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laitoMti pmutovand Instance fmmwri. tonfctts’ fcctte, tfimmewfa! A WEEKLY REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND NEWSPAPER, COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. j Bankers and Brokers. i Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. RANKERS AND DEALERS IN. GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, No. 44 Wall SJrcst. New York, Keep constantly on hand for immediate delivery issues of GOLD, &c. UNITED »— Miller, BANKERS, AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCKS, BONDS, &C., STREET, NE\I YORK. Haslett McKim. Robt. McKim. Jno. A. McKlm. McKim, Bros. & Co., Interest allowed on given to orders from Taussig, Fisher & Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS, No. 32 Broad NO. 8 BROAD STREET, A. Loan. , Compound Interest Note* of 1S64 & 1865 RougJit and Sold, CH. C. FAHNESTOCK COOKE, ) MOORHEAD, V D, COOKE, ) 1 EDWARD DODGE, (PITT COOKE. WM. G. H. NO. Jay Cooke & Co., BANKERS. Corner Wall and Nassau St*,. New York, Fifteenth Special Attention given to tho accounts of Banks and Bankers. Interest allowed upon Gold and Currency Deposits subject to check at sight, at the best rates. ■s Hoyt & In connection with our houses in NO. 69 Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co. of our Washington House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, be resident We shall BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Bankers and Brokers. Stocks, Boiids, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold at market rates, on commission only. Interest allowed on balances. Advances made on ap¬ proved securities. Particular attention given to orders for the purchase or sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ faithfully executed. All orders Union Express Stocks. JOSIAH HE ODEN, ISAIAH C. BABCOCK, LOCKE W. WINCHESTER. ROBT .M. HEDDEN. John Munroe & Co., AMERICAN BANKERS, PARIS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, AND NO. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issno Circular Letters of Credit for Traveller* to all NO. 5 NEW BALE, & Gans, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN U. S GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. Special attention given to orders in gold. Yice-Pres’t. Gold Exchange BANKERS & 28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individual* received on favorable terms. References: J. H. F0NDAtPre8. National Mech. Banking Ass., N.T. C. B. Blais*Pros’* Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. partners. Jackson Bros., and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Of issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, bonds and gold, and to all business of National Banks. JAY COOKE &-CO. DEALERS IN STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD AND GOV¬ ERNMENT March-1,1866 NO 5 NEW STREET AND 80 STOCKS, BROADWAY. SECURITIES, Arc., NO. 19 BROAD Hodgskin, Randall & Hobson, NO Georg J. L. Brownell & Bro., BROKERS, all 39 EXCHANGE BROKERS STREET, NEW YORK. Fred. Wendell Jackson Henry Jackson. Temple & IN Marsh, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Securities. GeNERAL Partners ; James B. Hodgskin, Chas K. Randall, J. Lowry Hobson, •=' Wm. PLACE, Foreign Exchange, Gold, Government, and other Dealers In Government Securities, &c. on Commission, No* 9 Wall Special Partners, Jchn Randall, J. Nelson Tappan, Geo. G. Hobson. Street, cor. New. •I Fbanklin M. Ketchum. George Phipps. Thos. Belknap, Jb. KETCHUM, PHIPPS Ac BELKNAP, Warren, Kidder &c Co., BANKERS, No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. Order* for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly «*• ented. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST1 ALLOWED pn deposits, subject to check at sight. Murray & * NO. 2 T WALL B. MVMUY, Jr. STREET, * ~ P. D. CteENBT BANKERS AND BROKERS, No, 24 Broad Street, New York. Governmerft securities, railroad and other bonds, railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and exchange bought and sold on commission. Mercantile paper and loans In currency or gold negotiated. Inte¬ rest allowed on deposits. Two Safes For Sale. Cheney, BANKERS AND BROKERS, . BROKERS IN MINING James Gabdneb, T. A. Hoyt. No. 14 WALL STREET Riker & Co., STREET, NEAR WALL, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold exclusively on Commission. give particular attention to the purchase, Also Commercial Credits, parts of Europe, etc., etc. Frank Philadelphia and Washington we have this day opened an cilice at No 1 Hedder^Winchester&Co Gardner, Street, Washington. promptly execute orders for the Purchase or sale Cold, State, Federal, and Railroad A. W. DIMOCK & CO. upon current Opposite Treas. Department, terms, Securities. STREET. NASSAU Money received upon deposit and Interest allowe balances. Street, Philadelphia. others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight Draft. of 16 Government Securitlesof all issues, Gold and Stoeks bought and sold upon commission only, and advances made upon the same on the most favorable terms. ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Make Collections on favorable Co., BANKERS AND BROKERS. No. 114 South 3d Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and W. Dimock & VERMILYE & CO. Street, New York. Bay and Sell at Market Rates, Bonds, <JL'Co5 NEW YORK. BANKERS, 2d, & 3d seriess LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS. JAY deposits subject to draft at sight, and special attention ocher places. Stocks, 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1863, 6 “ “ 1861, 6 “ “ 1805, Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, I Per Cent Currency Certificates. BANKER*, 62 WALL STREET* Securities, Government STOCKS STATES New York State 7 per cent. Bounty NO. 6 WALL Fisk, COMMISSION DEALER 3N INCLUDING Ho. 22 WALL STREET, Campbell & all H. Richard & Go., Hatch, Foote & Co.., IVermilye I BANKERS. and NO. 133. SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1868. YOL. 6. One large and one small, new Marvin's Safes, jue« bought will he sold for 20 per cent, less than cost, th owner having now no use for them. The safes will b warranted new and In perfect order. Addrese SAFE P.O. la* 4 5 ■- . r-::—— ■ Dupee, Beck & Sayles, Charles BROKERS, No. M STATE JiMM AUGUSTA, G A. ~ COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED FOR. HENRY BATLZS BOSTON, , FIHST NATIONAL BANK OF Bone and JOHN MUNROE Sc ALSO CO., PARIS. IUCI for the pnrcheee of Merchfti England and the Continent. Trai wiir«* for the uae ef Trv^ilers *br>*d. Commercial Credit* rflse in Credit* HaydeK Hayden, Hutcheson 8c Co Do a NO. 13 S. HIGH STREET, COLUMBUS, OHIO, General Banking, Collection, and Exchange Business. Western Bankers. EXCHANGE ON LONDON BILLS OF BROKER*, AND P. Hayden.1 Jos. Hutcheson. W. B BANKING HOUSE OF - Page, Richardson & Co 114 STATE STREET, D. Carr & Co., BANKERS STREET, BOSTON. JAMES BECK, DUFXX, A. Western Bankers. Southern Bankers, Eastern Bankers. STOCK [January 11, 1868, CHRONICLE THE 34 Established 1848. IDAHO City, I. T. Organized March 11, 1867, (with circulation), under Act of Congress approved June 3,1864. Capital, $100,000. Authorized Capital, $500,000 B. M. DU REEL, Pres. C. W. MOORE, Cashier. New York Correspondent,—National Bank of North Co., Haskell 8c RANKERS, ST. LOUIS, MO Dealers in Government Securities, Gold and Ex change. Collections made on all accessible points and promptly remitted for at current rates of exharige. America. principal places in Idaho Terri¬ tory promptly attended to. ** Telegraph Transfers,” Sight and Time Exchange, for Gold or Currency, can be purchased on this Bank, of National Bank North America, New York City; National Bank of Com¬ merce, Boston, Mass. * Collections Southern Bankers. National Bank of Republic, thf. 809 & 811 CHESTNUT L. the on Benoist 8c A. PHILADELPHIA. Co., London and Paris for sale. Services to Banks Liberal Terms. Its Bankers on and Edward B. Orne, William Ervi^n, Joseph T. Bailey, ' Osgood Welsh, Benjamin Rowland, Jr., Samuel A. Bispham, Frederic A. Hoyt William H.Rhawn, H. RnxwN, President, - William of the Central National Bank. Joseph P. Mcmford, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia National Bank. Late Cashier SO BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. EXCHANGE, STERLING At National Bank. Second Sight or Sixty Days; also, Circular Notes and ters of Credit for Travellers’ Use, on L. P. MORTON, and Prompt attention given to the business of corres pondents. E D. JONES, Cashier. National Trust Company London.) (58 Old Broad Street, Capital..$200,000 | Surplus..$150,566 the LONDON. UNION RANK OF Available In all the principal towns 423 PENN STREET, Let¬ BURNS & CO., LOUIS, MO. ST. directors: Nathan HillesI BANKERS, BANKERS, LOUIS, MISSOURI, Buy and Sell Exchange on all the principal cities of the United States and Canadas. Also, drafts on $ 1,000,000 Offers Co., P. Morton 8c L. ST. STREET, Capital Bankers and Brokers. and cities ot Europe and the East. PA. PITTSBURGH, T $100,000 Capital elegraphlc orders Sale of Stocks and executed for the Purchase and York. Bonds in London and New Particular attention given to collections, and pro promptly remitted. eeeds Washington. Walter H. Burns. J. F. Stark 8c Co., NATIONAL BANK FIRST WASHINGTON, H D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.), Pa*»’T. WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. OF Government Depository and Financial Agent oftue United Staten. Wilson, Callaway 8c Co., BANKERS & BROKERS, PITTS H UKGII Do a Bankers and Commission Merchants- • general Banking, Exchange and Collection busines America; Knautn, Nachod & Kuhne. a i ten (ion to tlie several Government. Gilmore, Dunlap 8c Co., with business connected departments of the ^ Full information with regard to At all times cueerfully furnished. Government loans JAS. L. MAUBT. BOB’! T. BROOKS ROB’T H. MAURY. Liverpool.; 108 Co., H. Maury & R. CorrespondentsNational Bank North New York 110 Ac Fourth. Street, West Lockwood 8c CINCINNATI, OIIIO.Q MAIN ST., RICHMOND, VA. Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, State, City, and Railroad Bond* and bonght and sold on commission. Bank Note*, Stock*, Ac., Deposit* received and Collection* All accessible ' point* in the United States. N. Y. made sn No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, COLLECTIONS MADE at all md remitted lor on DEALERS N ATI O N A L F HIST References & Co., Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York. E. II. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. Byrd & Hall, New York. Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York. Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolft & Gillespie. Henry A Hurlburt, late S\Vift & Hnrlbert. Home Insurance Company ot New York. York Life Insurance Company. Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford. Underwriters Agency New York, Charles Walsh. President Bank of Mobile. ew Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Sonthem Bank of Ala. $1,000,000 Collections made on John W. Ellis, Jas. A. Frazer, William Woods Cash Capital, $150,000. Co., STREET, NEWT ORLEANS, Merchants National Bank, New York, and Liverpool, England. Collections and remittances^romptly attended to. SOUTTER 8c $314,852 89 points and L. B. Harrison, Robt. Mitchell, Jos. Itawson. Real Capital, $1,000,000. Jos. F. Larkin 6c Co., BANKERS, CINCINNATI. Jos. F. Larkin, ^ John Cochnower, Adam Poe, ) The Marine Company OF CHICAGO. J. Young Scamjion Robert Reid General Co., RANKERS, No. 53 WILLIAM ■R99 STREET, NEW YORK. ■- “Dealers In Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bondks Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable? Securities. Interest allowed on Deposits Check. Advances made on approved subject to Sight Dralt or securities. Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper. Collect- "msboth inland and foreign promptly made. Foreign end Domestic Loans Negotiated. (Thomas Fox- general ! j John M. Phillips. f partnership, j Thos. Sharp. Decamp, J (John Gates. BANKERS, Bank of accessible Lewis Worthington, R. M. Bishop, A S. Winslow, r on SURPLUS all Directors: Harvey Burke & Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Orders Promptly Executed John W. Ellis, Pres. Lewis Worthington, V.Pres. Theodore Stanwood, Cashier. CAPITAL RANKERS^ STREET, NEW YORK,, Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum and Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to promptly remitted for at best rates. : Babcock Bros Draw oF Cincinnati, Ohio. St., Mobile, Ala. Dealers in Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬ ernment Securities. Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt attention given to Collections. 54 CAMP B A i> It i - No. 52 St. Francis No. 16 BROAD FOR SALE. AND) Brothers, STOCK BROKERS AND « r GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. Drake day of payment. Checks on UNION BANK OF LONDON ' IN OTHER Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency,, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loiyied to Merchants* and Bankers upon favorable terms. accessible points Correspondent, Yermilyr St C*. Jas. M. Muldon & Sons, Co.,, BANKERS. BANKERS AND BROKERS No. 1014 STREET, NEW YORK. Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought !»nd sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬ chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco. &c., consigned to ourselves o- to our correspondents, Messrs.* K. GILLIAT & CO., NO. 44 BROAD Government We bny and »ell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and inve especial Charles E. Milnob. H. Crugkb Oakley. Levi r. Morton. .President. Manager. Ranking: and Collections promptly attended to. Gilliss, Harney 8c Co., BANKERS, BROAD STREET. Buy and Sell at Market Rates. ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES', NO. 24 Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS and others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight draft. Jlake collections on favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. 35 THE CHRONICLE. January 11, 1868.J Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Financial. THE Duncan, Sherman & Co., Garth, Fisher 8c Hardy, National Trust BANKERS. Company BANKERS, CORNER OF FINE AND NASSAU STS., ISSUE CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United States, available in all the principal cities of the world; also, COMMERCIAL CREDITS. For use in Europe, east of the Cape or Good Hope West Indies, South America, and the United States FOR TRAV¬ LETTERS OF CREDIT No. 18 NEW OF THE CITY OF NEW Successors to Harrison. Garth & Co. find Heni'y Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc. bought and sold at the “ regular” Board of Broker and at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis¬ sion only. Foreign and Domestic Exchange bought, sold and collected. EXCHANGE, James G. King’s Sons, 54 William Street. Jesup 8c Company, (Of the old firm of Garner & Co.) Henry C. Carter, First Vice-President. Barnet L. Solomon, Second Vice-President. James Merrill, Secretary. S. G. & G. C. Ward, FOR BARING BROTHERS A COMPANY, STREET, NEW YORK, 28 STATE 12 PINE STREET. 2^ 0 gotlate Bonds and Loans for Railroad Contract for Iron or Steel their representative ana Attorneys prepared to make advances on shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile The subscriber, in the United States, is them for use in China, the East and West Indies, South America, &c, Marginal credits of the London House issued for the same purposes. credits upon Central National Bank, 318 BROADWAY. Has for Bale R. P. Sawyers. N. P. Boulett" BROKERS. mission. Particular attention given to the Purchase and Sale of all Southern and Miscellaneous Securities. Collections made on all accessible points. Interest allowed on Balances Joseph A. Jameson, I Amos Cotting, | Of Jameson, Cotting & Co. St. Louis. } j James D. Smith, of the late firm of James Low & Co., New York Jameson,Smith 8cCotting RANKERS, NOS. 14 & 16 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Receive #3,000,000 * Deposit# in Currency and Gold, all descriptions of Government Bonds- City and County accounts received on terms most fa vorable to onr Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of the United States an per aunura on daily balances which may be checked for at sight. purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks strictly and only on Commission. Will CAQ&dftS WlNTHROP &C WHEELOCK, President. William H. Sanford, Cashier.. WILLIAM A. BaYLEY, 49 EXCHANGE PLACE. D E A L BR N IN The Tradesmen’s NATIONAL BANK. 291 BROADWAY, NEW Grenville Winthrop & Co. YORK. Tenth National Bank. Ca pital .. $ 1,000,00O. No. 29 BROAD STREET. S. The Capital stock of One Million Dollars is di¬ vided among over five hundred Shareholders compris¬ ing many gentlemen of large wealth and financiaiexperience, who are also personally liable to depositors for all obligations of the Company to double the amount of their capital stock. By its charter, no loan can be made, directly or in¬ directly, to any trustee, officer or employe of the Com¬ pany. The Trustees are compelled to exhibit annually a full statement of their afl'airs to the Supreme Court, and it is made the duty of the Court to see that they are properly conducted. '1 he charter restricts the investment of its Capital to United States Government Stocks, or New York State Stocks, or Bonds of Incorporated Cities of this State ; or on Loans on Bond and Mortgage on u».incumbered Real Estate in this State, worth double the paper. The above provisions constitute this Company a very secure Depository for Money and for trusts committed charge. ADVANTAGES TO DEPOSITORS. to its As the National Trust Company receives deposits in large or small amounts, and permits them to be drawn as a whole or m part, by Check at Sight and without notice, allowing interest on all daily bal¬ ances, parties can keep accounts in this institution, with special advantages of security, convenience ana profit. THE NINTH NATIONAL Smith 8c McGinnis, Jr. McGinnis, BANKERS AND BROKERS. STREET, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Exchange, Commercial Paper and Gold, Purchased or Sold on NO. 4 BROAD Commission. Deposits received and Interest allowed same as with Incorporated Bank. Bonds and Loans negotiated for Railroad Companies. an John Bloodgood 8c Co., 22 WILLIAM DEALERS STREET, NEW YORK. IN OTHER Interest allowed" cy, on GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. AND deposits of Gold and Cnrren subject to check at sight, and particular atten tion given to accounts of country banks and banker Cohen Sc Hagen, RANKERS, - AND DEALERS IN BULLION, SPECIE, AND UNITED STATES SECURITIES. No. 1 Wall Street. BANK, 363 Broadway, New York, December 23, 1867.—The Board of Directors of this Bank have declared a semi¬ annual Dividend of FIVE (5) Her Cent., free of Gov¬ ernment tax, payable on 2d January text. The Transfer Books wiH be closed from this date to January 2, 1868. JOHN T. HILL, Cashier. Late of Henry Clews & Co, EUROPEAN PASSAGE AND EXCHANGE OFFICE, 73 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Drafts on England, Ireland Ac Scotland THE WARKIT NATIONAL BANK. furnished FIVE (5) Per Cent., free of Government tax, payable on and after January 2,1868. A. fttatea. with cr GILBERT, Cashier. Star Fire Insurance Sterling Exchange and through tickets from Europe to all parts of the United Bankers $200,000 53,000 A##et# Memphis and Charleston RAILROAD COMPANY. $600,000 Second For Mortgage Sale. Rond# part of a series of One Million of Dollars secured by Mortgage on 290 miles of Railroad, of w’hicli Messrs. Dening Duer and James Robb are Trustees. They have 20 years to run with 7 per cent, interest coupons, payable semi-annually in New York. The liens on the Railroad having priority, amount to $2,889,530, making the total incumbrance $3,889,580, and These Bonds are its estimated value exceeds 10 millions of dollars. Since the conclusion of the war extensive improve¬ ments have been made, and its condition will compare favorably with that of leading lines of Western Rail¬ way. The profits of the Company from 1858 to 1862 were large, and after paying invest on Bonded Debt yielded over 15 per cent, to the shareholders, those of the fiscal year ending 80th June, 1867, were $547,187 76, being more than double of the liability for annual In¬ terest, including the issue of the 2d Mortgage Bonds, and earned during a most unfavorable season owing to the failure of Southern crops. We prepared to receive bids for the above Bonds part, and recommend them to the pub unquestionable security. are in whole or in lie as WINSLOW' LANIER & CO., Co., NO. 96 BROADWAY. Gapital Siirplu#, Jan. 1, ’4>8 Financial. BOSS, Preside John Securities, State Stocks and City Stocks of this State ; but it is not? permitted to discount or deal in coemercial or business I. H. Stout, Cashier. Washington M. Smith. will make loans from its Deposits and J. Roosevelt Bayley Thompson’s Nephew, - D. L. Sight. New York, December 20, 1868.—The Board of Direc¬ tors have this day declared a semi-annual dividend of Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers and Dealers’ Accounts solicited. Government Securities Late o.i $1,000,000 450,000 RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. CAPITAL SURPLUS Foreign Exchange, Gold, &c., on commission. Eugene Winthrop, ac City Governments, and foreign and domestic corpora¬ tions, banks and bankers. It will act as administrator or executor of estates, and as guardian for minors, and as receiver in litigated cases. The Company is also constituted by its charter a legal depository fpr money paid iato Court. amount loaned. The Company and Louisville, Ivy. and allow Interest at the rate of FOUR PER CENT TT77T Check Certificates payable on demand are issued at the rate. Special Deposits for one year or more may be made at five per cent. The National Trust Company discharges all the various duties of similar institutions. It acts as Trus¬ tee for Corporations and Individuals, and Mortgagee for Railroads, and as Financial Agent of State and same SECURITY OF THE COMPANY. Co., No. 2)4 Wall Street, N.Y., (PETTY, SAWYERS & 00., Mobile, Ala.) BANKERS AND to INTEREST BALANCES, Trust Funds on Government YISSER, Exchange Place, New York. Capital P. D. Roddey, J. N. Petty, Railways Gold, Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com¬ LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. SIMON DE Cos., and undertake all business connected witli ACCOUNTS OF AND ALLOWS Subject Ralls, Locomotives, P. D. Roddey 8c STREET, BOSTON. Drake Klein wort 8c Cohen 26 TRUST COMPANY FOUR PFRCE'T. ON DAILY Cars, etc., 56 WALL NATIONAL Ranks, Bankers, Corporations, and Individuals, MERCHANTS, BANKERS AND STATE. THE R, Mangham, President. Darius RECEIVES THE AT THE NEW YORK STOCK AOBNT8 BY CHARTERED THE M. K. J Capital, One Million Dollars. Hardy). ELLERS, EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS. SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW. STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. YORK, NO. 336 BROADWAY. STREET, $253,000 DIRECTORS: Levi Apgar, I). Randolph Martin, Clms. H. Applegate, O. W. F. Randolph, John F. PupKe, Martin V. Bunn, . * Edgar Pinchot, John'H. Holdane, Chancellor H. Brooks, Stephen S. Chamberlin, Charles Spear, " William w. Owens, John M. White, Alexander Bonnell, Robert P. Getty, At a meeting of the Board of Marshall O. Roberts Horace K, Thurber R. Cornell White, Erastus T Telft, Allan Hay, Eben Sutton, David Wagscaff, James Flanagan, James Wallace, Chris’n II. Liiienthal, Adolph Eberhardv, Charles B. Richard. Timothy C. Kimball, John R. Flanagan, Robert McLoughlin,* Directors, held Mon¬ day. December 30, 1867, the resignation of GEO. W. SAVAGE, Esq., as President, was accepted, and the following resolution was unanimously adopted: Resoleed, That the thanks of this Board are due, and are hereby tendered to Geo. W. Savage, Esq,, (who resigns to assume the Presidency of the international Insurance Company,) for his devotion to the interests of the stockholders, and the able manner in which he performed his duties as President of this Company congratulate Mr. Savage upon the present prosperous condition of the Company, which is largely due to his efficient administration. Subsequently NICHOLAS C. MILLER was unani¬ mously elected President, and MOSES M. BRADLEY has and that this Coard appointed Secretary. MOSES M. BRADLEY} Secretary, Financial. Financial. Financial. QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF QUARTERLY" REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CENTRAL NATIONAL RANK, THE THE NINTH NATIONAL BANK. € HA Til 4ITI NATIONAL RANK. In New York, in the State of New York, ing of the lirst Monday in January, 1868. on the morn¬ Resources, $1,7G2;996 06 506 41 Real Estate -. Current Expenses Cash Items (.including revenue 6,102 87 Suspense account 209 65 275,447 59 379 03 Due from National Banks 139,547 34 stamps) Superintendent Bank Department State of New York Due from other banks and bankers LTnited States Bonds deposited with United StateB Treasurer to secure circulating 4,600 00 22,899 79 150,000 00 notes Cash on hand in circulating notes National Banks of other 49,500 00 109.865 78 736 65 237,655 00 272,640 00 Specie Currency Legal Tender notes Compound Interest Notes Fractional . Total $3,034,029 07 Liabilities Capital Stock paid In $450,000 00 Surplus Fund 190,000 00 Circulating notes received from Comp¬ troller..: $139,500 00 Less amount on hand 7,805 00 Amount outstanding 129,415 00 Individual deposits 1,791,329 89 Due to National Banks; Due to other banks and bankers State Bank circulation outstanding Dividends unpaid Cashier’s checks outstanding Discount Interest Of the City 54,000 4S,445 4,109 16,7S8 90,000 96 % 00 03 00 $883 03 Uncollected checks 250,076 71 Total $3,081,029 07 I. O. H. S .HRPINER, Cashier of the Chatham Na¬ tional Bank of New York, do solemnlv swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge aud belief. O. H. SCHREINER, Cashier. State of New York, County of New York, bworn to and subscribed before me, this 6th day of January. 1863. Henry C. Banks, Notary Public, New York. Resources * Loans and Discounts $3,980,432 03 Commercial Paper... $2,594,937 43 Loans Demand 1,313,494 65 Indebtedness of Directors... 22,000 00 Overdrafts 2,S12 88 Furniture and Fixtures 13,000 00 Current Expenses 237 56 Premiums.. 115,493 78 Cash Items and Revenue Stamps 40,112 81 . Exchanges this AM * Loans and Discounts Overdrafts $1,904,560 30 Banking house Current Expenses Exchanges aud Cash items... 35,000 00 125 30 440,781 «7 Due from Banks and Bankers U.S. Bonds to secure circulating notes Other Bonds and Stocks Cash on hand circulating notes National Banks Cash on hand circulating notes State Banks Specie 95,498 71 672,000 00 1,000 00 32,776 00 172 00 —$295,975 203,000 Compound interest Notes Three per cent Cent. Certificates... 170,000 Legal Tender Notes 81,184 04 632,975 00 - ^ $3,956,719 15 Total $1,000,000 00 Capital Stock paid 281,395 89 3O,/i80 58 Dividends unpaid 590,561 00 Circulating notes outstanding 1,563,930 18 Individual Deposits Uncollected Checks Due to Banks and Bankers 370,300 00 111,395 50 8,500 00 outstanding..... $3,956,719 15 Total I do solemnly swear that the above statement to the heat of my knowledge and belief. A. is true GILBERT, Cashier. QUARTERLY REPORT* OF THE CONDITION OF THE I'.» i ' Resources. Demand loans Other suspended and overdue 62,091 69 Indebtedness of Directors Overdrafts Furniture and Fixtures Premiums on Government Bonds Cash items including Revenue stamps Due from National Banks United States Bonds deposited with United States Treasurer to secure circulating notes United States Bonds deposited with United States Treasurer to secure deposits.... Cash on hand in circulating notes in other National Banks U.S. Deposits $1,568,617 36 4,935 51,000 1,450 71,698 39 68 42 00 00 53 1,036,000 00 250,000 00 $308,476 00 355,883 00 Total $7,234,182 58 State of New York, County of New York,—I, JOHN T. HILL, Cashier of the Ninth National Bank of the City of New York, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and be¬ lief. JOHN T. HILL, Cashier. before me this .$3,723,934 35 Total Liabilities. 1 ...$1,000,000 00 from Comp¬ troller Due depositors and banks United States Deposits Dividends unpaid Profits and surplus (net) 1863. t Individual United btatea Banks 166,724 52 13,796 57 95,448 56 JOEN H. STOUT, Cashier. York, County of New York, Sworn to before me. this 8th day of January, S. Fbancis Hyde, Notary Public. $7,491,449 89 120,714 74 7,285,955 09 Total $19,994,511 19 Sworn and subscribed J anuary, 1568. NATIONAL"MECHANICS’ T? BANKING TJ' Q Tip AT7* OFft • c Notes and bills discounted % Overdrafts $913,868 5G Banking house 125 6,886 8,974 3,1S5,780 18 22 Current expenses.., Cash items, including Revenue Stamps Exchanges for Clearing House this AM circulating notes U, S. Bonds and Securities on hand Cush on hand in Circulating National Banks 355.000 00 107,000 00 ;.. Notes of other Specie Fractional Currency Legal Tender Not‘*s Compound Interest Notes. $389,8 9 00 200,960 00 Treasury Certificates 00 22 05 41 25,525 58 5,259 18 Due from National Banks Due from other Banks and Bankers...*. U. S. Bonds deposited with U.S. Treaserer 9,680 00 6,152 42 1,763 01 25.000 00 $5,251,984 16 Ox? TAUTT TTTTPCi Capital Stock paid in. ! $500,000 00 136,3,9 83 Surplus Fund Circulating Notes received from Go raptroller ...$309,500 uO on 794 00 hand outstanding .... Individual Deposits Due National Banks Due to other Banks and Bankers...,. State Bank Circulation outstanding.. Dividends Bogart, Notary Public. THIttTI-FIFTH DIVIDEND. 803,706 00 4,196*936 27 51,60188 12,102 35 11,854 00 $6,833 63 Cash Capital 906 76 3,91V: 76 KTC $5,251,984 16 York, City and County of New York* —I, Franklin Chandler,Cashier of “The National Me¬ chanics’Banking Association of New York,” do sol¬ emnly swear that the above statement is true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. F. CHANDLER, Cashier. Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 7th day of January, 1863. Wm. T. Farnham, Notary Public. State of New BANK. 25 Broad Street corner Exchange Place, New York, December 24,—Dividend.—The Directors of the Tenth National Bank have this day declared the regu¬ lar semi-annual dividend of FIVE (5) Per Cent., free of tax, payable on and after January, 2,1868. The Transfer Books will bedoaed until January 2, 1868. I. H. STOUT, Cashier. THE CHAT HAH NATIONAL BANK, New York, December 21,1867.—A semi-annual divi¬ dend oi SIX (6) Per Cent, has been this day declared, free of government tax, out of the profits of the last six months, payable on and after January 2. An extra dividend of TWO AND 67-KX) Per Cent., free of Government tax, has also been declared, to pay the taxes levied by the city and county against the shareholders of the Banks. The Transfer Book will remain closed from the 24th instant to January 2d, inclusive. By order of the Board. , $1,0^0,000 , 363,000 The Board of Directors have declared a dividend of FIVE Per Cent., for six months, free of tax, payable on and after Mu hi DAY, the 13th Inst. .1. D. STEELE, President. P. NOTMAN, Vice-President. Henry Kip, Secretary. OFFICE OF THE Germania Fire Insurance COMPANY. New Y"ork, Jan. 8, 1868. The Board of Directors have 'this day declared a semi-annual Dividend of FIVE PER free from Government tax, CENT., payable on demand, at the office, No. 175 Broadway. HUGO DesMoines Valley Rail- COMPANY’S R«)1D FIRST SCHUMANN, Secretary. MORTGAGE EIGHT PER CENT. FOR SALE. These Bonds are BONDS $2,310,000 the first and only Mortgage on a completed Railroad, 162 miles In length, running from Keokuk to Des Moines, the capital of Iowa. The bal¬ ance now of the entire issue 268 Bonds of $1,000 each, are on favorable terms. offered The subscribers have solffover a million dollars of these Bonds at par to parties investing for estates and to Capitalists. The principal of these Bonds can be registered payable to the holder. GILMAN, NON «fc CO., No. 47 Exchange Place, N. Y. Chicago and Alton Railroad Coupon*. of First Mortgage Bonds. 17,578 19 NATIONAL CO.,- New York, Jan. 8, 1868. • Joliet and Chicago Railroad Coupons, of First Mortgage 8 Per Cent Bonds. Dubuque 0. H. SCHREIKER, Cashier, and Coupons, of 5,100 57 TENTH INSURANCE Surplus, Jan. 8, 1868 11 92 Unpaid HRE OFFICE NO. 12 WALL STREET. Total Isflue..M 590 70g Q0 10.147 51 T Less amouut Chas. E. New Y"ork. Jan. 6,1868. ASSOCIATION, City of i*ew Y"ork, in the State of New York, morning of the first Monday of January, 1868. Three Per Cent. Taxes Paid W. H. SANFORD, Cashier. to before me this 6th day oi' 14TH DIVIDEND. THE _ to secure 14,893,119 63 79,006.00 Dividends unpaid QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF - 1,546,859 70 1,725,000 00 Deposits, viz: Notary Public. 901,155 00 Total .$3,723,984 35 I, JOHN H. STOUT, Cashier of the Tenth National Bank, New York, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and beState of New and subscribed 1868. J. H. V. Arnold :7th day of January, stamp. : 87,199 00 864,384 00 $3,000,000 00 292,355 56 Capital stock NIAGARA 4,400 25 24,345 00 23,380 50 3,594 75 Fractional currency Capital stock paid in Circulating notes received 1,676 07 1,009 02 Unpaid Dividends. In the on the 5,994,904 68 80 50 Interest Profit and Loss 5 cent 60 00 50 00 $19,994,511 19 Surplus and Profits $1,684 66 Exchanges : : 41 Liabilities. Circulation 3,632,999 59 1,465,760 80 Premium* Account 35,088;53 Specie Legal Tender Notes Compound Interest Notes 14,000 00 89 160,350 05 Due to National Banks Due to other Banks and Bankers Interest.. Profit and Loss ...: 1.950 00 paper 115,419 21 913 556 QQ Exchanges 1,060,720 00 16 00 00 52 Total 25,000 09 1,957’,770 Individual Deposits Discount $443,355 .0 Commercial Paper Checks, &c $93,966 91,468 3.867,867 ;.. 1,941,603 Liabilities. Amount TENTH NATIONAL RANK, In New York, in the State of New York, on the mornng of the first Monday of January, 1363. Loans and Discounts: 51 $9,234,182 58 . Profit and loss Stute circulation Specie 09 00 Capital Stock $1,000,000 00 Surplus Fund 75,000 00 Circulating Notes received from Comp¬ troller $919,330 00 Less amount on hand 35,714 00 650 83 Liar i litirs Overdrafts Premiums Due from Banks United States Bonds Cash on hand, viz : RANK, Of New York, on the morning of the first Monday In January, 1868. $4,173,608 44 6,619,439 07 $10,793,047 $360,752 61 11,280 83,W0 612,278 2,550,u00 Liabilities of Directors National currency Legal Tenders 2,142,565 82 Total Demand Loans Bills discounted 169.250 00 Circulating Notes of other National Banks Specie Fractional Currency Legal Tenders $1,528,065 82 Compound Interest Notes...... 013,000 00 » Resources . 49 24 Sworn to and subset ibed THE MARKET NATIONAL 587,905 96,833 618,565 1,088,000 275,000 Due from National Banks Due from oth.*r Banks and Bankers U.S. Bonds deposited to secure circulation U.S. Bonds deposited to secure deposits.... U.S. Bonds and Securities on liana [U.S. Revenue Stamp, 5c. ‘canceled.] QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF Of the City of New York, on the morning of the first Monday of January. ■ Resources. Discount 30 49 52 “ of New York, on the morning of the first Monday of January, 1868. Loans and Discounts Overdrafts i [January 11, 1868. THE CHRONICLE. 3G Moux Ci«y Railroad First Mortgage Bonds. Dnbuque southwestern Railroad Cou¬ pons, of First Mortgage Preferred Bonds. Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad Cou¬ pons, of FiiSt Funding Bonds. Detroit and Pont lac Railroad Coupons of First Mortgage Bonds. Cedar Falls and Minnesota Railroad Coupons, of First Mortgage Bonds. due January 1st. 1868, will be paid at our office. No. 12 Pine street, in the City of New 1 ork, on and alter the 2d proximo, less Government Tax. Also, SI. Louis, Jacksonville and Chicago Railroad Coupons, of 10 per cent. Equipment Bonds, free of Government Tax. M. K. JESUP & COMPANY, New York, December 23,1867. Gibson,Readleston & Co., BANKERS, 50 EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds and Gold bought and sold, ONLY" on Commission, at the Stock, Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem¬ bers. Interest allowed on Deposits. Dividends. Coupons ana Interest collected. Liberal advances on Governmeift and other Securities Informati on cheerfully given to Professional men, Executors etc., desiring to invest. Refer br.peraMBBlon to j Messrs. Lockwood & Co., { « dabnky, Morgan * Co §nnta’ fecttc, (StommrMiaJ jMwag §$Mtw, and gmsttyanw journal A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, ^ REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. YOL. 6. SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1868 heavy galling burden of taxes for army purposes would the genius and spirit of repub¬ CONTENTS. be intolerable and contrary to 42 lican institutions. THE CHRONICLE. The January Debt Statement.... Railroad Management Commerce of New York for 1867. Treasure Movements at New York Public Debt of the United States. 37 IClevelancfand Pittsbnrg*Railroad 3S Latest Monetary and Commercial 39 | English News. (Commercial and Miscellaneous 41 41 42 News 43 j THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Commereial Cotton Tobacco Breadstuffs Groceries Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks. Philadelphia Banks National Banks, etc. Sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange 44 6 National. State and Securities List 47 Epitome 4S 50 51 52 52 53 , 5 Dry Goods Municipal Prices Current and Tone of the Market 61-62 THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Railway News Railway, Canal, etc.. Stock List. Railroad, Canal and Miscellane- 55 56 | ons Bond List Insurance and Mining Journal j Advertisements... 57 58 .33-6,65-60,63-4 . ®l)e Chronic]*. The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, with the latest news up to midnight if Friday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier to oity subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,) For The Commercial For One Year For Six Months * $10 00 6 00 Foliage is 20 cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office b. DANA, ) WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., Publishers, will AM john o. flotd, jr. 60 William Street, New York. j Remittances should Office Money Orders. apa aw invariably be made by drafts or Post Soliciting Agents make no collections. xbwhmhwbmwwwwpwh—wwbw———a—a THE JANUARY DEBT STATEMENT. The popular interest in the monthly reports of the national to know no abatement. Every successive state¬ ment is scanned as closely as its predecessorWe regret to notice once more an increase in the aggregate of our in¬ debtedness, the gross sum of which is 2,642 millions, against 2,639 millions in December, 2,625 millions in No¬ vember, 2,630 millions in October, and 2,641 millions in September last. For the present it appears that we must give up the hope of diminishing, to any great extent, the vast aggregate which represents our national obligations except retrenchment be enforced with a much more rigorous firm hand in the Departments at Washington. The customs duties fell off in December, the internal revenue receipts were light, while the demands for the War De¬ partment were excessive, and we had also to meet other requisitions on the Treasury at the close of the year, besides disbursing about $8,500,000 for interest on Seven-Thirties and Compound notes. It is with some anxiety that the public contemplate the existing scale of extravagant outlay for war purposes now that we are so rapidly nearing the fourth year of peace. To increase our debt because of dis¬ bursements for war purposes, as we seem to be doing, is a disappointment to our peaceful citizens, and to carry a debt seems NO. 183. As would probably be the policy, Mr. McCulloch still reduces his idle balance of cur reney in theTreasury. The gold balance has increased in anti¬ cipation of the payments of coin, which matured with the opening year to the extent of some thirty millions of dol¬ we announced lars. some time ago • Pending the acliou of Congress in regard to contraction, greenback aggregate shows no material change; and even in the absence of any final action, it is very probable that the resources of the Treasury would not have allowed any withdrawal of greenbacks for cancellation, except bonds or gold were to be sold for cash, which would be a very unpop¬ ular procedure just now. There are few other points of special interest in the debt statement. Some surprise has been expressed at the large aggregate to which the funding operations were swelled in December, notwithstanding the change in the term3 of con¬ version which was made on the first day of the month. After that date, it will be remembered, the Seven-Thirties were converted into bonds not bearing the January coupon, the gold amount of which had previously been sold at par to the purchasers of the bond. The change in the terms of conversion being thus equivalent to an advance in the price offered for the Seven-Thirties, or to a reduction in the price asked for the Five-Twenties the conversions were expected to have been arrested, and we were prepared to see the amount re¬ duced to 20 millions. As such a check to the process of conversion would be mischievous it is gratifying to find that the report shows so favorably. The consolidated FiveTwenties issued during the month amounted to no less than $49,392,200, while the Seven-Thirtie3 retired were $47,318,the 650. The excess of two millions of bonds we suppose was given in exchange for compounds, of which sixteen millions These compounds might, under the law, were redeemed. have been redeemed in 3 per cent, certificates, but only ten millions have in fact been so redeemed, while the re¬ maining 6 millions appear to have been either paid off in cash or exchanged for Seven-Thirties. It is to be regretted that Mr. McCulloch has not told us what proportion of the conversions have been made on the new terms fixed on the 1st December, which were, as we have intimated, about per cent, less advantageous for the piiblic. We have inquired about this matter, but cannot learn the exact figures. Reports have been in circulation that a few prominent firms were allowed an extension of time for their conversions to the manifest injury of the public, who were denied this privilege, worth, as it was during the early part of the month, from j*@| per cent. These injurious [January 11,1868. THE CHRONICLE. 38 -• emphatically denied. They probably originated ments may be taken as evidence, we stand as welljn this in the circumstance that partly from want ot adequate clerica respect as the country whose railroad capital amounts to force in the Department, and partly because all bonds in nearly one-third of that of the whole world. This, however, transitu on the 1st December were accepted at the old terms is no palliation of the discreditable fact that the affairs of of exchange, a large amount of the conversions which our roads are so conducted as to seriously impair confidence properly belonged to November did not get into the books in such investments. It is easier, perhaps, to expose the causes of this fault till December, and appear therefore in the statement before us. Making due allowance for these circumstances, we have than to propound a practicable remedy. They do not con¬ arrived at the conclusion that of the 49 millions of conver¬ sist, however, in the perplexity, of the business details, nor sions in December, about 30 to 35 millions were made on in anything whatever intrinsic in the affairs of the corpora¬ the old basis, and from 15 to 19 millions on the new. We tions ; but in the fact that large discretionary powers have may also add that so far as appears, there was no favoritism to be entrusted to the direction and5 the officers; which or partiality shown in the negotiations, and that the conver¬ powers they are apt to employ with a primary regard to sions nowr and for a week or two past have been going on their own special interests. The directors have the oppor tunity to secretly start schemes or to make changes in the very prontisingly. Another point on which some questioning has arisen is company’s affairs materially affecting the value of the the apparent increase in the Sixes of 1881. For such an ini stock; and, in too many cases, the management is made crease MivMcOulloch has no lawful To produce fluctuations authority. And it is in to turn upon this power. part because the supply on the market cannot be increased, in the value of shares is to create opportunities that these absolute long bonds of 1881 are such a favorite for speculation, opportunities in which the directors have the rumors are security with certain investors, and possess an element of; stability denied to such securities as*are always liable at some first chances. It does not follow that because a director has position by using it. There are issue of several millions directors w ho accept their posi¬ tion as a public trust, and discharge its duties with an, put without notice upon the market. The bonds known as the old 1865’slast year suffered thus, as such an issue was made honest regard for the welfare of the company. But the fact after the loan was supposed to be closed, and the price fell of this position conferring such powers naturally attracts in¬ accordingly as soon as the fact became generally known. to the direction of the roads a class of men who desire the Mr. McCulloch’s experience, it is believed, would prevent office only for. the object of promoting speculations. A shrewd any such mischievous manipulation of the securities which director, with good Wall street connections, may in one are held and dealt in by the public with the understanding year make a handsome fortune out of manipulations of the that the loans to which they belong are definitely closed shares of his company. This being the fact, there are al¬ up and will be swelled by no new issues. This conviction and ways found knots of speculative capitalists ready to buy up the fact that there is no legal authority for any further issue sufficient stock to secure their election as directors. They elect themselves to that of Sixes of 1881 gave some importance to the question how position, not from any special fitness these securities in December could be permitted to show an for the management, not from any real aim to benefit the increase of $945,050 over their aggregate a month before. road, not because they desire or are peculiarly able to im¬ We are semi-officially informed that the discrepancy arose prove its condition, not because they have any large vested from a clerical error. The Sixes of 1881 amount altogether interest in the company, which they desire to protect, for, to $283,676,600, and are arranged under the three following usually, they sell out their stock soon after the election, but heads: first, those issued under the act of 17 July, 1861 simply because they desire a position favorable for specula¬ $189,316,550; secondly, those under act of 8 February, tion. This position being secured, the way to improve it is 1861, $18,415,000; and, thirdly, those under act of March by producing the widest possible fluctuations in the stock. 2, 1861, $945,050. This third series of 1881 bonds are com. For realising that result there is no lack of devices. Some¬ monly known as the Oregon war loan, and were by an error times resort is had to garbled reports, sometimes to the sup¬ on the part of the clerk who made out the debt statement for pression of facts relative to the condition of the road, some¬ November included with the five per cent, bonds and septa times by passing a dividend when the company is able to pay rated from the six per cents to which they really belong, and one, at other times by declaring a dividend when it has not are now restored. This blunder of the Treasury, and the been earned. These, however, are but the petty expedients of irritating discussion to which it has given rise, should at least the stock-jobbing director. His favorite devices are the pur¬ have the effect of stopping all future secret negotiations of chase of real estate in behalf of the company, the purchase bonds—either the Ten Forties or the Five-Twenties—the not of contiguous roads, and the extension of the company’s line. unfrequent occurrence of which during the last few months These operations not only affect the value of the stock, but has been the subject of severe frequent comment. also afford a chance for operating in real estate cn the route of the new track, or for speculating in the securities of the sudden moment to have a secret RAILROAD MANAGEMENT. How to manage a difficult problem of this power he will abuse his doubtless many high-minded road to be absorbed. while this element enters into the management so largely as it does, railroad investments must be shunned by the public at large, and stocks gravitate toward Wall street, to be bandied about as speculative foot balls, the directors being the head players. Investors require a kind of security which does not fluctuate 10 to 20 per cent, within the year, and one the dividends on which are not dependent upon caprice; but such they cannot have, in the majority of railroad shares, so long as this system of management is per¬ Of course, railroad seems to be practically the most this material age. In the United States we have 35,000 miles of road, on which 1,400 millions of capital has been expended, and in the control of which the best business talent of the country is engaged ; so that neither experience nor ability are lacking in the superinten¬ dence of this great interest. Yet the fact remains that, in the common judgment of the public, our railroads are ilj managed. Perhaps we may flatter ourselves that, in this mitted. The late transactions of the directors of a Western com¬ matter, we are no worse than other countries. If the present condition of Biitish roads, and the outcry of English pany are an illustration of the evil of such large powers be¬ stockholders against the severe depreciation of their invest¬ ing reposed in and exercised by the direction. Without an- / 39 THE CHRONICLE. January 11, 1868.] against 5,911,511 bushels last year, while ia flour the figures are ticipating the decision of the courts as to the right to issue about the same for the two years; but in corn there is a very de¬ 49,000 shares of new stock without the consent of the stock¬ cided decrease this year, the total being only 14,914,234 bushels holders, it may be safely asserted that a proper regard for against 22,696,186 bushels in 1866—had it not been for the early their interest wrould require That the negotiation be made and unexpected closing of the canals our receipts of breadstuff's an 1 openly, and that the stockholders first should have the priv¬ some other articles would have been considerably larger, 1,500,000 ilege of taking the new stock. The directors must have been bushels of wheat alone having been locked up in the ice. Below we aware that this new issue thrown upon the market wrould de¬ give our table of receipts for the two years'. RECEIPTS or DOMESTIC PRODUCE FOR 1866 AND 1867. preciate the value of stock outstanding; and therefore to clan¬ Yea Year Year Year 1866 destinely sell the shares was virtually an unfair imposition 1867. 1867. f 1866. 59,002 turp 61,428 5,924 6,0U8 Ashes, pkge. upon the purchasers and also upon the old stockholders—un¬ Breadstuff's— Rotin 361,427 401,460 48,118 Tar 23,081 fair to the purchasers because a fact was concealed which the 2,597.606 2.780,735 Flour, bbls 3,162 Pitch 5,713 Wheat.ba 9,652,537 5,911,511. ... . , 14,9 44,234 22,696,1801 Oil cake, pkgs 91,918 108,952 purchas¬ Corn 4,155 Oats 4,198 7,994,479 8,699,3391 Oil, lard 1,017,735 1,057,299 ers had a to the be¬ right be informed; and to stockholders ]Ve 758,263 1,304,7^91 Oif Petroleum... 2 ',780 17,914 Malt 458.783 526,818 Peanuts, bags... cause they 2,218,454 Barley 4,861,9931Provisions— had the first right to the new stock, and to the 454,049 Grass seed 72,057 141 5231 Butter, pkgs....... 555,861 145,622' 1,2-4,143 726,143 66,177j Cheese.. .7 advantages which the knowledge of the coming issue might Flaxseed 47,474 Cut meats., i 105,“'ll 102,389 40,343 afford.* So long as directors feel themselves free to under¬ 414,543 Eggs 223,664 150,401 156,779 131,668 C. meal,bbls.. 69 182 195,341 Pork 70,076 take operations of this character, the public can have no con¬ 10<,8S7 102,956 O. meal,bags 31*6,209 272,072 Beef, pkgs Buckwheat & B.W. Lard, pkgs 151,643 8,481 fidence in the stability of such investments. 82,039 Lard, kegs 13,403 Some legal flour, bps 23,752 4,54 4 657,383 .Rice, pkgs 4,753 600,411 77,7i’0 restraint should, therefore, we think, be imposed upon the Cotton, bales Copper, bbls 12.368 216.017 13’Starch 8,228 312 steanne 8,995 3,!>67 plates 17,005 23,46 power of directors to make purchases of real estate, or to Copper, 2,801 Spelter, slabs Driedfruit,pkgs 17,713 5,591 *V>^1 Sugar, hhds & bbls. 1.814 yg 454 undertake extensions of their line. 7,356 These operations are wrease, pkgs Hemp, bales...... u\n6 3G7,03»)j'Pobacco, oJWSiTallow, pkgs 8,366 167,368 pkgs.. ... 169,027 Hides, No g-kS 63,624 constantly unsettling the value of railroad stocks and pre¬ Hops, bales 19,715 19,'389 Tobacco, nh'ds...... 92,220 103,314 Whiskey, bbls 116,640 sides 2,295,250 2,285,251 venting them from becoming an investment upon which the Leather, 88,264 119,998 uead. Pigs 14,49 i 0,819 -Wool, bal os. Dressed Hogs, No.. 88.653 8S.052 public can rely for a steady income. In England, the evil Molasses, hhds and 23,001 23,704 Rice, rough, bush.. 3,964 has been carried to such an extent that aval.Stores— very many of the roads Crude trp,bbJ 14,242 36,886 are similar to tho3e.no ted failing to pay dividends and the stocks have greatly de¬ The exports during 1867 exhibits changes preciated ; so that the many families which have depended in the receipts. Wheat, after an export of only 522,607 upon these investments for income are suffering severely in* 1866, increased in 1867 to 4,468,774 bushels, while of corn we ex’ losing their dividends and in being unable to realize on their ported in 1867 8,147.313 bushels, against stock. A similar mania for extension prevails here; which 1866. Below we give our table showing the total exports for must result in great injury to the roads, unless placed under two years: YORK FOR 1866 AND 1867. directors alone could communicate and of which the • ... . . ‘ . x bushels in 11,147.781 bushels in the some effective check. Another evil of EXPORTS OF our present system consists in the abuses of power and privilege by the officers of the roads. These parties have the making of contracts for supplies, the con¬ trol of freights, the purchase of materials and equipment and the determining of arrangements w ith freight agents. Ag the exercise of these functions implies a wide discretion as to individuals and firms with whom the business is trans¬ acted, there is the strongest possible liability to contracts being awarded ' to those who offer the largest inducements in the way of largesse ; and indeed it is notorious that the finances of the roads frequently suffer seriously from this jobbing system of management. in this case would be in the direction. a strict unfortunately the officers are too fre¬ quently friendly appointees of the directors, and the latter are too prone themselves to use the road for their own pur¬ poses to be very jealous over similar sins by their subordi¬ nates. with the stockholders remedy for all abuses lies rather than ARTICLES FROM NEW IS i7. 1S66 1867. Breaos uffs— Flour.... ...bbs C<»ru meal Wheat 23,4*0 4/06 639,045 5*2,528 86,254 92,081 Bye Barley. Oats... 8,147,3«311,147,7*1 I ProvisionsVoa Corn... Peas.. Candles bxs. to>e. bags. Coni. Coffee Cotton 680,763 68,281 72,529 bales. Domestics Drugs. Hardware — bales. pkgs. cases bales. Hops Naval stores— 44,664 447,647 13,644 51,884 23,8'2 3,L32 Fork 230,170 I "bis. 70/34 65,037 35,077 376,976 9,413 Bacon Butter Cheese.. .. Lard.... .. ' “ 44,036 537,543 52-/93 “ 184,986 “ 17,737 pkgs Tallow Tea 3,016 5/361 93,177 & tcs. 100 lbs. Beef. ..bbls. 79,032 71,551 Tobacco leaf.. .hhds , Tobac .bales, I ea’s <fec 15,310 253,292 20,827 390,695 283,066 149,018 55/25 45,5 3 n—r« ’lbs[7.S93’725 5,691.557 .lbs 600.536 647.413 The direction which these exports have taken may be seen by refThe most proper remedy fereme to the Chronicle of Jan. 4, 1868, page 19. Below we give supervision of officers by But But the most effective LEADING Articles. the legislators. Their votes might not be able to accomplish much; but their rigid scru tiny into the doings of the direction and the affairs of the company, their protest against mismanagement, and their appeal to the courts where the right of investigation is de¬ nied them, would go far toward holding mismanagement in check. Spirits 1 r urp..bble. “ Rosin the value 38,! 15 289,194 ^ 21,413 | Tobacco, manf. Whalebone. 222,084 i Whalfihone... . exported to each country (exclusive of specie) 1867 Exported to— Great Britain France, value. Holland and Belgium Germany Ot;ier N. Europe bpaiu .. | value 10.470,683 | Hayti 6,434,558 | Other W Mexico 20 497 615 | 1,385.116 1,495 119 * 1867. Exported to— $100,547,843 | Tuba . 1867. I , j New Granada Venezuela j British Guiana 11,331 | Brazil...... Other 8. ports A. ports 2.454,004 | All 2,896,099 | All other othernorts 7,294,556 Other S. Europe East x!.ac*i Indies muicB China and Japan Au.-tralia... Br. N. A. Colonies during 3,895,249 | $6,242,357 1/74,170 7,122,005 2,133,758 3,146,464 679,721 1,111,379 3,060,591 3,662,263 3,ot«,z»v> 3,122,977 to’al foreign bring forward our figures showing the th «t commerce at this port for a series of years. It will be seen the exhibit for the past twelve months is more satisfactory We rv now than last year, although the exports are less than anticipated owing in the lower prices paid for cotton duri* g the lust In the imports, however, there is a fading off great measure to half of the ^ear. of about 54 millions, COMMERCE OE NEW YORK FOR l?b7. full review of the commerce of New York for the past year, having received from the Custom Bouse the returns for the last quarter and revised our own figures of re¬ ceipts, exports, &c. We are now able to publish exports. a RECEIPTS, IMPORTS AND EXPORTS OF LEADING ARTICLES. reach exports from New York for 1867, exclusive of specie, total of $186,790,025 against $192,329,554 last year. As we The a 5 staled last year, however,fit should be remembered, in receiving figures and in using them as a basis upon which to estimatr the trade of the country, that the exports from the South have bed these sma.® receipts of the leading articles of domestic produce show no large since the close of the war while the imports have been marked variation except in breadstuff's, cheese and a few other arti¬ so also during the past year California has shipped an amount of wheat and flour. For these reasons the figures sho*--cles. Of wheat the total this year reaches 9,652,537 bushels, The unufjjg [January 11, I860. THE CHRONICLE. 40 the commerce of New York do not indicate the same relation to the trade of the country as formerly; that is to say, the exports do not The shipments of specie during 1867 will be millions less than last year. seen to be about 11 - now represent nearly as large a proportion of the total exports from the United States during the war, while the imports represent a larger proportion of the total imports tnau even during the years previous to the war. The shipments direct to foreign countries of cotton alone from the South TOTAL Last year the imports reached the large total of $306,613,184. Compared with those figures there is this year a falling oil of about 54 millions, but compared with previous years the total still con¬ tinues large. From what we have said above, however, it will be understood why these imports should show au excess over former years/inasmuch as this port has been called upon to supply not only the usual portions of the country which draw their imports from this point, but to a very great extent the whole South. In the following we classify the total imports, giving separately the dry goods, general merchandise and specie : during 1867 reach about one million of bales, while the total amount of naval stores, tobacco, etc., sent direct from that section is also large, and yet foreign imports for the through New York. for the whole country are South have been to a very great extent received We think, therefore, that when the figuies made up, they will cot show an unfavorable balance. The followingstatemeDt exhibits the quarterly exports, exclusive of specie,[for the past six years from this port. As the shipments of merchandbe reckoned are at their market connection the range same price in FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK. Total 1864. 1855. 1866. $ $ 1st quarter.. 32,075,563 60.614,908 41,429,756 40,710,118 Pric-i of gold 101*-101* 152*-172* 151*-169* 1&0* -234* 2d quarter.. 29,798,3 ;4 41,040,720 48,446,086 24,216,: 67 Price r,f gold 101*-109* 110*-157* [166*-250 128*-147* 3d quarter.. 45,313,299 88,825,587 70,519.134 40,621.493 Price of gold 108* 124 191-285 122*-145 138*-146* 4th quarter. 49,747,611 40,223,747 52,426,966 67,178,421 Price of gold 122 134 189-2*0 14Uf-156* 144*-149 1S67. $ / 124*-145* 46,766.386 125-107* 88,381,202 148*-147* 40,80-V435 131*-154* We usual detailed statement showing the exporis produce, foreign dutiable and free goods, and specie and bullion, during each month of the last six years: EXPORTS OF DOMESTIC PRODUCE. 1863. 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. ... March April May June July August.... September. October... November. December . 8,985,176 16,137,689 8,002,094 31,581,933 9,837,693 13,183,510 10,048,832 14 780,072 14,050,437 15,298. 73 13,0-16,389 10,666,959 14,7:44,993 31,717,761 19,476,947 14,513,454 14,060,340 11,413,591 14,8 5,112 12,846,151 14,410,051 13,263,712 14,610,493 13,898.565 7,220,709 17,996,495 16,740,404 8.079,802 12,521,246 14,500,860 12,7b3,4&4 20,986,936 12,015,064 19,248,528 26.251,"73 26,617,850 15,595,548 Total....$149,179,591 164,249,177 201,855,9S9 23,291.485 22,526,822 12.281.623 9,601 080 7.8S3.565 19,679.955 16,979,383 12,615,02! 14,:;46,769 13,057,476 12,643,004 12,116,096 1*,666,098 1.635,610 11,102.100 22,763.327 14,593,664 13,6r'l,4bl 20.056.540 22,562,534 16,817,615 13,412.177 16,679,510 174,247.154 186,655,969 178,210,409 EXPORT9 OF FOREIGN FREE. ... February... March April $27,193 $73,111 49,- 99 65,388 $42,232 43,880 213,685 74,949 77.698 74,793 26.605 72,667 57,167 48,461 103,337 40,898 49,380 75 709 307,221 57,541 54.500 35,417 28.206 45,045 55,350 70,971 43,308 1,117.193 May June Ju.y AngnBt FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK. Year. i3H Dutiable. .... September. October November ... . December . 417.100 77,232 90,815 667,987 179,205 65,400 119,325 45.533 106,439 $103,421* 249,404 $38,301 88.889 23.482 66.534 109.155 65,565 425,031 24,165 $1,037,212 $2,142,458 $638,735 $706,483 33,235 36,803 SI,133 151.393 53,074 27,209 50,720 29,873 32,061 64,001 ■14,205 61,003 | „ f- JL, Free uoods. $9,719,771 12, 05,342 12,156,387 D 5.336.052 . 1853.... ]S54.. - l853.... 142,90«Afll 1806.... 1857.... 196,279,362 128,578, 66 213,640,373 jb59.... i860.... 43,214 20,168 24,096 9,498 4.446 8,515 82,694 855,631 1814.425 21,440.734 22,024,691 28,708,732 ... 95,326,459 149,970,415 ., }r63.... j864..,. 204,128,236 1567.... 284,033,567 238,297,955 i860.... 15110.... Below 30,353,9:8 23,291,625 11,567,000 11,731,902 10,410,837 13,001,588 11,041.181 . Total. Specie. 2, 07,572 28,006,417 ,861.... •i862. ' $2,049,543 2,408,226 3,429,083 • 16,768,916 14,103,946 17,902.578 . 12,898.033 2, 64,120 2,816,421 8,852, 30 37,088,413 1,390,277 1,525,811 2,965,62! 2,123 281 '9.578,029 3,306,339 $’31,361,578=' 129,849.119 ' 194,097,652 181.371,172 157,866,238 213,566,649 230,618,129 152,867,007 245,165,516 238 260,46 • 162,768,790 174,652,317 187,614,577 218,125,760 2 4,742,419 306,613,184 252,648,475 give a detailed statement showing the receipts from foreign ports during each month of the year, for the last six years, both of dutiable and free goods, and what portion were entered for warehousing, and the value withdrawn from warehouse : we IMPORTS ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION. $114,207 130.254 126,537 818,742 69,965 61,914 T 2858.... January $12,053,477 $14 329,39S *11,448,953 $16,023,621 $19 734,997 $12,911,689 February... 10,078.101 17,780,586 33,662,218 15.042 505 16,768,120 14,615,040 January now 132*-145$ of domestic 1862. 3,306,3,9 imports.$187,614,577 $218,123,760 $224,742,419 $300,671,184 $252,6-18,475 -... now annex our 160,759,725 46,376.379 Total.... 15G,9c4,822 170,718,768 221,822,542 176,' 26,599 192,329,564 186,790,025 We 1867. $88,682,411 give for comparison the previous yeats since 1851, classi¬ Under the head of 132*-140* fying them into dutiable, free, and-specie. 46,270,21.1 dutiable is included both the value entered for consumption d 132*-141i 36.292,663 that entered for warehousing. free The goods run very light, as 7 3-—148* 52,214,722 nearly all the imports now are dutiable. $ 60 912.531 1866. * $56,121,227 $71, 89,752 $92,051,140 $126,222,855 Gen merchandise 117,140,813 144.2.0,386 130,657,998 170,812,300 Specie. 1,390,217 2,265,622 "2,123,281 9,578,029 of gold. 1803. $ 1865. Dry goods EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK TO FOREIGN PORTS EXCLUSIVE OF SPECIE. 3852. ' 1864. 1863. we^have given in the currency, IMPORTS. 1862. 1863. 1864. 1865. 1866. $6,763,395 $8,741 227 $12,422,618 $5,2 7,495 $18,556,726 7,0 8,174 7,372,539 15,766,601 5,178,774 17,389,505 March 10,312,689 11,461,572 15,848,425 7,066,126 15,200,809 April.. 7,141,197 9,493,830 18,9 1,700 5,528,075 13,366,448 8,091,120 May ....' 7.980,281 6,592 157 13,563,551 7,531,300 Ju-e 7,273,953 6,321,581 5,513 985 8.542,271 10,602.723 13,799,605 July 9,080,210 6.382,928 10,175,820 14 304,403 10,289,427 10,004,580 August 6,603,653 15,903,743 14,560.1*11 September . 11.890,711 11,203,535 4,390,114 16,748,595 13,228,439 Oc'ober.., 8,462.554 11,885,569 3,770,526 16,357.232 13,812,206 November 6,565,185 10, *26,929 3.363,359 16,655,764 10,688,544 December:. 6,831,073 10,498,576 4,443,542 14,500,606 8,447.064 January.... February 1867. $11,046,856 13.364,912 .. 11,373,974 10,800,747 9,438,747 8,917,3.9 ... 11,036,960 13,547,834 13.149,846 10,224,405 6.193,013 . , $136,655 January February... ... March April May June Ju'y August September. .... October November. December . . Total ... $149,493 208,757 458.917 607,673 752,797 372,561 449.918 256.680 572,572 434,265 281,873 352,902 $6rC,275 $664,465 37 ',224 599,953 $432,550 633,509 191,917 658,812 433,395 6''2,25 4 298,067 569,888 1,282.218 5,l:i7,460 2,231,782 2,460,133 320,210 654,019 759,857 131,425 262,593 606,255 401.724 135,172 200.854 226,786 306,214 610.009 758,266 448.601 231 774 238,972 850,614 456,493 $284,909 400,782 320,165 383,948 1,104,29.) 1.126,059 222,072 186 103 208,091 458,575 1,632J02 238,606 268.600 651.657 $422,751 IMPORTS ENTERED 800,663 January 704,138 815,824 March 663,034 713,137 332, 95 717,161899.851 797,23 019,46 * > 533,115 $4,901,383 $5,425,579 $17,824,095 $3,440,410 $1,967,102 $8,142,96i January ... March April May June July August.... September. October November. ... December.. $2,658,274 $4,624,574 $5,459,079 $3,184,853 $2,706,336 $2,551,351 3,7.6,919 3,965,664 3,015,367 1,023,201 1,807,030 2,121.461 2,471,233 6,585,442 1,800,559 381,913 1,015,039 1,891,141 4,037.675 1,972,834 871 210 6,883,077 688,875 2,261,23^ 6,161.636 2115.6:5 6,4o0,930 7,255,071 23.744,194 9,U43,1o4 9,867,614 1,367.774 8,064,337 3,713,532 3,085,919 fr,7«7,5l9 6 213,251 3,673,112 6,263,881 3,465,261 3,480,385 6,210,156 5,438,303 5,259,053 0,533,109 1,947.329 1,'"01,813 6,199,472 723.9 '6 2,835,398 2,617,121 7,267,662 6,104,177 15,890,956 5,821,459 1,554,898 2,494,973 1,687,851 831,550 2,516.226 2,046,180 1,163,450 2,752,161 3,297,270 Total.... $59,437,021 #19,754,066 $50,825,621 $30,003,633 3,776,690 6,724.272 13,519,891 1,714,591 2,201,958 1,182,031 1,733,261 6,854.548 Ji’ne.. 11.980,714 April ‘lay 12,703,797 15,832,097 lane. folly ^igust.... Member. )bcr.... t ember, jmber.. 20, 32,375 23,684,9:5 17,443,701 19,061,471 26,797,936 23,695.082 14,004,940 16,002,780 16,495,293 16.383.236 19,7.54,062 21,682,200 2\8V7,53l 14,799,626 8.582,897 15,513,346 13,446 116 24,713,856 22,366,307 23,899,970 20,121,879 36,937,067 22,340,699 26,153,374 21,827.392 19,307.928 27.588,755 21,092,787 33,585,866 13,536,061 14,464,809 20,977,982 10,235,474 14,511,361 14 571,947 16,492,518 21,739,826 45,523,314 12,805,773 14,204,4 7 21 219,549 20,431,789 23 788,469 16,275,283 1>,603 252 20,603,912 17,292.436 20,473,699 25,126,753 17,750,755 22,408,776 18,939,615 18,619,334 27,410,438 25,577,766 20,710,807 20,912,634 I,...$216,371,843 220,465,03 1 272,648,163 208,630,282 254,883,254 238,591*97^ . . ... July . August September, October.... November December Total... WAREHOUSE. $3,141,725 $4,48*2,794 $5,571,938 $4,510,221 $10,211,576 $9,007,702 3,370,488" 3,657 775 4,991,398 5,568,127 11,626,677 11,211,014 4,841,846 3,853,21S 4,600,920 3,874,127 4,502,764 2.939,721 4,351,084 3,689,806 . 2,108,909 . 4,212,725 45,486,431 6,016,901 6,611,403 7,872,055 9,539,100 6,456,203 5,905,540 7,448,371 10,159,657 5,437,404 14,727, i 76 6,2S8,049 13,902,407 5,377,885 16.906,964 7,123 792 10,957,"50 6,057,343 14,954,635 7,845,947 11,301,274 4,409,891 10,437,478 7,553.260 8,123,406 3,431.310 6,218,568 4,936,209 7,817,045 4,189,457 5,332,928 6,903,993 8,113,869 4,956,415 4,160,532 9,184,116 8,345,859 6,076,955 4,250,862 10,506,502 10,105,018 60,144,337 99,139,425 63,741,146 9,"69,758 13.321,839 10,896,675 10,478,305 11,226,514 9,340,292 6,676,707 7,096,411 6.414,609 6,931.115 20,232,938 110,756,939 IMPORTS OF FREE GOODS. January... February. March... . April May June July August $2,552 050 $2,413,649 783,561 3,231,413 1,3 >8,8 6 3,476,004 2,232,815 1,328,216 1,440,093 71",021 1,122,092 781,053 1,831,931 982,992 1,784,804 ... September Oc ober... November. December. $841,050 797.78-5 620,063 1,072,349 830,450 1,025,517 1,056,576 818,818 961,026 1,258,634 6S8.88 > 917,694 5 9,781 786,801 741,888 $840,129 $1,238,757 1,004.870 1.526,496 065,207 936,472 832,557 855,079 911,916 1,950,504 834,074 1,125.718 1/ 04,253 1,179,177 1,152.683 959,416 9*8,226 886,431 836,533 795,468 1/02,339 795,508 1,471,951 873,514 947,999 1,159,248 913,937 889,519 $717,910 918,364 923,377 1,232,997 1,140,103 1,043,040 .760,786 844,664 854,987 931,877 840,082 - 754.881 1,082,066 765,106 Total..,$23,291,625 $11,567,000 $11,731,902 $10,110,837 $13,001,588 $11,044,181 TOTAL EXPORTS. March , .. April May $62,563,700$51,601,943 January $14,888,437 $19,695,358 $17,609,749 $19,746,461 $22,814,5-13 February.. 14,113,843 12,400.148 17,211.176 16,774,008 19.002,587 $15,999,998 17.576,967 ... February EXPORTS OF SPECIE AND BULLION. February... 6,416,343 Total.'...104,483,984 114,377,429 104.988,811 128,467,155 1G3,8v0,620 127,541,016 EXPORTS OF FOREIGN DUTIABLE. , Total... \ $.2,853,848 IMPORTS OF SPECIE. January.... $163,568 Febiuarv... 62, "07 89,327 llaich .. April May June July August September October . .... November..December.. . $101,900 $141,790 213,971 88,150 123,616 101,437 285,814 660,092 26,152 107,061 110 338 197217 61,023 219,001 92,703 121,318 109,997 182,245 113,877 256,676 109,708 78 316 78,231 78,053 103,144 116,493 Total,.. $1,390,277 $1,525,811 146,731 128.052 $52,263 106,904 213,242 236,492 177,085 236.032 253,640 245,858 182,072 58,220 194.224 129,775 161,727 114,976 77,942 236,526 127,054 $52,771 172,122 $126,719 •285.854 136,491 145,867 161,817 393,073 376.725 64/49 499,184 345,961 269,221 5,193,473 1,131,158 802,937 352,093 271.710 56,606 640,244 34.3,669 362,789 181,319 263,016 $2,205,622 $2,123,231 $9,5t8,020 $3,300,339 January li, 1868.] ' THE CHRONICLE. TOTAL IMPORTS. about 40 millions. April 13,252,8-2 17,385,315 May 14,248,521 June 12,336,195 July August 20,353,002 14,304,843 26,168,631 23,970,144 12,597,516 23,926,314 16,003,677 32,383,299 15,038,129 18,223,463 15,499,940 10,539,459 16,894,967 10,088,808 16,045,695 8,597,595 17,126,098 9,935,093 14,324,925 14,174,464 12,876,109 16,855,821 19,161,838 24,475,608 22,674,496 23,134.675 27,235,651 26,048,099 We give a detailed statement showing the description of these goods, and also the relative totals for the preceeding five years: January... .$12,620,829 $15,739,576 $18,977,394 $10,620,117 $30,109,830 $20,979,087 February... 13,872,140 13,(127,846 21,643,937 11,473,668 30,692,557 25,630,781 Mirch 18,719 866 18,390,895 23,667,119 16,ul2,373 26,204,940 21,512,974 24,840,605 25,633,293 28,818,447 21,852,250 22,736,652 20,967,908 26,85^,187 23,086,866 23,884,665 24,273,034 27,079,089 21,027,209 24,832,184 18,438 486 20,710 854 15,871.007 19,852,174 13,375,580 IMPORTS OF DRY GOODS AT NEW YORK. Description of goods. 1863. Manufactures— 676581 September.. 18,047,917 October .... 13,413,906 November.. 10,309,398 December.. 13,072,618 Total Wool Cotton Bilk Flax imports $67,274,547 $71,589,752 $92,061,140 126,223,855 $88^582,411 during this year has been very large on woolen goods, but otherwise is pretty evenly distributed. We now give a summary of the imports each month, from which can be seen the course of the trade through the year. The returns for the previous four years are added : TOTAL IMPORTS OF January February Maich Below we 67,480,778 80,524,342 100.241,282 106,776,056 April give io detail the receipts for custom* at New York May June 1863. 1866. .. .. October 1866. December 47 $12,437,474 16 $9,472,248 48 10 12,008.273 74 11.466.418 42 26 11,173,104 92 11.977.418 19 34 10,950,896 78 9,372,701 48 06 11,418,492 10 9,340,766 73 84 9,559,808 38 7,725,135 60 65 11,507,186 60 9,505,432 94 50 12,349,760 82 12,623,300 45 64 12,283,144 66 11,712,164 78 01 11,002,048 08 8,682,889 05 96 7,716,883 67 6,931,212 90 37 5,707,547 99 5,276,301 32 $2,350,635 9,437,454 12,635,127 5,220,245 6,081,136 4,801,703 6,762,750 7,529 800 4,107,449 3,723,690 6,324,599 3,969,706 3,931.468 5,443,062 7,220,231 13,462,265 11,198,257 12,187,331 12,657,937 10,586,951 receipts for the year amount to $114,085,990 34, given in above table. This is a decrease over last year, but the total is larger than any previous year. IMPORTS FOR 2,996,100 2,235,107 6.509,783 6,Oil,208 5,371,041 .... ... 1,558,567 3867. 1866. $15,769,091 $12,928,872 16,701,578 10,786,615 15,833,273 10,227,579 7,336,564 5,274,455 7,299,112 * 5,436,451 6 775,244 4,564,079 6,532,575 10,727,463 14,870,333 12,608,019 9,175,675 7,351,223 8,480,550 6,332,793 7,259,236 4,897,398 5,989,731 3,092,350 $67,274,547 $71,539,752 $92,061,140 $126,222,855 $88,582,411 foregoing table we have indicated the extent of the im¬ ports each month since January, 1863. It will be noticed that the large increase in the foreign movement began in August, 1865, and was kept up with considerable regularity until March, 1867. Since (hat time, with the exception of August last, the total each month has been small. As our readers may be interested in seeing the totals for the anterior period, we annex the following, showing the total imports of dry goods at this port each year since 1849 : as IMPORTS OF FOREIGN DRY 1849. 1867. AT NEW YORK. Invoiced value. $44,435,575 $93,362,893 90,534,129 ... 60,1(.*6,371 1858 62,846,731 61,054.144 1851. 1852. 1853. 1854. 1855. the total GOODS Invoiced value. 1850. in the foregoiDg table classifying the imports, that imports of dry goods the past year amounted to $86,263,643, against $126,222,855 for the previous year, a decrease of seen $8,184,314 In the The total custom It will be $5,269,181 6,027,857 9,204,581 4,384,007 3,612,511 2,901,423 4,713,365 5,892,712 Total... Total... 58,886,054 42 66,037,127 51 101,772,905 94 128,079,761 60 114,085,990 34 GOODS 1865. .... November... 1867. NEW YORK. 1864. August January $4,127,906 82 $6,18",536 00 $4,231,737 February.. 3,59 *,713 97 7,474,027 93 4,791,247 March.... 4,554,400 13 7,679,770 47 5,392,099 April 3,957,197 57 13,982,555 60 6,309,994 May 3,873,865 42 3,856,186 46 8,133,433 June 3,738,934 06 3,311,148 43 7,837,075 July 4,912,718 49 3,586,848 44 9,778,276 August... 7,296.735 58 6,237,364 17 13,113,689 Sept 7,270,543 65 4,084,492 54 12,929,615 October 6,238,943 46 3,670,188 88 10,973,513 November 5,075,846 24 3,455,156 53 9,933,483 December 5,248,189 03 3,440,852 67 8,340,750 DRY .... DRY GOODS AT 1868. September... CUSTOMS AT NEW YORK. 1864. .... July each mouth of the last five years : RECEIPTS FOR 1867. 1866. The decrease January.... $4,356,252 $2,881,531 $4,950,418 $5,653,554 $7,424,388 $9,380,484 February... 3,466,641 2,499,127 6,285,680 5,673,619 7,666,543 11,794,146 March 3,339,567 3,456,530 5,215,993 5,795,512 7,844,644 18,318,411 April 4,406,410 4,132,683 14,183,873 7,880,008 8,640,260 8,838,610 May 3,700,232 9,794,773 659,869 10,277,170 9.450,597 9,245,943 June 5,054,106 3,830,387 2,544,914 6,346,958 8,967,431 6,910,287 July 6,102,033 4,227,265 3,386,873 8,612,411 9,084.242 7,560,396 August ...'. 2,386,604 6,429,421 7,867,843 9,661,136 10,530,593 10,49.>,050 t-eptember. 2,715,030 6,942,561 6,852,329 8,042,603 11,091,194 9,928,471 October.... 3,109,388 4,858,512 5,504,138 4,69y,328 8,789,8:38 7,728,761 November.. 1,914,983 4,084,183 6,828,884 4,249,381 6,126,725 6,378,248 December.. 1,282,908 3,704,294 6,400,974 3,636,662 4,564,836 6,202,239 50,851,167 1865. .... Total WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE. 41,563,754 1864. $29,703,956 $31,411,965 $36,053,190 $50,406,179 $33,676,601 7,913,967 8,405,245 15,449,054 21,287,490 15,800,8<*4 15,534,460 16,194,080 20.476,210 24,837,734 18.665,817 10,381,059 11,621,831 15,521,190 20,456,870 12,940,561 Miscellau’us dry goods 3,781,106 3,956,630 4,561,586 9,235,582 7.589,588 174,652,317 187,014,577 218,125,760 224,742,419 306,613,184 252,648,475 Total now 103,927,100 1863. 1864. 1865 1866. 43,636,689 1867. 6. *,154,509 113,152,624 93,704,211 1801 80,842,936 64,974,062 Invoiced value 1862 ... ... $56,121,227 67,274.547 71,-89,752 92,066,140 126,222,585 88,582,411 TREASURE MOVEMENTS'AT NEW YORK FOR THE TEARS 1886 AND 1867. In consequence of the method of reporting the treasury balances at the close of each month, and the impossibility of distinguishing the amount of coin or currency in the reported balances, we have been obliged to varj our usual formula from that of preceding years, and adopt the following, which omits from the calculation the amount of coin in the hands of the Assistant Treasurer at this port at the close of each month Reported new Supply and its Sources. , Total Months. Rec’ptsfrom Imp’tsfrom Inter, on Californ a. for'n ports. U.S.b ds. Amount, $72,771 $5,73 3,686 $7, v>96,771 January.... $1,485,314 172,122 430,091 3,603,000 4,205,213 February... 235,8 >4 March 3,958,291 2,658,324 6,992,466 161,817 187,2 1 1,539,321 1,888,369 April 393,073 13,105,535 3,992,148 17,4 >0,756 MTay June 91,549 826,153 1,842,271 ‘2,762,973 345,961 5,873,378 6,75 (,659 12,974,008 July 356,766 4,477,659 269,221 5,103,646 August ... 5,193,473 2,639,532 52,884,432 10,708,437 September.. October * 218,121 1,434,158 4,902.207 6,551,480 17 258,600 November.. 802,937 14,786,272 1,669,391 December.. 352,093 1,722,407 4,323,023 6,397,••'23 , ... Year.... $41,431,726 $9,578,029 $48,533,493 $99,543,243 : 1866. Withdrawals trom Market. Total Customs Export to for’n ports. amount. duties. . $12,437,474 $15,113,810 12,098,274 11,173,165 13,815.3i*4 12,218,204 11,539,772 23,744 194 11,418,492 9,559,868 15,*9 -,956 5,821,459 1,587,851 834,550 3,297,270 5,707,548 supply. w’hdraw’a. $ - 25,450,824 17,328,645 13.937,612 12,349.701 3,776,*>90 1,403,450 reported ....... 35,162,686 11,507,186 12,284 145 11,002,043 7,716, 84 Excess of reported new $2,790,330 1,807,0:80 1,945,039 588,875 10,930,897 Excess of • ••• . . . . 13.118,693 12,465,498 11,493,574 9,004 818 $7,847,039 9,610,091 5,315,73S 9,631,403 17,671,930 22,687,851 4,354,637 8,833,966 2,410,258 5,911,012 $62,563,700 $128,115,742 $190,679,442 Increase month. on $ Decrease riv’d from unon mouth. $4,394,295 6,243,656 . . . . . . 5,25 *,738 3,686,455 . 13,614,156 14,060,875 1,903.828 rep. source# $3,452,744 15,853,747 65,990 5,964,948 31,286,086 8,626,976 6,258,465 . 3,319,446 .5.514,520 2,607,295 1,771,735 3,672,618 7,453,675 5,358 835,510 $91,130,194 $2,146,547 83,989,647 $ $5,133,944 5,765.026 . ,—Specie in Banks.—, Balance: de- T 1,262,360 1,542,663 5,770,384 1867. January.... $2,472,895 $126,719 February... 1,740,109 1,896,857 3,149,654 1,181,128 2,568,773 2,662,139 3,967,100 136,491 145,857 271,710 March April May June........ July August*..... September.. October .... November.. December.. Year.... 376,725 2,611,440 2,339,284 513,855 3,238,162 499,184 £6,606 540,244 345,669 362,7*9 181,319 263.016 $7,485,945 $10,0S5,559 521,832 2,716,959 2,398,432 4,873,250 3,068,990 17,866,170 4,305,039 19,025,116 5,128,411 5,674,068 189.357 2,891,439 16,969,514 17,664,688 1,438,753 4,989,931 2,830,526 247,626 16,308,317 1,237,082 16,3(6,374 621,067 $2,551,356 2,124,101 1,891,141 2,261,283 9,043,154 6,734,272 13,519,894 1,714,594 2,201,958 1,182,081 1,733,2 il 6,834,548 $9,520,385 11,452,204 12,193,034 9,511,075 9,634,697 8,040,114 9,794,404 12,903,710 11,967,824 $12,071,741 $1,986,182 13,576,665 14,089,130 11,772,358 18,677,851 11,178,233 9,215,930 9,082,986 1U,265,017 7,304,934 9,038,195 12,302,792 811,681 14,764,386 10,459,347 23,314,298 4,289,182 9,489,923 8,495,714 7,373,587 .... .... 8 $28,391,396 $3,299,819 $66,871,349 $98,562,564 $51,8(31,953 $116,858,524 $168,660,477 ct. (RR ) bonds 3-y'arscom. iut. n’tes 3-years 7-30 notes 3 p. cent, certificates Abstract statement, as appears from the books and Treasurer’s in the Treasury Department, on the 1st December, 1867, January, 1868 . e ... ... Total ; • • • 7,212,756 1,118,305 6,424,680 6,159,168 6,985,063 8,024,437 6,848,064 3,611,283 1,466,499 969,098 5,258,280 7,312,861 5,600,921 8,023,424 10,720,282 4,0:38,588 1,785,233 1,711,940 $70,297,913 $2,213,253 $67,884,66q 2,224,568 .... ... 3,334,999 10,411,726 626,493 DEBT BEARING 6 per returns 4,753,603 3,056,772 • 14,618,334 14,169,782 5,448,244 PUBLIC DEBT OF THE UNITED STATES. and 1st ** $3,117,762 CURRENCY INTEREST. $18,601,000 00 62,249,360 00 285,587,100 00 12,855,000 00 379,292,460 00 $20,713,000 46,244,780 238,268,450 23,265,000 , 00 $2,112,000 00 $ 00 16,004,580 00 00 47,318,650 00 00 10,410,000 00 828.491,230 00 50,801,230 00 MATURED DEBT NOT PRESENTED FOR PAYMENT. DEBT BEARING COIN INTEREST. December 1. 5 per cent, bonds.... 6 “ ’67 & ’68. 6 “ 1881 “ 6 (5-20’s) .. $205,532,850 14,690,941 282,731,550 1,324,412,550 Navy Pen. F’d 6 p.c. 13,000,000 January 1. Increase. 00 $ 204,929,800 00 $ 80 14,690,941 80 00 283,676,600 00 945,050 00 00 1,373,804,750 00 49,392,200 00 00 .13,000,000 00 Decrease $6^3,050 00 7-30 n. due Aug. 15,'67 6 p. c. comp. int. n’es B’ds of Texas ind’ty $2,855,400 00 7,065,750 00 Treasury notes (old). B’ds of Apr. 15, 1842. Treas. n’s of Ma.3,63 163,011 64 .64,061 64 868,240 00 2,880,900 55 31,000 00 Temporary loan... . Total . Certifi. of indebt’eea 1,840,367,891 80 1,890,102,091 80 49,734,200 00 Total *• } 26U,0J0 00 14,178,363 83 $2,022,950 00 9,952,810 00 257,000 00 $ 2,887,060 00 $832,450 00 i. 8,000 00 162,811 64 54,061 64 716,192 00 2,674,815 55 31,000 00 15,871,640 88 $1,693,277 00 200 00 152,048 00 206,*>85 00 I rs [January 11, 1868. THE CHRONICLE. 42 Increase. January 1. - Decrease. $53,346 00 $356,159,127 09 31,5j7,581 85 667,599 80 18,4ol,400 00 2U,10a,580 00 1,708.1^0 00 United States notes. $356,212,473 liO Gold csrtl. ofdepouit Total 407,861,200 85 405,643,857 05 2,317,433 80 mile. Earn#. $40,375 38,506 $5,479 per l$fr-62 1862-63. 1863-64 1864-65 1865-66 30,929,981 05 fractional currency. Years. 1860-61 1866-67...... RECAPITULATION. $ $ $ Bearing coin interest..1,840,367,891 80 1,890,lo2,091 80 49.734,200 00 .... Bearingcur’yInterest.. 379,292,460 00 328,4^1,230 00 50,801,230 00 Matured debt 14,178,363 83 15,571,6.0 83 1,693,277 00 Bearing no interest.... 405,543,857 05 407,861,290 85 2,317,433 80 Coin & cur. in 2,508,125,65 J 10 Debt less coin and cur.2,501,205,751 75 The rency 30 2,639,832,572 68 2,642,3^6,*53 48 2,943.680 Treas... 138,176,820 98 134,200,6u3 38 3,976.217 56 following statement shows the amount of coin separately at the dates in the foregoing table : 1863-547. COIN AND CURRENCY IN and cur¬ 37,485,175 24 Total coin & curre’y. December INTEREST “ 6 6 6 “ Total “ ’07 63. “' 1681 “ te-20’8).. com interest.. $30,152 50 46,377 10,491 1863. 17,393,596 85 697,950 00 20,847.853 30 385,650 00 Total currency lnter’t,. $22,349,563 30 $19,331,326 65 Aggregate Interest.... 130,716,313 81 3,454,261 45 312,300 00 $3,015,241 45 $25,158 95 statements in 18G7 see the refer to the September 9, 1865, and April 14, 1866. The operating account for the two last years, 1856 compares as follows : Chronicle of $654,726 36 sheets of December “ “ bonds giviaendbonds icome Mortgage bonds ol 1390 Total funded debt Bills pay b!e Dues on Nov. account Net eanuDgs set forth in the balance 13,314 8,500 00 75 16,500 00 ;i, 57 25 13,314 75 1,603,000 00 1,106,488 7V 8.600 Oo 135,000 00 185,000 00 for a> count . Railway shares.... Wed. Tues. 92#@# 92 Mon. Sat. 92# 92#®# 92#©# 72#@# 72#, 88# 88# 48# 48# Thu.- 92 @# 92@# 92#@#92#@# 92# 7 [#@72 71# 71#@72 88# 88# 83# 48# 48# 49# 92# 72# 88# , 48# daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort were— 76# 76# 76# 77@# 77 7b# Liverpool Cotton Market.—Cotton is again depressed, the advices being unfavorable. Half the sale* on Saturday were for cotton to arrive. The remainder of the week has shown inactivity, with a constant falling off in price. Thursday’s business was larger a^ the decline. Sat. Mon. 7#d. 80,000 7# 7# 30,000 7# 7# 7#d. 7# Fri. Bale* told PrLv Miad. L... 90,000 Uplds. 7#d. .. Orleans Tues, 8,000 7# Wed. Thu. 8,00 7# 10,000 7# 7# 0# 7# 7# 7# .... .... Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—Wheat is firmly held at the late ad¬ vance—California closing at 16s. 3d., and Milwaukee No, 2 at 14s. 6d. Extra State flour is selling at 37£@3Ss. per bbl. Indian corn is lower, Barley and Oats have advanced, the former to 6st Peas steady at 47a. 6d. 70,115 44 185 60 24,233 35 16,913 72 2,635 57 15 $393,983 60 45 13,402 76 d. s. Flour, (extra State)..p. bbl Wheat (No.2 Wes Red) p. ctl o t ([aUfornia white) “ (West, mx’d) p. 4801ba ts(Am & Can.) per 45 lbs Peas..(Canadian) pr5U41bs , # 6 3 9 3 8 A 16 46 5 8 47 6 6 14 10 40 6 8 9 9 8 6 0 47 Wed, s. d Thu. 8. d. 14 6 16 3 46 3 5 5 8 10 47 0 14 6 10 3 46 a 5 5 3 10 47 6 14 6 38 S 40 a 5 6 3 10 47 6 Tues. Moa. 8. < d. d. a. Liverpool Provisions Market.—Beef has advanced to 113s 6d., and pork to 78s. Bacon and lard are lower, the former closing at 40s., and the later at 49s. 6d, Cheese has been steady at 52s. $ Sat. 8. d. 112 0 78 0 Frl. s. d. 112 0 74 0 Lard (American) - Cheese (fine) 00 79 Sat. b. d. 87 « 14 fl 10 3 46 9 5 8 3 8 47 6 Frl. Barley( American) per 61) lbs $ $8,947,354 <6 $9,339,526 61 $392,172 59 $9,066,845 49 $9,460,879 147,472 134,069 69 flh’p materials 10,U( 0 Lawrence Railroad stock.. 10,oo0 00 li,069 BiL rt ctivable 12 230 67 228,9* 8 Balance personal accounts. 137,486 95 steady time reached 921,but have generally ranged . Frank!oi t Corn $3,872,860 79 $3,975,488 79 108,628 00 29,968 62 25,768 13 14 290 49 80 9 3 60 2S5,9U0 ; 2 354,996 62 287,251 29 167,000 07 120,251 22 (.9,929 94 82,697 73 16,913 78 summary ; Fri. 92# Consols for money * Against which are charged as follows, viz : Construction Machine* y and tools Personal property TeLgraph i.ne ©99# 75#g96# 65#@9G 6d. and the latter to 8s. lOd. $9,566,262 U $9,961,700 22 $395,437 98 Total @88# Money and Stock Market.—The market has been quite closing at 6s. 8d. Decrease (Increase. $5,403,953 22 $5,424,091 40 $20,088 18 1,000 00 l,129,00u oo 1,136,000 00 1,619,500 00 1,107 546 04 82 ©93 quotation. $3,382 59 $651,343 77 $ IS 67. 1886. *'* $211,754 23 208,371 64 1,1866 and 1867, was at date a9 follows : Capital stock 2d mortgage bones ** Decrease. Increase. $640,793 63 $ $148,129 14 1,430,632 43 63,099 13 68,826 54 4,474 0-1 The financial condition of the company as 83 from Manchester and 1867, $2,351,905 83 $2,140,151 60 1,697,179 47 1,^*88,807 83 Net revenue 75# @85# 75#©91# 75# @82# 79 @85# 78 #@83 75 #@82 77 @84# 65#©79# 80#@96# 71#@75# 80 @86# 75# @86# 82# @87# 84 ©95 86# @88# 91 #@96 85#@89# 76# @89# 88 @94# 71 #@86# 81 ©85 82 ©94 S. 6’s show the effect of the gold movement largely, and close barely at 72. Illinois Central shares are a shade lower. Erie share have advanced from 48£ to 49 J closing at the latter The For former notices of the affairs of this compaoy we bd 4th following Cousols for money at one between 92 and 92£. U. Erie Total earnings Operating expenses 51 90 @132 1687. I860. 1865. 77# ©99# 77# @85 daily losing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬ pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as CLEVELAND AND PITTSBURG RAILROAD, 1867. in the following table : The “ 1866. 7.21 6.88 Friday, January 10. U. S. 6’s (5 20’s) 1862... Illinois Central shares.. Earnings from paseengers... $788,922 77 Earnings fiom freight 1,499,631 66 Earnings from other sources 64,351 50 3,193 most 130,691,154 36 For the aggregate of the monthly Chronicle for December 14, p. 747. 8,205 .. Jilonetarg an& fflomnurrial ©ngl'isl) N.tui. £atest London $1,242,780 00 $126.720 00 $1,116,060 00 per cents. 7.30 8 8,029 8,319 7,298 1864. 105 ©120 , 6G#@115 shown in the $108,366,745 01 $111,356,827 51 $2,990,082 50 Currency-?* 4,943 3,621 66#® 73 @ 73# 310# ©119# 114% ©128# 51 @78# © 73 57 @81# 104 ©132 67#© 84 82 ©108 110#© 117# 65 ©77# 56 @64# 80 © 97# 110# ©116 82 #@ 97# 106 ©114# 65 @71# 65 @71# 110 ©114 93#©105 91 ©102# 105#©117# 70#@78# 90 @107 72% @93 10> #©115 S0#@97 99# ©112# 102 @109 82 @94# 91#©113 100#@1C9# Year 780,000 00 780,000 00 7,400 12,343 13,250 11,524 46.07 English Iffarket Reporta—Per Cable. D. crease. Increase. Jan. 1. ; DFBT. $10,276,642 F0 $10,246,490 06 $ 881,456 51 881,456 51 10,963,893 00 17,020,596 IK) 56,703 00 79, J64,753 00 82,428,285 00 2,963,532 00 Coin—5 per cents “ 6 PAYABLE ON PUBLIC Dec. 1. 5,083 to cost. 6.07 8.89 13.10 11 91 7.94 $3,976,217 55 j^/lhe annual interest payable on the debt, as existing December 1, 1867, and January 1, 1868, (exclusive of iuterest on the compound interest notes) compares as follows : ANNUAL ... 67$7,740,607 98 $ 25,770,349 71 11,715,825 53 Increase. 134,200,603 38 138,176,820 93 .... October $100,690,645 69 $108,430,253 Currency June November January 1. 45.81 69.94 72 67 72.19 69.66 3,262 65 64 April May Decrease. December 1. Coin January February July August September TREASURY. 55.29 4,298 land and Pittsburg Railroad Company five years ending with 1867, are shown varch 6,919,898 f'5 $2,451 3,806 9,381^ 41,543 45,60!) 44,445 . Aggregate $8,028 Expen’s to earnings. -n monthly fluctuations in the price of the shares of the Cleve¬ at New York, through the The $ 1?er mile of r<oad Expanses. Profits. 7,058 ... , December 1. Cost ofroad Fiscal DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST. “ “ 40 49 52 6 40 49 62 9 0 0 9 0 Mon. 8. d. 132 0 73 0 40 0 49 3 52 0 Tues. s. 113 73 40 49 62 d. 0 0 0 6 0 Wed. d. 113 6 78 0 40 0 8. 49 52 6 0 Thu. 8. d. 113 78 40 49 52 6 0 0 6 0 1,176 88 Liverpool Produce Market.—Rosin is lower and closed at 5s. 9d. No Turpentine without change. Petroleum is lo,\er by -frd.; there ia no spirit in the market; sales of stock to ar¬ $9,566,262 34 $9,961,700 22 $395,437 98 Total rive have been made at Is. 6d. Sugar as at last report. Tallow is The following statement shows the length of road open and its easier at 43s. 6d. Clover seed, 46. oost, earnings, expenses, etc yearly: Fiscal Years. 103,382 46 205,57^ 53 \ 108,197 07 alteration in medium and fine. , Foad, miles. 3860-61 203.6 1861-62....2n3 5 203.5 1868-68 208.5 Cost of Road, etc. $8,218,8.2 7,830,095 7,911 934 8,45V>40 Gross earning*, Operating expenses. 1,910,034 2,512,315 $616,335 662 068 874,732 1,505,336 $1 114.941 1,436,3i7 Dlvi- Net Revenue. d’ds. nil. $498,646 si 774 252 4 8 1,035,304 1,006,679 203.6 9,201,464 2,696,377 1,959,583 736,794 5 203.5 2u3.5 9,066,895 9,460,879 2,351,905 2,140,152 1,697,179 1,488,808 654,726 651,344 5 The statement which .follows cost, &c., per 91,421 43 i9 a nil. reduction of the above table to » -t , ^ 2- J Sat. d. 6 0 s. d. 6 0 8. Rosin (com “ Wllm ).per 112 lbs middling.... “ pale “ Sp turpentine “ I etroleum (std white).p. 3 lbs spirits.... per 8 lbs Sugar (No.lKDchata) p. l Tallow (American)..p 119 lbs* Clover seed (Am. red) “ li’ *6 flue 87 1 0 3# 2 0 25 0 48 9 “ 46 ' mile of roadj Frl. 0 Mon s. 5 d. 9 Tu. Wed. d. 6 9 s. s. ii' 6 11 0 11 0 87 0 * 27 0 27 0 1 3# 1 3# 1 3# 2 0 2 0 25 6 35 6 25 6 48 9 43 9 44 0 46 0 46 0 46 0 5 d. 9 Th. a. 5 ii’ *0 ii' 27 1 0 87 85 43 Q 6 46 0 8# d. 9 1 0 0 a 25 43 40 e 6 0 •-* • Markets —Linseed Oil has declined to ; Cash...T 37 January 11,1868.] THE CHRONICLE. £36 10s., being a falling off at last week’s close. eame as of 10s. Fri. Linseed (Calcutta) p. qr... £ Linseed cake (obl’g).p ton 10 10 0 “ oil *. “ 87 0 0 Sperm oil “110 0 0 Whale oil p. 252 gals. 38 0 0 Latest: Consols closed at Otherwise the quotations Pat. Mon. £ Tn. £ £ 10 10 0 10 10 37 0 0 37 0 110 0 0 110 0 88 0 0 38 0 0 0 0 0 Wd. £.... ; 10 10 37 0 110 0 38 0 0 are the Th. £ 37 0 110 0 Friday Evening, January 10. 92^@92J both for money and Corn closed at 46s., and Peas at 47s. and Rye. Produce is without Imports 11f ; 1865. Total for the week Previously reported In our $217,818,327 report of the goods for one week dry-goods trade 1865. of , $2,596,813 Date. Dec. 7 $3,095,642 “ Jan. $238,535,483 For To • Other Northern Spain $1,395,503 153,984 48,200 48,200 158,529 Week Other Southern Europe... East Indies China and Japan Australia British N A Colonies Cuba 80,439 80,439 49,293 41,648 17,b38 Hayti Other West Indies 43,655 130,486 6,744 137,372 51,268 5,357 5,357 139,799 19,551 16,693 139,799 Hermann, Bremen- Foreign Gold Foreign Silver $600 1867 1*06 1865 3 652,027 594,353 l8t>4 1,306,'466 1863 1862 1861 1660 The $784,512 325,038 442|l41 85!080 imports of Dec. 31—St. 2—Steamer Chicago, American Gold 4—St. City of London ... Same time In 1869 1858 1867 1866 1855 from : Gold Bullion 8itver 31-Brig Edwin Total for week 300,000 404 “ 21 “ Roe, 143,610 *. 23,210 55,056 843,977 week have been as Jan. • Gold 8—-Steam. Moro Castle, 2,036 400 • .... $149,650 in $299,723,146 299,155,824 299,829,816 299,833,600 299,833,976 6,600,695 6,625 555 5,726,955 weekly, and _ 28 4. f.. $459,000 373.400 264,606 253,600 391.400 the total Total to date. $91,793,617 94,047,090 96,000,000 98,261,000 104,512,541 6,251,172 The warrants drawn by the Treasury Department during the month of December to meet the requirements of Government amounted to $80,321/'00, viz.: civil $4,751,000, interest $8,800,000, was $12,955,000 navy $8,620,000, interior $986,000. &i)c Bankers’ (&a?ette. DIVIDENDS, per Name of company. CENT. WHEN PAT’BLE WHEREPAYABLE Railroads. Terre flaut Indianapolis Lehigh valley Utica & Black River Honsatouic pref., per shre Coimecticut& Passumpsic. King’s County Fire Empire City Fire. Cll ton Fire Aetna of Hartford Nassau Fire Pacihc Fire North American Humboldt Fire C tit ^ Notes Circulation. 2,000,000 2,14#.C00 Howard New Amsterdam Fire HavanaGold -5,528,737 $6,672,556 2,354,010 Insurance Gaboon— $3,200 Jan. $5,314,535 Current week. ! . Firemens Henry Chauncey, Notes 358,675 458,604 358,628 19-4,571 434,000 Juiy 1 to date 7. 14 “ 38,818 287,779 duriug the 378.815.700 378.760.700 The following Dividends have been declared during the past week: American Gold.... bpecie at this port Total. returned. on account of Internal Revenue 400,000 Liverpl— 1853 1862 25.424,206 26,095,658 27,283,809 28,391,396 $378,979,700 879,625,600 378.320.700 $228,242 524,600 539,500 399,000 4.—Receipts the port of New Gold Bars Silver Bars “ 305,4S6,161 $505,500 Liverpool— Aspinwall— “ -,551 Southampton- “ 25,103,234 16,693 5,399 5,399 1854 15,799 fallows: 1 American Gold.... 2—Steamer Hermann, “ 31,172 34,200 4,050 silver Bars 3-j,750 Amer can Go d.... “ 50,000 2—St Hermann, LondonSilver Bars 273,553 Gold Bars 265,162 Mexican Silver.... 143,610 Total for week Same time in 6,744 137,372 62,077 21,494 8,241 23,936 23.936 following will show the exports of specie from ending Jan. 4, 1868 : Foreign ;>ilver 305,430,511 14 21 “ 28 Jan. 4 30,635 221,412 24,494 8,241 York for the week 2—St. Hermann, Havre— American Gold.... 305,284,561 “ 130,486 52,077 96,727 24,589,379 24,916,795 Currency Bureau by U. S. Treasurer and distributed weekly ; also the amount destroyed : Weekending. Received. Distributed. Destroyed Dec. 7 43,055 30,635 17,638 144,792 61,268 4 $305,037,695 305,560,931 8.—Fractional currency received from the $2,384,498 22,660 121,412 117,057 ...$321,700 246,870 145,950 55,650 74,770 “ 22,660 41,648 117,057 96,727 Notes issued. Current week. Aggregate. Weekending. 49,293 144,792 Mexico New Granada Venezuela British Guiana Brazil OtherS. American ports.. All other porta Jan. 2—St. Jan. Dec .... The $2,560,234 221,566 467,205 Deposits. $38,018,950 37.917.950 37,8P,950 37.817.950 37.817.950 > 7 Dec, 14 21..... 28 1868. 221,566 407,2u5 For U. S. ’.$340,982,750 341,107,750 341,162,750 340,997,750 340,942,750 ending. Since Jan. 1, 1867, $2,384,498 153,984 158,629 Europe For week. Nov.lO.Rieing Star 327,416 Nov. 20.Arizona... 186,439 Dec. l.H. Chauncey 320,972 Dec. 9.Rising Star. 671,447 Dec. 24.Arizona.... 1,187,656 Dec. 31.H.Chauncey 1,108 087 amount (exclusive compared with the the following table: Jan. 1. 1868. $1,395,503 Germany “ '' $3,716,624 Since week. Great Britain..,. France Holland and Belgium in Since Jan. 1. 2.—National bank currency issued (weekly and Aggregate), and the (including worn-out notes) returned, with the amount in circu¬ lation at date: imports of dry 1867. For Circulation. 14 21 28 4 “ 235,439,840 The value of exports from this port to different countries specie) for the past week, and since January 1, corresponding time of last year, is shown Steamship. At date. July 11.Arizona 699,493 14,513,168 1,400,726 July 21.0c’n Queenl,158,396 15,671,571 2,472,8*5 Aug. l.H. Ch’ncey. 1,858,062 3,260,922 Aug. 11, RisingStar 1,165,844 17,689,655 18,695,417 4,213 004 Aug. 20, Arizona... 943,194 5,031,822 Sep. 2.H. Chaunceyl,083,822 19,638,667 5,276,710 Sep. 9.Rising Star. 207,252 20,727,456 20,984,725 6,109,861 Sep. 20.Arizona 1,315,366 22,2'0,095 7,001,853 Oct. l.H. Ch’ncey. 815,447 8,144,737 Oct. 9.Rising Star. 4*8,717 23,065,542 9,259,515 Oct. 22.Arizona.... 584,467 23,494,259 9.405,729 Oct. 31. H.Chauncey 610,653 24,078,1726 followiug forms present a sumru iry of cer weekly transactions at the National Treasury and Custom Houses 1.—Securities held by the U. S. Treasurer in trust for National banks “ $286,388,046 $4,091,557 Date. National Treasury.—The 2,342,377 282,247,972 I860. Jan. 1. $874,764 July 4.Rising Star. 804,*50 13,813,669 EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. 4t_ $404 00 - Since J line 2. H. Chauncey. 774,81311,214,959 dune 11.Arizona 653,26211,868,218 June 23.0c’n Queenl, 141,19813,009,416 following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Jau. 7 : „ 001 April 1 H. Chauncey 891,992 14.Ocean Queen 1,142,884 22.New York... 1,114,778 May 2.H. Chauncey. 206,214 May 11.Arizona 409,667 9,875,396 May 25.0cean Queen 565,24710,440,646 The For the week 97 $3,654 00 . 1807. $4,140,074 later. 50 4 $753,205 2,449,789 will be found the $1,108,086 tain 1806. 2l2,190,’l49 Since Jan. 1 00 ASPINWALL, N. G. $3,200 00 I McKesson & Robins Date. Steamship. At date. Jan. 10.Rising Star. $874,764 20.New York.. 525,956 Jan. 81.H. Chauncey 1,072,175 Feb.10. Ocean Qne en 788,027 Feb.22.Rising stnr 952,082 Mar. 4.II. Chauncey. 818,818 13.Ocean Queen 244,888 Mar.24.Rising Star.. 833,151 NEWS. $1,690,285 $5,728,178 Co.144,610 following statement: FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. $2,507,734 3,220,444 , $31,172 04 637,000 00 37,414 01 Totalirom San Francisco and Aspinwall 1,111,740 97 The arrivals of treasure from San Francisco since the commence ment of the year, are ehown in the Exports for the Week.—The imports this week show a considerable increase in both dry goods and in general merchan¬ dise, the total being $3,095,642, against $2,458,493 last week, and $2,117,077 the previous week. The exports are $2,500,234 ibis week, against $2,514,442 last week, and $2,607,233 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week were 5,790 bales, against 13,571 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week end¬ ing (for dry goods) Jan. 3, and for tne week ending (for general mer¬ chandise) Jan. 4 : Dry goods 135,564 28 Ribon & Munoz Total from Aspinwall and General merchandise 65,800 00 I Fred. Pob»t <fe Co Hargous & Co Illi¬ change in Wheat, Barley MISCELLANEOUS FRANCIBOO, OAL. $26,761 40 | Wall & Co 35,371 06 | Lees & Waller 74,394 18 j Wells, Fargo & Co FROM change. AND ... accounts. Beef has advanced to 115s. No other change in the provision list. The London produce and oil market is without change. At Frankfort U. S, 6’s have fallen off to 76. COIVUULKCIAL FROM SAN Total from San Francisco 49£. No California.—The steamship Henry Chauncey, from at this port Dec. 31, with treasure to the Panama Railroad Co Duncan, Sherman & Co. Dabney, Morgan & Co Eugene Kelley & Co A. Belmont American securities closed dull—U.S. 6’s (5-20’s) 1862 at nois Central shares at 88, and Erie shares at from Aspinwall Dec. 23, arrived following consignees: 10 10 0 10 10 0 0 0 36 10 0 0 0110 0 0 38 0 0 38 0 0 0 Treasure 43 ns * Germania Fire Y- nkers & New York New York Equitable Globe Fire Commonwealth Fire Tradesmens’ Fire American Exchange Fire.. , 8 4 $4 $3 5 5 5 7 5 6 10 8 5 5 7 10 5 5 6 6 5 5 5 Jan. 8 Jan. 15 Jan. 10 Jan.16 Jan. 21 Jan. 10 Jan. 2 Jsn. 4 Jan. 3 Jau. 6 Jan. 6 Jan. 8 Jan. 9 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 13 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Corapany’sOffice Company’sOttice ‘ompany’sOffice Company’sOfflce Company’sOfflce Company’sOfflce Company’ sOfflce Couipany’sOfflce Company’sOfflce Company’sOffiee Company’ sOflke Company’si >fflce Company’sOffice Company’sOfflce Company’sOfflce Companv’sOfflce ComFany’aOfflce Company’sOfflce Company’aOffice Jan. 18 Jan.10 Com .any’sOffice Jan.10 Company’sOfflce Jan. 13 Company’sOfflce Jan.10 Jan. 8 BOOKS CLOSED. [January 11, IS68. THE CHRONICLE. United States Fire Me-manics Traders lire. Arctic Fire 5 5 5 5 Long Island Fire 3# Niagara Fire Lori Hard Fire.'. Lamar 5 6 Montauk Fire, Belief Fire American 5 Brooklyn... 5 3# Jan.13 Jan. 6 Jan. 9 Jan. 8 Jan. 6 Jan. 9 Jan.13 Jan. 8 Jan. 8 Jan. 6 Any of the bonds in Company’sOfiice Company’sOlticc Company’sOfiice redeemed pany’sOffice Company’sOfllce Co „ Feb. 1, for redemption, will be on • following are the closing prices pared with preceding weeks : The Compaiu’sOOice Cotnpany’eOllice Company’s 16 ce Company1 sOffice Company’sOlhce 9.6’s, 1881 coup S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons. S. 5-20’s, 1864 “ ... 9.5-20’fl, 1865 .. “ S. 5-20’s, 1865, N. isSi.. 9. 5^0’s, 1867, c 9 10-40’s, “ .. 9. 7-30’s 2d Series U. U. U. U. U. U. U. U. U. P. M. bank statement exhibited some unusually wide fluctuations in the items. In the loans, there was an increase of $4,800,000, due probably, to some extent, to the banks having loaned the gold received iu payment of their coupons on bonds (deposited at Washington. The deposits showed the extra¬ ordinary increase of $8,300,000 ; while, in the legal tenders, there was a gain of $1,400,000. The statement was favorable to an expansion of operations; and hence the money market has been quite easy through the week at 6 per cent, on call loans. The banks probably increased their loanable resources during the week, as there has been a steady flow of currency from the West, while the amount going South is quite moderate. The Assistant Treasurer has received, during the week, about $1,000,000 from the National Depositories of the interior, in the form of drafts upon their correspondent banks in this city. But it is ques¬ tionable whether this item and the remittances South together 112# 107# 104% 105# 107# 107# 111# 107# 101% 105 107# 107# 204 # 204# 101# 104# 104# 101# 104# 104# 104# 104# 104# 104# 3,'’68 Jan. 10. 112#x.c.l08# 108# 107% 105# 105# 105# 105# 108#x C.104# 10S#x.c.l04# J12# R8# 105# 105# 108# 108# 101# 100# 101# 7-30’s 3rd series S of leading securities, com¬ Dec. 13. Dec. 20. Dec. 27. Jan Dec. 6. Friday, Jan. 10, 1808, The Money Market.—The last transitu arrival after that date. on 109# 108# 106# 106# 105# 106# 102# 105# 105# Stocks.—The Stock Market has been very active and buoyant. Preparations for an advance on some of the leading shares which have been in process for several months, but have been interrupted by the late panicky state of the money market, are now in process of culmination. The stocks of the roads in the Vanderbilt interest have been especially buoyant. N. Y. Central has advanced 7 per cent.; Erie 4£; Hudson River 1), and Michigan Southern If. Operators have shown unusual confidence in tlie market ; and it the cliques have not shipped part of their load upon the street, it has not been from any indisposition on the part of buyers to take the stocks. The Western stocks have sympathised with the firmness in the shorts of the State lines. Cleveland and Pittsburg lias been in Cleveland Toledo, very strong demand aud has advanced 4|. though not specially active, is 4£ higher. Fort Wayne has ad¬ vanced 3f, and Ohio and Mississippi If. Rock Island shares have been unsettled, in consequence of legal proceedings taken against the Directors for flic issue of 49,000 shares, for completing t- e road from Des Moines to Omaha. An .injunction has been, served upon the Directors restraining them from issuing any new stock, and from using the funds received Ur,on the late sales of stock. The company has ; emoved its transfer books to Chicago in order to evade the jurisdiclion of the lcr;ai COUr!s ; and upon the court, attaching the funds of the company in the bank of New York o, ly $175,000 was found to its cred**lt> froni which it is probable that ihe money rec ived upon sale?, of stock hai also been sent out of the city. ri lie court has transferred the hearing Railroad equal the receipts from the West. The funds in the Treasury are unusually very low. According to the Debt Statement, the amount of currency in the Treasury on Jan. 1, was only $>5,000,000, of which about $10,000,000 only is held in the Sub-Treasury. About $13,000,000 of taxes from the banks and private ba kers becomes payable this month ; but as these receipts may come to hand slowly it is mot improbible that the Treasury may tind it necessary to resort to some means for providing itself with currency. It is re¬ ported that, ihi» afternoon, the Assistant Treasurer sold $4,000,000 18GT ; but for the truth of the statement we are unable fo vouch. We have, however, good grounds for stating that, in the event of Sixty-Sevens loathing a certain price, as compared with Seven- I hirties, the Government has been prepared of Five-Twenties of and Miscellaneous referees, and the next As matters now stanGL, jg to take place on The discount market id easier. There is but a moderate amount the 18th inst. a protracted lawsuit appearsof paper offering, and prime names pass at 7 per cent at the banks, likely to grow out ot the case. Th§ stock boards have determined and 7-a7^ per cent, on the open market. that the new stock is a “ good delivery.” The price of the shares The following are the quotations for loans of various classes : has advanced upon our last quotation. Per cent. Per cent The following were tho elosiug .quotations at the regular board, Call loans i Good endorsed bills, 3 «fe 0 ©.. Loans on bonds & mort.. @ 7 4 months . 7 @ 7% compared with those of the six preceding weeks ; Prime endorsed bills, 2 | do single names 9 @12 to sell. of the case to 7 months United States @ .. 25 @25 | Lower grades Nov. 29, Dec. 0*. Dec. 13. Dee. 20. Cumberland Coal Securities.—Government Securities have been firm throughout the week, especially toward the close. The comparative ease in money is creating a partial demand for the employment of balances. Some of the financial institutions who sold their governments in anticipation of the late fall in prices aie now buyers, in expectation of an advance. The current very active Quicksilver Canton Co very demand, however, comes chiefly from parties desiring to invest interest received at the beginning of the month. The amount of dividends i#>d interest payable about Jan. 1, has been unusually Mariposa pref.... New York Central ic# 44# Michigan Central 302# preferred 67# “ 90 Rock Island Fort Wayne Illinois Central Okie & Miss 97# # 27 Jan 3.’68 Jan. 30. 32 82# 26 22 21# 51 50# 15 13# -c. 117# 117# 117# 72# 73# 72# 332 132# 131# 95# 96# x.d.92# 85# 85# 83# 107 112# xd.107# 87# 89# 87# 98# 97# 102# 82 .... 84 101# 58# partial demand lor export; which has also had a tendency to pro¬ mote the large improvement in prices. The amount of Sixes of 1847 redeemed during the week is less than might have been expected, the whole redemption being but little over two millions. A large amount of the bonds are held'in Europe - (probably $6,000,000); and these holders are, for some reason, tardy iu forwarding them. The Secretary of the Treasury, being quite willing that these parties should continue to hold the binds,-the interest being allowed to ruu at the usual rate, lias in¬ structed the Assistant-Treasurer t© issue the following notice, the chief purpose of which, we believe, is to convey this intimation : Unite* States Treasury, \ New York, Jan. G, 1808 f- Holders of U. 9. Bonds of the Loan of 1S47, bonds which shall not be presented for payment as above required, on which thejinterest^will be paid as heretofore, and the principal at the option of the Government. Hy order of the Secretary of the Treasury. : Jl. II. H. VAN DYCK, Asst.-Treae. Mining “ Improv’t “ Sat.. 32 Mon. 48 57,043 48,724 7.KJ 850 700 400 1,000 1,500 2,250 2,300 Telegraph11 2,810 3,640 440 3,190 Exchange Board Open Board... . 33,705 32,080 34.042 Total current week. Total Previous w’k. 65,785 58,290 Steamship14 Express “ At At . • . 87# 108# 93# 101# ' Tues. 57 58,609 1,150 600 2,600 4,520 2,355 2,905 Wed. 65 on each day of Fri. Week. 121 623 Thnrs. 30D 90,8711 .107,747 128,77 487,391 3,970 14,970 400 800 220 1,200 3,100 3,115 5,770 1,000 2,870 6,200 3,2 0 1,200 4,095 3,510 54,617 1,965 1,498 18.375 5,865 60,816 82,385 257,992 311,567 120,614 143,201 79,817 66,003 569,559 365,4.,5- 37,449 35,347 48,061 43,919 26,410 58,650 7o,695 60,452 72.796 106,711 85,065 75,597 -10,400 16,315 17,515 following is a summary of the amount of Government bondsaud notes. State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds The sold at the who do not present them for payment prior to tlie first of February, 1808, will be considered as having waived the right of present payment thereof, and such bonds will be paid at the option of the Government. Interest on this loan ceased oh the 31st ult., except on the Bank shares Railroad Coal “ • 94# 70# 99# 98# .... .... 76# 143 72# 71# 97# 94# 300 97# 100# 99# 133# 132# 20# 27# 30# 31# volume of transactions in 97# 99# large this year, and the demand for this purpose is con e juently 26 greater than has heretofore been experienced at this season. Bonds The followiug statement shows the have advanced from these causes ^@1 per cent, during the week. shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, For Sixes of 1881, Sixty-Twos and Ten-Forties, there has be u a the week, closing with this day’s business : .. 124# 58 59 69 67 135 131 4 • 96 102# 63# 66# 95# 97# 58 • 116# 72# 132# 10 82 83# Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern . 114# 71# 125# 95# 80# 80 Mick. Southern., • • D $7# 20# 15 .... 113# 71# 125# 95# Reading ' 15 45.# .... Erie Hudson River.... -27 21 .... .... Regular Board on each day of the past week : Sat. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. Fri. Week- $618,6001,131,900 827,000 86 4,luO 1,416,500 5,003,GOO1 26,0 )0 70,700 80,500 119,650 141,000 393.850ft 912,000 83,000 139,0-K) -.405,000 100,000 166,OuO 19,000 20,800 35,000 14,000 35,000 33,000 45,000 191,800 el. S. Bonds... .|145.500 U. 9. Notes 6,0 0 State#Cityb’ds Company B’nds. Total Cnr.w’k...$279,500 Previous week., 475,200 858,1001,597,900 971,5001,181,7501,609,500 6,501,250 837,200 651,600 518,700 3,471,200 988,500 i / January 11,1868.] The totals for several lation Oct. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. Jan. 4 11 18 25 8 15 22 29 6 13 20 27 3 10 . Governments Bonds. Notes. do shrt 4,228,900 4,719,300 3,962,000 3,021,900 . 823,000 8-46,500 1,005,100 305,100 297,000 295,900 245,500 292,250 191,250 136,900 170,500 111,500 2,005,200 ... 3,121,500 1,497,500 2.256,400 . Swiss Total Company City Bonds. Bonds. amount Hamburg 487,500 750,000 235, (XX) 5,774,400 178,700 0,480,5(10 Amsterdam Frankfort 1,618,000 550,000 113 500 939,500 131,500 597,500 1,091,5( 0 491,0 0 . 207,000 175.000 , 220,500 241,000 359,500 514,500 398,500 157,800 174,000 439,000 931,500 912,OuO 188,500 893,850 0,098,600 4,117,000 3,865,450 4,557,000 3,P17,000 2,639,100 2,415,350 2,858,‘GO 3,864.500 2.150,000 3,471,200 6,501,250 240,000 102,000 92,800 191,800 of the premium has been irreg¬ ular. The weakness of last week was followed by a strong upward reaction, under which the price rose to 137£, an advance of 3f upon our last quotation. This was followed by a decline to 135£, from which the price has advanced, to-day, to 137f, closing at J37^@f. The market keeps constantly largely oversold ; and it is the demand from the i ts,” who are easily frightened into covering, which has been the chief strength of the premium. At the same time, the continuance of the shipments at the rate of about millions per week, and the apparent certainty of the stoppage of contraction tend to sustain the market. course The whole amount of coin paid by the Sub- Treasury, on coupons and bonds of 1847 since Jan. 1st amounts to between 10 and 11 millions. Gold has loaned, to-day, from C per cent, for carrying to “ flat-” The fluctuations in the gold market, and the business at the Gold Board during the week closing witli Friday, are shown in the fol¬ lowing table : Quotations. • . Open- Low- HighClosTotal Balances. ing. est, est. Range, ing. clearings. Gold. Currency. Saturday, Jan. 4.134 133% 184# 0% 134% $54,097,000 $2,297,672 $3,656,258 Monday, “ 6. 134% 134% 135% 0% 135% 83,890,1)00 2,223,613 3,039,179 Tuesday, “ 7. 135% 135% 137% 2 136% 92,182,000 1,525,000 2,126,036 8 137% 136% 137% 0% 136% 136,395,000 2,252,215 Wedn’day, “ 3,772,703 9. 135% 135% 136% 0% 136% 79,940,000 2,256,29S 2,958,619 Thursday, “ Friday, “ 10. 137% 137% 137% 0% 137% 96,856,000 2,289,203 3,215,782 , Current week 134 133% 137% Previous week. 133% 133% 134 Jan. 1 ’68, to date 133% 133% 137% 3% 137%$541,621,000 12.944,001 18,769,177 0% 133% 261,021,000 8,559,498 11,222,257 4% 137% The Register of the Gold Board, J. C. Mesereau, Esq has com¬ piled a very complete manual, in which the daily fluctuations of the prices of gold from 1862 to the close of 1867 are stated. , The movement ol on and coin Saturday, Jan. 4, bullion at was as this port for the week shown in the following formula Treasure receipts from California Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury Reported new supply thrown Withdrawn for export on $I,10S,087 149,650 3,934,000 market $ excess 1,158,795— of reported new supply 3,945,938 $ 1,245,799 Reported new supply in excess of withdrawals Specie in banks on Saturday, Dec. 28 Specie in banks on Saturday, Jan. 4 $10,971,769 12,724,614 Increase of specie in banks Decrease of specie in banks «* $1,752,845 . follows l,7f.2,845 Receipts. Dec. 30 $184,648 82 234,369 52 " 31 Jan. 1 “ 2 ‘‘ 3 4 Total Balance in . a ad Sub- Sub-Treasury , $3,809,828 17 3,074,337 06 2,727,005 94 2,373,734 47 230,714 09 265,108 88 243,959 29 4,3 4,506 73 2,185,463 56 $1,158,795 60 $19,267,464 93 Receipts. 1,035.567 20 2,289,179 76 „ $12,582,0)46 66 104,249,546 63 $116,832,193 29 Deduct payments during the week Balance on 19,267,464 93 Saturday evening c. $97,564,728 30 6,684.818 27 *. Foreign Exchange.—For Wednesday’s mail the rates of ex. change were the same as last reported. To-day, however, owiDg to a moderate supply of bills against shipments of bonds, sterling has declined about £ per cent., prime bankers GO days’ sterling being 109|-@110. The following are the closing quotations for the several classes of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : Dec. 20. London Comm’l. ' 109 @109% do bkrs'lug L110 @110% 36% 41% 41% 41 %@ 41%@ 79%@ 72%@ 79% 72% 41 %@ 41% 4 %@ 41% 41% 41% 79% 72% 79%@ 79^ 72% 7-% @ following statement shows the City for *he week business on January 4, 1868 : condition of the Associated Banks of New York ending at the commencement of -AVERAGE Banks. New York Loans and Discounts, Capital. . $3,000,(KM) $3,270,910 Manhattan Merchants’... Mechanics’ Union America Phteuix 2,050,000 3,000,000 2,000,000 1,500,000 3,000,000 1,800,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 000,000 300,000 1,235,000 1,500,000 800,000 000,000 City Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical Merchants’ Exchange.... National. Butchers’ Mechanics and Traders’. Greenwich. 0,200,351 7,795,871 5,295,717 4,312,012 0,900,272 4,178,802 2,935,695 8,002,337 2,071,781 5,382,836 3,051,001 2,058,555 2,290,100 1,939,332 1,005,548 2,834,421 1,179,419 4,371,640 9,943,440 24,154,054 0,119,382 2,983,038 8,311,697 1,644,122 4,258,871 200.000 Leather Manuf. National Seventh Ward, National. State of New York American Exchange.. Commerce Broadway Ocean Mercantile Pacific 600,000 500,000 2,000,000 5,000,000 10,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 .. 1,000,000 422,700 2,000,000 450,000 412,500 1,000,000 1,000,000 Republic Chatham People’s North American Hanover — Irving 4,000,000 Sprn ontinental Exchange 1,000.000 1,000,000 1,(XX),000 1,500,000 1,000,000 2,000,000 Citizens Nassau Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather 1,820,980 1,553,000 2,000.000 500,000 800,000 11,144,809 1,343,001 2,139,638 2,607,815 2,525,500 4,814,000 3,740,629 4,275,891 2,705,998 1,162,181 1,789,868 1,124,195 6,061,917 11,219,820 979,115 820,990 400,000 1,255,526 850,000 500,000 5,000,000 820,547 1,295,724 10,050,S04 12,849,898 400,000 Commonwealth Oriental Marine Atlantic 750.000 - 300,000 400,000 300,000 1,500,000 Importers and Traders’.. Park Mechanics’ Banking Ass. Grocers’ North River East River Manufacturers & Mer— Fourth National Central National Second National Ninth National First National Third National New York N. Exchange. Tenth National Bull’s Head National Currency. 3,(XX),000 300,000 1,000,000 1,083,376 5,398,511 2,919,909 3,024,587 919,732 2,094,300 1,324,121 238,098 500,000 1,000,000 300,000 1,000,000 200,000 100,(X30 250,000 Bowery National Stuyvesant 507,414 Eleventh Ward ‘ Eighth National New York Gold Exch’ge , 1,352,018 2,048,798 2,334,406 500,000 Metropolitan 359,968 494,621 820,189 687,000 CirculaNet Legal Specie. tion. Deposits. Tenders. $2,021,916 $893,086 $6,808,993 $2,212,990 318,200 5,850,790 11,510 2,388,773 723,876 895,054 5,445,364 1,073,972 204,888 589,857 3,738,629 1,031,506 153,498 2,870,267 756.889 493,496 1,855 1,450,085 5,906,633 1,932,991 205,574 445,044 287,075 2,870,255 750,878 1,783,527 345,000 23,026 1.756.228 711,173 796,792 129,050 1,77S,481 825,188 550,452 5,018,267 1,S80,467 35,898 452,555 672,493 2,121,221 162,960 738,120 1 53,119 495,658 41,000 262,000 1,605,500 503,000 1,343,698 425,343 25,294 195,720 3,775 750,707 135,391 231,402 265,970 1,964,439 674,596 45,796 178,485 638,667 271,216 508,806 328,000 3.561.373 1,516,362 992,481 536,359 5,S68,965 2,289,105 958.371 5,982,675 7,378,387 5,607,113 4,982,665 121,706 900,000 1,517,320 91,933 798,060 2,031,950 767,364 78,484 481,322 2,745,604 732,215 11,689 134,124 1,292,033 422,989 at?, 177 858,750 3,431,073 1,623,414 88,482 129.444 429,477 1,791,988 23.497 6,496 1,111,851 165,81.4 60,030 333,000 1,725,301 508,040 ‘100,058 292,219 1,381,287 406,198 30,000 192,168 1,289,COO 397,000 307.371 2,186,900 5,501,187 1,640,800 21,937 131,314 1,206,734 343,741 56,598 • 4,157 1,898,510 418,566 109,027 590,711 1,703,553 538,386 34.475 475,2(9 755,342 1,027,899 24,973 829,330 940,923 2,462,600 22,761 7,377 3,827,083 .1,424,000 138,187 675,000 559,554 2.526.374 48,680 242,127 2,367,887 612,247 10.475 7,416 931.584 199,900 82,868 360,000 1,267,451 385,834 901,054 20,050 99,117 322,402 146,864 500,323 5,950,342 1,663,983 619,690 992,440 15,058,968 3,922,060 986,369 391,868 4,867 308,781 9.422 679,006 197,818 76,583 18.382 11,565 960,15 4 260,572 19,305 283,500 441,091 176,564 11,736 736 1,009,115 275,823 189,635 2,953,031 13,779,880 4,526,762 51,812 1,708,083 12,345,768 3,802,8S3 270.000 801.584 294,942 119,494 915,906 5.572.228 2,040,928 29,564 429,107 3,389,093 1,266,428 51,380 795,893 2,333,997 1,015,761 12,281 268,614 248,087 614,886 25,300 901.500 1,710,700 639,200 6,806 8,604 i 1,448,967 316,982 103,854 10,959 90,000 387,473 225,000 158,861 250,000 283,308 422,110 838,568 ....... 76,008 361,932 542,936 12,724,61434,134,391 187,070,786 62,111,201 The deviations from the returns of the lows AMOUNT OF 6,200 405,180 82,520,200 249,741,297 previous week are as fol¬ : Loans Inc.$4,879,015 Specie Inc. 1,752,045 Circulation... Dec. Deposits Legal Tenders Ino. $8,359,595 Inc. 1,453,209 9 following are the totals for Dec. 27. F**.... Jan. 3, 1868. Jan 10. 110'@llo% 110%@110% 109%@ 110 11Q%@ 110% a series of weeks past: Circnlation. Specie. Deposits. 7. 247,450,084 15,805,254 34,092,202 174,920 355 Dec. Dec. 14. 540,327,545 14.880,828 34,118,011 177,044,250 Dec. 21. 244,105,353 13,408,109 34,019,101 177,032,583 Dec. 28. 244,020,312 10,971,909 34 134,400 178,713,191 Jan. 4. 249,741,297 12,724,014 34,134,391 187,070,780 Legal Aggregate Tenders. Olearines 52,595,450 472,950,918 54,554,308 447,0 >0,00<) 58,311,434 473,151,502 00,057,932 449,140,304 02,111,201 483,200,304 Philadelphia Banks.—The following shows the totals of the leading items of the Philadelphia Banks for last and previous weeks; Dec. 28. Capital Jan. 4. $10,017,150 $10,017,150 51,208,209 52,002.304 196,747 235,912 10,007,491. 10,782,432 4,439,090 5,051,497 6,570,080 0,730,491 34,800,225 30,021,274 10,032,599 10,039,003 21,853.415 29,910,648 2,1)80,800 3,206,346 Loans Specie Decrease during the week 36%@ 41%@ 41 %@ 79%@ 72% @ .... New York City Banks.—The Loans. Payments. $2,199,606 92 7,850,881 78 Sub-Treasury morning of Dec. 30.... 36% 41% 41% 79%@ 79% 72 @ 72% Berlin The : Custom House. @ 41 %@ 41 @ Bremen $507,046 The transactions for the week at the Custom Mouse as 86 110%@110% 5.13%@5.12% 5.11%@5.10 6.11%@5.10 5.18%@5.12% 6.16%@5.13% 5.16%@5.15% 5.16%@5.13% 5.16i£@ 5.13% 36%@ 36,% 36%@ 36% — Actual excess of reported supply: balance retained in private hands Actual deficit in reported supply: balance from unreporied sources Treasury have been 110%@ 110% 110%@ 110% @5.13% 5.13%@5.12% 5.12%@5.11% 5.11%@5.10 5.17%@5.16% 5.16%&5 13% 5.17%@5.16% 5.16%@5.13% Total $2,787,143 Withdrawn for customs Withdrawals in : 45 5 15 Antwerp State & ,, The Gold Market.—The ending do Paris, long do short , Friday. uct. past weeks are shown in the following tabu¬ : Week ending Oct. Oct. THE CHRONICLE Legal Tenders Due from banks Due to banks Deposits Circulation Clearings Balauces Boston Banks.—The following Increase Increase. Increase. Increase. Increase. Increase. Increase Increase . . . Iucrease . $734,035 39,105 174,941 011,807 160,411 1,821,049 6,404 8,057,233 1,125,547 Banks the footings of the Boston compared with those of the two previous statements : Capital $41,900,000 are Jan 6. Loans : 86,304,249 Specie Legal tender notes 1,406,24(1 Due from other banks Due to other banks Deposits Circulation .. (National) i Circulation (State).. ...; i 15,543,169 17,016,167 14,313,785 40,856,022 24,026,559 228,739 Dec. 30. $41,900,000 95,788,720 406,400 15,162.405 15,271.082 13,184,944 39,044,105 24,583,351 229,223 Dec. 23. $41,900,000 94,932,304 509,847 14,2^3,062 14,702,366 12,483,750 38,453.021 24,6 3,366 224,014 46 THE CHRONICLE. tJanuary 11,1868. SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, TOGETHER WITH THE AMOUNT OF BONDS AND NUMBER OF SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK. STOCKS AND Satur. M011. SECURITIES. 134* 135# 136* 136* American Gold Coin (Gold Boom). National: United States 6s, 1868 covpon. do do 6s, 1868. .registered. do do 6s, 18S1 coupon. do do 6e, 1881..registered. do do 6s, 5-20& (’62) coupon do do 6s, 5-20s doregi8t'a do do 6s, 5-20s(’(i4)cow;wo do do 6s, 5.20s do regisVd do do 6s, 5.20s (’65) coupon do do 6s, 5.20s do reqisL'd do do 6s, 5.20s ('65 n.)cwp. do d© 6s, *.206 do rtgisVd do do 6s, 6.20s (1867) coup. do do 6s, 5.20s do regiJd do do 6s, Oregon Wa. 1883 do do 6s, do. (I y'rly) do do 5s, 1871 coupon. do do 5s, 1871. .registered. do do 5y, 1874 coupon. do do 68, 1874. .registered. do do 6s, 10-40s ...coupon do do 5e, lQA^s.registcred. do do 7-30s T. Notes. “Id se. do do do do — — | Fri. 136* ;137* — _ — io?* 108* 108# 108* 105* 105# 105* 1 — 105* 106* 106* 105* 106* 108 106 57,400 35-i,5‘.0 2)9,500 017,= 00 146,000 290, 00 106# 106* 106* 106* 816, C0t) 104# 104* •04* 104* 104* 105* 1< 4* 104* 105# 104* 104* 104* 04* 106 104* 914,000 30,600 104# — — 921,250 6,000 115 —r- 3,000 102# 229.500 02* ,104* 104* 104* 105* 105* 51,500 101* 104 102# 102* 102* 102 — — 105# 104* 104* 101* 104* 105 245.501 64,200 State — — — Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 — — — do do do 1877 do do do 1879 do War Loan Indiana 68, War Loan do 5s • 7,000 — 99* 7,000 — — — — — — — 98 97 Sale 72* 72* 67,375 94,6. 5 73# 73# 74# 111 29 93* 70,700 102 22,884 25 219 74 74* 75* 76 £1 75 54 63,009 1,388 66 3 0 358 7h0 119 50 Hartford and Newnaven Hudson River Illinois Oeutral 100 100 ..100 532* 134* 133 '37 133 138# 140 144 11,725 138 60 855 60 Indianapolis and Cincinnati..;. 10C Lehigh Valley 5c Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st pretlOO 16 18# IS# 17# 19 do do 2d preflOO 0# 108 IOC# 108# Michigan Central .100 166* 106J 107 86* S6* 86* i7 87* Michigan So. and N. Indiana .100 86 Milwaukee & P. du Ch. 1st prellOO do do do 2d prellOO Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 do do • prel...l00 Jersey 1-00 do 100 100 47# 64* 65 65* COO 1,660 100 2,120 82,690 — 217,000 6,000 — — — 1,000 f* 105* — 51* •51# 51* — 51* 51# — — 8,000 • 36,000 — t33 61 60 61 61* 61* 58* 5S* 58* 59 45 42 44* 59 45 45 31* — 93 — 61# 59# 159,000 — — 93 7,000 98# 94* 94 144 312 /e 38,510 93* 51* 98# 91* V9* 100* 8,973 41,041 94 52 200 43# 250 44# 45 6d# 65* 30 4b* 45# 66# 8,400 600, s Buffalo, N. Y. & Erie, let mort., ’71 Central of N w Jersey, 1st mort.. Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund do do do do let mortgage.. Income HO 4,000 86 ll.Of'O 27,(00 6,000 22,000 2,0k 0 101# Gallatin .....100 — 60 Na-sau Ninth Ocean Phoenix Republic Seventh Ward Ft. Nicholas Shoe and Leather S ate of New York 103)3 162 100 Merchants Metropolitan . 10 100 — 126 I'*1 100 101 100 *0 126 — do do 104 — l -100 100 100 — —— 106 100 100 Sprue-Hill Manhattan Metropolitan New York do 33 IVeamph.—Western Union Steamship. — A tlantic Mail 35* 35* 50 — 173 50 20 — 100 50 — 50 100 — — 50 lrnprocti/M/U.—Bost. Wat. Pow. 20 2t# Canton 36 23 100 22* 22* 49# 22* 49# 50# m. 50* 100 3i# 37* 38# 39* 38 38 100 113 112* 113 112* 113# 100 111* 1 3# 113 114 113# 114 — Pacific Mail IruAt.- Farmers’ Loan & Trust 25 New York Life & Trust. 10( Umo i Trust 10( 92# 1,800 8,900 18,815 1,600 10,705 — 77* 77 77* 38* 38* 78# 77* 4«# 45* — 8*# — 46 100 76* 76* 73 73 36* 76* 45* 37# 76# 45* 76* 6.913 270 37# 76* 6,225 46# 2,523 10( 1,874 1,000 100 —— > 13* 14 21* 21* 23* 24* — _ - — 93 — 96 — — — • - — 15 25 1 ■- ——— m. - 102# — S3 I 102* 4,000 1,000 97* 2,000 1 92 3,100 — — — 69 70 70 " ^ 24,000 — — Cons’lidated & Sink Fund 102* 3,000 1,009 102 — do 8s, new, 4,500 10,470 - ,, " t> 1882... do 2d mort.,7s.. do Goshen Line,’68 Milw'’kee & Pr. du Chien, 1st mort Milwaukee and St, Paul, 1st mort, do do 2d mort. Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage., do do 2d mortgage... New York Central 6s, 1883 do do 6s, 1887 do do 7s, 1876 do do 7s, conv’le, 1876 New York and New Haven........ Ohio and Mississippi, 1st — mortgage — 85 97 - — 86 — 96 91* 91* 97* 6,000 & — 91 — 91* 21,0, 0 — 3,000 92 7,000 2,000 — _ * 96* * — *,000 — 87 — ‘ — Peninsular, 1st mortgage Pittsb’g, Ft. Wayne &Chic., lstm do do do do do do 2d mort 3d mort Quincy & Toledo, 1st mort Louis, Alton & Terre H, let m do do do ' 2d, prei 82* do do do 2d, inc Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mort Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort., ext.. St. 100 100 500 .100 100 — 85 103 do do — — — — Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund 49 — 83* McGregor Western, 1st mortgage. Marietta and Cincinnati, 2d mort. Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 106 — 80# — 2d mort 3d mortgage, 1868 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mort, (S. F.), ’85 do 3d mortgage, 1875.. do convertible, 1867.. Illinois Central 7s, 1875 Joliet & Chicago, 8s zioc* 101 — 100 60 Miscellaneous Stocks: 0 u.—American 100 Central lOt Cumberland .100 Delaware and Hudson. ..10( Wilkesbarre 9Z'. - Harlem do do 6th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended.... do do 2d mortgage. Gimt Western, 1st mortgage o do 2d mortgage Hannibal and St. Joseph, Is Mort 126 — 82* Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1669-72 - 100 86# Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mort Chicago. R. I. and Pac, 7 percent. 92# Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort. ft Tenth Union Pennsylvania.... . Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 do 4th mortgage, 1880 101* 102* 102# 114# 115 Fourth Mechanics do Extension do 7 p. equipment do 1st mort do coneolid’ted do — ttau do do do do Delaw7’e, Lackawan. &Weet,lst — Iinporf ers and Traders Chicago & Great Eastern, l6t mort Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mort. Chicago & Northwest., Sink. Fund 3d mort, conv do do 4th mortgage. Cleveland and Toledo, Sink’g Fund do do new 7s I 100 104 10! 100 ......100 102# 102* 102# 103 Fargo & Co Gold Mining.—Mariposa i-Murii.oaa preferred t: Quick 100 do do — — — 1 intcd States W ~ n. 31* 72 120 pref.100 Railroad Ronds 398,000 20,000 3,000 — — 100 1()0 , Merchants’ Union 32# 32* 133 — • Exchange A me ican do 15 46,515 Chicago, Bnrl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c 6s 5s Bank Stocks Mrrprt+b. - Adams 93# Louis, Alton & Terre Haute.100 do Sixth Avenue 65* 15,100 16,0U4 100 50 do 13,0001 51* — do 6b, Impmovement Stock, ^ater Loan Jersey City 6s, Wf New York 7s UnitcriStatesTrust St. 65* 134# 39 49# 68* — 105# 1 — * 84 — 6b. (new) Commerce 99* 82* 49# 118* US* U9* 119# 121# 124 10c 30# 100 Reading 99* 49 .100 pref * 48# 90 49 90 Toledo, Wabash and Western. .100 48# do do do pref.100 5s,1868-76 7s, State B’yB’de(coup) do do (reg.) Central 99* 102 — Municipal: Brooklyn 6b, Water Loan do 6b, Public Park Loan.... 60 preferred 73 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic. 100 97* 98* Virginia 6b. (old) . 73# 73# 62 112 pref...l00 Panama — — do North Carolina, 6s do 6b (old) do 6s, (new) Ohio 68,1870-75 do 6s, 18S1-86 Rhode Island Cs TennosseeBs do 6s told) do 6s, (new) . do Harlem do , do 7s, War Loan, 1878 Missouri 3s, with 7 coupons do 6s, (Han. & St. Jos. RR.) do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 do 68,1867-77 Commonwealth Continental do ?2# 100 100 preferred New York Central New7 York and New Haven Norwich and Worcester Ohio and Mississippi — Louisiana 6s American 100 New — Michigan 6s do 73# .. 81# 7s (new) Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 do Registered, 1860 do 6s,cou., ’79, a ft.’60-62-65-71 do W eek’s , Georgians. do pref.100 72# do 101 Cleveland,Painesv*& Ashtabula. 100 Cleveland and Pittsburg 89* 91# 92 60 8S# 89 Cleveland and Toledo 50 98* 98* 99* 101* 101 107# Delaware, Lackawrana and West 50 39 Dubuque & Sioux City 100 do Ualilornia7s... Connecticut 6s. do do do Hannibal and St. Joseph — Fr 'ihur6. Chicago, Rock Island and Pac 100 94# 95* 96# 96* 96# 97* 98* 08# 9S# Cleveland, Columbus and Cin. ..100 98* do — — Wed. 100 13# 14* No. 300 115 115 116 117 7# 100 325 13 i 131 Chicago and Alton 100 130# 260 do do preferred... .100 131 75 138 138 138 Chicago, Burlington and Quincy10C> 48 Chicago and Great Eastern 100, 59* 100 59# 59* 69* 59* 59 Chicago and Northwestern 13,950 Erie — — Satoi"Alon. Tuea. bfttttU'lUi) Railroad Stocks ; Boston, Hartford and Erie Central of New7 Jersey $ — 136 132 10 8* 108# !198# 108* 108* 109* r 8* 10'# 108# l';8* 108* . STOCKS AND Thar- Wed. Tuts. do do do do 94 Long Dock Mariposa, 1st mortgage (new).,... Western Union, 7s ; . 94 S5 _ 13,000 4,000 77# 77 66 6,000 i8,o e — 2d mortgage, equipment.. . 66 — 80 —- — 4,80, THE CHRONICLE. January 11, 1868.] 47 NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES LIST. Subscribers will confer a great ftror DENOMINATIONS. Marked thu« * l'l UlOl Rate. Due. Payable. Uid American Gold Coin 1860 do do do 6,417,800 1867 8,908,342 1868-j ) coupon. 7,022,000 registered, f 1858....... coupon. ) 20,000,000 do do registered, j do 1861.. coupon.' do do registered. 283,746,830 OregonWar Bde {yearlyt a yearly do do Bonds (5-20s) ofl862...,coupon. do do do .registered. 134% 134)4 114 1874] j 1864 do .registered. 1 1865 ...coupon. . • do .registered. | 1%5 (new) coupon, j do do do do do registered. J 1864 .coupon. } do .registered, j do (10-40s) .. do 109 *0i) ‘ 1881 July... 1881 § 1884 106% 106% 1885' 1%% 106% State do ($4,066,210): State do do do do 105% do do (extended) do do (funding) Arkansas (inch int. $3,252,401): ♦State Bauk Loan ♦Real Estate Bank Loan California ($5,322,000): State Bonds of ’67 and ’60 War Bonds Connecticut ($10,0 >0,000): State Bonds (war) do (war) 437,850 610,000 do (war) tax exempt.. 1 ’72-’84 April AOct. ’74-'84 1S85 do ) \l 1 do Canal Bonds do registered do 1,157,222 1,229,667 Coupon Bonds do State Bonds do do War Bouds, coupon Iowa ($81,000): State Stock War Loan Bonds Kansas ($004,475;: State Bonds . (war) of ’61 . . . Massachusetts ($25,555,747) % ♦Railroad Loans (various) do do (Pacific) (H. A St. Jo) ($3,791,327): State Bonds (war) 1861 do do (war) 1864 do do (war) 1866 do do (war) 1806 New Jersey ($3,395,200): 6 10/000 7 do , • do do ’89-’90 do do do Jan. & July • • Brooklyn ($10,023,419): Municipal Bonds (various)... Improvement Loan Bonds .... • do i.‘V. ... • • ... 6 6 6 1,194,100 66 6 8 500,000 coupon registered.. 442.961 2,609,607 2,559,000 5 5 7 21,726,500 7 12,700,000 6 5,466,000 5 Jan. & Mar. & July Sep. July Jan. & July May A Nov. Jan. A July do do Quarterly do „ do 1870 68’78 1870 ’75-’79 ’71*’81 77-’90 1887 Jan. A do do do 2,347,340 Apr. A Oct. 1868 2,175,400 13,911,900 do 1868 Jan. A July lone do 1882 6 | Jun. 6114 6IX 59 1914 A Dec. 71-’78 11,108.000 21,896,298 494,000 3,450,949 Jan. A July ’86-’95 406,100 Jan. A July ’08-’88 845/22 J .,A.,J.AO. 4,1:5,399 250,900 4,335,034 1,000,000 5,000,000 . do do ’84-’95 ’6 *.’99 do '68-’99 723,966 1870 1870 1873 1875 iac6 1890 1890 1893 1895 do Jan. A July May A Nov. Jan. A July J.,A.,J.Au. do 2,192,168 225,000 Mar. A Sept, 6,0S8,200 Various. do 44 1,800,000 1,038,000 336,000 622,000 898,840 850, oro 1,217,000 589,000 98*4 69 99* ’67 ’87 ’67 ’78 ’74 ’76 ’70’79 ’75 ’76 1,000,060 do 6,188,000 do 1894 ’15 ’16 ’81-’99 615,000 do ’85’90 291,000 1,062,500 1,435,000 1,039,000 Jan. A July ’73 ’76 do Various. Jan. A July do do 99K • •*» • • » • ••t Jan. A July ’67’95 do ’67 ’95 do ’67 ’91 790,000 Municipal Bonds.... do • • do 1,033,000 62* 98 96 93 ’72 ’96 ’81 ’90 1876 1886 99 '£ Water Loan Bonds. . erbey ,,,, .... City ($L953.5S City and War Bonds 100' do 575,000 Jan. A July ’72’90 May A Nov. ’70 ’97 April A Oct. ’95 ’00 469,968 650,000 Various '68 *86 Jan. A July 1871 896.000 .... Water Works Bonds • ... • • • 661,254 689,900 do do Water Loan Bonds.. ’67’84 '67 ’90 A Nov 1887 Various. do 650,000 May 95 .... .... 1,231,000 .... Railroad Loan Bonds Waier Loan Bonds... .... i !!!! i Iew York City ($33,326,524): Water Stock >. do do Croton Water Stock do do do Water Stock Floating Debt Fund Stock Central Park Fund Stock do do Impr. Fund Stock .... Municipal (re-adjust.) Bonds.. . .... • • ... .... ... .... 98 100 83 100 84 .... .... ... .... .... .... 01% 00% 1868 74*’78 1877 1 06% 1877 1 05% • • • • • • • • 72-’7? 68-’74 92 .... * + .... .. . • • • # 1 00% 861,500 June ADec. .1894 3,000,200 F. M.A.AN. 2,147,000 900,000 1,800.000 1.878,900 do do do do do 2,748,009 3,0t>6,071 2,500,000 Bounty Fund Bonds.. 1,122,400 I Municipal Bonds (old) do do do War and do (new) (old) (new) Bounty Loan Bonds... F ittsburg ($ ): do do Railroad Bonds * 851,000 2,000,000 1,500.000 1,800 00O 4,000,000 Soldiers’ S s t. Louis . ($5,644,000) : Municipal Bonds Real Estate and Improv. Bonds Water and Sewerage Bonds.... Harbor and Wharf Bonds Railroad Bonds ’76 ’93 Apr. A Oct. ’82 ’93 May ANov. 1887 do do do do Real Estate Bonds Sold. Family Aid Fund Bouds.. do do do do Court House Stock Soldiers’ Bounty Fund Bonds do Substit. & Relief B’ds Riot Damages Bonds .. .... Various. 1,975,000 !!!! .... 67-78 84 ’89 Jan. & July 67-’84 do £6-’P6 do 97-’02 Quarterly A school (new . 1869 Quarterly. July 318,159 1,000,000 500,000 1,775,000 1,210,803 96 95 .... Apr. A Oct. 67-’77 Jan. & ... Water Bonds ... Jan. & July ’73-’83 622,000 6 11,132,000 7,000,000 3,000,000 ... issue) Sewerage & River Improvem’t ’77-’93 Jan. A July ’62-’83 do ’74-’91 do ’72-’89 do ’73-'87 ... Municipal (old issues) . do ’68-’74 ’68-’77 ’67-’93 ’67-’71 1867 1877 do Loan Bonds... do do do do Water Loan Bonds Soldiers’ Aid Fund Bonds Chicago ($5,397,464). 1874 Jan. A July do 7 7 do Prospect Park May & Nov 1894 Jan. & July ’71-’76 Mar. & Sep. ’71-’86 do do ... Floating Debt Stock Boston ($12,845,376): Municipal Bonds .... 1889 89-’00 1870 do ... 1871 1883 1880 250,000 8 100,000 7 600,000 do do • ... ... ’67-’78 May & Nov 1,100,000 493,000 ...” do • do do do (currency)... Water Loan Bonds do do do (currency) ’67-’72 1886 '86-’87 40 yrs do coupon do do ’68-’72 1879 1886 1890 700/00 7 2,489,78 > 6 Caual Loans do Various. 1,798,900 6 1,002,900 6 793,400 6 N-cw York ($51,753,082): General Fund Loans do do do do do do do 5 Bonds, act May 10, ’61 (free) act Mar. 24,’63 (free) act April 14,1804... “ do Mar.& Sept Feb. & Aug •June & Dec 798,000 1,887,6 0 War do • : ♦State Loans (old) Bounty Fund Loan, Various 525,000 1,0 0 1,966,000 ” Buildings Loans ^souni ($35,404,515): „ ASept Quarterly 1,688,000 5 8,376,372 5 3,000,00f> 6 2,118,000 6 - State do Mar. 5 6 6 6 [6,826,196 IS Michig an ($3,97<>,921): dor 99% 99% ’76-'81 6 6 6 6 6 (Funding) ... 1869 1681 345,000 800,000 625,000 475,000 541,000 6 .. „ • 1866 1868 Various. do (registered) Jail Stock Water Stock Pittsb. & Connellsv. RR.Loan. Baltimore A Ohio RR. Loan Park and Park improve. Stock. Delensc Loan Ipleas. 6 Various. do do ... 11679 Feb. & Aug ’71-’94 1,667,500 Baltimore ($21,928,656;: Internal Improvement Stock... 82% : do State Loan Bonds 99% 99% 6 6 5 State Loan Bonds Caual do War Loan do Bounty Loan Bonds 1870 ’60 ’65 ’69 ’70 i’76 ’77 11879 1,000,000 409,800 1,992,000 Various. Municipal Securities 72 sox 99% Feb. A Aug. ’68-’86 3,626,500 War Bonds ... 11870 4,833.933 6 569,000 6 3,000,000 bounty .." Minnesota ($2,525,000) do do Various. ... var. 1875 do 9,178,800 State Bonds var. 100 July 1875 Var. Var. 1871 (Fuuding) ( do ) registered West Virginia ($ ): state Bonds ’67-’73 2,832,500 State Bonds.. do do do Railroad Loans do do War Loans do do do do do do (currency) Jan. Jan. A 1881 ’G8-’71 do Feb. A Auf. (State House) do ) do Bonds do (war) of’63. (bounty) of’63 (war) ot ’64 New Hampshire 6 7 do 3,316,000 Maryland ($13,549,766): M 5 271,000 (civi) , 4,578,017 600,0'K) Levee Loan Bonds do do 6 08.975 Funded Coupon Bonds Railroad Loans of ’53- 60 21a INE ($5,127,500): do 945,200 184,090 7 300,000 7 do do Louisiana ($13,3)7,999): Bauk Loan Bonds State Bonds do do do do 15 do 1,514,489 2% May & Nov 848,000 6 do do Kentucky ($5,324,6o2) : State Bonds State Bonds do do do do do do do do do ] 6 J War Loan Bond Indiana ($7,009,092): do do f66 !■ 4,663,254 do do * 6 6 do do do do 98 j 1886 Illinois) $7,795,905): 218,574 51% d% 1880 do 29,209,000 3,000,000 RR.).. Versiont ($1,650,000): War Loan Bonds Virginia ($43,166,286): State Bonds (coupon) .... i’72-'86 1,269,500 6 3,030,000 7 etc.) j do 1868 18 u 1875 do do Funding Bonds (new) Jan. A. 1860 ;do ;d° 6,168/90 .... Stock ( do Railroad Loan Bonds 1 870,093 Stock (Fire Loan) Bonds (Blue Ridge do .... .... ($370,617): State Bonds State Bonds Georgia ($5,706,500): State Bonds do do (funding, .... Jan. & July ’77-’80 122 ’S3-’S4 do 6 6 6 coupon.. ... tranemissable do Tennessee ($51,143,497): Internal Improvement Bonds... 1868 1861 Apr. A 3,774,000 7 1,548,000 7 8,000,000 2,000.000 2,000,000 1872 18S3 1887 do 6 6 899,000 ....... do Florida 5 5 5 168,000 1,941,000 i State Bonds Bonds, 105% Military Loan Bonds Rhode Island ($3,626,000): 104% War Loan Bonds 102)4 -02% 102% South Carolina ($5,206,227): State Securities. Alabama Jan. A July |do Allied Pennsylvania ($38,377,000): 105 105 105 Jan. A July 4/95,309 2,400,000 679,213 *3 td. ’67-’76 *77-’86 ’87 ’96 61 1900 61 do do 444,022 379,866 2,183,532 1.6' 6,0U0 State Bonds Due Various. 477,000 3-874,000 5,514,500 1,425,000 do do do do do 1882 1867 1868 1868 7.30 Treasury Notes (1st series)..... ) do do > 511,939,525 7.30 (2d series) 7.30 do do (3d series) ) do do do do do (domestic) 108% 108% Oregon ($Bonutv and Relief Bonds 1904- 171,409,850 Payable. ($11,814,768): 106 Jan. A July 1886 pal Rate State Bonds do do (U< ion Loan) • .... 103K IO9" 1881 coupon. .. /. • ... . do do .... FRIDAY. »-i,. u. i Ouuiauding North Carolina ($11,290,500): Slate Loan UondB (ex coupon).. do do do do do do Funded Coupons.. Ohio IcWI < Jcoup. do do do do do do do do ii\ l c,tir.o nKNilMlNATliiNW ere In dofault for intereet. Merited thus * Asked 13734 National Securities. Bonds of 1847 registered. do 1848 coupon. ) do do. registered, f do us Immediate notice of any error discovered in our Tables. FRIDAY. pal Outstanding. In default for Interest. are by giving L\iTLK£.aT AlUOULU 2,088.200 1,183,487 _ 2,000,000 6 1.620.000 ~ do 1887 do do do 1876 1887 1878 May A Nov ’69 ’72 '78 ’75 do do '75’92 ’83 ’90 do do 78’76 ’77 ’82 do ’91 ’97 do , * 829,886 Jan. A 478,397 do do 4,097/S3 18,109.955 11,650,000 1,800,000 1,516,000 1,138,000 1,062,000 902,000 982.000 1,104,000 1870 1880 1890 1888 1875 1878 do do July '67 > ’85 '67 ’82 ’07 ’95 96 97 67 ’04 100% 10034 94’05 Tan. A July 1913 do '88 ’98 Jan. A July 67 ’85 4 71 ’06 do do 70’88 do ’67 ’S7 do ’71’77 « Exports of Leading Commercial limes. COMMERCIAL , following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows tl e Exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York 9iuce January 1, 1868. EPITOME. JO. Friday Night, January . slowly improves. Business would be more active, but for the disposition which is prevalent, to ad¬ vance prices on the appearance of any considerable demand. This is natural, perhaps, in view of the fact that the ruling prices of so many goods are below cost, but it will delay the resumption of active operations. The following .is a statement of the stocks of leading articles of merchandise at dates given : Jan. 1. Beef, tierces and barrels Pork, barrels Tobacco, foreign, bales Tobacco, domestic, hogsheads Coffee, Rio, bags Coffee, other, bags Coffee, Java, mats.. Sugar, hogsheads Sugar, boxes Su^ar, bags Molasses, hogsheads Molasses,barrels. 22,046 57.167 13,619 19,219 5^,940 37,214 2,000 34,248 43,590 Spirits turpentine, barrels. barrels Rice, E. I., bags Rice, Carolina, tierces Gunny Cloth, bales Gunny Bags, bales Linseed, bags Saltpetre, bags Jute, bales Manila Hemp, bales Tin, slabs 44,410 6,371 26,056 106,032 23,524 3,621 7,330 *3,877 194,100 20,227 32,600 34,900 46,705 41,230 30,400 63,246 83,100 1,370 3,425 2,450 2,652 6,212 18,602 -M - r ^ 32,500 8,434 11,915 38,600 11,759 20,200 75,000 21,000 6,400 13,790 15,400 38,100 9,800 104,000 19,630 7,780 21,890 7,9 0 Spelter, tons 1,300 750 700 Iron,tons Lead, tons... 1,500 8,000 10,000 2,200 3,100 3,800 products has been most liberal in cutmeats and lard, the latter for export, closing at 131c. There seems to be very little demand for pork, and the closing quotation is nominal ; while in bacon buyers and sellers are apart, Cumberland being quoted at the close at 10fc. a 10fc., the advance in gold being offset by higher freights. The receipts of live hogs at this market have been largely reduced, and of dressed hogs the supply has been moderate, circumstances which tend to the advance of Western cured meats. The packing at the princi¬ pal points in the West to date, this season, compares with the corresponding time last season as follows * 1867-8. 1866-7, 297,000 600,000 220,000 1 1,000 284,0 0 230,000 90,000 110,0'0 80,000 1,868,000 832,000 Cincinnati. Cnicago... St. Louis.. Louisville Milwaukee. . 148.000 H i-l t—< <o ©>«> g*.© « r-4 H c* oo co th Ci <M O CO CO ri CO e*r<on to — ■closer' r._- - f ^ ^2^ - *• 3 ^ -^mcoco ©CO TOC* <N§ (S — P. CSCO CO 5 £ ® o -m *» co . Tf* Gf ■ :8 tH 03 03 erf 5 3 -*) c* o sj co co a 05 vr 2 08 ^ xi . :g : : :££ : •OglOo, lO ~ T> • :o (?* 03 O* o* • : : • packing, last season, at the above five points, was 1,615,583 head, which is only 24*7,500 more than has already been packed this season ; while at interior points the packing to the present time is generally in excess of the total paekiug last season ; but there is a great falling off in weight and lard. Beef has been active for export. Hides have been more active, and per lb. gold, advance. Leather quiet. Petroleum firmer for refined —a cargo of 2 500 bbls. standard refined, in bond, sold to-day at 24^c. We note some further advance in Linseed Oil, and the sale of 1,600 bbls. crude Sperm at $2. East. India Goods are more steady, but quiet, except Cal¬ cutta Linseed, which brought $2 22^, gold, per bushel, for February delivery. *■ Metals are rather firmer, but the only business of moment is in Detroit copper at 22£e. per lb., currency. Naval Stores and Straits Tin, at 24c. gold, are dull, except Spirits Turpentine which, with a light stock, is gj ’ * -r, . . t <u £ o & > N d T3 . ■ CO J£5 l- • . ■ • .© Tl* tcc Gf ■2*<a ■OS t- OS •• ti* os g, CO £ a 03 of 2 o O .© . o CO • CO os f • >o ■ifleoi • ft 1 ■IfiHT)* CO rH JO t— OS f ■ r- ' . ■ ■ • 03 «-l § ^3 0) OoOT-lTl*rH .©©«-* i JO CS 1 ■ Tt* ; Tf. t- t- CO .»00*Tl*Tt* • G* ■ 03 .in®« • JT3 T-* OS CO Of ■ ■ ~ Tl* O JO -r-t —' ' £ Hr* • . • * 'of f-t a x o t 5 CO --> : : : t-uo >, JO r-t o3 H .1- >* 0? © ■ « s Of ■ ; ' ccT p o <3 r» .r-1 5 ™ (« PS O P* « c § 05 SQ ■ CQ • r*KO c: J^3 »o ' CO © ■*»*' o O 03 , it ^ •*-) <J d 2 « a .2 & ja i-s o 03 . o* %-4 0? :S r- ■ GG o XX % -M 0 O H nim i 93 a - GQ ►zj 6 M P* «3 O X) ^ P +3 : j • 8 : : : * ; * O H o* . >* !8 I s : IT' . i OS • 1 of o a •o* > Is v-t T1J_ t t- W* 13 :s : : o d ; o_ • of * p •h • • Pm d « l C- '“3 is ^r >h i ’ :1 : CO ' jr* . -S ; I ill jl r-T Of ’ • OQ ® ® • • • •. • • • iliP jSil IS iif rH®rfrHOS W CO • • • • • • • OQ S ® 'daoauaDXtOQcrtMd aC 03 ^ bfltu ^ ^ 0 0 0 0 *0 Q eg o5 <*joxx> • X X X X X X ;-*i'2*c'Q P*t3 X ® ao an t3 od ao P WO^jOjU •g.3 03 «3 S i Of? h • ►* ! ! >>«S o 03 d : H : • • *2 • . • &B * ad au o 3 as i-lllilil <o . - £ B'S . 03 • p • d (9 : 5 £BSl2d p 3 • . . C^3 **£xi 03 j~ : at !°o Jh s u d ® od ♦? 03 T3 "P 03 l. M V. o I-. 03 O • O 03 'p J &: *3 cents. • • • (§® wanted at 53 Freights have decidedly improved, and at the close room is scarce. The business has been mainly in cotton to Liverpool, closing at 5.16d.@fd. by rail, and £d.@fd. by steam, and in Corn to British ports at 7^d.@8£d. by sail and steam to Liver¬ pool, 9d. by steam to Glasgow, and 6d. per quarter to Cork. Very little is going to the Continent. • 5H S ttc fore:gu dry £c. • - : : ; : : d The total o» m ■CO • © f- 536,000 - «©oo' CO r-t 00*005 in m 0*0*0 ~ o* Tj< »H Total to 30 *0 ^ to lO t- to © Cotton declined until to-day, when the demand became active and prices buoyant. Brearistuffs are uniformly lower. Groceries have shown more activity. Tobacco has been fairly active and firm. Provisions show more firmness, but the business in bog os rt r-H P . 35,150 26,650 10,931 O JT5 CS <?f -Jg t* 'rTtfiW u 328 S04 P* ; O >q to OlOt* S ® ”5 oW35_ C jd ai c'ioV 10,353 109,900 903 38 fH ^ 13,576 24,377 9,600 1,722 $ 3 a a -< O » t^COO • £ GG* p 30,700 8,100 « •—} J6,590 8,274 1,075 1,556 - "1 l>> t 380 80.400 998 03 a H 9* 493 150,000 98,420 § & S ^ 62,037 64,990 7,748 23,876 138,990 17,903 9,026 . tildes, No Petroleum, crude, barrels Petroleum, refined, barrels Cotton, bales Rosin, barrels Crude turpentine, barrels Dec. 1. 51.001 11,438 118,972 a £ GG 1868. Jan. 1. 1367- / Articles from New York. The The state of trade Tar, [January 11,1868. THE CHRONICLE. 48 ■ o 5? ► tr S o p ad 2 o •a «soo^g Quantity. Articles. Imports of Leading Felting shows this port correspond¬ of For the week. 134 Jan.1, Buttons Coal, tons 1,276 '505 Cocoa, hags... Coffee, hags 15,988 Cotton, hales. Drugs, Ac. 715 Bark. Peruv Blea p’wd’rs 1,3)1 Brimst, tns. Cochineal... 30 1868. 134 85 Hardware... 505 871 350 15,988 32,707 Iron,RR b’rs Lead, pigs.. Spelter, lbs. 1,276 .... .. 1,311 .... 30 Cr Tartar Gambier.... ... Tea.... 600 Tobacco 50 Waste Gums, crude Gum, Arabic Indiiro Madder Oils, ess 129 68 10 33 129 68 10 13 ... 1,380 Wines, Ac. Champ, hkts Wines 204 Soda, bi-carb Soda, sal.... Soda, ash... 16 16 3,150 1,802 3,150 ...... 969 969 20 45 Flax Furs 20 45 Gunny cloth Hair .7 Hemp, bales.. . *127 629 Hides, Ac. Bristles 5,982 5 100 2.426 2,425 1,374 2,042 1,374 99 99 107 Jewelry, Ac. Jewelry 44 44 Watches.... 9 Linseed 86,435 9 36,435 1,033 1,033 Molasses Metals, Ac. Cutlery...... 758 956 2,449 Lemons..... 2,948 2,948 Oranges.... 13,025 Nuts 13,306 13,025 13,306 4,362 20,411 Raisins 79,171 79,171 17,762 14 Hides, undrsd. 300,808 218 Rice 300,808 65,161 3,550 10,500 24 221 221 Ginger Pepper 23 Saltpetre — 8,510 Woods. Fustic 1,173 7,676 Logwood... 14.523 Mahogany. 2,717 112 7,676 14,523 8,784 1,402 2,717 427 Goods at New Imports of Merchandise oilier tl»an Dry York for 18G7. the impirts of merchandise other than dry goods at this port for the year 1867 ; in the Chronicle of Jauuury 12, 1866, page 49, will be found the figures for 1866. The following are [The quantity is given in packages when not Quantity. Value. E^rthnw are 46,757 12.881 -656,717 Earth’vv’re54,967 2 2:30,305 Glass.... 597 6811,297,771 China,Glass & RotUes China Quantity. Cuhebs 152 Cudbear 316 Cutch 5,411 Divi divi.. .1,756 Dragon’s blood. 2 Glassware.14,908 423.114 Errgot Stone ware. 6.546 3,92'» Ergot of rye ..2 ...1 Glass plate.6,234 944,289 Extcurn 4,694 Ext indigo .100 Flor sulphur.100 Drugs, Ac Acids 1,046 114,901 Geutian root.. 96 37 Acid, boracic.25 3,678 Gelatine Acid, citric... .4 1,021 Gambler. .14,352 Other china . .12 Gamboge of Acetate lime Alkali 2,020 2,907 Asphaltum ..132 Albumen 8 247 Alzarine Aloes Alum 1,044 Aluminum.... 2 “ eulph.182 Alumin’s cake366 Ammonia sull29 crb.201 ..299 sal. 427 “ “ “ Annatto .1,968 Aniline Aniseed 78 Aniline cols. 151 -. Arrow root 1,259 ' . 1,S82 Argols Ar’bi c5,212 25,384 Gum “ 43,4"2 crudell,424 “ 11.098 16,607 38 504 “ • 1,274 Bone black. ..10 .213 6 Bromine... Buchu leaves..8 Brimsto ne Borax .. (tons)... 13 907 “ 32,105 175,856 4,571 344,938 62.387 27,115 talc myrrh...88 tragaca’J)50 Senegal.56 lewaki..34 Guiac 82 Gypsum 2 Ipecacuanha. .75 Insect powder62 Isinglass 1 Jalap 91 Lac dye .665 Lac sulphur 20 . . 343.278 .. Magnesia ..1,086 Manganese .12 .. 36,661 2,399 1,841 1.590 Oil, bergam’nt30 1,458 Chamomile flow75 Cadusium.. Cantharides ...8 Cardamom Carmine.... .11 .48 Chlorodyne. Chalk C *balt 7 .30 . .... 2,914 11 17 065 2,400 “ 9,6«6 1,5241 4731 Coloeynth.. tar’il,275 61,263 Chickory .3,791 1601 Colombo root. 20 Cochineal .3,290 675,833 Cream ..5,304 79 Manna ..250 Muriate potl,477 Nitrate lead 67 Nut galls ...146 Nux vomica.s55 Oils, nnspec 940 504 1,247 265,372 8,669 15,206 487,979 42,313 “ “ “ “ “ “ “ “ cod 235 cassia....70 cinnamon 1 haarlera..l2 cocoanutl34 con* 38 hmon...,27 orange....5 pepp’nn’tl2 ess’tial 3,210 997 Orchilla weed20 “ pastelS Oxide cobalt. .1 Oxide zinc 200 Paints Paris whit 1,328 Persian ber’sl71 Fitch Po ash, brom.25 “ hie 1048 . “ chlo.527 “ “ “ 2.989 2,761 947,295 9,986 10,020 1,54S 1,879 74,035 18,768 clirye 15 400 hyd.102 33,371 9,725 iodid.19 inur 147 “ 432.360 3,426 490 Keg. antim 1,466 Rotten stouelSl Rhubarb ....600 Saffron a Safflower.... 138 “ ext..44 Santorria .1 2,476 51,260 1,354 27,766 46,119 992 28,323 12,223 73.899 2,397 39,141 1,202 17,228 Mathematic’1149 Musical....2,750 438,705 587,059 sal..27,547 142,115 caustic, 124,831 360,300 “ “ 3,450 ash.38,9201,301,980 hypera‘200 2,250 “ 432 “ nitr20,027 321,891 Sponges.. .1,333 69,758 242 Squills 76 4‘2b 6,372 3,637 Sugarof load 106 milk .7 692 9,314 23 281 Sumac....44,587 311,141 14,223 4,123 Sulph copper418 660 11,591 bulphalum 1.076 Tonqua beans97 5,685 11,178 60,520 Tumeric...3,128 576 4,985 Ultra marine. 15 10.758 Vanilla beans 83 34,146 12,468 6,170 Verdigris.... 44 4:30 Vermilion.. .922 103,138 890,050 20,386 “ 279 Vinegar ...35 254 5,310 Venice Turp... 1,027 Whiting.. .1,069 1,639 Worm seed...10 300 278 Yel. ochre 3,757 “ Denies.585 889,4061 Drugs, unspec.. • 658 2,216 2,787 16,784 31,714 262/211 Gingei Barilla:.. Leather .5 Mf of leather 377 Patent leather39 Liquors, Ac.— Ale 15,551 62,107 199 Camphor wood. 25,579 1,566 Cedar Camwood Cork 83,077 Ebony 25,021 Fustic Lima wood 9,137,305 ed Horns 7,921 3,322 Box wood Brazil dress-. 10,470 4,493,680 158,093 64,482 Gunpowder... Hair 5,542 Hair cloth.. .411 Hay 90 4,101 Oakum Onions Parasols 49 277,189 5,728 676,883 234,347 1,430 41 24,346 Paper hangings, 6,113 Personal effects.* Pearl shells...4 . 146,530 1,340 6,743 224,423 Perfumery.3,350 380 39,494 3,795 Plaster 328,180 55,279 Pipes 1,795 Lignum vitas 650 13,656 189,705 77,994 6,253 51,297 18,989 Potatoes 24,007 . Pumi stone.352 Provisions..... 6.129 350,512 Logwood .49,313 234,514 125,879 Rags ....56,3401,354,432 25,36'. 1 Mahogany 451,266 49,637 Rice Bay water 2,286 Ratin 163,375 Cordials 611 92,948 Rope. 5,691 Rosewood 19,602 Coloring for Sapan wood.... 8,417 Sago 6,630 1,714 Sat o flour .196 brandy 2 585 Satin wood Brandy Beer 2,590 Gin 4,6&5 . 709 18,530 Sandalwood.... 106.126 Redwood Min. water.3,380 34,838 15,807 Willow Porter *7,323 6,436 58, <00 Palm leaf Rum 196,858 1,147 45,596 Other Whiskey 985 50,513 Miscellaneous— 10,71 Wines .137,7561,556,192 Alabaster orn432 32,07* C’mpagne 87,751 912,274 Animals. Lemon juice ... 1,292 Baskets.... 5,358 171,221 Metals.— Bags...;. 145,941 Anviie 809 302 37,770 10,227 Beads Braes goods.316 8,225 59,2 2 Beeswax Beil 1 1,838 4,192 Lonednst 617 115,974 Boxes 4 44,219 Bronzes Chains and an Blacking 35 1,993 10,132 chors.. .6,764 289,?03 Bricks .6,0771,557,005 Copper.. ..269 5 ,144 Buttons e/ider l'»l 8 Building stones Copper ore 31,961 Cut ery... .3,8051,513,298 Copper, regulus 38,989 hoop, 82,955 Candles 25 2,195 Carriages Clay 19 11,643 56,819 . 197,727 Carra way seed.. 10,881 Linseed. 460,<41 2,128,680 Soap 54,728 180,5!'4 Statuary 2 169,078 Seeds, unspec.. 476 Shells Staves 2,029 Sugar, hlids, bhls, & tcs.276,54914,656,923 Sugar, boxes & hags.. 278,709 4,488,269 Tapioca... 1,013 9,323 Trees A plants. 75,150 Tea.... 741,583 10,507,346 22 244 Ti es Twine Tomatoes I Cheese ....4,707 218,489 Umbrellas Waste 5,298 w halebone Wax 7 Cigars Coal, tns.170,264 547,099 Other Gas fixtures..31 5,193 Guns 3,631 461,139 Hardware. .9,1041,445,797 Iron 46 .49 Pol atones Burr stones 429,055 Salt 3,257 154,120 pig, tons... 68,3481,024,228 Iron,? Railroad • bars.. .404,4912,149,685 Iron, i sheet, tons Iron, 12,542 23,393 255,895 386 602 483,551 Wool, hal.38,759 4,166,339 5 231,490 Confectionery 54 5.350 Corks 716 30,711 33,639 Toys.. ..9,825 530 456 2,518 Tobacco.. 35,3721,000,888 .. 71,180 Grand total.. 152,504,551 76,865 1,068 144,132 Cotton, bah 8751 Clocks Receipt* of Domestic Produce for the Week and since Jan.-I* The receipts of domestic produce for the week and for the same time in lStit, have been 10,514 12,S63 147,536 660 Guano Hemp... 114,098 2,127,154 Honey ....2,420 83,502 4,040 349,765 49,615 Hops 10 4<’5 India rub.36,660 2,600,349 2,215 182,221 30,653 Ivory 6,517 35,361 67,949 Jute Mace Mustard 537,125 Senna 165 Shellac ...2,708 284 73,056 7,159 17,422 521 Woods— Bladders 3 Bristles.... 1,816 This 36,762 S„da, bicarb, 48,666 436,222 18,900 2136 Nutmegs 658 184,248 Jute butts. .364 Optical 299 80,254 Pepper 13,602 28,531 Lith etones.288 Telegraphic.. .1 752 Pimento 1,371 Mach:neryl2,424 810,082 3,466 Other Surgical 14 Marble & manf. 170,943 Stationery Jewelry, Ac.— 38 1,899 Jewelry ...1,4771,S00,328 Rooks ....7,240 929,167 Matches 20,309 Watches.. .1,0651,999,369 Engravings .610 176,297 Marcaronill,255 Leather, Hides, Ac.— Paper.....34,053 980,893 Molasses 144,169 3,039.006 Boot*Ashoes257 31.653 Oth. station^859 395,721 Oil paintings833 459,910 week. 871 206,146 Cassia Cinnamon Cloves 6.091 18 755 32,211 4,4S9 280,292 Zinc, 103,719,011 30,490 Spices— 1.328 36,333 7,955 1,S70 720,868 92,237 830 1,839 etones... 8,661 .46 580 46,241 Gunny cloth, bxs 34,896 733,458 760,’015,073,226 Gntta perchal06 13,596 slbe,lb3,987,- Wire 988,572 58,308 37,061 6,107 Tin 68,882 .. 247,391 Saltpetre 24,499 Sarsapaiillal543 6 3,133 Scammony 24,316 113,006 334,152 Madder Opium 1,363 Quicksilver 5,354 Lie. pa-te.10,287 131,524 “ 285 5,‘-161 Litharge 160 261 Liquid styax .3 whale ...453 77,221 71,46 prus 348 55,462 Potash 5,197 Phosphorous567 2,402 Plumbago. 2,716 50 6,052 Putty 282 2,250 Quinine Lie. root. .21,341 Camphor.. 1,255 ers 3,287 Ipecac. 21,678 Mazeina ..6 500 Iodine 20 Iodine pot.. .132 Castor oil. .1,104 Calomel.... ..16 Capsu es .130 ... . 1,390 292,536 3,948 Leeches 517 523 719 10,152 126,831 6,236 damar..216 kowrie3920 33,495 Indigo • Blue Vitrol “ 1.433 21,098 68,554 Glue 6,173 2.1,412 Glycerine.... 447 5,460 • “ 6,514 .17 . “ 1,138 345 olive .43,206 palm....168 Value. 859,536 165,452 33,147 lins’d. 13,879 “ 36,360 38,955 6.115 776 339 Quantity. “ 12,460 copaivi.502 gedda 1,643 copal.2,977 “ 17,454 4,1349 Assafoetida ...31 Arsenic 594 BwkPer* vll ,226 D “ “ 293 UC1 “ 24,747 1,662 2,799 Arnica flowerc-28 Barytes.... 5,785 22 Bismuth Bleaching pow- “ “ Value. 369,567 1,377 amiui 6,136 1,537 4,240 9,071 otherwise specified.] Silverware Tin plates, 8,695 Hides, undress¬ 627 10 Percu’n Saddlery 29,058 49,584 Other fruit s.... Instruments— Chemical 5 ed.... 5,207 Cassia 27 caps013 120,fc55 Flints 1,300 ... 279 65,413 Flour Steel ....210.576 3,248,602 Furniture... 315 Grain 687,957 Spelter. 3,-974699 175,322 Grind . Grapes Hides, 8,577 .. Plums Prunes Raisins.... Sauces A pres.. Nautical 79,304 3,005 SpiceSj Ac. Pineapples. 46,474 470,865 18,611 663,140 Philosophical) 20,068 2,449 1,858 6'J 66 762 »••• Fruits, Ac. 3,539 107, 3,539 3,253 1,110 20,068 Fish 7 86 7 86 Hides,dres’d 203 67,868 715 140 $12,168 ••••..»» 127 629 1,078 8.471 Cigars 5. Peas.... Pres d ginger.. 4,067 10,678 ... 7."',877 Oranges $12,168 iCorke 152 Fancy goods.. 90,768 133,012 174,091 36,197 Dates Lemons Lentils Nuts 1,380 6,105 35,172 1,085 2,286 121,344 Figs...., 4,721 8,165 reported by value. Articles 1,802 Same time 1867. 221 745 140 5 ; Wool, bales... Oil, Olive..-. Opium India rubber.. Ivorv 6,673 Tin, boxes.. 6.105 Tin slabs,lbs 35,172 1,018 Rags hhds, Sugar, tes A bhls.. 1,085 Sugar.hxsAhg 2,286 159 527 715 6,673 goods, Bananas Citron Currants.. Dried fruits .... Steel . 5,428 Since Jan. 1, 1868. 188 5.428 For the week 18S 34,993 1,404 4,50S 2,251,629 369 not otherwise specified.] Same time 1867. Since 8,753 634,467 Cocoa, hgsl8,4o8 419,632 Iron, tubes4,635 22,000 Coffee, bags. 943,52714,433,119 Iron, other, tons... 67,022 2,436,417 Emery ....8,310 37,000 . 3,104,815 Lead, pgs391,974 2.2'7,311 Fancy goods 500 3,521 Metal g’ds.4,690 504,617 Farina 6,318 526 Nails 13,383 Fans 208,548 Needles 530 258,712 Feathers 12,451 Nickel ; 225 133,942 ’Firearms 131,590 Old metal 228,713 Firecrackers 686,519 Plated ware.341 79,Q38 Fish 1,860 220,219 Platina. 71 172,594 Flax tons Fruits, Ac— ing period in 1867: [The quantity is given in packages when ... Furs Hatters’ Value. Quantity. Quantity. Value Value. Furs, &c— The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, the foreign imports of certain leading articles commerce at for the week ending Jan. 4, since Jan. 1, 1868, and for the - 49 THE CHRONICLE. January 11,1868.] Aehes, pkgs.. Breadstufls— Flom, bbls.. Wheat, hush Corn Oats , 71 Since Same Jan.l. time ’61 94 4t3 * 94,686 87,016 91,319 247,6 1 397,748 19,948 38,558 4,761 Rye 1,178 Malt 14,550 16,520 3,200 3,675 1,274 1,832 B ans Peas..; 1,326 2,406 C.ineal, bhls. C.meal, hags. 5,902 7,322 42,4 il Barley Grass seed.. . 23,504 . . Bnckwheai A Rosin Tar Pitch Oil cake, 1,695 4,770 26,085 45,252 436 149 14,914 hales.. Leather, sides 60,652 223 34,926 Lead, pigs M<dasses,hhds 1,840 232 15 280 .... and bb's Naval Stores— 1,276 Crude trp.hbk Spirits turp. 61 330 2,839 Since Jan. 1. Same time ’67 3,492 4,146 252 149 720 253 154 4,492 1,117 1,066 a^soo 183 25 7.162 421 14,911 1,101 10,740 Butter, pkgs. 8,695 17,135 14,060 9,397 5,881 Is,514 801 739 Cut meats... 4,785 8,914 2,459 Eggs 1 203 4,663 2,176 11,159 Beef, pkgs... 7,235 Lard, pkgs.. Lard, kegs 8'3 Hice, pkgs. 2,402 6,189 4,072 10,278 11 765 661 Starch........ 259 Stearine 274 Spelter, slabs. 426 Sugar, hhds. A bbls 2,789 300 1 5*7 Pork . 20,927 ..... Tallow, pkgs. 2,130 Tobacco,pkgs 11 Tobacco,hhds 83,860 Whisky, bbls. Wool, bales Dressed hogs, 4 365 No Rice, 218 483 This week. 38 258 4 : pkgs 20,035 Oil, lard 15,280 Oil, petroleum 125 Peaunts. bags 9,100 Provisions— .. 171 Copper, bhls.. Copperplates 149 Dr’d fruit, pkg 601 232 Grease, pkgs. llemp, hales Hides, No.... 10,299 II ps, follows 1,854 Cheese 560 Flaxseed. B.W. flour,hg C >tton, hales. 22,459 60,462 as auJ since Jan. 1 399 1,212 bush 1,016 3,8S9 9,730 1,406 2.544 18 712 112 226 129 .... 783 .... 468 213 133 98 360 659 224 1,856 492 798 318 1,208 1.865 3,545 2,177 2,844 1,128 6,706 17,881 6,605 rough, «••• • # # • [January 11, 1868 THE CHRONICLE. 50 v*s? erpool there has been a very active market and an entire recov¬ ery in prices. The sales to-day have bean 7,364 bales, and Friday, P. M., Jan. 10, 186 8. for the week they foot up 22,211 bales, of which 4,606 bales The receipts of cotton this week show a small increase, the were taken by spinners, 14,828 bales for export and 2,777 total at all the ports reaching 100,048 bales (against 97,842 bales on speculation. The following are the closing quota¬ bales last week, 105,617 bales the previous week, and 87,757 tions. N. Orlesrs bales three weeks since) making the aggregate receipts siuce Upland. Florida. Mobile. & Texas Ordinary ...$ lb 33# 13# 14# ' 14# Good Ordinary 15 16 36# 16# September 1, 1867, 947,092 bales, against 819,347 bales for Low Middling 15 16# 16# 15 the same period in 1866-7, being an excess this season over last Middling 16 16 16# 36# Good Middling 16# 36# 17# 17# season of 127,745 bales. The details of the receipts for the In the exports of Cotton this week from New York there is past week, and the corresponding week of 1866, are as follows : a further decrease, the total shipments reaching only 5,790 -—Receipts.—, ^-Receipts.—, Received this weak at*—1867-8. 1866-7. Received this week at— 1867-8. 186 -T bales, against 13,571 bales last week. Below we give our bales 1,802 4,007 New Orleans bales, r1,161 24,344 Florida 1,040 331 table showing Mobile.../ .16,537 14,746 North Carolina the exports of Cotton from New York, and Charleston. 9,832 11,401 Virginia 3,893 1,881 Savannah their direction for each of the last foai weeks ; also the total 24,273 7,718 Total receipts Texas 7,174 100,048 76,179 3,847 Increase this year 23,869 exports and direction since September 1, 1867; and in the Tennessee, &c 7,6.3 5,074 In the exports this week there is a large decrease, the last column tho total for the same period of the previous year : total from all the ports reaching only 47,066 bales, against Exports of Cotton (bales) from Newlork since Sept. 1,1865 4,089 bales last week, and 69,477 bales the previous week. Same ENDING The following, table furnishes the particulars of the week’s Total j time EXTORTED TO to Dec Jan. prev. Dec. Dec. shipments from all the ports: 31. 17. 24.. V date. | year. COTTON. . WEEK L From New York ■ Boston.. Bal imore! ver pool. 5,657 154 1,358 : 692 11,310 7,637 New Orleans Mobile 1,610 ... 131 9,503 .. 1,883 .... 1,910 .... 8.2 2,367 2,291 Savannah Charleston Total this week 2,030 642 28,356 2,924 2,759 9,503 3,393 131 19 £4,606 10,176 2,291 2,672 47,066 (Total to Gt. Britain.. Havre Other French 592 8,260 S80 2,513 100,735 102,875 2,169 2,8 7 4,149 103,632 105,044 .... 2,3 S3 8S0 2,513 1.563 2.863 2,241 Total to N. Europe.. Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar 2,458 499 .... 9,867 • Since This week. Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. From New Orleans 19,0-43 . M78 5,074 90,848 Mobile Florida Total tor the week. Total since Sent. 1 . 1,243 • .... 4,522 | • 1,289 1,276 1,641 26,012 10,361 2,122 860 • • • 917 EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 1 TO— PORTS. SEPT. N.Orleans, Jan. 3... Mobile, Jan. 3 •Charleston, Jan. 3.. Savannah, Jan. 3.. Texas, Dec. 27 New York, Jan. 10+ Florida, Jan. 37 N. Carolina, Jan. 10 Virginia, Jan. 10 ... Other ports, Jan. 10+ Total this year.. Same time last year m'ntsto Great SINCE 1. Britain 250,776 190,258 116,694 237,275 21,217 47,029 11,367 15,587 46,452 10,437 . France Other Total. for’gn. 69,417 89,656 47,429 69,667 7,623 4,811 33,157 1,115 7,809 2,800 63.248 1,362 1C6,606 1.442 1.914 472 • . • . 103,632 10,518 29,051 • . • . .... l,99tf 3,900 947.092 335,489 8.9,347 271,093 72,101 42,081 67,400 143,196 .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... 244 60,459 93,586 33,896 22, &4 4 1,993 NORTH. STOCK 35,170 113.335 15,331 66,256 57,097 21,511 112,981 61.236 8,802 17.207 64,123 2,346 2,388 76,587 .... ... 45 456 4,144 .... • • Thi» week. Bales. §25,0u0 489,534 287,220 361,051 327,138 345,310 561,942 Bales. 43,340 13,0'16 41,270 3,212 .*. 930 Norfolk, Baltimore, &c. Per Railroad 2,302 . 3,489 46,398 5,357 — — 273,033 F of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ Sep. 1867: ,—Boston.—, Last Since r-Fhilad’phia.—> /-Baltimore.--, week. Sep. 1. week. Sep. 1. week. Sep. 1. 795 New Orleans— Texas 2,347 Savannah Mobile Florida 3outh Carolina North Carolina 70S Virginia Tennessee, Kentucky, &c... 2,791 1,921 Total receipts bales. 8,562 * The market this week has hot retained the buoyancy no¬ ticed in our last, but there is au improved feeling at the close. Since Sept. 1. 26,085 Receipts from— New fi York for the week delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since tember 1, PORTS. 118,81 143,196 5.790 From South Caroli na North Carolina The following are the receipts ship- 860 3,039 • • •• 13,571 15,934 Receipts of cotton at the port of New and since Sept. 1: - 3,416 131 • .... .... 499 Total Spain, etc Grand Total 6,609 7.015 • .... — A11 others 2,798 2,660 17,108 • 297 .... 2,151 • 1,510 557 890 10,M3 • . RECLD 2,151 M0,518 .... .... .... .... Hamburg Other ports Mentioned. 3,557 849 5,0.6 11,895 2,383 — Bremen and Hanover Receipts and Exports of Colton (bales) since Sept* 1, and Stocks at Rates - ports Total French the 7,911 100 Other British Ports 6,790 corresponding week of 1866-7 the shipments from all the ports amounted to 44,425 bales, showing an increase for the week this year of 2,641 bales. The total foreign exports from the United States since September 1, 1867, now reach 489,534 bales, against 327,133 bales for the same period last year, and the stocks at all the ports are at present 361,051 bales, against 551,942 bales at the same time in 1866-7. Below we give our usual table of the movement of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing at a glance the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: For 4,926 11,695 Liverpool. Total. 154 1,-58 19 Philadelphia , Bre- Ant* Barceguw. Havre men. werp. Iona. Gbis- ' Exported this week to , York, &c*. Reshipments. + These do not 14,287 857 Last 5,234 4,803 50 4,4 9 Since .... Last Since 2,423 .... 9,188 203 614 5,632 .... .... 1,812 .... .... — 794 .. . .... .... 1 .... 224 5.685 1,368 362 101 24 .... .... 932 .. .... 85 879 695 +13,850 1,661 28,259 82,790 71.741 9,665 — 9,7l>2 include the railroad receipts at Philadelphia. tables show that the Immediately following our report it assumed a quiet aspect exports of cotton from the United States the past week have and developed a tendency to a reaction from the considerable reached 47,066 bales. Below we give a list of the vessels advance that had taken place. This feeling caused pressure to realize, under which there was some decline. Ocean in which these shipments from all the ports, both North and freights also advanced, and this, together with unfavorable re¬ South, have been made : Exported this week from— Tola) bales ports from Liverpool, and a decline there to 7£d. for middling New York—To Liverpool, per steamer City of London, 678....per ships Uplands, added to the depression here, and at the close last Escort, 1,211 Robert K-rr, 1,768 8.557 To Glasgow, per steamer Iowa, 6 2 602 evening prices had fallen off J@fc. per lb. from the highest To Antwcjp, per bark Orpheus, 131 331 To Bremen, per steamer Hermann, 1,215 ...per bark Stella, 295 1,610 point. To-day, with a slight advance in gold, reports of 154 decreased receipts at Savannah and better accounts from Liv- Boston—To Liverpool, p r st-.amer Africa, 154. Baltimore- To Liverpool, per ship Maeauly, 1,358 1,358 Shipping News.—'The foregoing ... In this table, as well as in our general table of receipts, &c., we deduct bom the receipts at each port lor the week all received at such port from other Southern porta. For instance, each week a amount from Flor da to Savannah, which in estimating the total receipts must be de¬ ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We are thus par¬ ticular in the statement of this fact as some of our readers fail 1 o understand it + The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments bom Tennessee, * there is certain Kentucky, &c.~, not otherwise enumerated. X These are the receipts at Apalachicola to Dec. 28, and at ports of Florida to Jan. 3. $ Estimated. shipped other Philadelphia—To Live pool, per ship Chieftain, 19 New Orleans—To Liverpool, per steamer Alice, 1.510 per ships Z mi, 2,714 ...L, B. Gilchrist, 3,380 Abbotsford, 3.303... per bark Iron Queen, To Havre, per ship 373 - Mongol, 2,920 per barks E. C. Lit lifleld, 1,433 Annie Kimball, 2,245 Almoner, 3,180 Harvest Home 1,725 To Barcelona, per brigs Barce o, 450 Pa amas, 400 — Bartolome, .. 460 Teresa, 60o :9 11,310 9,503 1,910 ship Hermien, 1,S83 .' 1,883 Mobile—To Xiverpool. per ships Nunquam Dormio, 3,003 — Success, . 3,123 per bark Eurique. 1,511 7,637 To Havre, per brigs Clara Pickens, 1,301....Aquidneck, 866 2,16 To Bremen, per 51 THE CHRONICLE. January 11,18681 Barcelona, per bark Filomena 372 Savannah—To Liverpool, per ship Molocka, 2,291 Charleston—To Liverpool, per bark Tecumseh, 100 bags Sea Island 1,930 bales Upland To Barcelona, per bark Esperanza, 642 bales Upland ... 372 To 2,291 and Hhds. 11,393 From New York Baltimore Boston 2,030 642 Total exports of cotton from the United States this week .bales. 47,066 Cases. Bales. 2,959 9,694 » 7,320 • New Orleans 8an Francisco • • 498 1,297 280 - Philadelphia 29 • 452 . * " 66 Virginia Portland • • • .... .... • • 43,*'96 ... ... . . . . . ♦ .* . • - . . 30 . . 603 33 96 ... ... ... . .... ... 2 100 ... • • ... a . • . • 126 . % Lbs. Tcs. & ,—Stems—. Bxs & cer’s. hhds. bales. pkgs. Maufd 780 147 973,883 122 23 48,296 541 29 927 1 .... .. — (which leans and Mobile obtained were per telegraph, — . as our Total since Nov 1. 19,5 i 6 — . 4,385 2.462 1,025,275 088 132 10,319 several errors. "VVe The market this week has been rather more active, at therefore now furnish the corrected statement in full below. steady prices. There has been a fair demand for Leaf, and Exported from— Tot >1 bales. the sales of the week amount to about 350 hhds. for export New Orleans—To Liverpool, per ship W. JVC. Reed, 4,023 per eng Chas. Henry, 806 4,829 and 150 bhds. for consumption, at 6@18^c. for Kentucky, To Havre, per ship W-Boynton 3,003 4,790 1 t[ ]atter prjce for a small lot of new wrappers, and including per barkEgeria 1,787 b^rk uedwiK, 2,810 9,483 a few hhds. low grades New Virginia, at 5@7-£c. beed leAt To G noa, per bark Ardour, 663 663 . . * • I has . . been more active, 666 though the demand. is moderate. still To Vera Cruz, per steamship Mezico, 192 bales and 549 half bales The sales include 100 cases Pennsylvania wrappers, 12£@20c.; Total foreign exDorts from New Orleans 20.436 20 cases Connecticut wrappers, 30c.; 184 cases Pennsylvania Expor'ed from— and Ohio fillers, 3£@5c. Spanish tobacco ha been very Mobile— o Liverpool, per ships City of Brooklyn, 4,523—Lancaster, 4,054 Wo’fville. 2943 ...Wallace, 2,918 14.458 quiet, the sales being limited, 50 bales Yara at 90c. and 30 To Havre, per schooner Mary R. Somers, 2,938 / 2,938 bales Havana on To R rcelena, per brig Pedro Antonio, 440 private terms. Manufactured tobacco is 440 To Genoa’, per brig L. Staples, 956 956 quiet. us) there mail returns failed to reach were — • ..... . ■ , , Total 18,792 foreign exports from Mobile QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCY. exports, therefore, from all the ports for last week should have been stated at 84,089 bales instead of 80,940 Our total KENTUCKY C mmonLeaf.. 8 M uium do. 11. hales. By following telegrams have been Telegraph.—The by — . From— Oh rleston. for week. 6,350 Total Savannah.. 15,700 Price ... 4,781 New York Ohio and Middling. Stock. 18,790 56,050 Britain Continent. Exports, 1 670 l,,f40 SPANI8H Havana.—Fillers—Common.75 © 80 “ Good 82#© 90 “ Fine 90 @100 TOBACCO. @45 ©25 20 16 5 8 8 @16 20 ©45 70 @ 18 @32 * 8 @14 3#@ 5# (BALES). Havana.—Wrappers Yara, assorted lots - 1 5C@2 75 90 92# 1 08©1 15 II cuts. MANUFACTURED. lack work—com., tax Friday, P. M., Jan. 10, 1863 good expoits of crude tobacco this week are again very small, there being no exports from Baltimore, and the total from all the ports reaching only 643 hhds., 168 cases, 419 bales and 32 hhds. stems, against 1,691 hhds,, 689 cases, 1,384 bales, 1 tierce for the previous seven days. Of these Ihe I 50 @60c Bright w ork—good, tax paid 45 @80c Fine, “ 90 @1 20 15 @40c Black work, in bond 15 @40c Bright work, Bright work—-common “ 44 35 @80c ........ receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since The ]sj0Vi \ have been follows: as RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK SINCE NOVEMBER This wcekhhds. pkgs. 348 112 112 40 3 104 £.108 167 From . .. • Ohio, &c : paid. 15 @30c V* Virginia.... exports 640 hhds. were from New York, and 3 hhds. from I virgin^. Baltimore Boston, and the ports to which they were shipped were as | New Orleans... Ncw^rie follows 15 ©35 12 @16 Pennsylvania Fillers ... 2,235 (CASES). tk EXPORTS TO—, Great Receipts Fine do | Selections Wrappers, crop of 1865. Assorted lots, “ 44 “ 1866 Wraooers, ...; “ Assorted lots, J “ “ FU’ers, 1865 a^d ew York assorted lots, 1865 and 1866 Ohio Wrappers, crop of 7836 Assorted lots,* “ Pennsylvania wrappers, crop of 1865 and 1866....... Asssorted lots, “ “ CHRONICLE. TELEGRAMS TO THE Hcavv. Light. 13 ©14# 15#@16# 17 ©20 15 ©17 21 ©23 18 ©20 do Connecticut us SPECIAL ©10 ©12 (HHDS.). ' Good SEED LEAP re¬ to-night showing the receipts, exports and stocks of cotton at the ports named for the week ending January 10, and price on that day : ceived Heavy. 8 © 9 9#@1^ 12#@lo Ligh t. 5#@ 7# Lng» LEAP Other • • 1. 1867. 21,845 1,974 22,193 619 188 577 28 620 191 617 28 2,591 4,265 2,699 4,369 117 44 117 211 Bremen, 330 hhds.; to Gibraltar, 169 hhds., and the bal 224 659 5,601 Total 26,759 5,377 ance to different ports. The particulars of the week’s ship¬ The following are the exports of tobacco from New ments from all the ports are as follows: for the past week : . ,—Stems Export’d this week from Hhds. Case. Bales. Tcs. New York............ Boston 168 6J0 3 .. 404 15 hhds. bales. 32 .... ibs,. 1,691 . Total previous week. 168 689 209 653 . . 531 . 419 32 .... 1,334 .... 1 200 .... .... .... 2 2s<> from 50 18 57 3*0 169 Liverpool Glasgow | Antwerp 3 ,656 Bremen 118,551 68,112 442 tobacco new Hhds. 2 .... Philadelphia — of 22,909 .... 8,747 Total this week Total last week Exports Man’f Pkgs. . Gibralta and Malta Cases. Bales. Tierces. 129 35 of Tobacco from all the ber To Great Britain... Germany Belgium Hhds. 3,020 4,116 Holland: Fiance 2,597 2,202 ,3,208 Spain, Gibralt.&c 3,443 Mediterranean ... Africa, &c China, India, &c. All others The above • • • .... . 52 31 47 . . - ^ m m .... .... .... • . • • • .... . . . , . .... hhds. bales. & bxs. . . .... 250 , . .... . . 2,333 14,520 10,613 .... ^ . . . . . 1 67 1,299 923 .... 517 4 ..... 37 .... 120 .... 903 « • • • 10,319 4,335 . • 182 .... 688 . 2,201 .... . 77 S,735 Y. 1.624 !!! 2,599 352 168 404 82 22,909 from mani¬ and Hayti, 30 Ohio.—At Baltimore the trade in leaf has been cou - siderably heavier than for any previous year since 1861. It will be seen by the tahle below, made up officially by the inspectors of the dif¬ 396,884 25, 667 3',060 127,787 • .... Y! foreign exports for the week, from, the ports, has been as follows: Maryland 530 .... .... 19,516 43 21 .... 32 From Boston—To Surinam, 8hhds....To St. Thomas, 2boxes....To half bales. From Philadelphia—To Liverpool, 8,747 lbs. manufactured. 6 . 36 other 4,400 .. Ma. i. 14,399 The direction of the 3,588 438 .... 640 Ycik lbs. 400,702 . 14 - 467 38: for week 347 * The exports in this table to European ports are made up fests, verified and corrected by an inspection of the cargo. Pkes. Manf’d .... 86 105 86 115 489 2 .... Total since Nov 1. • 2 4 Honolulu, &c.... 31 475 Australia, &c. B. N. Am. Prov.. South America... West Indies East Indies Mexico 141 3 221 2 .... 88 238 Austria 115 7,848 100 50 B-ilcs. tcs. 1,845 420 *>.. Italy Cases. 8i3 Total export 1, 1867. Cer’s & -—Stems-—, i 31 26 we ExportH of Tobacco from the United States since Novem¬ 27,418 tore.* give our usual table showing the total exports Hayti'V..**.’.7.7.7.’.* '.‘.W*"io ports of the United States, and their Briii h Guiana YY.lliLl’.*/.’.’.’.**.*.*.*.*.’. *’ 6 Republic Cisplatine direction, since. November 1, 1867 : New Granada Below fl 1,862 to ti P -T’l sin. Nov.lhhds. pkgs pkgs hhds. - y i ferent warehouses, that the stock on hand Dec. 31st, 1866, waB 17,015 hhds., to which adding the inspections for the year, 63,747 hhds., makes an aggregate of 80,762 hhds.; and from which deducting the shipments or deliveries for the year, 72,266 hhds., leaves as the stock in ware¬ houses at the close of the year 8,506 hhds.—befog the smallest stock known by the trade for many years. This stock is classified as follows : Of Maryland 6,616 hhds., Ohio 2,032, aod other kinds 868, and is held, 2,462 1,025,275 »P“alaton>, l.lOO hhds. Maryland, 600 Ohio, and 300 other following table indicates the ports from which the *cj ^ kinds, and in the hands of shippers and manufacturers, 3,116 hhds.Maryexports have been shipped : | land, 882 Ohio, and 168 Kentucky, <kc, ' , . , . , 52 Statement of six years; Since Jan* l.from Boston Inspections, exports and stocks of tobacco for the past 2,070 5,454 ......... 60 27,090 49,096 Philadelphia Years, Insp’ns. Exp’ted, Stocks. I Years. 58,996 61,930 8,506 1864 1867 1866; 1865 47,660 43,952 52,663 42,605 Baltimore Insp’ns. Exp’ted. Stocks* 52,873 45,052 20,938 55,975 44,137 21,560 58,699 £5,447 6,470 17,6*5 11863.* 22,297 | 1862 EXPORTS OF 800 . BREADSTUFFS 48 260 TO GREAT BRITAIN FROM SEPT IRELAND :Jan. . THE Corn has continued to anive fieel) by iail nearly equal I quantity to the wants of the markets. Shippers have been steady buyers in the face of a decline in Liverpool, but steadily advancing ocean fieights Lave forced down juices, and the close is at $1 34@$I 35 for new Western mixed afloat, and in store. Oats have been 8,298,502 12,785 7,460,387 1,538,453 1,151,790 1,407,246 Corn, bush. 25,975 6,716 348,411 192,914 26,188 7,060 32,961 348,411 38,522 80,(.91 219,102 41,436 57,333 68,521 7,000 1.835 Tie movement in breadstuff's at this 1868— For the week AT 24,820 6,920 port has been as follows: 1868— For the v eek. 1.850 — Rye, bush. Parley, &c. I Oais, bush. 13.930 bbls. Wheat, bush..... 89,725 Corn, bush 195,230 7,910 1 Weekly Receipts at Lake Ports. Corn meal, -The bush . ^|^ukee . . . . . .. i. Flour. bbls. Wheat. bush. 27,707 8,881 9,914 68,817 169,373 7,300 161,203 10.341 • 3,429 59,763 59,016 56,794 9,300 2,681 15,041 28 11,445 12,560 Barley. 44,653 3,979 16,324 5,726 19,700 bush. 4,516 1,234 8,400 2,048 9,600 175.017 350,135 62,751 134,677 132,277 509,756 99,656 107,032 139,798 : Oats. bush. bush. 94,078 13,225 week. 250 following shows the receipts Corn. . r-1867-^ For the 17,170 ports for the week ending Dec. From 4,208 14,349 NEW YORK. —1867—. For the wrek 50,160* Flour, bbls 2,888,819 8,523,426 73,359 bush. 10,01S , 2,094,641 Wheat, 2,425 RECEIPTS 8,70i Rye, The market California $3@3 10. 128,640 56,079 2,750 bush. , throughout the past week has been dull, and prices towards the close were drooping. The receipts of flour have been liberal from the West, with part of a cargo from California. There was some continua¬ tion of the speculative movement of last week, but it subsided on Tuesday, and a portion of the advance has since been lost. The wants of the trade appear to be unusually small, and the supplies are rather in excess—certainly equal to the regular demand, and the stock does not diminish. The dull accounts from Europe to-day increased the depression. £ Wheat has also receded five cents from the highest point. | Shippers were not able to do much on the advance in Liver¬ pool, owing to the extreme views of holders ; and latterly an advance of 2d in freights has interfered. The liberal supply of Western flour depresses prices below the relative value of wheat; consequently our local millers are doing very little, and they buy wheat much less liberally than last winter. At the close No. 2 Spring is nominal at $2 38@$2 40, aud white 33^889 bbls. . . 1,898,231 Flour, . Friday, Jan. 10, 1868, P. M. bush. 4,115,211 CONTINENT. From BREADSTUFFS. bush. 240 295,405 69.617 83,888 55,920 TO Corn, Wheat, 3, 1868 253,713 Dec. 14, 1867.. 253 “ 27, 1867.. 10,968 “ 27, 1867.. 2,846 “ 27, 1867.. 15,240 “ 27, 1867.. 5,185 “ 27, 1867.. 7,200 New Orleans lb. Flour bbls. Date. From New York Stems, 1,301—total coastwise, 3,878 hhds. Foreign, Leaf, 312 ; Stems, Philadelphia Baltimore 498—total fureign, 806. Total experts of all kinds, 4,688 hhds. The Boston total inspections for the year 1867. and stocks on hand at the close were California as follows : Inspections, 10,590 hhds.; on hand inspected, 306 ; do un¬ Other ports inspected, 162 hhds.—total on hand, 468 hhds. Total Kentucky.-—At Louisville the receipts have been very light, and the To about same period, 1867 do do 1866 market quiet and steady. Good manufacturing 1-af from Hart Couuty do do 1865 sold as high an 88-^-c. per lb. We quote : Lui££—commoD,5@5^ ; good,. 6@7; Leaf—common, 7^@10 ; medium, 11@14; fair to good, 15(5)17 $1 37 for old in AND 54,142 1, 1867. Virginia.—At Petersburg very little has been done, owing to bad weather and the holidays. The shipments of tobacco from Petersburg for the year ending Oct. 1, 1867, were—Coastwise, hhds., Leaf, 2.577 ; cts. per 868. [January 1 THE CHRONICLE. Rye. bush. 6,837 2,500 51,087 22,«87 28,689 GROCERIES. Friday Evening, Jan. 10,1868. There is rather doing as the New Year opens, and disposition to take larger supplies. Most pe0p|e believe that the lowest scale of prices has been reached, and allbollgh trade is cautious, there is more confidence than jjas p,een shown for many months. Stocks are generally smaller a| ^his time last year (except of Rio coffee), and are held with firmness. The turn higher for gold has caused some hes¬ itation, but where settlements are for 60 days or four months jj. j8 believed that there will be opportunities to settle at lower more there appears more subject to a great speculative movement* I Nearly a million bushels changed hands, and the price was I rates, forced up to 87£c. for Western, in store, since which there has Included in the imports of the week are a part cargo of been an irregular decline, selling to day at 85c. The receipts ^aPan teas an<^ °* *|ava coffee. At Boston also a cargo of Java has arrived; the receipts of sugar aud molasses are below are very light, but the stock is ample, and the regular trade 1 au r ® average. unusually slow. Rye has become very quiet. The small deThe total imports at this port for the week and since Jan.; mand is nearly supplied by the parcels arriving by rail. ( 1 have been as follows. Full details of the several items are ^ r „ i . i , i . . , , ,, i.i receipts limited to lots of a few hundred bushels daily, prices are well supported. Barley malt has been in more demand. The following are closing quotations: Flour, Superfine..$ bbl. $8 85® 9 50 Extra State 10 Western, to good com¬ 9 85® 11 50 mon Double Extra Western and St. Louis 12 00®16 00 Southern supers 10 65®11 60 Southern, fancy and ex¬ tra 11 75(9)15 00 12 60®13 75 California Rye Flour, fine and Corn 7 meal, Jersey FOREIGN EXPORT8 6 FROM To . Western Yellow Southern White 15(2)6 50 Malt Peas Canada NEW bbls. 1,317 2 2 2 2 Corn, Western Mixed.... YORK FOR bbls. WEEK THE Flour, C. meal, Wheat, Gt* Brit, week since Jan. 1 f2 30® 2 48 . Milwaukee Club Red Winter Amber do White 75(g) 9 50 and Brandywine Spring Rye Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State Barley super¬ fine...... Chicago per bushel 10® 10 75 Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 10 25®10 85 Extra Wheat, bush. Rye, bush. 32® 65® 80® 85® 1 32® 1 35® 1 30® 1 70® 85® @ 1 80® 1 65@ 1 41® AND 8IN0E Barley. Oats, bush. bush. 7,405 1,317 2 2 2 3 1 1 1 1 50 75 90 15 39 40 40 80 87 2 10 2 00 1 60 JAN. 1 Corn, bush. 7,405 111,135 111,135 500 500 4,000 " N* A. Col. week., since Jan. 1...... 910 3.598 910 3.598 West Ind. week, since Jan. 1 1,590 since Jan. 1, 1868 6,228 6,2*8 1,047 1,047 time, 1867. 7,956 Total exp’t, week •ame .... • • • • .... .... 1,590 5,366 7,905 5,366 3,473 7,905 7,074 4,600 ,,,, 750 750 1,039 1,039 8,700 24,445 « • • • This week. Tea Tea (indirect import) Coffee, Rio Coffee, other Sugar Sugar Sugar lb?. 381,241 238 238 9,300 9,300 24,435 6,453 27,018 24,435 6,453 3.3 214 214 99 4,050 4,050 bags. boxes. ... hhds. bans. Molasses, New Orleans.... F1 om Jan 1 to date—, 1868. 1867. pkgs. bags Molasses ^ 381,241 bluls. 200 200 bbls. 1,563 1,763 419 991 TEA. There is activity in Tea with the opening of the year, and a very steady confident feeling prevails. The sales are very fair for the times, and amount to 4,278 half-chests Greens, 3,270 half-chests Japan and 1,000 do Oolongs. The imports of the week have embraced 381,241 lbs. of Japan tea per Yokohama, and 238 packages by steamer from Liverpool. The following table shows the shipments of Tea from China and Japan to the United States from June-1, 1867, to Nov. 1, the date of latest advices by mail; and importations into the United States, Jan. 1 more in 1866 and 1867 : SHIPMENTS PROM CHINA AND JAPAN SINCE JUNE 1. 1856. June 1 to Oct. 1. Congou & Sou, lbs 176,872 Pouchong Oolong&Ning...i 685,137 , 1867. IMPORTS PROM CHINA & JAPAN INTO U. , June 1 Oct. 1 to to Oct. 1. Nov. 1. 460 . 440,187 185,224 4,583,766 8. 1868. SINCE JAN 1*—» 1867. 1868.] January 11, Pekoo Twankay Hyson skin Hyson 82,130 ... . . t f Young Hyson .. Imperial Gunpowder .... 4,7 2 252,940 734,371 194.784 184,072 ... ... .. 118,552 17,541 28,0 0 auction. 163,933 1,114,281 1,322,560 381,241 Total, lbs.. ...4,357,272 1,291,186 7,865,227 381,241 , The above ... table includes all Porto DomeN. O. Hhds aft Cuba. Rico. rara. Other, bbls. 30 200 1.763 .... N. York .... •'• Portl and 103 Boston 165 61 985 shipments to the United States, except perhaps rather less doing in Rio Coffee than prices for all grades are rather easier, nevertheless there is a fair trade to report. The sales amount to 7,849 bags Rio, and 1,400 bags Maracaibo and 236 Savanilla. St. Domingo is very quiet, the stock Bags. In do • 9,300 in ’67.. • • • 27.018 Ceylon 3,700 .. • • 9,300 • • Boston 47,502 York Jan. 7, and the ^imports at the follow,}:Balt. -N. Orl’s Total Same in Phila. Import. Import. Import. Import. 16,656 17,243 . .... .... 6,643 — 33,904 2,580 .... —. 6,648 ••<(, • .... 1,590 • • • • • • 200 •••• • • • • • • 1,590 ..... 539 944 1,483 143 3,826 Total.. 17,230 Same ’67. 11,714 24,435 19,190 43,625 2,923 Other.... . r . 2,923 2,5S0 343 “ “ .*• T . • •( • • ... . _ .. 159 would only a moderate demand for raw sagir, but the stock is small and prices are fully sustained, lhe sales are 1,100 and Porto Rico, and 5,349 boxes Havana refined is in steady request hhds Cuba without change been at all the ports 7,710 boxes, week. 850 bags of Javat follows details against 8,779—and 540 hhdsagainst 2,641 last and 3,200 of Brazil have also come to hand. The . are as P. Rico, Othe —Cuba Cuba , Other Java, Brz’l boxes, hhds. hh is. hhds At— At— bx’s. hhds. hhds.. bags. bge. Philad‘1... N. York 6,453 ..... 214 850 3,200 Baltimore. 210 78 Portland N. Orleans Boston. 1,257 .... 38 Stocks Jan. 7, and imports since Jau. 1, 1868, were as follows : Brazil, Manila Other b’xs. At— N. York stock Same date 1867 , 20,443 .... 43,417 .... 1,453 .... .... 210 1,257s Imp’ts since Jan 1 do do Philadelphia do Baltimore do New Orleans do Portland Boston 214 bgs,'hods NO 12,919 9,053 31,915 112,772 214 3,200 850 288 85 78 85 .... 12,710 .... 377 33 3,200 850 reduced to hogsheads. Havana, January 4—Sugar (clayed).—We have no new feature report since our last with regard to this staple, as nothing has Includes ♦ to since continuing cember, compare thus : 31st De¬ 548.109 Britain North Europe France South Europe Other parts STOCKS tiits Havana Mantanzas 7,016 17.074 27,717 27,841 1,455,581 1,406,235 ’ Total 60,054 110,220 237,619 189,956 9,831 Spain „ 475,186 417,(W5 69,737 204,618 244,088 425,491 United States Great 1865. 1866. 1867. •* DECEMBER - 31. I,,' . 1867• 19,858 4,973 Boxes 1866 1665. 27,598 5,774 22,536 4,827 33,372 27,363 MOLASSES. light, moderate demand for both foreign molasses, and prices are steady. The sales for the There is a . 746 — 2,748 1,310 991 419 of the receipts comprising so far preengagement was re¬ rs, to this month. be delivered SPICES. details of business in We have but few for small lots for immediate consumption. Spices. The trade is chiefly Prices are steady. FRUITS. foreign dried fruits, and the higher gold has caused more firmness in currency prices. Prices are other wise unchanged. Domestic dried are very quiet. We annex ruling quotations of goods in first hands : There is nothing more doing in Tea. 5). r-Dutypa’d.- Hyson, Common to fair ... do Superior to fine.... 1 do Ex fine to finest... 1 Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair ... do Super, to fine. .1 do Exfinetoflnest.l do 90 @1 90 05 @1 2» r-Duty raid—* 85 @ 90 do Ex f. tofin’st Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair. 30 @1 50 75 @1 60 15 @1 35 Sup’rto fine. do do - 80 @ 90 90 @1 05 Ex f. to finestl 10 @1 20 Oolong, Common to fair. do Superior to fine... 40 @1 70 70 @ 80 85 @1 10 Ex fine to finest ..1 25 @1 60 do Souc & Cong., Com. to fair 65 @ 80 do Sup’rtoflne. 9i@L05 do Ex f. to finestl 25 ©1 55 fairl 00 @1 15 25 @1 45 unp. & Imp., Com. to do Sup. to fine.1 do do Ex. f. to finest. 1 H. Sk. &Tw’kay,C, to fair. do do Sup. to fine . 55 @1 8 > 65 @ 70 75 @ 80 Coffee. Duty: When imported direct in American of its growth or production; also, or equalized vessels from the place the growth of countiies this side the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents $ lb; all other 10 $ cent ad valorem in addition. Java, mats and bags ....gold 75 a Sfi Rio, prime, duty paid ...gold 161@ 171 Native Ceylon is a 20* do good gold 15}@ 15| Maracaibo ly q do fair do ordinary do fair to g.cargoes ...gold 13 @ 13j gold U @ 12 .gold 12±@ 15 . Laguayra 16 @ m St. Domingo 15 @ 16 153 36 except one sale on Monday of 500 boxes new crop at 7^ rs. and 8 rs. No. 12, and another to day of 180 boxes old crop at 7f rs. No. 11 | 14, and 6f rs. Nos. 8 | 8J. The stock to increase to a fair extent, business will probably be fairly resumed next week after the holidays are over. In the commencement of the week a contract for 4,000 c has been reported closed in Cardenas at 6£ rs. for No. 12, with cash advance. The market closes dull at 7f@8 rs. per arrobe for No. 12. The tofal exports from Havana and MataDzas, from 1st January to of . not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 8; on white and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 84 above 15 a» not over 20,4 ; on refined,5; and on Melado, 24 cents $ ft. de 18 to 15 12f@ 13 do do Porto Rico $ ft Hi® l’l do 16 to 18 18|@ 14 do do 11 @ 114 Cuba, inf. to com. refining do 19 to 20 14J @ 151do do do fair to good do ... lli@ 111 white do do 144@ 15I do fair to good grocery... 12 @ 124 Loaf '@171 do pr. to choice do ... 12f@ 13 Granulated @ 161 do centrifugal -.. I0*@ 134 Crushed and powdered @164 do Melado 6j@ 84 White coffee, A @15 Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7to 9 11 @ 114 Yellow coffee 154@ do do do 10 to 12 11|@ 12; barrels and tierces been done for No. 10 . .... absence of transactions prices the quotations are lower—say, immediate shipment, most Duty : on raw or 587 103 985 . .... _ 261 260 195 .... engaged parcels. Last Saturday the following ported : From Cardenas 1,000 hhds. clayed, at or 210 70 ... • • Sugar. ' time 1867 • 153 .... ..... Total import Same P Rico. For’n, Tot’J, bgs. &c *hhds. hhds *hhds. ♦hhds. Cuba. • . reduced to hogsheads. > , • •. .. , .... . .... here are 54@5^ rs. and 6|@6-£ rs. for Muscovado, in Mantanzas, where be active were it not the impossibility of obtaining Havana, Jan. 4.—In the nominal; but at the outports keg for clayed • .... 854 . . 230 108 226 61 • • • 1,725 1,100 1,763 7,648 9,400 200 746 Duty: 25cents per There is The • T .... , in prices. imports of the week have _ . • N. O. bbls. Total. .... .... SUGAR. . 165 “ the demand • 30 108 Includes barrels and tierces per foreign. 2,036 2,250 .... Total import Same time 1367 ♦ Other rara. • .... “ Deme- • follows 1867 were as 50 .... .... .... .... * 1867. Import. Import, .... .... .... Maracaibo 8,917 Laguayra. * 727 St. iOomin 208,05 7 • Boston, lots for 115,748 • ••• - .... . 6,000 6,584 7,900 .... New Yo k-. Singapore . 6,000 .... other sorts the stock at New several ports since Jan. 1 were as Stocx. • .... .... p.' Of In bags. Java 7 30,000 14,00:0 30,000 16,000 Total. Mobile, ve-iton. Orleans. more. 7,000 134,057 Stock. .7 79,748 Same date 1867. Imports Balti- “ Philadelphia week have been 9,300 bags of Rio, 5,300 per “Stephanie” and 4,000 per “ Traveller 17,248 bags of Java; 6,648 bags of Maracaibo, and 539 of sundries. At Boston a cargo of Java has also come to hand including 16,666 bags. These cargoes will replenish the stock of Java which had become entirely exhausted in first hands. The stock of Rio coffee, Jan. 7, an t the imports from Jan. 1 to date in 1868 and 1867 were as follows: Savan. & GalNew Phi ladel. Portland Baltimore NewOrlears imports of the New York. — V .... Rico. 5,562 .. Imp’ts since Jan. 1 being very light. The 746 Porto Cuba. ♦Hhds at— New York, stock Same date 1867 expected, was Baltim’re N. Orle’s and imports in the year Stocks, January 7, COFFEE. and Philad’a. .. importation 238 pkgs. There is N. O rara.Other bbls. Porto Deme-' Cuba. Rico. Hhds at • • . Francisco. Of indirect 12,869 packages to San have been received. amount to 1,810 hhds. of Orleans against 1,201 last imports at all the pcrt9 for the week foreign, against 2,867, and 2,748 bbls. New week. The details are as follows : The 1,846,796 Japans ... chiefly at Orleans, the latter and 1,100 bbls. New 2,010 hhds. Cuba, 2,800 74,168 2,311 99,559 836,5 i0 154,258 8,031 . 53 CHRONICLE. THE and New Orleans week amount to brown sugar, olayed, above No. 12 .... .. . Molasses. Duty : 8 oents $ gallon. New Orleans Porto Rico Cuba Muscovado $ gall - 70 @ do Clayed....*^*37 Barbados ... _. 50 90 48 @ 65 @ 40 @ 52 40 @ 48 Spices. Duty : mace, cassia and cloves, 20; 40 cents; nutmegs, 50; ft. pimento, 15 ; and ginger root, 5 cents 1 Cassia, In mats .gold $ ft 53 @ 55 87 @ I Pepper, (gold) 11 • Pimento, Jamaica.(gold) 924 1 Cloves (gold) 90 THE DRY GOODS TRADE. Ginger, race and Mace Nutmegs, Af(gold) (gold) No.l....(gold) lu*@ 90 @ I Riday, The transactions pepper and 3 in the dry goods 2?*@ 22| 19*@ 19* 26 @ 264 P. M., January 10, 1868. market have been on a during the past week, and restricted mainly to filling orders to replenish stocks. This, however, proves limited scale conclusively that dealers have purchased very sparingly dur¬ ing the last season, and to this action we attribute the more jopeful feeling that now generally prevails throughout the trade. A heavy failure in Cincinnati produced an unfavorable 54 THE CHRONICLE. impression, and caused some anxiety about credits that fall due during this and next month; but advices recently received show that business was fairly active during the holidays, and that collections are coming in more promptly, which will enable the country merchants to meet their obligations as they become due. This, of course, does not refer to the South, where business for some time past has been totally prostrated. While on this subject we cannot but pay a most deserved tribute to the jobbers in this and the adjacent cities, for the [January 11,1868. Stripes are quiet and nominal. Amoskeag 21-22, Uncasville 14$-16$ Whittenton AA 22$, do 3-3 20, do BB 17, do C 13-13$, Pittsfield 8 8 8f, Haymaker 16-17, Everett 14-14$-, Massabesic 6-3 22$, Boston 18$14$, American 13-14, Eagle 12$-13$, Hamilton 21$, Jewett City 13$14$-, Sheridan G 13$. Checks are in limited demand. Park Mills Red 17$, Lanark 4x2 2S inch 11$, Lanark Fur 11$, Union 60 4x2 26, do 60 2x2 25, do 20 4x2 22$, do 20 2x2 22$, Kennebeck 22$, Star No. 600 10$, do No 800 2x2 ’ 16, do No 900 4x2 18. Miners and Mech 21. Denims of the best make are selling moderately, but the demand is few days time. Amoskeag 27$, Haymaker 28 inch 16, do brown 16, York 28 inch 25, Boston Manufacturing Co. 29 inch 13$, Union 16, Monitor 16$, Manchester Co. 17, Columbian XXX 28, do blue 27$, Arlington 17 j Otis AX A 26$, do BB 24, Mount Vernon 24, Pawnee 12$, Nortkfield 12$. Webster 10. expected to revive in a prudence and acumen with which they have conducted their operations during the trying times we have just passed through. Had they not restricted their purchases to the extent they have done, and shown a careful shrewdness in the credits granted, Brown Drills have been reduced in price,, which will probably trade would now have been stimulate sales. Winthrop 13, Amoskeag 16$, Laconia 16, Pepperell completely demoralized: It is 16, do fine jean 16, Stark A 15$, Boott 16$, Massabesic 14$, Massnchu well known that the manufacturers paid but little heed to the setts G 12, Woodward duck bag 21, National bags 31, Stark A do 37$* warning symptoms of the pust, and instead of curtailing pro¬ Liberty do 81. duction they tried to stimulate a fictitious demand Print Cloths are firmer in through price. Operations will be more animated important concessions, which, had they been accepted, must when the rates asked for prints become more fairly settled. in the end have had the most disastrous effects. stocks show a brilliant generally light, and the spring season will probably fairly active trade, which would probably be more it not for the Presidential were ably has a depressing effect canvass which invari¬ business. on _ , The exports of dry goods for the week ending Dec. 31, and since January 1, 18G7, and the total for the same time in 1866 and 1860 are shown in the following table : -PROM NEW , Exports to British West Indies 10 15 Cisplatine Republic Liverpool... .... French W. Indies.. . . Mexico New Granada $J50 1,153 • • c .... • ... • . . 0 • Total this week. 1, 1868. “ We 1867... 1869... annex a manufacture, i few our jobbers: Brown Sheetings ! grades t t ■ u . are more m . 250 79 25 56 .... . $1,403 1,403 ••• .... • • • • PROM B09TON 700 2.500 • . - ... 411 411 35 .... $23,429 23,429 ... cates. .... . , . f .... 10,087 4,158 7.984 s Domestics. DryGoods .... .... .... 25 25 56 , pkgs. . 1 . . . . . . Since Jan. bame time • • .... Hayti British Provinces.. “ • —% Val. $.... • .... Argentine JBepubl bhanghae YORK. Domestics.--, D, Goods. Val. packages. pkgs. .... .... .... .... .... .... 1,577 20 91 1,688 1,688 .... «... .... .... .... ioi particulars of leading articles of domestic prices quoted being those of the leading and Shirtings active, and prices are still in demand. The finer generally very firm. Atlantic N 8-4 8, Massachusetts C do 9, Lawrence H do 9$, Iudiau Orchard L do 9, Commonwealth 0 do 7, Knox E do 9, Union do 10, Pepperell N do 10$, In¬ dian Head do 12, Atlantic V 7-8 12$, Atlantic E do 10$, Pacific E do 10$, Tremont E do 10, Bedford Rdo 8$, Boott Odo 11, Indian Orchard VV do are 10, Massachusetts E do 10$, Lawrence G<lo 11, Pepperell Odo 11^, In¬ dian Head 4-4 15$, Wachueetts do 16, Pacific extra do 16, do H do 14$-, do L do 12, Atlantic A do 16$, do H do 16, do L do 12, Lawrence E do 18. do O do 14£, do F do 12$-, Stark A do 14$, Amoskeag A do 14$, do B do 14. Medford do 14, Kenaebeck do 8$, Roxbury do 13$, Indian Orchard BB do 10$, Nashua D do 11$, Pepperell E do 18$-, Great Falls M do 11, do S do 10, Dwight W do 12$, Standard do 11. Shawmut E do 11 $, Pepperell R do 12$, Laconia E do 11$, do B do 12, do 0 9-8 12$, Pequot do 17-$, Pocasset do I < ! I 1 ! t | t Li 14$, Saranac Edo 17, Boott S do 12, Indian Orchard A40 inch 12$, do C 37 inch 11$, Nashua 5-4 19, Indian Head do 22$, Pep¬ perell 7-4 26, Utica do 82$-, Pepperell 9-4 82$, Monadno^ 10 4 82$, Pep¬ perell do 87$, Utica do 60, do 11-4 65, Pepperell do 46. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are more in request. The concession in prices on some of the best brands has stimulated the de¬ mand. The shirt manufacturers are buying very sparingly, as prices are aa yet too unsettled for large operations. Mechanics 3 4 7, Globe do 7$, Kingston do J$, Boott R do 8$, do H do 9. Globe A 7-8 8, Wash; ingtou do 9, Strafford S do 10, Putnam Bdo9$, AmoskeagZ do 10$, Ed. Harris do 10$,Great Falls M do 11$, do S do 10$,do A do 12$, do J do 12$, Lyman Cambric do 12$, Strafford M do 11, Lawrence L do 11$, Hill's Semp Idem do 12, James 81 inch 14, Bartlett 31 do 11$-, Greene G 4 4 11, Putnam A do H, Newmarket O do 12$, Great Falls K do 11$, Bartlettsdo 14$, James Steam do 14, Indian River XX do 10$, Attawaugan XX do 11$, Hope do 12$, Tip Top do 13$, Blackstone do 18, Amoskeag A do 14$, Boot B do 12$, Forestdale do 14, Masonville do 16, Androscoggin L do 16, Lonsdale do 16, Bates XX do 20. Lyman J do 17$, Wamsutta H do 20, do O do 20, Mystic Lake do 20, Atlantic Cambric do 26, Lonsdale Cambric do 25, New York Mills do 22$, Hill do 16, Dwight 9-8 18, Wamsutta do 23, Amoskeag 42 inch 16, Waltham do 16, Chickopee-44 in. 16$, Naumkeag W 6-4 20, Boot W do 16$-, Nashua do 19, Bates do 20, Wamsutta do 27, Utica do 27$, Wal¬ tham 6-4 26, Mattawamkeag do 26, Pepperell do 26, Allendale do 24, Utica do S2$, Waltham 8-4 82$, Pepperell do 85, Mattawamkeag 9 4 86$, Pepperell do 40, Utica do 60, Allendale do 40, Waltham do 40, Phoenix 10-4 85, Mouadnock do 86$, Bates do 42$, Waltham do 45, Allendale do 46, Pepperell do 46, Utica do 66, Pepperell 11-4 45. Ticks are moderately active at nominal rates. Conestaga extra 11-4 80, Amoskeag A C A 32 inch 35, <(o A 32 inch 27, do B 32 inch 24, do D 80 inch 18, do C 80 inch 21, Brunswick 18-$-, Blackstone River 16, Hamilton 25, Somerset 12$, Thorndike 17, Pearl River 81, Housewife ex. 27, do AAA 24, do A A 24, Pittsfield 8|, Housewife A 8, York 82 inch 82$-, do 80 inch 26, Cordis AAA 82 inch 27$, do 4-4 27$, Everett 27$, do A 32 inch 27$, Boston A A 24, Lehigh Valley B 12, Swift River 16, Browne AAA 16, Albany 9, Prints have been more active since the standard styles. There are but few As it is are recent reduction in rates of some operations to report as yet days some of the spring patterns will be will probably show more steadiness. dark 11$, do purple 12-$,' do shirt¬ ing 11, do palm leaf 12, Merriraac D 12$, do purple 12$, do VY dark 18$, do purple 18$, do pink 13$, Sprague’s 11 $.do purple 13, do shirt¬ ing 13$, do pink 13, do turkey red 12$, do blue check 12$, do solid 11$, do indigo blue 12$, do Swiss ruby 124, London Mourning 11$-, Simpson Mourning 11$, Amoskeag Mourning 10$. Dunnell’s 12$, Allen pink 12$, Richmond in first hands, but within ten on the market, and prices American 11$, Amoskeag 11$, Arnolds 11, Gloucester 11$, Wamsutta 8$, Pacific 12$, Purple 12$, Victory 9$. Empire State 7, Lancaster 12$, Atlantic 7$. Ginghams are fairly active. Lancaster 16, Hartford 12, Hampden 12, Caledonia 12$, Glasgow 16, Clyde 11, Berkshire 14, German 14$, Roan¬ oke 11$, Hadley 12$, Manchester 16 cents. Canton Flannels are in steady demand for the best makes ; 'fibers are neglected. Ellerton N brown 28$, do O do 26, do P do 24, do S do 21, do T, do 19, Laconia do 20, Slaterville do 16$, Hamilton do 20, Naumkeag do 18, Tremonts 17, Ellerton N Blea 29, do O do 26, do P do 24, Stillwater do 18, Granite State do 20, Naumkeag do 21. Corset Jeans are in limited request. Androscoggin 11, Bates colored 10-$, do bleached 10$, Naumkeag 13, Pepperell 14$, Naum¬ keag satteen 17, Laconia 13, Amoskeag 13, Newmarket 12$, Indian Orchard 11$, Ward 16. Cambrics and Silesias show no change since our last report. Wash¬ ington glazed cambrics 9, Victory H 8$, do A 9, Superior 7,- Pequot 9$, Waverly 11, Wauregan 9$, and S. S. & Sons paper cambrics 82 inch at 11$, do high colors 12$, White Rock 11, Masonville 11$, Warren 12$, and Lonsdale Silesias 28 inch at 20, Victory J 12$, Indian Orchard 16. Freeman 11, Cocheco 18$, Lowell 10$, Hamilton Ward 16. Muslin Delaines have been in some demand to replenish stocks, and in the superior grades prices are firm, as they are sold up pretty close. Lowell 19, Hamilton Co. 17, Manchester 19, Pacific dark 19, Pekin 28, Armures dark 21, Pacific Merinos A 30, Mourning 19, Spragues 16$, Skirtings 80, Alpacas 28. Flannels and Linseys.—Flannels Linseys the trade is in are moderate demand. For Belknap shirting flannels sells at 40, Wash¬ ington do 60, Rob Roy rolled 6-4 69, Rob Roy 3-4.85, Cocheco black and white check 46, Frankliu shirting 40$, Caledonia shirting 82$, Peover. double fold 86-40, Bay State Opera 47$,. Gilbert’s do 57, Fiankliu 52$-, Washington do 43, and Park Linseys No. 85 at 20, do 45 22$, do 50 25, do 60 27$, do 66 82$, do 75 86, Wamsutta No. 40 22$-, do 60 25, do 70 86, White Rock 22$, Black Rock 20, James Nolan 23$. In woolens there is as yet but little doiog ; the clothiers are limiting their purchases to the lowest point, and foreign goods are quite iuactive. qua, do IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. The importations of dry goods at this port for the week endiug Jan- 9, 1868, and the corresponding weeks of 1866 and 1867, have been follows aa : ENTERED FOB CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK -1806." Pkgs. Value. ENDING JAN. -1867. * Value. Pkgs. Manufacture* or wool... 922 do cotton.. 1,179 $431,356 350,078 silk... 868 flax.... 1,234 Miscellaneous dry goous. 574 1,409 449,005 297,114 211,022 289 935 1,737 293,6(55 190,259 3,307 $1,738,575 4,967 $1,553,001 „ do do Total.... WITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE Total Add ent’d 686 788 112 660 $338,616 dry goods.2,541 cotton.. silk.... flax Miscellaneous AND .... .4,737 239,420 291 204 132,481 204,189 464 37,413 1,099 $952,119 forcousumpt’n3,307' 1,738,575 Total th’wmipon mak’t. 8,014 $2,690,694 41 2,102 1868. Pkgs. $309,684 47o,675 283,727 THROWN INTO THE SAME PERIOD. Manulactures of wool... do do do 597 9, 1868. , THE $139,026 $159,324 1,930 $767,010 (tRKET DURING 168 137 68,610 51,433 151,132 31,182 Value 420 526 299 395 299 149,762 269 444 95,864 92,610 $74,441 13 182 85 40,913 19,380 46,036 19,033 $441,383 1,553,001 585 $200,403 1,939 7o7,0l0 7,069 $1,994,884 2,524 $967,413 4,967 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... 1,192 $547,978 287,049 2,241 #$1,036,908 626.230 1,726 193,*81 112,489 22,549 1,748 289,136 388,127 2,891 141,662 118 183 43 291 24 Total ; 2,589 $1,163,346 Add ent’d lor conBumpt’n3,307 1,738,575 8,913 $2,481,963 4,967 1,553,001 1,939 Total entered at the port 6,890 $2,901,921 13,880 $4,034,964 2,598 do do - cotton.. silk .... do flax Miscellaneous dry goods. .... 790 177 391 89 - 301 ' $51,17 49,173 659 $207,678 43,935 51,305 12,092 767,010 $974,688 M THE CHRONICLE. [.January 11, 1868. ftatlttjaji Jttonxtor. (weekly).—Ia the following table \ye com¬ the reported weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of the leading : Gross earn’es—. 1867. 1866. 93.776 79,034 Week. Miles of road Railroads. Atlantic & Qt. Western. 1st,Dec. I 44 44 2d, 44 ( “ 3d, “ f “ ' ' « “ “ 2(1, “ 3d, “ 4th, “ - “ < . 44 “ “ 1 34528.6701 1,152 “ , 41 44 44 “ Marietta and - 44 44 2d, 3d, “ i -* 4tu, “ | J 44 “ 2d, ' 8d, 44 “ “ “ *• 4th, 44 “ Y i Western 1st, Dec. ) 44 2d, “ [ 44 44 44 44 3d, 4th, 285 44 44 44 44 it »4 2d, 84, 3d, 4th, 29,818 23,725 23,494 24,865 80,074 29,265 25,452 24,558 30,597 27,600 30,029 - 28 42 59,616 55,252 73,303 71,011 83,511 101,964 67,046 524 “ | J “ 88,298 54,907 60,068 521 87,377 9,467 .1st, Dec.)j 1st, uec. Western Union 61 85 154 156 193 146 151 45 93,900 91,500 1431 21 151 52 98,000 145 20 68,100 .72,368 1st, Jan, J Tol. Wabash & 335 35 165 59 44 I " f J 44 158 126 124 137 194 21 14) 37 20 4 80 148 70 297 202 216 150 159 355 135 136 61 19 97 58 74 43 81 69 7,854 521 9,332 96 66 as 00 121 90 109 96 119 64 107 73 11315 114 57 73,976 67,497 75,107 87, 27 8 ,h81 110,331 75,925 253 93 193 89 257 20 63,139 73,348 111,517 176 59 U9 93 12011 167 71 14434 i1,200 11,974 44 39 53 01 80,520 236 88 260 38 135 51 159 37 194 49 127 95 210 53. 144 8s 16104 27 126 146 69 214 04 63 29 67 64 I860. (507 m.) <466 m.) (507 m.) $289,400 $504,992 827,269 408,864 888,480 899,870 894,533 343,408 451,477 399,364 474,441 429,669 4)2,674 472,483 696,583 540,687 687,121 614,849 475,723 1865. 1867. $361,137. .Jan.... 877,852. .Feb-... 438,046 .March 443,029 April.. 459.370 fflaf... 880,796. J une.. 400,116. .July... 475,257. .Aug... 483,857. .Sept... 477,528. .Oct 446,596. .Nov • 528,618 526,959 641,491 497,250 368,591 ... .Dec 6,548,359 5,476,276 8,050,340..Tear Erie 1865. Bailway. 1866. (798 m.) (798 m.) $1,070,890 $1,185,746 lloil,736 1,637,592.11,416,001 — 6,501,063 14,596,413 — Mich. So. A N. Indiana. 1866. (524 in.) $363,996 366,361 (524 m.) $312,846 277,234 413,974 412,715 418,970 865,180 361,489 887,095 301,613 418*675 486,808 624,760 495,072 361,799 1,826,723 418,024 884,684 839,858 384,401 429,177 496,655 429,548 852,218 (468 m.) 690,144 $559,982 480,986 678,504 857,583 662 168 733,866 699,806 687,186 682,510 646,995 633,667 584,523 552,878 712,495 648,201 795,938 654,926 858,500 757,441 979,985 712,362 680,968 656,222 M89.062 7,457*818 822,638 360,323 323,030 271,246 307,919 236,824 City 1866. 518.088 (708 tn.) $603,053 605,266 505,465 411,605 669,250 567,679 480,626 673,253 671,348 661,971 588,219 604,066 7,181,208 6,546,741 celebrated 1865. (624 m.) $305,857 . fan. 811,1)88. .Fob.. 379,761 Mar. 391,163. April. May.. 304.232.. June. 81 v,879... July.. Aug4. 487.867....5.p.. (235 in.) $98,183 74,288 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,888 217,159 170,565 223,020 1866. (235 m.) $121,776 84,897 72,135 108,082 267,488 262,172 170,795 116,224 150,939 Lebanon Spring 422,164. ...Sep.. 468,358 685,628 747,942 702,692 767,508 946,707 430,108. .Oct... 364,196. .Nov.. 302,407. .Dec.. 647,842 . . .. - 660,438. ..Jan.. 654,201. ..Feb, 417,852. ..Mar.. 420,007. .April. 477,607. ..May 496,616. .June. 497,621. ..July. ..Aug.. 705,259 ..Sep.. 761,499. ...Oct... 679,160. .Nov.. . .Dsc.. 1867. 285 in.) 143,000. ..Jan*. <<5,000. ..Feb.. 72.000. ..Mar . 87,510. .April. 119,104. ..May.. 606,686.. June.. 634,733 July. . 602,069 Aug.„. 686,067 Sept,,. 766,568. .Oct. 69l,005.Nov„., -• „Deef... 169,299 177,625 173,722 (162,570 218,236 216,783 222,924 308,098 162,694 3,240,714 . . 1866. (275 m.) 5395,579 g.171,125 346,717 2,535,001 June. 365,663 .July. ..Aug.. 829,105 413,601 460,661 490,698 447,669 142,823. ..Oct.. 132,887. ..Nov.. 123,883. ..Dec.. . Tear . . - 4,504,546 4,260,12$ —Ohio A 1865. 1867. 130,000. ..Feb. 131,900. ..Mar... 192,648. .April.. 230,497. ..May... . 121,633 245,698 244,376 7221,690. .June.. 208,785 5198,000. ..July.. 188,815 o20 W36. ..Aug... 276,416 £*.103,658. ...Sep... 416,369 1,101,600. ...Oct... ..Not... 328,539 DeCti.. 129,287 • 2,538,800 Tear... — 1865. .. . 230,340. .Oct 204,01-5. •Nov.*... .Dec.... *375,634 f 861,010 (.347,023 I860. (521 m.) $296,059 194,167 256,407 270,300 316,433 325 * 91 804,917 396,248 349,117 436,065 854,830 364,741 .T«U. 3^*8,878 3,804,378 351,759 307.742 4,303,81 3517,702 1558,200 (415,460 351,600 186151 (285 m. $304,09 283,66 875,310 862,783 833,952 284,977 813,031 398,993 464,778 606,395 412,933 830,87a 4,371,071 Mississippi.—. 1866. 1867. (840 m.) $242,785 219,067 279,648 284,729 282,939240,135 234,683 322,531 866,371 879.367 336.060 272,053 Western Union,1865. (157 m.; $43,716 37,265 $237,674 ...Jan... 200,793 ...Feb... 804,810 309,591 36-1,723 382,996 406,7«6 S 274,800 S! 404,600 3,193,005 3,330,583 3,459,319 (521 m.) 270,630 817,052 829,078 ^261*480 (840 m. m.) (840 m.) m.) 7,541 $259, 223Jt26?,541 ' 239,139 246,109 813*914 326,236 271,527 277,423 290,916 283,130 304,463 253,924 349,285 247,262 844,700 805,454 850,348 278,701 872,618 310,762 412,558 302,425 284,819 281,613 $146,800. ..Jan... 123,404 12?,957 f 280,283 i 251,916 835,083 824,986 859,645 429,166 493.649 828.869 (370 m.) $131,707 224,621 272,454 1866. 414,604 308.649 /-Toledo, Wab. A Western. 1867. (210 in.) (242 m.) $149,658.. .Jan... $144,084 189,171 149.342.. .Feb... 174.152.. .Mar... 165,753 188.162.. April.. 144,001 138 738 171,736.. .May... 156,065 ..June.. 194,524 172,933 July.. f 271.798 220,788 .Aug... '874,634 219,160. .Sept... §879,981 - April. •May.. 121,217 ..Sep.. 123,802 1865. ^300,841 177,864 78,976. .Feb.. 84,652. ..Mar.. 112,952 $292,047 (285 in.) (285 m.) $5JUO,i $282,438 265,796 279,13 837,158 344,228 343,736 837,240 401,456 365,196 $94,136. ..Jan.* 113.504 * Michigan Central.— J 1865. 72,768. 90,526. 96,535. 1< 6,694. 114,716. 1867. (410 tn.) 8,318,514 8,466,922 4,107,0 9 * (251 in.) 85,447 84,367 81,181 96,388 103,373 98,043 106,921 104,866 (234 m.) $98,181 86,523 95,905 106,269 277,830. ...Sep.. . 1866. 2,251,8*5 87,791 93,763 78,607 76,248 107,525 104,608 116,184 125,252 116,495 116,146 105,767 (228 tn.) $305,554 $241,395 246,331 183,386 257,230 289,403 209,099 196,580 277,506 234,612 806,693 821,818 238,926 244,121 317,977 306,231 389,489 2400.941 807,528 *428,474 270,078 S 346,027 201,779 3.260,268 1867. (251m.) (251m.) $96,072 $90,411 1866. (228 m.) , . 1866. 114,579. Jnne 130,000. ..July.. 113,404. ..Aug.. L,, Alton AT. Haute.—i 1867. 155,893 192,138 167,801 168,699 167,099 166,015 222,953 198,884 244,834 212,226 1,000,086 1,461,284. ...Sep... 1,200,216 1,508,883 . ...Oct..,. 1,010,892 1,210,387 .Nov... 712,359 918,088 . ..Dec,.. - 203,013 237,563 251,9H6 241,370 Tear.. $178,119 . 1,224,058 1,201,239 1,258,718 -Milwaukee & St. Paul. ..Tear 1,943,900 153,903 202,771 624,174 774,280 . .April.. -880,993 896,712 ..May... 925,983 898,357 .. June... 808,524 880,324.. .July,. 797,476 1,038,824 ..Aug... 7,976,491 9,424,45011,712,248 ..Tear.. 1865. 1867. 708 m.) 1,985,712 $170,078 1865. Marietta and Cincinnati.- 98,737 (468 m.) $560,115... Jan... 522,821... Feb... 678,349.. .Mar... 575,287.. April.. 578,242.. .May.. 932,683 754,671 . 110,664 (210 m.) (210 m.) -Chic., Bock Is. and Pacific.-, 1867. — 283,951. .April. 888,691. ..May.. 843,678. .June. 356,142. .July . 421,484. ..Aug.. 370,767;*. Dec.. * 1866. (860 m.) (1,032 m.)(l,152m.) $541,005 $690 767 $696,147 ..Jan... 459,007 574.664 ..Feb... 482,164 613,974 766,898 ..Mar... 499,296 142,947 .Feb. 23S,362. ..Mar.. ...Oct... .Nov.. .Dec. 1865. Railroad.—This extension of the Harlem Rail OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. 1865. . engaged in from Camden, the southern terminus -Chicago & Northwestern 215,7-*1 244,854 -St. the 30th ult. progressing rapidly. Twenty-nine of the fifty-six miles are ready for the track, and several raile3 are nearly completed. Iron is being distributed along the line, and the laying of the track has been commenced. It is confidently expected that the “ Green Cars’* of the Harlem road will run through to Atontreal before the 1st of next July. 1867. 681.377. opening Midland road is 810,694 226,840 1867. ou Amboy Railroad.—This company are a new line of railroad of their route to Hightstown. 519.435....0.t... 423,341 «;Nov.. .. and building Mil. and Prairie dn Chien. 1867. _ and was $240,238. ..Jan.. 871,548 821,597 the extension. Pure Marquette Railroad --The formal of the Flint and Pere Marquette Railroad (Michigan) to Flint 3,840,091 3,695,152 3,8S4,181 ..Tear 648, S87 ..Tear.. 4,650,323 4,613,743..Tear 1866. 401,280 357,956 641,589 ..Oct... ...Not.. ..Dec... Pittsb., Ft.W., A Chicago.-* 1865. 468 m.) 887,269 (708 m.) $571,536 628,972 616,665 516,608 460,573 617,682 678,408 747,469 739,736 . 1,421,831 1865. 409,250 1865. $906,759. Jan 1,580,31791,476.244 1,498,716 1,524,9 L7|Z 1,041,115 829.851 on Louisville R4H.road.—It has been decided, at to be taken to construct are --Illinois Central. (775 m.) 1,426,120 1,101,632 1,252,370 1,243,636 1,274,558 1,208,244 1,418,742 1,295,400 1,435,285 1,416.101 1,831,124 1,070.917 1,538,318 1,153,441 822,277 855,270 335,985 opened public meeting of parties interested, to complete the Lake Erie Findlay to Lima. Immediate steps (280 in.) (280 in.) $280,503 $226,15 222,241 275,282 290,111 299,063 269,249 258,480 1867. 917,639. ..Feb.. 1,139,523. ..Bar., 1,217,144. .April. 1,122,140. ..May . 1,118,731. .June.. 1,071,812 .July.. 1,239,024. ..Aug 1,444,745 ..Sep... 987,936 .. 1866. (280 m. jnd was and Louisville Railroad from 166 65 168 89 i Chicago and Alton —Atlantic A Great Western. 1865. Saginaw Railroad.—The extension of at Jackson on the commences Lake Erie a COMPARATIVE MONTHLY EARNINGS 18HH. and the 17th nit. Michigan Central Railroad, 76 miles from Detroit and 108 miles from Chicago, and runs north¬ east 115 miles through Lansing and Owosso, on the Milwaukee and Detroit Kailroad, and Saginaw City to Wenona, opposite Bay City on Saginaw Bay. The road Camden J “ 3d, 221 44 137 77 Jackson, Lansing J 2d, Dec. 1 Michigan Southern 7* 44 206,526 240,319 171,376 27,040 28,401 28,758 251 1st, Dec. 1 2d, 3d, 4th, 222,376 • 188 44 “ 4th, “ Michigan Central 159,564 161,359 201,623 168,' 681 62421 Cinclnnatl.lst, Dec. “ 44 46,367 48^613 1 Detroit and Milwankee.lst, Dec. “ 88,577 62,096 Ch1c.,R. 1. and Pacific.. 1st,Dec. 452 2d, 11 (in ’07 “ 3d, “ 410.) “ 4th, “ J “ 93,900 280 | J 4th, •* 1st, Jan. 44 62,096 1867. 112 10 154 43 189 49 this road from Owosso to Wenona Chcla^o and N. West’n. 2d, Dec. 1 44 78,299 96,076 133 0: 182 18 165 91 j 4th, “ 1st,Dec. 1 Chicago and Alton 92,363 84,119 607 44 “ 1—Earn’gs p. m-v 1366. Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw Railroad.—The western exten¬ Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw Railroad has been com¬ pleted from Warsaw, on the Mississippi river, to Bushnell, on the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad. It was opened for travel on the 1st inst. The intervening gap between Peoria and Bushnell is being rapidly graded, and will be finished before the expiration of another year. sion of the Railroad Earnings pare railroads in 1866 and 1867 55 ..Mar... 82,378 April.. ..May... as,972 63,862 82447 . ..Jnne.. ~ 68480 July.. ..Aug... ..Sept... ..Oct ..Nov.. Dec.. , ^Tear.. . 60,862 75,677 92,713 61,770 87,880 680,883 I860. 1867. (177 m) (177 m.) 45,103 86,006 39,299 43,883 86,913 102,686 85,508 60,698 84,463 100,308 75,348 64,478 $89,679 27.666 86,393 40,710 57,853 60,558 68,262 73,525 126,496 119,667 79,431 THE CHRONICLE. 56 Subscribers will N.B, The figures after — refer to the name, page RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK confer a jgreat favor by giving* us Immediate notice of any error vol. anrl Periods. standing. Railroad. par 1,075,139 Albany and Susquehanna... .100 2,494,900 Jan. & July Atlantic & St. Lawrence* —100 April «to Oct 100 16,151,962! Baltimore and Ohio 1,650,000 April & Oct 100 & Aug 100 4,420,000;Feb. Quarterly. 109 600,0001 50 250,000! June & Dec Washington Branch* Bellefontaine Line Berkshire* • Blossburg and •' Corning* 100 Erie... .100 11,877,000 500 1,8:10,000 and Maine, 3, p. 355.. .100 4,076,974 3,360,000 Albany Boston and Boston, Hartford and Boston and Lowell Boston Boston ana Boston and 100 Providence 6,936,625 50 RivlOO Central Georgia & Bank’g Co.100 Central of New Jersey .100 Central Ohio 50 do preferred 50 Central Park, E. & N. River. .100 Chicago and Alton, 4, p. 329. .10C preferred. .100 Quincy,3, p.201.100 Chicago and Great Eastern... 100 Chicago', Iowa & Nebraska*... 100 Chicago and Milwaukee* ....100 Chicago and Northwestern .. .100 do Chic.Bur. and Chicago, Rock Cine., Ham. & pref. .100 Isl. * Pacific..100 Dayton(5 p.S7)100 Cincin.,Richm’d & Chicago...100 Cincinnati and Zanesville..... 50 Cleveland, Columbus, & Ciu..l00 Cleveland Mahoning* 50 Cleveland, Painesv. & Ashta.100 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 Cleveland and Toledo,3, p. 154 50 Columbus & Indianap. Cent..100 do Eastern, (Mass) East Tennessee & East Tennessee $ 4.666.800 do do 100 Williamsport*.... 50 do pref. 50 . 100 109 J00 100 100 599 preferred Fitchburg Georgia Hannibal and St. Joseph do 133* 133’ 3% 26 Apr. ’67 6 2* Sep. *67 5 5 Sep.’07 1,500,000 117% 131* .35 134* 135 142 138 25 23 -July .’67 70 Dee. *67 Oct. ’67 Oct. ’6 ' 59 60 73 73% 96% 96% 99 Aug. 6 NoV. ’67 4 4 Jan. *68 SA Sep. ’67 Jan. *68 Oct. ’67 5 93* 93* 3* 101% 102 do do no 106 7 63 4 4,156,000 Apr. & Oct. Apr. ’67 6 July *5/f. 121% Indianapolis.. 50 100 Toledo, Peori8, & Warsaw...100 do 1st pret.100 do do do 2d pref.100 Toledo, Wabash & Western.. 100 do do preferred.100 Jan. ’(58 Jan. ’68 JCt. ’67 1401/ 100 preferred & Schuylkill Haven 50 Mississippi Central (5,p. 265). 100 Mississippi & Tenu.4, p. 489.100 Hill Mobile and Ohio Montgomery and West Morris and Essex Nashua 100 Point.100 555,500 Western (Mass), 4, p. 247 Western (N. Carolina) Western Union (Wis. & Ill.) Worcester and Nashua 143 and Lowell Nashville & Chattanooga ... 100 Naugatuck 100 New Bedford and Taunton .. .100 New Haven & Northampton.. 10 100 New Jersey, 4, p. 183 New London Northern.. .. 100 N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt. WestlOO N. O.,Jackson & Gt.N.,4,p.184100 - York Central, 3, p. Consolidation Central Cumberland Pennsylvania., 49% 66% .... 50 50 10 Spring Mountain Spruce Hill Wilkesbarre 100 Wyoming Valley 100 Gas.—Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) Harlem Sep Mar. ’67 3%* May & Nov Nov. ’67 5 65 5 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 500.000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 4 1,224,100 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 35 6,250,000 Feb. & Aul- Aug.’67 4 895,000 Mar & Sep. Sep.’67 135 • • • 122* 123%i 100 160 106 5” Jan. & July Jan. ’68 5* 4 3 3 Aug. ’67 8 Aug.’67 5 Nov. ’67 3 Jan. ’«<' 5 Feb. ’67 3 Aug. ’67 5 Aug. ’67 6 Aug. ’67 6 June’67 Aug. ’67 152 80 20 33 90 23 40%' 22 Jan. ’65 74% Sept.’66 3* 49 50 35 172 173 20 29 2,500,(MM) 500,0(H) Jun. & Dec. Dec. ’67 5,000,000 2,000,(MM) Jan. & July Jan. ’67 5,000,000 3,200,000 Quarterly. Ang. ’67 1,250,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 1.000,000 Jan. & July 3,400,000 Apr. & Oct 1.250.000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’66 2,000,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 25 20 1,200,000 60 644,000 Jan. & 38 July Jan. ’68 386,000 Jan. & July uan. ’68 4,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. *68 Metropolitan 100 2,800,000 50 1,000,000 May & Nov Nov. ’67 New Yoru William burg 750.000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 50 Improvement. Canton 160 4,500,000 July ’66 Boston Water Powdr 100 4,000,000 Telegraph.—^ extern Union. 100 28,450,000 Jan. & July July ’67 100 10,000,000 Quarterly. 100 5,097,600 5,774,400 100 10,000,000 Quicksilver ►M 20 2 Feb ’65 49% 21* 37% 50 21% 38 76* 76% Nov ’66 500 9,000.000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66 100 20,000,000 .100 6.000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’66 Oct. ’67 Wells, Fargo & Co.. ...100 10,1)00.000 Steamship.—Atlantic Mai. 100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Sept.’67 Pacific Mail 100 20,000,000 Quarterly. Sept. ’67 Trust.—Farmers’ L. & Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. & July; Jan. ’68 New York Life & Trust.. 100 1,000,000!Feb. & Augl Aug. ’67 Union Trust 100 1,000,000, Jan. <fc July'Jan. ’68 United States Trust 100 1,500,000 Jan. & July Jau. 68 American Merchants’ Union United States Mariposa Gold Preferred.100 ip < Jan. ’68 Jan. ’64 July July 50 Manhattan Mining.—Mariposa Gold • • •< 56 Jan. & Jan. & Transit.—Central America. ..100 Mar. & 95* 63 Jersey City & Hoboken.. 20 Express.— Adams 769 ..100 28,507,000 Feb, &Aug Aug.’67 50 25 100 100 100 . 46% 1% 25 1,500,000 Mar. & Sep. Mar. ’67 Ashburton Butler 46 66 4 4 IVIlKCcllancous. Coal—American. 49% 66* 111 2,056,544 1.408.600 4,093,425 4,697,457 100 8,710,800 100 1,860,000 2,687,237 75 1,141,000 3* Nov. ’67 Jan. ’68 530* Chesapeake and Del. (5 p.183) 25 1,818,963 June & Dec Delaware Division 50 1,633,350 Feb. & Ang Delaware and Hudson 100 10,000,000 Feb. & Aug Delaware & Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 2,521,300. Feb. & Aug Lehigh Coal and Navigation . 50 6,968,146 May & Nov 728,100 Jan. & July Mouongahela Navigation Co. 50 Morris (consolidated),4, p.631.100 1,025.000 Feb. & Aug do preferred 100 1,175,000 Feb. & Aug Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,207 Feb. & Aug do prefer.. 50 2,888,805 Feb. & Aug Susquehanna <fe Tide-Water.. 50 2,052,083 Onion, preferred 50 2,907,850 West Branch & Susquehanna. 50 1,100,000 Jan. & July 800,000 Irregular. Wyoming Valley 50 91 Jan. ’68 June & Dec June’67 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 Canal. 825,399 3,588,300 1,644,104 do 121 776.200 pref.100 2,943.785 50 3,500,000 100 720,009 73 1,651,314 2,250,000 102 841,400 February... Feb. ’67 3,627,000 Jan. & July 7,371,000 January. Jan.’ ’67? 3.775.600 Jan. & July Jan. ’6S 1,983,150 Jan. & July 1,170,000 Quarterly. Utica and Black River 100 Vermont and Canada* Vermont and Massaehnsetts. .100 do Jan. 1st pref.100 3,204,296 February... do Mine (N. Y.) 2,860,000 Virginia Central, 3, p. 678. .. 100 3,353,679 ..1(M) 2,94 ,791 Virginia and Tennessee 71% 75% 5 750,000 Quarterly^ Nov. ’67 5,819,275 1,360,000 816.100 3.203,400 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 908,424 5,700,000 1,000,000 May & Nov 100 834,400 Jan. & July 53 64 1,900,000 pref.1001 1.100 Milwaukee and St. Paul 71* 576,050 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 2* 3 869,450 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 3 635.200 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 50 Schuylkill Valley* Terre Haute Third Avenue Jan. 2d 70 50 pref.100 1,700,000 Annually. May ’67 Louis, Jacksonv. & Chic.*lC0 1,469,429 Sandusky, and Cincinnati 50 2,989,090 do do 393,073 May & Nov Nov. ’67 pref. 50 900,236 Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark.100 10'1 1,000,000 Savannah & Charleston itaine Central..~. 100 1,600,860 Mar. & Sep Sep. ’6(5 as. 18% Marietta & Cincinnati,1st pref 50 6,586,135 10 ’6(5 3s. do do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. & Sep Sep. Nov. ’67 5 122* May & Nov 1,000,000 Manchester and Lawrence... .100 Mar. ’62 Memphis & Charlost.. 3p. 487.100 5,312,720 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 5* 108 108% 7,502,860 Michigan Central, 5. p. 151.. .100 -87* 87% Feb. & Aug Feb. ’65 Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l00 9,813,500 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 5” 787,70o do do guar. 100 45” Milwaukee & P. duChien 100 98* Feb. ’67 do do 66 5 100 & TerreH...100 2.300,000 West.Georgia, 3, p. Syracuse, Bingh’ton & N. Y..100 1,200,130 do pret. 50 Central, 4, p. 311 100 Indianapolis, Cin. A, Lafayette 50 JefferBonv., Mad. «fe Indianap.100 i% Joliet and Chicago* 100 Joliet and N. Indiana 100 Lackawanna and Blooms!)urg 50 1,335,000 Quarterly. Jan. ‘68 HA Lehigh Valley— 50 10,7:34,100 Nlay & Nov Nov. ’67 3 614,646 100 3,572,400 June & Dec June ’(>7 4 Lexington and Frankfort Little Miami 50 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 2 Liittle Schuylkill* 50 2.646,100 3,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’67 23 ixmg Island 50 1,109,594 Jan. July Jan. ’68 50 5.492,63S Feb. & Louisville and Frankfort & Aug Aug. ’67 4 juisville and Nashville 100 juisvillc.New Alb. & Chic. .100 2.800,000 Jan. *68 >on and Western 100 1,520,000 do 133 100 South *68 3 A 5 183% 134 23,38(5.450 Feb.& Aug. Jan. ’68 4 60 64 1.689.900 Mar. & Sep Sep. ’67 2,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’06 94' 300,000 Quarterly. Oct. ’67 4 Jar. ’08 Jan. & July 300,000 Illinois 119 117* ui Jone ’67 Nov. ’67 898,950 155,000 May & Nov May ’67 4,000,000 2,469,307 Sliamokin Val. & Pottsville*. 50 Shore Line Railway 100 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) 100 South Carolina 50 South Side (P. & L.) 4, p. 521. .100 4 4 Jan. ’68 January. Jan. & 797,320 3,068,400 June & Dec 4,518,900 Quarterly. do do 452,350 1,500,000 1,200,000 1,673,952 7 8. 1,983,170 December. Dec. 67 4 105* 3.573.300 Tan. & July Jan. *6S 2,141,970 1,902.000 4 1,000,000 Quarterly. Jan. ’68 Noy. 1‘j7 HA 500,000 May & Nov 600.000 Jan. & July Jan. 63 3A 4 71% 16.574.300 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’66 3,540,000 1,755,281 114 112 133 ’68 ’68 ’68 ’68 St. 350,000 Jan. I,514,300 Jan. ’68 1,650,000 fan. & July Jan. 1,316,900 Apr. & Oct. Oct. ’67 2,38063 406,132 Tan. & July Jan. ’*58 II,238,550 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 8.536.900 Rutland do preferred St. Louis, Alton, Jan. & M ay Jan. & July Jan. 1.500.00") Jan. & July Jan. 6,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. Jan. & July Jan. 5,285,050 Ask 8. Feb. ’67 3,150,150 4 2,363,600 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 3 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 Ogdensb. & L. Champ(5 p.ll9)100 3,077,000 4 356,400 Apr. & Oct Oct. ’67 do preferred.100 31% 31% Ohio and Miss.certif., 4,p. 631.100 20,226,604 73 Jan. ’67 7 do preferred. .100 3,353,180 January. J»m. ’68 3 85 Old Colony and Newport 100 4,S48,30C Jan. & July Orange and Alexandria 100 2,063,655 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 4% 285 482,400 Oswego and Syracuse 50 6 Panama 100 7,000,000 Quarterly. Jan. ’68 103% 194 Nov. ’67 May & Nov 20,000,000 Pennsylvania 50 56* 57 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 3 5,091,400 Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5s 93% 93% Jun. & Jan. ’68 July 22,742,867 Phila. and Reading, 4, p. 89.. 50 128 Oct. ’67 5 1,507,850 Apr. & Oci Phila., Gerraant. & Norrist’n* 50 106 Jan. ’68 4 Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50 9,019,300 Jan. & July Pittsburg andConnellsville... 50 1,776,129 -Tan. ’68 ha 99% 100 Pittsb.,Ft.W. & Chic.,4,p.471.100 11,440,987 Quarterly. 3 Feb. & Aug. Aug; ’67 Portland & Kennebec (new)..100 ioi* Dec. ’67 3 Portland, Saco, & Portem’th.100 1,500,000 June & Dec 4 Providence and Worcester... .100 1,750,000 Jan. & July Jan. "68 Raritan and Delaware Bay 100 2,530,700 800,000 April &Oct Apr. ’67 Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO 500,000 April & Oct Apr. ’67 Saratoga and Whitehall... .100 800,000 April & Oci Apr. ’67 Troy, Salem & Rutland .... 100 Richmond and Dan., 4, p.456.100 2,000,000 Richmond & Petersb.,1,p.4S8.100 1,008,600 Jan. & July Jan.’68 Rome, Watert. & Ogdensb’g..l00 2,385,500 ha July •Jan. 68 5 & N ov Nov. ’67 5 & July Jan. 63 3A & July Jan. ’68 3 Quarterly. 1,786,800 47% HA in Oct. Sep. ’(57 47 A 3* 5 Last paid. Date, rate Bid. Periods. asi 129 June & Dec June ’67 Jau. 68 pref.100 5,253,83P Quarterly. Hartford and New Haven. . .100 3,000.000 Jan. 1,180,000 100 13,937,400 April&&July Housatonic preferred Oct Hudson River 100 Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50 '494,380 190,750 Jan. & July do 15 121 *68 4 ’68 5 ’68 5 *68 10 Oct. ’67 3,886,500 Mar & Sep. 2,425,000 Mar & Sep. 12,500,000 Mar. & Sep. 4,390,000 1,000,000 Jan. & July 2,227.000 13,232,496 14,789,125 Annually. 9,100.000 April &0ct 3.260.800 April ifc Oct 362,950 1,(500,250 6,000,000 Feb. & Aug 2,044,600 May & Nov 8,750,000 Jan. & July 5,391,575 6,250,000 Jan. & July 100 Georgia.. .100 Virginia . 100 Erie, 4, p. 137% Jan. Jao. Jan. Feb. FRIDAY. Stock refer V ?w York and Harlem 50 New York &"Harlem pref 50 N. Y. and New Haven (5 p.55)100 New York, Prov. & Boston.. .100 Ninth Avenue 100 Northern of New Hampshire. 100 Northern Central, 4, p. 568.. 60 North Eastern (S. Car.) do 8p. c., pref North Carolina 100 North Missouri 100 North Pennsylvania 50 100 Norwich and Worcester 1% &Aug Aug. 67 970,000 pref. ..100 Eighth Avenue Elmira and Feb. 13,000,000 Quarterly. 2,600.000 April. 400,000 Xenia* do 2* 2,200,00) April & Oct 50 50 Concord Concord and Portsmouth 100 Conn.& Passump.3,p.210 pref.100 Connecticut River* 100 Cumberland Valley 50 10<> Dayton and Michigan Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50 do do scrip. 100 Detroit and Milwaukee 100 do do pref. ..100 Dry Dock, E.B’way & Bat... 100 100 Dubuque and Sioux City Columbue and Jan. *68 Dec. ’67 522,350 600,000 721,926 Jan. &July Jan. ’68 1,150.000 do preferred Cedar Rapids & Missouri do Aug. ’67 2 4 5 3 & July & July & July & July LIST. In our Tables, discovered Dividend. {)age€of Chronicle “ leased." standing. report. * meanscontaining rate Bid. Ask. 14 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. The figures after the to the vol. and [January 11, 1868. out¬ paid. Jan. ’6S Oct. ’67 Oct. ’67 — name 4,500,000 5 2,100,000 Jan. & July July ’(57 1,000,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 3* 850,000 June & Dec Dec. *67 3* 5 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 Worcester 100 Broadway & 7th Avenue 1' 0 Brooklyn City ••••••• • Buffalo, New York, & Erie*.. 100 100 Buffalo and Erie Burlington <fc Missouri River.100 Camden and Amboy, 4, p. 509.100 Camden and Atlantic 50 do do preferred 50 Cape Cod 00 Catawissa* — do Last Date, out¬ containing '‘'‘leased.'" of Chronicle FRIDAY. Stock M. N. Dividend. the report. * means last • 73 75 37% 76* 45% 37% 76% 46* HA 112 3 114 114 114% 5 10 4 5 7 14 9 1 14* 24% 1 2i> January 11,1868.] THE CHRONICLE. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS 57 BOND LIST.—Page 1. Bond List Page 2 will appear In tills place next week* I NTEBEST. DESCRIPTION. B.—Where tht* total Funded Debt Amount is not given in detail in the 2d col out stand nmn ii is expressed by the dgures iug. in brackets after the Co’s name. * , Railroad: Atlantic & Gt. Western ($29,940,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) $2,161,500 9A do do ■757,900 1st Id Mortgage Binking fund, (N. Y.) 1st id Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio) 3,681,900! 1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, do do .do do Consolidated Bonds do do do do 2,658,000! ex 1,382,0001 Mortgage (S. F.) of 1855 do do do do 1850 1853 . Bellefontaive ($1,745,000): l*t 5 1 Mortgage do July Ap’l A Oct. do do do Mortgase....... Sinking Fund Bonds Boston, Hirtford and Erie. 1st Mortgage Mortgage Buffalo and Istaie Line ($1,200,090): 1st Mortgage Burlington S' Missouri ($1,902,110): General Mortgage - 2d . Bonds conv. iuto pref. stock \imden and Amboy ($10,264,463): Dollar Loans do Dollar Loan Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan Sterling £380,555 at $4 '4 Camden and Atlantic: 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Giiawissa : 1st Mortgage Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage Central of New Jersey : 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Central Ohio: 1st Mort.. Central Pacific of Cal.: 1st mortgage Convertible Bonds Cheshire: Bonds Chicago and Alton : Mortgage (Skg Fund), 1st 1st 2d do do pref income Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): Trust Mortgagees. F.) Jan. «fc July ’70-’79 do 1870 Bonds till 1870 Ap‘l A Oct. j 1866 1,180,950 600,000 April & Oct j 1870 Jan. A July 11870 338,040 675,000 867,000 4,437,300 April & Oct 1870 141,000 786,000 900,000! 600,0001 2,500,000! 8 Equipment. Bonds Chicago, Rock Island at, F tciflc: let Mortgage (C. A R. I.) 1st do (new) Cine., Ham. & Dayton ($1,829,000): Mortgage Cleveland At 1st Mahoning ($1,752,400): Mortgage July 1898 86 1,250,000 3,600,000 Feb. & Aug 36 756,000 3,040,000! May 1885 do 1885 & Nov. 1863 Cle'., Fain. At Ashtabula: IstM. B’ds 2d Mortgage do 3d 1 do 4th SU veland and Toledo ($2,746,230): . .... Connecticut River: lit Mort form, and Passumpstc R. 1st Mortgage.' Cumberland Valley: 2d do 6 per cent bonds ($800,000): Jan. & 1st 3d 3d ’' 1st Mort Payton and Michigan ($3,782,430): Mortgage ’ do (*3,491,500): Mortgage, sinking fund.... do Laaaa. and West. 1st Mort Dis Moi'its Valley : Mortgage Bonds Detroit and Milwaukee ($5,206,680): 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d ao 1st A 2d Funded Coupon Bonds.. Detroit and Pontiac R.R.......... do do » etroit, Monroe At loledo: 1st Mort, July 1870 May A Nov 98 lao. A JulyllSS5 do ! >895 May a do Indianapolis and 1st Mortgage Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort Indianap. A Madison RR., 1st M.. Jeff., Mad, & Indianap., 1st Mort.. 1,00 >,00( May & Nov. M’ch & Sep 109,50( 108,100 &July 1st 1st let 96 89 1904 st .642,000 169,50*' 500,00(' 1,122.500 1,668 000 572,000 1,740,000 $2,500,000 1,000,000 1,005,640 250,000 250,000 924,000 do do Tan. A July 1875 Anril & Oct 1875 \Tch A Sop 1881 lan. & J uly 1871 \p’l & Oct 1887 May & Nov. o various, 1875 1864 1876 various. 1*78 Feb. A Aug 1886 Feb. & Aug 1816 Mortgage, sinking fhnd Milwaukee and St. Pam: 2d 06 96 97 97 Mortgage do do do (Mil. & Western)... Income Bonds Real Estate •. Mississippi Ac, Tennessee ($1,069,600). 1st Mortgage Income Mobile and Ohio Income bonds ... ($6,133,243):.... Sterling bonds Interest bonds. Montgomery At Tlest Point .*$1,130,700 Bonds of 1870 Income Bonds ' Mortgage Bonds ('new)........... 1875 1881 April & Oct 1873 May & Nov 1881 April A Oct! 1906 May & Nov. July Jan. & May & Nov. May A Nov 1869 1873 1888 1,500,000 1897 May & Nov Jan. A July May & Nov. 100 1872 April A Oct 1877 Jan. & Jul> 1875 F-‘b. & Auk 1890 267,000 115 1875 1890 886,000 600,000 175,000 150,000 92 1893 var. var. 600,000 Feb. & Aug 1892 Jan. & July 1885 4,000,000 300,000 Sinking Fund do 1st do do do May & Nov (P.& K RK.) Bonds.. Mich. S. At N. Indiana: ($9,135,840) 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee At Prairie du Chien : 1881 1834 April A Oct 1875 640,000 397,000 612,50* 1,095,600 315,200 Convertible July 1867 M’ch&April do A Nov 1870 Jan. A July 1866 j Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds. 1867 600,000 1,594,000 10 102 1875 do Jan. & Julv 1866 do 1870 2,862,800 .... Memphis At Charleston: Mort. bonds Michigan Central, ($7,463,489) 1st Tan. A Mortgage (Main stem) Mortgage (Memphis Branch) Mortgage (Leb. Br. Extreme).. !;1,1'H),000 Lean Bonds J’ne A Dec. 1876 1904 ($5,165,000): 400,000 Loan Bonds 2d :May & Nov. 600,000 864,000 1,300,000 Mortgage, sinkimr fund : 1st Mortgage Mortgage, Me Gregor Western 1st Mortgage Maine Central: ($2,733,800) 1878 do do 1st Mortgage........ 80 Feb. A Aug 1869 J’ne A Dec 1885 Feb. A Aug 1882 903,000 96 1876 .300,000 1,000,000 1,466,000 .... Marietta <fe Cincinnati ($3,688,385): 1st 18— 18— Ap’l * Oct. Extension La Crosse d, Milwaukee : 1st Mortgage, Eastern Division.... 2d do do : 1868 485,000 8 Jan. & July 1882 Jan. & July 1874 800,000 Jan. A July 1875 900,000 90»000 March& Sep 1885 April & Oct 1880 900,000; 900,000! May A Nov 1890 Mortgage 70 Feb. A Aug 1875 6,668,600j 2,523,000j 2,000,000 ! Joliet and Chicago : i let Mortgage, sinking fund 'Joliet and N?Indiana: let Mortgage Lackawanna At Blomnsbvrg 1st Mort do Extend n .. A112! Tan Cine. (J1,3S2,2B4) 1st Mortgage (guarrante d) Louisville and Nashville Feb. & 1873 M’ch & Sep! 1876 Tan. A July 11875 Jan. A July [1874 do 1880 3,2rK3,0'v . Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point). Jo dc (Glen Cove Br.) Louisville, Cincinnati dc, Lexington: July 1890 fan. & July ,1885 do 1886 ...... 102 1868 do 2,563.000 358,000 Long Island Nov|l893 Tan. & Mortgage 101 878 70-75 1870 1868 1888 1893 1868 - ^May 500,000 do 6 per cent Indiana Central: 1st Mortgage, (interest ceased) 2d 1st Feb. & Aug 1882 May & Nov. 1875 Jan. & July 1884 do 3,890,000 1,907.000! 500,000 ‘ Little Miami: 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill ($1,000,009,): 1.880 2,021.00 G92,006 600,00( 161,001' do Lehigh Valley 2,«:55.000 102* 97X April & Oct 1881 Man. & July 1883 |Jan. & July 1883 Jan. & Jnly 1873 192,000j Mortgage 102 102 94 1870 July 200,000 do 189,000 6 do 388,000 “ Jan. & July 927,000 1,000,000 10 April & Oct 1,455,000 “ Feb. & Aug 2.500,000 May & Nov 326,000 July, do 700,000! 523,000! ' 98 1896 M’ch & Sep 1873 do ;1875 Jan. & July ! 1892 283,000 2,589,000 do Toledo Depot Bonds TJ daw are: 1st Mortgage, guaranteed, r fia., Lacka. <£ Western 1st 2d do 1,619,500 1,107,546 250,001 , do Redemption* bonds Sterling Redemption bonds 2d Jan. & 1,919,000 1,173,000 700,000 927,000 87 June & Dec 1888 M’ch A Sep 1875 149,000 New D. B’ds Hartford A New Haven : 1st Mort. Hartf., Frov. & Fishktll : Hudson River ($7,762.840): 1st Mortgage ! 2d do sinking fund : do 94 1883 do 8,875,520 633.600 d<* j Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1866 Columbus & Indianapolis Central: 1st Mortgage 2d do MX 90 1,397,000 j 1,129.000 convertible Feb. <fc Aug 1885 Anr. .& Oct 1874 May & Nov. '6o-’7! 1,000,000 ($3,872,860): 90 85 F.SIA.4N. 1915 PQ April & Oct 1880 600,000! Jeffersonville, Madison Atlndian apoiis. 1st Mortgage 87 165,0' K)l 2,200,000 534,900 121,000 500,000 _ 2d Mort. Bonds Cleveland Ac Pittsburg ' May & Nov. 1877 M’ch & Sep 1879 3,437.750 1st Jan. & 795,000 do Hubbard Branch... 3d do Illinois and Southern Iowa: 861,000 450,000 Mort.(payable $25,000 do do 91 3,000.000 &. 103 100 Jan. & July 1880 April A Oct 1862 . Rlijwis Central: Construction bonds, 1875 503X 1,000,000 670,000 ~. 2d 99>; 100 per year; 1st do Huntingdon At Broad Top( $1,462,142) 1st 1877 600,000 do Convertible Jan. & July 1893 Ap’l & Oct. 1883 5<. 0,000 ... Mortgage, sinking fund 3d 65 3 •^4 1SS8 Ap’l A Oct. 926,500 . Bonds unsecured 88 V 483,000 2.400,000 1,100,000 1,300,000 .. .. Harrisburg At Lanc'r Jan. A July 1S83 Ap’l A Oct. 1895 ■*o 394,000 5 1 Jan. & July 1872 750,000; 6 jFeb. A Aug 1874 do 1885 160,000 4,441,600 Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds Jan. & July ’75-’80 Cincinnati Richmond & Chicago. Cincinnati At Zanesville. 1st Mort.. Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($450,000) : convertible do Hannibal & St. Joseph ($7,177,6*90) : I^and M’ch A Sep 1690 May & Nov. 2* 5* 0 •c ft 900,000; 7 Jan. & July !83-’94 4,000,000 6,000,000 Greenville & Columbia .* 1st Mort.... Bonds guaranteed by State 95 7,336,000 1,500,000 673,200 1,250,000 do 72 90 1889 J’ne A Dec. 1893 :880 Jan. & July 1873 Ap’l & Oct. 1879 Feb. & Aug 1882 Mar. A Sep. 1875 Feb. A Aug 1870 May A Nov. 1875 6,663,000 ..... do do 2nd Feb & Aug. 1883 493,000 convertible Georgia May A Nov. 490,000 do do Grand Junction : Mortgage. Great West., III.: 1st Mort., W, Div. 1st Mortgage Whole Line May & Nov j 1872 1,841,962 484.000 ..... Equipment Bonds... 2d 3d 600,000 Railway 22,370,982) : Mortgage (extended) Mississippi River Bridge Bonds.. Elgin and State RR. Bonds.; I Sinking Fund Mortgage cony, J’ne & Dec. 11877 6,600,000 Chicago & Northwest. ($16,251,000): Preferred Consol. S. F. Bonds, Extension Bonds 1st 2d 11879 2,000,000 380,000 ; Mortgage July' 873 Oct. A 598,000 Gal. dt Chic. U. (incl. in G. AcN. W.): 60 Ap'l & & o Payable. : Sterling convertible (£800,000)..^ Feb. & Aug 1865 Jan. A Williamsport Erie and Northeast ($400,000): J’ne A Dec. 1867 M’ch A Sep 1885 Feb. A Aug 1877 1889 Pennsylvania: 4th 5th - 444,00 200,9' l 3,317.000 Chicago and Gl. Easter /list Mort.. Chicago ana Milwaukee : 1st Mortgage (consolidated).... let interest Erie 1st 2d 3d 1,225,000 433,000 do do 1st Mortgage 5 per cent. Bonds 1,852,000 I860 do do Sinking Fund Bonds 1866 1878 do do Elmira & — Boston and Lowell : Bonds o;‘ Ju y 53 j do of Oct.-'8*4 Buffalo, N. Y. and Eric ($2,395,000): 1st Mort. Sinking F’d, conv. bonds Eastern, Mass. ($1,848,4iK>): Mortgage, convertible East Oct. l."M Ja Ap JuOc 1867 Jan. & July 1875 do 1880 Ap’l A Oct. 1885 915,280 1,021,750 628.500 ing. FRIDAY. INTEREST. Railroad: Dubumie and Sioux City : 55 Aprl A 619,036 } 384.000{ 200,000 ........... M 8 o May A Nov. Bdvidcre Delaware : 1st Mort. (guar. C. aDd A.) 1,000,000 2d Mort. do 600,000 3d Mort. do 689.500 boston, Cone. <£ Montreal ($1,050,000):, Ut umn it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co’s name. m •H 1882 1879 1881 1876 1883 18*4 1895 Jan. <te 17, i 05,0001 UanticAcSt. Law 1st Mort (Portland) 1,500,' hi. 1 2d Mortgage 268,900 Sterling Bonds 484,000 DESCRIPTION. N• B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ outstand¬ 13 £* as Ap’l & Oct. 1877 886,000 761,000; ) do of 18*>4 B zltimore and Ohio. Mort (S F) 1834 Payable. A FRIDA?. JO Feb. & Aug. June A Dec. Apr. A Oct. Feb. & Aug. 660.000 ’90-’61 ’70-’71 1874 1870 1,294,006 May A Nov 2,297,000 4,504,600 March &Sep 1869 April A Oct 1882 4 May A Nov. 1880 863,000 2,693,000 651,000 do 1877 Feb. A Aug 1868 296,560 Jan. A July 1891 4,269,000 824,000 1,500,500 135.500 1885 Jail. A July 1893 April A Oct 1893 April A Oct 1884 Jan. A July 1875 600,000 fi 297.500 10 Jan. &July 1876 do 1870 8?1,W 4,187,0*0 8 May A Nov. 1867 75,343 {e 8 do do do 85 ’892 1882 1876 100,000 7 Jan. A July 1870 de 810,000 7 3876 do 750,000] 7 1861 97 9’tf 93 97 86X 77 100 70X PETROLEUM STOCK Allen Wright Bemis Heights Bennehoff Run par 10 6 10 Bergen Coal and Oil • 5 Bradley Oil . .... 50 .... 100 .... ■‘7.3 i 6 5 5 5 Excelsior First National Germania 3 GO . 10 Great Republic G’t Western Consol Shade River Union United Pe’tl’m United States Union . . .... . . .... 10 . . . ....1 .... .JEtna 13% 17% Bay State Bohemian Caledonia Calumet Canada Charter Oak Copper Creek Copper Falls Copper Harbor . — 66 19 24% 1 2% 3% Dacotah Dana Davidson Delaware — Dev<*n.. , Eagle River Evergreen Excelsior Flint Steel River Franklin .... Gardiner Hill Girard — 5 2 2 17% 1% 2% Great Western Hamilton Hancock Hanover Hilton 5 00 > . 1% Hope Hec-a Hulbert — Quincy X 1° Humboldt 5<i Exchange 80 17 Hanover Hoffman Home 66 16 par Ada Elmore Alameda Silver 80 60 30 35 American Flag . Atlantic & Pacific Bates & Baxter Black Hawk Benton 10 25 1,000,000 Irving 25 — 50 — 50 5 Bob Tail Boscobel Silver Bullion Consolidated — .... — Central. .... Combination Silver.... Consolidated Gregory... Corydon Des Moines Harmon 25 LonglslandfB’kly) 50 2 00 Lorillard* 25 100 100 Market* Meehan’ & Trade 25 Mechanics (B’klyJ 50 loo Mercantile ’ do 165,933 200,766 149,689 fdo Nassau ... Resolute* Mark’s St. Nicbolast Security t Standard St. E. & S 30 to 00 2 Buell 46 — 4 100 ' 27 5 10 40 48 6 90 30 90 1 50 5 75 50 .100 .100 25 25 25 ... 50 419,952 152,229 135,793 546,522 195,926 167,833 800,604 206,179 238,808 176,678 302,741 141,434 863,006 300,000 200,000 200.000 . 150,000 150,000 . . . 1,000,000 .100 .l'O Sterling * 25 Stuyvesant Tradesmen’s.... 25 United States... 26 5f Washington Washington *t.. .100 Star 8 —■ 20 20 20 26 26 10* 12* 141 10 10 12 Jan. ’68.6 Jan. ’ti8 5 io io io Jan.’68.5 10 10 30 10 10 14 10 Aug.’' 7 6 July’67.5 and do do do do do do do do do do do do 121,607 284,605 195,546 245,169 . . . . WilliamshurgCit V 50 fonkers & N. Y.100 200,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 250,000 400,000 393,700 150,(KX 500,000 Jan ’68.10 July’64.4 Jan’68.10 Aug'67 7* 10 10 Jan. '6f\5 J my’67.7 14 5 • ept’67.5 - - 516,936 161,743 259,270 12* io io Uct. 14 10 14 10 14 10 July’67.5 10 io io do do do do do do 453.233 185,952 216,879 ’67.5 Jan.’68.7 Jan .*’68.7 J’y’66.34 July’65.5 io July’67 5 May ’65.6 io Aug ’67.5 — 5 10 io 6 5 io 12 10 Jan ’68.5 Jan. ’68.5 7 J’y ’67.3* Aug ’66 5 Apr ’66.5 10 10 7 14 5 10 10 7 *7 *7 J’y’67.3* *8 12 8 10 10 10 10 io 10 io July’C'.5 12 io 1G 5 20 10 6 5 10 14 • do do Feb. and Aug. do 140,679 156,220 Jan. and July. 962,181 Feb. and Aug. 226,756 Jan. and July, do 195,780 206,731 Feb. and»Aug. 198,182 Feb. and Aug. 158,733 Jan. and July, do 336,691 630,314 Feb. and Aug. 190,206 Feb. and Aug 179,008 Jan. and July, do 501,244 9* 8* 7 5 io* 12 10 10 14 8 5 5 * Jan. ’68.5 Jan. "68.5 July’66.5 Jan. ’65 5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. 68’.5 July’65.6 Aug’663* Aug.’67.5 Sept.’67.ti 7 10 10 JO 10 10 10 5 10 30 10 9 16 18 10 10 15 -15 8 13* 10 11 10 10 8 5 20 20 15 10 io 14 15 16 14 5 8 8 10 . Republic* 92 25 20 . Rutgers’ 6 17 7% New Amsterdam 35 N. Y. Equitable.3 35 1 2 5(1 i2 Aug.’67.6 228,628 319,870 264,703 Jan. and July. 247.895 Feb. and Aug. It 200,000 N.Y.Fire and MarlO 11 50 1,000,000 1,053,825 Jan. and July, Niagara 10 do 500,000 511,631 North American* 50 8 OcU 379,509 April and 350,000 River.... North Jan. and July, 12 244,293 25 200,000 Pacific uo 200.000 212,521 .100 Park ’j 150,000 185,365 Feb. and Aug. Peter Cooper ... 20 Jan. and July, 14‘,203 26 150,000 People’s 15 do Phoenix + Br’klyn 50 1,000,000 1,077,288 10 do 50 200,000 190,161 Reliei National 1 50 25 (B’klyn). do do do do do do do do 1,000,000 l,118,6f>1 600,000 610,930 200,000 288,917 222,921 200,000 150.000 146,692 50 Merchants’ Metropolitan * +. ICO Montauk (B’k'yn) 50 Dec.’66 5 12 7 do 177,178 162,571 200,000 200,000 300,000 150,000 150,000 200,000 300,000 210,000 Aug.’654 • 10 10 10 Jan. ’68 5 10 July’67.5 10 July’67 5 10 July’67 5 10 July ’67 6 14 July’67 7 10 Jan.’68 5 10 July’67 5 7 10 10 10 20 J’y ’67.3* Joly’67.5 July’67.5 10 Julv’67 5 Jan’68.10 Jan/’G8.6 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68.5 J’y’67.10 July ’65.5 7 18 12 10 10 0 10 10 10 1J 10 10 10 10 10 11 7 10 6 5 10 8i 10 10 8 .12 10 1 8 8 10 3* 10 10 5 10 10 10 8 7 10 Jan. ’68.6 Ang* ’67.5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan* ’68.5 Oct ’67.5 Jan. ’68 8 Jan. ’68 5 Ang. 67 5 Jan.’68 5 July’67.5 July’67.5 J’y’67.6* J'y’66.8* li Ang.’676 5 Feb.’67.5 Aug.’67.5 F’b ’66.3* io Jaly’67.5 10 Julv’67 6 5 Aug.*67.5 Ang.’67.5 11 10 10 5 10 10 Jan. *68 5 Jan. ’68.5 Ang.’67.6 Feb.’67 5 July ’67.7 Jan. '68 5 .... — . 4 Sioux City and — _ Downieville .. Eagle Edgehill Fall River First National Gold Hill Gunnell...; — — .. • — • • • — .... — Gunnell Union — .... 50 Yellow Jacket — Bid. Askd Companies. Copakelron pa<- Lake Superior Iron Bucks County Lead, Denbo Lead Manhar Lead Phenix Lead'. Iron Tank storage 100 ... 5 .... .... •• — — .... — .... ...0 Bid. Askd Companies. M. Wallace Nickel Rutland Marble. Long Island . ..25 . . .. Peat.... FI e Savon do Terre Rnsse. — LIST. Tudor Lead Saginaw, L. S. & Wallkill Lead 5 Foster Iron .... .... ... .... MISCELLANEOUS STOCK 100 . 2 50 Bid. 1 Askd 5 75, LaCrosse 50 T.i'hnrtv 3 00 Manhattan Silver Midas Silver 1 00 Montana New York New York & Eldorado do 122,468 200,000 200,010 150,000 280,000 150,000 300,000 150,000 200,000 King’s Co’ty(Bkln 20 Knickerbocker.. 40 Lafayette (B’klyn) 50 • Sep.’67.5 Pacific Railroad.—This road diverges from 8 io the Iowa Division of the Chicago and Northwestern Railway, at 11 00 45 00 75 00 Owyhee 20 30 5 Missouri Valley Junction (formerly St. Johns Station) 21 miles 00 5 60 5 75 People’s G. & S. of Cal. 25 1 30 1 35 45 25 65 Quartz Hill 5 east of Council Bluffs, and follows a northerly course up the Mis¬ Reynolds 35 37 10 1 porky Mountain. souri Valley to Sioux City, 74 miles from the Junction and, by this praver 8 00 8 80 3 90 route, 541 miles from Chicago. The whole of the grading has been 20 3*15 3 20 Smith & Parmelee 1 00 done, and some 54 miles of the track laid from the Junction, leav¬ Symonds Forks 100 4 00 Twin River Silver i 60 ing but 20 miles to be laid to carry it to Sioux City. The 10 1 15 1 50 Vauderburg 10 Burroughs Kipp & l'O Manhattan Companies. 75| 25 50 10 J’ne ’64.5 2,000,000 2,271,387 International.... 100 MINING STOCK LIST. 80 100 Lenox' 4% Ilolman Hope 50 .. Lamar Winthrop .... 15 50 io Aug.’675 10 • 36,518 424,295 203,990 229,276 131,065 241,840 200,000 150,000 400,000 200,000 io ‘5 404,178 - Import’&Traders 20 00 HamiltonG.& S.b’ds par — — 150.000 Jefferson Winona — 204,000 150,000 150,000 200,000 Jan. ’68.6 Jan. 68.5 5 12 5 14 1,289,037 150.000 — Howard Humboldt + Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares t Capital $200,000, In 20,000 shares J3T" Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares Companies. 228,696 234,872 150,000 500,000 200,000 200,000 75 5 03 2% 3 Bid. Askd do do J’y’6710* 10 7. *9 424.189 2(H),000 200,000 10 25 50 100 50 Guardian Hamilton * GOLD AND SILVER 257,753 336,470 204,790 170,171 345,749 266,868 238,506 92,683 384,266 338,878 275,591 309,622 214,147 300,000 10 Trust 16 5 5 10 10 200,000 227,954 500,000 525,762!, Ian. and July. 200,000 200,016 Globe Great Wcstern*t.l00 1,000,000 2,385,657 25 200,000 255,657 Greenwich 50 200,000 170,225 Grocers’ 1 West Minnesota 8 100 40 100 J’e’65.3* H 282.127 400,000 Excelsior 21 1% 1% 6 Washington 500.000 ... Gallatin Gebhard Germania 8 Vulcan 5 Knowltou 50 Commercial Commonwealth .. 100 100 Continental * Corn Exchange.. 50 Firemen’s Firemen’s Fund. 12 3 1 Victoria 33 Keweenaw (N.Y.).IOO (Alb’y)lOO Eagle Em}>ire City 8 Toitec Tremont 55 19 10 Huron Indiana Isle Royale* Commerce Commerce • • 1 Hungarian Columbia* lSG5)lt>66 1867 Last paid J’e’64.,6 300,000 210,000 250,000 500,000 200,000 400,000 200,000 250,000 20 Periods. 151,002 325,233 515,890 222,073 200,000 200,000 300,000 200,000 153,000 70 too 100 Firemen s Fulton Netas’ts — Clinton 6% Superior 52 . 12 3 05 St. Mary’s 5% Salem % Seneca 1 Sharon % Sheldon & Colam fcian.21 South Pewabic 1 • 2 00 South Side 11% Star — % n .... 5% Providence ’so Broadway — Rockland St. Clair St. Louis . Brooklyn Central Park Citizens’ City .10% Ridge H 00 16 Y.) Hope — ... 14 5% 3% 15 Resolute 9% 8% Beekman Bowery (N. 7 Princeton — 95 „ 300,000 200,000 200,000 500,000 250,000 300,000 25 25 25 25 17 Baltic — Pontiac Portage Lake 5% Bluff . Croton Pittsburg & Boston... 1 Everett . ...? 50 10 Empire . 1 00 2 75 Ogima.., Pennsylvania * 1% Edwards . .... Norwich 1% 3% Dudley... • . 4 11% 11 1% Dorcheeter • 60 50 Atlantic (Br’klyn) 50 1 Consol....10 Petherick Pewabic Phoenix 20% 1 • . 2 North Cliff North western 63 41 • • 18% 6% New Jersey New York 42 . 8 1% Naumkeag 18 00 2 20 . 6 4% 5% 4% 1% 5 6% Native 5 4 Central Concord . . 2 Minnesota National 10 00 — — — — • . Astor • paid 1 Milton 2% Boston..... • IFcOAekd Medora Mendotat Merrimac Mesnard 2 4% Atlas. 1 Aztec • $300,000 50 25 Arctic 3 25 LIST. Mass 17 Amygdaloid .... .... 25 American * American Exch’e .100 ... .... 2 10 Mandan 3 00 Manhattan 2 25 1% 1 Aliouez American Adriatic 1C — Lake Superior Madison 25% .... 3 Albany & Boston Algomah • • .... , 10 F’ms Lafayette paid 3 11 Adventure...: . , Companies. [Bid.! Askd • • .... 5 10 COPPER MINING STOCK (Companies. . . ... Rynd Farm .... • , 5 5 5 5 1 Oceanic Pit Hole Creek Rathbone Oil Tract 3»> .. . .... Philadel N.Y,Ph. &Balt.ConB 1 00 • — N. Y. & 38 35 .... 2 2 York & Newark... New ... 33 10 Empire City . participating, & (t) write Marine Risks. Capital. ... — Ivankoe Manhattan Mountain Oil National N. Y. & Alleghany t . . • G Clinton Oil . ... Petrol’m.... 2 special 6 Cherry Run Cherry Run • . ...10 Buchanan Farm Central • .... 10 Brooklyn « • HamiltonMcClintock... . . 2 55 2 1G _ Brevoort . • • . 10 Bliven... par 20 DIVIDENDS. 1867. Jan. 1 (*) are Marked thus Bid. Askd Hammond LIST. INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Companies. Bid. Askd Companies. [January 11,1868 CHRONICLE. THE 58 55 56 25 10 50 15'6o — • • • .... 5 ... • road February. Arrangements from Sioux City to this road. Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad.—The Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad has been completed twenty miles, from Grand Rapids to Cedar Springs, in Kent Co., Mich. Pocomoke and Wicomico Railroad.—Sixteen of the twenty miles of the Poeomoke and Wicomico Railroad have been finished. The track layers are approaching the Pocomoke river, and most of the depot buildings are completed. will be opened through by the month of l ave been perfected for a line of boats next year Fort Benton, Montana, to run in connection with January 11,1868.] THE CHR0JN1CLE 525 59 MILES Insurance. OFFICE OF THE or THE Atlantic UNION PACIFIC Mutual RAILROAD, NEW Insurance Co., YORK, JANUARY 25th, 1867, The Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the Company, submit the following Statement of its affairs on the 31st December, 1866: Premiums received on Marine Risks, from 1st January, 1866, to 31st De¬ $8,282,021 26 cember,,1866 Running West from Omaha Across the Continent ARE NOW COMPLETED. Premiums 1st on Policies not marked off January. 1866 2,188,325 15 Total amount of Marine Premiums.. No Polices have been issued upon This brings the line to the eastern base of tke Rocky Mountains, and it is expected that the track will be laid thirty miles further, to Evans Pass, the highest point on the road, by January. from the foot of the mountains to the summit is but eighty feet to the mile, while that of the western siope will continue through the winter, and there is now no Work in the reason rock-cuttings to doubt that the entire on Risks; nor upon Fire Risks discon¬ nected with Marine Risks. The maximum grade is over one hundred. many Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ eastern roads ary, 1866 to 31st Losses paid grand line to the Pacific will be open for business in 1810. same The means provided for the construction of this Great National Work grants its Six Per Cent Bonds at the rate of fram $16,000 to $48,000 security, and receives payment to aB issued are as sioners and a per are ample. These Bonds finished, and after it has been examined by United States Commis¬ pronounced to be in all respects a first-class road, thoroughly supplied with depots, repair-shops stations, and all the necessary rolling stock and other equipments. during the period $5,683,895 05 Expenses a second lien large if not to the full extent of its claim in services. each twenty-mile section is December, 1866..... $7,632,286 70 Returns of Premiums and The United States mile, for which it takes $10,470,346 31 Life The $1,194,173 23 Company has the following As¬ sets, viz.: United States and State of New York Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks, $6,771,886 secured by Stocks, and other¬ wise.. 1,129,350 Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages, 221,260 Interest and sundry notes and claims due the Company, estimated at 141,866 00 Loans The United States also makes large revenue to the Company. and other The large portions donation of 12,800 acres of land to the mile. which will be no more. and deliver the Bonds to the a source ol Much of this land in the Platte Valley is among the most fertile in the world are covered writh heavy pine forests and abound in coal of the best quality. Company is also authorized to issue its the Government and and a Hon. E. D. own First Mortgago Bonds to Morgan and Hon. Oake6 Ames Company only as an are amouflt equal to the issue ol Trustees for the Bondholders the work progresses, so that they always represent 24 3,837,735 41 434,207 81 Premium Notes and Bills Receivable.. Cashm Bank Total Amount of Assets 00 00 $12,536,304 46 an actual s productive value. Six per cent interest on tlie ontstand The authorized capital of the Company is One Hundred Million Dollars, of which over five millions have already been paid in upon the work already done. EARNINGS OF THE COMPANY. At present the profits of the Company are derived only from its local traffic, but this is already much than sufficient to pay the interest on all the Bonds the Company can issue, if not another mile were built. It is not doubted that wrhen the road is completed the through traffic of the only line connecting the Atlantic and Pacific States wrill be large beyond precedent, and, as tbere will be no more be done at competition, it can profitable rates. always ing certificates of profits will fie paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after Tuesday tlie Fifth, of February next. The outstanding certificates of the issue of 1864 will be redeemed and paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and after Tuesday the Filth of Februarynext, from which date all interest thereon will It will be noticed that the Union Pacific Railroad is, in fact, a Government Work, built under the sk a large extent with Government money, and that ita bonds are issued under Government direction. It is believed that no similar security is so carefully guarded, and certainly bo other is based upon a larger or more valuable property. As the Company’s The certificates to he cease. of produced at the time payment, and cancelled. , pervision of Government officers, and to A dividend declared of the on of Twenty Per Cent, la tlie net earned Company, for the premiums ending 31st year December, 1866, for which certificates will be on and after Tuesday the Second of April issued next. FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS are By order of the Board, offered for the present at NINETY CENTS ON THE DOLLAR, they are the icheapest security in the more than 15 per cent, lower than U. S. Stocks. They pay J. H. market, being CHAPMAN, Secretary. TRUSTEES : SIX PER CENT. IN GOLD, John D. Jones, Charles or over NINE PER CENT, upon the investment and have thirty years to ran before maturity. will be received in New York at the Company’s Office, No. 20 Nassau Subscriptions Street, and bj CONTINENTAL NATIONAL, BANK, No. 7 Nassau Street. CLARK, DODGE & CO,, Bankers, No. 51 Wall Street. JOHN J. CISCO & * and or other funds par R. Warren Weston, Royal Phelps, SON, Bankers, No. 3 3 Wall Street. by the Company’s advertised Agents throughout the United States. drafts Remittances should be made la in New York, and the bonds will be sent free of charge by return expreis. subscribing through local agents, will look to Partla bowing the Progress of the Work, Resources for Construction, and Value of Bonds, or of its advertised Agents or will be sent free on may Joseph Gaillard, Jr. Henry Burgy, J. Cornelius C. A. B. J. Grinnell, Hand, Howland, Benj. Babcock, Fletcher Robt. B. William E. Dodge Geo. G. Hobson, Gordon David James Low Westray, Mintum, Jr. W, Burnham, Frederick Chauncey, George S. Stephenson William H. Webb. Daniel S. Miller. Paul Robert L. Charles P. Taylor, Henry, Spofford. Burdett, be obtained at CISCO, Treasurer. - Joshua'J. Dennis Perkins, Shephard Gandy. application. JOHN J. November 26, 1867. Sturgis, Caleb Barstow JOHN D. JONES, President, DENNIS, -Presiden W. II. H. MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres D. HEWLETT, 3d Vice-Preift. CHARLES i Wm. Henry K. Bogert, A. P. Pillot Lane, James Bryce, Francis Skiddy, them for their ,'safe delivery. A NEW PAMPHLET AND MAP t< mpany’s Offices Dennis, W. H. H. Moore, Henry Coit, Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, Charles H. Russell, Lowell Holbrook, NEW YORK. . [January 11, 1868. THE CHRONICLE. 60 Insurance. Insurance. Insurance. THE States United COMPANY, INSURANCE JilFE North British AND City oi New York. In the Mercantile Insurance Co NO. 40 WALL STREET. ‘New and important plans of Life Insurance have _ one year, President. JOHN EADIK, Nicholas De Geoot, Secretary. COMPANY. (INSURANCE Policies issued in Gold or BUILDINGS) plicant. Losses 49 WALL STREET. $1,614,540 78 Thie Company having recently added to its previous assets a paid up cash capital of $500,000. and subscrip¬ tion notes in advance Of premiums of $800,000, continues to issue policies of insurance against Marine and Inand Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected tom Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are entled to participate in the profits. r & Co. Sheppard Gandy, & Co. Vice-President. No. 35 WALL INSURANCE against Loss bv Fire NO. COMPANY. OF HARTFORD, ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. has paid to its During the past year this Company Policy-holders, INSURANCE FIRE PHOENIX CONN. scrip, equivalent scrip dividend of TWENTY PER CENT. Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based on the principle that all classes of risks are equally the current Srofitable. iscouut. from makes rates, 6uchwhen or this .Company cashpremiums abatementare paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits remaining at the close of the year, will be divided to the stockholders. Ma¬ This Company continues to make Insurance on rine and Inland. Navigation and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Mer¬ insurance MARINE CASH SPRINGFIELD, MASS. J, N. Dunham, $700,000. CONNECTICUT C FIR M. Bennett, Losses RUDOLPH GAF.RTGT E, President. JOHN E. KAIIL, Vice '-’resident. HARTFORD, CONN. Hugo Schumann, in current money. WHITE, ALLYN&CO.. Agents, STREET. Secretary. Fire Insurance Hanover Secretary. Company, OF HARTFORD. I .Charter Pe: pctual. ncorporated 1819. July 1st, 1567 - capital Surplus Cash U. J. HEN Insurance Fire No. 12 WALL Assets July JONATHAN D. AND DA 4AGE BY - NO. NEW YORK 62 Char- percent. STEELE, President JAS. A. AGENCY WALL STREET. ALEXANDER, Agent. Notman, Secretary. FIRE Hope Fire Insurance Company, Cask Capital - 1867 - - *150,000 - - - 222,433 American Fire Insurance Co., responsible Com¬ Hoard of Directors: Jacob Reese, Lebbeus B. Ward. Lydig Suvdam, Joseph Britton, D. Fred. Sc luchurdt, Henry S. Levericb. Robert Schell, William H. Terry, Joseph Grafton, Amo6 Robbins, Thoe. P. Cummings, Jno. W. Mersereau, David L. Eigenbrodt, William Rempen, hen Hyatt. JACOB USES£, President. Jam** S. MO3 **, 114 BRANCH OFFICE 9 BROADWAY, COOPER INSTITUTE, THIRD AVENUE. INCORPORATED 1823. Ca*H Capital $500,000 00 7b <kfc 3a gfi.} WvvW&a« J ? J^clSSo.ll j' ^ cayTST ovk. (Z/0ea.tr LS in J2L. df. emtilLcS. and JZPaidan Sin!tang. r.f and rne.nLL.EtoL aft gfraefe. and aLd ^^r./LangeA in Lath, cities. dLer.aii.ntS aft J^cLnlzS and /§.anh.elS teccLLLed an LLLetal. teiraS. \3. S'. T&owAs a A. M. Foute, Late Pres. Gayoso Bank, W. W. Loring. Memphis, Tenn. 255 057 77 and Capital Surplus, January 1, Surplus _ Joffeph Foulke, Cyrus H. Loutrel, OFFICE against Loss or Damage by Fire favorable as any other INSURANCE. North OFFICE, No. 92 BROADWAY. Taber Henry M. m. Taber, Theodoi e W. Riley, Stenh. Cambreleug, Secretary. 37 7,668 4 6 Liabilities $1,090,000 273,009 equitably adjusted and promptly nai «redl850. Cash dividends paid In 15 years, 253 pany. Remsen Lane, FIRE. aid. as WALCOTT, President, BENJ. S. $4,650,938 27 1,1867..... STREET. Losses This Company insures 18<,205 93 {587,205 93 3S,480 03 Total Liabilities DEE, Presi k nt. $400,000 00 * CAPITAL cn terms , Secretary. NSdJRANCE AGAINST LOSS LUS.JANrUARY 1st, 1867, SURPLUS, Assets, June 1, ••• * Gross Assets $3,000,000, CAPITAL J* GOOD MOW, STREET. No. 4b WALL Bankers. COMPANY. CASH COMP AN Y, /Etna. Insurance ' here, and paid promptly adjusted by the Agents NO. 74 WALL $81 5,074 73 TOTAL ASSETS WINSURANCE CO Capital $27 5,000. Jr„ Sec’y. J. B. Eldrddge, Pres’t. Gold or Cur¬ ?! 5,074 73 SURPLtJS, July 1st, 1367 E. Freeman, Pres Sec’y. OF $5 00,000 00 CAPITAL, company, Capital and Surplus at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Rathbone, Eros. & Co., in Liverpool. TRUSTEES. 'gy D. Golden Murra James Freeland, E. Uaydocir White, Samuel Wlllets, N L. McCready, Robert L. Taylor, Daniel T. Willets, William T. Frost, L. Edgerton, William Watt, Henry Ti. Kunhardt, Henry Eyre, John S. Williams, Cornelius Grinnell, William Nelson, Jr., Joseph Slagg, Charles Diraon. Jas. D, Fish, A- William Heye, Geo. w. Hennings, Harold Dollner, Francis Hathaway, Paul N. Spofford. Aaron L. Reid, Ellwood Walter. ELLWOGD WALTER, President. CHAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-President. Niag ara Ins.-Co., BROADWAY, N. V No. 175 rency, J. Debpard, Secretary. Germania Fire Capital and * urpius $1,000 OOO. Sec’y. H. Kellogg, Pros t rebatement on in value to an average chandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freigiit. Policies issued making loss payable in CO*, MASON, President. S. ROBERTS, Vice-Prcs W. B. Clark, SPRINGFIELD FIRE AND CASH, premiums in lieu of IN George A. Dresser, CONN. Geo. M. Coit, $1,261,349 Inland $501,207 54 Jan. 1, ’67.J. Capital and Surplus *1,500,000. bec'y. Geo. L. Cha^e, Pres’t STREET, NEW YORE. Assets, January 1st, 1S67 OF HARTFORD. and the Danger ol NavigationBROADWAY. 104 rTf. INSURANCE COMPANY FIHE COMPANY" NEW YORK, OF Insures Hartford Mutual Exchange The Corn Caali Assets, The Mercantile INSURANCE WASHBURN, Secretary. J.- H. EZRA^HITE, | Associate Managers CHAS. E. WHITE, Assistant Manager. LORD. DAY & LORD, Solicitors. DABNEY, MORGAN & Co., Bankers. President. WILLMARTH, Vice-President. A. F. .of Avmar <fc Co. of David Dows & Co. of Fabbri & Chauncey. of S. B. Chittenden INSURANCE. CHAS. J. MARTIN, of E. D. Morgan & Co. SHEPPARD GANDY, Esq. .of 114,849 48 FIRE AND INLAND Secretary. Isaac H. Walker, a Liabilities Morgan & Co Esq.. 1, 1867 Assets, Jan. Management: of Dabuey, ......$2,000*000 00 3,439,120 73 Capital this Country. Chairman. SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esa AYMAR CARTER, Esq DAVID DOWS, Esq EGIBTO P. FABBRI, Esq SIMEON B. CHITTENDEN, MOSES II. GR1NNELL, President. JOHN P. PAULISON, 4,260,635 Currency at option of Ap¬ New York Board or 135 BROADWAY. 12,695 OOO promptly adjusted and paid in CHAS. H. DABNEY, Esq., Incorporated 1841. Capital and Assets, $10,000^000, Accumulated f unds...;.... Annual Income -Co., Home Insurance (IN GOLD) : CAPITAL AND ASSETS Subscribed Capital Sun Mutual Insurance YORK* NEW VTRFJET, WALL 74 William H. Ross, Secretary. BRANCH, UNITED STATES 1,893,220 $1,432,340 Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany United States Eranoh, No. 117 Broadway, N. Y. GEORGE ADLAliD, Manager. 1809. ESTABLISHED IN Prospectus. been adopted by this Company. See new Profits available after policies have run and annually thereafter. £2,000,000 Stg. Special Fund of $200,000 EDINBURGH. AND LONDON AND OF LIVERPOOL Authorized Capital Subscribed Capital PA.iD-ur Capital and Surplus OF $2,300,000 ASSETS Queen Fire Insurance Co LONDON. Cash Foute 1867, *755,057 77. & L oe. i n g , BROKERS, 33 BROAD STREET AND 36 NEW STREET. at the office of the Government Securities of all kinds, Gold, Companv, or at its various Agencies in the principal cities in the United States. State, Hank, and Railroad Stock* and Bond* Bought and Sold. Interest allowed on JAMES W. OTIS, President. R.W.BLEECKER, Vice Pres’t. Deposits pubject to check at sight. Collections F H. Caeteb, Secretary. made in all the States and Canada*. • J Geibwold, General Agent, Insures Property against Lobs or the usual rates. Policies issued and Losses raid HANKERS AND Damage by Fire at • THE CHRONICLE .January 11, 1868.] PRICES CURRENT. fcW* In addition to the duties noted below, a discriminating duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. 8=8?* On all goods, wares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 per cent. ad val. is levied in ad¬ dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place or places of their growth CT produc¬ tion ; Raio Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The top Ip all be 2,240 ft. cases to Anchor*—Duty: 21 cents # lb. Ot*209ftand 8;"© upward#lt Ashes—Duty: 15 # cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... $3 100 ft 8 25 © 8 50 Pearl, let sort 10 5> @ ff .... Heesirax—Duty,20 # cent ad val. American 40 @ yellow.$ ft invoice 10 $ ct. ton48 00 ©. .... Bone*—Duty : on Rio Grande shin # Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Pilot #ft © 7$ .. Navy........ 5$ IH 8$© Crackers..... Breads t uf f*—See special report. Common Croton hard..per M.ll 50 (^,12 50 )8 '0 ©22 00 Philadelphia Fronts...40 00 ©45 0u Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair 1 # ft. Airier n,gray &wh. 391b Butter and © 1 75 50 Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. © 70 25 '2o © 75 © © 40© . .. 85 lb.... Welsh, tubs # lb ... Fine io . xtra Sta e,.;. Good io ;1' e State, .... Common Stite, Wh tern B n ter, Grease bu ter, urk. dll 48 38 @ 4i@ v8 © 20 © 18 TO © $ ft Antimony, Regulus of Argols, .Crude Argols, Refined, gold. Arsenic, Powdered.... 16 14 16 11 © 13 Berries, Persian, gold. Sperm, patent,. .ft Refined sperm, city... Bteario Adamantine .. 211© 2 43© 30© 21 © 50 81 24 60 v© 80 © Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ castle gold Bi Chromate Potash... Brimstone. Crude 4*© 19j 4:© 4J 82$© 33$ # (gold).39 00 ©40 00 Brimstone, Ain. Roll # ft © phur Camphor, I'-nde, (in bond) (gold) i lor Camphor, l.’ofined .© _ bushels of80 ft # bushel. 19}© Cardamoms, Malabar © Castor Oil Cases $ gal 2 00 © Chamomile Fiow’s#ft 15© Chlorate Potash (gold) il$@ of2,240 ft .. Anthracite Cardift steam. © .... @18 0J ti 50 © 7 0» Liverpool Gas Caand Newcastle G-.s ©15 00 9 50 ©10 < 0 , , li © 3 Coffee.—See special report. Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and Ingot, 21; old copper 2 cents # ft; manu¬ factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 Inches wide, weighing 14 © 34 oz. # square foot, 3 cents # ft. Sheathing, new..# ft Sheathing, yellow Bolts Braziers’.... Baltimore Detroit .. © © 35 © 22*©* .. Portage Lake 33 26 © .... .. 35 . . . # @ 23 © 22$ Cordage—Duty,tarred,8; unv-rred Manila, 2$ other nntarred, 31 cents $ 2 im 22$ Manila, # ft Tarred Russia © 18$ Tarred American © _ „„ .. .. Bolt Rope, Russia..... .. © Corks—Duty,50 # centad val. Regular, quarts# gross 65 © 50 @ 12 @ Mineral Phial. 22 Drags and Byes—Duty,Alcohol, gallon; Aloes, 6 centB # ft; Alum,CO cents $ 100 lb; Argols, 6 # ft; Arsenic and Aesafcedati, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regains. 10; Arrowroot, 80 # cent ad ral rente Balaam CopaivL 20; Balaam Tola, 30; Balaam Pern, 00 oenta V lb; Caliaaya Copperas, American 20 3 25 "go b2 © 6* 18$© 19 14 15 © 90 © 8o © 85 li© © .. Tartar, pr.(gold Cubebs, East india.... 88 © 38 Cutch I5i@ 16 Cream 28 .. Epsom Salts © H Logwood../... Extract Fennell 10J© Se. d 17© Flowers,Benzoin.$ oz. 80 © Gambier gold 4f© Gamboge 1 75 © Ginseng, South&West. 65 © Gum Arabic, Picked.. 50 © Gum Arabic, Sorts... -il © Gum Gum Gum Gam Gum Benzoin Kowrie Gedda..... Gum Senegal....(goId) Damar Myrrh,East India Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. GumTrkgacanth,Sorts Tragacanth, w. flakey (guld) SO @ 84 © 20© 83 © 60 66 70 73 35 65 86 21 43 © 55 @ .. @ 25 85 © Gum 60 © 1 1*0 Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng (gold) 8 60 © 8 70 Iodine, Resnblimed... 6 50 @ Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3 85 © 3i 6i Jalap, in bond gold.. Lao Dye Licorice Paste,Calabria 70 70 40 Cotton—See apeolal report. 2 50 per 6 Cochineal, Mexic’n(g’d) 17 11 © .. Soda Carrawav Seed Coriander Seed Cochineal, Hon (gold) Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents # 1b. Caracas (In bond)(gold) 16 © # lb Maracaibo do ..(Pold) © Guayaquil do . ..(gold) St Domiago... .(gold) Ammonia, Caustic © n © 281 92 © 1 70 © 1 75 Cantharidos Carbonate in bulk 3| Sul¬ of 28 bushels So ft to the bushel; other than bituminous,40 cents $ 28 Liverp’l House Cannel Sago, Pea. led Licorice* Paste, Sicily. Licorice Paste Spanish Solid Licorice Paste, Greek. 85 © 25 @ 31 © 24 © 84 © 31 © 9 © 9$© Manna,large flake.... 1 7o © 95 © Manna, small flake.... Madder,Dutch..(gold) do, French, EXF.F.do Mustard Seed, Cal.... Mustard Seed, Trieste. 90 55 33 25 40 ’6* 10 .6 8© 14 © Nutgalls Blue Aleppo 35 © ‘io Oil Anis 5 .-7*<?»t Oil Cassia 8 75 © 4 00 . Oil Bargamot t tt•150 20 © 1|@ 22 © Sarsaparilla, Hond “ Sarsaparilla, Mex “ Seneea Root. ) . (80#o.)(g’ld) Sugar L’d, W’e(gold).. Sulp Quinine, Am# oz Sulphate Morphine.... 2$© 25 © i0 © She'l Lac Soda Ash .{g’ld)#® ex 45 31 • . 60 . . 50 10 91© © ©15 00 © .... .. © .... ©105 00 (gold) ... © Feathers—Duty: 30 # centad val. Prime Western...# ft 85 © 90 Tennessee © 85 .... Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 (Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 $ bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried, in smaller pkga.than bar¬ rels, 60 cents $ luO ft. Dry Cod # cwt. 4 fO © 6 00 Pickled Scale...# bbl © Pickled Cod # bbl. 4 60 © Mackerel, No. 1, Mass shore 14 25 © ...... . .... .. . Mackerel,No.l,Halifax © Mackerel,No. I, Bay..15 75 @ Mackerel, 27o. 2, Bay ©12 00 .... .... © _ )10 25 © © 00 © © 35 30 © 20 16 © Herring, plckled#bbl. 6 10 © 8 0j Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. Jersey # ft 15$© 22$ Fruits—See special report. |urs-Du„y,lO $ cent. Beaver,Dark..^ skin 1 00 © 8 00 do Pale., 50 © 2 00 Bear, Black » 6 00 ©12 00 do brown,. 2 00 © 8 06 Badger 10 © 50 60 Cat, Wild 40© do House 10© 2o Fisher, 4 00 © 8 00 Fox, Silver 5 Of ©50 00 do Cross 3 00 © 5 00 do Red 75 © i 00 do Grey 40 © 60 Lynx 50 © 75 Marten, Dark 5 00 ©20 00 do pale 1 00 © 3 00 Mink, dark 3 00 © 6 00 Muskrat, © Otter 5 00 © 8 00 ... Opossum 10© Is Raccoon 10 © 5o Skunk, Black 80 © 6j Crlass—Duty, Cylinder Polished Plate not over 2$ cents $ or Window 10x15 Inches, square foot; larger and 16x24 inches, 4 cents $ square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents square foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 not over inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents $ square foot: on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding lOx 15 inches square, 1$; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 24x30 ,2$ ; all over that, 8 cents $ ft. American Window-- 1st,2d, 8d, and 4th qualities. Subject to a discount of 35©40 $ cent. 6x 8 to 8x10. $ 50 ft 6 25 © 4 75 8x11 tol0xl5 11x14 to 12x18 18x16 to 16x24 18x22 to 20x30 20x30 to 24x30 24x31 to 24x36 26x36 to 26x40 2hx40 to 30x48 24x54 to 82x56 82x58 to84x60 34x62 to 40x60 6 7 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 24 75 50 50 00 60 Mining.. © 4 50 .. 6 50 © $ lb . 86 © 1 00 86$@ ?6 84$© 11 @ 85$ 14 12 24 21 © © © © 17 13 27 95 on © 9 00 © 5 00 © 5 50 © 0 00 © 7 00 © 8 00 00 © 9 00 00 ©10 00 00 @14 00 50 ©16 00 00 ©Is 00 25 00 ©vl 00 Frer.ch Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th (SUgleThiok) Now * 1st Sept. 25 Discount 20©25 Jt esnt. qualities. of ffx 8 to8x10.$150 ftst 0 35 O 4 26 • - ritEx. BioGrande,mixed# ft Limawood 00 and Buenos Barwocd Mackerel, No. 2,Ha ax Mac’el,No.3,Mat-s. 1’gelO Mackerel, No. 3, HTax Mackerel, No. 8, Mass Salmon,Pickled, No.1.37 Sa mon, Bi kled, p. tc Herring, Scaled# box. Herring, No. 1 l 24x8J.... 24x86. Hair—Duty © Fustic, Cuba 40 oO © “ Fustic, Savan Ilia" © 32 00 Fustic,Maracaibo,go!do2 00 © l ogwood, Hon (gold) J9 00 © «. 6 75 <?b 0 00 7 so ah 5 60 8 50 <Lb 6 00 00 i 00 50 $ 8 00 14 00 © 9 00 16 00 ©10 00 Gunny Bag:*—Duty, valued at l(i cents or less, 96 square yard, 3; ovw, 10, 4 cents $ ft Calcutta, light & h’y % 17$@ 18 Gunny Clotli—Duty, valued at 1C cents or less W square yard, 3; ovc« 10,4 center ft. • Calcutta, standard, v’d SO© Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 9f cents or less W lb, 6 cents $1 lb, and 20 $1 cent ad val.: over 20 cents $ 1b, 10 cents $1 ft and 20 $1 cent ad va. Blasting(A) $ 251b keg @4 00 ters 72 Camwood..(gold)#tn ... 26x40 .... Sporting, in 1 lb canis¬ 62© ... to .... .. Dye Woods—Duty free. Logwood, Laguna(g<*ld) Logwood, 8t D<»ain Logwood, Cam .(gold). Logwood,Jamaica « o 15 5 16x24 18x80 10x15.... 12x18 ShJ Ri Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Ravens, Light. .# pee 16 00 © Ravens, Heavy i8 iQ © Scotch, G’ck, No. 1 #y. © Cotton, No. i....y. • 6 25 47i© to to to to to to Groceries—See special report. 28 25 2 6 ‘^0 © 49 © il © dry . 27 14 © 7 @ 25 @ 20 @ 85 © Tapioca Verdigris, dry a . .. Senna, Alexandria..,. Senna, Eastlndia Tart’c Acid, 9 Si© 8x11 11x14 13x18 18x22 20x30 24x31 25x36 28x40 to 30x48.(3 qlts).18 00 ©14 00 S4x54 to 32x58.(3 qlts).20 50 @16 00 32x58 to 84x60.(3 qlts),24 00 ©18 00 34x62 to 40x60.(3 qlts).25 00 @21 00 English sells at 16 $ ct. off above rates. 7 Salaratus SalAm’n ao, Ref (gold) Sal Soda. Newcastle" .... . ton Chains—Duty, 21 cents # ft. One Inch & upward# ft 8© Liverpool Orrel. $ ton 40 90 50 75 10 © 19 .. Brimstone, ton © © 8 Cement—Rosendale#bll 90(b 2 00 Coal—Duty, bituminous, 81 2c# Quicksilver . 871© Borax, Refined 58 © 20 23 1 40 © Bleaching Powder mantine, 5 cents $ ft. © 18 © 25 © 12 © 14 © Candles—Duty,tallow, 21; sperma¬ ceti and wax o; it-, earine and ada¬ 31 75 © 1 5j Assafcetida Balaam Copivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru Bark Petayo 15© 8*© Annato, good to prime. 42 48 40 80 3i .. Fuctory Dairies do Common Farm Dairies do C inumon Alum 924 87 15© 80 78 © 2 25 © 3 60 Rhubarb, China... ?cid, cent4 adcents $2 50; Oxalic val.;$1Opium, ib; Phosphorus, 20 © 6*50 Phosphorus Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.; Cantharides, 50 cents $ ft; Caster Oil, $1 # gallon ; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, 1$; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, l; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft; Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent $1 ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzoia and Gamboge, 10 # cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $1 cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per ft; Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacauth, 20 $ cent ad vai.; Hyd. Potash and Resubiimed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $1 # ft; Oil Peppermint, 5u .. 12$ £0 Prussiate Potash Cardamoms and Acid, Citric Alcohol, 95 per cent. Aloes, Cape # ft Aloes, Socotrine 4 Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 20 OxaJioAcid Carb. # cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50cents $ ft: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad val.; Sal Bratus, 11 cents # ft; Sal Soda. 1 cent # ft; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 # cent ad val.; Sheli Lac, 10; Soda Ash, i; Sugar Lead, 20 cents $ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 # oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents # ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬ riol, 25 38 cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $1 # ft; all others quoted below, fsue. 8 87 Oil Peppermint, pure, f 62$ Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 $ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 # ton, and 15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 4ocents # ft.; . . Oil Lemon Refined Borax, 10 cents $ ft ; Crude . Butter— Fresh pail, # lb Hi-ttrkm tubs # * Bark, 80 # cent ad val.: B1 Carb. Soda, 1J; Bi Chromate Potasn, 3 cents # ft; Bleaohlng Powder, 80 cents # 1001b ; 61 Ayres, mixed. Hog,Western, unwash. HardwareAxes—Cast steei, best brand do ordinary .per doe Carpe ter’s Adzes,.... do ordinary..1: Shingling Hatchets, C’t Steel, best br’ds, Nos. 1 to3 8 do ordinary 6 Broad Hatch’s 8toSbatJ2 do mdli-ary 12 Coffee Mil s List 2 do Bri Hopper.; do Wood Back....... 17 12 7 50 00 „ )25 00 OO @ @25 * dU. © . .... @ .... Cotton ... Gins, per saw... $6©* leaa 50 0 Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 % dls Cast Butts—Fast Joint. List 10 %*dv “ Loose Joint.. List. Hinges,Wrought, Door List 12$ % dit Bolts, Cast Bbl L'st 25@30 % dia Carriage and Tire do List 55 % dU Door L .cks and Latches List 71 f dls Door Knobs—Mineral. List 7J JS “ Pore-lain List 7* % Padlocks N# w List 254fc7$ % «U» X . ___ Locks—Cabinet, Eagle Liht 15 % “ Trunk St. icks and Dies... 5 crew Wren ones—Coe’s Patent do Taft’s Smiths’ Via^B ola List 15)1 41s List 85 % 41s Llat25)ldla List 66 % dia # ft 20 @ 22 Framing Chisels.NewUst87i a bbjCdia Firmer do List 40 )Udv Insets. do insets handled, oo Ust40*adv Augur Bitta. List 20& 10 jtdis Short Augurs,per dz.NewLlst 80 % dls Ring do List 30 Jtdis List 75 % dls List 60 % die Cut Tacks Cut Brads Rivet-, Iron List tb&40 % dls Screws American.. .List b7 % dls do List 0@46 % dls English Shovels and Spades... List 6 % dis Horse Shoes 6$@7 #lt Planes. List 3l)©35 Jtads Hay—North River, in bales# 100 fta for shipping © 1 20 Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila $^5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sun£ and Sisal, $15 # ton; and Tampico. 1 cent# ft. Amer. Dressed.# ton 825 00@885 08 do Undressed.. 170 00@180 00 @;i60 (0 Russia, Clean Jute. Manila. .# Sisal (gold) 110 00@125 (0 ft..(gold) © .. Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry ed and Skins 10 Buenos Ayres# Montevideo Rio Grande Orinoco California lbg’d do do do gold California, Mex. do .. x^amplco do do do Texas cur Dry Salted Hides— Ch li ^.....(gold) California... Tamp: co Salt¬ # cent ad val. Dry Hides— Porto Cabello Vera Cruz or 11 do . do . South & Wes*, do Wet Salted Hides— Bue Ayres.# ft g’d. Rio Grande do do California Western .... Coutry sl’ter trim. db cured. do City do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. <fc Rio Gr. Rip # It gold Sierra Leone.... cash Gambia & Bissau do 18 © 19 19 184© 18$© , lb @ 18$© © . 18$ 19 14 © 15 @ 15 © 18 @ 16 16 21 14 15 .. .. .. © © © © • - 7 10$@ ioi© m 10$ iO © © 20 If l© 21 @ 11 .. 2? :-5 27 $ @ 86 Honey—Duty,2 cent # fallen. Cuba (in bond) (gc’ Hops— Crop of 1867 do of 1866 Foreign # gall. 58 © 5 cents # id. # ft ... «»».»»»■ 60 00 00 crotches $ ft @ East India logs 70 57* 42* 67* @ 55 @ @ Para, Modium Para, Coarse do do do 65 @ 1 00 (gold) 95 @ 1 20 (gold) 75 @ 10) Iron—Duty,Bars, 1 to 1* cents $ lb. Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 ft; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents $ ft; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to 1J cents $ ft; Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 Bar Swedes, sizes r-STOKB PbIOJES—x @150 00 @125 00 @ 100 lb Spanish (tfold) 6 45 @ 6 50 English.. Bar Oils Lard oil Red oil, . Heml’k, B. A.,&c.,l’t. do ^ do middle. do do heavy . do Califor., light do middle. do do do heavy. do Orino., etc. l’t, do middle do heavy. do & B. A, do do do 38 @ do and heavy do rou.,Vt mid. do 28 20 80 27 28 20 26 27 26 25* 21 22 @ 19 @ Slaugb.in rough Oak, Slaugh.in 22 27 @ 2T @ 26 @ 27 @ 27 @ 25 @ 26 @ 24 @ do do poor do do 43 48 26 @ dam’gdall w’g’s - 39 37 @ 39 @ 41 @ 38 @ Lumber; Woods, Duty: Lumber, 20 Staves, 10 $ cent ad and Cedar, free. 45 50 Staves,etc* cent ad val.; val.; Rosewood M ft 18 00 @ 20 00 35 00 @ 40 00 B’da 21 00 @ 27 <>0 '‘White Pine Merch. 27 00 @ 80 00 Box Boards 60 00 @ 70 00 Clear Pine.. Laths, Eastern.^ M 3 00 @ .... Poplar and Whi e wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 @ 60 00 Cherry B’ds & Plank 75 00 @ 80 00 Oak and Ash 55 00 @ 60 00 Maple and Birch ... 85 00 @ 40 00 90 00 @100 00 Black Walnut pipe, # extia M. •• do pipe, heavy .. do -pipe, light. .. do pipe,culls. 110 00 nh<L,extra. do .. hhd.,heavy do .. do hhd., light. .. do hhd.,cull8. .. do bbl., extra. .. do bbl.,heavy. . do - bbl.,light.. . do bbl.,culls.. ~ Red oak, hhd.,h’vy. hhd., light.. do ~ HEADING —White oak, hhd Hahogany, Cedar, wood—Duty free. Ifcahoganv St. go Dornin- crotohw @275 00 @225 00 80 gr.. 65 @ 70 @ £0 @ (free). 47 @ do white, American, 9 Ochre,yellow, Frencn, dry 100 lb do gr’u in oil.# tb Spanish brown, dry $ 100 ft) do gr’d Paris wh., No.1^100lb Vermilion,Chinese^ ft do do do 12 14* I 00 @ 1 25 9 @ @ 2 @ 2* 35 @ 1 40 8 • • 1 • • ■ .... 1 U> @ JL 15 Trieste Cal. & Eng:. l 30 @ 1 l 40 35 •J5 @ American.... Venet.red(N.C.)$cwt 3 00 @ 3 25 Carmine,city made# ft 16 00 @20 <H) China clay # ton32 $ lb. Chalk Chalk, block....# ton?2 (0 @34 DO U@ ... 5 @23 0) 15 @ 85 39 00 @42 75 Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents; Chrome yellow... Barytes. . $ ft @245 00 @175 00 Refined, free do in bond gallon. @170 00 @I1M>0 @100 00 @150 00 @115 00 @ 90 00 @ 60 00 @120 00 @ 80 00 Naptha, refined 90 91 @ Residuum Plaster $ bbl. 16 @ 43 @ .... 24 @ 25 bl @ 32 ... @ 3 60 Paris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 # cent ad val. Blue Nova Scotia# too 3 87*@ White Nova Scotia.... 4 50 @ Calcined,eas'-ern# bbl .... @ Calcined city miils @ 13 2 75 5 62* val. No. 0 to 18.....20 @25 No. 19 to 26.... 3'! No. 27 to 36.... 35 ....' Tampico...gold Mataiuoras.gold Payta gold Madras ....each Cape 4 00 4 70 2 40 2 50 Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ot; lams, bacon, and lard, 2 ts $ ft Beef,plain mess# bbl.. 14 00 @18 50 do extra meas..18 50 @21 00 Pork.meaa ™*21 00 @21 15 , , , . . # . .. « . .. • , @ .. @ @ @ @ 38 @ bO @ @ 47*@ @ 42 i@ 40 @ 33 @ Para Vera Cruz gold .gold ...gold Puerto Cab-gold cent ad val. # ft. waalilts # . 42* 85 25 $ lU @ domestic . 45 Spel ter—Duty : in pigs, bars, plates, $! 50 $ 109 fts. PLates, foreign $ ft* gold 6*@ -in » 471 13 @ 17 and 6* 10* Spices. -See special report. Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at .7 cents $ ft or under, 2* cents; over 7 cents and not above 11,-3 cts # ft; over 11 cents, 3* cents $ ft cent ad val. (Store prices.) 18 @ 23 English, cast, # ft . 14 16 German 14 @ 12 @ 15 American, spring 12 23 21 Amerm.n cast 21 @ 10 121 English, spring 10 @ @ H*@ English blister H*@ 20 16 I8*@ English machinery:'... and 10 $ .. Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Sicily # ton.. 126 00 @220 00 Sugar.—See special report. Tallow—Duty :1 cent $ ft. A merican,pri me, try and city # coun¬ ft... 11 @ 11* Teas.-r-See special report. Tin—Duty: pig, bars, and block, 15$ cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cent, ad val. Banca $ ft (gold) 26 @ Straits (g°ld) 21*@ English (gold) 23*@ Plates,char. I.C.# boxll 0 « @11 f0 do I. C. Coke 9 25 @10 50 do Terne CharcoallO 50 @11 25 do Terne Coke.... 8 87 @ 9 25 Tobacco.—See special report. Wines and Liouors—Liquors —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per fallon, Winks— value liquors, net over$2.50. 50 cents )uty other $ gal¬ : lon 20 oents ^ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over 5<' and uot over 100, 50 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem: over $1 $ gallon, ion and *5 V oent ad y»]« Class 1 —Clothing United States is 32 cents or $ ft, 10 cents $ ft and 11 cent, ad val. : over 32 cents $ ft, 22 cents $ ft and 10 $ cent, ad val. Class 3.—Carpet Wools and other similar Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 12 cents or less $ fi>, 3 cents $ ft ; over 12 cents $ ft, 6 cents # ft. Wool of all classes less 45 . 9* place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less $ ft, 10 cents $ ft and 11 $ cent, ad val.: over 32 cents $ ft, 12 cents $ ft ana 10 $ cent, ad val ; when imported washed, double these rates Class 2.— Combing Wools—The value where¬ of at the last place whence exported .. . 8|@ 47 @ 57 @ to the , .. $ ct. off list. ' # ct. off list $ ct. off list Wools—The value whereof at the last .. Bolivar ...gold Honduras ..gold Sisal gol-l Chagres @ @ @ .. practiced.” fore 8 50 @10 00 .. .... in the “ or¬ dinary condition as now and hereto¬ 12 -0 @18 U0 Buenos A...gold VeraCruz .^old .... 4 75@ Telegraph, No. 7 to il Plain # ft Brass (less 20p rcent) Copper do . Wool—Duty: Imported 11 00 @i2 25 Soap—Duty: 1 cent # ft, and 2 25 @ 3 00 8 @ 10 in oil. ^ ft Whiti'ig, Atner.. do do do do 13 8 @ Crude,40@47grav.#gal. *5© do 14 @ refined, 40 jents # Rose¬ do do 40 11$@ dry 10* 2 50 @ 2 20 Deer,SanJuan# ft-gold @ pure, in oil do white, American, @175 00 @140 00 - — 65 02 @ oil Spruce, East. # Southern Pino White Pine Box STAVES— White oak, . Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1 do white, American, No. 1,in oil do white, French, in @ 1 85 heavy @ 2 30 I 15 @ 1 2-> Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ lb ; Paris white and whiting, 1 cent $ lb; dry ochres, 56 cents $ 196 lb: oxidesofzim ,1$ cents $ ft) ; ochre, ground in oil, | 50 100 ft); Spanish brown 25 ^ cei.tad val * China clay, $5 ton; Venetian red and vermilion 25 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $ 10 $ toD. @ 11* Litharge, City. ...$ft @ 111 Lead, red, City puie, .. Lime—Duty: 10 # cent ad val. Rockland, coin. $ bbl. .. @ 1 do Straits Paraffine, 28 Kerosene 46 40 40 @ 40 @ 20 @ 2 10 @ 2 15 Bank 42 33 @ 40 @ city distilled do do do do do do do ...* (gold) 2 0 @ 8 50 do 85@ 1 30 do 1 25@ 9 00 do Madeira 8 60@ 7 00 do Muraeilles do 70@ 85, Sherry d» do ... @ 90@ 1 b0 Malaga,sweet . <o do dry.... do 91 @ 1 15 Claret, In hhds. do 85 00@ 60 W0S do in cases. do 2 65@ 9 00 Champagne .... do .... @ ... Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered $2 to $3 5. $ 100 ft, and 15 $ cent ad 8*@ Goat,Curacoa# ft cur 4 75@ 4 75@ Burgundy Port, Sherry Skins—Duty: lu $ cent ad val. casks.$ gall.. 1 6> @ 1 70 $ lb ;ii@ Linseed, city...$ gall. 1 00 @ 1 03 7o Whale 68 @ do refined winter.. 80 @ .... .... Wines—Port 15 9$@ ...gold do Medium China thrown.... do in Palm unbleach. Calcutta Japan, superior and whale or other fish (for¬ $ cent ad val. Olive, qs (gold per case 3 90 @ 4 00 do .... Silk—Duty; free. All thrown silk. 35 $ cent. Tsatlees, No. 1@3. #fti0 50 @11 50 Taysaains, superior, No. 1 @ 10 00 @10 25 do medium,No3@4. y 0J @ 9 -0 Uanton,re-reel.Nol@2, 8 10 @ 8 50 eign fisheries,) 20 r-cash.$ ft.—> light do sperm do .... Shot—Duty: 2| cents $ ft. Drop $ ft 11J@ Buck l-i@ seed, 23 cents; olive and salad Sperm,crude .... #ft 12 @ Timothy,reaped # bus 2 £0 @ Ornary # bus 5 3 *@ Linseed, Am.clean#tce @ do Am. rough $ bus 2 40 @ 4 00 @ 4 25 51 @ 53 do .... 4 75@ .... .. .... ad val. Clover 25 00 4 75 ....@ 3 5G@ 4 50 8 50@ .... 3 00@ 4 75 Dome—N.E.Rum.cur @ .... Bourbon Whisky.eur @ .... Whisky ('n bond) 34@ 4' Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, * cent # tt>; canary, $1 $ bushel of 60 lb ; and grass seeds, 30 $ cent .... 4 *5@ . P Romieux.... do Rum—Jamaica ..do St. Croix... do Gin—Differ, brands do .... @ .. Crude Nitrate soda......gold do Selgnette .... 5 00@ 10 00 7 50 do ArzacSelgnette .... .@ 00 00 00 ....@ .... 4 90@ 10 00 4 90@ 9 (10 Hiv. Pellevoisla do Alex. Selgnette. do partially refined, 3 cents; soda, 1 cent $ lb. Refined, pure $ ft oil, in bottles or flasks, $1: burning fluid, 50 oents # gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; .... @ @ @ @ @ @ @ .. . bgs $ bush do refined and in bags. 53 00@ obi’g, do 49 00@ .... Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and - rape Sheet net .. @12 DO LeatUer—Duty: sole 35, upper 30 $ cent ad val. do do middle do • do heavy. do light Cropped.... do middle do .... do bellies 2 95 @ g. 210 ft .. 4 75@ A. Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2* cents; do West, thin Pipe and Oak, Slaughter, do. 8@ 11 Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val. City thin obi’g, in bbls. $ ton. 55 50@*6 00 (gold) 0 4 » @ 6 55 (gold) 6 4> @ 6 75 net .. @10 50 German 3 25 @ Rosin, common Spirits turp., Am. do ‘ Solar coarse.. Fine screened do $ pkg. F.F 240 ft bgs Oakum—Duty fr.,$ ft , Galena PI ch (280 lbs.) 125 00@ ... Rods,5-8@3-16inch.. 100 00@160 00 Hoop 1^2 50@i85 00 Nail Rod $ lb 9 @ 1<» Sheet, Russia 15 @ 16 Sheet, Single, Double and Treble 5 @ 7 Rails, Eng.(g’d)$ ton 52 (0@ .... do American @ b2 5u Ivorv—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime #ft 2 b7@ 3 00 East Ind Billiard Ball 3 00@ 3 25 African, Prime.. .. 2 87@ 3 00 Afrioan, 3orivel.,W.C. 1 60@ 2 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 lb ; Old Lead, 1* cents $ ft; Pipe and Sheet, .. do do do do do Leger freres ... do Cog. do Other br’ds Pellevolsln nitrate do strained andNo.2.. .3 00 @ 3 No. 1 do 3 25 @ 4 do Pale and Extra Scroll 125 0 >@t?7 UG Dvalsand Half Round 120 U0@15U 00 ft* Onondaga,com.fine bis. Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30 cents $ gadon; crude Turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 $ cent ad val. Turpent’o, suft.#280ft .... @ 3 85 Tar, Am rlci bbl 2 37 @ 3 25 Bar,English and Amer¬ 95 00@100 00 ican, Refined to do do Common 9 » 00@ .... 2* cents $ 6 Naval 92 50@105 00 Band Horse Shoe 8 18 @ Zinc e>5 l) @86 00 assorted 50 4 @ 25 @ 7 2o .. Nails—Duty: cut 1*; wrought 2*; horse shoe 2 cents $ ft. Cut,4d.@60d.$ 100 lb 5 50 @ .... Clinch 7 00 @ 7 25 Horse shoe, fd(6d)$ft 30 27 @ Horse .'•hoe, pressed... . @ 41 @ Copper Yellow metal ‘-6 @ $ ton 35 O'H&ST 00 Pig, American, No. 1.. 38 0U@ (in gold) , J. Vassal & Co., Jules Robin.... Marrette & Co. Vine Grow. Co. .. MEolasses,—See special report. $ lb. sizes 25 @ 5@ Bahia do 3ootch,No 1. Bar, Refi’d Eng&Amer Bar, Swedes, assorted Mexican Florida. $ c. * Salt—.Duty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 ft; bulk, 18 oents $ 100 ft. Turks Islands # bush. 48 @ @ Cadiz Liverpool,gr’nd# sack 1 95 @ 2 00 do fine, Ash ton’s(g’d) 2 60 @ .... do fine, Vorthlngt’s 2 85 @ 2 90 12 12 9 00 ()b (gold) 4 90@ Hennessy (gold) 4 ut @ 18 Otard, Dup. &Co.do 4 80@ 13 Pinet,Castil.&Co.do 4 75@ 17 Renault & Co. do 5 00@ 16 70 @10 00 Carolina ....• $ 100 ft 8 East India,dressed.... 6 20 12 8@ 8 @ J. & F. Martell ;....# ft $ ft. 14 15 14 @ 8@ ft. Rosewood, R. Jan. $ ft. (gold) 14 10 @ 10 @ 11 @ Mansanilla do do do 14 10 @ Nuevitas.... Mansanilla Mexican Honduras (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas Guatemala Oaraccas Pig, 40 .. do @ Carthagena, &c. Indijro—Duty free. Bengal (*old)$ft 1 05 @ 1 70 Oude (gold) 75 © 1 85 Madras (gold) 65 @ 95 Manila 30 @ Port-au-Platt, do ad val. Para, Fine 10 Brandy— prime, Lard, 7 @ ordinary logs do Port-au-Platt, -■ 17 00 @18 50 12j@ >3* Hams, 11*@ 13 Shoulders, 8 @ 9 Rice—Duty: cleaned2* cents $ ft).; paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents do St. Domingo, do Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande... # C 7 0 >@ 8 00 Ox, Amerioan 7 00@ India Rubber—Duty, 10 # cent, oents [January 11,1868, THE CHRE.ONICL 62 $1 $ gal Imported scoured, three times the duty as if imported unwashed. Amer., Sax. fleece $) lb do full bl’d Merino. do * and * Merino.. Extra, pulled 65 @ 60 45 @ 6u 45 40 @ 45 @ 6o Superfine No. 1, pulled California,unwashed... 87 @ 40 27 @ 24 @ 82 do Texas 16 @ common 23 20 29 15 @ Peruvian, unwashed @ .. Valparaiso, unwashed.. S. Amer. MestiSia, unw.. 28 @ 80 28 @ 82 do common, w... Entre Rios, washed 8. American Cordova .. @ @ African, unwashed do washed .. 34 @ 14 @ .... Mexican,unwashed.... Smyrna, unwashed .... do .. 37 18 8o @ 40 1? @ 26 @ 19 yo 45 85 @ washed Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 60 loO fts.; sheets 2* cents $ ft. Sheet $ ft 11 @ 11* t’reightsTo Liverpool: Cotton $ ft Flour # bbl. d.^ a. a. 6-16@ @2 .. Petroleum @5 Heavy goods.. ton 20 @ @40 * 6 fi ... Oil *0 Corn, b’k& bags$ bus. Wheat, bulk and bags Beef $ tee. Pork.. $ bbl. @ 6* .. @ 6* ..@40 ..@30 0 .. To London : Heavy goods. ..$ ton .. Oil Flour .. # bbl. @22 6 @85 0 @26 @56 Petroleum Beef # tee. .. @4 6 Pork # bbl. ..@3 0 Wheat.. $ bush. 6* . @ Corn @ 6 To Glasgow (By Steam) : Flour ^ bbl. ..@30 Wheat $ bush. .. @ 8 Corn,bulk and bags.. .. Petroleum .. (sail)^ bbl. Heavy goods..$ ton. Oil..... Beef Pork. $ tea. .. . # bbl. To Havbx: Cotton $ft Beef and pork.. $ bbl. Measmem. g’da.# ton . @ 8 @5 6 @40 0 @40 0 @6 0 @ .... $ $ 1@ .. @ jO 00 @ .. .. 6 @ 6 0 Petroleum 5 Lard, tallow, out m t V ft eto lui, pot and pearl 8 00 @10 00 *@ ^ January 11, 1868.J Commercial Cards. Commercial Cards. Gilead A. Smith, 15 LANGHAM RAILROAD PLACE, LONDON, Railroad Bonds and U.S. and other Americrn Securi ies negotiated, and Credit and Exchange provided for , Merchants, AUGUSTINE STREET, NEW YORK. Cash Advances made on LIBERAL OF CHINA AND JAPAN. ADVANCES MADE ON FRIENDS IN MA 192 FRONT Neill, Bros., & Co., Railroad Iron, 134 PEARL Financial. RY-LAWS J- M. Cummings Sc Co., FOR Roads, DISTILLERS AND FOR SALE BY Street COMMISSION W. HOPKINS Sc Co., 58 BROAD Broadway. MERCHANTS, STREET, NEW YORK, Offer for sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class Dis¬ tilleries, Kentucky. Omnibuses. Cars, C. Holt & STEPHENSON Sc CO., JOHN COMMISSION Co., MERCHANTS, Also MORA IRON. eral J. C. Johnson. Daniel H. Commission OFFICE AND WAREHOUSES: TION 292 PEARL STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 67 WALL or Exchanged for coin. cabin. A limited quantity of merchandise will be conveyed under through bill of lading. For further information, application to be made to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall st Have Removed to 216 CHURCH STREET. Wm. G. Watson Sc Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William st. New Y Son, PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S No. 299 f THROUGH LINE AND To BROADWAY, NEW YORK. WORKS THE nowned SINGER SEWING ENGINE AND MILL MANUFACTURERS. Particular attention is called to our IMPROVED CIRCULAR SAW MILL. month (except when those dates fall on on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. of the world re¬ DECEMBER MACHINES, for’family use and manufacturing , list of every BEND Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with John Graham, steamers for South Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for Central American Ports. Those oi 1st touch at Man¬ zanillo. Baggage cnecxed through. Manufacturer of It Is superior to all others in strength, durability and simplicity, will cut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumber day. HEED’S PATENT GOLD PREMIUM WHEAT AND CORN MILLS. Built of solid French Burr Rock. Particular attention patronag WOVEN CORSETS, SKIRT MATERI¬ LACE, COTTON YARNS, &c., STREET, NEW YORK One hundred pound allowed each adult. ^ An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and attendance free. For passage tickets or further information, appl at the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf,f ©ot ALS, WEBBINGS, BINDINGS BED 234 CHURCH : 1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden Citt. 11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with Montana ?utn—a rizona, connecting with Sacramento. purposes. Branches FORA^mCULAROUghOUt tb0 civillze<* world» ER, FOOT o ) Canal street, at 1 o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, an Sunday, and then NEW YORK. Proprietors and Manufacturers California, And Carrying the Unit States M all. LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH I PATKR80N, N. J. SingerManufacturingCo. BROADWAY, CINCINNATI,, ©., the newly-discovered gold vants, one-half fare; female do., three-quarters faremen servants berthed forward, women do., in ladies MACHINE TWIST SEWING SILKS, ESTABLISHED IN 1826. run to J. P. & E. Westhead &Co, new. A. B. Holabird & Co Fares payable in United States gold region of Hokitika, New Zealand. Children under three years, free; under eight years quarter fare ; under twelve years, half-fare ; male ser, 458 yen to Southern for second class. The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward cabins of the Australian steamer: after cabin, latter REMOVAL. SUPERIOR STREET, NEW YORK, per Aspinwall (Colon) on the 11th of each month First and second class passengers will be conveyed under through ticket at the following rates: From New York to ports in New Zealand, or to Sydney or Melbourne, $346 to $364 for first class, and $218 to $248 $25 additional. NO. 27 MAIN ST., CINCINNATI, O. FOREIGN Sc AMERICAN RAILROAD Old Rails Re-rolled SIA via PANAMA. for MANUFACTURERS OF IRON, OLD AND NEW, Pig, Scrap Iron and other Metals, Lo¬ comotives, Railroad CJiairs Ac Spikes, NEW- AND AUSTRALA¬ The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of each month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬ tralian Colonies, connecting with the steamer of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving New-York PEARL STREET, NEW YORK Dana, COMMUNICA¬ BETWEEN YORK Merchant,—United States METALS. F. & F. A. Steamship Companies. Special steamers J. Pope & Bro. will remain closed from this STEAM Cano, Wright Sc Co., STREET, NEW YOKK. Thomas Books Faj,ls CINCINNATI. , 15 GOLD The Transfer Cotton, Flour, Grain and Provisions. Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c. and after January 2, 1868. The transfer day until the morning of Saturday, January 4,1868. WM. L. JENKINS, Cashier. New York, December 20,1867. Bonded Warehouse. Morris, Tasker Sc Co., Works, Philadelphia. J. N. on Carpenter, NOS. 263 & 265 WEST Pascal Iron BANK. Thursday, January 8,1868. Reier by permission to Caldwell & Morris, New York. Street, Boston. Manufacturers of Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street Co., BUYERS, Memphis, Tenn. W. J ESSOP Sc SONS. Leufsta, in Sweden, 29th April. 1867. CARL EMANUEL DE GEER, Proprietor. WM. JESSOP & SONS, in referring to the above notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers ot, Iron and Steel, that they are prepared to receive orders for tliis Iron, and for Blister and Extra Cast Steel made from the Iron, at their establishments. Nos. 91 & 93 John Street, New York, and Nos. 133 & ^Fed¬ NATIONAL BANK OF AMERICA. DIVIDEND.—The President and Directors of the Bank of America have this day declared a dividend of FIVE Per Cent., for the current.six months, free from all tax, payable to the Stockholders on and after COTTON request the special attention of the THE CENTRAL books will be closed at 3 P.M. on the 20th Instant, and reopened »n the morning of January 2d, next. W. H. SANFORD, Cashier, Agents for G. Falls & G. Falls. And to which I trade. Companv.in the City of New York, and the polls shall remain open from 12 A.M. until 4 P.M. At the annual Election of ? rusteesthe Stockholders shall vote by ballot, and each stockholder shall be en¬ titled to one vote for every share of stock then stand¬ ing In his or her name on the books of the Company, for Thirty (30) days prior to said election, ana may vote in person or by proxy in writing, duly signed and witnessed, and a plurality of votes shall dsterrnine the choice of Trustees. C. B. BOSTWICK, Secretary. payable Oder to Jobbers only. I beg to announce that I have this day entered into a contract wfth Messrs. W. Jessop & Sons, of Sheilield for the whole Annual Make of the abov* Iron, which in future, will be stamped Mt^LEUFSTA, lished pursuant to the requirements of Statute. The affairs of the Company shall be managed by a Board of Trustees, consisting of FIVE (5) members. This Board shall be elected annually by ballot, on the Monday succeeding tne first Sunday in February of each year, by the Stockholders, at the office of the day declared a Dividend of FIVE (5) Per Cent, out of the earnings of the past six months, free of all taxes, COTTON. MACHINE AND SEWING SILK, BUTTON-HOLE TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C. DANNE- HARDAWAY 119 CHAMBERS STREET. NOTICE TO THE CONSUMERS OF THE SWEDISH THE Agents for the Glasgow Thread Company’s SPOOL GENUINE OF BOLT, SPIKE AND RIVET MANUFACTURING COMPANY, regulating the Eleetion of Trustees, Pub¬ Of the City of New York, New York, December 19, 1867.—The Board of Directors of this Bank have this MANUFACTURERS. New York. USE, STREET, NEW YORK. STREET. AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, 69 & 71 UFACTURERS OF CORDAGE FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC HAMBURG. Steam and Street * ,r LIVER¬ POOL HAVRE AND at the Continental Bankers. S. Henry Lawrence & Sons, CONSIGNMENTS OF COTTON TO OUR HEARD Sc CO. Consignments Continent. Consignments solicited on the usual terms of any of the staples. Special Counting and Reception Rooms available for Americans in London, with the facilities usually found Co., AGENTS FOR General Commission 40 BROAD & 28 State Street, Boston, AND AND METALS. or Everett COTTON & TOBACCO FACTORS IRON, Cards. Commercial Norton, Slaughter & Co., W.’ BESSEMER RAILS, STEEL TYRES, U. S. 6S THE CHRONICLE. ! Canal street, North River, New Tor*. F. R. BAFT Agen) THE CHRONICLE. Commercial Cards, S. H. Pearce & No. 353 Commercial Co., BROADWAY, CHINA BILKS, WASHINGTON Silk, MILTON superior finish, and silk, which It equals In CO., CO., Patent Uevernlble Paper Collars. invented. Woolen George Pearce & Co., YORK. W. D. Simonton. Silk Fancy Cassimeres, IMPORTERS Emb's, COMMISSION AND MERCHANTS, British Linen Handk’f*, Goods, Goods, White Irish and Scotch John O’Neill & Sons, Linens, Ac., A, 150 & 152 DUANE STREET, NEW TORE. MANUFACTURERS OF Sewing Silks, (late of Becar, Napier & Co.) Agent for S. Courtauld A Co.’s ENGLISH CRAPES, MILLS AT PATERSON, N. J. And importer of Linen Smith, NATIONAL uary 8,1868. The Transfer date until January 2. SINK. Books will be closed from JOHN PARKER, Cashier. Offers CO., No. 11, Wall Street, New York, December 11,1867.— The Board of Directors have this day declared a SemiAnnual Dividend of FIVE Per Cant., free of Govern¬ ment tax, payable on and after January 2,1*68. JAMES GILMORE, Secretary. ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD CO. New York, December 16; 1E67.—The Beard of Direc¬ tors of this Company have dec nred a Dividend of FIVE Per Cent, in cash, free of Government tax, to be paid on the first day of r ebruary next, to the 'Hold¬ ers of the full-paid shares registered, upon the books of the Company cn the 18th clay of January next. Tae transfer-books to be ciosed from the I8ib day of Janu¬ ary until the 5th day of February next. THOMAS E. WALKER, Treasurer. TRADESMEN’S a new NATIONAL BANS*. York, December 20, 1867.—A Dividend of SIX (6) Per Cent., free from Government tax will be paid on and after January 2.186S. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. New OFFICE OF THE Tontine HOSIERY and RAILROAD COMPANY, Building, 88 Wall street, New York, Decem¬ have this GOODS, Stock of the above at 864 BROADWAY' COP.NER FRANKLIN STREET. day declared a Dividend of SIX (6; Per Cent., out of the earnings of the road for the three months ending 21st Instant, pavable to the stockhold¬ ers or their legal representatives, on and after the 6th January next. Transfer Book9 will be closed on the afternoon of the 26th and reopened on the morning of the 8th SON, BELFAST, IRELAND. PHFMX New York, December 28, 1867.—The Directors of this Bank have this day declared a Dividend of FOUR (4) Per Cent. IVee from Tax, payable on and after Jan¬ ber 24, 1867.-^43d dividend.—The Board of Directors MEN’S FURNISHING Linen Manufacturers and Bleachers CCTTING, 5-20s, 10-4Os, and T-30s PANAMA HANDKERCHIEFS, Agents for WILLIAM KIRK & IJ.S. Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red and Lawn PLACE, NEW YORK. 33 PARK Napier D. Alexander Embroidery, Organzlne, and Tram. CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK. Anderson & SMITH A BANKERS, NO. 16 WALL STREET. OFFICE OF THE Dress Brltisli and Continental. 84 JAMESON, Staple, And Fancy Machine Twist currency. HAMILTON FIRE INSURANCE Lindsay, Chittick & Co., Goods, the Bonds, and oiler them at 95 and accrued OFFICE OF THE 70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK, Importer* of Gold. the authorized Agents for Mixtures, Beavers. f Interest, In Co., 108 A 200 CHURCH ST., NEW W. W- Ccffjn, Trea*. Laces and Sale of these are CONVERTED INTO WATER BONDS, Globe Agents for the sale of the White The subscribers CO., MILLS, Non. 43 A 45 WHITE STREET. appearance amd durability. ever P. r Cent- Bonds, Principal and Interest Payable VICTORY MANUF. Our “ IMITATION ” has a very economloal collar Twenty-Year Six In ClIICOPEE MANUF. Imitation Oiled Silk. • most St. Louis Water Bonds. (HILLS* BURLINGTON WOOLEN SILK AND COTTON HANDKERCHIEFS, oats hut half as much as real Financial. AGENTS FOR and Manufacturer* of Oiled Cards. E. R. Mudge, Sawy er&Co. Importers of EUROPEAN AND [January 11, 18'8 proximo. Oscar Delisle & IMPORTERS HENRY SMITH, Treasurer. Co., BANKING HOUSE OF •F J. & P. Coats’ SIX-CORD BEST CABLED French Dress , A HUGH an incorporated Bank. Government Securities Bought and Sold at Market Rates. We also execute orders for Purchase and Sale of Stocks, Bonds and as Machine Edgings, Swiss A French White Goods. Real Brussels SOLE AGENTS IN NEW YORK. Imitation No. 108 Duane Street. Gihon, 73 LEONARD Importers & Commission Merchants, Laces, Byrd & Hall, UMBRELLAS AND In full assortment for the Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN Agents for the sale of LINENS WHITE BURLAPS, BAGGING, PLAY SAIL CLARK, Jr. Sc CO’S. End, Glasgow. 18 UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE SEWING. DUCK, &U THOS. BUSSELL, Solo Agent, II CHAMBERS STREET, N.Y. Strachan & Malcomson, FOR AND SCOTCH All Widths and LINENS, Large Stock always on hand. THEODORE POLHEMUS A CO MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS. 59 Langley & Co., COMMISSION Broad Wm. MERCHANTS COTTON AND WOOLEN GOODS. Street, corner of Beaver Thompson & Co., Importers of FSB AMERICAN IRISH STREET, NEW TORE. No, 19 Broad Street. LINENCAMB’C No. 185 Church Benedict’s Time Fine Watches ! Jewelry and Silver Ware, Articles Suitable for Wedding Pie-eute and Silver Weddings. Benedict UP-TOWN, .691 Bros., BROADWAY, Between Amity and Fourth Streets. BENEDICT BROS., Jewellers, 171 HANDK’FS, AC. Street, New Work Broadway. BENEDICT BROS., Brooklyn. 234 Fulton St, Sole Agents for the Remontolr Church Clocks. agents for the American Waltham Watches. jagr* The ** Benedict’s Also; Time Watch” having proved an exact time-keeper, we confidently recommend It to those wishing to keep the correct time, and in order to Introduce it throughout the country, we offer to send it by express at our own expense. DeLolme Benedict, Agent fortbe Na¬ tional Watelt Company, office No. 691 Broadway, BENEDICT’S TIME TABLE OFFICE ERTY STREET. LINENS, From Numerous Mills. 17 * 19 WHITE Weights. A 40 Murray Street, New York. Wm. C. Duck, Cotton IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS' AGENTS RISH STREET, NEW YORK. Mile GOODS. LINEN PARASOLS, JOHN AC Offices To Let, . Spool Cotton. WILLIAM GinON & SONS’ TURNER BROTHERS. Commission. On BROADWAY, BROAD and NEW Streets, near WALL. Apply to EDWARD MATTHEWS. Manufacturers of Jobbing and Clothing Trade* on STREET, NEW YORK. 42 & 44 MURRAY STREET. GOODS, Gold Laces, Corsets, Ac. IRISH & SCOTCH LINEN STREET, Corner of Pine, Opposite U. S. Treasury. We receive Deposits and make Collections, the same Lace Cnrtalns. AUCHINCLOSS, Brand & BROTHERS, NO. 14 NASSAU Muslin Draperies, Thread. JOHN TURNER Goods, NO. 95 LIB¬ Agents for Isaac Reed A Son’s Gold Fountain Pen •which writes four pages with one dip.