 @108%' 101) @ 109% 5.22%@5.17% 5.17%@5.15 5.22%©5.18% 108%© 108%" 108%© 109% 109%© 109% 109%© 190% 5.16%@5.15 5.21%©5.18% 5.13%@5.12% 5.17%@5.10% 5.20 ©5.17% 5.22%@5.20 5.20 ©5.17% 5.22%@5.20 5.22%@5.18% 36%@ 36% 86%@ 136% 30 © 36% 41%@ 41% 41 %@ 41% 40%@ 41% 41 @ 41% 41%@ 41% 41 © 41% 79 @ 79% 78%© 79, 7S%@ 79 72 © 78 72%© 72% 71%@ 72% 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 Feb. 2,1867 4,101,200 3,922,246 3,055,061 21,618 209,367 51,786 10,523 535,i20 „ 1,=68,378 1,229,165 5,894,630 13,376,*40 1,109,368 1,2-12,011 113,419 13,280 69,853 817,701 33,540 3,033,450 l,r01,661 1,536,264 988,699 1,285,278 21,763 13,056 237,927 13,5^0 315,000 99,122 504,474 1,000,000 308,907 82,650 11,831 . .... . Imp. & Traders... Park Mech. Bank’g As’n Grocers’ North River East River Manuf. & Merch’ts Fourth National... Central Second National... Ninth National First National Third National.... N. Y. Exchange... Tenth National.... Bull’s Head Croton National National Currency. Loans and discounts. $7,618,515 Banks. New York Manhattan Specie. $4,871,286 5,384,141 489,241 Merchants’ % 6,644,396 Mechanics’ Union America Phenix 5,145,656 4,597,6- 6 587,905 280,994 263,882 2,061,131 328,654 8,085,512 3.838,791 3,78-',301 City Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical Merch’ts Exchange National Butch. & Drovers.. Mech’s & Traders.. Greenwich 2,850,034 1,951,759 5,515,844 3,558,343 Circula¬ tion. $789,369 12,659 794,159 569,222 473,112 2,160 291,865 752,808 18.835 18,153 453,587 Leather Manufact’s Seventh Ward State of N. York... 2,896,300 4,332,187 4,987,084 390,453 24,700 506,124 495,945 246,519 195,720 4.940 192,735 178,393 1 33,000 American Exc’ge.. 10,202.898 910,770 987,063 .... 2,630,526 2,274,774 1,727,466 1,130,810 54,380 20,757 deposits. $7,975,598 4,560,917 5,026,971 3,804,169 4,213,629 7.698.795 3,119,lv2 3.017,622 270,816 22,793 216,0^6 635,092 75,197 156,136 Net 1,950,866 2,051,249 5,297,579 2,658,427 Legal Tenders. $3,802,283 1,470,865 1,697,450 998,193 1,421,361 1,459,870 902,311 883,891 823,091 1,042,584 1,579,890 Clearings for the week ending Clearings for the week ending Balances for the week ending Balances for the week ending 43,586 41,255 69,499 17,813 7,700 7,046 3,926 318,548 1,439,988 3,929,638 1,469,379 1,223,486 669,148 315,164 241,5)5 281,517 318,797 1,103,627 746,031 1,239,839 12,921,284 3,944,980 3,240.461 II,568,587 969,252 7, >82,101 3,213,859 2,458,706 645,107 795,000 268,668 910.500 14,430 180,000 348,007 1,965,581 1,275,627 85*2,045 297,065 848,100 1,478,300 1,373,851 304,298 119,625 519,120 90,000 128,516 $568,822,804 85 512,407,258 67 Jan. 26, 1S67 Feb. 2,1867 20,343,585 76 24,220,284 70 Jan. 26, 1867 Feb. 2,1867 previous week are as fol¬ lows: Loans Inc.. 318,977 Circulation Inc.. Inc.. $2,569,520 Inc.. .2,521,982 Deposits Legal Tenders Dec. $3,410,448 Specie 38,849 The following are the totals for a series of weeks past: Aggregate Legal Clearings £ion. Deposits. Tenders. .$263,011,668 $14,957,007 $31,393,849 $208,889,177 $61,485,458 $649,081,442 Circula- Loans. Dec. 1. Dec. 8 Dec. 15.. Dec. 22.. Dec. 29.. Jan. 5.’67 Jan.12 Jan.19.. Jan. 26.. Feb. 2.. Specie. ^ 260,620,027 258,45 -*,330 258,255,514 259,354,761 258,935,488 12,794,892 14,613,477 255,032,223 251,674,803 251.264,355 203,676,822 60,946,857 206,458,271 63,994,309 202,029,877 64,816,962 32,664,526 200,811,290 63,000,687 32,762,779 202,533,564 65,026,121 32,825,103 202,517,608 63,246,370 32,854,928 201,200,115 62,235,386 32,957,198 197,952,076 63,422,559 32,995,347 200,511,596 65,944,541 14,582,050 13,991,200 257,852,460 . 15,365,207 16,014,007 16,332,984 Philadelphia 31,794,653 31,797,665 32,433,429 13,231,917 13,185,222 Banks.—The following 647,315,736 556.150.833 587.150.833 515,917,999 4 6,987,787 605,132,066 520,040,028 568,822,804 512,407,258 shows the totals of the of the leading items of the Philadelphia Banks for last and previous weeks: average Jan 26. Feb. 2. $15,817,150 $15,517,150 52,168,473 52,551,130 Increase.. Decrease. $300,000 880,821 19,363,371 39,001,779 >71,564 19,269,123 39.592,712 Decrease. Decrease. Increase.. 9,257 94,248 590,933 • Capital Loans Specie Legal Tenders.. .Deposits Circulation The following are 46,210 Increase.. 10,430,893 10,384,683 382,657 the totals of the Philadelphia Banks for a series of weeks past : Date. Dec. 1... Dec. 8 Dec. 15. !... Dec. 22 Dec. 29 Jan. 5 '67.. Jan.12 Jan. 19 Jan. 26 Feb. 2 . ... Loans. Legal Tenders. $21,057.31:3 $54,549,367 20,488,385 20,115,704 51,536,821 >20.209,004 51.759,765 52.312,317 51,250,352 20,006.255 52,528,491 53,458,307 52,168,473 55,551,130 19,448,099 19,363,374 19,269,128 . Circulation. Specie. $S76,751 51,256.937 19.677,741 . . . .. $9,615,989 10,021,527 10,161,601 10,257,544 861,915 854,989 860,111 867,647 903,663 10,325,154 10,388,820 10,380,577 903,320 877,548 10,381,51*5 880.582 10,384,683 871,564 10,430,898 Deposits. 142,102,289 41,452,539 40,728,902 40,411,158 39,706,052 41,308,327 41,023,421 40,048,645 39,001,779 39,592,712 Boston Banks.—The ment of following are the footings of the state¬ the Boston Banks for the week ending February 4, com¬ pared with those of the two previous returns : ' Circulation (National) Circulation (State)... i. past : " “ 380,680 550,149 “ 881,421 2,612,993 829,289 3,679,710 123,497 5.627.796 “ Jan. “ “ “ Feb, 40,246,216 24,997,446 39,708,053 24,691,075 306,014 12,786,508 14,516,029 11,062,999 13,530,309 » the comparative totals for 311,749 a 97,742,461 11,641,281 13,056,648 series of weeks Legal /—Circulation. * Specie. Tenders. Deposits. National. State. 3 $99,446,166 $601,502 $16,640,798 $4,1,089,605 $24,593,237 $320,864 10 99,062,641 589,364 16,688,280 40,968,922 24,650,482 318,409 17 316,242 99,127,027 697,902 16,561,288 41,042,063 ' 24,671,197 24 98,958,672 582,112 17,038,272 40,971,613 24,654,316 315,140 31 99,033,673 589,137 18,090,512 41,801,496 24,666,860 313,562 7 ’67.. 97,009,3421,183,451 17,033,387 40,824,618 24,580,367 312,664 14 98,461,7781,334,300 16,829,495 40,246,216 24,997,446 311‘749 21...... 95,298,9821,078,160 16,596,299 38,679,604 24,275,162 301,911 28 97,891.3291,058,329 16,816,481 39,219,241 24,716,597 302,298 4 / 956,569 16,394,604 98,461,778 301,911 Loans. Dec. 1,333,409 16,879,495 38,679,604 24,275,162 Deposits ar^ $41,900,000 1,078,160 16,596,299 Due from other banks Due to other banks following $41,900,000 95,298,982 * Specie Legal tender notes The Feb. 4. Jan. 14. Jan. 21. $41,900,000 Capital 321 564 1,715,167 751,040 217,212 402,250 17,054,088 447,764 31,887 534,286 1,317,600 677,000 564,000 4,816,239 1,925,755 1,642,537 270,000 899,733 The deviations from the returns of the 866,732 1,661,464 1,433,453 314,447 1,033,440 1,722,606 1,946,522 1,236,579 $251,264,335 $16,332,984 $32,995,347 $200,511,596 $65,944,541 Totals 707,961 1,219,049 1,771,556 1,611,425 1,642,00*1 6,257,283 I,327,617 283.500 1,050 28,803 181,754 218,585 513,705 229,079 616,569 519.832 443,000 1,797,000 405,322 444,425 692,906 1,210,785 183,881 6,146 1,071,932 1,469,835 15,989,'<14 II,947,842 1,169,727 6.171,077 2,762,057 3,203,139 900,434 2.499.500 1,202,324 522,870 347,570 ... 1,127,724 3,281,799 2,218.285 11,090 835,121 951.831 506,064 3,623,000 2,587,960 Loans Average amount of 948,854 2,250,849 ... ... 0 week 46,957 11,380,318 I,374,409 Changes in , 1,057,950 .. 2,125,167 139,057 4,444 554,800 754,728 1,195,369 Exchange Continental Commonwealth Oriental Marine Atlantic $13,897,446 32 Sub-Treasury morning of Jan. 28 Balance on Saturday evening Decrease during the week 1 2,723,426 3,724,314 1,535,362 1,423,848 1.346,832 8,541,432 63 1,601,914 58 1,187,952 25 1,532,810 07 $2,094,760 26 Total 18,000 373,030 •9,469 109,894 1 3,548 87,854 2,450,478 1,765,Of *0 Citizens’ Nassau Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather.. Sub-TreasuryPayments. ReceiDts. $4,852,268 49 $3,143,662 52 18 53 59 09 Feb. 291,355 31,215 2,215,813 ....... 136% Receipts. $314,141 56 491,757 31 346,233 275,507 292,040 375,080 Deduct follows: 137% 136% Custom House. 94,864 People’s Sub-Treasury for the week ending Sat¬ Jan. 28 Balance in as 482,215 13 890 128,480 1,931,252 1,*50,593 .. The 900,000 800,000 854,655 129,938 6,993 339,625 Chatham Irving Metropolitan 7,491,335 1,865,120 7,865,953 5,961,166 2,561,491 2,966,344 1,610,994 8,977,163 1,916,993 5,860,610 271.168 54,089 3,236,913 3,241,734 1,817,172 5,157,124 Mercantile 137% 137% 540,654 59,668 101,306 87,714 34,504 6,666,671 136% 137% 136% 137% 137% 136% 137% 138% 136% 134% 1363b 134% . Highest. 136% 136% 137% 137% 138% 137% . 173 Commerce : 136% 136% 136% . 8 Lowest, CHRONICLE. 97,742,461 ‘ 956,569 16,394,604 39,708,053 24,691,075 306,014 THE CHRONICLE. 174 [February 9, 1867. SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. (REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8.) STOCKS AND American Gold Coin (G>(" Itoom) National: United States 6s, 1867 do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do' do '.36% 1S6S Kri. STOCKS AND 137% 137% Ib7%jl36% —-135 registered. registered. ios%jios% 10'% 107% 1 8% ios% 1881 : registered- 10.7% 108% i —jio % — 6s, 5-20s (1st iss ie) coupon. 107% '107% 108% 108% 103% 106% registered. 6s, 5-20s 106V ,106; 6s, 5-20s (2d iseue) coupon 106 6s, 5.20s do registered 106% 106% 106%! 107% 107% 6s, 5.20s (3d issue) coupon ICo /105 1 do 6s, 5.20s. registered 105 105 5.20s (new issue)... 105% c upon. 104% 101% 105 5.003 do 105% register id 6s, Oregon Wa" 1881 6s, do. do. (1 ijeeifli). 5s, 1871 covjxm. coupon j 106% . .. 1871 1874 5s, 1874 5s, 10-408 5s, 10-40s registered. os, 5 s, -— zz coupon. registered registered. z~ do do a;97% 105% 105 % 105% 105% 105% 'id series. 104% 105% 105% 105%! 105% 105% Zd series 104% 105 105% 105% 105% do do State 102% 100% 1 99% 100% coupon 6s, Union Pacific R. R.. .(cur.). 7-30s Treas. Notes—1st series. do do 103 102 SECURITIES. 160 1 do do preferred Chicago, Burlington aud Quincy Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago aud Milwaukee Chicago and Northwestern.... 100 100 — 130 — 100 — — do do Harlem do preferred Hudson River Illinois Central preferred — — 100 50 50 ; — 130 115 129 108 108 100 100 114 Indianapolis and Cincinnati Chicago Long Island McGregor Western.. ; Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred do 09% I860. Registered, 1860 6a, coupon, ’79, after 1860-62 -05-70. do 100 50 100 100 2d preferred r* 1 — Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 — Louisiana 6s do 7s, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s Missouri 6s do 6s, (Hannibal and St. Joseph RR.)... — — 93 79% 92% 93 94 , Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago 94 do do Sixth avenue — — — 09 % do — 52% 66% 66 42% 6s, Water Loan 6s, Public Park Loan 6s, Improvement Stock Jersey City 6s, Water Loan New York 7s s. do 50 104% 100 — preferred. 100 zz 100 : a Western 60 100 50 10 60 61 do do 50 42 ) 1 Cumberland Delaware and Hudson Lehigh <fc Susquehanna — 37% } 145 145 — — — 146 146 ) •Pennsylvania 1 37 \ Spring Mountain ) Spruce Hill — —- — — 41 ) 42 — 42 — — Citizens (Brooklyn) Harlem do do — Jersey City and Iloboken do 67 . do — — 145 145 — — —r- Williamsburg Improvement.—Boston Water Tower Brunswick City Canton 100 100 100 - C«*y Telegraph.—Western Union Steamship.—Atlantic Mail Western Union,Russian Extension.100 Railway K>0 100 Nicaragua Loan and Trust New York Life and Tru-'t Union Trust United States Trust 25 .100 1.00 100 KX) Express.—Adams Merchants Union ’500 100 100 100 100 100 50 United States Wells, Fargo & Co Mining,—Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred Minnesota Copper New Jerse^ Consolidated Copper... Quicksilver Rutland Marble Smitt and Parmelee 44% 44 84% 44% 45 44% — | I 44%j 44% i 103% 105 159 117 46% ) ) 159 — —.— — T- — — 67 — 66 66 67 65 67% — 70 10 23 — 66 65% 65 67 69% 68 22% 10% 22% 90% 90 , 4th mortgage do do 100 — -- 2d mort. 0 — — 4th mortgage, 1880. 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended do do 2d mortgage ' Great Western, 1st mortgage do do 2d mortgage Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage.. .... Consolidated and . 2d mortgage, 1868 69% — , i Sinking Fund... 102 —— 1 River, 1st mortgage, 18G9 do — 104 1' 2 39 39% 39 . do do 39% 40 do Toledo and do - • 105. — :05% — — — — do 8s, new, 1882 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund do do 2d mortgage, 7s do do Goshen Line, 1868 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort.... Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage do do 2d mortgage Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage New York Central 6e, 1883 ! do do 6s, 1887 do do ” 7s, 1876 do do 7s, convertible, 1876...... vd'> ' 7s, 1865-76 d^> New York and New Haven ’* ** Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage Peninsula, 1st mortgage Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort’! do 25 10 Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 do do do do ' do — — 87% 87% — 2d mortgage 93 J 93% 101% —-— 94 — 102 2d mort... 3d mort... .. — - — 92 93 — 92 80 80 88 75 • 1 \ 92 2d, pref.... do do 2d, income. Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended. do 87% 85 zz do Mwipoea (Gold) let mortgage 97 96% . St. Louis, Alton and Terre naute, 1st mort — 15 Z! ZlOO .. 67 64 67% 10% 10% 23% 23% S3 99 26%; McGregor Western, 1st mortgage 45 100 Irust.—Farmers’ American 27% 161% 159 116% 117 100 Union Navigation 7ransit.—Central American ■ 28% 105 100 too 100 159% 160% Pacific Mail s- Am. Nav. & Mar. 44 2-8% 44% 26% 89 83- • — 42 — 84 83 — do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1S85... do 3d mortgage, 1875 do convertible, 1867 Illinois Central 7s, 1875 Lackawanna and Western Bonds — Manhattan 42 42 — Toledo, Sinking Fund.... Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort Hudson — zz i | Interest Extension 1st mortgage.... do Cleveland and do do — 32 34% 03 — Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1569-72. — 25% 98% 98% 98% 1C %' 104% . Income do do 146% 25% 105 42 66 Erie, 1st mortgage, 1S08 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 13 98% 105 —— do Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent.. Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund... do 100 102% Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877.. do Consolidated 59% — consolidated.... Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage Chicago. R. I. and Pacific, 7 t or cent, Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage do do 3d mortgage, conv. 6s 5s | preferred.... 50 Railroad Bonds: do do do do $6 99% 1106% 100 50 Central of N w Jersey, 1st mortgage Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund do do 1st mortgage - do do ' do do Stonington Toledo, Wabash and . Virginia 6s, coupon Municipal: Brooklyn 6s 100 97% Reading... St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute. 79% do 6a. (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 do 100 68,1867-77 99% 99% do 5s, 1868-76. do 7s, State Bounty Bond? (coupon).do do do do (registered) lG5)i 105)* 105% 10*% 105% North Carolina 6s 53 53 5 '2k £3 x 53 do 6s. (new).. 55 Ohio 6s,1870-75 do Gs, 1881-S6 100)* Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 6s 1868 do 6s 1890 x 63% 64; 65% 66% 66% do 6s, (new) 63% 64% 65% 65% Cameron 40 j1 25% 1 Michigan 6s Central 75% — do 1S79 Ashburton Butler 75 4‘x — — Miscellaneous Shares Voal.—American 1 109 108% 72% 74% do guaranteed...lot) Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien 100 do do do 1st pref.. .100 do do do 2d pref... 100 Milwaukee and St. Paul 39 40 41 100 do do 58 preferred 100 57% 58% Morris and Essex ...100 New Jersey... ■. 100 New York Central 100 99% :o3 10:% 103 New York and New Haven 115 115 1:6 100 115 New Haven and Hartford 100 Norwich and Worcester .100 Ohio and Mississippi Certificates 25% 26 Vw 09 do do do preferred.... Panama zz 100 260% 260 — do 1877 do 130% 114% 14% do : 7s (new) Canal Bonds, :2S 115% 50 Joliet and ,107 : — 100 do do do War Loan Indiana 68, War Loan do 5s m. 129 —— 72 Georgia 6s do do Pri 100 37% 39% 37% 37% 38 88% preferred 100 66% j 6>% 66% 68% 6 % 66% 99 Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific 98% i 98% 100 96% } 99% 98 105 Cleveland. Columbus aud Cincinnati..... ..100 —lias C’levelandand Pittsburg 83% 84% 85% 50 84% CO V)' 84 12) Cleveland aud Toledo 120 r 120 50 120% Delaware, Lackawanna and Western 50 Erie 100 57% 60% 59% *7*V8 do preferred 74 74 100 Hannibal and St. Joseph 100 do : Connecticut 6e do^ Wed. 122% 113% 113% 115 114% 115% 131% , 100 iiu . California 7b do Hlinoia do do do Mon. isniur Railroad Stocks ; Central of New Jersey .. Chicago and Alton coupon. 1868 1 S-Sl Tuurs. ic-s. 1 ' 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, Satur.f S\r>n. iT SEOURITIKS. i •I".-.---' February THE GBBONICLE. 9,1867.] 175 NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES LIST. denominations. Securities. National do 1847 1848...., do do I860 do do do do 1858...., do do do do 1881 do coupon. I registered. ( coupon. ) registered. \ coupon.) registered. [ coupon. ) registered, f July Jan. & July ll86S 5 Jan. & July 7,022,000 July 1874 6 Jan. & July 18*55 ...coupon. I do .regismed. ! I860 J do (10-40s) 1864 .. .coupon. I do do do .registered, f Union Pacific RIt. Bonds of 1865 . TressnryNot.es (1st series) (2d series) do do do do (3d series) State Securities. - do 171.009,350! 5 8,202,000 6 64S,00»M 688,000; 2,472,000] large j 8,000,000] do do do do do do War Loan Bonds.. 1,778,(577 i 241,000! 1,157,700 236,000 Indiana—State Bonds do do War Loan Bonds Iowa—State Certificates do War Loan Bonds do do 1.225.500 200,000 300,000 200,000 Kansas—State Bonds Kentucky—State Bonds 447,000 3,204,000 516,000 3,9-12,000 5,398,000 532,000 4,800,000 State Bonds do Louisiana—State Bonds (RR)— State Bonds (RR)— State Bonds for B'ks, Maine—State Bonds— do War Loan do do do State Scrip do do do do War Loan Michigan— $2,000,000 Loan do do do Renewal Loan do do War Loan .... 21(5,000! 1,122,000 - 800,000 909,G07 442,961 Ohio—Foreign Loan.. do Foreign Loan do Foreign Loan do Foreign Loan 900.000 800,000 25,5(56,(KX) 702,000 3.050,000 6,000,000 2.250.000 500,000 900,000 192,585 ' 1,163,000 167,000 4,500,000 9.719.500 3,<Uft 000 536,798 631,653 379,8(56 2,183,532 1,600,000 4,095,309 Foreign Loan Foreign Loan Foreign Loan 2,400,(XX) Domestic Loan Bonds .... 679,000 Pennsylvania—State Bonds do. State Stock 6,108,000 29,209,(XX) do Military L’n Bds 3,000,000 Rhode Island—State (\Var) Bds. 3,889,000 South Carolina—State Stock... 3.091.000 Tennessee—Improvement Bonds do Improvement Bonds 2,347.340 2,115,400 13.911.900 Railroad Bonds. do New Bonds Vermont—War Loan Bonds do ... Virginia—Registered Bonds... do do Coupon Bonds New Bonds do Certificates..*..... do 21,888,398 12,972,000 8 951 200 600,000 Improve’t St’k Pub. Park L’n. Water Loan Pros. Park L’n do 1879 95 1881 '76 ’78 '66 ’73 '68 ’72 dern. (57 .69 Dubuoite, Io.—City Bonds do Railroad do Park Bonds do Railroad Bonds., do Water Bonds.... King’s Couni y—City Bonds Jersey City, N. J.—City Bonds. 95 do , do do do „ Jan. A July ’75’77 Various. Feb. A Aug Jan. A July June ADec. 500,000 375,000 ’65’80 1882 1876 1883 ’66 ’81 Various. Jan. A July ’77 ’83 122,000 650,000 Various, 911,5(X)I « 425,000; k ft 60,000: 150,000; 200,000 105 105^! 105* 99 * 166* 99 V 99 V j 99 99 do do do Cit.yBds,new City Bds,old CityBds,new Pittsburg, Fa.—City Bonds Railroad Bonds. do Portland, Me.—City Bonds do Railroad Bonds. Providence, R. I.—City Bonds... do do 70 52V Raflroad B’de City IiOan Rochester, N. Y.—City Bonds... do do City Bonds... Railroad... Sacramento, Cal.—City Bonds, 100 97 do St. Louis, Mo, -Municipa Real Estate....: do do Sewerage do Improvement.. Water do Harbor do Wharves do Facific RR do O. A M. RR do IronMt. RR do San Francisco, Cal.—City Bonds, do City Fire B do City Bonds do C.ACo’tyB do C.ACo’tyB do C.ACo’tyB. II * .ACo'tvB. WrLKiNGTOit; Del.—City Bonds.. , do a 2,147,000 k 100,(XX3 g IKK), (XX) j 483.900 1,878,900 k n 190,000 k 402,768 k 8DD.300 k 895,570 490,000 1,000,000 2,500,000 Philadelphia, Fa.—City Bds,old J £ 102.000 Vol.Fam.AidL NewYorkC’nty.—C't House S’k do do Sol.Sub.B.R.B do Sol.S.ARf.RB do do do Sol.B'ntyFd.B do RiotDam.R.B do ~ 3,000,200! Union Def. L. Vol. B’nty L’n Vol.Fam.AidL 93 4 219,000 UK),000! Tomp.M'ket S 103 var. var. May ANov. 1887 Real Estate B. Croton W’r S. Fl.D't. F’d. S Fb.B.Sk. No. 8 Docks ASlipsS Tub. E^du. S'k. 1 T9V do 1868 66V Jan. A Jnly long 65V do Jnn. A Dec ’71 ’78 Jan. A Jul ’84 ’95 ’86 '95 do do Jan. A Juiy|’67 ’88 ’93 ’99 ’65’72 Various. 400,000 125,000 1:30,000 3,066,071 275,000 2,08.3,200 l,966,Qp0 600,000 1,800,000 2,748,000 150,000 500,000 154,000 C.P.Imp. F. S. C.P.Imp. F. S. 91 var. Apr. A Oct. 1868 Apr. A Oct. 1865 Jan. A July 1871 50,000 650,1X10 319,457 .. City Bonds... New York City—Water Stock.. Water Stock.. Croton W’r S’k Croton W’rS’k W’r S’k of ’49 W’r S’k of ’54 Bu. S'k No. 3. Fire Indem. S. Central P’k S. Central P'k S. Central P’k S. var. 1900 I860 do var. Feb. A Ang. 1871 Jan. A July 71 ’94 Jan. A July ’68 '90 20,000 256,3(58 Water Bonds.. do 1,400,000 2,000.000 949.700 4,990.000 4,442,100 552.700 739,222 2,232,800 2 « I- « ft ft « 5 5 5 ft 6 6 ft 5 ft 6 ft ft ft 5 5 ft J 7,898,717 1,009,700 ft 1,800,000 985,326 1,500,000 600,000 500,000 300,000 200,(KX) 150,000 260,000 1,49(5,100 446,800 1,464,000 523,000 425,000 254,000 48-4,000 tAtked -j M.J.SAAD. 1S90 Apr. A Oct. '65 ’82 ’65 ’74 do '78 ’79 '65 ’85 ’67’77 ’72 ’73 '70 ’78 Jan. A July '65 ’71 )'65 ’95 do 1869 do ’81 ’97 do 1897 do '65 '79 '65 ’82 Apr. A Oct. 1881 Jan. A July 1876 ’79 ’87 do 1888 do Apr. A Oct. 1895 Jan. A July var. do 1879 do 1890 do 1871 do June ADec. ’69’79 do City Bonds New Bedford, Mass.—City Bds New London, Ct—City Bonds... Newport, R. I.—City Bonds New Haven, Ct.—City Bonds... May A Nov. ’68-’71 Various, 360,000; 913,000; 1,030,000 City Bonds do 1874 1865 18(58 1870 1875 1S81 1886 . Milwaukee, Wis.—City, re-adj’d Newark, N. J.—City Bonds...., May A Nov. 1868 Jan. A July 1875 do 1878 Jan. A July do do do do do do do do Water Bds Marysville, Cal.—City Bonds „ pleas. 1877 18(56 1868 1871# 7 7 6 7 Louisville, Ky.—City Bonds.... 1878 1875 6 299,000' ... Water Bonds... 1808 do do do do do do do do 216,000! 571,000] Bid .. 189-1 ’71 ’74 '75 ’78 1883 1868 ’73 ’83 1878 1886 1890 1866 1872 1873 1874 6 ... Hartford, Ct—City Bonds 1866 1877-j 121,540! Water Bonds Jan. A July! pleas 1 JAJAO . Water Bonds Sewerage Bonds. Detroit, Mich.—City Bonds do City Bonds do City Bonds Jan. A July: 18(57 do 11883 Jan. A July! ’71 ’89 do '72 '87 do ’72 \S5 do 18(56 Jan. A Juh 1874 1869 Jan. A July var. Jan. & July ’71 ’72 102 J.Ap.J.AO. 1870 Jnly 5,550,(*00 > 6 150,000! 7 ... Water Bonds do do May & Nov. 1880 Jan. A 4V 993,000 5 631,200! 6 1,281,000 6 Cleveland, O—City Bonds var. do do do 1,949,711] Water Loan do 1890 May A Nov. 6,5S0,416! 5 1,2(55,(510! 6 City Bonds City Bonds...... Water Loan Stg. do Cincinnati, O.—Munieinal 1866 .... i,650,000 .... Wisconsin—State Bonds... 98 Mar. A Sept. '6(5 ’67 Jan. & July '80 ’89 do Jan. A July do do Jan. & July do do do 740,000 ] 6 583,2051 4 Boston, Mass.—City Bonds .. May & Nov 186S Jan. A July 1868 do Jan. & July Jan. A July do 197,700! 6 Railroad Debt Payable. J.,A.,J.AO. 1890 6 554,000! 6 Buffalo, N.Y.—Municipal Bonds do Municipal Bonds Chicago, Ill.—City Bonds do City Bonds do Sewerage Bonds '68 '74 250, (XXV ^General do do do do do 1879 Various. 1,750,000 do Fund 1 do do do do do coup'ns Bounty ds “ “ resist'd do do do do do V Canal Bonds. do do do do do do North Carolina—State Bonds., do do State Bonds (new). do 5,000,000| f B. AO. RR.. Park Brooklyn, N.Y.—City Bonds 1880 1886 1S70 1870 '60 '65 '69 ’70 ’76 ’7 Quarterly 1,088,000! B.AO.R.cw/w) do 1,727,000 (5,429,000 1,150,004 2,450,000 Water Loan... York ACu m. R. do -j 1870 672,0 >0 220,000, Miscellaneous, Bangor, Me.—City Debt do 3,192,703 345,000 War Bounty Loan.... do • 250,000 Minnesota—State Bonds 602,000 Missouri—State Bonds do State Bonds for RR... 13.701,000 7,000,000 do State Bonds (Pac. RR) 3,000,000 do State Bonds (II,ASt.J) 431,000 do Revenue Bonds, 5:45,100 New Hampshire—State Bonds... 1,650,000 do War Fnud Bds 95,000 New Jersey—State Scrip 731,000 do War Loan Bonds.. 700,000 New York ' 1,1S9,780 do 500,000 do do do do do ; -fan. & July; 72 '92 RR. Bds. N.W.Virg.RR. do Jan. A Julv 1876 do * j 1876 '72 '80 do i Quarterly Quarterly 8,171,902 Maryland—State Bonds do State Bds .coupon [ State 'B\$inscribed | do do State Bonds .coupon. Massachusetts—State Scrip do do do .... do War Loans .... 107 V: 107V 105 ! 105 ‘ May A Nov; 1877 2,058,173 do do Registered -Coupon Bonds do do do do do do I jJan. A July|1895 do do Jan. & July do * 2,0‘|(,,<KH); 1,288,S37| 1,758,406: 1,38(5,570 ... j 108V f :106 V! 106^ I jJan. A July j 1886 1 ! Mar. ASeptJ 19041 2,371,725] Bonds . 1S34 ! ;1<X»V]107 V 106 V 106 Jan. & July do Jan. &. July do do do 2,073,750 do new 7s Illinois—Canal Bonds do do I .. 7. B0i Feb. A Aug. 11867 7.30 Jun. A Dec. 1868 7.30 Jan. A July 11808 2,109.000! Connecticut—War Bonds Georgia—State i ! 108 V do do do do do do do do j jMay & Nov.'1885 6 no Sure Bonds jMay & Nov. 11882 6 769.518.900 10(5 July! 1881 (May & Nov. 773,‘122,800 do Dae. Jan. A July ’65 ’69 do ’70 ’82 do 1879 Jan. A July var. do 1913 |J.,A.,J.AO. 1870 1870 do Jan. A July 1873 May A Nov 1875 Jan. A July 1886 850,000 6 300,000 : 6 i 6 600,000 : 4 4,9(53,000! 5 820,000 6 1,500,000 ' 6 3,500,000! 6 1,000,00*.?: 6 Baltimore, Md.—Improvement., j 1881 A no 1S81-j iiosv ios>; 6 (Sterling) do do do Calipor.NiA-9tate Bonds i do do iJnly ; Jan. 6 Alabama—State Bonds ’ f . i-m $225,0001 6 do Water Loan do Alb. Nor. RR.. Alleghany City, Fa.—City Bds. _ Jan. & 1,01(5,000 1125 106V 20,000,000 5 282,718,800 Municipal Securities FRIDAY pal Rate.) Albany, N. Y.—City Scrip 434 i 180 Princi¬ Outstanding. A ke<> |137* 1867 Jan. A 8,908,342 6 registered 18154 ...coupon. , do .registered. 5 do do do do do do Rid INTEREST. Ament denominations. Due. Payable. 9,415,250 6 OregonWar Bds (y^ar^y)( coupon.. do do (b yearly) t Bonds (5-20s) of 18t)2... coupon. 1 do do do .registered. : do do do do do FRIDAY. pal Ratr. Gk)LD Coin American Bonds of Princi¬ INTEREST. Amount Outstanding 5 ft ft ft 6 5 5 7 ft ft 6 6 6 6 6 6 239,000 6 163,000 6 457,000 6 429.900 6 285,000 6 1,352,600 10 ITS,500 10 329,000 6 1,133,500 6 300,000 7 960,000 7 1.000.000 7 338,507 .. Jan. A July do June ADec. 1894 Feb. A Aug ’70’83 Jan. A July 1873 Apr. A Oct. ’65 ’84 Jan. A July '07 ’87 Apr. A Oct. ’73 ’84 7" A July ’70 ’81 f.m. a. an, 1870 1880 no 1890 do 1890 do 75’79 do 1875 do ’70 '73 do Feb. A Aug. 1868 F. M.A.AN. 1898 1887 do 1898 do 1887 do 1876 do 1873 do 1883 do 1878 do 1866 do ’67 ’76 do 1873 do ’65’ 69 do May ANov. 1864 do do , do 1867 1865 ’66 ’73 May A Nov. 75-’89 do do do do Jan. A July do do • do Jan. A Jnly do ’73-’76 80-’81 ’83 ’90 ’77-’82 65 ’81 ’65 ’82j 65 ’93 65 ’99 var. 1913 Various. '66 ’83 Apr. A Oct ’68’71 Mar. ASept. 1885 Jan. A July 1876 1893 do Various, ’65 ’82 '65 ’82 do Jan. A July ’65 ’76 Jan. A Jnly 88-98 1884 do Jan. A July 65 ’83 65 ’90 do ’79’88 do 71 ’87 do ’71 ’83 do ’65 ’86 do ’67 ’81 do ’71 ’73 do 72’74 do 74 ’77 do May A Nov. 1871 Jan. & Jnly 1866 1875 do 1888 do do 177,78 [April A Oct. 1883 Jan. & July 1884 . various 99V BfFebruary 9,1867, THE CHRONICLE. 176 Exports of Leading Articles from New York, ®{)e Commercial ©tmeo. ™™ COMMERCIAL EPITOME. Friday Night, Feb. 8. There is some improvement in general trade, favored better weather, a more abundant supply of money, and an vance in gold. But a feeling of incertitude still remains, by ad¬ following is a statement of the stocks of leading articles foreign and domestic merchandize : 1867 1866 1867 Beef, tierces and barrels Fork, barrels Tobacco, foreign, bales Tobacco, domestic, hogsheads.. Coffee, Rio, bags Coffee, other, bags Coffee, Java, mats Sugar, hogsheads Sngar, boxes Sugar, bags Meiado, hogsheads Molasses, hogsheads Molaaees, barrels Hides, No Petroleum, ernde, barrels Petroleum, refined, barrels Cotton, bales Rosin, barrels Crude turpentine, barrels Spirits turpentine, barrels Tar, barrels Rice, E. I., bags Rice, Carolina, tierces Gunny Cloth, bales Gunny Bags, bales Linseed, bags Saltpetre, bags Jute, bales Manilla Hemp, bales Pig tin, slabs Spelter, tons Lead, tons Feb. 1. 23.048 80,926 9,834 16,922 Dec Jan 1. -3.S O f 1 57,167 13,619 59.940 37,214 43,590 118,972 13 6,751 11,438 5,131 44,70l» 16,820 30,700 , 98,183 21,505 150.000 9,545 31,045 150,000 98,420 1,557 8,466 6,173 18,342 238 14,750 8,960 5,700 37,200 1,556 8,088 6,212 18,602 , 10,931 8,434 11,915 38,600 11,759 26,200 13,790 38,100 rt‘ "o 3 > | 23,004 1.300 forward more liberally than was expected. In groceries the business has been liberal, with a small but well-established ©i> CO • . • • .'tC> • . . • -—ICO • . :S : :8 ■:; co —1 • *C5 ; *3 . • . .Tr • - ■tH • • CO<T. CO . . • .w • . ; 1 !§ ©« • • ©5 • . S' • - of demand for the English market. But the market closes rather weak, with large offerings for early arrival by rail. Beef of all kinds, with a reduced stock, has slightly improved, with a considerable business in India mess for the Liverpool market, at $34@$35 per tierce. Cheese has also been exported freely, and butter is firm. A telegram from Cincinnati says the latest returns from the pork-packing towns show a total number packed this season of 2,18V,000 hogs, against 1,433,000 hogs last season, with a slight increase in the weight. • Naval Stores have shown more general activity, part for export, and prices of Spirits Turpentine and Rosin have slight¬ ly improved. Oils have shown a general good demand, ex¬ cept in Linseed Oil, in which business is checked by the ad¬ s co • 0 0‘8 0 . ; *ao -c? . H • • • • Ift —• co ■ * tH . : ; «©»©—( •COt-<N O * tHW • • tH • • • . • IW • ; ; ; co • . • ■ r- ceeo as TH- Tf * © CO G* ■ ' *—1 CO ©if ‘ ’8 * © • ©s • 8 Tj< ©t to co eo- asked. Hides have been but following table shows the exports of leading articles of com¬ of New York since January 1, 1867, the principal ports of destination, and the total for the same peiiod in 1866. The export of each article to the several ports /or the past week can be ob¬ tained by deducting the amount in the last number of the Chronicle • • : : AAS - -7 CO ® OtCCr 1-iWC 5 o ■ •<* ©* t- r-) • -GO©* O if? • -f ©{ 00 fc- ©5 »© ©* ©t .COCOc© ns05 ^ • 2gg££S t-es con • ■iOi-iS5o ■ • . -ot-oo oo—t rr ©» co • Tit- • n ™ 33 O :&,on : • - 00 »~l • : • . : a ^ . O *« cS • £! © t— • •ifOO ©; ©i L— n —( • • • ■§*so 8 * ' •W©C©HWl»H t- • CO T r-l 1 C f- lb .©StH * O 40 ©i co M COOnOOO •co • • ' * 5? ‘/i « i « M O i-I :§ : •—I : : : • CO CO t* p5 • , ® w ph • <j g •CO :8J • 0^5 * ■ • T>< t- : : H ci S £ • • • • ‘of o w o ;8 co ® «8 w •& a ►—i 0) £-4 5 | :§ IS I i" • t-n 5? oj °w . co • o cu H o5 Ch o> r— . CtJ o O W • >» CO co • • o .CO • • : ■ • ©: a • • t— co • ; :38 : j rl ; 664 811 ■ to fcfl • O rH 00 ' ’ —1 re 1© • o » • Cj n ■ ® a • CO • s s •©» ■ co :®* :SSS • .©>.. r-H • rH • • • . . ; % 1 . . t- ,' • ^ • .0C©5 ' • 1© —1 • • ©1 —1 • zQ r-i 15,381 51,940 :f CO « ’ eT ’Sf co rH vH to <u • CO . • .5Jco ©» 1© • •ioto-i •: ■ : • rH t- per gallon, supposed to be in anticipation of a reduction in the excise. Wool has experienced a slight revival of demand, but no general activity. Freights have become quiet. With large quantities of cot¬ ton pressing for shipment to Liverpool rates have advanced to a half-penny by sail and three farthings by steam. Under these circumstances ships have sought weight, and the ship¬ ments have been liberal at 6£d. per bushel for corn, and 25c. per ton for provisions by sail. A few Bremen vessels have been taken up to load corn for Irish ports at 5s. 6d. per quarter. - : ai moderately active, and gold prices of foreign dry have ruled rather heavy. Leather, at the consid¬ erable decline that has taken place in the past month, is fairly active. East India goods are firm at the late decline. Metals have been irregular. There has been more doing in Pig Iron, both Scotch and American, for immediate and future delivery, but at some concessions in prices. Pig Tin has sold to some extent, mainly Straits, to arrive, at 22£c., gold, per lb., but other metals have remained quiet and unchanged. Hops are more freely and are dull. In Whiskey there have arriving o t— m . : •©« t-i vance given: rri •« H l *: i si fi ’o ©f from that here .03 ' j • •.© • . • • O CO —< —t tT —1 O —I 1© to . :S£ : : : tj* co • _ S s < from the port . ©» ■ T»< £ quite active. Pork and other hog products have brought rather better prices, with a resumption Provisions have been ■ . 20 improvement in prices. The —i • .COI • S : ■ a 400 breadstuff's, although showing more steadiness the past few days, are still weak, owing to supplies coming merce • • 2.642 0 2,700 bbls., in bond, at 30@31c. • ■ 9915,,7758 CO 2,320 550 ”35 rH been sales of several hundred ©» co © none. 12,330 7,961 14,387 23,875 2,i48 18,495 22,600 Cotton and in O — • 1 10 14 361 2,400 1.100 Guian . 264,700 34,017 15,444 180,000 25,018 3,162 4,135 804 -lOao • ■ 467 493 ; Brazil. 1,135 64 70 CO t- : - 24,798 32,384 .00—‘©*©:u?0Dgpc©c© 3 «© cc ftai-otMSo© .—<©*©; co 01 u* -QO ' SO. : • O .< 45,866 116,325 Oi • rj 4,000 34.248 • <** •TJ< TJ< © 19,983 23,539 ■ t— ©O CO —I * If a 56,815 26,243 • \ 31,140 42.028 • ■ 5 ® o OtlH cn 66,031 7,581 2,000 ' to Ct-MHCHftiOvC'at* k. »© CO CO ©* ©J <N to •»** 1© <J 30,896 19,219 ©i Tf* (Jt 0»C>C»0—<lQ-f©*t-e©CRt-—' o J) -Ci —< 1 23,046 . 1-1 —( l~t political The of CO oc¬ respecting casioned by the pending measures before Congress the finances, the tariff, and internal taxation. The situation is regarded as less threatening. ef ©5 ©f, O ©* oo . 4,597 7,505 . : j© ©t : ' • * S co *-> cj O a i co f aj O 0 % a .tojoesceeoci - op —«oo ^ ©♦ o • O lO —' CO —I co . • • * ‘^§#1 ‘ »o . .t-( .icoc.cu- • ct.no • ©t • -00 -©»ocoif?co ’©iJIOft- *--1^1©—it-©irf,cooo • • L~db •CO»£3CO©CTO©lt-COo6 1 •d'nco—• CO •cot-—icooOoc©»©?^ ©t CO • ■ ©»o© i-1- bo A "Crttfo THE CHRONICLE February 9,1867.] Imports of Leading Articles. The total .The following table shows the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port for the week ending Feb. 1st, since Jan. 1,1867, and for the corresponding period in 1866: [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] For the Since Jan. 1, 1867. week. 320 550 40S 3,233 1,033 2,847 1,924 Coal, tons 75,825 85,785 .... Cocoa, bags... Coffee, bags Cotton, bales. Drngs, Ac. Bark, Peruv .. Blea 114 998 Brimst, tns. 29S 30. 30 Cochineal... Cr Tartar Gambier.... 15 ... "'so ... 400 5 Opium . Hair 1,118 1,803 J 75 128 4,412 252 71 Hides,dres’d 178 953 India rubber.. Ivory Jewelry, Ac. Jewelry . . . Metals, Ac. Cutlery.... 500 77 109 166 5,637 10,650 766,298 38,' 268 18,510 31,025 46,193 1,895 46,193 2,268 23,893 11,771 830 9,716 2,666 7.197 11,185 12,559 Cassia Ginger Pepper Saltpetre Mahogany 479 1,333 Produce for the Week, and since Jan nary 1* The receipts of domestic produce for the week ending Feb. 8, same time in 1866, have taen as follows : since Jan. 1, and for the This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66 Ashes, pkgs... 72 Breads tuffs— 429 Flour, bbls.. 20,096 1417116 Wheat, bush. 52,566 68,100 Com Oats 24,000 184,835 13,912 123,992 Rye 32 1,722 14,000 Malt 75,400 2,915 1,677 10,594 Barley Grass seed... Flaxseed Beans Peas C. meal,bbls. C. meal,bags. Buckwheat A B.W. flour,bg 1,360 327 804 9.404 2,900 652 5,781 21,997 99,111 250 5,140 Cotton, bales 31,117 122,426 Copper, bbls... 63 768 Copper, plates. 192 1,019 .. Dnedfruit,pkgs 3,949 7,496 545 Grease, pkgs... 1,025 Hemp, bales... 5 156 Hides, No 14,344 31,773 Hops, bales. .. 286 1,859 Leather, sides 37,281 224,677 ..... . Lead, pigs Molasses, hhds 579 579 and bbls Naval Stores— Crude trp,bbl 2,087 5,765 69 366 Spirits turp.. This Since Same week. Jan.l. time’66. Rosin Tar 135,583 Pitch 43,579 Oil cake, 665 3,082 26,946 44,932 3,722 ... 11,307 536 pkgs 151 b,859 1,249 8,167 423 736 243,168 Oil, lard 50 237,074 Oil, Petroleum. 11,202 83,487 142,172 640 3,671 Peanuts, bags. 2,795 1,516 71,559 Provisions— 1,737 Butter, pkgs.. 8,939 62,732 53,691 37,118 Cheese 6,122 46,648 10,879 Cut meats.. 1,176 4,372 16,090 9,553 586 18,992 Eggs 3,224 5,916 4,245 Pork 7,459 46,899 29,630 1,201 4,323 Beef, pkgs. 6,097 4,923 6,536 28,490 14,752 71,608 Lard, pkgs.... 1, 350 676 2.086 Lard, kegs.... I, • • 552 2,748 4,970 621 S2 912 12S 760 1,878 4,521 13,581 396 1,311 10,693 4,530 11,157 2,286 719 9,810 100 2,150 8,882 Total this week 14,716 47,439 • burg. Total. 1,060 11,«»14 .... • • • • 2,321 3;961 10,948 5,319 3,154 • • . • .... PORTS. 1,535 . . . • • . * • • • • .... • . • • .... .... • • • • c • • .... • 889 .... 1,067 .... 2,321 1,535 164 . 1,060 . 18,572 3,951 10,949 6,2u8 3,154 54,012 8HIP- m’ntbto SINCE SEPT. 1. N. Orleans, Feb. 1.. 472,479 Mobile, Feb. 1 Charleston, Feb. 1.. Savannah, Feb. 1... Texas, Jan. 25 New York, Feb. 8*. Florida, Feb. It Great 167,293 N. Carolina, Feb. 36,447 8,815 146,572 25,510 55,273 9,806 10,483 1 116,371 443.147 p’ts, Feb. 8* Total The market 261 10,744 151,436 251,727 50,784 75,123 46,864 15,576 82,780 26,250 27,800 30,396 150,000 29,260 4,124 25,251 52,209 $50,000 43,819 29.718 616,684 466.334 608.196 • 203,799 48,761 38,799 • . ... . . 36,447 10,072 • 1,257 3,784 15,736 .... • 8 STOCK. PORTS. for’gn. .... 92,370 141,163 72,695 50,522 29,260 NORTH. Total. 153,014 39,126 111,659 801 47,960 909 4 37,886 Virginia, Feb. 8... Other France Other Britain. * . • • . • 166,092 • . . . . .... « 1,970 .... • * . .... . 1,970 .... • ... during the whole of the past week has been feverish and per unsettled, and closes at a decline of about £ cent pound. This is due to the large receipts at the ports, which in our returns by mail to-day, but were foreshadowed by telegrams received early in the week, and also to the un¬ favorable accounts from Liverpool. On Wednesday and Thurs¬ day, however, the advance in gold gave a fair margin for ship¬ ments, which stimulated the export demand. But to-day the quotation of 14£d. from Liverpool by the Cable served to re¬ new the depression, and prices relapsed to the lowest point of the week. Long Island sound is again free from ice, and spin¬ ners have bought moderately, but retired to-day. The sales of the week*reach about 9,000 bales, and the annexed quota¬ tions are merely nominal: * appear $ Upland. 29 Florida. 29 30 32 N. Orleans Mobile. A Texas 30 30 30 31 30 31 33 32 33 33 33* 35 36 37 34 38 and Kentucky,) the crop is, as we have frequently would prove to be, in excess of last year, and we think who have insisted upon very limited receipts have not see 2,024 Ham¬ TO— may be at Mobile. From Virginia, South Carolina and Georgia, and from some of the Southwestern States, (Arkansas, Tennes¬ 4,381 e 1 estimate. At the inland towns, also, there*are already stocks included in the above amounting to 100,000 bales, and, as yet, we see little sign of exhaustion in any direction, except it rough, -Exporte>d this \^eek to— Barce¬ Liver¬ Glas¬ gow. Havre. lona. pool. 768 9,186 164 .... EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. rec’d not 53,838 62,584 bush 5,780 356 receipts of cotton at all the ports this week show a still further increase, amounting to 82,087 bales (against 77,941 bales last week, and 70,323 bales two weeks since), making the total receipts since September 1, this year, 1,116,371 bales, against 1,174,241 bales for the same period in 1865-6. The exports from all the ports this week are also large, amounting to 54,012 bales (against 41,269 bales last week), of which 47,439 bales were to Liverpool, 1,657 bales were to Glasgow, 2,321 bales were to Havre, 1,535 bales were to Barcelona, and 1,060 bales were to Ham. burg, as follows : . * those who anticipated only 14 million bales. Our table, given in our cotton report to-day, shows that up to this time they have reached about 1,117,000 bales, leaving only 383 thou¬ sand bales to be sent forward, uuless the yield is to exceed this said it those prop¬ erly estimated some of these sources of supply. For instance, from Virginia the shipments now amount to about 55,500 bales, against 39,000 last year, and the total receipts at the Friday, P.M., Feb. 8, 1867. ... Receipts and Exports of Colton (bales) since Sept* 1, and Stocks at Dates mentioned. large receipts of cotton at the ports would seem to settle the question of total receipts against The Mobile Savannah Charleston Galveston stocks, &c.: The Crop.—The continued 547 20 61 a ports glance the total receipts, exports, Good Middling 12,600 241 904 Sept. 1, showing at the at all Middling 540 1,573 No 3,999 Rice, .... since Good Ordinary Low Middling COTTON. From New York Boston New Orleans usual table of the movement of Cotton Ordinary - 4,897 Rice,ipkgs 127,5M2 Starch 760 Stearine 656 Spelter, slabs... 1,889 Sugar, hhds A 424 bbls 147 Tallow, pkgs 55,621 Tobacco, 1,767 Tobacco, hds.. 261,116 Whiskey, bbls.. 466 Wool, bales..... Dressed Hogs, 669 4,728 ... bales for 29,880 Logwood 570 Receipts of Domestic 10,152 .... 31,736 Woods. Fustic 3,839 44,786 2,263 2,000 7,526 3,258 Spices; Ac. 72 88 4 872 ' 34 26 1,401 286 81 989!Rice..' 1,010 7,036 . 4.930 561 foreign exports from the United States since now amount to 516,684 bales, against 635,841 the same period last year. Below we give our September 1 .... 10,093 Bristles 349 164 5,850 28.768 42,701 3,312 1,556 Wines 745 1.930 7,218 11,833 14,516 Wool, bales.. 3,215 3,284 102 Articles reported by value. 10,379 Cigars $5,250 $30,375 $87,592 29,036 5,819 3,619 2,018 Fancy goods.. 43,409 385,353 350,484 284 1,213 Fish. S7,591 168,364 570 Fruits, Ac. Lemons 2,475 34,729 753 13,486 Oranges 2,066 20,226 11,136 Nuts 2,246 55,697 126,163 Raisins 3,368 23,344 172,658 62 5,000 1,993 Wines, Ac. Champ, bkts 1,370 6,886 61 23 13 656 14 Flax Furs Watches.... Linseed Molasses Steel 352 2,276 ‘i ’ 1,466 110 Sugar.bxs&bg 2,762 Tea 1,704 Tobacco 426 Waste 483 250 163 385 "i4 Oils, ess Oil, Olive... Hemp, bales.. Hides, Ac. Iron.RRb’rs Lead, pigs.. Spelter, lbs. Same time 1866. 1,17S 1,408 15,854 7,686 32,933 32,069 331,500 1,259,850 19.S88 13,719 45,836 36.768 168,025 631,210 1,531 4,493 ... l’ooi 186 30 Gams, crude Gum, Arabic Indigo Madder 133 Tin, boxes.. 4,558 891 Tin slabs,lbs 3S,574‘ 1,127 Rags 866 Sugar, hhds, 71 tcs A bbls.. 10 1,100 Gunny cloth Hardware... 493 p’wd’rs Soda, bicarb Soda, sal.... Soda, ash... For Since the Jan. 1, week. 1667. 5,656 2,589 Bat tons - Same time 1866. 811 177 East and at New Orleans from the Southwestern States I now named, reach about 120 thousand bales, against about 100 thou- sand bales for the period last year, with a stock at Memphis of 40 thousand bales, against about 18 thousand bales in 1866. same Charleston and Savannah have also sent for¬ ward, in 1866-7, 233 thousand bales, against 172 thousand bales in 1865-6. These figures show very clearly where our present supply is coming from. It would be of little speculate as to the extent of the readers to make their own estimates We stated a few weeks since that the decidedly in favor of continued firmness use to crop, and we leave our from the facts given. indications were in the market. very The present unexpected large increase in re¬ ceipts has, however, lead some operators to fear a speedy fall¬ ing off in prices. This fear may be to some extent realized, and the Liverpool market may for a time be unsettled. But it appears to us evident that the whole surplus of our crop, * The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from. Tennessee, Kentucky, Ac., not otherwise enumerated. t These are the receinta at all the ports of Florida to February 1, excep Apalachicola, which are only to January 19. % Estimated. The stock at New York is also estimated. 21845.. [February 9, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 178 ending Feb 1 bales last week, supply in the last week 28,843 bales, of which 14.716 bales were to Liverpool, 1,535 to Europe. Tndia, Egypt and Brazil will together probably fur¬ nish six to seven hundred thousand bales less than anticipated, Baicelona, 2.231 to Havre, 3,320 to New York, 45S to Philadelphia, and 993 to Boston. Stock on hand Feb. 2 was 251,727 bales. The re¬ and there is little probability that the United States can spare weeks, and for export the quantity sent forward last year. With peace in ceipts, sales andofexports for a series ofand New York,the stock, price of middling rates freight to Liverpool and price of gold Europe the present consumption will probably be continued, at the close of each week since Dec. 7, were a9 follows: Freights and how can it be supplied from America? To Liver- To New Price Price The exports of Cotton from New York this week are a pool.’ York.* gold. Date. Rec'ps. Sales. Exp. Stock. Mid. ^@9-16 1*@- 139 @little less than the total for last week, amounting in all to Dec. 7.... 25,299 22,900 9,170 190,420 30 @31 9-160 H'-C— 137 ©137)* 31,979 40,000 25,408 198,708 32 ©— 9-160 1<@— 133X@133tt 37,761 32,800 19,806 218,643 32 @33 11,014 bales. The particulars of these shipments are as fol¬ 9-16@ 1 t@- -3 -'if @132)* 224,022 31 receipts amount to two million eventually be needed to make out the deficient if the total even New Orleans, Feb. 2.—The mail returns for the week show the receipts to be 41,666 bales, against 80,755 and 29,664 bales the previous week. The shipments for bales, will were lows To : Liverpool, per steamers—Denmark, 1,930... City of Boston, 431.... To .Hibernia, Total bales Hamburg, per steamer—Germania, 1,000. 18 9,1 SO 70S 1,000 Feb. of Cotton last foui September the last column the total for the same period * — — — 29,461 22,900 20,219 <&—r 32,050 31,163 218,491 33*@— 9-16@ll-16 1*@- 133^ @,134 9-16@— 14@— 182**@133 25,019 18,900 26,2*7 219,543 32*@33 9-16@— 1*©— 137 @137)* 29,004 32,750 30,289 220,707 33 @— 30,755 23,050 21,701 231,202 32 @— Sg @11-16 1:@— 134)*@ — 1 0— 135 @1351* 41,056 32,000 23,343 251,727 31*0— @8@ 4.... 24,344 Jan. Edinburgh, 942... .Aleppo, 1,205 per ships—Energy, 073... Victory, 2.636. Total bales 1,408 To Glasgow, per steamer—Iowa, 708. Total bales— / . . 1... By steam. Below we give our table showing the exports from New York, and their direction for each of the weeks ; also the total exports and direction since to about 1, 1866; and in little of the previous year : Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1, WEEK ENDING Total ' — EXPORTED TO i.-„ 522. 10.466 204 Total to Gt* Britain.. 14,844 Havre Other French ports Bremen and Hanover 1,434 8 5,-910 1,276 1,060 .... .... 5,119 7,677 89 Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar 14,870 Spain, etc ' .... ! 860 j247,524 Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the and since Sept. 1 : ’ This week 7,968 From New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile Florida Total tor the week _• Since This week. Scpt.l Bales. Bales. 83,168 18,312 66,346 19,466 14,.>4 5,826 3.247 2,661 3,413 2,707 11.705 11,014 week. Bales. From South Carolina . Norfolk, Baltimore, «fcc Per Railroad.. Bales. 2,260 .. Nort h Carolina Since Sept. 1. .. .. 33,011 1,623 21,176 3,926 5,517 52,790 — 45,468 — 31,117 4 351,121 following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬ The tember 1: /—Boston.—. Last Since week. Sep. 1. Receipts from*New Orleans 4,002 Texas Savannah • 204 676 Mobile Florida • • 9,350 17,96-4 receipts m 629 1,344 7,201 27,348 62 9.806 7,442 113,090 * There have been m 1.094 bales * Reshipments. • Since Last week. Sep. 1. /— Baltimore.—„ Last week. 5.767 .... .... Since Sep. 1. 850 207 .... 3,764 .... week ending Feb. I week. Shipments for this bales last week,) of which to Liverpool, 889 bales to Havre, 99 to Boston, 1,4 99 Feb. 2.—The receipts for the 5,319 bales were to New York and 58 to Baltimore. The 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 7, were as follows ShipStock. Date. Rec’ts. Sales, ments. Stock, 10,695 Dec. 7.. 5,221 2,*253 5, 11 13,870 14.. 5,619 3,712 2. 10.384 17,409 . . . . . 1,332 717 . ' ... .... 47 312 17,531 * exports from either of these cities during the past week except from Boston which were to the amount of 1G4 bales, all to Liverpool per steamship Asia. Shipping News.—We have given above the vessels in which the foreign shipments for the week were made from the Northern ports; we now add the same information with re¬ gard to the Southern ports : no Total bales Exported this week from— Liverpool, per ships H. L. Rnth, 2..S81 Owego, 2,816 Sylvia, 3,231 Rosalie, 2,579 Per barks Amphion 1,491... Aden, 877. .Per brig Ruth, 74*2.. . 14,716 To Havre, per ship Java, 2,321 .. 2,321 To Barcelona, per brigs Odila,;244.. .Teresa, 285 Angela, 500 1,535 Charisto, 606 Mobile—To Liverpool, per ship Continental, S.951 3,951 Savannah—To Liverpool, per ships Ne. Plus Ultra, 4,190 Upland, 108 Sea Island America.3,157 Upland, 204 Sea Island.. ..per barks Malleviile, 2,499 Upland, 198 Sea Island Aries, 593 Upland 10,947 Charleston—To Liverpool, per ship Screamer, 3,441, 361 Sea Island.... Per bark Regina, 1,347 Upland, 170 Sea Island. 5,319 To Havre, per bark Mazatlan, 823 Upland, 66 bags Sea Island 889 Galveston—To Liverpool, per barks Wild Hunter, 942 Trinity, 1,069 Weser, 1,143 3,154 ... 32 140@lll @~ 137(513*9 1 @- 1320431 1 @- 1340136 1 @- 1310136 >i@— 1 1 1 ><•©— >*@;*@9-10 @— @— 1 gold. 1 >*@>*©— 32)*@- 140@142 (ire— 136013$ @@— 1350137 1350137 continued during the week about as it closed last a Sterling exchange closed at $6 35@$6 45 for 60-day bills. have received one week’s later statement by mail from Galveston. The receipts for week ending Jan. ‘26 were 4,789 bales, against 4,182 last week, and the shipments were 9,814 bales,of which 3,154 bales were to Liverpool,,2,761 bales were to New York, 3,306 bales were to Boston, and 693 bales were to New Or leans. 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 : dling 3*2£. Galveston, Jan. *26—We -Freight.s.Date. Dec. 7... “ 14... “ 21... “ 28... an “ “ * Receipts-'. 1S6G. 1865. Exp. 5,667 4,4,;3 5,042 3,569 4,546 3.842 6,139 6,441 ary 4... 3,821 11... 5,451 18... 4,182 25... 4,879 4,928 6,624 8,234 6,632 2 090 Price Stock, To Liver- To New mid.* York.t pool. 23,628 21)*@22 22@— 3,096 25,574 4;517 25.G03 23)*@— 1,885 30.-157 24 @— 380 33,801 25)*@— 5,009 34,243 25 @— 3,004 35,421 24)*@— 9,314 30,396 23 @— J^@%@SA %%.. %@J*@— 1)*@— l,k@— j*@— 1)*@— 1)*@— 1)*@— l;*@— Price gold. 139 @110)* 139*@140>* 136 @ — 133 @ 136 133 @ J35 133 @ 135 136*@ 137* 133 @ 135 tPer steamer. Specie. activity the past week, the amouuting to only 2,600 bales. This is due to the fact that a large portion of the stock is held at a limit which is above the market price. Shipments, however, have bsen larger than any week this year, The market has failed to show much but principally on consignment. At the close the market is lower but unsettled, and the quotations are nominal. Exchange in New York currency, £ discount; gold, £ premium. Savannah, Feb. 2.—The receipts for the week ending Feb. 1 were 9,489 bales (of which 287 were from Florida), against 11,156 bales last week. The shipments this week were 16,112 bales, of which 10,949 bales were to Liverpool, 2,973 bales to New York, 1,354 to Boston, and 536 to Providence. Below we give the receipts, shipments, prices, Ac., for series of weeks a : Receipts. Shipm’s. Dec. “ New Orleaus—To . >*@— >*@— 33’*@— 31>*@33 @34 33 @33 @— Price sales .... 12,089 To New York. fair business doing, but on the last day under the influence Liverpool advices there was a decline of about £ cent, middling being quoted at 32, ordinary 80, low middling 31, strict mid¬ week, with 4,120 952 6,421 .... /—Freight for Upl’d—, To LiverPrice of mid. pool. 31 @X@r 32 @32;* >*@ of unfavorable 4,981 63 259 16,803 15,576 The market has “ 47 20,023 20,399 11.. 18.. 25.. .... . gold at the close of each week since Dec. 459 .... 3,295 m Virginia New York, &c* Tennessee, Kentucky, &c... «. • .36 South Carolina North Carolina Total 37,461 Fhilau'phia.—, dull and lower, middling being amount to 6,63*2 bales, against 6,25*2 bales last week amount to 7,859 bales, (against 9,84 8 651 ! 166,092 Grand Total i for bank. Charleston, * .... unfavorable accounts from New York, done, and the market closed quoted nominal at 31L ordinary 28(^29, and low middling 80 L Freights are dull and lower, the rates for Liverpool being by steam 1£@1£ by sail £@. and coastwise, by steam 1, and by sail nominal. Sterling ex¬ change is quoted nominally 143^@144 for bill of lading bills, and 146 644 7 .... . i- was 12,885 SG0 1,060 767 4,434 1,254 .. .... m- largely increased receipts and 13,826 7,690 the 17,800 Total to N. Europe Total 13,813 3,784 .... .... .. . .... 767 1,254 Hamburg Other ports 3,784 .... 472 270 491 Total French 9,954 146,572 220,162 .... .... .... prev. year. -.43,4.31 211,693 3,141 | 8,559 472 270 491 ’. 768 10,466 0,204 date. 9,186 .... 1 Same time to 5. i 6,264 14,640 Liverpool Feb. Jan. Jan. Jan. Other British Ports 1866 Early in the week there was considerable activity, sales amounting *21,000 bales, and prices tending upwards ; but later, owing to “ 7. 14. 21 28 4 Jan. “ 11 “ 18 “ • 25.. 1 Feb. 5,230 8,240 3,527 10,S04 8,295 3,552 5,831 6,976 7,837 11,589 11.156 Stock. Price Mid. 31 @.. 31 @31 J* 5,013 8,496 15,819 18,802 22,590 27,383 28,508 27,8-49 11,401 5,953 28.037 33 32,873 31 >*@32 7,016 31 @81)* @30>* 3*U*@ 3! >@32 30 @ 16.112 26,250 9,489 31>$@The business o*f the week has not been large, owing to the unfavor¬ able news from Lirerpuol and the North, and the unwillingness of hold¬ ers to submit to the decline. Saturday and Monday scarcely anything on Tuesday the demand was good, and the transactions slightly advanced rates. During the remainder of the week business has been very limited, prices have given away, and the market closes dull and nominal at 31 ^c. for middling. In freights there Iffss Total exports from Southern ports this week bales. 42,834 been no change. Several vessels are filling up for Liverpool at f@Jd. The total exports from the Southern ports the previous for square, and £d. for round bales. Steam to New York lc., to Boston 1 lie., and to Philadelphia and Baltimore ".mounted to 28,830 bales. was done, but were at February 9,1867.] THE CHRONICLE. London, January 23.—The stocks of cotton in Liverpool, London and quantities of Indian and America! cotton now afloat, Havre, and the are as under: Stock at Liverpool “ j, ; Loudon ”***■ “ Havre American cotton afloat Indian “ Afloat to Havre. 1S66. 417.710 31.258 bales. . 1867. 501,320 58,106 33,870 85,302 55.000 13,786 65,000 131,000 16,611 901,624 857,339 350,000 Total Alexandria, Jan. 10.—BuUittle business is doii j in cotton. Prices however, are firm more especially as legards the better classes of pro duce. The shipments stand thus :, Great Britain. Continent. bales 5,147 4,197 From Jam. 1 to Jan. 7 Previously from Nov. 1 61,672 66,821 Bomb \y, 16,421 43,748 Total Same period 1865-6 do 1864-5... 12,224 12,790 Jan 14.—Cotton is firmer, lb, free per last two years, 9.346 73,896 83,- 42 56,538 100,825 86,285 14,510 and commands rather more money . ...... Dbollerab is worth 9fd; B>oach 9|4, Pomrawuttee 9fd, and 10^1 Total EXPORT OF COITON FROM BOMBAY FROM JANUARY 1865. bales. Destination. To Loudon Cbcuptah Total Great Brit'n TO DECE.MBKR bales. 24,646 3,714% 4,322% Grand Total. 1,095,981 Fiudat, r. M., Feb. 8, 1867. We have another week of very small exports This is due in part to the obstruction id our The mild weather of the past few days has, however, removed this difficulty. All the foreign shipments of tobacco tor the week were from New York and Boston (nothing having been sent from anv of the other ports), and amount in the aggregate to only 515 hogsheads, 317 cases, 153 bales, 146 boxes, and 12,939 manufactured pounds, as follows: Pkgs. Exported from New York Boston... . .... Total this week.. . 515 107 347 153 146 205 .... 20 i 12.939 78,U65 Below we give our usual table showing the of Tobacco from all the ports of the United total exports States, and their direction, since November 1, 1866: To Great Britain Hhds. — Germany. Belgium 1,255 2,850 2,669 Italy France 3,464 3,799 Spain, «fec ... Africa, &c China, India, &c. Australia B. N. Am. Prov. South America... West Indies East Indies Mexico All others 821 14 436 • • • . • above Cer’s & ,—Stems— Pkgs. Manfd, Cases. Bales, tcs. Stps. hhds. bales & bxs. lbs. 38S 142 IS? 299,410 870 4,a50 229 1,314 55 121,307 125 162 7,562 16 . . .... 1 ... . . . • • . ... .. ... • , .. ... . , ... * . . ... 4 . • . . ... • . « ... „ . . • • . . • . • • • ... ... . • • • • • ... . • • • • 41 . . • . . . 79 • . . • 33 257 386 268 ... 723 1,569 , • • • ... 6,968 3,241 . • • • , , • . ... ... • • " . • « • ... • . .' • . . . • • . 36,411 705 466 50 212,354 31,586 413 1 40,110 ... , . . ... • * • ... . • . 30 . . . ... • • 690 . • ... 460 50 . 102 48 334 • . • • T’l since Nv. 1,’6628,079 The 1, 1866. • Holland Mediterranean Austria 2,520 • * * ... . 568 342 112 1,286,653 64,223 113,305 216,979 ... • • . ... .... .. 1,476 313 . ... 172 229 50 Tcs. & Hhds. Cases. Bales, 11,620 erns. 5,902 2,586 13,896 2,244 2,430,918 Portland.... New Orleans 1,116 Philadelphia 21 Bxs. &✓—Stems—, . Strips, Lbs. pkgs. hhds. bis. mant’d. 765 11 1138 330 23 4S2 20 2010 694 782 13 Total since Nov. 1..28,079 655 14 7,068 3,241 .. The market this week has ruled dull. for export, but there is a great 229 2,396,082 27,788 7,048 172 2,244 1,476 The 229 2,4:30,918 inquiry is fair deficiency in the assortments offering, and there is very little regularity to prices. In Kentucky leaf the sales of the week are only about 200 hogsheads, of which a portion for export to Africa ; and prices paid range from 4 to 17c. The New Orleans steamer which has just been wrecked on the coast of Africa bad 300 hhds. on board, which had been mostly sold for arrival; 200 hhds., arrived from New Orleans last week, were sold to go West. Seed leaf has been without important movement, except 1,140 cases Ohio at the close of last week, at 7fo., for export. The only other saloa of seed leaf since the 1st February are Work, com., tax . paid. 25 “ “ “ “ BrigbtWork.com., good 40 60 25 45 15 @16 18 (BOXES). @50c @40c @20c @10c N. Y. State.—Fillers Ohio.—G ood running @l8c Penn.—Kunning lots @12c @20 Average “ Fillers.. 5 @ 7c 1%@10c 5 @ 7c lots... ... 3 Fillers @ 4c 6 @10c @4c 3 @30e. Fine, tax paid. @T*5c. 1 Black Work, med. in bond.. @70c. ; g* od & fine ** @40c. Bright Work, med.. “ @75c. 1 80 @1 25. 12)*@18c. 20 @30c. 16 @40c. go^fd & fine “ 50 @S5c. FOREIGN. Havana.—Fillers—Common. “ ’ 60@ 75@ 90@ Good..... 14 Fine The receipts of Nov. 1, have been RECEIPTS — * Havana.—Wrappers AT Yara, average lots follows: NEW YORK SINCE This week—, hhds. pkgs. SFro rom 1. 1866. NOVEMBER Previous! yhhds. /—T’l sin. Nov. 1—, hhds. pkgs. Baltimore 1,865 Ohio, &c 127. Other Total 376 The following arc for the past week : EXTORTS 13 197 Antwerp ........ 4,972 9,899 5,374 44 124 44 27,954 6,135 29,832 the exports of tobacco from New York OF TOBACCO bis. bxs. lbs. .137 50 100 5 125 cas. 3 Hamburg 1,878 755 88 FROM NEW YORK .... " 297 .. 4 .. Mfd, 1 lihds. Cuba... 1 Other West I. 2 I Brit.. Guiana. 3 New Granada ca*. 515 bis. bxs. lbs. 24 .. .. 10,291 2,648 1 .. Total this week 1 he * Mfd, I hhds. Cadiz 402 23,571 647 539 5,759 182 755 88 2,772 1,416 6 ,. New Orleans 1,926 641 357 61 jikue 22,095 124 Virgil irginia * 1 25@2 60 55@1 05 60<$ 70 Yara tobacco at New York this week, and since as 200 100 146 12,939 exports in this table to European ports are made up from the man¬ Kentucky.— At Louisville there was a decided increase in the offer¬ ings last week, and the stock on hand very materially reduced. The average daily sales exceeded 50 hogsheads, while the actual receipts were not more than one third that amount. The market active all was the weekend Barren County prices fully sustained on all grades offered, including leaf at §21 60. The sales on Saturday were 26 hogs¬ heads, with only one rejection, at prices ranging from §3 to §13 76. The sales of the week amounted to 333 hogsheads, with 85 rejections. Ilhds. The stock on hand Nov. 1,1S66. Received since from the country to Jan,u5 Local receipts since 1,9(8 243 Total Deliveries to Jan. 5 Stock on hand Jan. 5 6,959 2,728 4,231 We continue our 4,768 classification Lugs, common Lugs, fair to good following table indicates the ports from which the exports have been shipped : From New York Balti more Boston 12 7 &CTkev'le. 13 @16c 16 @17 10c @12 13 @14 ifests. Exports of Tobacco from the United States since Novem¬ ber “ Leaf. Good Leaf. Fine do Selections. manufactured. Liverpool .... .... 65 Running , .... .... State.—Wrappery lots. -Stems Manl’d hhds. bales. lbs. 12,939 Hhds. Case. Tierc. Bals. & bxs, 200 515 100 146 147 53 40 “ 30 “ to b'd'rs 10 7 Fillers N. Y. of tobacco. harbors, caused by large accumulation of ice. Average 953,961% TOBACCO. Ky. Light H’vy West. SEED LEAF . Conn.- Prime wrappers fine 32,864)* (HHDS.). LEAF i caff & Cl'ksv'le. Common Lugs.. 4c@ 4)*c. — @ — Good do ..4?4@ 5 5c @ Common Leaf. 5)*@ 7 6 @ 9 Medium do ..5)*@ 9 10 @12 800 China 1,066,820^916,777* KENTUCKY Ky. Light H’vy West, Black 28. 1866 bales bales. Continent.. America.... on good 1865. 23,745)/ 20.921* 1,043,075 8 *3.418 2,438 Liverpool Clyde 1 1866. including common Ohio at 3c., and an inferior private terms. foreign tobacco has been more active. The sales include 100 bales Havana at 70c.@$l 03, as in quality, and 300 hales Tara, in bond, at equal to 75c. currency, duty paid, of which 140 bales resold in bond for export at a private price. Nothing of moment is reported in manufactured tobacco. The following are quotations at this port: mixed lot Com. board and freight. Tbe shipments in each of the with the exception of three days, were as follows : on 440 cases, 179 Total...., Deliveries since Stock on 318 92 4,651 705 hand i 3,936 : $2 50@ 3 50 3 75@ 4 75 Common leaf. Low medium Hhds. Receipts this week—country... Receipts since—local 5 00@ 7 00 8 U0@ 9 00 Good medium Fair to uood Good to fine 9 50@11 50 12 00@14 00 15 00@20 00 Cutting leaf, med. to fine. 15 00@40 ID New Orleans.—Tobacco is in request, but the stock is too small for extended operations. There have been sales of avout 250 hhds at full The stock on sale is very much reduced, and is confined to mostly of desirable descriptions, however. The re¬ ceipts of the new crop are light, and sell readily as soon as offered. A number of foreign buyers are in the market, awaiting receipts from the West, and supplies would meet with good and immediate sale. In the first column will be found a statement of the stock on hand as taken by actual count. We repeat our quotations for reference, although they are said to be the inside prices; prices. about 600 hhds. LIGHT. - Inferior and trashy Lugs.. 2 Good Lugs 4 Inferior to Common Leaf., 5 Medium Leaf 7 Fair 9 do Fine do 12 Choice selections (Cutters)15 The following is a @ 3)*c. @ 4%c. @6 c. @8 c. @11 c. @14 c. @17 c. HEAVY. ^ Inferior Lugs.... 3 @ Good do 4)*@ Inferior to Common Leaf.. 6 @ Medium Leat 8 @ ..... 4 5 c. c. 7)fe. 9 c. Fair do 10 @11 c. do Fine 12)*@15 c. Choice selections (Balers). 16 @20 c. statement of the stock at close of the week: Stock on hand, September Arrived past three days 1,18GG hhds. 8,707 3 1,605— 1,608 Arriyed previously.... ' 10,315 Exported past three days. Exported previously... 6,684—6,684 Broken up for baling, city consumption, &c., since Sep. 1,1866.. 676— 7,360 . Stock on hand and on shipboard hhds, 2,955 1,*1866. Philadelphia through the week, and prices steady. At the close, however, there was more activity, with increased offering. Below is the tobacco statement for January : Total Deliveries to Jan. 5 6,959 2,728 on 318 92 Receipts since—country Receipts since—local 4,768 1,948 243 Stock on do 1,878,443 3,416,205 1,179,204 1,471,520 6,723,884 4,214,140 ro 12 8,060 41,436 .... 2,035 38,522 41.436 8,060 4,021 12,639 108,595 57,3313 68,521 18,353 25.551 13,965 135,18S 5,463 Total... To about eame period, 1866.. do 1865 do do 1864. do - 6,374 Feb. 2. 17,699 619,9133 34,477 12,513 7,147 53,721 53,809 400 350 3.065 454 630 69.569 "Wheat, bushels.. 83,785 77,531 6,1388 “ Oats, 49,193 56,564 4,112 Corn, “ 1 ’ ,203 18.512 2,569 Rye, 19,861 IS,529 4,026 Barley, The stock of wheat, Feb. 2, was as follows : more condemned; bushels, 1,177. Total, bushels, 567,815 ; 44,000 estimated stock. Holders have conse¬ Total Baltimore for at poses, but common Oats have been dull and The Rye is firm. the closing quotations : following are Flour, Superfine.. $ bbl $9 25©10 20 Extra State 10 Peas nominal. heavy. 00©12 05 Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 11 00©12 60 Extra Western, com¬ mon to good 10 00@12 50 Double Extra Western and St. Louis 13 00©16 Southern supers 11 15©12 00 Southern, fancy and ex. 13 00©16 Rye Flour, fine and super¬ fine 6 75© 8 Corn meal, Jersey and Brandywine 5 00© 5 Wheat, Chicago Spring per bushel..; 1 90© 2 50 00 00 50 40 Milwaukee Club Red Winter Amber do White $2 00© 2 40 © 90© 3 05 2 85© 3 25 1 13© 1 14 © © ... 2 Corn, Western Mixed Western Yellow Western White. ... 1 09© 1 1 15© 1 61@ 68© Jersey Yellow Rye Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State. Barley Malt . Peas, Canada White beans 12 30 64 69 80© 1 24 1 20© 1 35 . 1 30© 1 43 1 75© 3 50 .. The movement in breadstuffa at this market has been as Peas, bush 392,459 Barley, bush... AT follows: 1866For week. S’e Jan. 1. -1867For week. b’e Jan. 1. 21,430 13,140, 49,735 Corn meal, bbls... Wheat, bush Corn, bush Rye, bush Barley, &c.\ busn. Oats, bush 162.460 360 12,725 11,600 FOREIGN 49,160 50,07 ' 1,670 63,940 115,595 Gt. Britain, since Jan. 1 bbls. • 2,076 • • • • .... 490 Wc»t Indie* since Jan. 1 2,280 3,158 10,053 17,472 5,922 3,781 30,315 12,913 7,193 same time, 1866. 124,792 Since Jan. 1, from 330 Boston jrt 8,952 Total exp’t, week toeflteince Jan. 1, 1867 Philadelphia 3&itimore 8,337 . _ . 6,251 14,086 136,13135 41,745 238,420 3,505 52,285 220,385 at i Corn. bush. Oats. bush. Barley. Rye. bush. bush. 46,842 95,093 75,601 69,963 7.576 hicago Wheat. bush. 99,590 23,110 1,289 7,131 19,294 57,059 2,810 1,365 25,704 1,440 1,755 4,048 13,095 5,212 1,670 7,200 900 Milwaukee Toledo Detroit 11,877 5,067 8,1300 Cleveland Corresponding week, ’66 Since Same Jan. 1, 1867 time, 1866 Rye, Barley. Oats, Corn, bush. bush. hush. .... 6,515 51,650 192,189 4,286 2,030 .704 12,870 16,450 23,450 169, ill 245,113 125,587 798,2130 242,532 79,662 76,883 32,477 Totals Previous week 274,347 179,828 862,614 721,925 290.567 121,912 532,687 6 42,097 151,893 48,646 522,12x 300 .... 6,251 18,586 2,110 17,360 56,229 .... 51,650 .... 50 518 42,147 49,564 25,427 500 « • * ceries gress , , , . , 61,759 TEA. Tea has remained very firm, and a good demand has prevailed, es¬ pecially for green and black up to the close of the week. The market less trade demand, but with a good invoice inquiry In the sales for the week are 7,170 half-chests greens, 23,800 do. Japans closes with rather and 8,260 The do. Oolongs. imports during the week have been unusually large, compiiemg by nine vessels from China, and one from Japan. follows Vessel. From— Date of sailing. Tea, lbs. Adelia Carleton....Foochow August Vanda Yokohama ..Sep. 5,1866 Lota— Shanghae... “ 29, “ Wild Gazelle “ 29, “ “ Gresham The details : “ Amoy. “ 29, ,Oct. 6, “ Amoy 100,275 32,577 bring out a more liberal trade. The receipts of all the lead¬ ing groceries for the week have been very large, amounting to more, in some items, than the total receipts of January. There have been imported, in round numbers, 120,000 packages of tea, 57,000 bags of coffee, 2,000 bxs. and 2,400 hhds. of sugar, and 3,463 hhds. and 1,283 bbls. of molasses. Shanghae... “ 27, “ Whampoa ...Nov. 1, “ 15 84,195 to Tycbow Acapulco 31,018 130,921 easy money market, and there is better disposition to operate. .The pleasant weather and better facilities for moving goods has also had the effect Amazone 1,191 12.60S 483,647 524,140 24^676 a 152,921 25,435 * 7,675 19,977 confidence in an present gives more 730 529,611 31,381 general improvement in the trade in gro¬ during the week. The reputed determination of Con¬ to postpone any further contraction of legal tenders at 5,188 609,591 . , 192,189 33,847 Fridat, P. M., Feb. 8. Tycoon Drydens. .... 100,632 109,712 102,578 There has been a ... .... .... GROCERIES. are as bush. 7,923 107,880 Flour. bbls. cargoes 473 3,635 4,832 Br( W* A« Cola... since Jan. 1 bush. 1130,585 YORK. EXPORTS FROM NEW Flour, C. meal, Wheat, bbls. 19,365 8,555 4,580 53,665 1,750 20,705 58,135 123,570 42,860 Flonr, bbls . 28,919 9,1325 57,358 4,187,965 YORK. NEW .* ... 1866, Dec. 13. 38,340 Lake Ports.—The following shows the receipts the foliowing lake ports for the week ending Jan. 26 : . RECEIPTS 1867, ... an for tine qualities, for malting pur¬ is dull, and prices cover a wide range. store and of last re- Weekly Receipts at * again heavy. slightly improved for the good grades of Red, with some demand from out-of town millers, who have, however, taken only broken lots. They do not wish to pur¬ chase full cargoes. A ship load of about 37,000 bushels Cali¬ fornia Wheat has arrived this week, but none is yet sold. The Western markets have considerably advanced, but close heavy. Corn has slightly advanced, mainly on speculative influences, but the improvement is partially supported at the close by purchases for export. The Eastern trade is also buying more freely. The receipts of new Southern are more liberal, and a corn Rye, bush 1319,471 287,433 Oats, bush and the close is Wheat has load 225,493 279,465 Wheat, bush Corn, bush grain in the date Feb. 2. 1866, Dec. 13. 1321,892 1867. Feb. 2. quently been successful in checking the decline. Hut as the pressing wants of the trade are supplied the demand falls off, bark has been sent hence to Irish port. Barley is firmer ; days past. The freely, and there has been demand from the West Indies. • 5,73 t bushels less than the sumption. more 630 865 6,700 No. 1, bushels, 58,830 ; bushels, 286,634; No 8, bushels, 167,683 ; rejected, bushels, No. 2, Stocks ok Grain at Bu falo.— The amount of afloat at Buffalo Feb. 2 1867, as compared with port, is as follows : buying 21,197 .... is still to be 'local trade has been 1st. 90 53,134 some Same time 1866. 35.515 Since Jan. ending 1866. Feb. 2. ending Week Same time Since Jan. 1st. Week Flour, bbls.. Shipments- -Receipts- r unchanged. The effort steady for follows Milwaukee.—The movement in breadstuffa has been as prices under the pressure of large stocks noticed, with some increase in the demand for con¬ more bush. 38,522 of holders to maintain Flour has been rather Corn, bush. bush. -2,023 Wheat, Rye, bbls. New York, to Feb. 1, 1867 . Other ports, to latest dates.. Friday', Feb. 8,1867, P. M. 73,359 240,220 continent. the Flour, BREADSTUFFS. are 7,410 69,437 450,183 1865.. 1864.. From opened- market 16,332 104,865 February 38 hogsheads were The main features of the 1,510.873 18,608 period, 1866.. .V offered and no re¬ jections. Sales were 5 hogsheads at $3 10@3 60, 3 at $4 05@5 50, 2 at $5 75@6 90, 2 at $7 35@S 50, 6 at $9@9 80. 3 at $IU@10 75, 5 at $11(3)11 26, 6 at $12@12 75, 2 at $13, and 2 at * 15@15 76. Maryland.—At Baltimore, in the absence of receipts there is some inquiry for old stock Maryland leaf to fill op the vessels now loading for Holland and Bremen. We hear of nothing doing in Ohio deecrip tious, but reports sales of 17 hhds. Virginia «t 7$, and 25 hh'ls Kentucky lugs on private terms. There were reinspected this .week 60 hhds. Maryland. No new receipts Virginia.—Advices from Richmond, Lynchburg and Petersburg speak of very light receipts, and the market for the uew crop not fairly Prices—on the 4th of 3,519 14,649 ..Jan. 29, 1867.. do do do 4,231 | hand Jan. 5 94,139 3,345 87,922 To about same 3,936 hand Jan. 26... 3,153,535 161,121 Jan. 29, 1S67 Feb. 1, 1867.. Jan. 7, 1867.. Total 4,611 705 Total Deliveries since bush. 347,893 Jan. 23, 1867 Baltimore Boston San Francisco Other ports Hhds. Hhds. bush. bbls. 50,885 291 Date. Feb. 1,1867.. Jan. 25, 1867.. Corn, Wheat, Flour From New York New Orleans Louisville.—The market has been quiet The stock on hand Nov. 1, 1866 . Received from the country Local FROM SEPT. IRELAND BREADSTUFFS TO GREAT BRITAIN AND OF EXPORTS the 29th ultimo to New shipboard not cleared on Arrived for the week, 3 hhds. Cleared since York 182 hhds. Stock in warehouses and on the 1st inst., 2,956 hhds. Stock (February 9,1867, THE CHRONICLE 180 Amoy ... “ 11, “ 11 4, “ 657,480 Sorts. Cong., Sou. & Oolong. 322,685 Japans. 468,893 Mostly greens. 490,271 Mostly greens. 408,934 Greens. 499,600 Oolong and Ningyong. 595,697 Cong., Souc. OoH & Ni’g 891,305 Mostly greens. \ 1)9,400 Pouchoug & Y. 1,051,410 All black. Hyson. 0T % a typograpical error last week the cargo of the Benefactor reported as 6,746,000 lbs. ; it should have been 746,000 lbs. The following table shows the shipments of tea from China and Japaq was 30,1866, and importations at from June 1 to Nov. York and Boston since Jan. 1 : the United States, to New -IMP’TS AT N. Y. & BOSTON.» Direct -Indirect at New At New AtBoston. York. York, lbs. pkgs of all sorts. SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN. . ,—To Atlantic ports.—» To San Nov. 1 to Junelto Same FranNov. 30. Nov. 1. in ’65, cisco, lbs. lbs. lbs. pkg». , 284,756 770,255 349,260') Poucbong 123,000 243,470 119.265 Oolong&Ning.l,524,749 3,224,497 3,094,718 Twankay 49,628 168^419 282,693 Hyson skin 6,146 2,420 75,380 Hvson 138,635 £05,227 430,578 Young Hyson..502,951 1,949,6912,349,219 j- 33,733 Impenal .. 78,947 472,086 415,519' Gunpowder 133,525 461,167 517,990 Japans 2,221,054 748,376 Congou & Sou.. 60,685 2,618,26610,032,346 Total 53,000 3,208,671 118,146 402,6f 7 1 J04,068 371,5 6 365,312 827,726 8,401,388.] 33,733 COFFEE. From G’t Britain. 404 From Europe. ports. “ “ 404 7,235,832 “ imports since January 1, The and stock in first hands February 6> follows: are as OF RIO OTHER SORTS. COFFEE. At New Stock. Import. York, At Bost. import. Stock. Imports. bags Philadelphia k* Baltimore; “ New Orleans “ Galveston “ Mobile “ Savannah “ 76,226 53,898 30,814 2,200 2,500 2,500 8,000 Ceylon 15,000 Singapore, 2,000 Maracaibo, 2,000 Laguayra 2,000 St. Domingo Tokal 114,240 82,893'| New York, bags 11,514 kk Java, • • -♦ “ “ .... 9,147 4,34<> 2,580 .... 2,436 .... 1,984 2,377 “ “ 2,255 4,512 11797 2,275 20,265 32,677 2,275 ‘k Other, .... Total | fairly active for raw, and the higher price of gold slight advance iu currency prices. Refined Sugar is Sugar has been caused a quite active, and prices are £@£c. higher. The sales of raw Sugar for the week are about 3,000 hhds. Cuba and Porto Rico, 1,000 boxes Havana, and 1,800 baskets Java. The imports of the week have been large, including 1,989 box< • Havana, 2,045 hhds. Cuba, and 386 hhds. from other ports. ^1 Imnni-to fnllnWH * a -1- a t*£» ~ ~ Q Q Other W. New m. boxes At— 7ew York * Indies, Orleans, Total 4,598 7,447 • .... . • ♦hhds. Brazil, Manila, bags. bags. 104,304 « 425 60 ”2 620 35 497 35 459 1,031 Includes barrels aud tierces reduced to — Oolong, Common to fair., SO ® 90 do Superior to ftne...l 00 ®1 V5 Ex fine to finest.l 45 @1 75 Ex tine to finest 1 40 do Souc & Cong., Com. to fair 70 do Sup’rto fine. 90 Exf. to flnestl 25 do Gunp. & Imp., Com.tofairl 00 @1 15 do Sup. to fine.1 25 ®l 50 7* .. do Ex. f. tofinest.1 65 @1 9o &Tw’kay,C, to fair. do Sup. to fine Duty raid—> 60® 70 75 ® 80 ® 80 ©l 05 @1 50 Duty: When imported direct in American or equalized vessels from the of its growth or production ; also, the growth of countries this side the of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 place Cape cents $ fl>; all other in 19 cent ad valorem in addition. lava, mats and hags ....gold 24f® 25* Kio, prime, duty paid ...gold IS}® .. Native Ceylon 19 ® 20 do good gold 17f® 13 Maracaibo 17*@ 19 do fair gold 16|@ If Laguayra 17*@ 181 do ordinary gold !5*® 16 do fair to g. cargoes .. ® .. .gold L*® 17f St. Domingo Sugar. Duty : on raw or brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on white or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 3* above 15 and not over 20,4 ; on refined,5 ; and on Melado, 2* cents $ lb. de 13 to 15 11 @ Ilf do do Porto Rico $ lb 9*® 1*2 do do do 16 to 18 12*® 13 Cuba, Inf. to com. refining 9 @ 9$ do do 19 to 20 18*® 14 do do fair to good do ... 10® Iff do ’ do white 13 ® 141do fair to good grocery... 10*® 10* ® 16* do pr. to choice ... do 11 @111 Loaf If*® do centrifugal 8 @ 1» f Granulated Crushed and powdered 15*® .. do Melado " 6 ® 7 14 @ 141Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7to 9 9i® V* White coffee, A 13 ® 18* do do do 10 to 12 10 ® 10} Yellow coffee . .... .. Molasses. Duty : 8 cents $ gallon. ^ gall New Orleans Porto Rico Cuba Muscovado 38 ® 40 44 ® 45 do Clayed.,.,,.. Barbados...... 80 @1 88 45 @ 6>» 40 ® 50 Spices. cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and cloves, 20; pepper and pimento, 15 ; and ginger root, 5 cents 78 lb. Cassia, in inats_.gold §itt> 42*® .. j Pepper,.. (gold) 21*® 22f Ginger, race and Af(gold) 141(91 I Pimento, Jamaica, (gold) 19 ® 19* Mace (gold) 87 ® 9' 1 Cloves f..(gold) 27*® Nutmegs, No.l (gold) 83© 90 | .. Fruit. Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds,! Duty: Raisins, Almonds,6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; PeaNuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filbertn 11 Walnuts, 3 cents $ lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Grean Fruits, 25 $ cent ad val. 17 ® 18 ft qr. box Raisins, Seedless. .$ *cask 8 50 @8 60 Sardines 16 ® 20 do Layer ®4 0 * Figs, Smyrna go d $ lb $1 box do Bunch Currants Citron, Leghorn Prunes, Turkish Dates Almonds, Languedoc. do do do 8ardlnes do Brazil Nuts Provence. Sicily, Soft Shell Shelled $ box $ hf. box 17«® ® 84 ® 23 ® 24 ® 86 ® ® 3J @ .. 17 Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, 3 60 ® 12 ® 12* 21 ® 3U .. $ tt> 10*® 11* 8 ® 14 ® 18 Dried Fruit— 18 $ lb Apples .. Blackberries Black Raspberries Pared Peaches S6 0 25 Unpeeled do Cherries, pitted, 40 ’ 40 iox@i2*r .. @ 20 §50 85 new.... 12 ® 50 ® 14 55 ' - 97 THE DRY GOODS TRADE. Friday, P. M., Feb. 8, 1867. The 5,832 5,776 hogsheads. Feb. 2.—The market for sugar has been very dull week, with sales of 2,773 hhds., the market closiog dull and New Orleans, le Ex fine to finest,. .1 40 @1 65 Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair ... 85 @1 10 do Super, to fine. .1 15 ®l 40 5,a32 4,624 197 ... .— do do Ex f. to fln’st 85 ® 95 Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair. 85 ® 85 do Sup’rto flne.l 00 @1 06 do Ex f. to flnestl 10 @1 20 98,036 .... Total import * •hhds. ♦hhds. ♦hhds. stock Feb. 5 36,524 24,566 Same date 1866 45,451 22,519 4,139 Imports since Jan. 1. 4,559 Portland do 4*ii 1,072 do Joston 382 ’hiladelphia do 38 1,038 laltimore do 296 >lew Orleans do Duty pa’d.—> Hyson, Common to fair ... 80 @1 05 do Superior to fine.... 1 15 @1 85 Duty: mace, 40 SUGAR. has lb 25 cents per Coflee. 4,000 | Traveler “ : . Albatross.. 3,703 Dunmore.. 20,676pockets Ribbleton. 8,309 .5,000 | PortoCabello.Sundries.. 1,784 bags, .. 2,255 4.500 I St. Domingo. “ “ .3,000 | Other ports.. “ .. 700 “ Queen of Fleet Fredericke “ Tea. Doty do 5,000 1 “ ..3,700 | Batavia 3,485 Padany .Minnie Abbe Christian Conrad St. Ursula “ request from the higher price of apples. H. Sk. do been firmer and quite active, ... *• box higher. per do From other ’ FRUITS. steady moderate demand, Raisins are 6@10c. Other kinds are steady. Dried fruits are in better v Fruits have been in do From East Indies. especially for Rio, of which i here has also been a good busi¬ the stock is reported as quite limited, ness in other kinds, at a slight advance in prices. In the sales were 260 bags Laguayraat 17$@18c., gold, 100 bags Maracaibo, at 18$@19^,gold. 4,000 bags Rio ex Donneborg, 2,600 do. ex Minne Abbe, 1,000 do. ex Traveler, 8,600 do. ex Fredericke, 3,080 do. ex Albatross, and 8,700 ex Christian, all on private terms. The market closes firm. The imports of the week have been very large, amounting to 57,744 bags. The following table will show the details: Vessels. Bags. I From Vessels. Bags. From Armure Rio 3.500 | Rio Hygea... . 3,0oo Coffee has 181 THE CHRONICLE. February 9,1867.] during droop- Dry Goods market continued quiet in all its branches, both among agents and jobbers, up to the middle of the week. On Wednesday quite an active demand sprung up, and has continued, resulting in a fair business among the jobbers Prices have fallen off until near the close, when leading goods and choice at 14£. Molasses has been in are quite steady, but light weights are still declining. The prices considerably in advance of been 2,662 bbls., ordinary being pleasant weather and opening of communication again has uoted at 7‘2@74, choice at 78@31. served to exhilerale all trade, giving promise of the usual —Shipments Receipts Since Same, Since Same, Spring demand. The uncertainty, however, which surrounds 1865-6. Price. Week. Sep. 1. 1865-6. Week. Sep. 1 84 1,945 30,538 11,070 ugar, hhds7.. 3,457 Congressional action on the great questions of finance and 5 1,443 i.SSI 529 586 18 ugar, bbls... 896 8,379 @81 11,417 trade prevents all large operations, and must, so long as it 52,638 20,437 ioiasses, bbls. 3,620 Inferior is quoted 9c. tg. mch better demand, and has sold at ist week. Sales of the week have , v , — MOLASSES. Molasses has been continues. fairly active at steady prices. imports of the week have been larger than for many weeks preously. They include 2,116 hhds. of Cuba, 140 Porto Rico, 1,207 from lier West Indies and l emerara, and 1,283 barrels New Orleans. Stocks and imports are as follows: The r-r-Porto Rico-r-Other Foreign.—, Cuba. *hhds." At . iwTork, stocks Feb. 5 . Y., imp’ts since Jan. “ ortland oston, “ tiiladelphia “ iltimore ew Orleai s “ “ “ “ “ “ 1,200 .... 409 443 1,534 .... .... 988 .... 4,170 89 63 Includes barrels and tierces 1,686 443 ices are steady. Domestics. 4,698 .... 617 534 71 5,920 trade and home markets, pkgs. — — — .... — .... 7 — 2 4 — — .... British Provinces ‘ Total this week " 7 59 ....^ 41 168 ... 6,^22 .... Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are moderately and for standard goods prices are very steady. dull. The following are jobbers* prices, two per days: Nonantum 3-4 , Domestics. DryGoods. 35 Hayti Since Jan. 1 Same time 1866 “ “ I860.. BOSTON , cases. pkgs. Cuba New Granada 600 > Dry Goods. Liverpool..../.... reduced to hogsheads. fairly active for Western Goods cases, this week and since of 1866 and 1860. NEW YORK. , bbls. SPICES. Spices continue from New York and Boston of January 1, and for the same period N. O. 697 .6,264 Total. * 4,790 *hhds. ♦hhds. Below we give the exports Domestics packages, and Dry 7 123 33 4,864 cases. 3 3 3 .... active at the close, Lighter weights are cent. of£ cash ten 11, Atlantic N do 12, Massachusetts 0 do 15, In- 182 THE CHRONICLE. [February 9,1867. dian Orchard L do 16, Lawrence H do 14$, Commonwealth 0 do 11. Knox B do 16, Union do 14, Pepperell N do 14, Indian Head do Corset Jeans are in steady, fair demand, and prices are unchanged. Androscoggin 15$, Bates colored 15$, do bleached 14$, Naumkeag 21, Atlantic V 7-8 18, Atlantic E do 17, Pacific E do 17, Tremont E do 16, Pepperell 22$, Laconia 21, Amoskeag 21 @22, Newmarket 16$, Lew¬ Bedford R do 12$, Boott O do 16$, Indian Orchard W do 16, Lawrence iston 15$, Indian Orchard 16, Berkeley 22$, Rockport 21, Tremont 12$. G do 16$, Pepperell O do 16, Indian Head 4-4 22, Appleton A do 214, Cambrics and Silksias are called for steadily. Lonsdale SileWachusetts do 21$, Princeton A do 21$, Pacific extra do" 21$, do H do sias sell at 23c, Victory 21$, Indian Orchard 21$, Ward 21$.Wash¬ 21$, do L do 17$, Atlantic H do 21$, do A do 22, do L do 18, Lawrence ington glazed Cambrics sell at 14, Victory 13, do E 15$, do high colors E do 19, do C do 21$, do F do 18, Stark A do 21$, Amoskeag A do 21$, 14$, Hudson Mill 12$, Fox Hill 11, Superior 11 $, Sroithfield 13, Waverly do B do 21$, Medford do 20, Pittsfield A do 16$, Kenebeck do 18$, Rox- 13$. and S. S. & Sons paper cambrics at 18 cents, do high colors 20, bury A do 20, Indian Orchard B do 17, Broadway best do 18$, Sussex F English 30 inch 20, White Rock 18, Masonville 19, Warren 18. do 17, Newmarket A do 18, do C do 22$, Nashua D do Woolen Goods show a little 20, Pepperell E improvement in demand for goods suit¬ do 20, Great Falls M do 18, do S do 161, Sagamore do 15, Albion do 16, able to Spring wear and manufacture, but prieps are below the views Dwight W do 18, Standard do 17, Shawmut E do 17, Pepperell R do 18$, of manufacturers, and they do not crowd production. Laconia E 17, Laconia B do 18, Laconia O 9-8 19, Pequot do 25, Po.usAmerican Printed de Lainks are more wanted, at steady prices. eet do 28, Indian Orchard A 40 inch 21, do do C 19, Nashua 5 4 32$, All dark 25, Hamilton Co 25, Manchester dark Naurakeag W do 24, Utica do 40, Pepperell 7 4 40, Utica do 50, Pep¬ mures dark 25, High colors 25. Pacific Merinos 26, Pacific dark 26, Ar40, Mourning 25, Shepherd perell 9-4 60, Mouadnoc 10-4 67$, Pepperell do 68, Utica 11-4 95. checks 25. all wool 42$, Skirtings 35. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are in light request principally American Linen continues in fair request, and prices are steady. for leading goods, at more steady prices. Mechanics 3-4 Foreign Goods are more active as the auction sales 12, Revere do progress, and for 12, Globe do 12, Kingston do 11$, Boott R do 12$, do H do 16$, Law¬ Spring styles of dress goo la and lighter fabrics there is a liberal de¬ rence H do 15, Woodbury 7-8 14, Newburyport do 18$. Rockdale do 17, mand, more particularly for the Southern market. Prices are not Waltham X do 19, Putuam B do 15, very Amoskeag Z do 17, Harris A A do firm, and imported profess but little encouragement to offer goods. 16$, Great Falls M do 18, do S do 16, do A do 20, do J do 19, Lyman 18$, - Cambric do 19, Stratford A do 1S$, Lawrence Ldo 18, do A do 18, Hill’s Semplderndo 22$, James 31 inch 18$, do 83 inch 18$, Bartle'.t 81 inch 18$, do 83 inch 20, Webster 4-4 18$. Greene G do 16$, Lewiston G do 19, Windsor do 22$, Pocumtuck do 18, Putnam A do 17, Newmarket A do 20, do 0 do 21, Bartletts do 28, Bates BB do 23$, Constitutional do 17, Indian Grove do 18, James Steam do 22$v Newburyport do 22$, Indian River XX do 10, Attawaugan XX do'l 9, Fountain do 19, Hope do 22$, Tip Top do 24, Blackstone do 21, Franklin do 25, Amoskeag A do 25, Boot B do 21 $, Forestdale do 23$, Masonvilie do 26. do XX do 32$, Androscoggin L do 25, Lonsdale do 25. Wauregan do 27$, do F do 21 $, Bates XX do 26$, Arkwright do 30, Warasutta H 32$, do O do 32$, Atlantic Cambric do 30, Lonsdale Cambric do 32$, New York Mills do 37$, Hill do 25, Amoskeag 42 inch 26, Chickopee do 25, Waltham do 23, Warasutta 9-8 37$, Lym in R 5-4 24, Naumkeag W do 24, Boott W do 25, Nashua do 32$, Bates do 29, Wamsutta do 42$, -Amoskeag 46 inch 2S, Waltham 6-4 35, Mattawamkeag do 37, Pepperell do 86, Oneida do 42$, Utica do 60, .Waltham 8-4 48, Pepperell do 50, Mattawamkeag 9-4 60, Pepperell do 60, Utica do 85, Phoenix 10-4 65, Baltic do 65, Bates do 65, Waltham do 08, Allendale do 65, Pepperell do 70, Utica do 90, Masabesic 11-4 76, Amoskeag do 75, Pepperell do 80. Ticks are in better demand and prices are more steady: Conestoga C M 42, Amoskeag A C A 60, do A 40,do B 85, do D 25, do C 80, Pemberton A A 39, do Red Stripe 32$, Brunswick 20, Blackstone River 21$, Hamilton 36$, do 1) 32$, Somerset 13, Thorndike 25, Pearl River 47$, Oriental 39, Harvest 34, Hancock A A 29, Pittsfield 13$, Bunkerhill 24, York 47$, do 36$, Omega B 37$, do A 50, Cordis A A A 45, Everett 25, Imperial 35, Boston A A 82$, Lehigh Valley A 21, do B 20, do A C A 22, Swift River 25, Winnebago 12$, Girard 30. Stripes show a better trade and more tone in prices. Amoskeag 29 and 80, Uncasville 21 aud 22, Whittentou A A 32$, do A 3-3 27$, do B B 20, do C 20, Napoleon 18$, Pittsfield 3-3 Awn 45, Lanark 4x2 18, Lanark fur 18$, Uuion 50 4x2 35, do 50 2x2 85, do 20 82$, do 20 2-2 32$, Caledonia 34, do 28, Lancaster fur 18, Ken nebeck 82$, Wamsutta 20, Farmers Mechanics 80, Star No. 600 16, do No. 800 2x2 22, do No. 900 4-2 26, Cameron No 90 21$, 4 2 do No. 80 20, Miners it Mechanics 30. Denims and Cottonades are in fair request at unchanged prices, Amoskeag deniuo9 sell at 37$, Haymaker 25, do brown 37, York 36. Warren brown 25, Boston Manufacturing Co. 25$, Pearl River 36, Union 80, Monitor 20, Manchester Co. 27, Clark’s brown 25, Suffolk 27, Marlboro 20. Blue Hill 22$, New York M 22, Fort Moultrie 30, Mount Vernon 30, Tremont 28. and Farmer’s and Mechanics cottonades at 56, cents. Pemberton d*tt 45, 1/odtnan’a Ky J 47, Plow L it Auv 50, Everett 47$, New York Mills 62$, Whittenden d<£t-31(5)39$. Brown Drills are in more demaud for export. Wiuthrop 17$, Amos¬ keag 22, Laconia 28, Androscoggin 12$, Minerva 16, Pepperell 22$, do fine jean 24, Stark A 22, Boott 21$, Beunington 22, Massachusetts G Woodward duck bags 32$, National bag9 31, Stark A do 62$, Liberty do 31. Print Cloths are very quiet, aud prices nominal. The last sales are reported at ll$c. for 64x64 square cloth. Prints are quite uniform in trade and price, and at the close there is a liberal business doing. Americau 17$. Amoskeag dark 16$, do purple 18, do pink 18, do shirting 16$, do palm leaf 17$ Merrimac D dark 18, do purple 18, do W dark 20, do purple 20,do pink 20, Sprague’s dark 18, do purple 19,do shirting 19, do pink 19, do blue checks 19, do solid 17$, do indigo blue 18, do Swiss ruby 18$, London Mourning 16$,Simpson Mourn¬ ing 16$, Atlantic Mourning 16$, Amoskeag Mourning 15$. Gainers light 18$, Dunnell’s 17$, Allen 17, Richmond 17$, Arnolds 15, Gloucester 16$, Wamsutta 13$, Pacific dark 18, Freeman 15, Cocheco 19, Lowell 15, Naumkeag 14$, Hamilton 17$, Victory 15, Home 12, Empire State 11$, Lancaster 16$, Wauregan 16$, Belleville 15. Lawns are in good request for spring trade, especially for Southern 20, Market s. Canton Flannels are in but little request and quotations are rather nominal. Ellerton N, Bro. 85, do O do 32, do T do 21, Laconia do 28, Sl&terville do 24, Hamilton do 2S$, Rockland do 17, Naumkeag do 25, Tremont do 20, Scotts extra do 20, Whittendon do 22$, Ellerton N Blea. 87$, do O do 35, do P do 33$, Sal’n Falls do 31$, Methuen A do 82, Naumkeag do 27, Nashua A 21. entered for consumption for THE WEEK -1865. Value. Pkgs. Manufactures of wool... 503 $196,203 do 216 cotton.. 77,756 do silk... 104 81,362 do flax.... 516 135,098 Miscellaneous dry gooas. 89 31,325 Total 1,538 FROM WITHDRAWN AND -I860. Pkgs. , 830.1S7 S69 363,936 240,117 9,029 $3,379,694 THROWN INTO do do do ^ 418 2S2 cotton.. ■ Miscellaneous $151,04 S9,311 129,166 615 136 dry goods. 799 S82 126 341 73 101,018 ~72 silk.... flax.... 51,102 $323,249 234,979 289,513 155,701 151,350 3,003 $1451,832 THE market THE SAME PERIOD, Manufactures of wool... 030 745 215 5c-0 791 653,465 5,744 -1867. Value Pkgs. $1,380,989 739 31,1S67. / Value. 2,755 1,922 $521,744 WAREHOUSE ENDING JANUARY , „ $372,184 during 1,310 265,328 $611,036 972 130,016 349.50 181 95,409 109,910 1,7S0 28,815 604 . Total Add ent’d 1,553 $521;637 521,744 forcousumpt’ul,538 Total thrown upon mak’t 3,091 2,224 9,029 $1,013,381 $891,793 3,379,694 338,403 52,053 4,847 $1,600,936 3,001 1,154,852 11,253 $4,271,487 0,818 $2,759,7S8 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... do cotton.. do Bilk do flax Miscellaneous dry goods. 273 137 101 223 .... Total Add eut’d tor $126,866 1,620 41,354 52,696 61,795 924 $714,941 280,289 116 143,747 970 198,467 997 163 549 1,422 24,732 137 424 20,411 1,166 1,158 $306,12-2 cousumpt’n 1,538 521,744 4,762 $1,362,176 9,029 3,479,694 Total entered at the port 2,696 $827,866 13,791 $4,741,870 $515,678 318,352 191,455 182,48-1 51,718 3,007 6,016 13, Pemberton Hayrnab^ 24, Everett 26, Massabesic 6-3 28 and 29, Andover 23, Boston 22$, Harvesters 3-3 22@27, do 6-3 22@27, Blackstone 23, American 19 and 20, Eagle 17$, Hamilton 27, Arkwright 17, Easton 16 and 17, Jewett City 21 @21$, Sheridan G 18. Checks are unchanged in price and fairly active. Park Mills Red 25, - IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Feb. 7, 1867, and the corresponding weeks of i866 and 1866, have been follows: 5 3,008 1,154,852 IMPORTS (OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND WEEK SPECIE) ENDING AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR FEBRUARY THE 1, 1867. fThe quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value China, Glass & E. Leather, Hides, Jkc.— m Woods— ware— Bristles China 74 Earth’nw’e . Glass 5,512 4,376 1,225 2,267 .123 550 .78 Glassware Glass plate... .78 ... Drugs, «fcc.— Anoline colors.. Aluminous ck.ll Bark Leruv. .114 Barytes.. 65 - 3 532 Hides, dressed.... 72,429 Miscellaneous— Hides, Boxes ed 55,308 Buttons 120 11,523 Leath patent. ..5 1,246 Cheese 12 Liquors, Wines, &c. Cigars.. 1,403 Ale.. ......118 1,209 Coal, tons... .408 2S4 Brandy 55 2,923 Clocks .5 1,641 387 Cordials Wines 51 178 81 2,121 8,209 Champagne, Gums, crude..50 2,704 baskets ....286 do Arabic 186 13,993; Metals, &c.— Glue. 93 4,921 Bronzea 1 Indigo 30 3,738 Chains & an Lie paste....350 chors 9,752 185 14 ess " 1,184 Cutlery 2,912 205 8,455 83,740 10,645 1,191 ...55 Hardware.... 133 2,614 Iron, pig, Potash, Prns ..8 Reg antimony. 10 {Soda, sal 1 797 483 104 do do 3,765 58 ash.... 61 2,304 caustic. 37 914 Sponges 06 781 Safflower 12 1,109 Jalap 6 Ver. .illion .. .21 W ormseed Other Furs .. 3,531 3,476 2,776 Furs, <fcc— Fruits, &c. 79 ..13 . 4,065 - Dates Nuts 313 2,246 Oranges 2,066 Pre’d gmger Raisins. Sauces and pres. Instruments— Musical 14 ....... Jewelry. &c.— Jewelry 26 Watches 4 1,495 Guns tons Furniture 5 G nny cloth.656 Hair 14 Hair cloth .5 Hemp 5,0U0 13,701 27 tubes ....6 Machinery. .,.109 Marble man..!.. 1,646 tons 412 299 19,OSO 8,447 21,262 11,687 3,359 1,134 Lead,pigs. .1,4(6 Metal goods .89 Needles 23 . Nickel 6 Old metal Plated ware,... 1 Per. caps 7 Saddlery 5 Steel 1,993 Silver ware 5 128 2,004 2,737 63,170 ' 1,380 Tin, bxs....4,558 34,808 Tin, 1,002 slabs, 38,574 6,332 Wire 3 3,527 Pepper Stationery, «fcc.— Books 124 207 46,193 15,813 Engravings.... 7 1,225 Paper 2,084 32,864 Our General Prices 4,809 284 459 13,443 5,143 2,483 S8,1‘4 19,425 6,712 Maccaroni.. .475 Iron, Iron, other, Other 854 7,461 23 Fish .865 tons Spices— 9,382 3,117 119 5,250 1,006 Feathers Ind. rubber. 953 Iron, sheet, 3,368 3,825 18,175 143 31,723 Cocoa, bgs. 1,033 23,304 Coffee, bgs.2,847 41,882 Fancy goods.... 43,409 Flax 166 linsee i 1 do olive... 400 Opium 5 Paints Paris white.. .32 86 830 783 ..... Other 178 undress Cream tartar.. 15 Oils Fustic 8 2,227 513 891 707 Oil paintings..4 Paper hang¬ 11 ings Parasols 6 Perfumery.... 14 Pipes 1,646 1,994 2.912 2,564 Salt 195 Statuary 150 Seeds Linseed.. ..2,000 4,870 8,867 550 Soap Sugar, hhds <fc 3,033 s 10 357 Sugar, bgs bxs. & 561 11,242 bb Trees & plants.. Tea 1,556 Twine 11 Toys......... .97 1,675 21,405 1,724 7,969 349 11,482 7,198 Tobacco Waste Other Total Current will be round 189 and 190. 164 798 $1,055,116 on paces THE CHRONICLE. February 9,1867.] 5681 ©l)e Railway ill o nit or. Canadian Railway Earnings.—The gross receipts from trans¬ portation on 2,104 miles of Canadian railway in 1866 was $10,968,963, against $10,793,378 in the previous year, being an increase of $175,585. This is $5,213 39 per mile. The following shows the earnings of the three most extensive companies for the two years comparatively: Grand Trunk Railway 81.59 18C5. Increase. 186G.* $6,586,193 3,26’»,754 $6,6 9,260 $53,067 Great Western Railway 3,264,402 3,648 Northern Railway 493,777 19,095 51*2,872 Railroad Markings and Expenses—The Northwestern Railroad and Rock Island Railroad —We find in the Chicago r Republican of the 5th inst. some interesting figures and statements, showing the comparative cost of operating two of the leading Western railroads from 1860 to 1866 inclusive... The figures giveu tor these roads may be taken as a good indication of the course of prices for railroad material and labor in all parts of the country. The following statement exhibits the business of the Chicago and Northwestern'Company for six years, with their earnings and ex¬ penses per ton per mile, &c. From Jan. 1, 1861, to June 1, 1864, the earnings, operating expenses and dividends of the Galena and Chicago Union Railroad are included: Comparative statement of Earnings, Expenses, Dividends, d'c., of the Chicago and Northwestern Railway. 1861. 186*2. Aggregate ton¬ nage* 92,361,4:38 Gross eurn'gs.$2,572,054 Operating ex- 1,351,652 Earnings per ton p. mile*. Expenses per ton p. Av. cost .02 78-100 .01 40-100 mile*. of ma¬ terials, Ac.. Dividends * 443 00 5 p. c. .... One passenger 1863. 1864. 1S65. 1,481,063 2,417,292 3,OSS,629 5,109,944 6,362,061 .0-2 74-100 .03 MOO .03 77-100 .01 32-100 .03 78-100 .01 47-100 .01 74-100 .02 27-100 .02 77-100 096 55 6 p. c. 901 79 3X p. c. 819 44 7 p. c. 1,048 83 3X p. c. paid by the Chicago. Rock Island and Pacific Railroad during the from 1860 to 1866, inclusive, to be, on an average, 200 per COMPARATIVE Chicago and Alton.— 1S05. 1864. (280 in.) $100,991 154,418 195.803 162,723 178,786 206,090 '224,257 312,165 354,554 320,879 307.803 252,015 3,840,091 3,677,795..Year -Erie 1864. Railway " 1865. 1866. 304,445 3:18,454 330,651 267,126 315,258 278,891 358,862 402,219 407,107 448,9:44 411,806 . 4,120,153 1864. (468 m.) 351,489 387,095 301,613 418,575 486,808 524,760 495,072 351,799 4,826,722 1865. 747.942 702,692 767,508 946,707 923,886 840,354 • 7,900,9S1 .. 1S65. 459,762 4*23,797 406.373 510,100 423,578 586,964 799,236 661,391 657,141 £>06,640 625,547 C76,3i0 701,3 >2 691,556 914,082 747,469 739,7o6 641,589 6,329,447 1863 3.«<1 1804 1805 1866 4.12 1.48 1.81 2.36 2.29 4.00 3.79 Year. 7,181,208 Ties. I860 140,418 106,689 186,747 212,209 139,547 113,399 146,943 224,838 217,159 170,555 228,020 310,594 226,840 State tax .. .Nov... 416,680. 339,447. .Dec... . 4,643,422 Year.. 168,218 178,526 149,099 117,013 1,711,281 1,985,712 St. Chicago. I860. . . . 147,485 160.497 157,786 149,855 155,730 144,942 218,236 234,194 203,7S5 202,966 1204,726 1865. on capital stock 65,6*9 43,610 and freight.., 25,000 68,716 20,000 99,995 76,068 Sinking fund Total 89,014 OF PRINCIPAL loos 1865. (228 in.) $158,735 RAILROADS. 1866. 18M. (238 m. $305,554 $241,395 183,385 246,331 289,403 257,230 .Jan— .Feb.... .March 170,879 202,857 197,886 264,605 April.. May... 193,919 284,612 321,818 290.642 J une.. 244,121 224,1.2 310,443 210,314 214,533 306,231 389,489 p7 396,050 307,523 <3422124 270,073 B 831,006 101,779 q 339,417 380,617 321,037 * A »eg... (251 m.) $77,010 74,409 89,901 72,389 83,993 78,697 91,809 94,375 93,078 264,637 242,171 248,292 .Sept... . . . .Oct .Nov .Dec 107,525 104,608 115,184 125.252 90,576 116,495 96,908 95,453 116.146 105,767 1,038,165 1,222,017 #■ 1866. 1864. (234 m.) Jan... 84,S97. .Feb... 72,135. .Mar.,. $51,965 ,. 46,474 , 64,993 83,702 131,648 126,970 99,602 86,4 2 164,710 221,6% 198,135 10S,082. April.. 267,488. ..May... June . .July... ..Aug... ...Sep... ...Oct.... .Nov.— .Dec.^ . 129,227 . \ear.. 1,402,106 1865. (234 in.) $98,181 86,523 95,905 106,209 203,018 237,562 251,9 6 241,370 3''0,841 395,579 346,717 171,125 2,5%,001 82,910.. .Mar... 82,722. .April.. 95,064.. .May... 106,315. .June.. 96,(23. ..July.. 106,410. ..Aug... 108 338 ..Sep... 150,148.. ..Oct... 110,932... NOV... 111,665.. .Dec... .. 1S66. (234 m.) $131,707.. .Jan.. 122,621.. .Feb. 1864. (210 m.) (210 m.) $170,078 $178,119 .Jan... 153,903 155,893 .Feb... 202,771 192,138 .Mar.., 167,301 .April., 169,299 163.699 ...May... 177,625 167.699 .June., 173,722 162,570 166,015 July.. 22*2,953 .Aug.... 218,236 198,884 ..sept... 216,788 244,834 ..Oct 222,924 212,226 •Nov;... 208,098 177,364 ..Dec.... 162,694 (242 in.) $79,735 95.843 .. 182,896 123,987 . 127,010 156,338 139,65*8 ■ .. • 244,1*4 375,534 " 221,570 220.209 265,154 1865. 1865. 1866. (285 m.) (285 m.) $252,435 278,848 348.802 338,276 271,553 $3Utf,J (286 m.) $282,436 265,796 337,158 843,736 265.780 263,244 346.781 408.445 410.802 405,510 376,470 3,970,946 —Ohio & 1864. (340 m.) $210,329 124,175.. .Mar.. 260,466 309,261 121,904. .April. 245,511...May.. 242,560. .June. 209,199. ..July. 188.223...Aug.., 275,906. ...Sep.. 410,138... .Oet.. 327,926 ..Nov... 128,741...Dec... 269,443 224,957 223.242 268,176 302,596 332,400 278,006 346.243 275,950 2,544,000.. Year.. 3,311,070 Toledo, Wab. & Western. 1866. Michigan Central.——* 1864 84,264.. .Feb... 1,186,808.. Year ' 2,512,315 .. (251 in.) (251 m.) $96,672 $90,125.. .Jan. ~ 87,791 93,763 78,607 76,248 1866. (204 in.) (204 m. $173,567 $168*741 180,140 151,630 222,411 167,007 173.732 196,154 215,784 198,082 245,627 196,138 226,047 189,447 243,417 243,413 217,641 2*23.846 239,088 220,138 178,434 161,427 . 220,062 201,169 ... 3,313,514 3,478,325 ..Year 1S65. 208,514 .July... • Pittsburg. * 1865. (204 rn.) $139,414 196,580 324,865 3,095,470 -Cleveland and *101*1? (228 m.) 175,482 243,150 185,013 198,679 243,178 224,980 271,140 331,494 .Dee.. 2,012,700 408,602 16,622 Dividends in cash, August and February Profit and loss to surplus earnings L., Alton & T. Haute.- 1864. . 110,664 153,897 165,517 Government tax 1866. 262,172 170,795. 116,224. 150,9S9. 286,133. 244,854. 98,787. 237,207 $981,847 789,014 r-Milwaukee & St. Panl.-^ $121,776. 338,490. ..July... 380,452. Ang*.. 429,191. ...Sep... 500,404. ...Oct.... $1,770,862 EXPENSES. L Interest on bonds. Transit duty on passengers ..Year 74,283 70,740 269,768 225,505 sources L Total Uaiu . $98,183 , $1,275,588 ; Repairs of locomotives, cars and machinery Fuel, cost and labor in preparing Operating the Toad, and transporting passengers and freight Ollice expenses, salaries and contingencies. 639,195. ...Oct... 681,552. .Nov.. 115,135 8S,221 . .... 93.14 8 89.8T 35less 25.50 07.28 7 54.25 1S7.47 107 54.211%.87 118 42.50 176.79 96 25.50 25.50 Maintaining railroad, bridges arid buildings 560,025. .June. 467,115. ...» uly. 586,074. ..Aug.. 551,021 ..Sep.. $102,749 fan. $25.50 $90.22 mail, rents, express, freight and other j (234 in.) , more than iron. Total. 1860. '. United States 1864. (234 in.) P ct RECEIPTS. 1866. 1864. Machin Rer’ld R.R. i Passengers; Freight (708 m.) $582,828. ..Jan.. 512,027. ..Feb. 516,822. ..Mar.. 406,773. April. 507,830. ..May (2% in.) 233,177. .Feb.. Mar.., 412,393 409,427, ’April.. 426,493. ..May... 392,641. .June.. R.R. -Marietta and Cincinnati.—» (524 in.) $314,598 1865. LumCasther. Wood. Coal ings. New Jersey Railway.—The report of the New Jersey Railway and Transportation Company for the year 1866 is as follows: .Nov... .Dee... — 1.65 1.41 1.10 1.06 1.92 1.74 Nails iron. 29££c $8.00 $2.25 $1.25 2c $2.85 $50.00 30 X 25 2 2.85 43.00 7 50 ‘2.66 33 \i 12.00 2.71 fc.OO 2X 4.25 43.00 32*4 17.00 2.94$ k.25 4 5.12* 4:lOO 40.92 23.00 3.54 6 00 6X 8.00 92.07 49.65 21.00 5.06 6.155 6.62*101.13 82X 21.00 5.50 4.00 5X 7.50 95.60 1860 186» 1862 1863 1864 18647 . $1.61 0.97 0.95 1.05 1.40 1.76 1.67 - iu«;r .. $0.96 1.40 1.42 1.40 1.58 1.84 1.84 1.30 1.35 1.53 1.90 1.73 - Chicago and Rock Island. . $1.51 Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad—Cost of Material from I860 to 1866'inclusive, compared with I860 : Mil. and Prairie du Chien.- L2,084,074 625,751 532,911 617,682 578,403 643,887 518,088 7,120.465 8,469,062 7,454,006**.Year** 588,066 460,573 603,402 . (210 m.) $100,872 • 1.31 Miscel¬ laneous. services. 1.30 3.24 and rack. Train $1.29 1.29 1.21 1.48 1.85 ¥.25 2.28 9,088,994 ..Year.. (708 in.) $571,5% 528,972 616,665 516, <508 (468 m.) (4l« m.) $690,144 $555,488. .Jan... 678,504 474,738. .Feb... 857,583 654,390. ..Mar... 7%. 866 606,073 .April.. 637,186 672,628 ..May.. 646,995 644,673 .Jane.. 684,523 554,828, July-. 712,495 641,848, Align 795,938 661,608. Sept 742.G0C. .Oct.... 858,500 712,362 681,558, Nov*... 680,963 550,483. -Dee..., $290,676 457,227 01,297 546,609 meut. $1.36 $523,560 ..Jan. 405,634 ..Feb. 523,744 ...Mar... 518,736 ..April.. 735,0*2 ...May... 922,892 ..June... 77 ,990... July.. 778,281 ...Aug... 989,053 ....Sep... 1,210,654 ....Oct..* 1,005,680 61*8,679 ment. Roadway Station services. 1.33 EARNINGS 1.866. (524 m.) $363,996 306,361 413,974 365,180 -Pittsb.,Ft. W. ,& 499,296 468,858 585,623 416,5S8 .. Mich. So & N. Indiana.- $256,600 482,164 depart- $1.33 (930 in.) (708 m.) $327,900 .. 13,429,643 15,434,775 14,5S6,943.. Year 1865. (860 in.) $541,005 depart- 3.08 1866. 1864. .. 1864. 1865. Machinists’ Car repair $3.12 ... 1861 1862 Illinois Central.- . (524 m.) 1864. 6,114,566 .. (657 m.) (657 m.) (797 m.) $984,837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188. Jan 947,146 934,133 983,855. ..Feb... 1,114,508 1,256,567 1,076,434. ..Mar... 1,099,507 1,458,455 1,153,295. .April.. 1,072,293 1,333,461 1,101,668. ..May .. 1,041,975 1,177,872 1,243,142.. June... 994,317 1,202,180 1,263,462 .July... 1,105,364 1,331,046 1,290,3 0. ..Aug 1,301,005 v1,330,615 1,411.347 .>ep 1,222,568 1,438,615 1,480.261. ,.Oet— 1,224,909 1,522,472 1,417,927. i\ o v... 1,824,217 1,429,765 1,041,083. ..Dec— * 1S00 Chicago & Northwestern (280 in.) (800 m.) $280,503 $210,171. Jan... $273,875 207,913 .Feb... 275,282 817,839 304.885. ..Mar... 299,063 890,355 258,480 270.889.. April.. 421,363 400,830 322,277 833.432...May... 368.273.. June.. 355,270 565,145 3:15,985 326.870.. July .. 4bU,710 409,250 A u g... 519,306 318,549. ...Sep... 669.605 401,280 357,956 347,OSS...Oct.... 729,759 307,919 322.749.. .Nov.;. 716,378 236,S24 285,4'.3.. .Dee... 563,401 (257 in.) 2,770,484 1 1866. MONTHLY General ottices. Year. .02 58-100 511 06 of various materials Average amount paid per day for labor by the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, in January, from i860 to 1866 inclusive: Total equal to one ton of freight. The tables below show the rise iu all kinds of railroad wages, as years cent., and the rise in prices during those years used in railroading, to be about 60 per cent : 1866. 101,030,160 139,283,992 162,152,927 184,389,374 245,995,365 $2,772,436 $4,187,158 $6,114,567 $7,976,491 $9,299,330 8 p. c. 183 1866. (242 m.) $144,084 (484 m.) $2*6,059. ..Jan... 139,171 194,167. ..Feb... 155,753 256,407. .Irtar... 144,001 270,300. April.. 138 7% 316.433...May... 325 691.. June.. 194,52* 304,917- July.. f 211,798 4,374.634 396.248.. Aug... 379,981 349,117 Sept.... 486,065., Oct ^ 375,534 3>4,830 Nov...,. ?361,610 [247,023 264,741, Dec 279,13 344,228 337,240 401,456 365,663 329,105 413,501 460,661 490,693 447,669 328,869 365,196 836,089 324,986 359,665 429,166 493.649 414,604 308.649 4,504,546 4,260,125 Mississippi.—* 1866. i860. (340 m.) (340 m.) $259,223 $267,541 239,139 246,109 313,914 326,236 271,527 277,423 290,916 283,139 304,463 253,924 349,285 247,262 344,700 806,454 350,348 278,701 372,618 310,762 412,553 302,425 284,319 — 3,793,005 — Western Union. 1864. (140 m.) $30,840 37,488 42 038 41,450 48,369 68,118 50,308 49,903 6G,565 56,871 64,942 42,195 1865. (157 m.) $43,716 37,265 32,378 83,972 63,86* 82,347 68,180 59,862 75,677 92,713 61,770 87,830 1866. (177 m) 45,102 36,006 89,299 43,833 86,913 102,686 85.608 60.608 84,462 100,303 75,248 64,473 ■ 3*40,744 2,251,525,.Year., 2,050,323 2,926,678 «,094,975**Year.* 587,078 689,383 H4,C|f THE 184 AND MISCELLANEOUS RAILROAD, CANAL £■3 ! Amount N. B.—The sums placed after name of Company shows the Funded Debt. the'outstanding. total] O .as? Payable. 'O FRIDAY. Princpal payble. DESCRIPTION. B.—The sums placed after the -name of Company shows the total Funded Debt. ' N. rO as BOND LIST. INTEREST. FRIDAY. INTEREST. DESCRIPTION. [February 9, 1867. CHRONICLE. til < <V ing. Payable. & T3 M rD m •rrt « Railroad: Railroad: Detroit and Milwaukee Fredericksburg : 1,000,000 1st Mortgage (gold coupons) tlantic A Gt. Western ($30,000,000): $2,500,000 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Fa.) 1,000,000 / lexandria and do do 2d 1st 1,014,000 Mortgage, sinking fund, {N. Y.) 2d do do 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, {Ohio) do ) 1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex 800,000 4,000,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 do Id Consolidated Bonds 13,858,000 1,472,000): Atlantic A St. Lawrence Dollar Bonds 988,000 484,000 Sterling Bonds Saltimore and Ohio ($10,112,584): Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834 ao do 1855 do 1850 do do do 1353 1,000,000 1,128,500 700,000 2,500,000 . deUtfontaine ($1,745,000): 1st 2d 1,225,000 Mortgage 433,000 do Melvidere 1 maw are, ($2,193,000): 1st Mort. (guar. C. aud A 2d Mort. do * 2d Mort. do — 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Mortgage April Jan. A Julyjl870 Feb. A Aug'1883 867,000 4,269,400 do Central Pacific of Cal. 1st mortgage Convertible Bonds Cheshire ($600,000): Mortgage Bonds Chicago and Alton 2.400,000 1,100,000 ($5,754,406): Mortgage Interest Bonds Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. Extension Bonds 5,600,000 Ap’l & Oct. 2,000,000 Jan. & July Feb. A Aug 1885 do i 1885 756,000 Feb. A Aug 1885 Jan. A July 1870 do 1896 1,300,000 900.000 83 85 935 100 500,000 1,129,000 1,619,500 1,108,124 M’ch & Sep 1873 1875 do Jan. & July 1892 2,081,000 300,000 Jan. A July 1885 do • 1886 M’ch & 600,000 169.500 Toledo Depot Bonds jMaware ($500,600): 500,000 .... Western ($3,491,500) : sinking fond 1,500,000 600,000 1 900.000 ^.11,740,000 Jan. & Jan. A Jnly • • • • .... .... .... • • 103# 104 103# 99 99# .... ..... 105 f 1874 0 6 0 — 106 * .... April & Oct 1870 do do 90# 74 May A Nov. 1873 May A Nov 500,000 225,000 ”’ April & Oct 1877 6 Jan. A 7 May A ($3,297,000): ..!! mort 1,000,000 1,294,000 4 855,000 2.258.500 631,000 Mortgage, sinking fund . . Mortgage ;; do Mississippi and Missouri River: ist Land Grant Mortgage do do do Mobile and Ohio ($6,133,243) Income bonds l Interest bonds Morris and Essex : 1. let Mortgage, sinking May A Nov. 7 7 7 7 . 3,612,000 695,000 7 7 . . . . V* * * * ..... .... .... 55 • * t . 18- • • - .... May A Nov. 1885 97 do 1877 Feb. A Ang 1868 91# May A Nov. do 1877 1883 98# .... • • • • 112 . 97 92 .... 99 87# 80 85 .... .... \ 831,900 8 ■!8 16 8 fond. 1885 4,600,000 7 Jan. A July 1893 1,500,000 7 April A Oct 1893 4,187,0(0 Sterling bonds July 402,000 7 Jan. A July 1891 Mortgage, sinking fund. 2d Jan. A 7 2.242.500 8 Feb. A Ang 69-72 4.253.500 8 April A Oct 1882 do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee A Prairie du Chien: .... r 6 Peb. A Aug. ’90-’90 314,100 0 June A Dec. ’70-’71 681,000 6 Apr. A Oct. 74-’75 399,000 6 Feb. A Aug. 1874 Milwaukee and St. Pam: 97 97 1,092,900 Mich. S. A N. Indiana: ($8,537,175) 1875 1881 1871 95 2,362,800 7 Feb. A Aug 1892 300,000 7 May A Nov. 1888 .. Sinking F’nd do 1st 2d .... July 1870 Nov. 1890 Feb. A Aug 1S83 do ms 300,560 7 Memphis A Charleston: Mortgage bonds 1st • m3 7 Dollar, convertible 97 • t Memphis Branch Mortgage 1st 2d ..... * May A Nov. 1872 A July 1869 6 Michigan Central, ($7,463,489). 100 • Jari. 6 1st Mortgage Little Miami ($1,400,000) : 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill ($960,000) : 1st Mortgage, sinking fund .... 1861 1862 7 7 $1,100,000 Loan Bonds .>.» $ 100,000 Loan Bonds , 1st Mortgage (P.A K.RR.) Bonds.. 2d do ( do ) Bonds.. 9C# 18— Ap’l A Oct. 1887 .... .... 1882 Lehigh Valley ($1,477,000) : 1st Mortgage, Scioto and Hocking Valley McGveaor Western : 1st Mortgage Maine Central: ($2,733,800) July 1875 Jan. A Jnly M’ch A Sep Jan. A July July 8 Marietta A Cincinnati ($3,688,385) : 18- do Jan. & 7 Jan. A July 1S67 do 1881 642,000 8 3d do La Crosse A Milwaukee ($1,903,000): 1st Mortgage, Eastern Division -2d do do 1st Ap’l & Oct. 1904 283,000 2,622,000 .... 69# 1881 do Extension Bonds Louisville and Nashville J’ne & Dec. 1876 270.500 ••• July 1866 May A Nov. Mortgage Mortgage Sep 1878 250,000 1875 1875 1890 7 Long Island ($932,000): Feb. & Aug 1880 do 1874 do do ?es Moines Valley ($2,088,000) : Mortgage Bonos 88 83 Feb. & Aug 1873 M’ch A Sep 1864 do 1875 Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280): Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1866 Qonieccicut River ($250,000): 1st Mortgage Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000): 1st Mortgage Cumberland Valley ($270,500): Mortgage Bonds Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): 1st Mortgage 2d do Laskawanna and Western 34# July 1890 850,000 244.200 648.200 do guaranteed..... 84 May & Nov 1893 475,000 do 94# 1885 Jan. A do do 7 Jan. & Mortgage 1st May & Nov 1880 Mortage.. May & Nov. j 1863 Quarterly. jl915 97 7 Jan. A Jnly 1866 1870 do 10 Joliet and Chicago ($500,000) : 1st Mortgage, fund Joliet and N. Indiana ($800,000): 1st mortgage Kennebec and Portland ($1,280,000): 2d 1,250,000 500,000 den,, Pain. A Ashtabula ($1,500,000): Dividend Bonds 7 Sanbury and Erie Bonds Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,880,848): 2d Mortgage. 3d do convertible 111 1898 1,250,000 3,600,000 97 7 sinking 1895 6,000,000 Cincinnati A Zanesville ($1,300,000) : 1st Mortgage Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($475,000): 1st Mortgage Cleveland A Mahoning ($1,752,400): > 111 1883 1,397.000 New Bonds 1st 99 90 July ..... 7 Mortgage Indianapolis A Madison ($640,000): 1883 Jan. & April & Oct 6 Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284) 1st Mortgage Ap’l & Oct; 3,525,000 till 1870 2,000,000 48-4,000 Chicago, Bock Island A Pacific: 1st Mortgage (C. & R. I.) 1st do (new) Cine., Ham. A Dayton ($1,629,000): 2d Mortgage l»t Mortgage, Bela., Lacka. A 1st Mortgage, May A Nov. 1877 Jan. & July 1893 .. . May A Nov 1870 Feb. & Aug 1875 7 6 do 2d Indiana Central ($1,254,500): 1st Mortgage, (interest ceased) do 2d July ’75-’80 519,000 Chicago and Milwaukee ($2,000,000): 1st Mortgage (consolidated) Chicago A Northwest.. ($12,020,483): Preferred Sinking Fund 1st Mortgage 8d 1st 1,500,000 ($3,619,000): .... Feb. & Aug 1869 J’ue & Dec. 1885 May & Nov. 1875 1867 do 6 6 . Jan. & 100# 102 'll# 92# 92# Illinois and Southern Iowa : Aug 1890 May & Nov 1890 M’eh & Sep 1865 600,000 .... Ang 1883 7 do * 101 1876 7 Jan. & Jnly 1876 do 6 7 7 7 • 101# 102# July 1883 Feb. & a . 1870 Jan. & 6 Bonds .... 90 April & Oct 1881 Jan. A July 1883 7 7 Redemption bonds 7,336,000 Mortgage (S. F.) Chicago and Ot. Eastern ($5,600,000): 2d 100 Feb. & 800,000 income 3d 1870 1875 July 97# - ... 1868 10 April A Oct Jan. & July 1888 7 do ‘ 1893 2d do Illinois Central ($13,231,000): 1st Mortgage, convertible let do Sterling i (Skg Fund), pref.... 1st May A Nov. 800,000 Trust 4th Aug 450,000 ($8,836,000): Chic., Burl, and Quincy lBt Feb. A Jan. & — .... 1870 6 927,000 Huntingdon A Broad 7bp($l,436,082): 1st Mortgage.. Aug 1882 600,000 do do Feb. A 909,000 Central Ohio ($3,673,000): 1st Mortgage W. Div 1st do E. Div 2d Ap’l A Oct ($927,000): Convertible 1879 141,000 Mortgage 3d July! 1873 Jan. A 493,000 Mortgage Central of New Jersey ($1,509,000): 1st Mortgage 1st do J’ne & Dec.! 1893 490,000 1st 83 May & Nov.; 1889 July 7 Hartford A New Haven ($927,000): 1st Mortgage Hartf., Jrov. A Fishkill($1,936,940): 1st Mortgage 2d do sinking fund 8S # Hudson River ($7,762,840): 1st Mortgage 95 do 2d sinking fund A’Oct!l870 1,180,950 600,000 Jan. & ^ • • Feb. & Aug 1882 May A Nov. 1875 Harrisburg A Lancaster ($700,000): Oct.! 1866 1883 April & Oct 1880 June A Dec 1888 M’ch & Sep 1875 do 7 do ($2,350,000): Mortgage West. Division New Dollar Jnly May A Nov. 1876 M’ch& Sep 1879 7 East. do do 2nd do do do Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds May A Nov 1872 Ap’l & 1873 149,000 Great Western, III. 90 Jan. & 7 7 ) 7 r 7 7 6 Mortgage 1st 7 — 1888 ) convertible do 2d do Grand Junction Ap’l & Oct. ) convertible Sterling convertible ($149,000): Mortgage Gal. A Chic. U. (mcl. in C. A N. W.): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund. I 1877 do" do do do Erie and Northeast Julyi 1879 J’ne & Dec. Mortgage 3d 4th. 5th Ian. A July ’70-’79 1870 do 1,700,000 * do 2d Ap’l & Oct. Mortgage 1st 2d 1880 1885 Jan. & 500,000 Catawissa ($141,000): 2d Oc;1867 Feb. & Aug 1865 1865 do 1889 do 2,000,000 380,000 . 1st Erie Railway ($22,370,982) : July! 1875 400,000 ($2,395,000): Consoldated ($5,000,000) Loan Camden and Atlantic ($983,000) : 1st Mortgage 1st Ta Ap J11 Jan. A do 200,000 Bonds conv. into pref. stock Camden and Amboy ($10,204,463): Dollar Loans Dollar Loan 2d May A Nov. 1878 7 > Pennsylvania ($598,000) : Sinking Fund Bonds .Elmira A Williamsport ($1,570,000): 82 80 5 Jan. & July 1872 6 Feb. & Aug 1874 ) do .... . .. 1876 ) ) East Ap’l A Oct. 1866 1875 1864 do ) 300,000 7 Jan. & July 1863 1894 do ) 660,000 7 Mortgage, convertible ao 7 8 3 734,000 7 ($1,798,600): Eastern, Mass. May A Nov. 1871 364,0001 1st Mortgage urlington A Missouri ($1,902,110): General do 150,000 ($1,200,000): Mufalo and State Line July Ap’l & Oct. 589.500 500,000 j do Sinking Fund Bonds Boston and Lowell ($400,000): 1st Mortgage Bonds Buffalo. N. Y. and Brie Jan. & ($734,000): Mortgage... Dubuque and Sioux City ($900,000): 1st Mortgage, 1st section do 1st 2d section 1881 1876 1883 1884 1895 do 3 J 1st 11882 1879 J’ne A Dec. 1867 M’eh A Sep'1885 Feb. & Aug 1877 1,000,000 Vossburg and Corning ($150,000): Mortgage Bonds Boston, Cane. A Montreal ($1,050,000): 1st Mortgage I do Detroit, Monroe A Toledo 2d Ap’l A Oct.; 1877 do do do ($3,500,000): Mortgage, convertible, 1st J’ne A Dec. 1896 May A Nov. \ do do do , 1867 188* 1882 1876 7 May A Not. 1915 • • ••• M * » BOND LIST (continued). RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS Description. of placed after the name the total Funded Company show Debt. Amount outstand¬ ing. Description. 5 a >1 The Ask’d 'O 3. Payable. S 1 (convertible) ... Haven, A N. London ($706,000): st Mortgage New 1st Mortgage do 2d N. Haven A Northampton ($650,000) M’ch & Sep •Tan. <fc Juh .. -1st General Mortgage New York Central ($14,095,804): $500,000 Jan. & July *9 Feb. & Aug '3 .. 140,000 Feiry Bonds of 1853 ... New London Northern ($140,000)): Jan. & July *5 May & Nov <3 >7 93 >3 6 90 90 1U2 103 (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumeddebts). Bonds of August, 1859, convert... Bonds of 1S65 New York and Harlem ($6,09S,045); 6 103 General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage 3d Mortgage N lork and New Haven ($-2,000,000) : 1st Mortgage Bonds Mortgage Bonds Y.JProv. and Boston ($232,000) : Mortgage Northern Central ($5,211,244) ; N. 1st State Loans 2d Mortgage Sinking Fund Northern 'New Hampshire ($151,409); Plain Bonds North Carolina: Mortgage Loan North Missouri: 1st General Mortgage ($6,000,000). North Pennsylvania ($3,105,785) : Mortgage Bonds 165,000 663,000 1,398,000 3,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,088,000 1,000,000 June & Dec May & Nov. do Feb. & Aug do do May & Nov. Feb. & Aug do April & Oct >3 '6 2 13 8 Feb. & Jan. & Jan. & July July .... «... .. . 102 .... April & Oct 339,000 Mar. & .... ... 92# Sep 50,000 Jan. & July 6 &Jnly 0 7 .... .... , ChattelMortgage North- Western Virginia: 1st Mortgage (guar, bv Baltimore). 2d do (guar, by B. &O.RR. 3d do (do do do ) 3d do (not guaranteed)... htonvich and Worcester ($580,000); General Mortgage Mortgage do (W.D.) Oswego and Syracuse 1st W. & O.) ($311,500); Mortgage Pacific, {S. W Branch): Mortgage, guar, by Mo 1st W.): sterling Central ($575,000): 1st Mortgage Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000): 1st Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie) ... 1st do (general) (general), c Philadel., Qermant. A Norristown ; do 2d do do do Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1861 do do 1843-4-S-9 Mortgage. ntiming. A Baltimore: Mortgage Loan Pittsburg and Connellsrille : 1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.) P'b'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) 1st 2d Mortgage do do 3d Akron Branch: 1st mortgage. Pittsburg and Steubenville : 1st 2d S5 350,000 May «fc Nov, 5 Jan. & SO July Jan. & .. do Feb & Aug 1st ' * * * 1.000,000 5,(XX),000 4,000,000 408,000 182,400 2,856,600 106,000 81 ... ) April & Oct. .... Rutlandand Burlington ($3,257,472) 60,00C 7 Mch & Sept .... ... .... .... ,. .... *<*«*« m • • » * % • 1870 • 1,891,00C 7 June & Dec 1894 •*» • •el .... 900, (XXI 7 Feb. & Aug 1865 1881 do 2,500,(XX 7 lJHXUXX 7 May & Nov. 1875 1,500,(XX ■152,355 600,000 do do Jan. & July 7 7 7 1S75 1S65 1861 1S67 550,600 (i 8 Jan. A July May & Nov. Feb. 73 • • • • • . • ••« • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .... • 1SS3 1S76 7 .... . .... 1863 1867 June & Dec Jan. & July 88 77 77 , 1874 7 7 ••• 90 85 16 76 300,000 7 Jan. & July 188” 300, (XX) 7 Apr. & Oct. 1SS5 650,00C 7 May & Nov. 1875 200,000 7 Mar. & Sep. 1882 • • • • • a 116 40 1875 • • 600,000 A iip 38 .... 7 Jan. & July 1873 564,908 8 April & Oct 1878 103 399,300 4,319,520 5 do 1870 1871 600,000 • • • • • .... 1890 1890 175,000 6 May & Nov. 25,000 6 Jan. & July do ••* • 1S75 596,000 6 Jan. .ijly do 200,000 6 . • .... April & Oct ’68-’71 850,000 6 _ • 97 ... .... • 1877 .... * J uly 1886 ... Ap J u Oc 1870 1890 do 6 2,356,509 6 Jan. & Bonds Ja 2,(XX),000 6 1,699,500 5 6 800,000 6 Ian. & July 1878 641,000 7 Mch & Sept 4,375jXX) 1 Trie 1st Mortgage Bonds Interest Bonds .!.! do do do do . .... \lo .... • - • • • » -0 • .. • • .... • •*» f • • • • • .... • • • • • .... • • • C • > 1S86 1870 752,000 7 Jan. & J uly 1S65 1868 do 161,000 6 .... • • * 1 414,158 6 Mch & Sept Loan of 1871. Lo u of 1S84 2,667,276 do 6 » • -n 94 1870 1884 A an’ally do April & Oct Jan. & July 750,000 Mortgage Bonds July • • • . • • A New York: Mortgage (North Branch). 6 April & Oct 1876 .... 97 I Pennsylvania 1st ... S Semi 182,000 6 Jan. & July 1876 Mortgage Bonds A [arris. .... Feb. & Aug 18S1 1881 do 690,000 6 May & Nov. 1876 6 6 6 Mch & Sept Jan. & July Maryland Loan. Coupon Bonds . Priority Bonds, 1st Mortgage. 11Vest Branch an 1st Mortgage. 1912 100 1912 93# 84 1912 1SS1 1st 2d .... 1,764,330 ..... • 1.000, (XX 6 1,1*0,000 6 325,000 6 Ian. & July do do 1865 1878 1864 6 May & Nov. 1883 450,000 6 ran. & July 1878 750,000 6 Ian & July 1878 (guar. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) 1,000,000 7 ..» 60# 2,500,000 • 80 May & Nov. 1872 1882 1870 Mortgage. 3 do 980,670 586,500 Improvement 85 • S .... L • • • • 1875 1,438,000 Jan. & Mch & Sept 1888 do 1888 1876 do 937,500 • • .... Jul} 1 .... Feb. & Aug 1889 1,800,000 , • • Jan. & i .... i 400,000 : • • 1S66 Mortgage, sinking fund. of Pennsylvania : .... April & Oct Jan. & July Jan. & 800,000 800,000 4 • • 7 Bonds Maryland Loan ... Jan. & July do 516,000 .400,000 340,000 600,000 '♦e April & Oct 1876 1871 1st Mortgage July 1865 July 1st Mortgage miscellaneous : • • . • !!!! do do • • • • . . 1890 1890 1880 .... .... Cincinnati and c Covington Bridge 1st Mortgage Bond a 1st .. : .... Ian. & 7 H .... ... • * »► • • v a Bends ■May & Nov. .... n 800,000 7 IMch & Sept 1879 1st Mort. Saratoga & Whitehall.... 1st Mort. Troy, 3. & Rut. (guar.) . R. Water, and Ogdens. ($1,60 ,908); 1st Mortgage (Potsdam & Watert.) 2d do (Watertown & Rome) tm- »*-,4 I 7 > Sterling Bonds, guaranteed Preferred Bonds".. # ’ May & Nov. 140,000 •** .... April & Oct 200,000 250,000 Mortgage 09 1,400,0(X Julj 2,000,(XX 1,600,000 Chesapeake and Delaware : 91# 92# April & Oct 1,000,000 Rensselaer A Saratoga consolidated: l*t Mort; Rensselaer & Saratoga . Mortgage...... Jan. & Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds.. .... 189) Reading and Columbia: 1st Mortgage.... 2d do„ v acramento Valley: 7 500, (XX 6 Jan. & July do 180,(XX) 6 guaranteed... * • 1866 68-74 Mortgage 1st Mortgage Jan. & • .... .... Jan. «Sr Jnl> Various. Cumberland (North. Cent.); 2d • • Canal July 1876 ana fund , • • • . • .... April & Oct 60,000 200,OOiV do York A 99# 100# 97# 98 do 976,S00 “ 664,000 5,200,000 5,160,000 2,000,000 Mortgage .... • .... 5 5 Western Manjland: 1st July Mortgage Jfississippi (W. Union): Mortgage Dollar Bonds 1st 1st .... 1875 1872 do Sterling (£899,900) Bonds .... Julj Aug .. Westchester A Philadelphia ($962,300) 1st Mortgage ("convert.) Coupon .. 2d do registered Western (Mass.) (6,269,520): .... 2 Jan. & Raritan and Delaware Bay: 1st .... .... 76 .... 1,180,(XX 1st Mortgage Verm. Cen. A Verm. A Can. Warren ($600,000) : 1st Mortgage (guaranteed) .... 675,000 600,000 do let Mortgage, sinking 2d do Convertible Bonds Y. ($1,595,191); do 2d 90 90 3 Jan. & Quincy and Toledo : 1st 100 Jan. & 7 ' Vermont and Massachusetts 1 Mch & Sept 1884 1,000,000 Mortgage Racine .... July 1S92 200,00t j Vermont Central ($3,500,000): 1st Mortgage July April & Oct 1,521,000 6 Sterling Bonds of 1843 Dollar Bonds, convertible Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible Philadelphia and Trenton ($200,000): Philadel., 1 183,000 Convertible Loan Philadelphia A Reading ($6,900,663): Sterling Bonds of 1836 1st S5 4,980,000 2,621,000 2,283,840 Mortgage....: do do , Phila. and Balt. 2 1,029,000 Mortgage 2d 2d April & Oct Jan. & July do 92 .... Jan. & 91 78 • 1,070,(XX do do do 7 ... Feb. & Mortgage .... April & Oct. 7 Troy Union ($680,000): Mortgage Bonds . 1,494,000 1,150,000 . Pennsylvania ($16,750,124): let .. 7 7 700,001 Convertible .... May & Nov. 2,000,00C 1st Mortgage Toledo IT abash and West ($6,653,868) 1st Mort. {Toledo & Wabash) 1st do (extended) 2d do (Toledo and Wabash) 2d do (Wabash and Western). 1st 2d 3d 1,290,OCX : Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw : ... 7 1894 1894 1894 600,00( 7 June & Dec 1867 1st Mortgage, convertible Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage i .... D 100,000 Jan. <fc Feb. & 800,00C Pottsville ($791,597) : Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. & N Equipment bonds Troy and Boston ($1,452,000) : 116 .... 4 0 416,000 346,000 do Peninsula {Chic. & N. .... July Aug 1,139,000 Mortgage, sterling do do do 500,000 500,000 .... 90 187 3 8 5 5 .... , Panama: 1st 1st 2d 1,000,000 .... 225,000 ($3,650,000).* Oswego A Rome ($350,000). 1st Mortgage (guar. byR. Jan. & July do do do 300,000 OgdensburgandL. C%a«i.($l,494,000): 1st 2d 1,500,000 April & Oct .... 2,900,000 750,000 '.... Steamboat Mortgage '1st Mortgage Ohio and Mississippi 2,500,000 360,000 Jan. .... « Aug 1900 981,(XX 7 Feb. May & Nov ms Mortgage Terre Haute A lndianapolie($f)Q,000) •• ... 7 IstMortgagc South Carolina Princpa payble. 201,50» 1st ... 4 Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage Shamokin V. A Sterling Loan d 149.400 1 Domestic Bonds Staten Island: 1st Mortgage Syr a. Bing. andN. ... ... o ^700,0tX Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: let Mortgage j ... .... Aug 73- 78 1,500,000 2,500,(XX 94 Semi an’ally 7 do 24 Payable. 7 2,SOO,OOt Sandusky and Cincinnati: let Mortgage (extended) ... 5 ,6 232,000 .... ... 2.200,001 2J Mortgage preferred 2d do income St. Louis. Jacksonville A Chicago: 1st Mortgage do 2d St. raul A Paiific of Minn : 1 1st MortgageVtax free) ... 6,917,598 2,925,00(1 Premium Sinking Fund Bonds .. Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal) Real Estate Bonds . 450,000 200,00C .... 1aR te. tJ M 'd : A T. H. ($6,700,000); «. Louis, Alton let Mortgage 485,000 Mortgage New Jersey ($805,000); 1st Subscrip. Bonds 1876 300,000 7 Jan. & July .. ing. Compan shows the total Funded Debt. Railroad Natigatuck ($300,000); Amount outstand¬ sum Railroad: - FRIDAT. INTEREST. FRIDAY. INTEREST. The sums 185 THE CHRONICLE. February 9,1867.] do 1,500,000 2,000,(XX. Mortgage 2d . . 7 7 |t July 1886 Ian. & July 1884 ran. & July 13— , ipril & Oci i '.8 • • • • . • • • - - • • t • • V. M Jun. &Dec. 1874 Mch & Sept 1880 Feb. & Aug 1863 123 1863 do 400,00910 !J«u & July 187& 2SWW10 Feb. fh An* mi 8 Jran. & .... 77. .... 39# July 1881 *00 000 7 I I’eb. & Aug 1st .... 1871 J une & Dec j au. & July 1873 1879 600,000 Mortgage .... pi •w / Qi 600,000 do ltl Mortgage 600,000 .... uei T : MXXMW) J In k*r J W [February 9,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 186 RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Companies. Marked thns (*) are leased and have flxea incomes. roads, Railroad. Dividend. Stock out¬ Periods. standing. Quarterly. 153,000 1°0 50 11,52*2,150 Alton and St Louis* Atlantic & Great Western Last FRIDA’S. Bid. Ask p’d 100 2,49-4,000 ...100 13,188,902 April and Oct Oct ...4 5 1,650,000 Washington Branch*... 100 4,434.250 April and Oct j Oct... 3 Bellefontaine Line 100 I'eb. and Aug Feb.. 100 100 Belvidere, Delaware Berkshire* Blossbun: and Corning* 50 . 1<)0 Boston, Hartford and Erie Boston Boston Boston Boston and and and and Lowell 500 Maine 100 100 100 Providence Worcester 997,112 600,000 Jan...I** 250,00<1 June & Dee. Dec. .2% 12 8,500,000 1,830,000 Ian. and July Jan.. .4 132 4,076,974 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 1363* 3,160,000 Jan. and July Jaa ..5 143 4,500,000 -Tan. and July Jan.. .5 2,100,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 Quarterly. 1 0 Broadway & 7th Avenue Brooklyn Central .100 492.150 Feb. and Aug •Aug. .3% Brooklyn City. 10 1,000,000 366,000 Brooklyn City and Newtown.. .100 850,000 Jan. and July J^n.. .3% Buffalo, New York, and Erie*.. 100 Buffalo and State Line 100 2.200,000 Feb. <fc Aug. Feb ..5 Camden and Amboy 100 4,513,800 Feb. and Aug Feb ..5 111; 378,455 Camden and Atlantic 50 682.600 do do preferred.. 50 681.665 Jan. and July dan. .5)a 60 Cape Cod 50 1,150.000 2,200,00) Feb. & Aug 100 10,685,940 Quarterly. and Cheshire (preferred) 100 2,085,925 Jan. and July 100 1,783,200 Mar and Sep. Chicago and Alton. Sep. do preferred 100 2,425.400 Mar Chicago Burlington and Quincy.100 10,193.010 May tfc Nov. Chicago and Great Eastern 100 4,390,000 Jan and July /Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*.. .100 1,000,000 100 2,250,000 Chicago and Milwaukee* Chicago and Northwestern 100 13,160,927 do ' do pref. .100 12,994,719 June & Dec. Chicago, Rock Island <fc Pacific.100 6,500.000 April and Oct Cincinnati and Chicago Air Line 100 1,106.125 Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton. 100 3,000,000 Apr and Oct. Catawissa* do preferred Central of New Jersey 50 Cincinnati,Hamilton & Chicago.100 „ 100 1,000,000 Eighth Avenue, N. Y* 500,000 Elmira, Jefferson,& CanandagualOO 500,000 Elmira and Williamsport*... -. 50 do do 500,000 pref... 50 100 16.570.100 Eric 100 8,535,700 preferred 50 Erieand Northeast*. Hannibal and St. Joseph do do pref. ..100 Hartford and New Haven 100 100 Housatomc do .100 preferred .*0 Hudson River Huntingdon and Broad Top *... 50 do do prel. 50 130 Nov. 5 July. .5 65 Kennebec and Portland (new).. 100 Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50 pref. 50 68% Dee. ’66.7 Oct...5 38 69 99 9*% Oct.. .5 600,000 Feb. .4 Jan. and Jan. and Jan.. .4 Jan...4 Jan. and Jan...3% July July July Jan...3 Jan.«ftid July July. .5 128 Mar 7s.. July Jan.. .4 10 Quarterly. Jan Feb. and Aug Feb. .2% 60 Jan. and July Jan. and July J an... 3% 82 Feb. & Aug. 59% 73 January. Jan..7 Feb. & Aug. Feb.. 5 lio” Jan. and July Jan.. .5 Quarterly. 100 90 59% 74 52 820,000 i,i8a,ooo May and Nov Nov. .4 6,961,971 April and Oct Oct. ..4 130 131 190,750 Jan.and July Jan... 3% Feb. and Aug’ Feb.. 5 Mar. & Sep. Sep .4 Jan. and July July.. 3 Jan. and July July. .4 Quarterly. jau...i% 114% 214% 85 92 95 500,000 Quarterly. Jan.. .2% 126 130 °er). and Aug Aug. ..2 105" Juneand Dee Dec. .4 Jan. and July Jan.. .2 67% 70 1.000,000 May and Nov 20 35 Nov. .4 3,588,300 3,500,000 Feb. and Aug New Bedford and Taunton 100 500,000 Jan. and July do New Haven, N. Loud., & Stou .100 738,538 New Haven and Northampton.. 100 1,010,000 New Jersey 50 5,000,000 Feb. and Aug London Northern -. 100 50 104% 2.469,307 3,150,150 2,363,600 76 Jan. and 66 25% 26 75 70 97% 260% 265 115 120 61% 62% 104 124 110 104% 96% 98% 100 .100 1,700,000 Jan. and July Jail.. .4 100 2,520,700 Rensselaer & Saratoga consol. .100 800,000 April and Oct Oct. ..4% 500,000 April and Oct Oct ..3 Saratoga and Whitehall..... .100 800,000 April and Oct Oct.. .3 Troy, Salem & Rutland 100 Providence and Worcester Raritan and Delaware Bay .... Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb’glOO 1.991.900 Rutland and Burlington 100 2,233,376 St. Louis, Alton, & Terre HautelOO 2.300,000 do do pref.100 1,700,000 St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chic*lC0 Sandusky, and Cincinnati 100 2,989,090 do do pref.100 393,073 Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO 862,571 Saratoga and Hudson River.... 100 1,020,000 Savannah <fc Charleston. 10O 1, <’00,000 Schuylkill Valley*. 676,050 50 Second Avenue (N. Y.) 100 650,000 Shamokin Valley & Pottsville*. 50 869,450 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) 100 750,000 South Carolina 100 5,819,275 Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.l(K) 1,200,130 Terre Haute & Indianapolis.... 50 1,929,150 Third Avenue (N. Y.). 100 1,170,000 Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw.. .1(X) 1,700,000 do do lstpret.100 1,700,000 do do 2d pref.100 1,000,000 Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 2,442,350 do do preferred. 50 984,700 Troy and Boston 100 607,111 Troy and Greenbusli* 100 274,400 Jan. and July Jan...5 33% Annually. Feb. and 34% 64 May. .7 Aug Aug. .3 July Jan... 2%' 60 Apr. and Oct Jan. and 65 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2 120 Quarterly. Jan. and July Quarterly. . Ang3X*. 700,000 Mar and Sep. Utica and Black River Vermont, and Canada*...: Vermont and Massachusetts Warren* Western (Mass) Western Union (Wis. & Ill.)... Worcester and Nashua Jan...6 200 50 100 100 50 Morris do (consolidated) 10 preferred 100 Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 do preferred. 50 Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 Union... West Branch and 50 . 1,141,650 Jan. and July Jan...5* Jan...2 317,050 January. 75 Delaware Division Delaware and Hudson Delaware and Raritan 42% Nov. 3% 811,660 Jan. and July Jan 100 25 25 41% May and Nov June and Dec Dec ..3% .4 100 2,860,000 June aud Dee Dec...4 2,860,000 Jan. and July Jan.. AX 53% 57 1,408,300 Jan. and July Jan.. .3 134% 5,627,700 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 100 100 100 50 Chesapeake and Delaware Chesapeake and Ohio 1,575.963 June 8,228,595 1,633,350 10,000,000 2,298,400 5,104,050 1,025,000 1,175,000 1,908,207 2,888,805 2,051,000 Dec Feb. and Feb. and Feb. and Aug Aug Aug May and Nov Feb. and Ang Feb. and Aug Feb. and Aug Feb. and Aug . .3 Feb. .3 Feb. .8 Feb.. 5 Nov..5 Feb.. 3 Feb ..5 Feb ..6 Feb .6 108% 146 147 54% 82 121% 23 32% 33" 13 . 13% . 2,787,000 Susquehanna.100 1,100,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 50 750,000 Quarterly. Sept. .4 Coal.—American Ashburton 70* 1 77" 25 50 Butler . Consolidation Central Cumberland Pennsylvania SpringMouutain Spruce Hill.. 835,000 600,009 May and Nov Nov. .4 loo 1,100,000 Feb. and Aug N. Orleans, Jackson &Gt. West. 100 H'2% 102% 115% 107 Miscellaneous. 100 « 5,312,725 100! OlAA. 100 6.9*2,866 Jan.and July Jan ..5 75% 75% Michigan Southern and N. Iud..l00 9,381,800 Feb. and Aug do do guaran.lQP 1,089,700 Feb. and Aug Aug. .5 Feb.. 3 Milwaukee and Prai rio Du ChierilOO 3,014,(KM) 85 1st pref.100 3,082,000 February.... Feb..8 do do 95" 80 do do 2d pref.100 1,014,000 February.... Feb.. 7 86 40 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 1,000,000 40% do 60 preferred 100 2,400,000 Feb. and Aug F.10,«or5c 59 Mine Hill & Schuylkill Haven.. 50 3,708,200 Jan. and July Jan.. .4 12% 113 Naugatuck Ask 100 . Wyoming Valley 494,380 111 100 50 100 Bid. . July Jan.. .5 Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. .100 3,077,000 Feb. and Aug Feb...3 do 356.400 Apr. and Oct Oct...4 preferred.100 Ohio and Mississippi : 100 19,822,850 Jan .7 do preferred.. 100 2,950,500* January. Old Colony and Newport 100 4,819,760 -Tan. and July Jan.. .3 482.400 Feb. and Aug Aug. .4 Oswego and Syracuse 50 Pacific of Missouri 100 3,581,598 Panama (and Steamship) 100 7,000,000 Quarterly. Jan ..6 50 20,000.000 May and Nov Nov. .4 Pennsylvania 218.100 Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentlOO Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5,069,450 Jan. and July Jan...3 Philadelphia and Reading 50 20,240,673 Jan.and July Jan...5 Phila., Gennant’n, & Norrist.’n* 50 1.476.300 Apr. and Oct Oct...5 Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore 50 8.973.300 Quarterly. Oct...5 Pittsburg and Connellsville 50 1,774,623 Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolOO 9,312,442 Quarterly. Jan.. 2% Portland, Saco. & Portsmouth. 100 1,500,000 June and Dec Dec. .3 Lehigh Navigation Memphis aurt Charleston Michigan TY-mlr-ll Central Mobile and Ohio Morris and Essex.. Nashua and Lowell Last p’d 5,285,050 Jan. and July Jan ..4 1,500,000 Jan. and July Jan ..4 1,755,281 Quarterly. Jan .3 795,360 3,068,400 May and Nov Nov. 4.518.900 Quarterly. Jan.. New York and Harlem 50 50 do Dreferred... New York Proviuence &Bostonl00 Ninth Avenue 100 Northern of New Hampshire.. .100 Northern Central 50 North Missouri 100 North Pennsylvania 50 Norwich and Worcester 100 Canal. Jan. ..3 Quarterly. Aug. .2 Feb. and Aug Aug. .2 Louisville and Frankfort Louisville and Nashville 100 5,527,871 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3% Louisville, New Albany & Chic.100 2,800,000 Macon and Western UK) 1,500,000 Jan. ..5 McGregor Western* 100 Maine Central 100 1,447,060 Marietta and Cincinnati 50 2,029,778 do do 1st pref. 50 6,586,135 Mar. and Sep Sep. ..3s do do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. and Sep Sep.. 3s Manchester and Lawreuee Periods. standing. Wrightsville,York& Gettysb’g* 50 50 5,253,836 3,000,00(i 514,646 50 3,572,400 50 2,646.100 50 1,852,715 50 1,109,591 Islaud 140 March Jan. and 50 Little Miami Dittle Schuylkill* out¬ - 50 6,632,250 Lehigh Valley Lexington and Frankfort L<ong *70* 37?; 104 Nov. .4 Jan... 5 Jan.’66 4 34 >* ! 85 120 120W Oct. ..S Jan.. .2% •Ih'l .5 136 Nov 4 100 23,374,400 Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50 1,689,900 412,000 Indianapolis and Madison 100 do do pref.. 100 407,900 50 1,997,309 Jeffcrsonville Joliet and Chicago* 100 1,500,000 do 131 25 Aug May & Nov. Jan. and July Jan. and July April and Oct Quarterly. Jan. and July vi ay and N ov Jan. and July Feb.and Illinois Central do Jan...2% 122* 123 Jan.. .2)$' 57% Sep.. .5 113% 113% 114% 117 Sep.. .5 100 3,540,000 100 4,366,8(K) May and Nov Nov..3% 52" 100 1,900,000 Fitchburg Georgia v 50 60 .... . do 132 470,000 .100 2,000,000 Cleveland, Columbus, &Cinciu.l00 6,000,000 Cleveland <& Mahoning* 50 1,036,000 Cleveland, Paiuesville & Ashta.100 5.000.000 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 5,403,910 Cleveland and Toledo. 50 4,841,600 Columbus & Indianapolis Ceut.100 Columbus and Xenia* 50 1.490.800 50 1'500,000 Concord 350,000 Concord and Portsmouth 100 500,000 Coney Island and Brooklyn 100 Con’ticut and Passumpsic. pref. 100 1,514,300 Connecticut River 100 1.591.100 Covington and Lexington 100 1,582,169 Dayton and Michigan 100 2,384,931 Delaware* 50 406,132 Delaware, Lacka., & Western .. 50 10,247,050 Des Moines Valley 100 1,550,050 952,350 Detroit and Milwaukee 100 do do pref..... 100 1,500,000 Dubuque and Sioux City 100 1,673,641 do do pref.. ..100 1,987,351 Eastern, (Mass) 100 3,155,000 Cincinnati and Zanesville. FRIDAY. Dividend. Stock roads, few York Central .100 24 801 000 F«*b. and Amr Feb ..3 Jan Irregular. New York and New Haven.... 100 5,000.000 Jan...l% 50 1,919,000 do preferred Atlantic & St. Lawrence* Baltimore and Ohio Companies. Marked thus (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. 50 100 100 100 ... 50 50 10 Wilkesbarre 100 Wyoming Valley 60 61 Jan.. .5 40 36 49 38 Quarterly. Oct... 5 Jan. and July Jan...6 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...5 147 64 1,500,000 2,000,000 1,600,000 6,000,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 3,200,000 1,250,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3% Jan. and Dec. Dec...4 Jan. and July 69" 42* 100 Gas.—Brooklyn Citizens Harlem (Brooklyn) 2,175,000 Apr. and Oct 1.250. non Feb. and Aug Aug 25 2.000,000 Feb. and Ang Aug.... 20 50 Wells, Fargo & Co 120 i:noo,ooo Jan. and July Jan...5 644,000 Jersey City & Hoboken.... 20 1,000,000 Manhattan 50 4,000,000 Jan. and July Metropolitan 100 2,800,000 New York 50 1,000,000 May and Nov 750.000 Jan. and July Williamsburg 50 Improvement.—Canton 100. (16* pd) 4,500,000 Boston Water Power 100 4,000,000 Brunswick City... 100 1,000,000 Telegraph.—Western Union... 100 28,450,000 Jan. and July Western Union, Russ. Ex..l00 10,000,000 Quarterly. Express.—Adams 100 10,000,000 Quarterly. American 500 3,000,000 Quarterly. Merchants’ Union United States 42% 100 20,000,000 100 6,000,000 100 10,000,000 100 4,000,000 Nicaragua... »...100 ’1,000,000 Steamship.—Atlantic Mail...... 100 4,000,000 Pacific Mail 100 20,000,000 Jan...5 145 May.... Jan.. .5 45% July 20 26 46 27 Jan. 2... 44% 44% Ang.3.. 65% 66% 65% Aug. 3.. Quarterly. Aug. 3.. 13 69 69% Tt ansit.—Central American Sonth American NaviuationlOO Union Navigation 100 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25 New York Life & Trust.... 100 Union Trust... 100 United States Trust 100 .... uarterly. Dec.. .6 2^600,ooo Quarterly. Dec...5 ‘ 1,000,000 Jan.and Jiuly Jan...5 1,000,000 Fel). and A Ang.... 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan. .4 1,000,000 Jan. and July Rutland Marble 106 159% 120 125 Jan ..5 100 5,097,600 Mining.—Mariposa Gold Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100 5,774,400 Quartz Hill Gold Quicksilver 104 159 116 9% 22 , 11 22% 25 1,000,UO0 100 10,000,000 35 1000,000 MayandNov. Nov. 38 I 40 INSURANCE ITEMS. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Companies. 10 Bliven 10 Brooklyn 5 Buchanan Farm 10 Central 100 Cherry Run Petrol’m.... 2 Cherry Run special 5 Clinton Oil. • • • 10 Empire City 5 Brevoort 1 50 Germania Great Republic G’t Western Consol disastrous one, and, assuming the expe¬ for calculating the future, the com¬ 65 10 Second National Shade River 5 Union., 10 United Pe’tl’m F’ms.... 2 United States 10 "is “ kk —making a of the Sun’s 10 Venango (N. Y.) total of all issues $ 1,251,00a. One of the heavy items liabilities is an indebtedness of over 500,000 dollars. COPPER MINING STOCK LIST. .paid 3 Adventure JStna Albany & Boston. e • • • Marked thus (*) 25% write Marine Lake Superior...'. 2 Madison 6 00 Mandan 4% Manhattan 5% Mass 4% Medora 1% Mendotat 5 Merrimac 6)4 Mesnard 8 j . . . . 1)4 63 10 00 Milton 18% Minnesota 5)4 "50 National Native 2 80 Naumkeag 60 1 00 ■1 10 New Jersey Consol.... lu — 30 40 New York 4 50 4 00 North Cliff 11 % 1 North western 11 66 60 00! Norwich 7 .... 3 . . 1% Allouez . . 1 American Amygdaloid . . 2% Caledonia Canada Charter Oak Central Concord Copper Creek Copper Falls Copper Harbcrr.... Dacotah • . • • • .... . • • • • Arctic 50 . • • • • Astor. 25 • n% • • • Atlantic . • . • . . . — 1 — 3 4 . 1 .... 2% 3% Davidson Delaware Dev*n .... .... .... .... . . ....20% 1 Dorchester Dudley Eagle River . , . . • . • .... ... 1% 1% 3% ... . • • • .... .... .... .... • • • • 10 Everett .... Bluff... ....5% Flint Steel River.. ....— 9% .... .... .... .... • Evergreen Excelsior .... .... 1 .... • • • • • French Creek .... Girard Great Western Hamilton * .... 35 50 36 Franklin 66 .... .... 2 .... .... .... 2 .... .... ....17% 11 75 1% Hancock Hanover 2% 1% .... Hope .... Hudson Hulbert .... .... .... Hilton • 1 00 • « . 3 00 - — .... % .... Humboldt Hungarian .... Huron Indiana Isle Royale* Keweenaw ....) 2 00 5 1 .... • • 65 10% Excelsior 33 00 8 3 1 .. Firemens Trust.. 7 50 4 00 12 Rockland St. Clair Fulton..'. Gallatin Gebhard Germania St. Louis St. Mary’s 5)4 Salem )4 1 Seneca Sharon % Sheldon & Columfcian.21 South Pewabic South Side Star jrior GreatWestem*t.. 100 25 [reenwich Grocers’ 50 1 Guardian 2 1 00 3 50 11% 8 2 25 V- • • . Last Bid. Las paid. Sale. 1 00 Companies. Bid. Askd nar . ltl . Mining. 5 00 1 20 .... — . ... 10 — Alameda Silver American Flag Atlantic & Pacific MINING STOCK LIST. .. ... . . Bates & Baxter 5 1 3 30 ♦♦44 ftentrvn .. 5 Bob Tail Boscobel Silver .... . Bullion Consolidated.. Burroughs CentralT .. — .. — 1 05 2 75 .... ^-m Church Union Columbian G. & S — .. Crozier Des Moines Downieville Echla t • m CG 85 50 4» 35 . • 15 i — .. .. . • .. • • • — .... .... Fall River First National ... .... 3 00 4 75 Gilpin 4 80 — Gold Hill par ?.. 10 — 2 25 Hope Keystone Silver — Bid. jAskd 1 40 1 1 50 1 00 1 05 46 48 22 80 6 7 .... 2 Kip & Buell LaCrosse — % Lansenderfer — Liberty 50 75 75 80 20 00 30 GO 7 Liebig- ... 5 Montana Montauk New York 10 Nye — Silver People’s G. & S. of Cal. Perry and Peoples’ Quartz Hill Rocky Mountain Pah Ranagat Ccn. Companies. Copake Iron Foster Iron Lake Superior Iron Bucks County Lead Denbo Lead Manhan Lead Phenix Lead Iron Tank Storage _ par 1 30 10 3 CO — .... .... 100 .... .... 5 4 10 4 20 .... 6 75 7 00 30 50 .... — .... — — . , .... Mercantile Mut’l*tl00 50 Metropolitan *t... 100 Montauk (B’lyn). ..50 Merchants’ Nassau (B’klyn)....50 7)4 National 50 North American*. 50 North River 25 Pacific 25 100 Park 20 Rutgers’ 25 Security + Standard Saginaw, L. S. & M.. Wallkill Lead .. — 25 — 25 Long Island Peat — 5 Rnssell File Savon de Terre 3 35 . . . — 3 40 , . 83 81 - Rutland Marble 500,000 350,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 . & .... ... 20 CO 3 60 .... • ••• Sun Mutualt Stuyvesant Tradesmen’s United States 200,000 150,000 150,000 do do do do do do do 346,426 129,644 do tlo do do do do do do do do do do do do do Jan. and July Feb. and Ang Jan. and July do 601,701 385,489 April and Oct. 229,729 Jan. and July do 194,317 173,691 154,206 998,687 188,170 457,252 208,969 206,909 150,580 138,902 Feb. ’67 July ’66 July’65 Jan. ’67.3% Ang ’66. Apr. ’65. Jan. ’67 3% Jan *67 JaD. ’67 . . 107 July ’66 Jan. ’6’ . July ’65 . Jan. *67 . July ’65 July ’65 . . Feb.’65 . Aug.’66.3% Feb. Mar. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. ’67 ’66 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 July ’65 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. ’67 ’67 ’67. ’07 3% ’67 ’67.. July '66 July ’66... Jan. ’67 .10 July ’65 . Jan. ’67. Jan. ’67.-8 Jan. ’67 .6 Jan. ’67 .4 Jan. ’67 .6 Feb. ’67 ..5 Jan.’67 .5 . . . . July '66 . .5 92% Oct. ’66 Jau. ’67 Jan. ’67 ..5 Jan. ’67 .5 do Feb. and Aug. Jan. and July, Jan ’67. . .o do Jnly ’66. do do Jan.’67.3% July’66.3% Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67..5 Feb. ’67..5 do Jan. and July. Ang. ’66 Feb. and Ang. Feb.’66.3% Jan. and July, Jan. ’67 .6 do July ’66 ..5 50 1,000,000 1,277,564 50 200,000 230,903 100 200,000 217,843 100 200,000 177,915 ..107 500,000 3,206,424 ’66 5 25 IfcX^OOO 208,049 Feb. andAng. Ang. '67 .5 Jan. 25 150,000 142,&30 Jan. and July Jan. ’67 ..5 26 250,000 360,412 do Aug. ’66..5 60 400,000 569,623 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67...5 . Star Sterling * par . If8,828 138,166 Feb. and Aug. do 1,024,762 195,571 Marchdo Sep and 245,984 1 59,721 Jan. and July do 279,864 do 161,252 do 704,303 282,35 197.633 150,135 211,178 640,000 1.322,469 200,000 228,644 1,000,000 1,192,303 150,000 150,646 150.000 216,184 200,000 235,518 300,000 311.976 210,000 244,066 200,000 222,199 1,000,000 1,175,665 20 150,000 Phoenix t Br’klyn. 50 1,000,000 Reliei. 50 200,000 Republic* 100 300,000 Resolute* 100 200,000 25 St. Mark’s St. Nicholast..... 25 Bid. Askd , 349,521 201,216 600,000 200,000 200.000 150, (XX) 200.000 People’s ... Wallace Nickel .... — Meehan’& Trade’. 25 Mechanics (B’klyn). 50 Mercantile ...100 Peter Cooper 0 — Companies. Tudor Lead 5 100 Niagara MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Bid. Askd 100 50 20 Smith & Parmelee Texas Yellow Jacket Manhattan N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100 1 24 8 252,057 Long Island (B’kly). 50 200,000 260,264 Lorillard* 25 1,000,000 1,423,924 12 .... 10 20 150,000 “so — 25 25 30 200,010 King’s Co’ty(Bklyu)20 150,000 Knickerbocker.... 40 280,000 Lafayette (B’kly).. 50’ 150,000 Lamar 100 300,000 New Amsterdam.. 25 N. Y. Equitable 3 35 — 150,000 Jefferson 40 — 163,860 430,295 207,345 2,485,017 200,000 200,000 Market* 107 Jan. '67.. do Feb. and Aug. Jan. and July, Jan. *67 do July ’66.3% do July ’65 . do July ’66 . 204,000 230,3 2 150,000 149,024 150,000 156,063 200,000 215,079 150,000 149,755 May and Nov. and 200,000 229,809 Feb. and Aug. Jan. 500,000 592,394 Jan. and July. July. 200,Q00 195,875 1,000,000 3,177,437 Jan. and July. 200,000 228,122 Feb. and Aug. April and 200,000 186,170 Jan. and Oct. July, 200,000 172,318 do 25 60 8 50 258,054 150,000 .100 1,000,000 Lenox Knickerbocker Mill Creek % 85 10 7 — ..100 12 35 12 45 25 8 00 8 CO 14 12 2 15 2 2C — 12 1 .. Consolidated Colorado. Consolidated Gregory. Corydon .... 1 3 2 2 10 .. 50 30 50 00 Grass Valley Gunnell 1 Gunnell Union Holman 1 212,145 140,324 200,000 200,000 200,000 Irving 150 . 500,000 200,000 100 Jan. ’67 Jnly. Jan. 65.. .5 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’66...5 March and Sep Sep. ’66.. .5 May and Nov. Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65..4 . 50 .100 Indemnity International .5 J. ’67.3*c3* Jan. ’67 500,000 501,543 250,000 253,232 300,000 324,456 200,000 200.362 200,000 181,052 June and Dec. Dec. ’66..5 300,000 820, ill Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67...6 200,000 248,392 Feb. '67..6 do 153,000 241,521 ..4 150,000 123,577 Jan. and July July’64 .10 Jan.’67 do 300,000 378,440 Feb. and Aug. 210,000 314,787 Jan. and July, Aug. 5 p. s. Jan.’67. 5 250,000 231,793 do July’64.3% 500,000 391,913 Jan. ’67 .5 do 200,000 . 212,594 Feb. aud Aug. Aug. 6 5 400,000 440,870 July'66 200,000 244,296 Jan. and duly. Oct, '65....5 .5 April and Oct. 250,000 268,893 Jan. and July. Jau. '67 ..7 500,000 1,199,978 and Sep Mar. '64 400,000 86 ,970 March July. July ’64 Jan. and 200,000 1458,32 April and Oct. Oct. '66. 300,000 861,705 Jan. aud July, .July'66 Import’& Traders. 50 t Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares. Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares. % Capital $200,000, In 20,000 shares. Capital of Lake'Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares Companies. 50 Hope i. GOLD AND SILVER — Howard Humboldt... * Periods. 223.775 dan. and July. 20o,976 Jan. and July, 440,603 dan. and July. and 213,590 Jan. and July. Jan. 15 150,000 50 400,000 50 200,000 100 2,000,000 Hamilton Hanover Hoffman Home .... .. 10 25 50 100 50 50 Globe . .... 30 Firemen’s 17 Firemen’s Fund... 10 6)4 Ridge 50 Exchange — 10 Resolute 40 100 Empire City — Quincy % Corn Exchange... 50 Croton 100 Eagle Portage Lake 31 50 35 66 2 25 13 25 ....33 5 8 Knowlton Pittsburg & Boston... 5)4 41 00 Princeton Providence 1% Edwards Empire 5)4 3 00 3% 22 00'24 80 5 00 15 Pontiac (Alb’y).lOO Commercial....... 50 Commonwealth... 100 100 Continental * Commerce 50 Pewabic Phoenix 25 25 Brooklyn 17 Central Park 100 Citizens’ 20 70 City Clinton 100 Columbia* 100 Commerce (N.Y.).. 100 7 Ogima Pennsylvania * Pethefick 25 Bowery Broadway .... 24% 59 (Br’klyn)..50 25 Baltic Beekman .... Dana Ayres Mill & Assets. 25 $300,000 50 200,000 50 200,000 Exch’e.. 100 200,000 . 9 Boston . DIVIDEND. Dec. 31,1865. Risks. Capital. . 4% Bay State Bohemian . Adriatic JStna American American .... . . . . • . 1 2 - • . ...17 . Atlas Aztec Alnino are participating, and (t) paid 1 Lafayette * Bid. .... Algomah Arnold • • • • INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Companies. Bid. !Askd, Companies. their safety. wisely or unwisely provided for Mutual.—The amount of scrip expunged by this company* and the market value of the several issues thereof up to the close of October, are as in the following statement: Amount. Value. I Amount. Value. Issue of 1862 06 @97% ? Issue of 1864.... $587,000 , 78 @80 $233,000 1863.... 201,000 85 @87 | kk “ 1865 ... 230,000 71 @73 fSuN .....10 Rynd Farm cent., and on the the increased it is impos¬ The past panies have thus 10 25 Oceanic Pit Hole Creek of fire in¬ Insurance in Chicago.—A few months ago the rates in this city were increased fully 50 per 1st inst. an increase of 50 to 75 per cent, was made on The reason assigned for this movement is that tariff. sible to do a safe business at the rates heretofore ruling. surance year has been a peculiarly rience of that year as a basis 1 N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons 5 5 10 10 National First 22 1 20 5 Excelsior....... 10 Natural 5 N. Y. & Alleghany 5 New York & Newark.... 5 N. Y. & Philadel 5 g Bradley Oil 2 2 Ivanhoe Manhattan Mountain Oil 3 15 30 3 05 10 10 Coal and Oil 20 par HamiltonMcClintock. -.. 5 .10 Bennehoff Run Bergen Hammond 10 Allen Wright........ par JJemis Heights... Askd Bid Companies. Bid. Askd 187 CHRONICLE THE February 9, 1867.] .. Washington Washington *t—100 Williamsburg City.50 Yonkers & N. Y.. 100 . 287,400 160,000 500,0001 581,689 Feb. and Aug. Jan. ’87 ..5 151,539 Jan. and July. July'66...5 550,801 do 115% 188 THE CHRONICLE* Insurance. Insurance. The Mercantile Mutual i INSURANCE No. 35 WALL $1,261,349 Mutual ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844 rcbatement on lent in value to Instead of issuing based on the a PER CENT. Co., The Cash Capital- ----- $200,000 OO Assets. March 9, 1866 - -252,554*22 Total JLixbilitirs - - - 26,850 OO Losses Paid I s 1865 - - -201,588 14 Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the Company, submit the following Statement of its Fire Company. the 31st on December, 1S6G: Premiums received from 1st Marine on Risks, scrip dividend to dealers, risks are equally profitable, this Company makes such cash abatement or discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, ana the nett profits re¬ maining at the close of the year, will he divided to the stockholders. 8 This Company continues to make Insurance on Marine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, aud Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Rathbone, Pros. & Co., in Liver¬ pool. Premiums 1st This ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS SOLICITED. Policies not marked off on 2,183,325 15 •. Total amount of Marine Premiums. .$10,410,346 31 No Polices have been issued upon Life Risks; nor upon Fire Risks nected with Marine Risks. Board of Directors: HENRY M. TABER, JOSEPH FOULKE, STEP. CAMBRELENG, D. LYDIG discon¬ TRUSTEES. D. Colden Murray, K. Havdock White, HENRY S. LEVERICH. JACOB $7,632,236 70 ELLWOOD WALTER, President NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest. during the period $5,683,895 05 The Security Insurance Co., $1,194,173 23 No. 119 Company has the following As¬ sets, viz.: Cash . Capital, United States and State of New York Stock, City, Bank aud other Stocks, $6,171,885 00 secured by Stocks, and other¬ Loans wise ’ Real Estate aud Bonds and 1,129,350 00 221,260 00 Mortgages, • due the sundry notes and claims Company, estimated at Total Amount of Assets yEtna Fbank W. A. F. HASTINGS, President. Ballaiid, Secretary. $12,536,304 46 Germania Fire Ins. NO. 175 Company, HARTFORD. .777 Perpetual. Six per ceiif Interest on the outstand¬ ing certificates of profits will be paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, aud on ai'.er Tuesday tlte CASH Assets SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866 205,989 83 Fifth of February next. The TOTAL ASSETS outstanding certificates of the issue Liabilities 394,076 96 . $705,989 83 AND DAMAGE BY FIRE. their legal representatives, or GARR1GUE, President. JOHN E. KAHL, Secretary. on and after Tuesday the Fifth of February next, from which date all interest thereon will cease. LOSS of 1864 will be redeemed and paid to the holders thereof, January 1, 1867 -.$4,478,100 74 INSURANCE AGAINST $500,000 O CAPITAL, RUDOLPH I1ENDEE, President. COODNOWj Secretary. Co., BROADWAY, N. Y. $3,000,000. Ii. J. J. Dollars, FIRS AND INLAND INSURANCE. r- CAPITAL Million ($1,000,000.) 141,866 24 3,837,735 41 434,207 81 Premium Notes and Bills Receivable.. Cash in Bank Charter BROADWAY, One Interest and C. J. Dmfard, Secretary. Incorporated 1S19. REE^E, President. OH AS. D. HARTSHORNE, Secretary. Expenses N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Henry Eyre, Henry R. Kunhardt. Cornelius Grinnell, John S. Williams, Joseph Slagg, William Nelson, Jr., Jas. D. Fish, Charles Dimon, Geo. W. Hennings, A. William lleye, Francis Hathaway, Harold Dollner, Aaron L. Reid, Paul N. Spoflbrd. Ellwood Walter, OF JOSEPH BRITTON, AMOS ROBBINS, SUYDAM, WILLIAM RE M SEN, 1866 to 31st December, 1866 Losses paid THOS. P. CUMMINGS, ROBERT SCHELL. WILLIAM U. TERRY, FRED. SCHUCHARDT. THEODORE W. RILEY, JACOB REESE. JOSEPH GRAFTON, JNO. W. MERSEREAU, L. B WARD, Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ same terms as any Returns of Premiums and James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Watt, Insurance favorable $8,282,021 26 January. 18(56 ary, or Damage by other responsible Company Insures against Loss on as January, 1866, to 31st De¬ cember, 1861} principle that all classes of CIIAS. Insurance Company, OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. affairs premiums in lieu of scrip, equiva¬ an average scrip dividend of TWENTY Fire Insurance NEW YORK, JANUARY 25th, 1867, this Company has paid to its IN CASH, a Hope Atlantic STREET, NEW YORK. year Insurance. OFFICE OF THE COMPANY. Assets, Jan. 1st, 1867 During the past Policy-holders, [February 9, 1867. The certificates to be of payment, produced at the time and cancelled. Niagara Fire Insurance COMPANY. NEW YORK NO. 62 A dividend T wenty Per Cent. Is declared on the net earned premiums AGENCY, WALL STREET. of the JAS. A. ALEXANDER, Agent. Sun Mutual Insurance of Company, for the year ending 31st December, 1866, for which certificates will be issued on and after Tuesday the Second of April next. J. H. (insurance buildings,) John D. Jones, Charles Dennis, Wm. - - $2,716,424 32 This Company insures against Marine Risks on Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland Navigation Risks. a return MOSES H. GRINNELL, Prcs't. EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Frcs't Isaac H. A. P. Pillot William E. Dodge Geo. G. Hobson, Gordon W, Burnham, Frederick Chauncey, David Walker, Scc'y. The Mutual Life Insu- Lowell Holbrook, Weston, R. Warren Royal Phelps,. Caleb Barstow RANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK, Lane, Bryce, Leroy M. Wiley, CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1866, oveb $16,000,000 00 Daniel S. Miller. FREDERICK S. R. A. *wrtAnes, I ISAAC ABBATT, } J0HN M STUART. [P,i Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS. cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, P. NOTMAN, Secretary. William H. Webb. Paul Spofford. JOHN D. JONES, President, DENNIS, Vice-President CHARLES W. If. H. J. D. MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres’t, HEWLETT, 8d Vice-Pref’L President. HARTFOHD Accident Insurance Co., OF HARTFORD, CONN. Cash Capital. $300,000 L NEW YORK OFFICE, ,155 & 157 BROADWAY. , Shephard Gaudy. WINSTON, President. McCURDY, Vice-President. equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, Losses George S. Stephenson, Moore, Ilenry Coit, Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, Charles II. Russell, $1,000,000 270,353 Chartered 1850. James Low W. H. II. DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT. Premiums paid In gold will be entitled to premium in gold. Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert, Joshua J. Ilenry, Dennis Perkins, Joseph Gaillard, Jr. J. Henry Burgy, Cornelius Grinnell, C. A. Hand, B. J. Howland, Benj. Babcock, r Fletcher Westray, Robt B. Mintum, Jr. James ASSETS, Dec. 31, ISt>5 CAPITAL, SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 CHAPMAN, Secretary. TKUSTEBS! 49 WALL STREET. CASH 253 per By order of the Board, COMPANY. NO. 12 WALL STREET. WESLEY E. SHADER, Manag r. Insures Against DEATH BY ACCIDENTS of any description, with liberal compensation in case of bodily injury.' WANTED.—Active and energetic Agents to act for this Company. Apply as above. Hanover Fire Insurance COMPANY, No. 45 WALL STREET. January 1st 1866. Cash capital \..... Surplus Gross Assets \ ... Total Liabilities ,.. $400,000 156,303 81 $550,803 24,550 IS BENJ. S. WALCOTT. 1' President, J. Rbxsik Lam, Secretary* February 9,1867.] the chronicle. PRICES CURRENT. pgr* In addition to the duties noted below, a discriminating duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied all imports on under flags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. pgT* On all goods, wares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Oood Hope, when imported from places this of the Cape of Oood Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place or places of their growth or produc¬ tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted side The tor in all eases to be 2,240 ft. Anchnw-Dnty: 2* cents $ lb. 01209ft and upward $ lb 94© Ashes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... $ 100 lb 8 25 © 8 50 Pearl, 1 st sort. :. © 11 50 . Beeswax—Duty ,20 $ cent ad val. American yellow.$ lb @ 40 .. Bones— Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct. Kio Grande Shin $ ton 35 00 ©36 00 Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Pilot $ lb .. © Navy © 7 Crackers 61 © 14 Breadstuff ffs—See special report. Bricks. Common hard, .per M.16 00 © ... Croton 18 00 ©20 00 Philadelphia Fronts ©7.1 00 Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair 1 $ lb. Amer’n,gray &wh. $lb 75 ©8 00 ' Butter and Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. Butter— N.Y State—Fresh palls .. © 38 © 40© 4 > 85 © tS qualify 82 © 41 34 NorJh Ponnsylvin a — Firkins Western Be orve—Fir¬ 32 © 31 kins 2) © 25 Western Slates—Fir¬ kins, yell >w Firkins,md quality .. © 27 25 © Cheese— 19 © Faotory Dailies Western do Farm Dairies do Western do Common 21 15 © 18 © 14'© 10 © 18 20 17 14 Candies—Duty, tallow, 2*; ceti and wax o; stearine and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents $ lb. Sperm, patent,. ..$ lb 48 © 50 Refined sperm,city... 38© 40 Stearic 30 © 81 Adamantine 21 © 22 Cement-Kosendale.$b) .. © 2 25 Chains-Duty, 2* cents $ ft. One inch & upward^ lb 3,@ 8| sperma¬ Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 lb to the bushel; other than bituminous,40 cents $ 28 bushels of 80 lb $ bushel. Liverpool Orrol. $ ton @ .... of2,240 lb. Liverp’l House CannellO 00 ©20 00 8 i-'O © 8 50 12 00 © Anthracite. Cardiff steam Liverpool GasCann 1 © ... Newcastle G s caSteamll 75 ©12 (0 Cocoa—Duty, \ cents $ lb. Caracas(Il> bond)(goid) is © $ lb Maracaibo do ..(gold) © .. Guayaquil do ...(gold) 15 © St Domingo... .(gold) 9$@ Coffee.—See special report. 90 .. 15! 10* 1b. Shoathing, now.. $ lb Sheathing, yellow Bolts Braziers’ 39 © 23 © 23© 39 © 39 @ @ © 28 @ 27 @ 27 © 40 30 40 40 Portage Lake $ lb., Manila, 9 m • . 22 © © @ 23 194 19* © 22 Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val. Regular, quarts^ gross 55 © 70 50© 70 Phial 12 © Cotton—See special report. 40 Drag's and Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, 2 50 p^r gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ BE); Alum, 60 cents $ 100 fl>; Argols, 6 cents $ lb; Arsenic and Asaafcedati, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regains, 10; Arrowroot, 80 $ cent ad val.; BalsamOopaivi, 20; Balaam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 00 cents $ lb; Callsaya Annato, fair to prime. Antimony, Regulus of Argols, Crude Argols, Refined Arsenic, Powdered.... Assafcetida Balsam Copaivi..... Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru....(gol Ba k Petayo Brimston ■, 1 00 @ $ ft Brimstone phur Camphor, bond) i lor 4? 51© 6 © .. _ 921© Cantharido*.. Carbonate in bulk © 1 75 .. Ammonia, 19 © Cardamoms, Malabar.. 8 0o © 3 25 00 Castor Oil Cases $ gal 2 40 © 2 4) 40 Chamomile F ow’s$lb 60 @ 60 Chlorate Potash (gold) 82 @ Caustic Soda ?*@ V 3 4 Carraway Seed © Coriander Seed 14 © 15 95 © Cochineal, Hon (gold) 97* 95 Cochineal, iMexic’n(g’d) 85 @ 28 © 4i Cutch # 14|© 14)© Epsom Salts oz. Gambier 7* Gamboge .. 86 70 Ginseng, South* West. Arabic, Picked.. Arabic, Sorts... Benzoin Kowrie Gedda © . 42 ..(gold) Gum Damar Gum Myrrh,Cast 82 .. 89 India ■ 9 Cotton,No. 1... $ y. Limawood 4* 19 60 ^ , m @ 2 00 @ 1 0» 80 @ 45 @ 56 @ 87 © 27 © 42 © @ 6 > © 28 @ 40 © m 9 55 Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. Gum Senegal (g< Id) 80 Gum Tragacanth, Sorts 80 Gum Tragacanth, w. flakey (g Id) 60 © 90 Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng (gold) 7> © 8 S5 Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 © 50 Ipecacuanna,Brazil... 4 25 © 25 lalap 2 20 © 20 , - , 25 Lae Dye Licorice Paste,Calabria Solid '. Lioojice Paste, Greek. Madder,Dutch.. (gold) do, French, EXF.F.do Manna,large flake.... Manna, small flake Mustard Seed, Cal.... Mustard Seed, Trieste, Nntgalla Blue Aleppo 55 42 25 © 41 @ 24 © Licorice, Paste, 8icily. Licorice Paste Spanish 87 @ 30 © 7 © «1© @ 75 @ © 0<* r 17 @ 88 © # 40 « • n 6* . . • • ... 12 KioGrande,mixed$ 9> Buenos 75 @ Axes—Cast stee1, best biaud per d< z do ordinary Carpe ter's Adzes,.... do ordinary Shingling Hatchets, C’t Steel, best br’ds, Nos. 75 “ cod....$ bbl. .. 6 50 @ 7 10 19 (0 @ .... .... 8m tbs’ Vis s $ ft 24 @ Framing Chisels.... Old List 25 ^adv. Hrmer do in sets.. 00 00 00 00 75 10 © 20 4 00 © S 00 do House Fisher, ,... Fox. 8ilver j 5 Of ©50 00 3 00 @ 5 00 I 00 © I f O do Cross do Red do Grey Lynx 50 @ 2 »0 © 4 5 Oo ©20 2 (0 @ 5 Marten, Dark pale Mink, dark List 10* List 66&10 % List 65 % Hi vet Iron List 25&30 % Screws American.. .List 10*9* % do Eng ish List 2u % Sh<<ve!s end 8pades... List 5 % Horse Shoes t*@ Opossum Raccoon Sku, k, B 15 @ talass—Duty, Cylinder Polished Plate aot 21 cents $ over 75 or Window 10x15 inches, square B>. American Window—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. (Subject to a discount of 3f @35$ cent.) 6x 8 to 8x10..$ 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50 tolOxlS.7 to 12x18 9 to 16x24 9 to 20x30 11 20x31 to 24x30 14 24x31 te 24x36 16 25x36 to 30x44 17 80x46 to 32x48 18 32x 50 to 82x56 20 Above 24 . 75 25 50 75 50 00 00 00 00 00 @ © @ @ @ 6 00 6 50 7 00 7 50 9 00 @10 00 @11 00 @12 00 @13 00 @15 00 English and French Window—1st, 2d, /;3d, and 4th quslit es. ", (Single Thick)-—Discount 25@3fi $«er t 6x 8 to 8x10. $50 feet 7 75 © C $ ft. LTes8ed.$ ton 870 00@3:0 09 Undressed.. 270 0d@275 00 Russia, Clean 375 00@...^_ Jute (gold) 90 0O@135 00 Manila. .$ 5>..<gold) 111© 00 foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $ square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents fi square foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 cents square foot; all above that, 40 cents $ square foot; on unpolished Cyliuder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding lOx 15 inches square, H; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 24x30 ,2£ ; all over that, 8 cents 8x 1 lx 12x19 18x22 1 cent no @ dis. dis. dis. 8 Amor. do • O 80© dis. dis. for shipping 1 40 © Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $^5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 $ ton; and Tampico, Sisal 12 © Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry ed and Skins 10 80 60 10 ack..-. dis. dis. Planes Li?t 30© 35 *ad* Hay—North River, in balee$ 100 Iba 75 3 00 § 6 00 8 @ fO 5 00 @ 8 00 Musk rat, Otter Ll«t 40 ^adv. , 50 © 2 6 00 @i2 3 00 @ 8 50 © 1 50 © brown... hundled, Bins do Cut Tacks Cut Brads fnrs—Dnuy,10 $ cent. Beaver, Dark..$ skin 1 00 @ 4 00 do List 40 *adv. Angur Bitts List 20 % dis. Phoit Auguis,per dz.NewList 10 % dia. Fruits—See special report. Badger Cat, Wild . insets. no no Herring,pickled$bbl. 6 50 © 6 50 Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. Jersey J6 © 21 $ lb Pale... L 8t 2(i % dis . “ 0* @1S 00 *0 @18 00 50 @17 00 00 @16 50 @14 50 Mackerel, No. 3. Il’faxl.i 75 @ ...^ Mackerel, No. 8, Mass @ Salmon,Pickled, No.1.40 00 @42 00 Sa moo, M kled, p. tc.4< off @55 00 Herring,Scaled^ box. 48 @ 50 Herring, No. 1 25 @ 28 do List 25^adv. Its, Cast Btd . Mackerel, No.l,Halifaxl7 Mackerel, No. I, Bay..17 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..io Mackerel, No. 2, Ila axl6 Mac’el,No.3,Mass l’ge Bear, Black ..... Carriage and Tire Bolts List 40 % dis. DoorL c-sand Latches List 7*^ dis. Door Knobs—Mineral, list 7* % dis. “ Pore lain List 7* % dis. Padlocks New List 20&7* % dis. Locks—Cabinet, Eagle 5 £adv. TiunK.. List 10 jTdis. 3b'cksanrt Dies Li t 85 % dis. Screw Wrencnes—Coe's Paten’ List 20* dis.* do I aft's List 65@60 % dis. Mackerel, No. i, Mass shore List 10 Jtadv. List. Hinge•,'Wr< uwht, Door B . Pickled 00 © 9 50 Loose Joint.. Narrow Cast Butt*—Fast JoiDt. other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ 25 .... Wrought Butts Gotten Gins, per suw... ed, or Dried,in smaller pkga.than bar¬ rels, 50 cents $ 100 lb. Dry Cod $ cwt. 6 0) @ 6 ! 0 Pickled Scale... $ bbl. @5 5 ' © 13 @ 24 @ 21 @ 17 © 7 60 60 @25 CO *0 @ 76 © 7 50 f0 @10 00 2 @10 50 $5 less 20 % List 5 % dis. . $1 ;Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 on 16 1 to 3 8 do ordinary 6 Broad batch’s 8toS bst. 15 do «.idl ary 12 Coffee Mil s-Iron Hop’r 8 do !<ri Hopper 6 do Wood Bsck 4 Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $ bbl.; . Hardware- 80 70 @ .. 85 © f6 83 © * 84 10 © 14 Ayres, mixed Hog, Western, nnwash. Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val. .... Oil Anis. ... 8 75 <?A 4 CQ Oil Cassia 4 00 © 4 50 Oil Bergamot......... ... ©435 If air—Duty free. 82 © lb 20 50 24 00 ... 105 (0@lt0 00 . to82x48 to 32*56 .. (gold) 0 00 @ Prime Western...$ Tennessee 15 50 ©12 OO 16 50 @18 00 18 00 @15 00 .. ... Barwood 9 75 © T 00 10 50 @ 7 50 — Dye Woods—Duty free. Camwood..(gold)$ t nl9o 0G©200 00 Fustic, Cuba 30 ()•• © 31 00 Fustic, Savanilla(gold).*2 50 © 23 (X) Fustic, Maracaibo do.2'' 00 © Logwood, Hon *1 00 ©82 00 Logw< od, Laguna (g-dd)80 10 © Logwood, St. D.udn..v0 00 @21 00 Logwood, Cam.(gold).2> 50 © Logwood,Jamaica.... 14 6U @15 00 do m 11 © 11 @ 18 © @ 80 @ Extract Logwood Kenrieli Se d Gnm Gum Gum Gum Gem 584 @ 44 (80$o.)(gkld) . .. Copperas, American... Cream Tarar, pr.(gold) Cubebs, East India.... 30 80 Duck—Duty, 30 $ oent ad val. Ravens, Light. $ pee 16 00 ©18 00 Ravens, Heavy 20 00 © Scotch, G’ek, No.I $y © 72 80 95 > . 25 24© i| Sugar L'd, W’e(gotd).. SO © 85 Bafp Quinine, Am $ oz 2 SO © 3 35 Sulphate Morphine 7 25 © Tart'c Acid..(g’ld)$lb 50 © 15 Tapioca 12 © Verdigris, diy ,< ex dry "2© 45 Vitriol, Blue 12 © 18* ... 4;@ Sul¬ ‘i;de, (In (gold) Camphor, Refined Sho’l Lac Soda Ash 6 34 82*© © © Senna, Alexandria.. Senna, Eastlndia 8 82 42*@ 24 © 18© 38 © 10| 21 © 8 25 © 6 50 ' to 12x13. to 16x24 to 24x80 to 24x36 to 30x44. ©16 00 ©18 00 Groceries— See special report. Gunny ltag§-Duty, valued at 10 cents or less, $ square yard, 3; ovei 10, 4 cents $ ft Calcutta, light & h’y * 22i© 22* Gunny Clotli—Duty, valued at 10 cents or less $ square yard, 3; ovei 10,4 cents $ ft. Calcutta, standard, y’d 2C © Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or less S>, 6 cents II lb, an I 20 $ cent aa val.: over 20 cents $ lb, 10 cents $ lb ana 20 $ centad val, Blasting(A) $ 251b keg © 5 00 Shipping and Mining.. @5 50 Rifle 7 50 @ Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬ ters $ lb 40 © 1 10 85© Seneca Root 21 __ 101© Sarsaparilla, Hond Sarsaparilla, Mex 48 5*© .. BalAm’n ac, Ref (gold) Sal Soda.Newcastle... .. © © .... 41 .... , © 11x14 12x19 20x31 2«x31 24x36 80x45 82x50 .... © Phosphorus 90 © 95 Prussiate Potash 42© Quicksilver 96 © Rhubarb, China.(gold) 8 CO © 8 50 Sago, Pe-». led 81 8 © Salaratus © 10 45 7o -to .. $ (gold).am. Roll Oxalic Acid © 2 25 @ 2 75 60 6tl 46 i>0 Crude Peppermint, pure. 5 25 © Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 65'4@ 3* , 8x11 to 10x15 S 87i© 4 CO Oil 21 2*© 2f© @ © © .. Borax, Refined ton .. .. OIlLemon., 90 12 .. castle Bi Chromate Potash... Brimstone. 4 25 Berries, Persian....... Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ Bleaching Powder r*@ 15 © @ 22 © 83 © 88 # $ lb Tarred Russia. Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia. Mineral 26 85 _ Cordage-Duty, tarred,8; unu.rred Manila, 2$ other untarred, 3* cents „ Alum .. 27 27 Baltimore Detroit 67* ^ Flowers,Benzoin.$ Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2*; old copper 2 cents $ ft; manu¬ factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing oopper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 © 34 oz. $ square foot, 3 cents $ Acid, Citric.... (gold) © Alcohol .‘5 $ gall. 41 .‘ 5 © 2.> @ Aloes, Cape $ lb 2.> Aloes, Socotrine 75 © @ .. Firkins Half Utkin lubs... Welsh tubs, prime. Welsh tubs, second __ Bark, 80 $ cent ad val.; Bi Carb. Soda, II; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ lb; Bleaching Powder, 3tt cents $ 1001b; Refined Borax, 10 cents $1 lb ; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 $ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and 15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40cents 32 lb.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 60 cents $ ft; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, 11; Citric Aeid, 10; Copperas, I; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ 5); Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent « lb; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzols and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gnm Arabio,20 $ cent ad val.; Gnm Benzoin, Gnm Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per lb; Cum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 $ cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬ limed iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anls, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $1 $ ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 $ cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $ lb; Phosphorus, 20 $ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50cents $ 1b: Quicksilver, 15 $1 cent ad val.; Sal JBratus. 1* cents $ lb ; Sal Soda, I cent $ lb ; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; Soda Ash, I; Sugar Lead, 20cents $ ft; Snlph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad val.; Snlph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.; Tartaric Acid, 2o; Verdigris, 6 cents $ ft; Siri Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬ riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $ l $ ft; all others quoted below; price. 189 or Salt¬ $ centad val. Dry Hides— BucnosAyres$ ftg’d - Montevideo Rio Grande Di-inoco California 19 © do do do 18 17 15 © © 16 @ 14 © gold California, Mex. do Porto Cabell o ..do Vera Cruz do x’ampico 141© do 14 do ... 15 © ... Texas Dry Salted Hides— th li (gold) « 12 @ . 13© 9 © 9*© .... .. © 9j© 11 @ Coutrysl’ter trim. As 11 10 do © © 26 80 20 cured. do © If*© i llfornia... do San w ch Isl’d do South & Wes*, do Wet Salted Hides— Bue Ayres.$ ft g’d. Rio Grande do California do Western City © IS © © © © Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip $ lb cash. Sierra Leone.... do Gambia & Bissau do Honeyr-Duty, 20 cents $ gallon. Cuba (duty paid) (gold) $ gall. - 88© Hop*—Duty; 5 oov»U $ t>. Crop of 1866 .,...$ lb 60 © do of 186? ' *5© Foreign y ^ © 85 70 4fl logs. Carthagens, <ftc 60 @ 62 Indigo—Duty raa*. Bengal (.old) #ft) 1 00 @ 1 65 Oude (gold) 75 ® 1 35 Madras (gold) 65 ® 90 Manila (gold) 65 ® 1 10 Guatemala (gold) 85 ® 1 10 Caraecas (gold) 70 ® 90 Iron—Duty,Bars, 1 to 1* cents $ lb. Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 lb; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents $1 lb; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to 1J cents $ lb; Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents $1 lb. Pig, Scotch,No 1. # ton 45 00® 4~ 00 Pig, American, No. 1.. 46 00® 47 on Bar, Refl’d s.ng&Aruer 91 0 ®100 00 Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold) 95 00® 100 00 Baud $ lb Nail Rod American do middle heavy. 0o 30 ao .... do _. Heml’k, B. A.,<kc., do l’t. middle do do do heavy . Califor., light, do do do do do do do do middle, heavy. do Orino., etc. l’t. midtile do do heavy, do A B. A, dam’gd all w’g’a do poor do Slaugh.in rough do do 44 48 @ ® Oak, Slangh. in rou., 1’t do do do mid. and heavy 51 ® 2' @ 80 31 @ 82 81i@ 82* @ 30*® 30 @ 81 ® @ 20 80 @ 30 2o :K) 28 24 2 i 27 81* 21 ® 84 ® 35 @ Lumber* —Duty ; pure, do 36 ® 46 val. .. @ 1 70 @ 2 20 Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Spruce, Bast. ad val.; Rosewood $ M ft 18 50 ® 21 00 40 Of* @ 45 00 pipe, @300 00 @250 00 @200 0C @180 06 @250 00 @200 00 @12* 00 @100 00 @175 00 @140 00 @110 00 @ 60 00 @130 OC @ 90 00 # M. pipe, heavy pipe, light. pipe, culls .! nhd., extra. hhd., heavy hhd., light. hhd., culls bbl., extra. bbl., heavy. bbl., light.. bbl., culls.. . Red oak, hhd.,h’vy. do hhd., light., HEADINGr — Wh ite oak, hhd @150 00 Cedar , Rose- puio, dry Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1 do white, American, No. l,in oil do whi e, French, In oil French, dry ..$ **>« ft> do gr’ In oil.Ip ft) Ochre. yellow, 14 . 121® 9 @ 10 ® Domin¬ go, crotches, qp ft.. 25 @ 50 9* 11 . val. No. 0 to .. .. . $ ft), 8 cents orem @ @ .. 50 50 17 ipelter—Duty: in pigi plates, $i 50 $ 100 lbs. @ 81 , ® 15 . , 60 45 60 60 2 50 8 @ 3 50 10 v @ .... 9 3 25 v*@ 2} Amer c n cast English, spring English b ister ... ... ... .... ... ' 13*@ 12 @ 19® 10*@ 11 @ 18® , ... , * • ♦ do tarns, bacon, andlard,2 ts fl ft*. 3eef,plain mess# bbl..12 00 @18 00 extra mess 17 00 @20 00 Pork, mesa, new.. ..^...20 60 @21 00 do mess Old J^....19 00 @19 75 .. @ 18 @ 80 @ 32 83 washed 82 @ .... unwashed 46 .. 20 @ 80 .... 80 @ . 40 20 @ 27 2S @ 82 85 @ 58 .... rreiglttsTo Liverpool: Cotton $*ft> 12 Flour Petroleum 19 Heavy goods.. Liquors—Liquors @ .. 40 @ @ @ 15 —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $3 per gallon^ other liquors, $2.50. Wines— Duty: value net over 50 cents $ gal 84 27 4« 25 @ Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 60 » 100 lbs.; gueets 2* cents $1 ft). Sheet # ft) i:*@ 12 14 .... . 28 @ 80 ao .... 40 82® common,unw. Smyrna,unwashed washed Whalebone—Duty: foreign fish ery, 20 p. c. ad val. South Sea $lb @ .... Wines and pulled washed Mexican, unwashed $ bbl. s. s. < d 2 3* 1 °@ .. @4 ton Oil 6 25 0 @ ... .. @30 0 @ 6* @ 6* @4 <* .. @36 .... @25. 0 .. Com,b’k& hags^bus. Wheat, bulk and bags Beef $ tee. Pork $ bbl. .. .. To London : Heavy goods... $ ton @30 0 Oil Flour # bbl. . @23 Petroleum @ 5 0 Beef .. $ tee. @4 6 Pork $ bbl. .. @36 Wheat $ bush. .. @ 7 Corn @ 7 To Glxbgow (By Steam): Flour ..@26 $ bbl. Wheat ^ bush.' .. @ 6 .. .. 1 ct: .»3 do . Corn,bulk and bags.. , Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 22 @ Persian . @ @ 1 25 @ common... .. w North west coast.. Ochotsk Polar 4n unwashed S. American Cordova Donskoi, washed—.. io ;o 40 @ fO do 17* 55 80® SO @ Entre Rios, ' 6» 46® 5o @ Peruvian, unwashed... Valparaiso, unwashed.. 8. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. ft* 1 40 @ I 45 Sugar.—See sp cial repo*t. do Trieste .1 10 @ 1 15 Tallow—Duty :1 ceut $ lb. do Cal. &• Eng 1 85 @ l 40 American,prime, coun¬ 80 40 do American try and city $ ft)... 11*® 11* Venet, red(N.C.)$ewt 2 70 @ 3 0 * Car mi ne, city made $ ft* 16 00 @20 «H) Teas.—See special report China clay # ton28 00 @30 00 Chalk... # bbL 4 00 @ 4 T9 Tin—Duty: pig,bars,and block,15 cent ad val. Plate and sheets and Chalk, block:...$ ton .... @27 0u terne plates, 25 per cent at) vat. Chrome yellow. ..$ ft) 15 @ 35 Barytes 3> @ 45 Banca ^ ft) (gold) @ 28* Pet roll? am—Duty: crude, 20 cents; Straits., (gold) 22>@ refined, 40 ?ents ip gallon. English (gold) 2!*@ Crude,40@47 grav. $ gal. 19 @ 1 ’* Plates,char. 1.0.$) box 12 5o @18 00 do I. C. Coke 10 60 @12 0*) Refined, free @ 47 do In bond ;. 29* @ 80 Terne Charcoalli 00 @12 50 do do Terne Coke.... 9 V5 @ 9 75 Vaptha, refined 24 @ 25 Residuum $ bbl. 4 50 @ Tobacco.—See sperlal report. Planter Paris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 $ cent ad val. Blue Nova Scotia# toe ... @ 4 50 White Nova Scotia ... 5 00 @ 6 50 Calcined, eastern $ bbl @ 2 40 . @ 2 50 Calcined, city mills.. .. 48 @ Texas , 14 nglisn machinery. Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Sicily $ ton .125 00 @225 00 r 82,12 ceuts $1 ft), and 1 full bl’d Merino. * and* Merino.. do do Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents $ lb or under, 2* cents; over 7 cents and not above II, 3 cts $ ft>; over 11 cents, 3* cents $ lb and 10 cent ad val. (Store prices.) 18 @ 2-4 English, cast, $ ft) . .American, spring... 10 costing 12 cents or lea $ ft>: over 12 and not pulled Superfine No. 1, pulled California,unwashed... Spices. -See special report. .. ; over African, ' German 9 @ 47 @ 57 @ Extra, , bars, and o*@ Plates,foreign iptb gold domestic j, 15 A 5 $ cL off list. 25 & 5 $ ct. off list. 30 ,v 6 $ ct. off list- than 24, 7 cents;. over 24 and 82,10, and 10 ^ cent ad val¬ do 'do 47* ad val. Castile...........$ lb. 00® 150 00 25® 30 00 00® 25 00 valorem; oa the skin, val. 50 @ 65 Amer., Sax. fleece *{£ ft) b, and 25 $ cent 10® $ cent ad ^ cent ad 34 .. Cab.gold .... W ool—Duty: 45 .. Puerto 42 3 00 1 20 5 00 8 00 1 10 1 10 1 15 1 50 not over .. do .... Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain $ ft) Brass (less 15 percent) Copper .do ... .. 18 No. 19 to 26 No. 27 to 86 10 00 @11 U0 @ Ohagres ...gold do 60 50 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered $2 to $3 5* $ 100 ft), and 15 $ cent ad lit® do 1 8J 2 II !j£ 00 2 60 6 00 00® 75® 75® 1 ’5@ do Sherry do Malaga, sweet . * o do dry.... do Claret, in hhds. do do in cases do 90 95 95 4 90 4 do do Madeira do Marseilles 00 0 00 4 6 3 3 I 15@ do Sherry . 14 Spanish brown, dry $ do wood—Duty free. Mahogany, St. @ .. while, American, Wh*ti**g, Atner Vermilion,Chinese fcTAVES flahogany, 12 1 50 @ 100 ft* do gr’d In oil.$ ft) R@ Paris wh., No.1^100ft) 8 (0 @ SO Of* @100 00 Laths, Eastern.» M 8 25 @ Poplar and vVhl e wood B’ds A Pl’k. 55 00 @ 65 0.) Cherry B’ds A Plank 60 00 @ 90 00 Oak and Ash 60 00 @ 65 00 Maple and Birch ... 85 00 @ 40 00 do do do do do do .. H*@ 38 00 ® 83 00 Box Boards Clear Pine oak, in oil 12 @ 80 00 ® 82 00 Southern Pine White Pino Box B’da White Pine Merch. White exLa. do do do do do ft); ochre, ground in oil, $ 150 $ 100 lb ; Spanish brown 25 <(P cent ad val; do .. 7 5 5 4 4 4 (gold) 2 00® Wines—Port^ S5® Burgundy Port do more 38 Litharge, City fl ft) Lead, red, City do white, American, Woods, Slaves*.ere. Staves, 10 # cent and Cedar, free. (free). 51 @ Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents <{£ ft); Pari* white and whiting, 1 cent $ ft); dry ochres, 56 cents # 100 ft*: oxidesofzinc, 1* cents do do Champagne.... . 55 .... or® 90® 90® 85® 85® 4 85® 4 75® 4 25® 4 25® 8 50@ 2 90® 4 00® Whisky—8. & Ir. do D<*m’c—N.E. Rum.cur. 2 45® Bourbon Whisky.cur. 2 40® Corn Whisky (in brnd) 35® Canton,re-reel.Noi@2. 9 25 @ 9 5t* Japan, superior 11 50 @14 00 $5 $ ton; Venetian red and vermilion 2.5 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 $1 ton. Lime—Duty; 10 $ cent ad Rockland, com. $ bbl. do heavy 80 gr.. 15® 10 5u 5 4 4 4 4 do brands do St. Croix Gin — Differ, .. Skills—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. 40 @ Goat,Curacoa$ ft) gold 82 @ do Buenos A... gold @ do VeraCruz .gold @ do Tampico. ..gold @ do Matainoras.gold do Payta gold 82 @ @ do Madras,eac cash @ do Cape cash 55 @ Deer, San Juan $tt> gold @ do Bolivar ...gold 67 @ do Honduras ..gold 57*@ gold do Sisal 62 j@ do Para gold @ do Vera Cruz .gold 6 do Seignette Rum—Jamaica Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk. 35 $ cent. Tsatlees, No. l@3.$tt>12 50 @18 <)0 Taysaarus, superior, No. 1 @ 11 CO @11 50 do medium,No3@4. 9 60 @10 25 Medium do China thrown ... J. Romleux Other Rochelle, 15 10J® $ ft) Buck China clay, 2J 23 87 42 ® fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal, $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other ttsh (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val. Olive, qs(gold)per case 4 25 @ .... do in casks.$ gall.. I 65 @ 10 Palm j $ ft) .... @ Linseed, city.. $ gall. 1 22 @ 1 25 Whale 80 @ 1 *0 do refined winter.. 1 15 @ Sperm, crude 2 6» @ do do unbleach. 2 95 @ Lard oil I 20 ® Red oil, city distilled . 80 @ — Arzac @ S *25 85 @ 3 00 .. 60 50 00 50 do. Hiv. Pellevoisin do Alex. 8eignette. do 66 52 54® 60 @ Sliot—Duty: 2f cents $ ft*. aud cocoa nut, 10 Straits Paraffine, 28 Kerosene 4<> @ seed, 23 cents; olive and salad pil, in bottles or flasks, $1 ; burning 1 0C @ I 05 @ 45 @ 50 46 @ 14 @ ^ft> Drop. rape Bank «8 @ 44® light Cropped.... middle bellies 40 40 44 41 4f 1>» 11* cent ad val. . ft*.—, do do do do do 91® SC @ 2 00 50 00® 10 1*0 20® 10 00 Other br’ds Cog. Pellevolsin freres do do A. Seignette Timothy,reaped $ bus 8 60 @ 4 00 C’Dary $ bus 4 25 @ 4 75 Linseed, Am.clean$ tee @ do Am. rough ^ bus 2 75 @ 2 85 do Calcutta ...gold 2 40 @ 2 45 City thin obl’g, in bbls. $ ton.56 00 @57 00 do in bags.5 * 00 @56 00 West, thinobl’g, do 52 50 @ Oils - Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and (void) 6 87 @ 7 00 (gel 0 6 S7*@ i 00 English (gold) 6 81*® 7 12* Bar net .. @10 00 Pipe and Sheet net .. @10 25 - ad val. Clover 4 95 @ 6 00 Oakum—Duty fr.,(p lb Oil Cake—Duty: 20 German 39 @ Pale and Extra L»ger freres 10 10 10 10 10 5 do do do do United V. Prop. Vine Grow. Co. Seetls—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, * cent $1 lb; canary, $1 $1 bushel of 60 ft); and grass seeds, JO cent (2S0 lbs.) 7 50 @ 9 00 67 @ 69 Spirits turp., Am. $ g. Spanish 8i @ 39 ... bbl 2 0C* @ 2 75 No. 1 do S . $280ft> 5 25 @ @ 4 25 [do , light .. i do do Jules Robin.... Marrette A Co. $1 $ gal¬ 20@ 20@ 15® 00® 10® 5 C 5 do J. Vassal A Co.. Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2* cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent $ ft). Refined, pure $ ft) ... @ 16 9 @ Crude Nitrate soda gold 3|@ Rosin, common 4 (U @ do strairedan No 2...4 25 @ 4 50 Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime $tt) 8 2 ® 3 50 East Ind Billiard Ball 8 50® 4 50 African, W. C., Prime 8 25@ 3 40 African, Scrivel.,W.C. 2 00® 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 lb ; Old Lead, 1* cents $1 ft); Pipe and Sheet, 2* cents # ft*. Galena $ 100 ft* .. @ Oak, Slaughter, f > PI ch It * Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper $ cent ad val. ^-cash. 20 Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30 cents $ gallon; crude Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 $ cent ad val. ton 52 0, @ 53 00 85 00® 90 00 Rails, Eng. (g’d) 30 Naval Tarpent’e, Renault A Co.. @ .. do do 210 ft* bgs. 1 do* do $ bush. Solar coarse Fine screened .... • do $ pkg. F. F 240 ft) bgs. 2 24 28 @ @ (gold (gold Otard, Dnp. &Co.do Pinet, Castil. &Co.do Hennessy Liverpool,gr’ndifi sack 2 *0® do nne,Ashton's(g’d) 2 75 @ .... do flue, Vorthingt’s .... @ 8 00 Onondaga,coin.flne bis. 2 50 @ 2 60 30 48 @ Copper 50 50 6}@ .. Yellow metal Zinc lb and Treble Cadiz 5 6 5 J. A F. Martell ft*; Salt—Duty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 bulk, 18 cents $ 100 ft). Turks Islands bush. 57 @ .... 28 @ 22 @ f d (Cd)$ ft) line, pressed Horse 5 00 60 16® 4 Brandy— Carolina....•.$ 100 ft)10 50 @10 25 East India,dressed..,. 9 25 @ 9 60 20 @ 15 @ 15 @ 14 @ @ l 00 8 @ 6 @ 8 i*0 @ Clinch Horse shoe, 50@1 7 .*0 9*@ c.'ft. valorem; over $1 $ gallon, lon and 25 $ cent ad vaL # ft). special report. Nails—Duty: cutl*; wrought 2*; horse shoe 2 cents ^ ft). Cut,4d.@60d.$ 109ft) 6 50 @ .... 60® 172 50 14 50® 210 00 Sheet, Russia Sheet, Single, Double Mexican Florida. $ Tar, Am rlc HorseShoe... Rods, 5-8@3-16iuch..li7 Hoop Mansanilla @ (§> @ Molasses.— See @162 50 60®.0' f 0@ i Z0 60@i47 @142 13, 50® 142 14 14 1* 10 60 5 Rosewood, R. Jan. $ lb do Bahia /—Stork Pricks—, sizes .. do do do assorted Bar,English and Amer¬ ican, Refined 112 do do CommonlOf do Boroll 1 >2 Ovals and Half Round 1 7 .... (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas ' Bar Swedes, Nuevitas Mansanilla Mexican Honduras do do do do @ East India 16 16 16 17 Port-au-Platt, do 45 42 ® 40 12 12 12 15 crotches 70 6'» 67*® 65 ® $ ft) 30 ordinary logs Port-au-Platt, Lard, 10 do ad val. Para, Fine Para, Medium Para, Coarse 7 Ion 20 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over 5<i and not over 100, 50 cents $1 gallon and 25 $ cent ad .16 60 @17 00 #ft> U|@ 13* Hams, 10 @ 12* Shoulders, S*@ 9* Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* cents # 5).; paddy 10 eents, and nncleaned 2 cents prime, do. do St. Domingo, do llorns—Duty, 10 $1 cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande... C 10 00® 11 00 Ox, Buenos Ayres 8 00® 10 00 India Rubber-Duty, 10 $ cent, do [February 9,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 190 .. 6 @ (sa'l)^ bbl. ..@50 Heavy goods..$ ton. 20 0 @30 D Oil .' @85 0 Beef $ tee. @6 0 Pork .@3 6 ..$ bbl, Petroleum • . , To Havre: Cotton Beef and pork.. $ bbl. Measurem. g’ds.fl ton Whea*, in shipper’s bags; $ bush. Flour.' ..flbb Petroleum... Lard, tallow, cut m t eto „ *a> pearl *@ .. Hops Aahet, pot and $ $ $1 ft) @ 100® j0 00 @ .► . .. @ * @ 5 6 @ 6 m - 8 @ M THE CHRONICLE. February 9,1867.] Insurance. Steamship and Express Co.’s. STEAM Marine Insurance. The Company Insurance TION North of NEW- The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 21th of each month from Panama to Wellington, N. Z., and the Australian Colo I ies, connecting with the steamer of the PaciSc Mail Sreamshio Company leaving New-York for Aspimvall (colon) on the 11th of eacn month. First and second class passengers will be Agents. Commercial Cards, conveyed under through ticket at the following in New-Zealand, dr $364 for first class, rates: From New-York to ports to Sydney or Melbourne, $340 to Holiday Goods SIXTY-SIXTH ANNUAL DISPLAY OF Fancy Goods, Rich Bohemian Glass, China, Brom Clocks. Berlin Iron, Terra Cotta and Cabinet- run to the newly-discovered gold region of Hokitika, New Zealand. Children under three years, free; under eight years, quarter fare; under twelve years, half-fare; male servants, one-half fare : female do., three-quar¬ ters fare men servants berthed forward, women Smokers Requisites, Morocco Bags, Portemounaies, Spa and Carved Wood Articles, Toilet Articles, - j GERMAIN the STUDY do. in ladies’ cabin. A limited quantity LAMP. Also, Toys and Games, comprising all that is and suitable for Holiday Presents, and of as variety as can be found in the city, at WERCKMEISTER’S, 150 Broadway, (up stairs) New York. PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S James A. Robinson, CALORIC To Steam ENGINES And Engines, o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and 21st of every month (except when those dates fall on Jobbing. 164 Duaoe St., Cor. Hudsoia, New York. B. C. Morris & STOCK COMMISSION Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, vrith one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. FEBRUARY: 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City. 11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis 21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports • 1st and 11th for Son, HOUSE, NO. 17 WILLIAM STREET. ’entral American Ports. zanillo. Government Securities, Railways Petroleum, Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrip Miscellaneous of a 1 descriptions, bought and Bold at the shares different Stock Boards. Collections made In all tlie States and Canadas. For the more thorough protection Broker and “Principal ”—our business of all—both will be con¬ Baggage checked through. given or received unless certified. fully enable us to carry out this principle, although starting with a sufficient capital, all parties giving orders for stocks, of whatever description or amount, will be required to cover same with proba¬ ' more ble amount at time of such One hundred pounds National none Steam Navigation Co., Steamers deposits given until stocks are delivered. Stocks No purchased or ‘‘Option.” sold Out-of-town orders solicited, and those comp lying w th above requirements will receive special ana prompt attention. Quotations can be had daily upon application, will be furnished vf desired. ©i Edw Edward P. Tesson. ard M. Tesson. Tesson, Son & Co., BANKERS, (No. 45 Second Street, corner of Pine), ST. Founded in 1847, under the Style of Tesson Ac Danjen. W. H. Schieffelin & Co. Saturday thereafter. Drafts issued for any amount, payable at any bank in Great Britain or on the Continent. Rate of passage, payable in currency: Caoin. Steerage To Liverpool or Queenstown $100 $30 Through passage to London, Paris, Hamburg, Bremen, Antwerp, etc., at low rates. Steerage passage tickets to bring persons from Liverpool or Queenstown for $35, currency, can be obtained at No. 27 Broadway. For freight or cabin passage apply at the office of the Company No. 57 Broadway ; lor steerage tickets, at the passage office of the Company, No. 27 Broad¬ No. 275 Pearl street. F. W. J. as ETC., 170 & 172 WILLIAM ST. New York. Josei*hH Westekfield. William H. Schieffelin, Ould & Carrington, RICHMOND, V A. COMMISSION 58 BROAD Offer for sale, safe HURST, Manager. by the EXPRESS, 65 Broadway, of every description. Also for the collection of notes, drafts, and Mils, bills accompanying goods. See. IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE own aud other first-class J. Thorburn, AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, STREET, NEW YORK. Consignments of Cotton and all other South¬ 109 WALL ern POPE, 82 John Street. Anthracite and Charcoal Pig Irons, Ingot Copper, Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New Railroad Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons. Henry Lawrence & Sons, MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC 192 FRONT USE, STREET, NEW YORK. Jeremiah M. Wardwell, (of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell & Co.) Importer and Dealer in Hardware, and Commission 45 CLTFF Merchant, STREET, NEW YORK. All orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬ tention. Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hic.es, dec., solicited. Best of references given it required. Coal FROM For Grate Fires. Products Solicited, LIVERPOOL, Delivered from yards in New York and Brooklyn.' H. J. PARMELE Ac BRO., 32 Pine P. P- Street, N.Y Oldershaw, ACCOUNTANT, 62 BROAD STREET, NEW Rooks Examined. Accounts References STEWART BROWN, DAVID WALLACE, C. H. HARNEY, YORK, Adjusted. : C. S. BODLEY, S. L. _S. L. M. BARLOW, Me ANDREW & WANN CUSTOM SOLICITED BY Francis & Loutrel, STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK MANUFACTURERS. 45 Malden We Lane, New York. our line for Business, supply everything in Professional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders receive prompt attention. Files of this SHIPPING STREET, NEW YORK, Metals, THOS. lorwarding of Gold, Silver, Jewelry, and Merchandise C. E. MERCHANTS, WHISKIES, from their Distilleries, Kentucky. they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and WrLLTAM A. Oellatly. William N. Clakk, Jr. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, 11.3 MAIN STREET, ’ AND Bankers, Merchants, and HARNDEN MO DISTILLERS YOUR others should send INDIGO, CORKS, SPONGES, LOUIS, experienced Surgeon on each ship, free of CO., DRUGS, T J. M. Cummings, & Co., charge. IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OP GOODS, PERFUMERY, ETC., S \RK, Thomson, Sails SATURDAY, Feb. 2. VIRGINIA, Prowse, Sails SATURDAY,,Feb. 16. HELVE'I I A, Thompson, Sails SATURDAY, Ft- b. 23. ENGLAND, Grace, Sails SAT CRD AY, March 2 way, or SUCCESSORS TO FANCY AND GREEN STREET. BEST ENGLISH CANNEL Ac ORRELL DENM An SECOND STREET BETWEEN WASHINGTON AVENUE .... LOUIS, MO., SCHIEFFELIN BROTHERS Ac pool, Calling No. 47 Nonh River— And every o FLOUR, Nos. 148, 150, 152,1">4, & 150 N. Weekly to Liver¬ at Queenstown. THE SPLENDID FIRST-CLASS STEAMSHIPS of this Line will be dispatched as follows from Pier i on RECEIVERS OF (LIMITED.) leaving order. Receipts lor c & A E G E R Those of 1st touch at Man allowed each adult. An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and attendance free. For passage tickets or further information, apply it the Company’s ticket oflice, on the wharf, foot of Canal street, North River, New York. S. K. HOLMAN, Agent. ducted entirely bn the basis of Certified Checks, To Carrying the United States Mall, LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬ ER, FOOT of Canal street, at 12 Mills, Pumps, Cotton Gins, Iloistere, and General Y California PORTABLE AND STATIONARY STREET Chicago, Ills. ' THROUGH LINE ERICSSON WASHINGTON 165 of merchandise will be con¬ veyed under through bill of lading. For further information, application to be made to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall-st, Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William-st., New-York. nov large HINRICHS’S, Late COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Special steamers ware, ST. Blair, Densmore & Co., 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 cabius of the Australian steamer; after cabin, latter $25 additional. Fares payable in United States gold coin. READY. and SEEDS I N , * x. AND PROVISIONS. - in New York. NOW G R A FLOUR, AND AUSTRALA¬ SIA via PANAMA. INCORPORATED 1794. CAPITAL *500,000. Assets. Jan. 8, 1867, $1,763,287 23. Risks made binding and losses adjusted and paid CATLIN & SATTERTH WAITE, 61 William Street. Commercial Cards. COMMUNICA¬ BETWEEN YORK Philadelphia. America, of 191 Paper Round to Order. BLANK BOOKS, STATIONERY, ENGRAVING, » PRINTING,. &C., &C Cooper & 26 Sheridan, Ef CHANGE PLACE, Comer of William St1 ! . Brand & Go., S. H. !Pearce & Importers A No. 353 BROADWAY, In full and Manufacturers of Oiled WILLIAM GUI ON & superior finish, and Our “Imitation" has a very appearance much as real silk, which it Patent DUCK, AC. Thompson & Co., Importers of IRISH invented. LINENS, CAMH’C IIANDK’FS, AC. REMOVED FROM 30 TO LI N b N HAVE Co., George Pearce Sc 70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK, Church 185 No. 33 PARK PLACE, NEW YORK. WILLIAM KIRK A SON, George Hughes & Co., MERCHANTS, British Staple, Importers A And Fancy Dress NO. Goods, White 150 & 152 DUANE STREET, NEW YORK, E. R. Mudge,Sawy er&Co. Sole Agents for DICKSON, FERGUSON A CO., MILTON N«a. 43 A IT, WI1ITS<: Globe Mile End, CO., Mixtures, , JOHN T h A No. MANUFACTURERS OF HUGH d SHOE THREADS, BARBOUR 95 CHAMBERS BROTHERS, MILLERS <fc C OMMISSION MERCHANTS, 138 LASALLE ST , CHICAGO, ILL., PROPRIETORS OF Oriental Mills, Chicago, Ill. Lockport Hydraulic Mills, LocKport, Ill. Sweepstakes Mills, West Lockport. Hi. A full supply of on r well known brands of Floor always on hand. Eastern orders wdl have prompt attention at low¬ est market price. Our Chicago mills being siiuated on the railroad track cars are loaded with Flour, Middlings, Bran, &c., to ail points Fast, saving* xOrders lor pur¬ pense and damage from cartage. chase of Drain. Flour, or provisions in this market be faithfully a tended to. will E. W. Blatchford & LINSEED OIL AND OIL CAKE, LEAD PIPE AND SHEET 9 Broad Street, LEAD, I. S. Bush & HIDE 1Q8 Duane Street. ' Chicago. Orders wilt receive careful and GRAIN Co., BROKERS, 155 Kinzle Street, prompt attention. MILLERS, SHIPPERS, AND DISTILLERS. vVe are NEW YORK. John O’Neill Sc Sons, OF Manufacturing Richards9 Power Corn Shellerg, Of ail sizes and capacity, ranging from 50 to i,000 bushels per hour; built of Iron, and warranted to shell clean in any condition of grain, and clean the corn in superior condition for the Mill or Market. Over 500 m Daily Use. Portable Engines, Small Burr Mills, Farm Mills, &c. RICHARDS’ 190 & WORKS, IRON i92 WASHINGTON STREET, Chicago, Ill, Sewing Silks, 84 Embroidery, Organzlne, and Tram. CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK. Railroad Iron, AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, MILL* AT PATERSON, N, J. Lane, Lamson & Co., A RGB STOCK ALWAYS ON HAND. MANUFACTURERS Co., Machine Twist Duck, POLHEMUS A Co., (Established 1S4«.) e All Widths and Weights, THEODORE Street, Mobile, Ala. Norton Sc TO Mills at Patterson, N. JT. Cotton COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 65 Commerce NEW YORK, MANUFACTURERS STREET, NEW YORK. COJ TON FACTORS AUCHINCLOSS, Nos, 12 & 14 WARREN ST., SEWING-MACFiNE THREADS, ETC. England Sc Co,, CHICAGO, ILL. Manufacturers of ST., NEW TOR.* Threads, Wm. G. . UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS, Linen EXCHANGE PLACE), Tannahill. Mcliwaine <fc Co., New York. * Byrd & Hall, Parasols, 49 MURRAY r e a SOLE AGENTS IN DOUBLEDAY A DWIGHT, Umbrellas & NEW YORK. Late of Lvnchburg, Va , COMMISSION MERCHANTS, For the sale of produce and purchase of merchandise generally. CABLED SIX-CORD REST TO Silk AND MACHINE J. Sc P. Coats’ 198 & 200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK. W. M. CbrriN, Treaa. W. D. Si monton. Rom vers. 20 OLD SLIP, Manufacturers of Co., Place, CO’S. THOS. RUSSELL, Sole Agent, 88 CHAMBERS bTREET, N.Y. STREET. Have Removed from 6 Col ege Jr. A Glasgow. IS UNSURPASSED FOR HAND SEWING. MILLS, Woolen Fancy Cassimeres. Belfast. Banbridge. CLARK, JOHN CHICOPEE MANUF. CO., VICTORY MANUF. General Commission Merchants, ’ Spool' Cotton. CO., Morris, & CALDWELL, FACTORS, COTTON STREET, SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS, LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS, PATENT LINEN THREAD. WASHINGTON MILLS, BURLINGTON WOOLEN Successors to BREWER AND GENERAL their uew Warehouse And F. W. HAYES A CO., FOR AGKNT3 134 CHURCH STREET, 198 A 200 CHURCH Linens, Ac., Ac*, B. C. MORRIS, JR. B. CALDWELL. Caldwell & Commission Men hauls, Will Remove on January 1, to Goods, Irish and Scotch SAM’L BALTIMORE, MD. Refer by permission to Messrs. Jacob* Heald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Baltimore, Cambric Haudkerchlef Manufacturers COMMISSION AND McIlwaine & Co., of Petersburg, Va. (Offices, for the present, 03 CO., LURGAN, JAMES GLASS A IMPORTERS BELFAST, Linen Manufacturers. British and Continental. Lindsay, Chittick & Co., Street, New York. No. 79 Front Wilson, Son & Co., Agents for Emb’s, Handk’ffc, MERCHANT* Martin & Tannahill, of Petersburg, Va. New York. Street, Anderson Sc Smith, Goods, Linen Co., COMMISSION AND Importers of Laces and Sc AC. FOR THE SALE OF PRODUCE AND PURCHASE OF MERCHANDISE GENERALLY. FLAX SAIL Reversible Paper Collars. the most economical collar ever , SONS’ aud durability. Wm. McIlwaine Tannahill, of BURLAPS, BAGGING, equals in Agents for the sale of the White Trade. LINENS, WHITE Imitation Oiled Silk. NEW YORK. assortment for the Agents for the sale Silk, NO. 47 BROAD STREET, LINEN GOODS, Jobbing and Clothing HANDKERCHIEFS, SILK AND COTTON COMMISSION MERCHANTS, STREET. IRISH A SCOTCH CHINA SILKS, EUROPEAN AND Sawyer, Wallace & Co., .Gihon, Commission Merchahts, 55 MURRAY Importers ot costs but half as Cards. Commercial Commercial Cards. Commercial Cards. , [Febrnary 9, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 192 CO., AND DEALERS, Corner of Beaver. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS, 97 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK, \ FOR Steam and Street. * Roads, FOR SALE BY s; W. HOPKINS & Co., 09 <fc 71 Broadway.