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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-

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■2*<a
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t- OS

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d :
H :

•

•

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•

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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

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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.