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giwto’ fcctte, ^ommewM ?itue& Jlatfumy Ponitov, amt |n$m*anc^ §imml A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. YOL. 4. SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1867. Bankers and Brokers. W. H. Bankers and Brokers. Whittingham, Satterlee & No.'S Broad Street, EXPRESS,- BAN K ERS, CORNER'OF PINE AND NASSAU STS., 70 BROADWAY & 15 NEW STREET. t TELEGRAPH, RAILROAD, - Bankers and Brokers. Co., Duncan, Sherman & Co., ’ MINING, NO. 81. 1 AND ALL OTHER STOCKS, BONDS AND GOLD Bought ami Sold CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS STOCKS AND BONDS Commission. on Quotations and sales lists furnished daily on appli cation. Orders promptiy executed. •g C. A. Graham, BANKER AND 3 BROAD BOUGHT AND SOLD ON •• GOVERNMENT BROKER, Southern Bills on London and NO. 11 ALL a STREET, Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT s- ECURITI fc^S, GOL D, &c. Orders for purchase and sale of Stocks. Bonds and Gold promptly execated. TYLER, CLLMANN A CO., Chicago. Riker & NO. 6 NEW STREET 89 and BROADWAY. NEW YORK. , References * Fisk 3a Hatch. N. Y. Jay Cooke & Co., N. Y. Phenix National Bank. SOUTHERN BANK Edwin BANKER 80 Gilliss, Harney •& Co., NOTES* Q. Bell, AND ?ROAD STREET. BROKER, ALL UNITE» STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, HANKERS others, and allow inierett on daily balances, subject to Sight draft. Itfiake collections o«» favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. and Collections. BANKERS, No. 18 NEW STREET, NEW YORK. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Collections made on aU accessible Southern DEALERS STREET, NEW YORK. IN OTHER GOVERNMENT AND SECURITIES. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cnrren* subject to check at sight, and particular utten iongi * en to accounts of country banks and bankers. cv, issues of 6 6 6 6 5 7 6 STOCKS Per Cent Bonds of 1881, Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1S62, “ “ 1861, “ “ ' 1865, Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, Per Cent Currency Certificates. . - c 2d, & 3d series Bounty Loan. LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS Compound Interest 1865 Notes of 18G4 & Bought and Sold. VERMILYE Sc CO. NO. Bonds and Loans for Railroad for Iron or Steel Rails, Cos*, vilways. Scott Haslett McKim. Robt. McKim. Jno. A. McKra. on LEAVEN W Kerr The Marine J_ Young Scammon STOCKS, BONDS, ....Manager. General Ranking1 and Collections promptly attended to. VVm. H. Catlin. . NORTH-WESTERN STATES bank op Geo. C. Smith & 48 LASELLE AND GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, President. Robert Reid AND GOLD. NO. 27 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Bought and Sold on Commission Nos. 32 New Street & 36 Broad Street, New York. Refer to JAY COOKE & CO., Bankers, New York. Company OF CHICAGO. BROKERS IN Morgan, Lathrop & Co., Co., Lyman Fcott. deposits subject to draft at T. A. Lathkop. \ Sc ORTH, KANSAS. Lucien Scott. Gelston & Bussing, GOLD, Scott, BANKERS. places. T. M..Moroan. Co., ' sigat, and special attention given to orders from other 1 & • Late McKim, Bros. & Co., BYNKFR*, Interest allowed SCRIBE, PARIS AND Western Bankers. and undertake all business connected with \Z • No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit for Travelers in all portsof Europe, etc., otc. Also Ocmnrercial Credits. Locomotives, Cars, etc., 7 RUE 1 BROADWAY. Contract STOCKS, STATES INCLUDING points. John Bloodgood & Co., 22 WILLIAM ‘ Negotiate „ Harrison, Goddin & Appersoo, Bankers and Brokers, UNITED Street. New York. hand for immediate delivery a AMERICAN 84 . Harrison, Garth & Co., on MERCHANTS, G2 WALL STREET. Southern Co., Jesup & Company, John Munroe & Co., L BANKERS, M. K. In Southern Securities and Bank Bills. BROADWAY & 6 NEW STREET, New York. & New YGrk State 7 per cent. Buy and Sell at Market Rates. BANKERS AND F. A. Johnson, Jr Formerly Cashier 1st Nat. Batik, Glens Falls, N.Y., No. 44 Wall Keep constantly Collections made in all parts of the United States and British America. [ Late with Fisk & ftatch* ‘ * COMMERCIAL CREDITS, For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, South America, and the United States. STREET, *NEW YORK, And Dealer In all Classes of Govern¬ ment Securities and Gold. STOCKS, BANKERS GOVERNMENT SECURI¬ TIES, GOLD, &c. No. 11 WALL STREET, ^ world: also, Watkins, BANKERS, AND DEALERS IN Two doors 'rom New S reet. BROAD NO. 24 Hatch, Foote, & Co., C‘ States, available in all the principal cities of the BANKERS. RANKER, Co., BROKERS IN MINING S. Mobile. Tyler, Wrenn & Co., BANKERS, 18 OF CREDIT, of Travelers abroad and in the United Vermilye L. Paris, Memphis, New Orleans and NO. SECURITIES, use ALL VARIETIES. DEALER IN on COMMISSION, STREET, NEW YORK, Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Bill-1 For the • - Bro., ST., CHICAGO, (Lake Bank of Montreal.) Special attention given to collections Draw on—Drexel, Winthrop & Co., and Winslow, Lanier & Co., New York; Drexel & Co., Philadel¬ phia, and Bank of Montreal, Canada. Washington. National Bank. Fourth National $5,000,000 Capital NASSAU STREET, N. E. COR. PINE STREET. S09 & Sll Collections made for Dealers on eep best terms. Otters ‘-11S Bondsand Country accounts received on terms rnos Osgood Welsh, descriptions ot Government Wii.i.iam Joseph and Canadas. President. Cashier. WILLIAM II. SANFORD, Designated Depository of the Government. Bank and Dealers’Accounts solicited. D. L. ROSS, President. J. ri. Stout, Cashier. ALSO S',0r0,000 400,060 ,v POWELL, GREEN & CO. Bankers Commission 8c MERCHANTS, -.v BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, BOrids and Governments bought and sold "" exclusively on Goin/nission. Wilson, Callaway & BANKERS AND Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Butler, ' „ | j Office in New U. MAURY. R. Westervelt, Jones & BROKERS, Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold, bought and sold on BANKERS & Commission. COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS AND CURRENCY OF GOLD NEGOTIATED. 14 BROAD STREETS. NOS. 12 NEW A 8c Co., BANKERS, STREET, N. Y GOVERNMENT SECURITIES. AND OTHER STOCKS, BONDS, £c., bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only. Deposits received subject to check at sight, as NO. 16 WALL DEWITT C. LAWRENCE, York Stock Exchange. Memoer New York No. 71 Broadway. JA-. I.. MiUltY. T II E Cecil, Rawson & Co. STREET, N.Y. Stocks, BOUGHT AND SOLD and §1,<>0(MJ00. Surplus Fund, $250,000. Wort functor!. L, Bishop, William. A Frazer. Robe it Miiclivli, A. 'S Direct* rs.—Jchn W. Kills, l cv is B. Harrison, ’William Glenn. R. M. Woods, James Winslow. i commission. Deposits received and Collections made on accessible points in the United States. N. Y. Correspondent, Yermilye & Co. bought and sold on Gilmore, Dunlap 8c Co., jas. M. Muldon Mobile, Ain. 8c Sons, St,, 108 Francis Dealer- m Foretell and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬ ernment Securities. Bonds, Gold and ivLer. Pr.>m}.i attention given to Collections Wrd 110 A Fourth *:ruet, No. 52 St. References; B 'bcock Bros & Co., Bankers. Dealers in GOLD. | New York. O, C1 \ C i N N A i. 1 SILVER, UN CURRENT B^NK • , • - NOTES, and all kinds of I GOVERNMENT BONDS, ' ■ accessible points COLLECTIONS MADE at all | inrl remitted for on day of payment. j - • ’ Checks on UNION BANK OF LONDON. FOR SALE. J T. H. McMahan 8c Co. H. J. Rogers, GALVESTON, TEXAS. Special attention given to Collections of all kind's, having prompt and reliable correspondents at all ac¬ cessible points in the State, and Geo. T. Clark, Ca«b1er. NATIONAL of Exchange. B. Chaffee, Pres. V. Pres. .FIRST COMMISSION MERCHANTS and Dealer* in Domestic and Foreign BA ft' K Denver, DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY Antho* Ized Capital - ft-aid In Capital Transact a General Banking Blake and F. Sts. DEN VIE R National Park Bank, Ilowes & Macy, and Spofford, Tileston & Co., New York. Second National Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel Si Co. and D. S. Stetson & Co., Philadelphia. T. F. OF TTTE U. - - S. ' $500,000 §200,000 business corner of CeLORADb. ON COMMISSIuN. Henry De Coppet. . BANKING MOUSE OF . : Charles D. Carr 8c Co., BROKERS, AND AUGUSTA G A Given, 33 BROAD j. , PROMPTLY REMITTED FOR. Co., Padu ah, Ky. f M. Flournoy, Pres’t Commercial Bank of Ky. N. S. Ray, late Cash’r Com’i B’kof Ky., Lebanon, Ky and Job. E. Elder & Goodwin. St. Louis. Fowler, Stanard <fc Co, Mobile. Pike, Yaneyre & Bro., New Orleans. Drake- Kleiuwrrth& Cohen, Lou¬ don and Liverpool. Jones 8c Co., STREET, NEW YORK. Ray, Given 8cNEW OIICo., 43 CAROXBELET ST., LEA/s'S. purchase or sale of Government Stocks, Bond*, and Gold, promptly executed. - • Interest allowed on Deposits, subject to cheques Orders for the Securities, Conner 8c Wilson, No. 5 Broad _ Street, Charleston, S. C., BANKERS <fc Securities, D. A. Given, of Watts, Given & D. W. Jones, of Bovle C’o., Ky. Thirkieldjfc Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank DEALERS Especial attention paid to Collections. Reler to Duncan, Br ennan & Co., New York ; Drexel & Co., Pniiadelphia; Tin Franklin Bank, and Johnston Bros Baltimore; R. II. M utrv & Co., Richmond, Va., Charles D. Carr & Co. Augusta, Gai , John H. Jacquelol all points WEST end SOUTH, promptly remitted for. Capital Mock, Collections made on BROKERS IN FOREIGN & DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE, BANK NOTES, STOCKS. AND B NDS. Bonds, Gold, and Government Cincinnati. of RICHMOND, VA. Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State. City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, Ac , COLLECTIONS Jacquelin 8c De Coppet, NO. 26 NEW BANK FIRS V N AT I O N A L ROa’T T. BROOKE MAIN ST., BANKERS CYRUS J. LAWRENCE, JOHN R. CECIL. late Bntler, WM. A. HALSTUD. V.-P/ect. REFER TO Brothers with Banks. Lewis. Worthing rt n, ladder. J.W. Flits, T'icst. REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. Lawrence Railroad Western Bankers, 'The liuRE Stanwood. BANKERS AND all HENRY SATIES JAMES BECK, JAMFT3 A. DU FEE, II. Maury 8c Co., No. 1014 STATE STREET, BOSTON. No. 22 B. Henry Swui «fc Co.; II, Bank of Republic ; Claflin & Co ROP.’T BROKERS, STOCK York. Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York. No. 44 Broad Street, N. V. E. II. Buikly & "C’o., Brokers, New York. Bvrd & Hall, New Yo»k. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold Martin. Bates & Co. Merchants, New York. bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬ Geo. D. II. Gillespie, late Wolff* Gilkc-pi . chants, bankers, and others allowed 4 per cent on deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cot¬ Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & Hnrlbert. ton, Tobacco, See., consigned to ourselves or to our ( Home Insurance Company o:- New York. correspondents, Messrs. J. K. GILL1AT & CO., of ; New York Life Insurance Company. Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford. Liverpool. Underwriters Agency Xov Yo k, Ch ries Wal.-h. Pro ident Bank of Mobile. Henry A Schroeder. Pres. Son thern Bank of Ala. PARIS, , Beck 8c Sayies,7 uUpee 5 I . References in New York: /—Duncan Sherman A Co; Hi Frothingham, Esq., Pres't. Union Trust Co.; Moses Taylor. Esq.; R. H.-Lowry, Esq.,' Pres t BANK. NATIONAL BROADWAY, NEW YORK. RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. , A: C O ISSUE j I. Tradesmens ! The 88 Bank. Commercial Credits lor Hie purchase of Mor’clmn P. Mumford, C shier, | Jlse in England and the Continent. Travellers’ Late of the Philadelphia National Bank. Credits for the use of Travellers abroad. Bankers. New ers ' and JOHN MINKOE COMMISSION MERCHANT, GALVESTON, TEXAS. (Established in 1847 ) . 3 , Collection* prornpt'y attended to and remitted for by Sight Drafts on Messrs. Duncan, Sherman & Co., BROADWAY. No. 240 CJ. EXCHANGE ON LONDON BILLS OF Rhawu. , STATE STREET. ll4 :ER BANKER AND $1,000,0; 0. Capital * I Page, Richardson & Co BOSTON, Hoyt, IT. Khawn, President, Late Cashier of the Ctntral National George Tenth National Bank. CAPITAL URPLUS Frederic A. ' WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, 291 W: Hi am Ervien, WMiam II Correspondents. made in all parts of the United State Eastern Bankers. Edward B, Orne„ favorable to our Collections all times DIRECTORS: Benjamin Row land, Jr., Samuel A. Bispbam, with regard to Government loans cueeiYtiiiy furnished. Full information at Joseph T. Bailey, Nathan Ililies, ;^a,00310U0. Has tor sate all government. and liberal terms. Hankers on BROADWAY. Capital Bank* to services attention to bus ness connected several departments of the ciai with the $500,000 its Pres’t. Government Depository and Financial Agent of the United State.. We huv and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, «uti iv<‘ PHILADELPHIA, National Bank, Central OF WASHINGTON, H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.), WM. S. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. CHESTNUT STREET, Capital - NATION A L RANK FIRST Republic, Bank of the Toe ns for sale. All the Government Bankers. Southern Southern Bankers. Bankers and Brokers. City [January 12, 1867, THE CHRONICLE. 34 at sight. Special attention given to the Foreign Exchange Business. Given. Jone< & Co. are prepared to draw Sterling Bills, at sight or sixty day*, on the Bank of Liverpool, in s> ms to suit purchasers. The i\ew Orleans House will make Collect Otis in that City and at all accessible points 8outh. and remit on ihe day of payment. We refer to Ba»k of America Bank < f State of New York, New to aBy of the Kentucky Banks. aLd National York City, and January 12, 1867.] THE CHRONICLE. Financial. QUARTEKLY Financial. R E PORT QUARTERLY OF THE CONDITION OF THE New York-, OF THE MORNiNG OP THE RESOURCES: and Bills discounted and loans..$1,650,730 20 indebtedness of Directors....$78,741 tlie O Fir^tNorsda^ ol J iiuiary, 1887. 81 Overdrafts 3,918 35 6,022 87 509 12 270,907 03 Real Estate Current Expenses Oa*h Items (including revenue stamps). Super ritendent of bank Department, First lionday of -aiiuarv, 186'. RESOURCES: Notes and Bills discount¬ ' ed $7,6S3,000 35 In«!eb edness of directors -259,000 00—f 7.942 000 35 Oveidn»f:s 3’-68 13 Banking-house Current Bonds 33,960 00 51,308 41 288,816 i0 270,‘ 00 00 1,204 95 and Mortgages Cap'll Stock paid in $450,000 00 Surplus Fund 190,000 00 Cir ulating Notes received from Comptroller . i $132,500 (0 Compound Interest Les? amount on hand 3,315 00 outstanding. 129,185 00 1,687,486 82 19,517 90 14,805 30 Individual Deposits unpaid Due National Banks Due to other banks and hankers State Bank circulation outstanding — 120,508 95 4,565 00 — '*00 79 4>19 51 6.804 57- $ Discount Interest FroUt and loss Uncollected Checks.. ... $2,867,252 SO I, O. H. Schreinfr, Cashier of “the Chatham National Bank of New Yon.,” do solemnly sw. ar that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge aud beliet. O. H. SCHREINER, Cashier. State of New York, County of Nio York.- Sworn to and subscribed before me, this 7th day ot Janu¬ ary, 1867. Wa. H. Brown, Commissioner of Deeds. [5 cent Int. Rev. Samip cancelled.] . _ . QUARTERLY REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE N THE MORNING OP THE ay of January, Dr.— rtESOuR ES : Notes and Bids discounted Suspended D bt. Indebtedness of Directors. Exchanges 70,000 00 :— 24,472 95 3,324]573 ... 83 35,566 29 5,7lS 47 ' 300,000 00 • 200,000 00 131,000 CO hand in Circulat- * ing Notes of other Na on $47,464 00 hand in Circulat- ing.Notes of State Bauks 2,119 00 Specie Other lawful money • Capital Stock paid in Surplus Fund . , — 798,666 13 $7,640,62S C6 Cr.—LIABILITIES: . .. $600,000 00 400,000 00 Circulating Notes receivedfrom Comptroller $260,000 00 Less amount on hand belief. Di-couut 192,000 00 5,706,632 01 18,596 97 908 00 397,513 49 223,412 22 $28,807 17 .., Exchanges.. Iuterest Profit and Loss ... - 581 74 36,982 18 35,194 28 _ State of A eiv York, County of JS civ Yors ;—r?worn to'and subscribed before me, thL dav of January 1867. Robert Owen, Notary Pub ic. QUARTERLY National Mechanics’ Association York, In tbe State Fi»st Monday of of New Overdrafts., 139 58 Current expenses $S,1S6 01 Pi emiums 7,702 29— Cash items: including revenue stamus and checks, and notes on City banks in exchanges Due from National bauks Due from other banks and bankers... U. S. bonds deposited with U S. Treas¬ .. to secure circulating notes Specie Fractional currency.. Bonds and mortgages Cr.-LIABILITIES. State of New York, County of New York.—I, Nicholas F Palmer, Cashier of “ The Leather Manufacturers’ National Bank of New York,” do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. Nicholas F. Palmer, Cashier. Sworn to and subscribed before me this seventh day of January, 1867. Frederic Bell, Notary Public, 58 Wall st. 107,000 00 23.430 00 592,563 63 2,112 57 $309,500 00 2,341 00 Individual deposits $1,018,133 10 Uncollected < hecks 3,243,351 36Due National hanks Due to banks and bankers State bank circulation outstanding... discount $4,264 30 71 62 13,506 64 3,493 83- « Interest Profit and loss State of 10,0S7 29 $500,00-9 00 1 0,135 16 outstanding Dividends unpaid 41.953 65 $5,415,298 33 Capital stock paid in surplus fund Circulating notes received from Comp- .. 3,262.225 47 $834 66 hand , OF 4,266,484 46 117,026 10 57,972 15 12,119 00 annually. first January an-1 July, Free from Gov¬ ernment Tax, in the City of New Yore. Principal payable in 1892. The road runs through one rf the best portions of the State, and has been completed to St. Croud, r ghtv miles, at an ex- en-e of over $3,000,000. THESE BONDS ARE ONLY $10,OCX) PER MILE. G jvemment Bonds at the hi. he-t market price will he received in payment. For p ntieulars apply to TURNER BROTHERS, Banker-. Co ner Nassau and Pine Sts., New York. 14»U DIVIDEND—STANDARD FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, Office No. 11 Wail Street, New York. January 8,1807. A SemiAn nal Dividend of FIvE PER CENT., Free of Government Tax, ble on demand. has this day been declared, paya¬ WILLIAM M. ST. JOHN, Secretary. SEVEN PER CENT. FIRST GAGE liOMDS, OF THE North MORT¬ v Missouri Rail¬ Company. We offer for sale the Seven Per Cent. First Mort gage Bonds of the North Missouri Railroad Com panv, having thirty years to tun. Coupons paya¬ ble in New York on'January 1 and July 1, in each accepting the agency for sale of these bonds, we made careful inquiry into the condition and prospects of the road, which was examined bj Mr. Win. Milnor Roberts and others, on our behalf, and their highly satisfactory report enables us to rej commend the bonds as first-class securities, aud safe and judicious investment. The proceeds of these bonds ($6,000,000 in all)wi be used in extending a road, already completed lrO miles into North Missouri, to the Iowa State line, where it is to connect with the railroads of Iowa, and also westward to the junction with the Pacific Railroad (at Leavenworth) and other railroads lead¬ ing up the Missouri River, so that the mortgage of $5,000,000 will cover a complete and well-stocked road of 889 miles in length, costing at least $10,000,- 000. with a net annual revenue after the first year of over $1,500,000,. or a sum nearly four times be¬ yond the amount needed to pay tlie interest ou these bonds, the income of the road of course, increasing every year. The Railroad connects the great City of St Louis with its 200,000 inhabitants, not only with tbe rich portions of Missouri, but with the States ot Kau aud Iowa aud the great Pacific Railroads. rst 500,000 have been sold at 80 cents,.and the remainder are how offered at -5 cents. At thi9 rate sas they yield nearly 8X per cent, income, and add 20 cent, to principal at maturity. Any further inquiries will be answered a o7* per JAY COOKE & CO. 21,336 39 3,060 07 knowledge and belief. F. CHANDLER, Cashier. this 7th day of Wm. T. Farnham, Notary Public, me road office. I, F. CHANDLER, Cashier of “ The Nation i Mechanics’ Banking Association of New York,” do so emnly swear that the above statement is true, to January, 1867. [5 cent Stamp, cancelled.] HE ST. PAUL AND PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY of Minnesota. Intere-t at Sevou per c*n:., semi¬ The f SS.: Sworn to and subscribed before Secreta’y- FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS est 307,156 00 $5,415,298 33 New York, City and County of New York, the best of my JAMES GILMORE, Metropolitan National Bank, i No. 10S Broadway. New-York, Dec. 18,1866 \ DIVIDEND.—THE D IRECTORS OF TuE METROPOLITAN NATIONAiv BANK have this day declared a semi-ani.ual dividend of Six (6) PerCent., tree of Government tax, payable ou the first Monday of January next. The transfer books will be closed until Jannary 10, 1867. GEO I, SENEY, Cashier. year. Before 13,125 09 'Legal tender notes 335,634 00 Compound interest notes.. 226,100 00- Amount 15,833 30 355.000 ..00 U. S. bonds and securities on hand... * Cash on mind in circulating notes of other National banks.:.. $28,150 0* Cash on hand in circulating notes of State banks 280 00 - on 1st, iS67. : Notes and Bills discounted aud de¬ mand loans $906,868 71 Indebtedness of directors. 109,899 01—$1,016,767 72 toller. Less amount NEW YORK« DECEMBER 12 1866. —HAMILTON FIR cl INSURANCE COMPANY, No. 11 Wall Street. The Directors have this day declared a semi-annual dividend of FIVE Per Cent, free of Government Tax, payable on and after <;anu- York, Jannary, 18G7. Dr.—RESOURCES urer sailing vessels, etc., payable to the stockholders or their leg 1 representatives on and after January 5. Transfer books will be closed from the evening of the 26th inst. until the morning of January 7. IIENRY SMITH, Treasurer. YORK, ON THE MORN NG OF THE $7,640,628 06 REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE Exchanges 101,565 37 [5-cent stamp.] 3 GEORGE I. SENEY, Cashier. i . 68,000 00 Amount outstanding Individual Deposits" United States Deposits Dividends unpaid Due National Banks Due to other Banks and Bankers $14,614,354 85 -: .s... 49,583 00 301,450 67 47,945 3S I, George I. Senet. Cashier of “The Metropoli¬ tan National Bank,” do solemnly s«"ear that thu above sta.ement is true, to the nest of my knowledge aud 6 71 $20,105 67 4,367 28 tidnal Banks 35,619 34— T°tal 2,349,590 01 $7e,e00 00 2,279.634 37 26,000 00 17s 37 d Loss In New Remittances and ether cash items Due from National Banks Due from other Banks and Bankers United States Bonds deposited witn U.S. Treasurer to secure circulating Notes United states Bonds deposited with U.. S. Treasurer to secure Deposits United S. Bonds on hand.. $181,000 00 4,279,359 36 244,8 6 00 $12,147* 67 OF NEW • Current expenses Taxes puid 2,216.015 00 .* . Dividends unpaid Due to National Bauks. .$1,514,606*is Due to other banks and > bankers 765.028 19State Bank Circulation outstanding Discount 46,659 67 Banking-house 89 5 60 Individual deposits Banking IS67. $2,300,436 77 2,493 57 Overdrafts 1,520,594 74 Circulating Not s receiv¬ ed from Comptroller.. .$2,225,000 00 a board of directors have this day declared a dividend of FIVE PER CENT, out of the earnings of the road for the three months ending 31 st instant, aud OxE PER CENT, ou of the earnings of 85 $4,000,000 00 **** Less amount on hand.... Amount < utstanding COMPANY, ) Buildings, 83 Wall Street, f Yohk, December 24, 1866. New arv Suiplns Fund York, ill the state of New York. First Moil 1.969 745 5^ $14,614,354 Cap tal Stock paid in NATIONAL BAKKOFNRW YORK. Cash 51.166 05 LIABILITIES: Manufacturers’ Leather on 2,500,000 00 316,010 00 Total Profit Tontine PANAMA RAILROAD steamers, .... 8,024 S7 243,159 87 Total.... Ca-h 700 poo 00 51 054 50 with 1,566,500 ( 0 400,500 00— notes OF THE THIRTY-NINTH DIVIDEND.-t HE 444 360 72 $2,745 55 . GEORGE ELLIS. Cashier. OFFICE 411,635 28 set.lire oirculating notes Fractional currency... Legal'l ender Notes ary next. 114 25 Cash on hand n circulating notes of other Nation 1 Banks $30,555 00 Fash on hand in efre lating note? ot State Banks 20,611 05— .. In New deposited ?tat*s Bonds United rtates Tr*a?urer to YORK, DECEMBER 27, 1866. DIVIDEND OF SIX (6) PER CENT., Tee of I nit* d States Tax. will be paid to the Stockholders of this Bank on WEDNESDAY, the 3d day of Janu¬ A 225,000 00 Expenses Cash items (including kevenue Stamp) Due United $2,867,252 8i) LIABILITIES: BANK NEW - York, Specie... Total. NATIONAL MORNING OF THE 150,000 00 4.600 00 National Bank' Due from other banks aud bankers United State- bonds deposited with U.S. Treasurer to secure jeirculatug notes. Cash on hand in circulating notes of other National Banks. Sp cie - • • • j.e'Uil Tender Notes ^ Compound Interest Notes’ Treasurer United States, taxes overpaid Dividends flty of New THE 118.500 70 16,7^ 9 17 nf New York Due from Amount REPORT CONDITION Of THE from Nat onal Banks $864,159 46 Due from other hanks and bank rs 79,901 26New York State Stocks.: " Mate lit in tlie State of New York ON THE Dividends. Bank. Metropolitan Nat’l Bank Of the Commonwealth, Chatham National in 35 American Dock And Improvement Co., SE'rEN PER CENT, BONDS lot1 rest payable January and July. Guaranteed by b Central Railroad of New Jersev. Morris and Essex Mortgage For sale by 1 Also. Railroad 1st and 2nd Bonds, POTT, DAVIDSON & JONE8, Bankers, ;9and 61 Wall street. ’ 36 Sc Co., ^ BANKERS, YORK. STREET, NEW 20 BROAD STERLING EXCHANGE also, Circular Notes of Credit for Travelers’ Use, on Letters Sight or Sixty Days; At L. P. and NO. IN U. S. 16 NASSAU STREET, UNDER Tne No. 32 NATIONAL DANK. FOURTH at Market Buy and Sell U. S. Os of 1SS1. U. S. 5-20 Bon/is. U. S. 10-40 Bonds. U. S. 7-30 Treasury Notes. U. S. Certificates of U. S.- Compound hitereT Notes. And all classes of Government Hates: „ Buy and Sell at arid others, LONDON AND favorable terms, promptly execute orders for tlm Purchase or of Gold, State. Federal, and Rail¬ And Sale road Securities. South America, See. Marginal credits London House issued for the same purposes. ADAMS, KIMBALL & Exchange II. Crugeb Burns, ( It. C. FAHNESTOCK, EDWARD DODGE, JAY COOKE, S MOOKUEaD, ( PITT COOKE, D COOKE. Jay Cooke & BANKERS. Corner chase and side of STOCKS, PONDS, and Interest allowed on deposits of Gold rency, & Co., York. 3d Street, Jackson Brothers, Department,"ton. IVasl) ill day opened an office at No. 1 Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge «& Co., New York, Mr. II. C. Fahnestock, of our Washing¬ ton llonse, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio. COOKE & CO. March 1,1SC6. Allowed on LOCK BROAD avail¬ Accounts of Merchants receiv¬ ou depos¬ Telegraphic quota¬ Kh,£Rknck8 : James Brown, Esq , of Messrs. Brown Brothers & Co.; John Q. Jones, Esq., Pres¬ ident of the Chemicii National Bank; James H. Banker, Esq., Vice-President of tho Bank of New A. MORTGAGE UONDS STREET, NEW end Pacific . YORK, Securi¬ Coal, Petro¬ and Gold received on deposit subject to Dividends and Int rest collected and Invest¬ Guaranteed by the Atlantic Railroad Company, Bonds of $1,080 Coupon In DUE eacb, Run, Twenty Years to * State Stocks- and Dralt. SEPTEMBER 15, 1S8G, rate of 7 per Interest at tlie cent, per Annum, Payable in the City cf Mew York on the First Jan U19 y and Ja y. Days of Hughes, BANKERS, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES made. Orders 13 Broad Street, Deposits received, New York. subject to Check, allowed. IIAWLEY HEATH. BROKER* T. W. T>. and latere HUGHES. Ex Stock Member of N.Y. jpg John Cockle & Son, Promptly Executed. Kidder & Co., J- L. Brownell & Bro., ,RANKERS A: BROKERS,. ‘ 23 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Bought and Sold Accounts received on of Government Securities, and Gold exclusively on comm'ssion. Banks, Bankers and individuals Bonds, Notes, &e., Ac. NEW YORK. References.—Moses Tayh r; John Munroe A Co; C, Savage, U.S. Appraiser; W. Cockle, Peoria, Ill.; Hon. F. E, Spinner, Treasurer U. S. Washington. STREET, completed on this mortgage, when lands are , h is ro cons itule a Special Fund for the redemption of a like amount of these bonds at a rate not exceding 105 percent. Tr.ev are also receivable at I’AR l y the Company in payment of its sales oi lands. By a provis'on of sold to The araou t of S’0,00 Reference: -: .Meeh. Banking Ass. N.Y. Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. J. IT. Fonda, Pres. Nat. C. 13. Blair, Pres’t. Barstow, Edey & At Springfield with >lie Great Urn Son Invest Pac lie will connect Atlantic and • acif c itaxt.road (its Eastern terminus) forming a direct and ous route from 8t. Louis to San Francisco* When completed, it will present a road of .StOimbsin length, costing about With 1,086,000 acres of land valued at continu¬ $12.0*0,000 . 10,U00,C0’J BROKERS, HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 30 TO Showing a total value of. $22, 00,000 With a total amount of Bonds authorized, wilh the No. 36 Broad Street, Office No. 16. guarantee as above, of $7,250,000. which may he DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND -esnedat a rate not exceeding $25,000 per ir.iie of OTHER SECURITIES. completed work as it progresses. Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to Check at. Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. BANKERS & BROKERS Exchange, 77 raWes of favorable terms. AND GOLD, RAILROAD & MINING STOCK These Bonds are issued on mad, now in operation to holla, in the St*tc of Missouri, which cost to construct.... *.. §4 COO,CCO And 13 miles of r-an graded, with material hand to be compl> ted by Jarnarv 1, 593,10) 1867, at a cost, of Warren, Together with 260,010 news of land, row. BANKERS, being d sposed of at a minimum of £5 No. 4 WALL ST., NEW YORK. per acre, (maximum, $H>) 4. . 1,300.600 Orders for stocks, Bunds, amt Gold pi mnptly‘exe¬ cuted. FOUR PER CENT. IN'i BREST ALLO A ED Say present total wine of S 6,3 0,lC0 on deposits, subject to check at g’ght. ments Stocks, Bonds, Heath & Yt?srk. Currency WAI L STREKT, NEW YOKK7 sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and PINE . BANKERS, Commission Government Buy and Se 1 on Government Securities. Ranks, Bankers, and ed on favorable terms. Interest, allowed its, subject to check at sight. tions furnished to correspondents. 82 Broad Street, New FIRST MOBILE AND ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank'and Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, leum aud Mining Mock s. BROKERS Brown Bros & Co.’s new building), In Foreign GOLD, & GOVERN SECURITIES; Company. Deposits. BROKERS AND NO. 16 59 & 61 A. No. 19 Brothers, Drake 3 Davidson & Jones, DEALERS IX 1HENT York, Circular Letters of Credit fur Travellers, able in all parts of Europe Sntcrest BANKERS AND York N. B. STOCK'S, BONDS, Principal and Interest. Issue attention to the purchase, SALE, and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES oi all issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, bonds and gold, and to all business of National JAY Street, New LONDON AND PARIS, NEW ORLEANS. DRAW ON will be resident partners. We shall give particular Buy and 29 Dine houses in Philadelphia and Banks. DEALERS IN BANKERS, 27 & connection with our (Messrs subject to clieck at sight. Winslow, Lanier & Co., Pacific Railroad Washington we have this Pott, OuLD. and Cur¬ Southwest Philadelphia. Opposite Treas. WALL STREET. GOVERNMENT AND and Cur¬ rency. subject to Check at. Sight." Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. Fifteentli Street, In BROADWAY & No. 6 DEALERS IN OTHER SECURITIES. Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold Co., Sts., New Wall and Nassau 114 South No. r York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securi¬ ties, of all issues, and execute orders for ihe pur¬ YISSER, Place, New York. Lockwood Oakley. No. 94 H. Wall Street^ New No. 14 RANKERS. WM. O. MOORE, BANKERS, SIMON DE 52 daily balances, Charles E. Milnob, Levi P. Mof.ton, Walter n. of the MERCHANTS, BANKERS, Make Collections on West Indies, and Market Rates, and allow interest , on on Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase Sale oi Slocks and Bonds in London and New York. York. subject to Sight Draft. Securities. Broad Street, London,) Broad Street, New Solicit accounts from Indebtedness. LIVERPOOL.' The subscriber, their representative ann Attorneys AND THE in the United States, is prepared.to make advances UNION RANK OF LONDON, shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile Available in all the principal towns and cities of credits upon them for use in China, the East and Europe and the East. (58 Old BROKERS, | ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES, Drake Kleinwort&Colien BURNS & CO., MORTON, BANKERS AND SECURITIES DEALERS Co., Taussig, Fisher & R. H/Fisk, D. C. & L. P. Morton Financial. Brokers. Bankers and Brok-rs. Bankers and [January 12, 1807. CHRONICLE. THE J. Van Schaick, 38 Broad Street, RANKER AND STOCK BROKER. Of tlie present Issue of $2,000,000 of Bonds, a limited amount is now offer¬ ed for sale. For further particulars apply to WARD & CO., Bankers, jVo. 54 Wall Street, Mew York. '■ T>UU' -".p .(wJi g/h £ i W iKif-W. §a»to’ feeite, (Soimnmurt %m$f |Marag ptoaitor, and §wsumtace fmmtal i A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, * HLPRESSENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND -COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. NO. 81. SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 18(57 VOL. 4. CONTENTS. proposed to be attained by the tampering with the money locking up of greenbacks, which is charged on some prominent firms, is to produce a general outcry among the people against contraction of the volume of our redundant pa per money, that object is probably destined to signal failure. Two very sound, useful ideas have taken full possession of the public mind, which will effectually prevent it from being so misled. They are: first, that contraction of the currency may be so made as not to produce the mischief of a spasmodic stringent money market; and secondly, that this contraction of the redundant volume of our circulating money is the necessary * * and only means whereby the standard of the paper dollar can he raised and made equal to the dollar in coin. The malady under which our currency is suffering being redundancy, the obvious remedy is to correct this redundancy by calling in and cancelling the over-issue. There is no other cure than this. market and THE CHRONICLE. 'Contraction of Credit and Contraction of Currency I Pubi 33 * Lines Debt of U Red States — I Latest Monetary and Commercial Proposed Changes in the Banking Law '.. IRcport of the Special Comruissioucr of the Revenue -Nationalaid to Steamship c 37 I Commerce of Now York for 1866 J English News I Commercial and Miscellaneous 30 I 43 News | 3i THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. ‘•Money Market, Railway Stocks, R. S. Securities, Gold Market, Cotton. Tobacco. Foreign Exchange, New York 'N r. .*.... 49 fO 52 52 53 54 Prices Cairent and Tone ol‘ the 43 Market | a •. Dry Goods Imports. Sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange Epitome. : Breadstuffs Groceries 'City Banks. Philadelphia Banks National Banks, etc Com mereial 1 g 55-50 TI1E RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Railway News Railroad, Canal and Miscellaneoes Bond List 57 [ 53-59 Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. Insurance and Min ng | Advertisements 00 01 Journal 33-36, 02-61 . ®!)c <£l)i*onklf. f rk Commercial No Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ day morning hy the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, with the latest veto's by mail and telegraph up to midnight ■of Friday. A Daii.v Bulletin is issued every morning with all ■-he Commercial, and Financial news of the previous day up to the hour of publication. and TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Commercial and Financial Chronicle, with Tira 'Daily Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage) The Commercial and Financial Be llktin. (exclusive of postage) f,12 00 ; Chronicle, without. Tun Daily t$OT' The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage) 10 no and Financial 5 00 Canvassing Agents have no authority to collect money. Postage is paid by subscribers at their own post-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on. the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & CQ, Publishers, 60 William Street, New York. Files for holding Frice *j>L 50. the Chronicle or Bulletin The third volume can he had at on depreciated except by reducing the amount in circulation arid making tire supply of currency equal to the legitimate demand. Very plausible objections have been urged to the method of re¬ storing the currency by contraction, founded on the well-known fact that the price of gold has not kept even pace with the amount of over issue. These objections, in the present in¬ structed state of the popular mind, mislead very few per¬ It would be just as sound an argument to urge that the sons. gravitation is disproved because the waters sissippi rnu up hill from the sea twice every day. law of CONTRACTION OF CREDIT AND CONTRACTION OF CURRENCY. are reported that some of those powerful interests unfavorable to contraction of the currency are endeav¬ measure V-Uii 13 The law of the perturbing causes., is, that when once the financial system of any nation under a redundant currency has been looseued from^ its hold on the solid rock of specie convertibility, the . standard of value is liable to temporary derangement by a thousand influences, from not one of which it would other¬ wise have suffered. The value of the paper dollar is liable to contract and to enlarge spasmodically, suddenly, irregularly. Prices estimated in so fugitive and changeable a standard fluctuate, and tempt speculators to gamble in values, tnl thus Even under a sound metallic cur¬ to disturb them still more. rency the oscillations of prices in the open market offer the most d’fficult problems known to financial science. What • then must we expect when these well-known difficulties and an * omalies are increased in a geometrical ratio by a fluctuation of the unit of value in which all prices are expressed. A mathematician would not find a long series of calculations HJcVLUtHIlcU/ICIclU « UlUU UL-U Iii*u i* V. oring to exaggerate the existing stringency, and increase it into amonetary spasm, that they may claim relief, operate on Congi ’ess, and obtain either a further emission of some-kind of currency, or, at least, a Repeal of the law of 12th April last, which authorized a gradual contraction, to the extent of four millions of greenbacks a month. NVhelher there be any foun¬ dation for this Wall street rumor or not, it is certain that the odium of having produced trouble in the money market is charged by some persons on the law to which we have refer¬ red, and by a mischievous confusion of thought it is supposed that contraction of the currency is JUCUtlCiU with Ui tends in identical Will! or ieuus incvitably to bring on a contraction of credit. If the object j easy .. of the Mis¬ gravitation, as we see its workings, is subject to a thousand tidal and other perturbations, which derange its results. And as it is with tli£ stern, unyielding laws of matter, so is it with this Office. those laws which govern the value of the currency. Both alike admit of deviations which may puzzle us until we discern The truth which that has heretofore been emitted government was ever restored to par with coin of the Chronicle, from July to December, 1866, inclu¬ and sive, is for sale at this Office ; price $5 00. It is commonly paper money the faith of a stable if the figures and signs he uses were perpetually ebang < '-U/u THE CHRONICLE. 38 (January 12,1867. the depreciation of the currency and the consequent disturb¬ ing tbeir value. We will not enlarge, however, on this view ance of values. The interest on the 830 millions of bonds of the subject. It is only referred to in a general way to sug*. gest replies to the sophistical and superficial reasoning by deposited by the banks as security for 300 millions of circu¬ which plain people may often be puzzled, even though they lation is estimated at some 18 millions of dollars in gold. This sum, under the proposed plan, would be saved to the be neither convinced nor misled. In Congress, a few days ago, a very plausible statement of .Treasury, while the notes would be cancelled and their place these objections to the accepted theory of the currency was supplied by greenbacks. This scheme has been attracting the consequence of the opposition raised by the by Judge Kelley, of Pennsylvania, in a speech which banks against the redemption of their notes in the metropoli¬ otherwise was characterized by acuteness and ability. After tan centres. We publish below a copy of a bill for this pur¬ exposing some of the mischiefs of our expanded banking, Mr. pose, which was introduced into the House of Representatives Kelley proceeds as follows :— Neither the price of gold nor of other commodities is regulated nor by Mr. S. I. Randall on the Tth January, and referred to the materially influenced by the amount of currency ; nor is the difference Committee on Banking and Commerce: between gold and our currency evidence that the latier is inflated. If Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the the Secretary controverts these propositions, I will remind him that gold United States of America in Congress assembled. That the Secretaty commanded a premium of 185 in 1864. and ask him to let us know how of the Treasury is hereby authorized to issue, on the creditof the United much he had contracted the currency before it went down to 25, as it did in June, 1865 ; and again, how much he expanded the currency to States, such sums as may be necessary for the purposes set forth in this act, not exceeding in the aggregate amount three hundred millions put the premium on gold up again to 50, at about which figure it stood of dollars, of treasury notes, not bearing interest, of such denominations bo long before dropping to 29 and ascending again to its present price. as he may deem expedient, not less than five dollars each, which said During all these fluctuations the volume of currency was not essentially notes shall be lawful money and a legal tender; for debts in like man¬ modified. *, * * * But, sir, assuming that the volume ner as provided in the first section of an act eutitled An act to au¬ of currency does not regulate prices, and that apart from the often fatal thorize the issue of United States notes, and tor .the redemption or vice in our banking system to which I have alluded it has but little in¬ fluence on them, I appeal from the judgment of Mr. McCulloch to that funding thereof, and for funding the floating debt of the United States,” passed February twenty-five, eighteen hundred and sixty-two. And of the people, and ask whether, if the volume of cmrency regulated the provisions prices, it would not affect every species of propetty equally or nearly re-enacled and of the sixth and seventh sections of said act are hereby applied to the notes herein authorized. so ? If prices are regulated by the volume of currency, how is it that more made American wool is as cheap in the Philadelphia market now as it was before the war? How is it that corn is unusually low and wheat is commanding a higher price than ever before iu the history of our country ? How is it that during last month one variety of cotton goods, those known as brown or unbleached goods, advauced twenty per cent, or two cents per ) ard, and another variety, bleached goods, declined twenty per cent, or from five to seven cents per yard ? How is it that mess pork commands but about half last year's prices, while the de¬ cline in beef has been little more thau nominal ? in 1865, with gold at 25, Lehigh coal commanded from five to six dollars per ten, and ia 1866, with to 40, the same qualities of coal at the dollars to three dollars and a same And how is it that at the shipping point gold ranging from 32 points will not bring three quarter per ton ? attention in Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That the amount of said- notes hundred millions of for notes issued in any one fiscal year shall not exceed one dollars, and the same shall be used only in exchange issued by the national banks under the authority of the United States, in con¬ formity with the laws regulatiug the same, and for the purchase of suffi portions of the national indebtedness as may be necessary to carry out the true intent of this act. Sec. 8. And be it further so received in exchange for enacted, That the said national bank notes the treasury notes authorized bv this act, the Secretary of the Treasury forthwith cancelled in like though they had been returned for cancellation by the banks respectively issuing them, and the certificates of national indebtedness, and bonds on deposit for the security of said notes, shall be transferred to the commissioners of the sinking.fund, which is herein established, at market prices, to the amount aud extent that the several banks whose notes have been thus returned would be entitled to receive the securities shall be by manner as this ingenious array of facts not tor the sake replying at length to the arguments buiit upon them, but therefor. to show how, contrary to the logical axiom, an expert advo¬ Sec. 4. Aud be it further enacted, That the Secretary of the Trea¬ cate may use the exception to disprove the rule. Properly sury, the Attorney^eneral, the Secretary of the Interior, the Treasurer of the United States, and the Comptroller of the Currency, shall be the understood these facts simply prove what is universally ac¬ commissioners of the sinking fund, who, or a majority of whom, shall knowledged, namely : first, that the fluctuations in gold mark receive the evidences of debt and bonds purchased iu accordance with the provisions of this act, and forthwith stamp upon each, so as to make very imperfectly the value of our paper currency; and, sec¬ it unfit for further use, “Belonging to the sinking fund of the United ondly, that the prices of gold and other commodities ex¬ States,” and shall cancel the signatures thereon. They shall hold said evidences of debt and bonds until their respective maturities, and until pressed in fluctuating paper dollars, oscillate oftentimes in a then all accruing interest shall be paid and is hereby appropriated to the said commissioners, who shall purchase other evidences of debt and very irregular, violent and anomalous way, some comniodi ties going up when others go down, while all alike are really bonds, to be used and held as herein provided for, and so from time to time as money may be received from such sources. Sec. 5. And be it further enacted, That immediately after, the close borne upwards as the tide of inflation rises. The solid of each fiscal year the Secretary of the Treasury shall publish an ac¬ ground of specie payments being left, prices lose their old count of the condition of the said sinking fund in at least one newspaper stability, and are liable to be affected by all the currents and published in the cities of Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Boston, and New Yoik, and he shall, at the first meeting of Congress thereafter, eddies of the current of redundant circulation, by which they report the same to each branch thereof. Sec. 6. And be it further enacted, That so much of any law or laws £|p*e buoyed up and raised above their normal level. are inconsistent herewith shall be, and the same are hereby Such has ever been the course of events during the pro¬ repealed. gress of inflation under an issue of paper money. And when As our appreciation is well known of the important part contraction begins a similar or even a greater irregularity the national banks play in the financial affairs of the country, prevails, and the solid basis of values is only reached in sue we need scarcely say that we disapprove of the plan set forth ceBsive slow degrees as the tide recedes. If then to these in the foregoing bill, and think it likely, if adopted, to cause causes of fluctuation in values we add those arising out of our serious commotion iu monetary and industrial affairs. For the searching and mischievous taxation, we shall cease ,Lo be sur¬ present, and until the nation shall have recovered from its prised that prices deviate so often from what might be ex¬ financial troubles, the more of steadiness aud stability we can pected did the laws of currency-expansion and currency-con¬ confer on our banking system the better. Until we have traction operate with mathematical precision and undisturbed funded our vast floating debt, thoroughly absorbed the dis¬ force. ' banded soldiers into the disciplined army of peaceful workers./ and restored the equilibrium of our tottering, overstrained finan¬ PROPOSED CHANGES IN THE BANKING LAW. The opinion has been actively discussed for some time past, cial machinery, it would not be wise to run the risk "of caus¬ "and is evidently gaining ground in the country and in Con¬ ing further disturbance by closing any of the banks. We have never objected to making these institutions pay their fair share gress, that the National Bank currency could, be assumed by the Government without danger to any business interests of of taxation ; we approve of the late decision of the Supreme Court compelling the banks to pay local1 taxes; we might not importance, and with manifest relief to the burdens of the people. It is argued that the banks gain at present the whole object to the imposition of a heavier Federal tax than the 7 of the profits arising from the issue of the currency, while the millions a year which the banks now pay, but in the present financial situation we do strongly object to so sweeping,-dancountry at large suffers the loss which its issue has caused in We quote of as , , . '■•v 39 THE CHRONICLE. January 12, 1867.] ing w hich shall be to him the most remunerative, without demanding of the Government to make it so. But it is not Waiving all considerations of the overwhelming objections ! always practicable to carry on public affairs strictly upon of a political and financial character which oppose the plan of technical principles. Exigencies arise which materially com¬ increasing the volume of the Government legal tender notes, plicate these matters. True statesmen understand this, and Congress has a sufficient argument for rejecting the scheme provide accordingly. The pursuits of commerce are absolutely essential to before us in the fact that it would unsettle and weaken that financial stability which every motive of patriotic and enlight¬ render other departments of industry remunerative. The^ Acting on ened statesmanship combines to Rad them to strengthen and facilities of market are vital to all enterprise. gerous and revolutionary a change Mr. Randall and his friends. as that contemplated by j support. REPORT OF THE SPECIAL COMMISSIONER OF THE Mr. NY ells may in the habit of REVENUE. be congratulated on having accomplished a difficult task, and on hav ing done it well. He is required by the law of 13th July, 1866, under which his office was created, to report “through the Secretary of the Treasury, to Congress, either in the form of a bill or otherwise, such modi¬ fications of the rates x>f taxation, or off the methods of col¬ lecting the * revenues, and such other facts pertaining to the trade, industry, commerce or taxation of the country, as he may find, by actual observation of the operation of the law, to be conducive to the public interest.’* , In accordance with this arrangement Mr. Wells has presented his first ropoit, which forms an elaborate pamphlet of 112 pages, and is ac¬ companied by a new tariff bill, which is favorably regarded in the hostile camps of free trade and protection, and stands, if we are not misinformed, a very good chance of passing the Senate in a few days without much alteration. The report at large has been freely and favorably commented on by the daily Press in all puts of the country. It lias two obvious characteristics which confer oil it its chief value: first, it is free from narrow ideas and impracticable crotchety notions; and secondly, it presents trustworthy de¬ ductions from a vast array of facts which have been collected with commendable industry and painstaking zeal from a mul¬ titude of well-informed persons in our chief cities. Cue thing is wanting to give completeness to the report. We refer to vast mass of evidence which Mr.’Wells received during his investigations. This evidence should be published in full, as should also the evidence taken before the late Revenue Com¬ mission, of which Mr. Wells was chairman. These two vol¬ umes would be invaluable to the country, and would constitute a storehouse of facts for the- use of that large and increasing class of our leading men who are devoting themselves to the study of fiscal subjects. very principle, the British Government, in former years, were granting large subsidies to steamship lines. The purpose was to seize the whole of the mail traffic, and with it the lucrative trade accompanying it in the North Atlantic. Accordingly, Mr. Cunard first began his enter¬ prise under the express stipulation of receiving from the Treasurv the annual subvention of £60,000. He soon found the amount insufficient, and the government raised it to £100,000; but this w as not enough, and the sum was finally fixed at £145,000 a year—equivalent to ten shillings and eightpence sterling per mile. s.The fact was recognized at the outset that the immense capital required to start the line of steamers from*Europe to America, and the expenditure neeessarv for its maintenance, would not be covered by any commercial returns to be expected from it. Private enter¬ prise could not afford to enlist in so great an undertaking. Only by subsidy could it be accomplished ; and this measure was warranted by broad considerations of its importance to this ' the British nation. - Afterward the West Indian Steam Packet was established, subvention of £240,000 a year. like manner. As, however, the profits of the lines have become adequate for the remuneration of the companies for the capital invested, it has become proper that the subvention receiving the still greater The line to Australia wras should cease. sated for the also in its turn fostered in a amply compen¬ The British nation has been expenditure, from the commerce which operating of these steamship lines establishment and the has secured to the country. In.order to establish a successful rivalship on the ocean, the French Government found it necessary not only to bestow . the General Trans Atlantic Mail Steamship Company, b.ut to lend to it outright the sum of At this very time Prussia is also seek¬ five million dollars. ing to extend her power on the ocean. A bill pending before the House of Deputies proposes a large subsidy to steam¬ ship lines for mail service, and in addition a loan of $5,000,000 to enable the company to go into successful operation. The Geetsemunde, just acquired from Hanover, is the NATIONAL AID TO STEAMSHIP LINES. On New Year Day six steamers arrived at this port from entrepot which it is contemplated to establish, and the pro¬ Europe,* all owned by European capitalists. Yet this is no posed line is to ply between that point and the city of New York. unusual circumstance, for our entire trade with the Old World Commercial Navigation Company, of the W e see that the promises to be very soon carried on under foreign flags. State of New York, recently memoralized Congress for leg¬ The recent sale of the Arago and Pulton would appear to islation to enable the operating of an American Transoce¬ augur unfavorably for efforts to continue even one American anic line of mail steamships. The proposition which the line of ocean steamers in existence. It is not our purpose, at the present time, to discuss the company submitted w as, to establish a line of seven sea going steam vessels, two to be of two thousand and five of three reasons for this. They are many and varied; and yet, even thousand tons, and all to be constructed in the best manner, if all other difficulties were removed, assistance would still with all known modern improvements in model, machinery be required from our Government before an American line and outfit,,so as to secure the greatest possible speed and of steamers could successfully compete with the old-estab¬ lished European companies. Without such aid capitalists safety. The proposed outlay lor construction exceeds six will not enter upon so hazardous an experiment. We are million dollars. The purpose, it is said, is to secure a speed aware that it is the legitimate province of Government, of tw7elve to fourteen marine miles an hour, with a draught of water which shall not exceed sixteen feet when loaded; strictly speaking, to administer justice and protect its citi¬ zens. The establishment of industrial pursuits and other and in the plan of construction to have three decks, one ex¬ legislation of analogous character can hardly be said to be tending the entire length of the vessel, giving passengevs comprised within its purposes. It is to bs presumed that every possible comfort and convenience. These steamships would constitute a United States line for the transportation every citizen will exercise his talents and energy in the call* a heavy subvention on ’ i . .. The memorial asks Congress for law authorizing the Postmaster-General to of the mails. the passage and contract with the company for the weekly conveyance of the foreign and European mails of the United States between New York and Liverpool for a term not exceeding twelve years. The times of sailing, and other details, are proposed to be arranged between the company and the Postmaster- of a [January 12, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 40 arrange Our Government has actively taken the in¬ itiative in the case of the line of subsidized mail packets now dice to cease. which plying between New York and Rio de Janeiro, in case the contract obligates the United States to pay the com¬ of for twelve round trips each year the annual sum $150,000 for ten years, the Imperial Government of Brazil also paying a like amount. The Pacific Mail Steamship Company has also obtained a contract to make twelve round General. At the present time no mail, no dispatch from the Federal trips between San Francisco and China each year, for the annual subsidy of $500,000, for and during the term of ten Government to a minister, or other foreign agent, or from such agent to the Government, no diplomatic agent of the years, beginning on the 1st day cf January, 1867. In accordance with this principle,, enterprises been United States crosses under a allowed the ocean, except on foreign pany vessels, and These facts, it is claimed, should foreign flag. due weight when considering this application. be for carrying the mails is the postage. In view of the fact that an outlay of about eight million dollars will be required for the building, equipping* and running such a line of steamships as is pro¬ posed, this company ask in addition that the PostmasterGeneral shall be authorized to guarantee jhe payment of The compensation asked by the company of about $3,000,000. *To assure against loss by this .transaction, it is pro¬ their bonds to the amount the Government shall give to the United States a the steamships, their tackle, apparel, machin¬ ery and furniture, which will be worth double the amouut of the obligations so assumed; also that the Postmaster posed that the company have the purpose of developing the re¬ sources of the country. Aid has been granted by lending the credit of the Government to two Pacific Railroad, companies, the bonds of the companies having been endorsed by the Government at the rate of $16,000 per mile, and only a second instead of a first lien having been - required. Large grants of public lands have been made to the new States, to facilitate the construction of railways. Every argument that can apply in defense of those measures would seem to be of equal force in regard to the bestovvment of governmental aid to steamship lines. Such lines would increase the volume fostered first lien upon paid for postage on the mails so carried, applying the amount to liquidate the inter¬ est on the bonds, and retaining the excess for payment of the principal till the entire indebtedness shall have been extin¬ guished. The bonds so guaranteed, it is further proposed, shall be issued in such amounts and at such times during the construction cf the steamships as the Postmaster-General shall determine, and shall be made payable at the expiration of twelve years, bearing interest at five per cent., gold, to be paid semi-annually. The company also propose, as addi¬ tional security against loss on tho part of the Government, to cause each of the steamships to be insured, by marine in¬ surance companies of good standing, against the dangers of the seas, in such sums as shall be equivalent to the amounts of the bonds so guaranteed and owing; the policies to be made payable to the order of the Postmaster-General. In the event of war, the Navy Department shall be empowered to take the vessels and use them as transports or ships of war, for an equitable sum, or may purchase ,them for the public service, if the Secretary of the Navy shall deem General shall receive all the moneys . proper. We refer to this memorial thus be the most favorable project of the kind now before Congress; not because we approve of all its details. The estimate upon which the proposal is based supposes the aver¬ age amount received annually for postage to be $450,000) which would be more than sufficient to meet the interest and principal cf the bonds guaranteed. By reference to the re port of Postmaster-General Randall for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1866, the cost of transatlantic mail service, which is performed almost wholly by foreign steamship lines, was $525,307 46, the total amount for the four years ending with that date being $1,634,710. Within the last fiscal year our European postal communication has been increased at the unprecedented rate of 25 per cent. There has existed in this country for years a strong feeling against subsidies. The experiment of the Collins Line evi¬ dently operated to strengthen this prejudice. But when we pears to ' minutely because it ap¬ ' by Congress for of commerce making oar remunerative, and so developing the resources and direct it to our own ports, home industry of the Government. Congress will give the most careful atten¬ this matter. If the patronage of our Government We trust that tion to employed judiciously to bring Europe, the ports on the Mediterranean and the countries lying on the Indian and Pacific oceans, into frequent communication with the United States, it should be done. It is for the interest of this country. ■ Upon the direct question of guaranteeing the bonds of the Commercial Navigation Company, or private obliga¬ tion of any kind, however, we are hardly clear. In times can be public and private matters have been mixed up, the public interest has often been the loser. Neverthe¬ less, there is in this case security offered, and the prospect of ulterior advantage to counterbalance the risk of any such loss. When private enterprise promises and almost guar¬ antees to initiate an era of commeicial prosperity for the c:untry, it is, we will admit, the time, if ever, for the past, whenever an Government to lend its aid. UNITED STATES. Abstract statement, as appears from the books and Treasurer’s returns iti tue Treasury Department, on the 1st of November, 1st of December I860, and the 1st of January, 1867, comparatively : PUBLIC DEBT OF THE DEBT BEARING COIN INTEREST. 5 per cent, bonds “ “ of 1807 and of 1881 “ “ ' Dec. 1. Nov. 1. - Jan.1. $198,091,350 $198,091,350 $198,091,350 15,837,94* 15,783,442 16,033,742 1868.... 5.20’s 283,739,750 823 944,0u0 283,740,000 283,740,850 861,64 ,300 * 891,125,100 Pension 11,750,000 11,750,000 $1,333,558,S42 $1,371,06S,592 Navy $1,400,490,742: 11,750,0 0 Fund....; DEBT BEARING ^ CURRENCY INTEREST. 3-year 7.30 notes $857,622,890 '$832,379,440 $9,882,000 $10,302,000 148,512,140 '147,387,140 Interest Notes . - Various bonds 724,014,300 $10,022,000' 144,900,840 699,933,750 676,856,600 $882,408,440 6 per cent, bonds 3-year Compound DEBT ON WHICH . INTEREST HAS CEASED. $22,605,791 $16,518,590 $390,195,7S5 $8&5,441,819 27,588,010 28,620,240 10,896,980 19,636,500 $3S0,497,842 28,732,812 16,442,680 $433,608,598 $425,673,334 $36,988,909 and notes DEBT BEARING NO United States Notes Fractional currency Gold certificates of deposit INTEREST. $428,680 775 Abrogate debt Coin and Currency in Treasury...... $2,681,636,966 $2,6S4,995,875 $2,6^5,062^505 230,326,96. * 135,364,637 131,737,333 $2,551,310,000 $2,549,631,238 $2,543,325,172 shows the amount of coin and currency sep¬ consider what Great Britain has done to promote, the naviga¬ arately at the dates in the foregoing table :1. Nov. Dec. 1. Jan. 1. tion of the ocean by means of steam vessels, as well as the ... Gold Coin $99,413,018 $95,168,816 $97,841,9G3 30,913,942 40,195,821 33,895,765 advantages which have been thus secured for her merchants Currency and manufacturers, it would seem to be time for such preju¬ Total gold coin and currency......... $130,326,960 $135,364,637 $181,737,3 coin and currency following statement Debt, less The THE CHRONICLE. January 12,1867.] We COMMERCE OF NEW YORE FOR 1866. % We are able now to publish a full review of the commerce of JJew York for the past year, haviog^ received from the Custom House the returns for the last quart^J^tnd revised our own figures of receipts, exports, &c. ■ bring forward now at this commerce 41 pqrt for a - our figures showing the total foreign series of years. EXPORTS. The exports for the year show an increase over 1865, but still do not equal the figures for 1864. It should be remembered, however that for the past two years, and especially the las^twelve months, the foreign shipments direct from Southern porti hive been large, so that New York exports do not nowr represent nearly as large a proportion of the exports of the country as during the years of Ihe war. The shipments of cotton alone from theSoith direct to for¬ eign ports for I860 amounted to over one million bales. If to this we were to add tobacco, naval stores, &c., we would discover one reason why we have been able to import so largely the past year without working serious disturbance to monetary affairs by reason of our foreign balances. The following statement exhibits the quarterly exports for the past six years. As the shipments of merchandise are reckoned at their market price in currency, we have given in the same connection the range of gold. f RECEIPTS, IMPORTS AND EXPORTS OF LEADING ARTICLES. The movement of domestic produce the past year shows con¬ siderable changes over the figures for the previous twelve months, as our readers have probably noticed in our weekly tables. In the “matter of breadstuffs we have frequently celled attention to the di¬ minished receipts. This is, of course, due in great part to the fall¬ ing oft in the shipments East at the West, but in part also to the fact that the direct shipments to Boston and elsewhere have in¬ creased during 1866. give tables of receipts and our PRODUCE Below FOR we ports for the year : ; RECEIPTS OF DOMESTIC [Of the items left blank in 1866. Ashes, pkgs 1S65 1865. 36,SS6 59,002 Rosiu Tar Pitch Oil cake, 401,460 48,118 29,150 18,462 133,682 19,452 turp., bbls Spirits turp 3,650,490 * 9,162,680 22,696,186 15,505,905 8,699,339 9,710,625 1,304,799 ' 888,135 526,818 Malt Grass seed Flaxseed Beans Peas Corn meal, bbls. Corn meal, bags. 141,523 66,177 47,474 414,543 195,344 bags. Cotton, bales Copper, bbls Copperplates Dried fruit, pkgs.. Grease, pkgs...... Hemp, bales Hides, No Hops, bales Leather, sides Lead, pigs Molasses, hhds. & .... 19,2S9 2,235,251 6,819 bbls... Provisions— Beef, pkgs Lard, pkgs Lard, kegs Rice, pkgs Starch Stearne.. Spiel ter. slabs FROM Dressed 615,015 218, i 20 102,680 100,330 NEW OF FOREIGN DOMESTIC 1805. TORTS PRODUCE OF 5,591 69,750 136,5S0 522,607 27,403 222,129 Pork, bb's Vvnflh Do 282,992 83,899 Corn’, bush4,549,61011,147,7S1 Candles, bxs 86.287 70,334 Coal, tons ; 22,539 67.392 382,092 Cotton, bales 221,069 36,070 Hay, bales.. 33,053 Hops, bales 13,674 3,046 Naval Stores— Crude turp, bbls.. 4,832 939 51,742 8,815 Spirits turp, bbls. Rosin, bbls Tar, bbls 118,865 41,910 Beef, bbls 1,329,842 Barley, bush. tcs :i 92,0S1 55,310 28,749 51,828 Cutmea’B, lbs....35,743,0 .529,478,691 9,718,079 2,0S2,723 Butter, lbs Cheese, lbs Lard, lbs 41,668,213 39,069,500 22,793,384 28,300,600 Rice, tcs 83 81 Do. bbls 19,196 9,379 Tallow, lbs 16,550,55214,901,800 12,532 Tobacco,crude,pks. 167,447 104,975 Do manf., lbs.. 4,155.889 5,691,557 21,413 222,084 Whalebone, lbs 281,151 647,413 23,450 Petroleum, galls.. .14,593,58633,788,957 ........ imports of leading articles of commerce for two years may be seen in the following table. In our commercial department we publish a detailed import table, showing total imports of each item during 1866, which will be found very useful for reference; OF LEADING ARTICLES AT NEW YORK FOR 1865-6. 1866. Coal, tons . Cocoa, bags....... Coffee, bags....... Cotton, bales . . . Drugs, &c. Bark, Peruvian.. 6,770 231,029 16,413 724,646 2,007 1862. . Cochineal C earn Tartar 9,669 24,739 6,468 1,248 24,098 Gum, Arabic...... 4,356 3,4i 8 8,196 4,234 90,016 793 14.445 Indigo Madder essence Oil, Olive Opium Soda, bi-carb Soda, sal.. Soda, ash 141,462 , Gnnny cloth. Hair Hemp, bales 36,434 39,949 9,461 4,652 26,622 4,878 188,289 Hides, &c. Bristles ... India rubber Ivory Hardware* 2,476 11,564 26,817 1,308 Jewelry, <fcc. | $27,193 March 209.270 April...'... 209,573 180,114 648,482 65,388 56,350 . ... 29,819 | 1,208 131.893 MetalB, &c. Ohtiery $42,232 77,693 43,S30 213,685 74,949 103,337 49,380 77,232 90,815 55,400 149,325 66,534 55,555 $105,421 $38,301 74,793 307,221 26,606 249,404 126,537 45,045 848,;42 64.003 69,965 425,031 33,235 109,155 24,165 64,001 44,266 12,154,947 $2,S53,84S $1,037,212 $2,142,458 July August September. . $938,735 $706,483 $-432,556 $284,909 633,509 400,782 320,165 654,019 . 76.971 43,368 1,117.193 203,325 57,965 417,100 667,987 179,205 30,013 October November. December. 60,868 ... 41,973 75.474 Total... 45,538 108,489 72,667 48,461 40,SOS 75,709 64,914 57,544 32,061 EXPORTS OF FOREIGN DUTIABLE. $:65,978 429,537 839,415 ... March April May 607,678 752,797 £67,872 9u3,S77 260,866 176,581 264,168 July August September. August... $149,493 208,757 231,784 January February. 192,196 ... 377.170 494,514 Total.... $5,203,059 458,917 372,561 449,918 256,680 572,572 434,265 284,873 352,902 $668,275 610,009 753,266 375,224 602,254 298,067 448,601 231,774 23-.972 350,614 383,948 458,575 * ’ $664,485 466,493 £99,959 558,812 569,888 1,282,2:8 6,137,460 2,231,782 2,460,138 1,104,299 1,126,059 1,632,502 391)927 433,39.1 310,210 131,425 262,593 135,172 200,854 2 2,072 208,091 233,606 759.857 606,355 401,7^4 226,786 306,244 186,108 263,600 551,657 $4,901,383 $5,425,579 $17,824,095 $3,440,410 $4,967,1C 5,502 18,931 8,932 2,270 | 5,600 EXPORTS OF SPECIE AND BULLION. . Rags 44,067 Sugar,hhd8,tcs&bols 375.546 Sugar, boxes & bags 434.003 .. Tea 684,118 4,713 i Tobacco 24,808 14,843 8,361 Waste 4,451 Wines, &c. 6,809 Champagne, bkts. 112,805 Wines 383.1(3 5,094 2,754 Wool, bales 57,755 37,581 Articles reported by value. 1,094 Cigars ...$1,251,891 67,180 j Corks 168,823 1G,019 j Fancy goods 4,284,510 29,604 Fish.... 890,832 12,622 Fruits, «fec. Lemons 6,132 520,295 4.698 Oranges 311,621 Nuts... 3,315 1,009,202 Raisins 83,683 ;..1,152,943 Hides, undressed 6,728,819 Rice 1,494 776,470 7,032 Spices, &c. Cassia 26,861 174,008 2,532 Ginger 50,618 Pepper 230.522 Saltpetre 156,744 1,177 $961,372 . V oods. Fustic $53,894 $2,658,274 $4,624,574 $5,454,079 $3,184,853 3,015,367 1,023,201 3,965,664 1,102,926 3,776,919 301.802 881,913 6,585,-142 2,471.233 1,800,559 871,240 4.037,675 1,412,674 1,972,834 5,883,077 7,255,071 5,164,636 2,115,675 6,460,930 128,90 > 244,242 5,199,472 9,867,614 6,5:13,109 1,467,774 728,986 8,1 69,337 1,947,329 5,268,881 11,020 3,(500 3,4 55,261 1,001,813 1,554,393 3,713,532 15.756 2,494,973 3,083,919 2,835,398 3,480,385 2,516,226 6,707,519 2.57,121 15,0:38 6,210,156 48,385 6,213,251 5,438,363 '7,267,662 '2 046,180 893,013 2,752,161 3,673,112 5,259,033 6,104,177 . March April May June July . September. Octobe November. December . 140,074 3,413,147 978,643 1,031,9S5 825,323 5,427,761 1,094,949 228,075 50,517 149,128 107,575 120,427 74,228 163.919 Mahogany....... 1,> 07,030 1,045,039 588,875 23,744,194 15,890,956 6,821,459 1,587,851 834,650 1,463,470 3,776,690 3,297,270 $4,230,250 $59,437,021 $49,754,066 $50,825,621 $30,003,683 $62,553,700 Tctal... January.... $11,202,737 $14,SSS,4:7 $19,69),35S February.. 11,907,233 14,113,843 12,400,148 March 11,"31,384 11,980,714 23,695,082 11.709,619 12,703,797 14,001,940 April 11,732,595 15,832,097 16,002,780 May June. 12,067,031 20,332,375 16,495,293 10,028.000 23,684,915 21,092,787 July 9,890,448 17.443,701 14,451,809 August.... September. 10,178,846 19,061,471 i 5,492,518 October... 13,172,452 26,7*7,936 21,219,549 November;. 14,517,291 20,603,942 17,292,436 December. 15,124,445 18,939,615 18,619,334 " . 33,911 Logwocd $2,706,336 TOTAL EXPORTS. 252,715 332,415 . ' ., $73,111 54,500 35,417 28,236 . 6S,02G 117,1-3 57,515 ... • 49.099 67,167 130,264 151,393 66,074 27,269 60,720 29,373 May June...... January.... February. ... 1866. EXPORTS OF FOREIGN FREE. $399,940 137,950 January February.. 33,419 280,875 443,487 659,551 31,439 12,991 ... 1865. 149,179,591 164,249,177 201,855,989 174,247,154 1S6,655,969 Total... .131,235,995 October November. December . Watches MolaBses 1865. ... 1SG4. .... 13,651 5,670 Iron, R3. bars 243,238 218,290 Lead, pigs 463,577 225.888 .10,217.828 4,781,071 Spelter, lbs Steel 197,764 ' 95,615 Tin, boxes 800,471 621,890 Tin slabs, lbs.. 6,692,672 7,183,095 742,1! 5 | 1.090 Flax Furs 1366. | 312,792 1 16,214 Gambier Oums, crude Hides, dressed 4,039 1863. $12,053,477 $14,329,398 $11,448,953 $16,023,621 $19,784,997 February... 10,263,820 10,078,101 17,780,586 13,662,213 15,042,505 16,768,120 March 10,530,9* 7 8,985,176 16,137,689 14,410,051 13,893.565 23,291,485 April 9, i 55,643 8,002,094 11,581,933 13,263,712 7,220,709 22,526,822 May 10,855,709 9,837,603 13.183,510 1 4,610,493 7,883,565 12,281,623 June 8,079.802 9,601,089 10,270,430 10,048,832 14,780,072 17,996,495 July 9,552,789 14,050,437 15,298,073 26,251,673 12,521,246 13,057,476 August 9,652,301 13,046,389 10,666,959 26,617,860 14,500,860 12,648,004 September. 9,877,909 14,734,993'11,717,761 15.595,548 12,763,484 1,635,610 October 12,904,350 19.476,947 14,513,454 16.740,404 20,986,936 14.593,664 November.. 14,109,763 14;060,340 11,413,591 12,015,064 22,763,327 13,651,464 December.. 33,661,444 14,805,112 12,846,151 19,248,528 22,562,534 16,817,615 ... Bleaching powd’rs Brimstone, tons.. Oils, 1 1865. showiug the exports Januarv.. ..$10,277,925 June [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Buttons usual detailed statement 178,626,599 192,329,554 EXPORTS Of domestic produce. : The IMPORTS 1866 produce, foreign dutiable and free goods, and specie and 92,081 Provisions— 914,695 7,552 148,006 .. 2,757 20,919 219,103 28,823 13,405 Oils—Whale, galls.. Do. sperm, galls. Do. lard, galls Do. linseed, galls. 268,503 1,402,144 2,673 Rye flour, bbls... Corn meal, bbls.. 127.600 2,527,626 19S,348 Rye, bush 94.567 Oats, bush 1S66. 1,150 16,809 470,735 Pitch, bbls.i Wheat flour, bbls. AR¬ YEAR : 1865 Breadstuffs— now annex our 1861. S8,652 1866. 1865 Total.... 13S,594,901 156,934,822 170,718,768 221,822,542 12,580 CERTAIN LEADING FOR THE 1884 bullion, during each month of the last six years : + Including bags reduced to barrels. YORK TO 1863 $ $ I $ 1st quarter..33,477,74.2 32,075,563 5 ,614,903 41,429,756 46.710,118 60,972,531 Price of gold par 101>M04% 152%-172% 151%-169% 196%-234% 124%-145% 2d quarter 33,123,4S9 29,793,344 41,u46,726 4^446,666 24,216,567 46,766,3S« Price of gold par 101%-109% 140%-157% 166 if-250 128%-147% 125-167% 3d quarter 30,U75,91S 45,313,299 38.825,587 79,519,134 4',521,493 38,381,202 Price of gold par 191-285 13S%-146% 143%-147% 10S%-121 122%-145 4th quarter. .41,917,752 49,747,611 40,223,747 52,426,9GG 67.178,421 4b, 09,435 Price of gold par 1;2-134 189-260 148%-H5% 131%-154% 140^8*156% We 7,356 167,368 63,624 103,314 119,9h8 hogs, No. 1862 $ of domestic Rice, rough, bush. TICLES Ppoa -. Sugar, hhds. & bbls Tallow, pkgs Tobacco, pkgs.... Tobacco, hhds.... Whiskey, bbls..,. Wool, bales 28,690 2,124,900 104,505 150,401 131,608 70,076 102,956 8,4S1 4,544 77,720 8,228 3,967 Pork 792.675 053,470 102,889 Eggs +280,875 23,704 Including barley malt. EXPORTS 454,049 726,143 Cheese Cut meats Naval Stores— * £53,540 17,914 Butter, pkgs 82,039 657,383 17,002 7,312 23,461 6,581 2,958 367,030 4,155 ' Oil, petroleum.... 1,057,29!) Buckwheat & B. W. flour, lSGl 108,952 Peanuts, bags 272,072 EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK TO FOREIGN PORTS EXCLUSIVE OF SPECIE. 3,162 pkgs Oil, lard 4,861,993 *2,992,785 Barley made.] 1S66. Flour, bbls 2,730,735 Wheat, bush.... 6,911,511 Rye 1866. AND was Crude 17,210 Corn Oats 1865 record no 1S65. 6,924 Breadstuffs— ex¬ 196,865 • 241,817 Total... 142,931,151 21G,371,843 $17,609,749 $19,746,451 $22,814,543 16,774,008 14,799,626 19,154,062 8,582,897 21,682 200 15,513,346 25,887.531 13,446,116 33.5S5,866 13,536,*161 20,977,982 16,235,474 21,739,826 45,523,314 20,431.789 23,788,469 20,473,699 25,126,753 27,410,438 25,577,766 17,211,176 16,383,236 19,002,537 24,713,856 23,899,970 36,937,067 26,153,374 19,307,928 14.511 361 12,805,773 16,275,283 17,750,755 20,710,807 220,465,034 272,648,163 208,630,282 254,886,254 42 6581 IMPORTS. has been this port called upon to $2,123,281 $9,578,020 $12,620,829 $15,739,576 $18,977,394 $10,620,117 13,872,140 13,027,846 21,648,937 11,473,668 18,719,866 18,39c ,895 23,667,119 16,012,373 $30,1609,5357 30, 92, 30 26,204,940 January February September ; 1859 1860 1861 1862 IMPORTS 149.970,415 174,521,766 204,128,236 212,208,301 284,033,507 lo63 3864 1865 I860 give a we 1,525.811 2,265,622 2,123,281 9,578,0-29 10,410,837 13,001,588 -January February March, ... $8,178,837 $6,763,396 7,003,399 7,058,174 6,700,061 10,812,6*9 April May ........ June.. July . August September . October 7,141,197 8,091,120 6,393,809 2,889,588 7,278 953 1,825,563 3,200,663 13,799,505 3,359,095 10,289,427 3,106,298 11,890,711 8,462,554 November.. December .. 3.6:18.580 4,614,982 4,3-12,756 Total... $54,254,231 6,565,185 6,831,073 IMPORTS 162,768,790 as 174,652,317 187,614,577 218,125.700 224,742,419 306,613,181 $8,560,680 $3,141,725 $4,482,794 3.751,073 3,370,486 3,657,775 3,084,137 4,8 !1,846 6,016,901 April 4,187,678 3,853,218 6,456,208 4.600,920 5,437,404 May......... 5,842.313 June 8,245,504 3.874,127 5.377,885 4,502,764 6,057,342 1,769,636 July 4,409,^91 2,660,457 2,939,721 August Jauuary February.... March , September.. October .. 1,390,760 2,082,381 4,351,084 3.689,806 2,150,561 2,346,387 2,108,009 Total... $41,072,228 45,486,431 November . December... 4,212,725 February.... 4,956,415 6,676,955 March 2,873,6*7 April May; 3,351,905 2,730.563 3,476,004 2,232,315 1.410,093 1,122,092 June 2,191,513 July 2.972,054 1,8(6,124 1,831,931 932,992 2,103,452 1,964,644 2,574,248 August...... September.. October November.. December... 1,577,835 4,160,532 • 10,506,502 9,184,116 4,250,862 60,144,337 99,139,425 FREE GOODS. $2,825,005 $2,552,050 $2,413,649 783,501 3,281,473 2,312,603 7,872,555 5,905,^40 7,448,371 $841,050 797,788 1,328.806 1,326,216 3.012,849 083,880 509,781 917,694 936,472 710,021 781,053 3,025.517 1,056,576 1,258,634 1,784,804 786.864 832.557 1,004,870 1,526,496 1,950,504 741,8*8 665,207 855,079 911,976 834,074 1,125,718 April.. $7,202,229 2,274,067 $168,568 1,958,001 26,152 5,546,406 Flax..... 1.002,330 830,533 931,877 8(0,082 899,5(9 1,471,951 873,514 2,665,370 3,731,106 3,956.630 4,561,586 9 235,582 $07,274,517 $71,589,752 $92,061,140 126,222,285 The increase this year has been pretty evenly distributed among the different classes of goods. We now give a summary of the imports each month, from which can be seen the course 62,007 89,327 $56,121,227 Total imports throughout the year. added : ; TOTAL The returns for IMPORTS OF of the trade the previous four year3 are - DRY GOODS AT NEW 1802. $5, **9,181 $8,184,311 .71,901 9.204,581 4,384,007 3,012,511 6, 3.290,498 2.944,483 ....... May June 18*4. 5,344,514 March April 1863. $2,965,952 January.... February. . 3,535,102 5,028,014 ... July 8,07,710 August.. 6,185.193 September 3.865,798 3,710,357 3,466,405 Octo oer November December YORK. 1865. r,723,690 5,324,599 9,437,454 ,12,635,127 5,027,857 5,220,245 6,081,136 4,801,703 -6.762,750 2,901.423 4,713,365 8,310,S78 7,5*29,800 4,107,449 2,990,100 2,235.107 '1,558,567 5,892,712 6,509,783 6,071,208 5,371,011 1866. $2,350,635 3,969,706 931,408 5,443,062 7,226,233 3 $15,769,091 16,701,578 15,633,273 7,fi36,5>:4 7,299,112 6,775,244 10,727,463 13,462,265 14,870,338 11,198,257 12,187,331 8,48 ,550 12.057,937 10,586,951 5.989,731 9,175,675 7,259,230 $71,589,752 $92,061,140 $126,222,855 The above statement shows that about two-thirds of the imports for the year were during the first six months. As our readers may be interested in seeiug the totals for the anterior period, we annex the following, showing the total imports of dry goods at this port *$56,121,227 $67,274,547 Total each vear since 1849>: ■ . DRY GOODS AT NEW YORK. IMPORTS OF FOREIGN Invoiced 947,999 $11,731,902 $10,410,837 $13,001,588 $101,906 $141,790 $52,208 $52,771 88,150 106,904 172,122 218,971 123,616 104,437 243,242 285,854 107,061 286,814 236,492 161,817 $50,405,179 21,287,490 24,837,734 20,456,870 - goods 10,159,05 10,105,018 1866. 1865. 1864. 1863. dry. MDcellan. oils 8,345.859 YORK. $25,718,592 $29,703,956 $31,411,965 $36,053,190 8.501.512 7,913,957 .. 8,405,245 15.440,054 11,508,807 15,534,469 16.194,<80 20,476,210 7,666,946 10.381,059 11,02 .331 15,521,190 : Cotton Silk ' 13,902,407 10,957,(<50 11,301,274 8,123,406 7,S17,045 8,113,369 AT NEW DRY GOODS 1862. of put-ds Manufactures— Wool Invoiced value. * ^Total.. .$30,353,918 $23,291,025 $11,567,000 IMPORTS OF SPECIE. January February... March.,.. IMPORTS OF 953,220 886,431 9i 3,937' 18(>G. foregoing we have Description $840,129 $1.2:38,751 1,504,253 620,' 03 1.119.177 330,450 1.152,683 961,026 959,416 818.818 1,159,248 IMPORTS FOR classified the imports, showing that the dry goods amounted to $120 222,855. We now- give a de tailed statement of the dry goods imports, showing the description of goods and the relative totals for the previous five years : 83,741,146 20,232,938 795,468 795,508 GOODS previous to come. total $5,571,936 $4,510,225 $10,241,576 4,991,398 „ 5.568,127 11,626,67/ 9,539,100 14,727,176 5,288,049 16,906,964 7,123,792 14.954,635 7,8(5.947 10.437,473 7,553,260 3,431,310 5,258,568 4,936,209 4,189,457 5,332;923 5,903,993 IMPORTS OF January DRV 163,800,629 6,641,408 128,079,761 60 .$128,079,701, table. This is a large increase over and probably larger than it will be for some years In the portion were entered for warehouse : 104,988,811 128,467,155 11,418 492 10 9 559,8 8 38 11,507,186 60 12,349,760 82 12,284,144 66 11,002,048 08 7,716,883 67 5,707,547 99 given in above years, for the lust six years, WAREHOUSE. 58,886,031 42 66,937,127 51 101,772,905 94 receipts for the year amount to The total custom 1865. I860. $8,741 227 $12,422,618 $5,217,495 $18,556,726 5.178,774 17,389,505 7,372,539 15,766,601 7,060.126 15,200,809 11,461,572 15.843,425 5,528,575 13,366,448 9,493,836 13.951,700 13,503.561 7,980,281 7.534,300 6,592,157 10,682,723 8,542,271 5,513,985 6,328,5cl 14,304,408 9,080,210 6,3*2,928 10,175,820 14,560,161 6,603,653 15,903,743 10,00-4,530 4,390,114 16.743,595 13,228,489 11,203,535 13.812,206 3,770,526 16,357,282 11,885,569 3,363,359 16,655,764 10,688,544 10,326,929 8.447,064 10,498,576 4,413,542 14,500,606 ENTERED 83 52,274,116 75 Total..... 1864. 104,483,984 114,377,429 I860 82 $6,180,536 00 $4,231,737 47 $12,437,474 10 7.474.027 47 4.794,247 10 12,008,273 74 3,590,713 97 7,679,770 93 5,392,099 26 11,173,1 4 92 4,554,400 13 10,950,896 78 22 $4,127,906 December.. showing the receipts from 1863. YORK. 1865 1864 6,309,994 34 86 4,1(9,952 36 3,957.197 57 13,982,555 60 8,133,433 06 4,184,924 62 3,873,865 42 3.855,186 46 7,837,075 84 3,311,148 43 4,664,927 19 3.738,934 ( 6 3.580,848 44 9,778,276 (.5 June. ,912,7•8 49 July..... .. 7,211,817 68 7,296,735 58 6,237,364 17 13,113,689 50 4,762,581 54 7 270,543 65 4,084,492 54 12,929,615 64 August September. 5,239,045 50 6,238.943 46 3,670,188 38 10,973,513 01 October.... 4,309,419 87 3,455,156 53 9,933,483 96 5 075.846 24 November.. 3,003,270 23 3,440,852 67 8,340.750 37 2.664,593 S2 5.248,189 03 238,200,460 1,390,277 New York aril May. 245,106,510 37.088,413 5,400,974 8.636,662 4.564,836 A 23U,618,129 152,867,067 213,556,049 2.816.421 8,852,330 11,567,000 11,731,902 the 129,849,619 394,097,652 181,371,472 157,860,238 1,814,425 12,895,033 2,204,120 22,024.691 28,708,732. 28,006,447 30,353,918 23,291,625 6,340,958 for customs at 1863 January... $3,351,657 February.. 3,565,063 March.:... 4,626.862 $131,361,57S ' 8,967,431 3,386,873 8,012.411 9,084,242 7.867,843 9,661,136 10,530,593 6,852,829 8.042,003 11,091,194 5,5'4.138 4.699,328 8,789,838 5,828,884 4,249,381 6,1*26,72 » 2,544,914 give in detail the receipts of the last five years : RECEIPTS FOR CUSTOMS AT NEW 1862 9,450,597 10,277,170 * 855,631 14.103,946 17,9. .2,678 21,440,734 659,869 50,851,167 67,480,778 80,624,342100,241,284 we . year, foreign ports during each month of tree goods, and what both of dutiable and warehousing, and the value withdrawn from IMPORTS ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION. 1862. 39,717.259 41,563,754 each month Total. goods. Specie. $9,719,771 $2,049,543 2,408.225 12,105,342 2,429,083 12,156,387 2,107,572 15,768.916 Free detailed statement 1861. ... November December NEW AT 7,880,008 4,405.410 9,794.773 4,606, S64 2,760,232 3.830,387 1.963,842 5,054,106 4,227,265 6,622,454 0,102,033 6,429,421 2,386,604 2,614,052 6,942.561 2,938,404 2,715,630 4,858,512 2,518,080 3,109,388 4,084,183 1,937.620 1,914,983 3,7 4,294 3,561,887 1,282,908 1,761.245 October Below WAREHOUSE. WITHDRAWN FROM . July $218,125,760 $224,742,419 $306,613,184 previous years since ISol, classi¬ Dutiable. $119,592,264 115,336,052 179,512,412 163,494,984 142,900.601 19 f,839,646 190,279,362’ 128,578,250 213,640,373 201.401,633 95,326,459 1851 1862 1853 1854 1855 . May Juue and specie. Under the head 01 entered for consumption and free goods run very light, as all the imports now are dutiable. YORK. Year. . April fying them into untiabie, free, dutiable is included both the value that entered for warehousing. The FOREIGN .. /. .. March 24,840,605 28,818,447 22,736,65-1 26.851,187 23,884,665 27,079,089 24,832,184 20,710,854 19,852,174 306,613,184 $2,543,273 $4,356,252 $2,881,531 $4,950,418 $5,653,554 $7,424,388 7,844,644 3,466.641 2,499,127 5,285,680 5,678,619 8,040,260 5,781,728 3,339,567 3,450,630 5,215,983 5,795,512 7.666,543 5.817,144 4,132,633 14,183,873 Total $174,652,317 $ 87,614,577 give for comparison the IMPORTS. 26,168,681 14,174,464 23,970.144 12,876,109 23,920,314 16,855,321 22,383,299 19,161,888 18,223,463 24.475,608 10,539,469 22,674,496 10.088,308 28,134.675 10,645.695 S,597,595 27,235,651 17,126,098 9,935,098 26.048,099 174.652,817 187,014,577 218,125,760 224,742,419 162,768,790 Total.. 1806 209,221 5,193,473 14,324,9*25 12,597,516 16,003,677 35,038,129 15,499,940 16,894.967 14,248,521 12,386,195 June 14,938,851 20,353,002 July .... 8,8-5,923 14,304,843 August 18,(47,917 September.. 7.305,461 13,413,906 8,523,741 October 10,809,398 November.. 9.639,012 9,616.921 13,072,618 December. 130,5 7.993 -% 265,622 1,525,811 109,708 14,886,893 14,949,281 12,649,733 August...'. 1S05 78,053 94,549 345,9 l 18,204,351 13,252,882 17,385.315 May... 10,812,800 $92,061,140 $120,222,855 9,578,029 2,123,281 $67,274,547 144,270,380 118,814,219 $71,589,752 1,390,277 Specie 1804 1863 $56,121,227 117,140,813 goods.... .Gen'l iner\:l**e Dry YORK. FOREIGN' 184*53 Below $2,265,022 April supply not only the u<nul merchandise and specie :NEW IMPORTS AT goods, general 1857 1858 $1,525,811 121,318 256,676 353,530 March from nearly 352,093 78,316 182,245 113,877 78,231 92,703 908,825 January... $2(5,872,411 February... 16,341,727 their imports from this point, For while there has other Southern staples the South, as we have shown above, the imports have lo a very considerable extent passed through New York, in the fol¬ lowing we classify the total imports, giving separately the dry We now 802,937 146,731 128,052 245,858 109.997 . TOTAL portions of the country which draw but to a very great extent the whole Soutn. been a large direct export of cotton and Total imports 1,434,158 236,526 127,054 Total..'..$37,088.413 $1,390,277 the year at our that 77,942 103,144 116,493 October .... November.. December .. this port have been very large, as readers already have seen from our weekly tables ; in fact the total is without precedent, reaching the enormous sum of three hundred and six millions of dollars. It should be remembered also that this is the foreign gold value, without freight or duty, being added. There is reason, however, why the imports for the year should reach so unusual a figure ; and it is to be found in the fact imports for The 58.220 129,775 161,727 114,976 be seen from the fore- j May monetary disturbance in July States bonds. TOTAL 393,073 177,085 286,032 251,640 182,072 194,224 660.092 197,217 110,388 61,023 2:9,001 3,486,1812 5,387,153 6,9% ,4 98 1,049,552 September.. 1,231,012 639.328 of specie through the year will going to have been large, owing to tbe Europe and the consequent return of United The exports 12,1867. [January CHRONICLE. THE 1849 I860 1851 1852 1853 1854 Invoiced value. 1855 1856 .; 1857.... 1858..; 1859.... I860.... . . . . . . 60,106,371 62,846,731 61,654,141 .... .. .... 93.7-14,211 . .. .. .. .. .. .. $*:4,974,062 93.362,893 90,534,129 60,154,509 113.152,624 103,927,100 . i - , l?6t. 1662. 1863 1864. 1865. 1866.. .... .... .... .... .:.. .... value. $43,636,689 66,1 1,227 67,274,547 71,589,752 92,066,140 126,222,585 . Catcst filonetarg ani dommmial (Snglisl) Neros. English Market Reports—Per Cable, Consols at London have advanced during the week about f, Debt the indicat¬ ment: Erie Railway Wed. 9. Thur. 10 91 91 * Tues. 8. 91 90* 78 73 72* 82 46 ol* 41* 72* 80* 44* 72* 81* 45* • 46* shares.. Mon. 7. .Sat. 5. 90* 90*8 73* 73M: 82* 81 45 message Blackwell’s Island Real Estate Bonds—Issued in settlement with ou redemption of a like amount of bonds for payment Soldiers. $5,431,554 Total for the week In our 1,878,367 $2,507,7 !4 $2,375,440 1SC7 $5,728,173 report of the dry-goods trade 3,220,444 * $1,690,285 2,449,789 $4,140,074 will be found the imports of dry goods for one week later. The following i9 a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending Jan. 7 : EXFORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE 1864. $1,916,598 For the week WEEK. 1866. $4,091,557 '$2,596,818 $3,716,624 In the commercial department will be found the official detailec statement of the imports and exports for the week. The value of exports from this port to different countries of specie) for the past week, and since July 1, i9 shown in the (exclusive follow table: 0 ing To Great Britain... France Holland & Belg. Germany Other N.Europe Since Jan. 1,1867 This week. $2,384,498 $2,384,498 . 221,566 467,205 22,660 22,660 221,566 Spain Other S. Europe East Indies China Australia Br.N A Colonies 43,655 130,486 30,635 43,655 130,486 30.635 The following will show York for the week ending Jan. St. Johns, P. R— American silver. 3—S.S Palmyra, Liv.— Silver bars..: Gold bars 5—S.S. Louisiana, Liv— Gold bars Juu. Total since Jan. Same time in 1866 1865 1864 7T7. 1863 1862 1861, 1850 1859 9,000 62,000 15,154 $552,027 594,353 1,806,466 325,038 442,141 15,799 85,080 1‘. 52,077 24,494 8,241 23,936 19,551 16,693 5,399 8,241 23,936 19,551 16,693 6,399 5—S.S. City of Wash¬ American gold .... 6,751 5—S.S. Allemannia, Ham600 German silver.Silver bars 305,134 Gold bars 385,873 16,000 1,1867 ....... 137,372 ington, Liverpool— $17,000 Spanish gold.. 31—Brig E. Thomson, .. Other W. I .... Mexico New Granada... Venezuela Br. Guiana Brazil Other S. A. ports All other ports.- 6,744 Total for the week Deduct cleared Dec. 31 Same time In 1858 1857 1856 1855 1854 1853 1852 - 817,512 treasure 287,779 55,'56 843,977 1,052,558 California.—The Riot Total Funded Debt of Duncan, Sherman & Co 84,933 80 Engene Kelly & Co Dabney, Morgan & Co.,. Total $15 298 21 a,958 5b 109,800 00 .. 137,783 49 $417,717 48 Wells, Fargo & Co.. Flint & Hale Order . $11,509,100 00 County DEBT., $-2,423,576 50 8,209,600 00—30,638,076 60 payable from Sinking Fund payable from taxation County. 11,509,100 00 payable from taxation Total The Commission! rs of the Sinking above debt the sum of...... $42,142,176 50 : Fund hold on account of the $30,901,878 39 City and County Funded, December 31, 1866 Net amount 11,240,298 11 j. be perceived that $10,782,800 is for for Central Park, and $14,445,600 for growing out of, and connected with the war. Of the foregoing debt it will Croton Waterworks. $9,928,571 expenses TEMPORARY CITY DEBT. Revenue Bonds of 1866— Issued in anticipation of collectioa of taxes of 1866...../ I Street improvem* nt Fund Bonds—Issued to pay contractors for improving the streets in anticipation of the therefor... Assessment Fund Bonds—Issued to pa • 1,642,600 00 .......i for opening, widening, of assessments &c., of streets, in anticipation of the collection therefor Total $683,800 00 collection of as¬ sessments 400,000 00 $2,726,400 00 Temporary Debt of the City TEMPORARY Revenue Bonds of 1S66—Issued iu taxes of 1866 COUNTY DEBT. anticipation of collection of 307,200 00 >. RECAPITULATION—TEMPORARY DEBT. City County Total $2,726,400 00 307,200 00 . .. $3,033,600 00 Temporary Debt, City and County For the payment of this Temporary Debt the city holds assets in the shape of assessment liens, unpaid taxes, <fcc., <fcc. The net amount of funded debt is $S55,996 less than it was at the close of 1865 and the City and County Temporary Debt is $1,659,700 less than it was at that date. The whole debt is well secured, for it is a lien upon the whole prop¬ erty of the city, both public and private. The Sinking Fund (provided for the payment of the principal and interest of a large portion of it) is in a sound condition. The revenues 'or the payment of the interest on that portion of it payable from this Fund are greatly in excess of what is required f r of the principal will STOCK OF WOOL IN Jan. 1. Domestic fleece. Fulled Texas California and Oregon Total NEW YORK. lbs. 1867. 4,450,000 800,000 930,000 ..... 1,150,000 domestics..! 7,330,000 1866. 1865. 1867.| bales, bales. 6,600 \ 2,500 12,000 94,272 41 1,000 00 25,000 00 ...-.....$874,764 04 Cape 630 Australian Mestiza ,100 Coarse S. Am. 880 ^ine Chilian.. 900 Total foreign ales ... -3,000 .450 600 1866. 1865. 3,000,000 4,200,1)00 250.000 500,000 1,250,000 4,700,000 4,500,000 1S6G 1867. bales, bales.! Lees & Waller —8,069,100 00 620,000 00 —1,620,000 00 * Amount FROM SAN FRANCISCO. Y.. 1,800,000 00 1,200,000 00 RECAPITULATION—FUNDED City. $20,000 09 for the of the Union. Damages Indemnity Bonds list: Panama R R. Co Third National Bank,N. 490,000 00 $30,642,076 50 bounties, and for substitutes for the armies Riot Damages Redemption Bonds 23,210 steamship Rising Star, which left Aspinwall on Jan. 2, arrived at this port Jan. 10. The following is her from 500,000 00 that purpose, and the accumulations for payment be ample to pay it long before its maturity. $784,512 Wool Trade for 1866.—Mr. James Lynch, broker, has compiled the $2,393,684 275,809 following statement of the stocks, imports, exports, <fcc., of wool for 1866. 33,000 . Treasure 3,766,500 00 Soldiers’ Subsiitute Bounty Redemption Bonds.. . $2,:KX),000 00 Soldiers’ Substitute and Relief Redemption Bonds. 946,700 00 Soldiers’ Bounty Fund Bonds 4,000,000 00 Soldiers’ Bounty Fund Bonds, No. 2 376,600 f0 Soldiers’ Bounty Fund Bonds, No. 3 745,800 00 The above were issued to provide means for the payment of $121,412 $121,412 6,744 137,372 52,077 24,494 the exports of specie from the port of New Jan. 5, 1867 : Dec. 31—S.S. Corsica, Havana— “ To Cuba. Hayti 467,20 Since Jan. 1. This week. 51,000 00 DEBT. FUNDED County Court-house Stock—Issued, as its title indicates, erection of the New Court-house in Chambers street 1367. 1865. • 154,000 00 for erecting a bri-ge across Har¬ Harlem Bridge Bonds^-Issued lem River at McComb’s Dam Amount 1866. 2,930,023 General merchandise.-... 1865. 2,748,000 00 of bounties City COUNTY FOR THE WEEK. $497,073 500,000 00 Stock for Rebuilding; Tompkins Market Volunteer Soldiers’Family Aid Fund Bonds—Issued to provide for the families of soldiers in the United States Army Volunteer Soldiers’ Family Aid Fund Redemption Bonds—Issued to extend the time of payment of Volunteer Soldiers’ Family Aid Fund Bonds, No. 3 * Volunteer Soldiers’ Bounty Fund Redemption Bonds—Issued tor Amount $2,501,526 1,133,437 50 Debt Fund Stock—Issued for liquidating and funding Floating Debt in 1859 !.. i j Public Education Stock—Issued for payment of debt of Public School Society ij.' : .... - - 190,000 00 Staff* lessees of public docks and slips Week.—The imports 1864. Drygoods 402,768 00 Float ing to Volunteer FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK 9,923,571 00 West Washington Market, for payment to the Stale for sundry lands tilled in beyond the boundary line of the Montgomery charter and for purchase of Fort Gansevoort property Stocks for Docks and Slips—Issued for iebudding and repairing this week show an increase, both in dry goods and in general merchandise, the total be_ ing $4,140,074, against $2,426,214 last week, and $6,224,708 the pre. vious week. The exports are $8,716,624 this week, against $2,426,214 last week, and $3,234,610 the previous week. Tho exports of cotton the past week were 12,219 bales, against 5,867 bales last week. This large increase is due to the fact that the manifests of several vessels^ which sailed last week, could not be obtained from the Custom House until this week. The following are the imports at New York fur week ending (for dry goods) Jan. 4, and for the week euding (for general merchandise) Jan. 5 $10,782,800 00 , COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. for the DEBT. blowing up buildings, December, 1833. Building Loan Stock*—Issued on account of building workhouse Total Funded Debt of Exports FUNDED Water Stocks—Issued on account of introducing the Croton water into the ciiy and distributing the same Central Park Stocks—Issued ou acoount of Central Park and the improvement of the same Fire Indemnity Stock—Issued for the payment of damages for Lard has advanced 19. per cwt. and debt, and the particulars of the City and County of Xew York, Dec. i 1, 1866. CITY Liverpool cotton market in the first days of the week was firm and unchanged, with moderate sales at l5£d. per pound. On Monday and Tuesday it became quiet, at a decline of £d.,and on Wednesday a further decline of |d., and on Thursday evening closed dull at 14£d This ba9 been caused by an unusual dulness pervading the manufactur. ing interests and the limited orders on hand. The Manchester market for goods and yarns, though inactive, is without quotable change. The Liverpool Breadstuff's Market has exhibited an advancing ten_ dency, and both wheat and corn are higher. The latest report (Tues day’s) quotes Western Mixed Corn at 42@42^s. per 480 pounds. Imports of the Mayor of New York, will show aggregate amount of the City and County Debt The * County.-—The following statement, and in relation to it: On the contrary United States Securities have retrogaded. The closing quotations for the specified Securities and Shares on each day of the week are shown in the following' state, Fri. 4. New York City of taken from the annual ing an easy money market. Consols for money...... C S. 6’s (1832) Illinois Central shares.. 43 THE CHRONICLE. January 12, 1807.] East India. Donskoi.... Mediterranean. 2,000 700 Sundry bales 4,500 4,000 . bales. 3,000 200 900 900 3,500 1,800 6,000 3,00u 16,050 27,-ioO 1,100 400 25,460 1865. . \ 1 0 Foreign Domesiic 7,330,000 ... Total IMPORTS OF FOREIGN Jan. 1 to Dec. From— Buenos Ayres 31 . 14,420 14,360 1.980 750 .1,817 1,071 2,947 3,923 1,608 22,093 . Montevideo.. Rio Grande.... Chili West Indies... C. Good Hope. Adelaide .. 926 275 England 1,433 27,394 6.617 1,109 9,205 1,716 104 1,051 .Nashua 5,070 3,151 .. Antwerp Hamburg Bombay 3.4S7 00 14,067 1,152 9,259 Russia 3,586 .Naumkeag .Newmarket (par 700) 892 757 1.570 1,312 ... .. S46 no Sundry Total 15,002 Total. Foreign, 1S06 58,724 53,429 Foreign, 1863 Foreign, 1862. 113,008 1SG5. Bales. Jan. 1 to Dec. 31.1866. Bales. From San Francisco. 2,560 San Francisco 5,485 70,036 transit.. 39,413 45,000 23,000 ... 58,724 14,894 802 Savannah 302,040 From interior OF TOTAL 1804. 595,800 Washed—On sheep, Unwashed—California and Oregon •: Citizens American Ex. Ae na of New Merchants Lamar Fire he set down at 40 per cent. . New Amsterdam mericuu -Fire Equitable Nut onal Fire Jan. ... 10... .Berkshire Rai'roinl . 1... .Boston and Lowell 1... Boston and Maine 1... .Boston and Providence.. 1... .Boston and Worcester... . . 4X 3X *X 4 8a 5 5 5 3 >« 3 y. 3X 3X 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 0 5 4 4 5 3 4 4 4 5 guard 35t',000 . 1,591,000 .3,155,000 492,500 . 5 3 3 3 — — . . .Philadelphia, Wil. & Gal. 7,178.850 450,001) .Pittsfield and No. Adams 4 4 4 5 4 4 — — . . .Providence and 1... .Taunton 1 .Vermont ... Worccsterl,"00,000 Branch & . 250,000 Massachusetts2.800,000 1... .Western 1... .Worcester & 0.710,800 .15,22.2 sh. . Nashua 3 0 4 -1 4 4 5 5 4 $1 V Friday: Chicago & Alton Preferred do Chicago & Chicago & .. Northwestern. Pref. do & Pacific. Cleveland & Pitt.shnrg.... Cleveland and Toledo Erie Railway Indianopolis & Cin £4 Marietta & Cin. first . - . ’ . . 8,360 8,700 4,342 4,800 2,915 4,900 2,300 8,300 1,100 4,200 10,200 1,200 9,300 7,000 400 200 300 0 0 25 . 950 .... pref 369 Michigan Central -2,500 Michigan Southern Mil. & P. du Cli. 1st pref. 13 do do 2d pref.... 500 Milwaukee & St. Paul — do do pref. 2,9)0 New York Central 40 New York & New Haven. Ohio ,fc Mississippi 199 Panama . . . . Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic. 1,250 7,375 Reading Rome, Watert’n & Og St. L., Alton & T. H. pref Stonington 700 Toledo, Wabash & West’n Miscellaneous shares, vlj s.: • Not heard from. .... ——Atlantic 1 Bates — 1 .. * — Chicopee Cocheco Contoocook 1 *—Douglas Axe — * — Amount — Pay¬ able ' Stocks. Jan. 1 Androscoggin *... Appleton Dwight Mills • • • 1S05. .. 1S66. 25 20 1866. 20 10 10 15 600,000 f> 1.500.000 0 10 £0 25 30 4 10 15 $20 $40 $50 $50 5 0 4 5 3 4 10 3 5 6 1,000,000 429,000 140,000 400.000 1,7 0,000 1867. 1867. 20 10 $1,000,000 $200,000 60,1X0 0 5 20 0 - January 50,000 ‘ Coal, American *• 1*666 Butler Cameron “ 200 Cumberland Delaw’e & Hud. Can “ .... “ “ Maryland Pennsylvania 23 .... . 84,000 “ 100,000 7,000 24,000 “ Wilkesbarre Mining—Mariposa “ Pref “ Quicksilver • • • 3,008 10,800 7,00* 7,663 7,800 18,120 11,400 9.900 • .... 200 210 1,700 2,900 .... 109 4,150 3,700 • . 50 100 9,700 1,169 39,250 600 958 300- 7,910 .... .... 05 » 5 .... 13 .... 800 900 400 13,700 7,020 37,370 112 168 ljboo 1,020 3,520 15 414 2®.555 300 .... .... 5 3,345 400 .... .... 2,900 16,200 10,000» 6,000 7,000 19,700 25 100 .... .... .-. .... ^ .... .... . . 300 314 400 400 '400 GOO 1.000 1,300 400 400 *4oo -'•••• . 550 5 *200 ... .... 300 . 300 500 COO 1,100 300 \ bod • ... .... 436 100 100 • • 125 60 900 60 500 200 • . .... 200 . 1,2C0 .... • 61,530 25 165 5 ... 300 800 7,460 100 700 .... • 11 400 50 825 1.800 25 14,059 .... 5,105 700 100 • 6,900 200 ■* 150 3.300 1,800 . .... 2,100 .... 1,200 . .... 58 .... . .... .... • 100 .... • 200 47,925 250 700 . .... .... • 1,800 .... 100 300 300 COO 20 80,350 38,906 23,623 62,120 7,400 138,225 .... .... 4,000 100 335 .... '*20 1,100 100 .... 100 20 : 19.600 ..... • 95 350 24.350 11,200 6,400 400 4,700 ... MANUFACTURING COMPANIES. Divid ends July. Jan. Julv. Jan. Capital. 604 141 12,900 16,500 44,6U0 * .... "90 3,400 1,000 .... DIVIDENDS OF Fri’y. Week. *200 .... .... ..... . 8,200 .... £2,574,729 *200 25 ' * Thurs, 180 «... » .... 335,540 60,888 Total . do Preferred.... Hudson River Illinois Central . :o,ooo 5 * Wed. 20 100, 88 45 .... & Q,.. Milwaukee Mo Chicago, R. Isl. 42,900 IX Tues.. ”50 50 ... .... Chicago, Burlington 358,942 13,500 68,000 4 4 Philadelphia \ Railroad shares, viz.: 25.000 143.949 o j 417 Walnut st. Mon. 105 Sat. 70 Bank Shares 02,500 375,135 5 6 AT 177,000 '3 Phil. Exoh’ge Bost 13 Feb. 1. Feb. <. 6 preferred stock. 120,200 19.700 5 0 $3 on 12,250 63,040 - 412 Waln’t THE STOCK. BOARDS. The following statement shows the description and number of shares sold at the Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending 168,000 225,000 5 • , BUSINESS ♦ IX — do 1867. 3X 3.540,000 .Fitchburg 1,250,000 .Metropolitan 7,502,700 l.f. .Michigan Central 500,000 1... New Bedford and Taunton 1... .Old Colony and Newport. 4,798,300 .. 5 5 5 4 3,300,000 4.500,000 000,000 . 1... 1... 1 1... 1... 4 4 5 4 4,155.700 —... .. IX 4 <•> Oomuanya Company* Navigation Co. Schuylkill, common stock $5,000 73,200 207,785 IX 1,830.000 . . .Cape Cod (par 60) 1... .Concord & Ports’ll .Connecticut River 1 1... .Eastern 3... .Eastern in N.II m 1% „ Hartford Long I-land United States Fire Market Fire Knickerbocker Fire Standard Fire Pacific Fire.. Janu’ry, 180.... $320,000 . 1800. Howard Aetna of Amount s Jan. P67. July. Jau. 1800. July. Fire York Rntgers Fire 22,744,913 21 to Feb. 1. Office! Jan. 21 to Feb. 1. Office Jan. 1 to Jan. 20. Companys Office Jan. Jan. 15. 1 Nassau street. Jan. 8 to Jan. 15. 156 Broadway. Jan. 9. 141 Broadway. Jau. 9. 5 6 Jau. 10. 170 Broadway. 106 Broadway. Jan. 9. 10 50 Wall St. Jan. 14. 5 Jan. 10. Companys Office 5 48 Wall St. 3X Jan. 7. 48 Wall St. 3X Jan. 7. Feb. 1. 80 Chatham Sq. Jan. 26 to Feb. 1. 5 20 Wall Street. Jan. 3. 4 48 Wall Street. 3X Jan. 7. Jan.10. 58 Wall Street. 6 52 Wall Street Jan. 9. 6 Jan. 10. 06 Wall Street. 5 62 Wall Street Jan. 5. 4 3X Jam 5 Jan. 7. Companys Office 5 3X Jan. 8. Companys Office 5 Jan, 10. 64 Wa 1 Street. 11 Wall Street. J an. 8. 5 47 Broadway. Jan. 11. 6 Montaok Fire 03,500,000 Bank. At Bank. At 5 10 Central of New Jersey RAILROAD COMPANIES. —Dividends.- Capital. Stocks. KR American Fire do Extra 137,000,000 , Pay- B'kRepublic,NY Feb. 1. Feb. 1. J»n. 20. 10 2X Jan. 17. Feb. 1. $3 Insurance. 91.244,913 and imported in 1866 There nre in (he United States about 1,600 woolen mills, containing about 6,000 sets of carding machines, capable of consuming annually 170,000,000 ibs. clean material. Boston Dividends.—We are indebted to Joseph G. Martin, of Bos¬ ton, for tables of Railroad, Manufacturing and .Miscellaneous Divr dends, payable in that city iu January. The railroads show a profita¬ ble year, their dividends in many cases exceeding those of last year This is probably due, in great part, at least to the decrease in the ex¬ pense account, by reason of the lower charges for wages and railroad material. On the other hand the exhibit of the manufacturing com¬ panies is not so favorable, although many of them are still dividing large profits among their stockholders. Below we give the dividends tor this year, adding also, for comparison, those for the previous year. able Jan. 2. Jan. 10. Jan. 10. 7 Kings County F.re Leaving of pure wool, grown DIVIDENDS OF WHERE. R Ogdensburg & L. Champ’n Pounds. ' clean Lehigh Valley 2,000,000 Total allroads. , I860. Sundry Southern Yielding about one-half pure wool, or say The product of 56,802,234 lbs. foreign may 35 -.120,000.000 9,000,000 6,000,000 tub-washed and pulled Texas „ WHEN. 4 4 5 Mihv.&P. du Chieu, lstpre do do 2u pre Milwaukee & St. Paul —. 71,003,047 50,SG2,284 45,004,752 CLIP OS THE UNIl"ED STATES IN WOOL • BOOKS CLOSET). o’t. p. Americau National .... First National of Yonkers. 51,798,943 20,780,124 1,513,000 8r70,9S0 450,000 171,000 COMPANY. Banks. Mechanics of St. Louis.... 77,099,443 18(55. 597,150 Baltimore of bonds, &c., lost, and 59,033,216 30,200,54014,292,412 Philadelphia 125,000 165,000 (6>alette. rate NAME OF *0.460,203 130,023 225,484 1SGG. ESTIMATE 113,000 150,705 : 30.000,176 20,027,958 Total 10 10 0 lAVAbLK. i IMPORTED INTO UNITED STATES. New York Boston. 5 75,000 7X continued daily, and on Saturday through the week in the Bulletin Below will be found those . the Bulletin. published the last week in 13,009,000 65,045 .. 1865 1804 FOREIGN WOOL 1,107,200 508 8,S47,000 Sundry Southern Total.- 42,000 300.000 12 10 from day to day lists give in our Bulletin We Pounds. 2,913 New Orleans 4,408.200 ' 144,000 12 10 3 dividends declared. These tables will be morning such as have been published will be collected and published In the Chronicle. 1806. YORK IN Bales, 38,0(10,170 7,004 California Texas.- NEW Pounds. Bales. Foreign IN WOOL ARRIVALS OF 12 $70 $50. DIVIDENDS. Sundry SouthTOTAL 37,500 100,000 $2,590,760 100,000 in Interior, .. . .... 5 10 river and .... 555 65,045. canal road, steamers.... 1,044 1,014 1,250,000 1,050,000 <£J}e Boulters’ Interior bvrail- 6,331 5.071 Bales. 348 ern • via Aspin5,134 wall 14.894 Texas 2,918 New Orleans.. 802 Savannah 7X 108,0«0 375,000 6 15 5 14 15 7 12 10 3 8 8 66,250 15,000 108,000 Payable on demand. 1861 Bales- 508 * Bales. From Bales. 3. SvO 10 30,000 80,000 5 10 26 5 6 10 10 . $100 600,000 20 Total ARRIVALS OF WOOL AT NEW YORK. 1SG5. 1SG4. Jan. 1 to Dec. 31. 1860. COASTWISE 4- $21 1,000,000 .Washington Mills 88,883 - 10 25 10 7X 2,500.000 .Stark Mills 45,000 00,000 140,000 7X 10 600 eh. (par £00)....' 6 . 1,200,000 .... 60,000 3 7 750,000 1.000,000 — .Salmon Falls bales. bales. .. Salisbury 53,429 113,668 '3 . 2,500,000 .Pacific 58,721 .. Total Foreign, 1803.'.. Foreign, 1864... 9,018 5 5 4 15 20 25 5 12 1, SO*, 000 ... — 6X 225,000 800,000 800,000 1 .Manchester P. W .Massachusetts Mills Merrimack .Middlesex Mills bales. 1.645 20,955 7,415 9,445 bales, 5 5 800,000 400). .Langdon Mills: .Lowell Bleachery 3861. 1805. Jan. 1 to Dec 31. 1S66. bales, From— 333 France 1864. bales. 1865. bales. 1866. hales. 600,000 700,000 ' 10 0 20 5 25 25 6 0 0 5 5 10 0 1,200,000 10 3 10 5 0 600,000 1,500,000 r. . YORK. NEW AT WOOL 17,100,000 -.Jackson Company .Lancaster Mills (par 12,300,000 22,232,500 ... .Franklin Great Falls. ..Hamilton Cotton .Hill Mill.,. 1865. 7,800,000 4,500,000 14,902,500 . 13.000,000 4,700,000 1866. 1867. Stock in pour.ds. - [January 12, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 41 .« 600 40 600 ... ... 2,314 1.4C0 4,500 200 1,875 188 2,200 SCO 1,536 4,000 700 100 3,600 900 2,000 January 12,1867.] • • • » • • • • 2,320 • *• Canton “ Cary... • u <- • 100 105 400 700 8 5 500 81 300 700 400 2,000 2,200 Pacific Mail... “ S. Amer. Nav.. Union Nav Express— Adams “ 110 American 50 150 The amount of Government, State » • 1,200 • 700 . • 2,000 2,350 2,800 100 1,600 900 900 3S7 400 866 ICO 700 58 300 2,250 400 40 4 ; , , 6,336 2,300 7,200 ' 660 19 328 . and City and other bonds sold at the Regular Board, daily and for the week, are given in the following statement: Mon Sat. Wed. Tues. $51,000 413,000 $10,000 1881 U.S 6’s (5-20’s). U.S6’s (old)... U.S 5’s (10-408) U.S 5’s (old) $3,000 85,000 U. S 7-30 notes. 5,500 214,500 14,000 5,000 27,500 26,000 1,000 152,000 31,666 IT. S. 6’s, . • * • . . *;... 16,000 .... .. • 227,000 .... • • • • 53,500 11.0 0 Thur. Fri. $1,000 $91,500 206,700 175,000 2,000 1,000 494,500 Week. $156,500 1,160,700 8,666 13,000 39,000 69,500 855,-.'50 5,000 43,950 10,000 viz State bonds, Connecticut 6’s Missouri 6’s... New York 6’s.. New York 7’s. N. Carolina 6’s. Ohio 6’s Rhode Isln’d6’s Tennessee 6’s.. Virginia 6’s.... ; • .... • • • • • • 14,000 • 33,666 8,666 6,000 3,000 5,000 3,000 5.000 .... • 5,666 • 16,000 23,000 266,000 31,000 1,000 17,000 5,000 33.500 =66,000 - . .... 110,666 5,000 5,000 218,000 23,000 14,666 7,000 4,000 1,000 1,000 1,000 21,000 44,000 50,000 145,000 1,000 20,000 Dec. 14. Dec. 21. Dec. 23. Jan. 4. Jan. 11. 112 110 xc.108* 107)4 111)4 Dec. 7. J13 6’s, 18S1 conp U. S. U. S. U. S. U. S. U. S. U.S U* S U. S. U. S 5-20’s, 1862 coupons. 5-20’s, 18454 44 5-20'e, 1805 44 5-20’s, 1865, N. iss... 10-40’s, “ >0S% 7-30’s 2d Series 7-30’s 3rd series .. .. 107)4 K'6* ' 7-30’s 1st series 106 106 107 100* 105)4 105)4 105)4 - 105 105 105 106)4 107)4 105* 104)4 105)4 106 104)4 107% xc.104 99% 99% 106)4 105)4 105)4 108)4 99% ios% The Stock Market.—-The stock 103 99 105 105 105 105% 105* 104 99)4 104 104 104 105 104 104 104 104)4 104)4 market opened quiet, but gener¬ ally firm. Subsequently the severe closeness in the money market produced for the purpose of depressing stocks, had the effect of com¬ pelling a large amount of realizing, and prices yesterday fell off 2@4 per cent. This morning the market opened weak^pw'ecs being gen¬ erally about per cent, below those of yesterday afternoon ; as progressed, stocks gathered strength, and the first board a general improvement upon the opening figures. This afternoon the relaxation of the severe tightness in money produced a more buoyant feeliug, and a still further improvement in prices the call closed with realized. was 17,000 20,000 following are the'closing price? of biding securities, com¬ preceding weeks : pared with 7,000 8,000 34,000 1,000 25,000 City Bonds, viz Brooklyn 6’s.. Company Bondsi, viz : Railroad 5,000 Mining • 12,000 11,000 1,500 9,000 11,000 • The ' 98 1.900 advanced to 104f, but closed at 104. 18,906 S 10 IS fives have been made scarce, and 300 • 7 • 100 - • 1,800 • 2 50 United States.... 600 200 2,126 1,000 15 5 “ “ • (Russian) Steamship— Atlantic Mail. “ • / 700 Telegraph—West’n Dnion 1,610 • 44 100 100 200 300 600 100 300 100 ,,,, * • 300 200 100 10 Improvin't—Boston W. P. Bruns’k City 45 THE CHRONICLE. . stocks at both boards, for the weck} The total transactions in amount to 596,8G1 shares, agaimt 307,370 shares for last week; activity has been in Erie, the sales of which have been 138,225 shares. Included in the transactions are Northwestern com¬ Friday, Jan. 11, 1867, P. M. mon 80,350 shares ; Reading 61,530 ; Michigan Southern 39,250 ; The Money Market.—The week opened with a steady 7 per Cleveland and Pittsburg 62,120 ; New York Central 37,370, and cent, market. Up to Wednesday the tendency appeared to favor Western Union Telegraph 18,906. greater ease, and on the morning of that day call loans were made The following are the closing quotations at the regular board to¬ on Government collaterals at 6 per cent. This tendency was op¬ day, compared with those of the six preceding weeks : posed to the interest of parties largely “short” on stocks and gold, Nov. 30. Dec. 7. Dec. 14. Dec. 21. Dec. 2S. Jan. 4. Jan. 11. 90 81 65* 65* and combinations were consequently formed for producing a sharp Cumberland Coal 43 44 .'45 44* 45* 43% 41* Quicksilver 45 49 46 45* 46* 46 stringency in the money market. This object was accomplished by Canton Co 32 30* 31* SO* 31* 27 31* Mariposa pref.... no* no* borrowing largely from private bankers and up-town merchants New York Central no* no* no* 113 no* 64 69 65* 67* 71* 71)4 Erie 71)4 132 upon terms calculated to induce them to call ain loans. In some Hudson River.... 132 123* 119* 122* 105* 104* 105)4 109*x.d.l03* 110* cases tire greenbacks thus obtained were sealed-up and used as col¬ iii)4 Reading 8"* 82* 82* 80* 81* 79)4 81*4Mich. Southern.. 106* 112 x.d.107* ; 108 107* lateral for fresh loans, and the process again duplicated and re¬ Michigan Central no* 112* .... .... .... The chief ' t — ■ . .. . . .... .... duplicated. In other instances the loans were made for a definite period, and the money borrowed left as security,The end being served long as th% greenbacks could not be made available to other parties. In this way an amount, variously estimated at six to ten millions, was literally tied up. The result, of course, lias been to so 113* . 45 73 Northwestern.... “ preferred Rock Island Fort Wayne Illinois Central 84* 112* 51* 70* 103* 85 Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo 104* 105% 105 118* 119 .. 87* 124* 88* 124* 47 44* 45* 78* 90* 113* 80 82 103* 107* 118* 103* 85* 124* 54* 76)4 102)4 103* 104)4 117* 104)4 116* 90* 123 41* 81* 104* 102* 102* 121 119 The following statement shows the volume of transactions in produce an extreme.stringency, and to compel a considerable amount shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, on each day of of realizing upon gold, stocks and Governments, with a consequent the week closing with this day’s business : Fri. Week. Thurs. Wed. Tues. decline in prices. Wednesday afternoon and yesterday call loans Mon. Sat. 141 t>04 180 20 88 105 70 Bank shares 87,716 156,234 137,750 539,039 ranged at 7 per cent, in currency to 7 per cent, in gold. This af¬ Railroad “ 59,5S6 52,165 45,58S 12,559 2,000 1,855 1,755 3,496 2,200 1,523 44 ternoon, however, there has been a partial relaxation of the string¬ Coal 9,600 400 1,100 1,400 2,000 2,6ii0 2,100 Mining 44 800 4,300 500 1,300 600 1,100 ency, and the severity of the spasm appears to have passed. Some Improv’t “ 12,005 2,360 2,800 2,133 1,692 700 2,330 Telegraph “ 2,066 17,836 2,300 who had loaned to the parties in these operations, without kuowing Steamship14 4,150 2,500 4,215 2,605 66 54 1,007 407 150 260 70 Express 44 11 11 the purpose of the movemevt, we understand, have determined upon Gas 44 calling in their loans, and the stratagem may be considered as hav¬ At 42,684 206,136 67,853 Regular Board.. 14,656 26,950 26,871 27,122 97,700 104,100 71,400 42,000 37,525 38,000 At Open Board... ing now lost its power. It is proper to record that these operations 596,861 'are universally deemed highly discreditable, and the parties known 98.522 165,553 146,784 68,871 64,475 Total current week. 62,656 80,844 65,460 807,370 75,611 36,469 49,586 to be engaged in them are for the hour under the ban of public re¬ Previous week..... The transactions in shares weekly since the commencement of .... — .... .... .... , . • probation. \ Discounting has been almost eulirely discontinued oa the part c the banks, under the flurry of the moment, and transactions in pa per are confined to limited purchases by private bankers at 7@i per cent, for prime names. The following are the quotations for bans of various classes : / • ' tail loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed months Percen Percent. 7 @ 6 @ 7 bills, 2 7 — i Good endorsed bills, 3 4 months do single names Lower grades.. & 7 @8 8 ©9 8 @10 United States Securities. -Governments have been urisettle during the week, owing to the fluctuations in gold, the changes in the prices of bonds at London, and the fitful condition of the money market. The extreme stringency in money, alluded to in our re marks on the money market, forced out a considerable amount of bonds on Wednesday and Thursday, producing a sharp decline in prices, but the demand from the iuterior upon any decline in quota¬ tion has helped to sustain the market. The chief fluctuations have occurred in Seven-thirties. Parties supposed to be working in the interest of conversion operations have sold the first series of Seventhirties largely, producing at one time a decline to 103f@f ; this afternoon, however, the market was firmer, and each series closed at 104, which is 1 per cent, below ourjast quotations, New Sixty- the year are • • • shown in the following statement: f Rail- Min- Im- Tele- Steam- ship- Other. 200,715 Total. 898 J,2o7 141 639,139 1 2,559 9,600 4,300 12,005 17,836 1,018 596,851 “’ll The following is a summary of the amount of Government bonds and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds sold at the Regular Board on each day of the past week: Sat Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. Frl. Week. U.S. Bonds $i8,000 $480,500 $247,000 $73,5M $708,700 $274,500 $*.873,200 69,500 * 855,450 43,950 494,500 U S. Notes 5,500 214,500 27,500 ncrt AnA Rnn RQ Knn 623,000 *** ^ 61,000 24,000 173,e00 Week 7,850 188 089 83 Tor, Coal. ing. pro’t. graph, 3,600 ending— Bank. ro’d. State* City b1 da 71,000 Company B’nds 5,000 rotal Cur. w’k*. $160,600 Previous week.. 273,000 208,500 37,000 1,700 4,323 86,000 21,000 8,000 940,500 367,500 292,100 .... the weekly, since the commencement following tabulation : Veek ending r Friday, (1 to 4) an. an. ctive n 1,873,200 11 The Gold Governments •, Bonds. Notes. $977,000 $146,100 855,4*j0 50,000 165,000 201,4501,271,200 567,000 3'517,150 35y,509 702,800 7^2,500 2,349,900 The totals, n 44 000 of the year are shown Company State & City Bonds. $454,800 628,500 Market.—Gold has been . Bonds. $207,500 165,000 excited under Total amount. $1,785,400 8,517,160 unusually speculative operations. There are very heavy commitments higher and lower prices, and the contest between favor of both he opposite parties has been more than ordinarily active. fluctuated between 132^ and 135J, and closes at nice has The 134, Jan. Jan. Jan. ’> 5 7../ 8.. ; Jan.10. Jau.ll *••*. Sub-Treasury were as follows : Sub-Treasury $12,304,498 67 $17,565,951 34 303,353 47 262,359 62 $1,584,037 47 Total Balance in Sab-Treasury Deduct Receipts. $6,154,526 49 1,732,417 44 2,046,400 85 4,599,711 41 $224,075 08 287,007 25 505,967 05 Dec. 81 Jan. 3. “ 3. “ 4 11 5. * , Payments. $5,421,225 51 1,388,296 39 2,714,199 13 1,860,989 58 913,788 06 Receipts. 3,032,895 15 97,352,205 65 morning of Dec. 31. $114,918,156 99 12,304,498 67 payments during the week. 1,444,754 1,257,*26 959,145 1,451,576 15,536,576 12,490.705 1,156,575 $102,613,658 32 5,261,452 67 of Gold Certificates issued, $2,519,000. Included Balance on Saturday evening Increase during the week 307.212 83,300 11,865 28 ,500 924,630 29,922 65,425 795.276 2.486, 58 269,247 911,200 622.929 758,6'6 257,461 1,399,500 595/o00 1,050 270,000 448,271 13.050 11,600 1,274,714 34,000 1,445,552 616,817 21S,949 * The deviations from lows : 1866 1267 -*• ' Specie Dec. Inc. $1,722,274 Inc. 2,025,424 Deposits. Legal Tenders Dec. $1,502,301 390,330 198,253 Inc.. following are the totals for a series of weeks past: Legal Gircnla- Specie. Loans. 71 48i>,987,787 lb 1866 ^1 1867 19,769,003 09 the returns of the'previou3 week are as fol¬ Loans.... .' 305,861 2,256,685 1,062,829 $32,762,779 $202,533,564 $65,026,121 last week. Clearings for the week ending Dec. 29, Clearings for the week ending Jan. 5, Balances for the week ending Dec. 29, Balances fjr the week ending Jan. 5, Circulation 3,320,961 206,146 180.000 39.116 692,842 o 10,860 16,238” 4,639 7,' 52 224.569 $257,852,460 $12,794,892 as 644,261 545,2S5 224,439 265,428 227,645 4,017,817 1,645,071 2,543,300 Totals 1,302,037 4,231,100 2,925,755 910.539 Dry Dock Bull’s Head Croton National... 423,000 342,252 98,722 3,121,420 The 604,753 1,000,000 1,633,899 1,274,217 4,744,283 17,775,103 1,257,140 1,653,799 1,080,203 636.555 1.119,822 12,380,502 11,968,706 923.556 6,95 ,286 2,922,809 220,886 2,835.325 Same 98,711 7.611 18,518 289,518 5,837,792 First National * Custom House. 999,556 Third National.... N. Y. Exchange... Tenth National.... Custom House and the The transactions for last week at the 13,735,279 Bank’g As’n Ninth National.... '133% 132% 132% 184% 1*3% 134% 108,514 661,180 14,526 6,146 33.116 Fourth National... Central Second National... Highest. Lowest. Jan. 9 5,612,336 Grocers’ each of the last 6ix days : Highest. Lowest. 134% 1333* 1*5# 133% 134% 133% 18,720 North River East River Manuf. & Merch’ts and lowest quotations on following have been the highest 1,511,877 Park Mech. causes. The 1,962,288 Imp. & Traders... derangements in the money 265,000 105,930 Marine Atlantic market, although produced for the purpose i f depressing gold, have had comparatively little effect in that direction. Opinion, at present, appeares to be about equally divided between the upward and downward tendencies erf the pre¬ At present the price appears to depend upon the specula¬ mium. tive manipulation of the market rather than upon any external The [January 12, 1857. THE CHRONICLE. 46 Tenders. Deposits. tion. Aggregate Clearings $61,485,458 $649,081,442 60,946,857 647,315,736 Total amount 63,994,309 550,150,S33 13,231,917 32,433,429 202,029,877 64,816,962 587,150,£33 in the receipts of customs were $124,000 in gold, and $1,460,037 13,185,222 32,664,526 200,811,290 63,000,687 515,917.999 12,794,892 32,762,779 202,533,564 65,026,121 486,987,78* in Gold Certificates. Philadelphia Banks.—The following shows the totals of the The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the Subaverage of the leading items of the Philadelphia Banks for last and Treasury since Dec. 1 : s Changes in Weeks Custom previous weeks: Sub-Treasury Jan 5. Dec. 29. Dec. 1..$263,Oil,668 Dec. 8.. 260,620,027 Dec. 15.. 258,452,330 Dec 22.. 258 255,514 Dec. 29.. 259 354,761 Jan. 5.’67 257,852,460 $14,957,007 $31,393,849 $208,889,177 14,582,050 31,794,653 203,676,822 13,991,200 31,797,665 206,458,271 . 1... 8... Dec. “ 4* 15... “ 22 29. “ Jan. 5, Balances. Dec. $182,895 Inc. 4,234,131 Inc. 1,999,771 Inc. 5,389,950 Dec. 16,726,920 Inc. 5,261,452 Payments. Receipts. Balances. $1,173,546 $15,27^0128 $15,094,432 $102,455,273 20,389,460 106,689,404 16,155.328 1,419,235 10,793.385 12,793,157 108,689,176 1,471,199 15,915,183 114,079,126 1,057,950 10,525,233 97,352.205 12,814,763 29,541,684 1,332,919 17,565,951 102,613,658 1,534,037 12,304,498 House. Ending .. ’67. Wednesday’s steam, er was moderativeiy active, the rate for bankers’ 60 days sterling closing at 109To day the demand has been more active, aud Foreign Exchange.—Foreign exchange for considerable total of bills has been sold at 109£@f. 51.759,765 Specie. Due from Banks. Due to Banks.... Circulation The most remarkable past week is Increase.. Increase.. Increase.. Increase.. Decreased Increase.. Increase.. 52,312,327 ’876.647 19,777,051 4,559,059 7,646,572 39,706,052 10,325,154 Loans.. for the $15,442,160 $15,442,160 Capital 903,663 20,209,964 4.900,540 7,289,000 41,308,827 • 10,388,820 $552,562 27.016 432,913 341,481 827,572 1,602,275 63,6fc6 feature of the bank statement of averages the very large increase of $1,602,275 of de The loans increased $552,562, I he legal tenders $432,913, The following are the closing quotations tor the several classes and the specie $27,016. Every item of the statement shows an in¬ of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : crease. The clearings of the week amount to $33,374,852, against Jan. 11. Jan. 4, ’67. Dec. 28. Dec. 21. The balances amount to $3,484,108 @ 108% London Comm’l. 108%® 108% $26,951,011 the previous week. 107%@ 108% 107%® 108% 109 @109% 109 ©109% 109%® 109% do bkrsVn^ 108%® 109 109%@ 110 do shrt 109%® 110 109%® 110% 315, against $3,038,881 the previous week. do 109%® 109% 6.15 @ 6.16%©5.15 5.16%@5.15 6.17%@5.15 The following comparison shows the condition of the Philadel¬ axis, Iona @5.12% 5.13%@5.12% do short 5.15 @5.12% 5.13%® 5.20 @5.17% 5.20 @5.17% 5.20 @5.17% Antwerp 5.21%@5.17% phia Banks at stated periods : 5.20 6.20 6.20 Circulation. a posits. .... .... Swiss Hamburg Amsterdam 5.21%@5.17% 36% @ 36% Frankfort Bremen 41 %® 41%@ 79 ® Berlin 72%@ 41% 41% 79% 72% @5.17% 36%@ 41%® 41% 41 %@ 41% 79%@ 72 @ 72% ... .... @5.17% S6%@ 41%® 41% 41%® 41% 79%© .... 72 @ 72% ... @5.17% @36% 41% 41%@ 7«%@ 79% 72%@ 72% 41 %@ following statement shows the City of New York tor the ending with the commencement of business on Saturday* condition of the Associated Banks of the Jan. 5, 1866 : Average amount ofige * Loans and discounts. Specie. $8,015,096 $2,194,701 5.921.564 494,371 995,592 6,955,832 256,253 5,282,137 196,404 4,370,SOI 8,756,810 1,388,940 294,406 4,071,440 385,785 3,947,694 Banks. New York... Manhattan.. Merchants’. Mechanics’ Union ifc ' America ‘ Phenix City Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical Merch’ts Exchange National JButch. & Drovers.. Mech’s & Traders.. Greenwich Leather Mannfact’s Seventh Ward State of N. York... American Exc’ge.. Commerce > Republic J Chatham People’s North America.... Hanover 2,255,937 1,765,739 1,129,279 3,391,621 1,206,147 5,262,249 10,484,638 24,584,445 Citizens’ Nassau Market*.... St. Nicholas 13hoe and Leather.. Corn Exchange ... Continental Commonwealth. 5,258,900 . 24.116 178,656 675,014 57,700 202,644 40,896 20,570 5,578 224,279 43,604 366,435 692,047 809,413 160,326 56,837 59,621 26.060 302.182 1,856,073 42,377 1,348,295 36,211 63,989 76,012 16,000 209,874 18,289 94,254 2,512,467 2,629,714 1,715,000 11,135,112 Irving Metropolitan 2,053,543 3,418,041 8,055,102 1,897,661 Ocean Mercantile Orient*! 3,538,897 6,524,433 Broadway Pacific 2,853.631 2,041,188 5,232,844 1,325,131 2,206,275 2,620,146 2,730,780 5,712,000 87,090 4,049,677 8,035,129 48,224 58,706 27,854 195,529 59,vl0 1,384,533 9,552 4,828,400 Circula¬ tion. Net deposits. $769,411 $7,786,846 1:1,769 764,060 5,423,534 6,370,131 3,911,304 3,445,235 8,004,177 3,0(53,734 2,6 8,919 1,954,657 1,979,226 4,593,133 2,788,263 564,596 462,906 2,445 292,470 748,420 18,926 18,153 458,735 497,458 246,923 175,000 5,039 190,857 177,585 55,0 0 987,525 5,853,995 900,000 800,00» 482,215 1,448,560 1,100,&36 1,171,3 5 2,179,065 761,589 549.374 $41,900,000 $D,900,000 97,009,342 13,844,823 14,757,289 Circulation Jan. 409,562 386,178 763,555 639,916 1,208,300 353,000 661,000 766.375 239,194 Deposits. $42,102,289 41,452,639 40,728,902 40,411,158 39,706,052 41,308,327 - Dec. 31. Specie Legal tender notes Due from other banks Due to other banks Deposits 2,243,840 6,5*7,610 1,711,610 923,116 950,203 603,586 1,329,529 491,065 2,151,800 867,647 903,663 Loans Dec. 214,360 758.473 452.473 612,000 860,111 Jan. 7. : Capital 522,261 164,927 918,501 364,653 1,038,477 1,008,281 193,912 2,203,649 $2,936,265 1,967,774 1,471,816 935,174 2,741,829 736,417 3,888,646 6,131,161 5,584,552 6,628,010 2,811,958 15,531 7,035 339,939 292,031 statements: Tenders. 400,429 140,168 4,448 517,040 755,554 920,539 10,997 550,214 280,927 856,316 129,188 52,312,317 51,759,765 861,918 854,989 $9,615,989 10,021,527 10,161,601 10,257,544 10,825,154 10,388,820 last weekly statement of the Boston Na¬ tional Banka shows a considerable decrease in loans, a large increase in specie, aud in amounts due to and from other banks. The following are the footings compared with the two previous 753.697 3,055,102 19,777,051 20,209,064 (Specie. $876,751 Boston Banks.—The 1,647^366 • 20,488,385 20.115,704 19,677,741 .. 935,356 1,051,165 1,245,725 857,267 152,821 1,684,886 4,259,664 1,760,245 1,193,140 2,323,269 1,596,174 1,728,000 6,040,636 1,325,013 1,605,086 1,962,234 1,295,573 3,783,600 8,240,669 2,258,006 8,064,020 133,674 Legal Loans. $54,549,367 61,250,352 51,256,937 61.636,821 $21,057,343 ... New York City Banks.—The week Legal Tenders. Date. Dec. 1 Dec. 8 Dec. 15. Dec. 22.... Dec. 29. Jan. 5 ’67 1,183,451 17,003,387 ' .* (National) Circulation (State). The past following : are 99,033,673 589,137 18,090,512 12,6€tU58 13,534.113 41,801,496 24,666,860 40,824,618 24,580,367 312,664 313,562 Dec. 24. $41,900,000 98,958,672 582,112 17,038,272 11,659,442 13,287,649 40,971,613 24,654,336 315,140 the comparative totals for a series of weeks , • * Legal . Circulation. , Specie. Tenders. Deposits. National. State. $99,446,166 : 1601,502 $16,640,798 $41,089,605 $24,593,237 $320,864 318,409 99,062,641 689,364 16,688,280 40,958,922 24,650,482 316,242 99,127,027 697,902 16,561,288 41,042,063 24,671,197 316,140 98,958,672 582,112 17,038,272 40,971,613 =24,654,346 313,562 99,033,613 589,137 18,090,512 41,SOI,496 24,666,860 312,664 ’67.. 97,009,3421,183,451 17,033,387 40,824,618 24,580,367 Loans. 3 10 17 24 31 7 Banks.—There was issued from the Treasury Depart¬ during the week ending January 5 $18,400 in National Bank currency, making the total amuunt issued up to date $300,755 35. From this is to be deducted the currency returned, including worn out notes, amounting to $2,145,932, leaving in actual circulation at that date $298,609,419. The amount of securities held by the Treasury of• the United States in trust for National Banks reported January 6 is as follows: As security for circulating notes, $340,363,150 ; for deposits, $38,963,050 ; total, $379,267,200. \ The following is a statement of the progress of circulation for several weeks past: National ment B’ks. Date. Dec. 8.. 1,649 Dec, 22,. 1,M8 Capital. Circulation. 299,886,931 B’ks. Date. Dec. 29.. 1,649 Jan, 5,i Capital. Circulation 298,613,51 January 12, 1867.] EXCHANGE. ^PRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JANUARY 11.) YORK STOCK SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW I American Gold ! SECURITIES. AND STOCKS Il34#jl33% Boom) Coin (G>iu 127 J ;—; C0«pc>/4.;1O7#!1O7# do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 6s, 6s, 5s, 5s, 5s, do do do do ao. 1871 1871 1S74 registered registered. Indianapolis and Cincinnati Joliet and Chicago Long Island McGregor Western., coupon do 1S77 do 1879 do do 1860-62-65-70. ! Missouri6s do 6s, 41# 82#! 81%| 81# 103# 1102 1 102# 100:191# 103% -103# 00 I 90# j 90# 100j 1 50, •'sO#- 90#; 90# jl25#i 122# 50,124 i*2,i^jj ! 1 64# j 50! 76 ...100 67% < 67#l 66% j 66# j 100; 84# a7»#'; • 100, 100; 50 130 iigo# 232 ;i30 50 j 118# jus# ..100 :. i New New New New — j — { *; — — — j | J , |! 54# j -—1 67# 67# so#-: 95 .. -! -I — 6s 5s do do Cameron Central Consolidated Cumberland Delaware and Hudson 50| 50 j 100! 10 100 Lehigh <fc Susquehanna Pennsylvania Spring Mountain Spruce Hill Wilkosbarre. (Brooklyn) Hoboken — — — New York Williamsburg Improvement.—Boston Water Power Brunswick City Canton .100 Telegraph.—Western Union...... 100 Western Union, Russian Extension. 100 Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 100 Cary Railway American Nicaragua..-.. . Minnesota Copper — New Jersey Consolidated Quartz Hill Quicksilver Rutland Marble U Piraolttun, 57 9 9 9 9 49 11 11 45# 46% 11 46# 46#| 45%j 46# 96# 106 Michigan do do — 1 108 — 168#. 167 1168 1 1108#; — ;107# 100 100; 70 j* j | 403 | *. Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 do do 8s, new, 1882 46 49# 1 96 , 106# ...100 169 1169 jl68 100414# 14%'117 100 108 ,108#' 100 100 95 Southern, Sinking Fund. do 2d mortgage, 7s..... Goshen Line, 1868 do 96 j j Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort 11 Milwaukee and St,. Paul, 1st mortgage jj Mississippi 91 95# 87 S6# 87#. 82 2d mortgage do do and Missouri, Land Grants 1st mortgage . Morris and Essex, 1883 New York Central 6s, do do 68,1887 do do 7s, 1876 do do 7s, d^ d> 7s 1865-76 New York and New Ilaven 94# • convertible, 1876 64# 60 66# 78 75 72 69 69# 72 68 68 14# 31% 14 131* 31# 30# 68 80 71 13 I 32# 14 32# Ohio and 25! — 100 45 i 25 10 do do 30# St. Mississippi, 1st mortgage 43 do do do do Louis, Alton and 1st mort.. do do Torre Haute, 1st do Jtwlposft (Gol& do do ■' 9d mortgage ittmortgage. 95 2d mort... Sd mort... mort .. 2d, pref.... do 2d, income. Toledo end Wabath, l»t mortgago, extended, do do 44^j 2*1 — 95# Peninsula, 1st mortgage......' Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 5^ Copper... 15; t 1st mortgage Consolidated and Sinking Fund 2d mortgage, 1868. ‘ Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885 do 3d mortgage, 1875. do convertible, 1867 Illinois Central 7s, 1875. Lackawanna and Western Bonds McGregor Western, 1st mortgage. Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage 28#1 29# ....100 . 100 , 500 100 100 Wells, Fargo & Co. * 2d mortgage ; nannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage—,... i —Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1569-72 j 101 t do do 145 100 ; American Merchants Union United States... 100#; !lCl | 102 do do 100 Express.—Adams jtfinirg—Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred Great. Western, 25 100 100 7 rust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust New York Life and Tru t Union Trust United States Trust 1868 99 extended .! _;J 100 50 50 20 100 ...100 Metropolitan 2 ransit.—Central 1154 91# ! 92 ! 92 92 4th mortgage do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1888 do 4th mortgage, 1880. do 5tb mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, do do 2d mortgage 1 60 -: 93#J 89 ■156 !l55 56 1 8-1# Pittsburg, 2d mortgage.. — .. 3d mortgage, conv.. do ; 90 88#! 1st mortgage Erie, 1st mortgage, 50 Manhattan Pacific Mail s. Am. Nav. <fc Mar. Union Navigation i 20#; 19# 97 Sinking Fund.. Delaware, Lackawanna and V estern, 1st mort. do do „ do 2d mort. 100 25 20 50 20 Wyoming Valley —Brooklyn Jersey City and 100. 92 Extension do Cleveland and Toledo, 64#j 04 65 50 10 50 10 100j — 100! — 100 j — 100'; 154 Ashburton Butler 115 111# 1877... consolidated Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage Chicago, R. I. and Pacific, 7 percent Cleveland and . > Interest do do do do do do do do 95 1 90 90 Sliarcs 110# 110# no# ! 115 cent... mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund.... Loan miscellaneous tool.—American Hartford | 54# — 55# j 56 56# Improvement Stock.... Citizens Harlem Haven and Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., Central of N w Jersey, 1st mortgage —i 99# Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund do 1st mortgage. do do do Income 67 66#; 66# Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per 65# 64 %; 65# 66# 66 Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st 56 56 , :. 111 115 100 100 27#! 27 27# 2S ! do do do preferred.... 260 26 |260 ! 260 Panama 100 105#|104# EOS# 103#'102# 102# Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago 100 105#-104# 1106# 105 164# 105# —i ; 39#' — 5 _ 94%! 93 Reading. 50 St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute. 100 i 65 i do do do preferred. 100 Sixth avenue 100 x9S '. .100 45 45# 44# I 45 42# 99 ; 99#; Stonington Toledo, Wabash and Western 5ft do do do preferred.... 50 105#j Railroad Bonds: •405# ,105# > I Jersey City 6s, Water New York 7s. .... -) 99 j -i x\ ; j 100;111# 111 100415 ; — , 95 102# 402# 105 .*) 57# ! 57 Virginia 6s, coupon municipal: Brooklyn 6s.... do 6s, Water Loan do 6s, Public Park Loan 6s, 80 Bonds (coupon).. (registered) do 6s, 1870-75 95# 95# 94 do 6e, 1881-86 Rhode Island 6s.. Tennessee 6s 1868 do 6s 1890 do 6s, (new) 61 ’ 96 !... i 95 (Hannibal and St. Joseph RR.)... j — . 43 *60 : 100, V. Jersey York Central York and New Haven 80# !100 { 1001 48#! !... If 6% Norwich and Worcester Ohio and Mississippi Certificates | — Loan, 1878 100 du Cliicn do do 1st pref. ..100 90 do do 2d pref...100 Milwaukee and St. Paul do .100 do preferred Morris and Essex 100 — — I do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 do 68,1867-77 do 6s, 1868-76 do 7s, State Bounty do do do North Carolina 6s do 6s, (new) .* do do — ! Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 do 7s, War Minnesota 8s Milwaukee and Prairie — Loan Michigan 6s ~ [ — •’ — •..* Registered, I860. 6s, coupon, ’70, after Indiana t»s, War 6s do Gas. 42# 45 — ns# 7s “ (new) - ! 4\% 46 ... Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 do do '. preferred Harlem : do preferred., Hudson River Illinois Central Georgia 6s. do Joseph do do California7s.:. Connecticut 6s do do da do do preferred do Hannibal and St. 80 — 45# I00jl21# ;120# >19% 20 50; ! 87 ! 100; — j j; registered. 501 6s, Union Pacific R. R.. .(cur.). 7-30s Treas. Notes lsfseriea.1105 100' do .'. .’.2d eerie*.104#,H>4# 104# j 104# j 103# 104*1 Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred do 100; do 04#jl04#(U3# 104# do .3d series.] -05 !l04VCl04#iU3#!104irf': do do do 2d preferred 100[ ins#: 103# do 100 82# ' 81# 81# j 81# SO# Michigan Central State : Michigan So. and N. Indiana .100 do do guaranteed. ..100 do do do do preferred... „ : coupon.! ....registered. coupon: , do do War 1S01...— do. (iyevit/i). 6.s, 1874 6s, 10-40s 5s, 10-40s do do do do do do do Oregon ! . 5.20a do .100! and Pacific 7*} ; j j ■ Chicago, Rock Island and Cincinnati and, Columbus coupon!105#:106 ; - ; , i Clevelanc and Pittsburg : 100 j ,105;* ! Cleveland coupon] >*06#-106# i .105 ! | Cleveland aud Toledo registered! r— 104#!l06#!l05#! Delaware, Lackawanna and Western ! C upon.] 104#’i04%| 1047* j 104 jl03#jlQ3# Eric 6s, 5.20s (3d issue) 6s. 5.20s. do 5.20s ^ncw issue)... do do -107#,106# j .100 , , 131# 180# 1132 132 .100! .100 — # jlOSJg n» 11077 11 108#'; i .100! Fn 110 112 110%;110 .JIM)' do do jl24 .100124 [ i Central of New Jersey 123 128 ; registered.1 j Railroad Stocks 134#:i33#jl33 ;134 Wed. 1 hur». Tuen Mou. ..Sniur. SECURITIES. STOCKS AND t'ri. llhurs. eir Tubs. Satur.j Mou. National: United States 6s, 1867.. registered. do 6r, 1868 coupon. > do do 6s, 1868 do do CO upon. L0S& 6s, 1881 do do 6s, 1&S1 registered. do do 6s, 5-20s (1st issue) do do ..registered. \05 fis, 5-20s... do do 6s, 5 20s (2d issue) do do 6s, 5.20s do —registeredi do Ohio 4T THE CHRONICLE. ...» 75# 76 98 4$ "j 41ft 94 [January 12, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 48 <&lje Commercial ©hues. = g O ** +* © xo « 3 ■ o t- cx ; T-( , a r-i o •— © ■rr ©<?»*—© to tp <?» oo co t# © eo ao th r-T Jan. 11. >, U speculative advance in prices, for which there was no adequate basis—encountering very stringent money market, and a check to the demand, that less ambitious views on the part of holders would have clogged by a =8 ® © . oqootp© 'Wt-rHt- ©t-rHOOO*«t-t»©>00 T-t T- f ” ■ EPITOME. Friday Night, Business has been (OXCCH g ¥H OO «s r eo © 'WL-©HO«t-ir5iOOSOtC3®lOffiCO • (C COMMERCIAL York. Exports of Leading: Articles from New © ?o tp © © . >„ Ci S *-< X c O t- t— ® Tp ©TPOC-^ ; CO S f O X © co© co x i © —-"l-l r-t r4© SO t- 00' < a, M r( t—' 50 S'* Ori- CO © Ci QO • t* CO CO < a © a avoided. ' ... declining since Monday. Cotton and Breadstuff's have been Groceries have been f x3 □a fairly active, but quite irregular from con¬ flicting influences. Tobacco steady, but without activity. Pork and hog products generally have been dull and heavy, but without important decline in prices. The packing sea¬ proceeding briskly, and buyers, before committing them¬ selves to the future, are disposed to await a nearer approach to the end of the season. But packers are very confident, and do not press sales; relying upon the later developments of the season to support prices. The packing and shipments of hogs and their products at the West are thus far about 20 per cent, in excess of last season. Beef in bbls. or tcs. has been taken moderately for export to Great Britain, and prices have been supported. Butter is quiet. Cheese is firm with a good demand for export to Great Britain. son is firmer, but with only Naval stores have been rather •- ■5, 83 .2c©© :£ : : £ S £2 « o 2 C “ © o H ® > ! 3 more . I • *oc • N . . . 13 o ci co -t-aM • . : • — c* •« © •Tl» © is © ■ co :g :::::: • © co . : ® O t- o © «« a ■©cooo C2M CO foreign dry early in the a Wool meets with rather :g : : : a fair business was done for the Continent. An advance in tallow early in the week has since been lost. In metals, last Monday and Tuesday, we noticed a good business in ingot copper and pig tin, with some improve¬ ment, but the close is quiet. Hops have been taken to the extent of some 1,300 bales for export, and rule very firm. Fish and fruit are very quiet. Whiskey continues unsettled. week, when : eOst PQ very moderate degree of activity, as prices were generally above the views of buyers. Oils have been dull, with a considerable decline in linseed oil. In hides we notice rather more movement in hides at full gold prices. Leather is steady. Petroleum has been dull and heavy since : >o © N Ui . • • © CO . IS O • • Q* St t-l CO 00 . ‘ © t-l • •© © • • tH • © i- © © © .t-CO • • ~ • • *40©<}<i5© • i—i co Tp ;to ■ ■ * © Si t—i sf ■ So© P3 Q demand, but is without im¬ provement in price. Freights, the past week, have been noted by very large shipments of cotton to British markets, with some to the There has been rather Continent. going in grain and provisions, but in these the close is quiet, owing to scarcity of room more Receipts of Domestic Produce for the Week, i/nd since January 1. The receipts of domestic produce for the week ending Jan. Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1866, have t een as follows : [Of the items left blank in 1866 no record fiirtro Qomn 6 56 2 Flour, bbls.. £8,757 S A.shes, pkgs... Breadstuff's— Rosin Wheat, bush 31,338 51,373 17,000 32,280 Rye 155 12,660 250 Malt... ... Grass seed... Flaxseed Beans....... Peas C. meal,bbl8. C. meal.bags. Buckwheat & B.W. flour, bg 2,015 1,355 .. . 991 1,356 124 6S5 523 Naval Stores— trp,bbl Spirits turp.. The merce 1,897 following table ‘shows 8,881 1,136 8,288 2,253 69 69 1,070 3,570 4,284 100 125 61 20,471 31,211 41,9 6 106 9S9 375 1 1,460 .©Tj* 14,498 6,615 3 Beef, pkgs. )| 1 Lard, pkgs.... I ... Lard, kegs..;. Rice,'pkgs...... Starch IStearine1 2,216 1,353 19.851 Sugar, hhds 3,097 3,269 5,813 200 290 637 108 3,025 -U C 108 113 d •« Tallow, pkgs... 13,541 Tobacco, pkgs.: 331 Tobacco, hhds.. 70,087 Whiskey, bbls.. 416 Wool, bales Dressed Hogs, 512 No ... 1,503 Rice, bush • • - ✓ 38 243 650 342 • x • • • 38 509 1.448 560 5,357 2,093 16,061 21,606 o . © is © i- •TP . IS tp • • • do rt c? © .© •TP ■ t- T-l ®* ^ O *2 M • •t-T}' © 2,065 12,309 rough, >■> .... . v. . • of leading articles of vg- Ci >.asj o & com¬ • . * * * • 1-2 £, ci yom the port of New York since January 1, 1867, the principal <2 ■ © 5 * ° a p: cs © ci o o Q o oo i? to© ® =3 g p «j> . i-i V OB o,5 . 0*3 0^3 :7h <D O ° I 8 © tn C js o) •XJ w 53 I .... porta of destination, and the total for the same period in 1866. The export of each article to the several ports jttx tJic past week can be ob¬ tained by deducting the amount in the las t number of the Chronicle from that here given: "' * ' • ■ • . • • 3,166 965 ■ oi 209 3.535 679 2,513 on ■cs 5,087 793 the exports . CO TP 129 749 • *H 56 1,012 •tP* © © -p • l- 00 COCO 4,571 3,122 218 ' & bbls TP 3,487 1,691 5lSpelter, slabs... 461 167 86 . 1,820 1,558 10,121 Eggs Pork . 15,965 23,895 12,496 3,<U7 614 ( 3 .TH0 :S to Butter,'pkg. s. Cheese..Cut meats.... 2,16S 35,674 Lead, pigs Molasses, hhds Crude > 648 _. - 3 Provisions— 6,715 1,500 2,347 23,090 Cotton, bales 14,747 497 Copper, bbls... 238 677 Copper, plates. 403 733 307 Driedfruft,pkgs Grease, pkgs... r 93 Hemp, bales... *102 Hides, No 8,397 10,527 198 Hops, bales. 209 Leather, sides 36,309 70,159 ;and bbls... 1 3,692 4,256 1,200 820 Oil, lard Oil, Petroleum. Peanuts, bags. i 21,760 2,915 1.S38 390 15,855 3,796 Tar Pitch 1 Oil cake, pkjrs Com Oats 11, since was made.] fTKl?. L This Since Same week. Jan.l. time’66. l* w eel Barley 02 for cotton in the steamers. ' jL v pa \ o ■ £ S . w o _ '4 a> oj55'§l 3 o 5 o Imports of Leading Articles. bars...243,2381,492,633 1, 1867, and for the corresponding period in 1866 tons : Since Jan. 1, 1867. S5 871 350 32,707 week. - 85 Huttons 871 Coal, tons .... 350 Cocoa, bags... 32,707 Coffee, bags Cotton, bales. Drugs, &c. 159 Bark, Peruv .. • • Blea . Same 9,034 Brimst, tns. Cochineal... • • . . Iron • • • Indigo • .... ... 204 Oils, ess..i. Oil, Olive... Opium Soda, bi-carb S»da, sal.... Soda, ash... 1,253 1,110 5,982 5,925 1,298 762 100 960 48 375 2.042 Champ, hkts 2,042 269 758 758 Wines 956 28 Wool, hales... 956 40 Articles reported by value. 252 705 Tobacco 35 Waste 99 • 204 2 2 . • .... • . * .... " .... . . . .... .... ' . 152 152 Flax Furs Gunny cloth . 4 4 Hair . , 1,858 R853 Hides,dres’d 14 218 14 218 India rubber.. 3,005 Hemp, hales.. Hides, &c. • • Lemons • 92 . ; Bristles - 24 Ivory Jewelry, &c. Jewelry 10 23 Watches.... Linseed Molasses 8,510 1,173 ■ 3,005 24 Oranges i .... 16 10 23 8.510 Ginger Pepper Logwrood 8,5SS • 4,362 2D,411 17,762 55,161 4,362 55,161 8,577 3,076 6,583 48,373 121,493 8,577 5,207 .... 5,207 • .. . • 8,784 -1,402 310 427 4,343 ery 452 427 Woods— Brazilian wood. Camphor wood. 112 Cutlery 112 116 ... Mahogany.. 5,029 (The quantity is given in packages when not Quantity. Value. China, Glass & E. 540 26,371 19,172 361,337 Leeches 180 4,369 Drugs, unsp.... ware— Bottles s $6S,923 Licorice r. 33,380 134,791 Purs, &c.— China Felting 686 15,777 18,328 965,259 Licorice, paste.. E. ware..69,0042,943,521 13,505 399,239 Furs 4,652 2,600,378 Glass.... 441,745 S90.GS5 Madder... .8,1961,378,743 Hatters’gds.. .86 -27,509 917 15,050 Fruits— Glassw're.15,840 472,644 Magnesia Bananas.. 60,479 Glass pi....7,3751,590,774 Manganese 1,111 Manna 113. 6,153 Citron 116,750 Drugs— Acids 342,135 54,719 Currants 2,172 250,044 Muriatpot’6h419 Alkali... .5,974 131,369 Morphine ...13 48,550 801 Dried fruits.... Dates 682 2,497 Asphaltum 5,588 Napntha.. Albumen 58,811 13,130 Nitrate soda.... 400,146 Figs 41 620,295 Aloes 16,648 Lemons 3,629 Nutgalls 1 001,202 Alum. 257 6,661 Nuts 77,146 Nitrate potash.. Aluminous cake 1,43? Oranges........ 311,121 9,101 Nitrate lead.... Preserved Ammonia,car.10 365 Oils, uninspect¬ ed Ammonia .757 35,400 29,362 2,6.8 202,980 ginger ... .63 Annatto Aniline Aniline cols. .11 Arrowroot.. .726 Argols 2,276 Assafdetida Arsenic 207 Bark,Pernv9,660 Barytes...14,748 Bismuth 6 Bieachp’r.24,739 Blue galls Blue vitrol...40 Borax .175 Bromine Brimstone (tons)...16,214 Castor oil..8,377 Camphor.. 3,507 Capsules Cham’le flowers Cantharides Carmine 28 Chak Colocynith Creamtart’rl,248 Chickory...4,908 Copperas Cochineal. .1,090 Cubebs Cudbear 475 Cutch 7,6G8 Divi divi .. Ergot of rye.... Ext of Hyperic.. Ergot Flor sulphur. 150 Gelatine Gambier 24,098 951 44,769 58,354 Oil, cod 14,465 Oil, seal.... 1,551 107,429 84,086 Oil, ess....4,234 347,432 10,787 Oil, linseed!4,2731,330,608 8,232 Oil, olive..59,836 404,184 1,195 192,806 Oxide, cobalt... 3?,476 2,799 Oil, palm....526 798 306,426 10,58! Opium 1,893 290,255 Orris root 121,882 Oxide o» zinc... * 11,875 16,582 7,655 Orchilla weed... 1,074 988 433,023 Paints 1,?>94 Paris white. .166 ‘ 1.305 5,035 11,452 Persian berr’s.51 22^77? 9,649 Potash, chlo.182 2 207 Potash,bic’m 268 57,793 Potash, hyd.7i7 34,549 29,014 460,161 Phosphorous 605 15,835 76,393 Plumbago 84,180 105,116 Pruss. porasb486 489 60,345 4,062 Quinine 727 Quicksilver. ..20 41,174 4,446 Reg. anti’y.1,507 79,692 446 58,259 7,112 Rhubarb 902 14,800 Saffron .... 670 Safflower 235,030 Santorina 104,714 9,584 240,624 6,854 37,761 50,137 1,003 686 4,426 ", 705 4,748 1,337 214,124 312,924 10 .3 Saltpetre Sarsaparillal,454 Scammony 10 Senna Shellac 3,921 Soda, bicarb.... 141,462 3,478 Iodine Iodine pot.. Ipecac 550 5 .176 3 Ipecacuanha.... Insect Herbs powder.. Isinglass Jalap Lactme 14,559 ,10 Sauces & pres.. 1,152,943 312,633 6,700 Grapes Other fruits instruments— Chemical 2 Mathematical.92 Musical.... 3,234 Nautical 13,567 .. 24 7,233 Optical 292 104 648 Surgical 13 3,244 Jewelry— Jewelry ...8,0011,952,684 Watches.. .1,2082,387,765 Hides,dresll,664 4*734,735 Hides, un¬ dressed 6,728,819 Horns 30,65g Leather. Liquors, Wines. &c.— Ale....... 13,570 132,346 Brandy.. .33,849 730,123 Beer. 3,001 26,020 Bay water.. .20 1,508 Cordials.. .3,281 21,874 Gin 5,494 107,664 wa¬ 115 8,445 Porter Rum. 346 73.536 .1,597 ters 86,403 790 Whiskey.. .2,809 88,572 Sponges .. .2,994 135,193 Wines. ..383,1033,330,959 43,733 Champag¬ Sugar of lead731 ne 112,8051,101,182 Sulphur .-1 6,897 Ultramarine... Verdigris 60 29,731 Vitriol 13,397 Vermillion .970 2,170 Vitriol of cop’r. 3,651 Vinegar 1,000 Whiting .4,077 . 3,595 Worm seed. 9,162 Yellow och.2,100 2,593 Yellow ber.. 189,462 Metals— Brass goods.808 3,457 Bronzes 5,959 90,725 15,S69 453 18,937 2,708 48,378 62,341 Chains and anchors 8,039 3*8,490 817 665,309 Cutlery. ...5,6002,463,207 Drain pipes.... 4,270 Gas fixtures..29 5,032 Gems 3,074 463,647 Hardware 13,6531,821,731 Iron Hoop 6,724 19,352 Copper 33,938 324 tons 31, 1866 Potatoes Provisions.. 839 164,829 44,L671,928,925 776,470 147,814 Rags Rice Rope 56 289 543 19,340 Rosin Sago 13,586 Sago flour Salt 403,056 Seeds, unspec.. Castor s'dl5,150 241,528 55,481 .243,5621,043,481 Soap 60,722 187,392 Stationery .12 67,967 Linseed .... .. Starch 36,949 Sugar (hhds, hhls & tcs).375.546 16,047,265 Sugar, (boxes & bags). 434,003 5,53$ 852 200 1744 1,697 19,617 19,213 Tar Tapioca ... Trees & plants. Tea 684,118 8,085,899 Twine 601 38,599 13,228 597,154 664,132 Toys 17,770 Tobacco .24,868 Tomatoes Waste.... 14,823 Whalebone..494 Wax . W 360,537 7,285 615,081 65,452 2 344 oof (bl 8)57,755 5,065’,043 64,687 Other misc .... Grand total.$170,812,800 : -Boston. Jan.1 to ADecern Dec. 31, 1866. ber. 8S0 17,078 - Bread, bbls 4,073,200,038 15,019 Iron, pig, 879,733 Decernber. *51,515 1,759,708 3,062 86,293 605 BaltimoreJau.1 to Decern- Dec. 31, her. 1866. 550 25,863 Jan.1 to Dec. 31, 1866 31.662 Breadstuff's— 186,815 34,238 478 . 3,932 32.732 792,564 540,650 533,620 170,633 33,559 840,003 *535,394 12,049 29,225 27,896 7,656 4,142 40,997 *16,000 14,536 1,851 1,906 Flour, bbls Corn meal, bbls.... Wheat, bush Corn, bush Candles, bxs Cotton, bales 3,021 *15,000 13,557 *23,312 136 . 49,870 1,811 . 1,247 10,057 2,090 , • 564 • • • Naval stores— Rosin, bbls Tar. bbls Oil cake, bags . 1,615 .129,773 .... • • • • 582 84 300 11,021 33,559 *1.207,120 9,884,492 1,630,245 3,598,110 28,047,842 167,057 624,500 2,238,770 815 45 8,344 . .. Petroleum, galls 33 23 98 Tnrpentine, bbls.. Spts turpentine, bbls 300 4,603 63 451 .... * Provisions— Pork, bbls Beef, bbls Butter, tubs, &c Cheese, bxs, &c Lard, kegs & bbls.. Tallow, bbls Tobacco, pkgs Tobacco 477 808 184 4,226 1,927 12,635 *116,465 70 4,131 *252.521 462 12,767 *29,885 . . 550 110,782 *4,060 *2,181 47,726 2,066,492 *136,856 50 3,251,930 5,049 287,395 16,794 46,826 9*210 . Total val of cxports$l,370,947 * 3,234 226 284 *21,084 *4,850 . mfd, lbs 23,722 8,895 6,629 2,885 .. ... 1,254 123,936 98,710 1,909,425 268 45,833 91,436 23,062,7*24not reported 17,867,716 $779,525 11,097,925 Pounds. COTTON. Friday, P. M., Jan. 11, 1867. . receipts of cotton at all the ports show a further de¬ amounting to only 61,280 bales (against 77,554 last week, and 86,898 bales the previous week), making the total receipta since September 1, last year, 819,347 bales, against 904,217 bales for the same period in 1865. The exports from all the ports this week amount to 44,425 bales (against 32,927 bales last week), of which 33,244 bales were to Liverpool, 1,122 bales to Glasgow, 6,407 to Havre, 1,602 bales to Bremen, 1,050 bales to Ham¬ burg, 23 bales to Antwerp, and 977 bales to Malaga : The crease this week, -Exported this week to— /— LiverFrom New York Boston New Orleans Charleston Mobile 9,538 Havre, men. 486 1,122 Ham- Ant- Ma- burg. 1, 50 werp. 23 laga. 781 1,116 . • • • • • . . . . 977 .... • 6,147 33,244 . .... 6,407 13,881 2,897 Total this week.. The total gow. Bre- Glas- pool. . tons.... 52,810 Pipes Hemp.. .138,289 2,203,287 Honey 3,241 110,519 Hops 7,801 515,673 Horses 2 2,750 .« 664,918 Mineral 1,412 33,911 17,817 1,040 398,644 82,176 (Coal oil and kerosene are included under petroleum.) Leather, hides, &c.— Boots&8ho’8 459 66,861 Bristles... .2,476 674,069 69,692 70,955 Hair cloth.. .621 227 Plaster Pitch G’nnv clth26,022 Gutta percha.66 Guano 9,522 30,376 80,724 1 to Dec. 19,270 579,574 21,107 Leather, pat. 116 9,840 156,744 39,693 2,134 7,463 84,209 314,095 following table shows the exports from the above ports, of some leading articles of commerce for the month of December, and from Jan 467 • Squills .. 2 28 Raisins 605 254,509 327,588 Soda, ash.39,9491,314,270 461,071 Vanilla beans.70 8,101 66,552 143,350 273,461 Plums Prunes 1 Soda, sal..36,434 Soda, caus53,543 Gumarabic.4,356 ..... Gnms,crd.l4,445 461,151 Sumac.... 39,700 Gum, copavi. 809 37,046 Sulph cop’rl,656 Gum copal.2,T>9 64,686 Sulph zinc... 146 Glue 564 19,595 Tarqua beans. 19 Gypsum Indigo Pineapples Perfumery.3,342 19,120 The .. Ammonia, salS05 57,782 Personal effects 117,596 Etports from Boston, Philadelphia and Baltimore. Quantity. Value. ries Pap hang’sl,781 Grindstones.. 2 24,638 Lignum vitffi... Logwood. 28,357 153,919 the otherwise specified.) Quantity. Value Lac dye 745 .... Cedar Cork 6,28 Imports of Merchandise other than Dry Goods at port of New York lor the year 1S66. 470,462 4,828 628,646 5,800 453,481 166.565 81,338 Gunpowder 2,556 4,878 622,336 4,189 Hair Fastis-. ...1,871 Metals, <fcc. 678 Oakum 200 Oil paintings865 Onions 11,880 Blacking 687 Buttons ...5,7701,3S9,383 43,719 Building stone. Burr stones 36,160 Candles. 11,148 Carriages ...2 4,928 Clay 54,585 Cheese ....5,068 188,841 Cigars 1,251,891 Coal (tns)231,029 553,293 Corks 168,828 Cotton .,..2,007 157,113 81,446 65,603 Paper.. ..36,2151,456,560 4,076 8,784 1,402 49,773 Maccaronil8,612 Molassesl31,893 3,616,165 11,199 198.743 57,742 Bone dust Boxes Bricks 172,118 - 174,907 2,210 mid do...478 Matches 62 4,281 233,039 ... Other station¬ .... • Willow . .... .... • 1,344 42,171 Lith stones 409 Machinery.8,838 561,813 68,436 Marble and Caps 678 125,539 Saddlery ....389 93,528 Steel.... 197,7642,949,349 Speltr 10,217,828 452,759 Silver ware.. .41 11,412 Tin plate, box.... 800,4715,692,423 Tin slabs, lbs... 6,692,6721,130.722 Wire 1,934 93,007 Zinc, 845 119,028 lbs..10,285,212 611,436 Clocks Cocoa (bg)16,413 318,380 Spices— Cassia 174,608 Coffee hags 778,Cinnamon 894 12,SOS,788 1,921 Cloves 31,858 Emery 21,305 Ginger 50,618 Fancy goods 4,254,510 Mace Farina ....1,660 9,811 14,086 Mustard 3,697 33,013 Fans 136,608 Nutmegs 102,138 Feathers Pepper 230,522 Fire crackers... 183,157 Pimento 46,861 Fish... 890,832 Other Spices... 9,461 439,453 6,199 Flax Flour 23,425 StationeryBooks 38,366 5,224 851,683 Furniture ...153 17,356 Engravings. 697 140,212 Grain 627 • 29 Saltpe'tre.... 648 Woods. v 549 Fustic 1,173 • . 627 .... 131,962 15,545 10,500 17,762 I 80 Hides,undrsd. 363 Rice 623 Spices, &c. Cassia 625 3,550 79,304 . . . 512 494 $8,471 $28,006 20,411 Nuts Raisins 7,251 1,305 Wines, &c. .... • . .... 762 100 2,928 Cigars $8,471 3,550 1,161 Corks 98 Fancy goods.. 79,304 Fish 10,500 245 Fruits, &c. .... . • 1,462 .... Madder. »• 203 600 50 600 50 • tubes.8,979 Old Metal Plated ware.296 Piaiina .29 Percussion 2,598 314,367 S,165 . .... • .... .... Gums, crude Gum, Arabic 4,067 • 606,948 45,543 .. 4,721 2,253 12,394 155,430 .... ... 4,721 8,165 Same time 1S66. 153 4,067 10,673 67,868 .... Cr Tartar Gambier.... Iron,RRb’rs Lead, pigs.. Spelter, lbs. Tin, bxs.... 10 67S Tin slabs,lbs 67,863 235 203 Rags 30 Sugar, hhds, 3 tcs & bbls.. 1,253 10 Sngar,bxs&bg 1,110 Tea... 5,932 159 527 • Hardware... For Since the Jan. 1, week. 1867. 221 221 Steel 2,756 301 .... • 257 p’wd’rs time 1866. 218 Japan wood.... 8,752 Ind. 61,258 Palm leaf Iron, other, tons 46,697 2,200,949 Other woods.... Lead.. ..463,5772,4&5,&40 Miscellaneous— Metal g'ds.2,303 536,410 Alabaster...... Nails 917 28,517 Animals Needles 734 304,129 Baskets .4,660 Nickel 332 180,698 Bags [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] For the Rattan Rosewood Iron, sheet, articles of commerce at this port for the week ending Jan. 4,sioce Jan. Quantity. Value. ruDT.26,8171,992,831 Ivory 1,308 283,514 Quantity. Value. Mahogany 120,427 Quantity. Value. Iron, RR., following table shows the foreign imports of certain leading The 49 THE CHRONICLE. January 12, 1867.] . . ... •••*• 1,122 6,407 1,602 1,050 23 977 Total. 12,219 781 22,381 2,897 6,147 44,4% foreign exports from the United States sines stocks, &c.: Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) Stocks at Dntcs ■- since Sept. 1, and SEPT. 1 Great Britain 1France Jan. 4.. Mobile, Jan. 4 Charleston, Jan. 4.. Savannah, Jan. 4... Texas, Dec. 28 New York, Jan. 11. Florida, Jan. 4t N. Carolina, Jan. 11 345, 85 130,385 Virginia, Jan. 11... Other p’ts, Jan. 11* 37,318 31,0941 .... 20,7S4| bl.574 12,026! 4,709 36,347 105.044 ... 819.347 Total SOI 12.026 .... i 1,257 5,966 118,816 .... ..... .... 18,668; 87,318; .... 261 271,0931 33.396 22,644 lows .... 327,133 : > 345,310 551.942 “ 9;... the cable re* j .. “ gold, but since declining tend¬ ency, and prices must be written l@l£c. lower to-day than the currency price of last Friday. The money pressure has ; been quite severe the last half ol the week, while the ad vanced premium on gold has not been supported ; also freight by the steamers has been restricted, 80 that shipments ports from Liverpool and the advance in 21 Tuesday it has been extremely dull, with a ...82 pool. York.* Sales. Exp. Stork. Mid. 19.500 '£,592 126,215 37 @38 25^662 17.850 16,145 137,561 nominal. 24.968 9,210 17,457 147,328 nominal. 27,703 15,900 10,667 166,022 34 ©— 28.836 22,400 16,316 180,426 33 ©25,299 22,900 9,170 190,426 30 @31 24.344 ...4 Jan. * 198,708 218,643 224,022 32,050 31,163 21S,491 31,979 40.000 25,408 37,764 32,800 19,806 29,461 22,900 26,219 > Trice To New Pate. Rec’ps. Nor. 2..., 22,019 16 23.... The 30.... ..7 Dec, 14..., week opened very linn on. Freights . To Liver* Price “ market this ' ! ... ...,750.000 G.393; ... 14,697 Total for the week Total since Sept. 1 I ! i i 6,132, 97 were 20,804 ! , 6,912 131,233 31,895 2,551 11,221 ! 31,062 Fore i<rn 9,679 TORTS, .... 18,668 . j 20 '' 69,924 . j 14,172 -. 31.830 1,381 4,178 Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.. Per Railroad... NORTH. Total. 30,825' 9,104 91.304 101,291 19,543; Other jfor'gn. 1 I » N. Orleans, j SHIP- ■- M NTS TO SINCE 1. j South Carolina North Carolina 10,284 54,037 2.103 2,605 Savannah....Mobile.. Florida Bales. 1,778 28,018 334 15,911 From Bales. Bales. 2,228 60,376 „ Since This week. Sept. 1. Bales. 267,466 !s'r°CK. j New Orleans Jan 5—The mail returns for the week ending Jan j ! 4 show the receipts to be only ‘24,844 bales, against 29,461 bales last 121.442 318.491 j week, and 37,764 bales the previous week. The shipments for the hast, 31,163 bales, of which 13.881 bales were to Liverpool, 6,4»>7 32,706' 77,46S week to Havre, 1,116 to Bremen, 977 to Malaga, 2,577 to New York, 233 to 39,6611 17,409 Stock on hand Jan. 6 was 218,491 68.703 29,296 | Baltimore, and 5,972 to Boston. The receipts, sales, and exportp for a series of weeks, and the 15,170 .30.357 ! bales. 12',000 | stock, price of mid.ili g rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, 11,640, 3,921 | and ptice of gold at the close ol each week since Nov. 2, were as fol¬ TO— rec'd SEPT. From New Orleans Texas Mentioned. EXPORTED SINCE PORTS. This Since week. Sept. 1 week the the port of New York for Receipts of cotton at and since Sept. 1 : September I now amount to 327,133 bales, against 431,938 bales for the same period last year. 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, 12,1867. [January THE CHRONICLE. 50 1© 9.164*— — cold. 147#@14* #@9-16 1(g) — 146#©147 #©9-16 1© — 143#©143*4 #©9-16 1© — 138 ©139 #@ 9-16 1*©— 140#©- #© 9-16 H©— 9-16© — H©— 32 @— 9-16© 32 @33 31 ©33J@— 9-16© - — 139 ©— 137 ©137# im- 133#@133# 1*©- 132#@132# 9-16©ll-16 ©- 133#©134 By steam. ad Liver¬ pool and New York, the market closing strong at (New Orleans classifi¬ cation) 33^ for middling, 3l^(5;/32^ for low middling, and 27^(a)28$- for room ordinary. Sterling exchange is'quoted nominally 139^@14l for bill of could not be made except by sail. All these influences have lading bills, 14‘2@142^ for commercial, and 1434@144 for bank. served to check the demand ; but there is very little cotton TOBACCO. pressed for sale ; holders are generally very firm-. The re* Fridat, P. M., Jan. 11, 1867. ceipts at the ports last week show a large falling off', and as the exports have increased, stocks have not accumulated. There is an increase this week in the exports of tobacco The sales of the week amount to only about 10,009 bales, from all the ports, both in crude and manufactured tobacco. Of the market closing dull at the following quotations: N. Orleans crude the total shipments are 2,886 hhds., 238 cases, 1 tierce, Upland. Florida. Mobile. & Texan 149 bales, and 3 hhds. of stems; and the manufactured ^ ft> 8(i 30 31 Ordinary 30 Good Ordinary 31 31 31 32 amounts to 137,366 lbs., and 106 boxes. The movement Low Middling 33 34 34 33 Middling 05 ^ 35 34V 35*$ at all the ports for the week may be seen in the following: Good Middling: 38 39 36 37 Pkgs. -Stems Manfd lbs. The exports of Cotton from New York this week show a Exported from Hhds. Case. Tierc. Bals. &bxs. hhds. bale*; 137,366 104 3 1 York. considerable increase, amounting in all to 12,219 bales. Thi§ 1,039 Baltimore 2 increase, however, is due to the fact that the manifests of Philadelphia several vessels which sailed last week, could (on account of New Orleans 500 holiday intervening) be obtained from the Custom-house 137.366 3 149 106 1 2,886 Total this week 34,049 89 95 until this week. The particulars of these shipments are as 1,840 Total last week The business ' through the week has been liberal, and prices have under the more favorable advices from vanced about 24 per cent, . . , 48 231 New Baston • .... .. * 7 . • • • .... .... ... .... .... . . 101 11 . . . , ° a ' • • • • • • 238 132 ... 19 .... ... follows: Below we give our usual table showing the total exports City of Washington, 950; Albert Gallatin, 1,454;'" . 991. Total bales ' 9,538 of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their Total bales 1,122 To Bremen per ship Goschen, 486. Total bales . - 4S6 direction, since November 1. 1866: To Hamburg per steamer Allemannia, 1,050. Total bales 1,050 To Antwerp per ship Euergie, 23. Total bales *» 23 Exports ol* Tobacco froberthe Hotted States since Novenr 1, 1866. Below we give our table showing the exports of Cotton rkgs. Manfd. -StemsCer's <fc &bxs lbs. Gases. Bales. tcs. Stps. IIIkK New York, and their direction for each of the last tour from To 2S9.910 •'-84 142 2,290 Great Britain. 41 weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September 220 103,190 1,030 '2 619 Germany 8,844 Belgium 1,058 1, 1866; and in the last column the total for the same period 7,562 *i2 Holland... 1,753 36,411 of the previous year : 16 Italy 2,669 4 3,464 France Exports of Cotton (bales) from New It ork since Sept. 1,1866 462 156,357 96 Liverpool per steamers Helvetia, 1,668; Louisiana, 1,979; Palmyra, 1,077; per ships Cynosure, 1,379 ; Tae Royal Family, To Glasgow per steamer Columbia, 1,122. To . * , • - . . ... o.c ... WEEK ENDING Mediterranean Austria Africa Dec. Jan. i Jan. 25. l. ; 8. to date. prev. year. 6,704 9,538 102.875 167,600 Other British Torts Total to Of. 863 4,722 .... 8,028 7,567 281 316 .... 362 Total French 1,153 Hanover Hamburg Other ports 284 Total to N. Europe Spain, Oporto and All others .. Gibraltar .... Total Spain, etc Grand Total 10,660 105,041 ■ 171,620 -a ol6 .... j 2.551 •. j ** 2,551 -,07 8,527 5,669 ‘j .... 8,519 8 *. 486 825 •• • * .. 829 .... —.. 4,020 *. .... i 2,169 -1,122 4,722 362 Britain.. Havre Other French ports Spain, &c Same time 8,028 Liverpool Bremen and 'T'/MoI Die. IS. EXTORTED TO ' 1 2.787 !- 3,4IH 6,099 1,276 S9 j 1,559 1 10,361 8,975 •* 1,073 I 825 829 .... 65 65 9,608 ... .... 8,676 The X SitUuted. The »tock China, India, &c. Australia B. N. Am. Prov.. South America-... West Indies East Indies Mexico All others 2,382 800 above 31,546 21S 1 30,172 558 32 14 372 482 4i 75 79 1,286,653 201 1,006 *.. .... 5,867 i 860 j .... ! ....j j .... 860 602 7 609 i 12,219 lll8,816 189,731 New York it Also New York Baltimore - Boston Portland..... New Orleans Philadelphia 157,398 313 60 6 5, ■ 2,055 1,759 1.012 142 Hhds. Cases. Bales, 9,401 4,990 1,672 23 12.103 918 383 4 48 14 20 2020 erns. 142 from which 1 he Bxs. & /-Steins-^ Strips, pkgs hhds. bis. Total since Nov. 1. .24,013 if 518 o 694 348 229 2,174,457 19,835 !!■ 5,986 2,055 Lbs. mant’d. 909 330 ... 21 2,201,340 H following tabic indicates the ports exports have been shipped : From 52,870 49,958 341 112 351 758 244 37 255 I T’l since Nv. 1, '6624,013 The 50 50 Tc«. & 1,153 receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee, Kentucky, &c., not otherwise ^numerated. tha ports of Florida, to January 4 except t These are the receiof* Aptltchiola, which are only to December 14. * ... r,04S 142 The market this week has been 1,759 1,042 229 2,201,340 without material change. Kentucky Leaf, of tbcn§w crop, is readily taken up on arrival* old tobacco is entirely neglecte The demand is mainly for export, and the sales for the week amount to about 300 hhds, the business being limited by the small arrivals. Growers are looking tor very high prices and brings full prices, but of the finer sorts. We without movement of importance. Seed leaf has been only to notice sales of 100 cases Pennsylvania fillers at 4@5c. ; and two running lots, including 78 cases Ohio, on piivate terms, and 50 cases State, at about 8c. There has been nothing of moment done in Spanish To¬ bacco. Prices are drooping. Manufactured Tobacco remains dull. We regret to learn of have , suspension of one of the oldest and most important manufac¬ turers of this city. V the KENTUCKY (HHDS.). LEAF Ky. Light H’vy West. Ky. Light H’vy West. Lugs.. 4c© Good do ..4^@ Common Leaf. Medium do . .5,&@ Common 4)£c. 5 7 6c 6 13' ©15c @17 @20 10 IS @12 10 9 Good Leaf. Fine do Selections. @ oX © 9 &CVksv’le. Leaf. 10c @12 13 @14 15 @16 & Cl'ksv’le. I ea L 51 THE CHRONICLE. January 12, 1867.J SEED LEAK Conn.—Prime wrappers 40 Average “ ..... 30 11 to b'd'rs 10 Cora. Fillers ' 7 N. Y. State.—Wrappery lots. 12 ? Running “ . 7 @50c @40c (BOXES). N. Y. State.—Fillers Ohio.—Good running lots... 5 © 7c 7)^©10c 5 @ 7c The has quality of the New Crop, at least what so far been opened good opinion already entertained of this year’s production, and although in some irstances there is a deficiency of gum in the Leaf, yet most samples develope all the essential quali¬ ties of a perfect crop.' Harsh and unfavorable weather up the country has generally prevented the handling of the weed, aud therefore only from those sections where they are best prepared for the culture of tobacco have early shipments couie to hand. From the Upper Cum¬ berland, the Green River country aud the Kentucky purchase, ship¬ here, generally confirms the deficiency in look) do River, favored by the most timely ments have yet to commence, and even should there be a rich heavy leaf from the Clarksville section (for which we not other regions, especially the seven counties Treat of Tennessee will make up for it, for they were seasons4 and have, from reliable information, mw the largest and finest crop on hand ever heretofore produced in that part of We quote prices for old crop in currency at per as follows Kentucky. (Gold 133 cent.) : Heavy. Light. 3 © 3^c.... 4 © 4&c 4 © 4>*c 4#© 5 c 5 ©6 c 6 © 7 © 9 c 8 @10 c 10 @12 C....11 @12 c 12Jtf@14 c 12>f@l5 c 15 ©20 C....18 @20 c Inferior and trashy Lugs Good Lags Inferior to Common Leaf Medium Leaf Fair Leaf Fine Leaf Choice ee e^tions (Cutters) Stock on'hand Sept. Received since,... 8,707 1,633—10,240 1,1856 5,689 251— 6,940 : Exported this season City consumption aud baling Stock on hand not cleared Oi which in factors’ hands by actual count on 26th ult. 2,300 4,300 hhds. Current, reviewing the tobacco that the trade is satisfactory, and 6 @10c @lSc employed throughout the year. Filleis 3 @ 4c ©12c Touching the crop of last year, now to come forward, the opinion is ex¬ MaNUFACT pressed that it has been overrated, both in quantity and quality. Fine, tax paid. 80 @1 25 There is undoubtedly a good proportion of the crop of fine quality, but Black Work, com., tax paid, 25 @30c. I \ 40 © 5c. 1 Black Work, med. in bond.. 12)$'@18c good 60 @70c. ; fine “ good & fine *• 20 @30c. there will be a good deal wanting in body, owing to the heavy rains at 25 @40c. ! Blight Work, med.. “ 15 @40c. the time of cutting. The rains filled the plants with fresh sap, and a Brig tWerk.com., 11 45 ©75c. 1 good & fine “ 50 @$5c. good deal was cut in that State ; consequently, ou curing, it showed a good “ want of oil and body, though it looked well when cut. FOREIGN. The total in¬ Havana.—Wrappers 1 2o©2 50 spections at Petersburg for 1866 were 7,083 hogsheads. Stock on hand Havana.—Fillers—Common. 60© 'Yara 55©1 05 Dec. Good 75© 31, 1866 : Inspected, 677 hogsheads ; uninspected, 251. Total, 928 Fine 60</, 70 Yara, average lots 90© hogsheads. The production of manufactured tobacco for the last quar¬ The receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since ter of IS66 was 3,804,084 pounds chewing 94,816 pounds smoking, and 93,7 77 pounds snuff. Nov. 1, have been as followsi ' Marvland.—The Baltimore market is quiet, and prices nominally un¬ RECEIP1S AT NEW YORK 8INCE NOVEMBER 1. 1866. changed. Previously-^ ^-T l sin This week-> @20e @10c “ !’.... Penn.—Running lots Average ... 3 Fillers @ 4c * Vibginia—Clark’s Petersburg Price trade of that market for 2866, reports the tobacio manufacturers there were “ “ ' 133 hhds. 1.862 486 Baltimore .... New Orleans. 384 2,387 Ohio, &c Other pkgs. 21,585 571 28 619 18S 3,881 2,591 1,845 EXPORTED Hhds. Hhds. Hhds. To Bremen follows: Hds. 5,040 650 337 337 Total following are the exports for the past week 1 5,377 26,109 of tobacco from New Yort 31,515 Maryland. 15,579 ' Ohio.'. Kentucky...' 319 . 185 Virginia : OF TOBACCO FROM NEW YORK. Hhds. Cases. Bales. Tcs Bxs. St’ms, hhds. Total Man uf-., lbs. 1 London —... Bremen— home - New Orleans.—A consumption.... 7,304 —62,663 1st of 17,645 January, 1867 on 41 shipment and cleared.... 1,950 19,595 Total Africa Melbourne.... Cuba Other West Indies — China: r Guiana New Granada British N. Am. Provings.. Total for week 818 Actual stock in warehouse - And 12 682 6,320 42,215 3,144 70,308 Coastwise'shipmentsand ,451 45,000 Liverpool 15,198 4,192 Total foreign Reinspections 62—47,660 Missouri EXTORTS Hamburg Antwerp 26,759 15,005 To Rotterdam To Amsterdam To England.-. .‘ To France To Spain Inspections for the year 1866 were as 1866. Maryland and Ohio. Of Jan. 1, 1806. Stock in warehouse and on ehip' board not cleared.. 22,648 117 44 STATEMENTS. TOBACCO .kgs, 1,862 117 .... .... hhds. pkgs. 174 204 Virginia The 260 6 hhds. From ... 55,792 21,123 63 EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM 1,336 231 4S trade circular reports 104 3 business in 137,366 tobacco during December, with the small and poorly assorted stock left upon our market at the commencement of the month, and with but light re¬ ceipts since that time, has not been a heavy one, but transactions of any magnitude could hardly be expected, even had the declining tendency in the gold premium and increasing tightness in the money market not acted as a further drawback upon the movement of our buyers, some of whom, early in the month, appeared to be willing operators, but could only with difficulty find lots any ways suitable for iheir orders. Many small sales, howeter, were coucludsd, mostly previous to tbe holidays, and their aggregate sums up near 750 hhds., the greater por¬ tion of which was taken lor the Bremen market. Leaf of substance and quality was most iu demaud, and of this the sales embrace about 250 hhds. from the Clarksville region, a portion very fine, heretofore held at extreme rates, but for which from lfi@18$c. was accepted, then some 150 hhds. Green River tobaccos, old and nondeecript, at an aver¬ age of 6Jc.,a few" lots of low lugs from 8(>Mc taken on account of their cheapness, and about 50 hhds. new crop, which latter generally brought prices considerably above what the same style of old crop would com¬ mand. These sales pretty well cleargd^the market of any ways ser¬ viceable parcels, and left in the hands of factors by actual count on 26th ulto., 1,517 hhds. Light leaf, 193(hbde., heavy do, 452 hhds. light and frosted lugs and 188 hhds. heavy dcv^hich, with 250 hhds. trashy lugs in the hands of a speculator, makes a total stock upon the market of 2,550 hhds ; not oue-tenth of this, however, is fit for any other pur¬ pose than the lowest of smoking,tobacco, aud to supply henceforward our regular export buyers we have to look to the new crop, which, es¬ BALTIMORE OF FOR THE LAST 4 YEARS. 36 13 PORTS THE Roterdnm. Amsterdam.France. All other pics, •' 6,320 y^k403 15,198 4,192 5,863 / 6,664 8,950 4,788 12,287 7,459 4,660 4,940 Bremen. 15,205 14,350 Years. 1866 1865 1864 1863 15,686 8,135 11,672 TOBACCO 6,383 3,371 . 4 INSPECTIONS AT BALTIMORE FOR THE LA8T 4 Ohio. Maryland. Years. 15,579 15,396 21,961 31,515 1866 1865 28,518 1861 1863 17,032 STATEMENT OF 14,576 INSPECTIONS, EXTORTS LAST Years. 1866 1865 1861 186.$ 4 AND STOCKS OF Total. 51,618 40.598 45,052 44,137 YEARS. other kinds. 566 Total. 3,077 2,140 2,267 43,952 47,660 52.619 65,975 TOBACCO FOR THE YEARS. Inspections.Exportcd. 52,663 47,660 42.605 43,952 45,052 52,873 ' 55,975 44,137 Total. 17,645 22,297 20,938 21,560 BREADSTUFFS. The the date of Monday, and the market has upward movement in prices in progress at last report culminated on since been dull and depressed. our of anticipations of holders, although still considerably below the average of pre¬ vious seasons. This fact, together with the pause in the up¬ ward movement, has induced some of the late speculative buyers to realize, and they have' thrown a few thousands bar¬ pecially of good bodied leaf, suitable for the German markets, we be* rels upon the market* But the necessities of the trade are ieve could be placed without any unreasonable delay and at price* such, that after bolding on^two or three day*, they are Ibftt wiU compare favorably with any sale* recently wade, Flour has come forward by rail in excess [January ,12, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 52 obliged to forward, and the market closes steady at a cents per barrel from the highest currency of decline of 25 the week. been much less active this week, and Wheat has prices of Spring have receded two or three cents per bushel. The in¬ creased receipts and stocks at Chicago and Milwaukee caused some holders to desire to realize. The pressure of the money market has also had a depressing influence. But at the con¬ cession there was some speculative and export inquiry, and the close is quite firm. Corn has been very feverish and unsettled. The favorable -1867- -1866- come Receipts Shipments. 5,348 8,150 Receipts. Shipments. 3,493 7,822 163,474 1.617 Floor, bbls Wheat, bush Corn, bush Oats, bush 4,150 25,554 2,519 , 5,460 '53,169 8,731 11,849 2,110 2,017 130 150 ' 65 * Rye, bush r Barley, bush 2,9*9 ' 347 Weekly Receipts at Lake Ports.—The following shows the at the following lake ports for the week ending <Jan. 5 : receipt8 Rye. 9,775 2,870 Corn. Oats. Bariev. 97,985 5,959 13,385 9,469 - 59,519 20,426 6,425 17.407 1,338 .... 862 5,542 .... 6,750 13,000 19,600 1,800 132,277 188,969 139,798 107,032 V 3,624 77,837 28,6S9 25,327 6,803 Flour. Wheat; 33,947 6,365 5,621 5,228 55,722 62,934 3,736 3,135 Chicago Milwaukee Toledo Detroit ....... Cleveland 56,"94 40’553 Totals Previous week.. 2,593 Corresponding w eek, ’66 25,065 277,554 115,081 - 180,781 California.—The receipts of Wheat at San Francisco for months endiog Dec. 31st were 8,000,000 sacks against 1,250,000 .... 12,615 11,606 19,800 the six reports by Cable from Liverpool have not sufficed to support for the prices, and have not induced any considerable business. The corresponding time in 1865. It is believed that there are 2,000,000 receipts of new'Corn have increased, and are nearly equal to sacks yet to come forward. With such a surplus on hand holders are pot anxious to retain their stocks. During december 208.000 sacks the current wants of the market. Oats advanced four -cents were expected. Good shipping Wheat there is quoted $l 75 in gold per bushel, and nearly the whole has since been lost. Bailey per 100 lb. Extra Flour $6 50 per bbl. The shipment of Wheat lor advanced five cents, and subsequently declined as much, has been firmer but quiet. About 20,000 bushels have live been following the closing quotations : are per bushel Milwaukee Club Red Winter Amber do White 11 00®12 75 ShippingR. hoop Ohio. 11 65®12 65 Extra Western, mon to com¬ 10 65®13 50 good Double Extra Western and St. Louis 14 00®17 00 Southern supers 11 40@13 00 Southern, fancy and ex. 14 00®17 00 Canada, common to choice extra Rye Flour, fine and super¬ ® “■ Coni, Western Mixed.... Western Yellow 1 18® 1 20 ® @ % WTcstern"White Rye Jersey and State Barley 5 20® 5 50 Peas, Canada.......... 1 20® 1 35 Malt — 1 30® 1 43 2 10® 3 00 White beaus follows: The movement in breadstuff's at this market has been as RECEIPTS ' YORK. NEW AT 1866. 1S67. For w’k. For w’k. 250 250 2,850 11,445 1867. 1S66. For w’k. For w’k. 31,885 2,790 14,060 14,665 24,S20 Flour, bbls Corn Meal, bbls.... Wheat, bush Corn, bush 6,940 7,910 EXPORTS FOREIGN Rve, bush— Barley, &c., bush.. Oats, bush... bbls. 2,076 Gt. Britain,.... since Jan. 1 Br. 1V. A. Col... since Jan. 1 We»t Indie*— since Jan. 1 • • 24,445 3,473 27,564 2,189 , .... , . . • , • Baltimore • . • • • 109 10 1. .... .... • .... •••• • • 100 • IRELAND AND .... * * .* * ' GREAT BRITAIN BREADSTUFFS TO 126,685 126,685 156,577 .... 24,445 .... • 10 FROM SEPT. 1, 1866. Flour From New York New Orleans bbls. To date. Jan. 4 1S87.. 49,055 291 Dec. 2.-. 1866.. Philadelphia Dec. 31, 1S66.. Boston San Francisco Other ports Corn, bush. bush. 341,401 2,768,792 ’ 71,723 40,894 19 10,745 9,507 7,410 1,538,453 2,888,819 83,888 To about Bame period, 1866 do do 1865 do do 1864 1,177,375 16,332 69,617 Dec. 31, lt>06.. Total 1,151,790 1,407,246 5,247,318 3,523,426 55,920 361,976 TO THE Rye, Wheat, Com, bbls. bush. bush. bush. 38,522 4,208 41,436 12 41,436 4,208 2,425 10,01S 80,691 13,965 57,333 6S,521 135,188 14,349 25.551 do do 33,522 • • • • / Flour, bbls Wheat, bu h Corn, bush Oats, bush Bye, bush Barley, bush.'. ... — -1866- Receipts. Shipments. 15,890 13,942 101,000 16,942 96,335 147,165 14,256 2,000 -1867- —> 13,535 11,607 Receipts. Shipments. 33,947 32,320 55,722 27,334 1,618 97,985 59,516 -3,168 9,775 ..... 16,S07 Milwaukee.—Receipts and shipments have been as follows for week ending Jan. 6: gold ; nor does the stringency have affected the market in any way. tuations in in money seem to Jobbing houses report a very lively trade and a good de¬ gree of confidence. TEA. the close of last The greater activity which set in in the tea trade at week has continued with both first aud second h^nds up to this time, and the market closes in a very satisfactory condition to all parties. The sales of the week from first hands are reported at 5,485 half chests do. Souchongs, and greens, 8,100 do. Oolongs, 2,235 do. Japans, 3,200 216 boxes greens. There have been no imports during the week. The following table shows the shipments of tea from China and Japan to the United States, from June 1 to Oct. 23, 1866, and importations at New York and Boston since Nov. 1 : ' SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN.- * ,—To Atlantic ports.—* To San Oct. 1 to Junel to Same FranOct. 23. Oct. 1. in ’65, cisco. lbs. lbs. lbs. pkg*. Congou & Sou. .453,360 Pouchong 42.800 Oolong&Ning.l,960,423 Twankay Hyson .445,416 Young Hyson..723,015 Imperial Gunpowder Japans Chicago.—Receipts and shipments of breadstuff's at Chicago for week ending Jan. 7 : “ Prices have, how¬ trade since our last report. Hyson skin. 1,835 Total largely increased business in all branches remained essentially the same notwithstanding the fluc¬ 73,359 1,823 From New York, to Jan. 4, 1867. Other ports, to latest dates. ever. 239,459 CONTINENT. Flour, do do Wheat, 3,345 Dec. 31, 1866.. Dec. 31, 1866.. Dec. 7, 1866.. Baltimore... There has been a 996 996 • 100 3-10 6,935 Friday, P. M., Jan. 11. of the grocery 24,445 8,700 8,700 15,419 7,074 7,074 26,1*3 g. OF • .... .... . GROCERIES. • .... .... • • .... .... .... 90 250 5,582 1,353 . Total 123,789 12',789 _ Philadelphia arrivals from the United States and Friday last comprise 12,202 quarters wheat (chiefly Cali¬ fornian), 2,564 barrels flour, 8,683 quarters corn, 8,219 quarters oats, 500 loads oatmeal, and 2,210 quarters barley. The weather has con¬ tinued mild and open, which, with the Christmas holidays, has caused the demand to be limited to immediate wants, and the business done has consequently been insignificant; however, prices of all articles have been maintained. The Paris markets continue to advance, and the French are still buying freely in the Baltic markets,so that all prospect of supplies from France during the winter are at an end, unless our prices advance materially. At this day’s market there was a good attendance of the town and country trade, and more disposition to buy was evinced than for some time past. Wheat and flour met with a good consumptive demand at the full prices of this day week, and, in some cases, rather more money. Feeding Barley and Oats were in moderate demand, and without change in price. Peas were difficult to move at 43s. per 504 lbs. for prime Canadian. Indian Corn was in fair demand at 38s. per 480 lbs. for mixed and White American. We quote choice Amber Jowa Wheat and fine Canadian club 12s. 2<I. to 13s. 9d , No. 1 Milwaukie 13s. per 100 lbs. Extra State and Western and super Canaian Flour 35s. to 36s. per 196 lbs., choice Southern and extra Cana¬ dian 37s. to 38s. per b irel. Canadian Burley 4s. to 4s. 9d. per 60 lbs. ds in quality, and Oats 3s. 2d. to 3s. 4d. per 45 lbs. Farmers’ deliver¬ er of Wheat for this week 76,127 quarters at 61s. 7d. Ditto corre¬ sponding week last year, 76,126 quarters at 46s. 8d. Liverpool, Dec. 28th.—The * 3,333 3,333 3,473 .... .... 10 7,956 . The value bush. 24,445 FROM PORTS SINCE JANUART EXPORTS Corn, bush. 10 7,956 Boston Oats, bush. 7,074 7,074 • 3,170 since Jan. 1 time, 1S66 Barley. Rye, bush. bush. .... 1,025 1,025 3,170 . Total to all otli er porta same • 2.076 27,555 12,560 NEW YORK. FROM Flour, C. meal, Wheat, bbls. ... 1 08® 1 35 64® 67 68® 70 75® 1 15 . Oats, Western cargoes... - and meal, Jersey Brandywine $2 00® 2 50 2 05® 2 45 @ 3 05® 3 15 3 00® 3 30 6 75® 8 15 fine Corn Spring Chicago Wheat, Flour, Superfine.. $ bbl $9 65®10 80 Extra State for any year heretofore. over $6,000,000. Canada since shipped to Antwerp. The the last half year was larger than -of Flour aud Wheat exported was Total 176,872 200,670 53,166 685,187 250,768 82,130 201,8112 55,845 252,940 341,920 -2S,56S 734,3711,617,410 194,784 264,623 ..159,938 146,030 184,172 338,584 374,868 1,846,196 262,851 3,963,040 4,357,272 3,387,055 J 28,568 COFFEE. -IMP’TS ATN. Y. ABOSTON.IndirectDirect AtBosat New AtNew York. York. ton • lbs. pfcgs of all sorts. - 30,200 796,746 106,200 From G’t Britain. 3,347 From Europe. 1,439 11,951 29,800 38,489 From East Indies. From other 740,305 1,S42 1,160,330 ports. 28 5,189 28 ' correspondingly active with importers, and the a very liberal business. The large arrivals and favorable advices have tended to slightly lower gold prices. The sales of the week are reported at 21,500 bags Rio, and 1, 300 bags Jamaica, the market closing steady. i ' The imports of coffee during the week have been—of Rio, 3,800 bags per Germania: 5,000 per G. Aruna, 5,000 per Bremerin, 5,000 per Mary Bond, 4,218 per Agilis, 4,005 per Valkyrien: total Rio, 27,018 ; 200 bags Laguayra, and 143 sundries. Coffee has also been Jobbing trade are doing imports since January 1, and stock The in first hands January 8th, follows: are as . ... . 6,000 115,748 Toral............47,502 2,580 E of AND STOCKS. Boston. Philadel’a. Baltimore. N. Orl’ns. Total. 677 8,756 *' 558 1,030 IMPORTS Imports in • • 2,762 1,390 11,416 4SU 2,737 1,374 3,931 6.801 612 5,202 .... ..32,948 2,5 3 2,622 5,843 .... ....47,965 3,311 6,547 9,805 2,120 ....50,280 52,317 ..26,122 590 .. .. .. .1861....- 74,345 6S,730 65,786 33,310 43,946 77,248 4,457 5,990 tons.. 53,590 1866 1865 1864 1863 186*2 9,620 2,580 65,786 2,302 33,310 Jan. 1,67. 8,750 8,165 9,150 57,395 49,924 35,*656 39,42^ 76,720 3,570 2,302 5,S68 6,107 SUGAR. in moderate demand at rather firmer figures, although quotations are £ lower at the close in sympathy with the lower price of gold. The sales of raw sugar for the week are reported at 2,598 hlids. and 4,848 boxesHavana. Refined sugar is active and firmer. Imports of the week have been very small. Stocks and imports here aud at other ports since Jan. 1, are as follows': Sugar has been currency Cuba. , boxes, At— Brazil, Manila, Other W, New bags, Indies, Orleans, Total bags. , hhds. hhds. hhds. hhds. 56,030 31,497 .... 135 06 70 Imports since Jan. 1 112,712 92,316 31,915 Jan. 8 43,417 " New York stock Same date 1S66 92 25 75 80 06 Exfitoflnestl 25 ©l 50 do 60 © 75© ...gold 18 © Rio, prime, duty paid do do do lava.mats and bag* Native Ceylon .. gold 17 © 174 gold 16 © If* good fair do fair to g. cargoes Maracaibo Laguayra Domingo... -gold 15 © 15* .gold 15*© 16# ordinary . St. Sugar. do 9m -I* do 9 © 9* Cuba, inf. to com. do do fair to good do ... Pi© l« i do do fair to good grocery... 10*© 10| 11 © Ilf Loaf do pr. to choice do © It* © 7 IVIelado Hav’a, Box. D. S Nos. 7 to 9 9;© 8i do do do 10 to 12 10 © 16# 17 © 18 .. © .. de 18 to 15 11 © II# do 16 to 18 12J© 13 do 19 to 20 18*© 14 white 13 © 14* .... © j6* Granulated Crushed and 8 6 centrifugal do do ....gold 25 © 25* 19 © 20 174© 18J ... do do do do $ S> refining Porto Rico V*© - 15*© .. 18*© 14* 13 © 18* powdered White coffee, Yellow coffee A <0 do Clayed English Islands ^ gall. 65 © £8 -«5 © t»5 New Orleans Porto Rico Cuba Muscovado..'. .. © 43 © .. 42 © 5> Spices. (gold) 42J© vO © 9») © Nutmegs, No.l....(gold) 43,946 77.248 6,107 9,149 Stock 71,180 2,320 9,014 l,320 4,760 74,315 58,730 20 .. do Ex. f. to finest. I 65 ©l Tw’kay, C, to fair. do Sup. to fine 95 05 Molasses. in the year. in the year. in the year. 8,165 tons 1866 1865 1864 1863 1862 1861 .... Consumpt’n Exported Imported Stock Jan. 1. >-5 ©1 15 ©I 45 ©l 00 ©1 25 @l AT THE FIVE PORTS. DISTRIBUTION STOCKS AND TOTAL ; H. Sk. & do 95 Com. to fair. 90 © do Sup’r to flne.l 00 ©1 do Ex f. to finest 1 10 ©1 Oolong, Common to fair.. 85 © do Superior to fine... 1 CO ©l Ex fine to finest I 40 ©1 do Souc & Cong., Com. to fair 70 © do Sup’r to fine. 90 ©l UncoL Japan, Coffee. following table, compiled from the circular of Messrs. H. Moring <fe Co., furnishes a very complete summary of the statistics the coffee trade during the six last years : • Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair ... do Super, to fine. .1 do Ex fine toflnest.l Gunp. & Imp., Com. to fair I do Sup. to fine.I ty 85 © do Ex f. to fln’st do Hyson, Common to fair ... 80 ©1 do Superior to fine ^... 1 15 @1 do Ex fine to finest. ..I 40 ©l do — .... The New-York. Stocks Jan. 1, ’67. 6,485 Tea. Doty pa'( ^ Singapore, bags Maracaibo, bags .. .. 5,676 Laguayra 44 ...200 6,147 St. Domingo 44 Other, “ ...143 11,714 14,000 6,584 6,000 Stock. 8,720 5,604 Java, l ags 16*666 Ceylon “ !!!!!! 7",960 Baltimore “ New Orleans 44 Other ports “ Boston, import. Stock. 79,748 27,018 ..... At New York, Stock. import. bags Philadelphia At Other sorts. Of Rio Coffee, New York, 53 THE CHRONICLE. January 12, 1867.] Cassia, in mats—gold $lb S-? © Ginger, race and African. Mace j Pepper, I (gold) 21*© I Cloves (gold) 27*© .. 22 32 20 Pimento, Jamaica.(gold) .. © .. 23 9 J Fruit. Raisins, Seedless.. $ * cask 8 51 © do Layer .... do Bunch Currants , box a S 1 ...$ lb Citron, Leghorn .j Prunes, Turkish Dates Almonds, Languedoc do do do 8ardlnes do Provence Sicily, Soft Shell Shelled box ^ hf. box ... 1 •5 1 i 24 IT .. ©3 85 ©3 65 © 12* © © © 84 © 2* © 2- © 3 © © 88 © Mi 18 17 © 18 17 © 20 17 © 18 Sardines . ... T9 or. box go d $ lb f igs, Smyrna Brazil Nuts Filberts, Sicily It*© 12 8 Walnuts, Dkihd Fp.ijit— Apples f? lb Blackberries Black Raspberries Pared Peaches Unpeeled do Cherries, pitted, new.... .. 16 0 ‘.5 ;8 .. © 18 f*© .. .. © 28 §50 85 14 50 © 53 4> 4 At Boston At Philadelphia.... At Baltimore At New Orleans THE DRY GOODS TRADE. *• 70 139 36 33 Friday, P. M., Jan. 11,1867. Dry Goods Trade has continued fairly active during the There have been some spring styles of goods New Orleans, Jan. 5th.—There has been a good demand for sugar, past week. opened, and buyers have come forward with more confidence. especially of the better grades of Open Kettle. Receipts have been hardly equal to the want, and prices have ruled in favor of the seller. The near approach to the season for the usual spring activity Sales of the week have been about 1,50Q hhds : closing at 7@Sc. for necessitates considerable preparation in all branches of trade, inferior ; 12@l2f for choice Molasses has been in good demand, with and the indications are that there will be a general revival of sales during the week of 2,700 bbls; closing at 54@72 for common to business during the latter weeks of this month, unless the choice. usual course of events is disturbed by Congressional action. Shipments ReceiptsTotal import. , 7,095 437 34,011 14,585 Sep. 1. 1,523 1,030 14,188 3,159 ceeding thus far 7,500. Prices are nominal at 8(a>3* The following will show the receipts, exports and Liverpool for No. 12. stocks at Havana and Matanzas: stocks —Total export—, Rec’d this ^-Expts to U. S.—, week. Since Jan. 1. week. Since Jan. 1. week. Year. 186*6.. ROY. 1864.. boxes. 33,372 27,363 43,261 1,406,235 1,455,581 1,360,259 425,491 475,186 146,956 To ©72 is nothing of importance to notice in regard Arrivals of new tugar have been small, not ex¬ market. /—N. York.--, /—Boston—, Domes- Dry Domes-Dry Domes- 7©12>,' f 6,146 Havana, Jan. 5. —There to the sugar /—N. York.-^ ^-Boston-^ Dry Domes-D y tics. - G’ds. tics. G’ds. pkgs. casey. pkgs. ca’es 1865-6. Price 239 I 1,260 65 550 83 4,280 Week. 258 1865-6. 17,175 2,377 Same, Since Same, Sep. 1. Week. Molasses, bbls, . , ; Since Sagar, hhds... Sugar, bbls... The 1 .. 10 London Antwerp , Cuba. Mexico New Granada.. Venezuela 4 .. . .. ' 13 1 1 23 To China St. Pierre tics. G’cfs. tics. G’ds. pkgs. cases, pkgs. ca’es 33 .. 56 56 35 35 (mi- quelon) Total this w’k. 44 since Jan. 1. Same time’65 44 44 1860. . .. 2 2 101 .. been generally more active, while advanced *@lc by jobbers. Agents’ ].riC3 for these goods is still quoted higher than the figures at which sctu il sales take place by jobbers, and we give their prices. Nonantum £-4 11*, Atlantic N do 12*, Massachusetts O ao 15*, Indian Orchard L 1)*, Commonwealth O do 11*, Knox B do 15*. Pepperell N do 15*, Indian Head do !8*. Atlantic Y 7-8 18*. Atlantic E do 18, Pacific 1 Brown Sheetings and Shirtings have he price of Standard makes ha9 been fO Muscovadoes.—Nothing has been done in new crop as yet. and Matanzas are as follows do 13*, Boott O do 17*, Indian Pepperell O do 17*, Indian Head ,—Receipts—> -Total exports—. Stocks, ^-To U. States—, For Since 4-4 22, Princeton A do 21, Pacific extra do 2*2, do H do 28, do L do 19, for w’k. s’ce Jan. 1. for w’k. s'ce Jan. 1. hhds. week. Jan. 1. Tear. 80,356 5,556 Atlantic H do 22, do A do 22*, do L do 19, Lawreuce E do 19*, do C 65,556 1866 66,493 1.675 do 21*, do F do 19, Stark A do 21*, Amoskeag A do 22, do B do 21*, 82,525 1865 69,559 1,920 Medford do 20, Pittsfield A do l'74,Kenebec do 18*,Roxbury A do 20*, 37,181 1864 Indian Orchard B do 18, Sussex F do 19, Newmarket A do 18, do C do MOLASSES. 2 -'*, Nashua D do 20, Pepperell E do 21*, Great Falls M dol9, do S do Molasses has been inactive until near the close of the week, when 17*, Sagamore do 15*, Albion do 17, Dwight W do 18*, Standard do 17*, a rather better business has been done at unchanged prices. The sales Pepperell R do 19*, Laconia E do 17*, Macon do 20, Laconia B do 18*, were 719 hhds. of all kinds, and 975 barrels New Orleans. Laconia Q 9-8 19*, Pequot do 26, Indian Orchard A 40 inch 21*, do Stocks at New York and imports here and at other ports since Jan. 1, do Cl 19, Nashua 5-4 32*, Naumkeag W do 27*, Utica do 42*, Pepperell are as follows r 7-4 40, Utica do 52*, Pepperell 9-4 65, Monadnoc 10-4 70, Pepperell Receipts, exports and stocks at Havana -Exporte- do 18 Tremont E do 15, Bedford R Orchard W do 17, Lawrence G do 17, .. .. .. . Cuba. /—Porto Rico-y-Other hhds. At New York, stocks Jan New York,imp’ts since Boston, “ Philadelphia44 Baltimore 44 New Orleans44 “ “ 44 44 2,2*0 8. 7,150 Jan 8.159 44 44 Foreign.—, 44 44 SPICES. ’ Spices are in much better demand at the is d<#ng by all parties, but at essentially ness 1,100 991 260 * .... N. O. bbls. hhds. hhds. * .J f close, and a liberal busi¬ unchanged figures, FRUITS. Fruits large. are more inquired for, but actual transactions are not very do 67*. Utica 11-4 $1 on. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are in steady request at material decline established by t* e general desire to realise «hown the dur¬ ing the close of December. Stocks are not large of leading goods. The following are the net cash prices of goods in this market. Mechanics 3-4 12*, Revere do 12*, Kingston do 11*, Boott R do 13*, do H do 15, Lawrence H do 16*. Woodbury 7-8 15, Strafford B do 15, Newburyport do 18*, Rockdale do 17, Waltham X do Putnam B do 16, Amoskeag Z do 17*, Harris A A do 17*, Great Falls M do 19, do S do 17, do A do 20, do J do 19, Hill’s Semp Idem do 22*, James 83 inch 17*, do 33 inch 19*, Bart!e:t 81 inch 18, do 83 inch 20, Greene G 4-4 18, Lewiston G do 21*, Wiudsor do 22*, Pocumtuck do 19, Putnam A do 19, Newmarket A do 20, do 0 do 22*, 19', THE CHRONICLE 54 Bartletta do 23, Bates BB do *23$, Constitutional do 17, Indian Grove do 20, James Steim do 22$, Indian River XX do 20, Attawaugan XX do 20, Laurence B do 22$, Fountain do 22, Boot B do 23, Forestdale do 26, Masonville do 26, do XX do 32$, Androscoggin L do 26, Lons¬ dale do 26, Wauregan do 30, do F do 21$, Bates XX do 23, Lyman J do 32, Wamsutta H do 32$, Lonsdale Cambric do 37$-, New York Mills do 87$, Amoskeag 42 inch 26, Chickopee do 26, Waltham do *24, Wam¬ 87$, Lyman R 6-4 24, Naumkeag W do 25, Nashua do 32$, Wamsutta do 42$, Amoskeag 46 inch 28, Waitham 6-4 38, Mattawamkeag do 40, Peppered do 40, Oneida do 45, Utica do 52, Waltham 8 4 62$, Peppered do 62, Peppered 9 4 67, Utica do 90, Phoenix 10-4 65, Monadnock do 70, Baltic do 72$, Bates do 70, Waltham do 76, Allendale do 80, Peppered do 77$, Utica do 95, Masabesic 11 4 sutta 9-8 Bates do 32$, Satinets show but little change in the demand. steady in prices with rather less demand. Velvets, J. Crossley’s best $4, do A 1 qual. $8 76, do "patent #3 25. Body Brus¬ sels, Roxbury $2 75, do Bigelow $2 75. Tapestry, Brussels, S. Crossley £1 90, Lowell, ex S p $2 15. do, super $1 75, do med sup $1 60. Hartford Carpel Co. ex 3-ply $2 2 5, do Imp 3-plv $2 1*2$, do eupeifine $1 75, do med sup $1 60. Med and low'pri Ingrains $1 *25(3)1 45, Hemp d1, 33 inch 3'1(3)37$, do 36 inch 40(3)50, do twil 36 inch 55@60. American Linen is steady and moderately active at previous prices. Foreign Goods 9h-'w little more animation, especially for the lead¬ ing kinds of goods. Dress goods are still quiet, although importers are preparing to oiler a variety of new styles as'soon as the Spring busi¬ Cassimeres Carpets ness 85, Amoskeag do 87$, Peppered do 85. Ticks are in increased demand and prices have been quite steady. Amos¬ keag A C A 55, do A 42, do B 87, do D 27, do 0 82, Pemberton A A 42$, do red stripe 42$, Brunswick 22, Blackstone River 25, Hamilton 36, do D 82$, Somerset 19, Thorndike 28, Pearl River 50, Oriental 41, Har¬ vest 86, Hancock A A 31, Pittsfield 14$, Bunkerhid 26, York 52$, do 39, Omega B 37$, do A 50, do C 27$, Cordis AAA 45, Everett 28, Impe¬ rial 35, Boston A A 37$, LehighValley A 22$, do B 20, do A C A22$, Swift River 25, Pacific 30, Winnebago 13$, Baltic 16$, Girard 87$, Hampden C C 30, Albany 14$. Stripes are also in better request and steady. Amoskeag 29 and 30* Uncasville 23 and 24, Whittenton A A 36, do A 3-3 30, do B B 26. Napoleon 13$, Pittsfield 3-3 14, Pemberton Awn 47$, Haymaker 28, Everett 26, Massabesic 6-3 28 and 29, Andover 25, Boston 25, Harves¬ ters 3-3 22(3)27, do 6-3 22(3)27, American 22(^23, Eagle 19, Hamilton 28, Arkwright 23, Jewett City 22(3)23, Sheridan G 20. Checks are quiet and unchanged in price. Park Mills Red 25, Lan¬ ark 4x2 18, Lanark fur 18$, Union 50 4x2 37$, do 50 2x2 37$, do 20 4 2 35, do 20 2-2 35, Caledonia 35, do 29, Lancaster fur 18, Kennebeck 35,Wam8utta 20, Farmers A Mechanics 80, Star No. 600 16$, do No. 800 2x2 22, do No*. 900 4 2 26, Cameron No 80 20, Miners A Mechanics 32. Denims and Cottonades are steady in price, and in improved request Amoskeag denims s 11 at 37$ cents, Haymaker 30, do bro.vn 30, York 86, Warren brown 25, Boston Manufacturing Co. 26, Farmer’s and Mechanics cassimeres 55, Pemberton dAt 45, Rodman’^ Ky J 47, Plow L A Anv 50, Union 80, Monitor 21, Manchester Co. 27, Clark’s brown 27$, Suffolk 27, Everett 47$, New York Mills 62$, Whitteuden dAt 31(3)39$, Marlboro 22, Arlington 20, Blue Hill 24, Fort Moultrie 80, Mount Vernon 32$, Brown Drills are fairly active for export and hence trade at steady Winthrop 18, Amoskeag 23, Laconia 24, Androscoggin 14, Minerva 18, Peppered 23, do fine jean 22, Stark A 22$, Bennington 22$, Massachusetts G 20, Woodward duck bags 32$, National bags 40, Stark prices. A do are unsettled opens. < IMPORTATIONS OF DRY HOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. importations of dry goods at this port for the week endiug Jan . corresponding-weeks of 1865 and 1866, have been as The 10. 1S67, and the follows: * • by the declining teniency of the ]L865. r Manufactures of wool... cotton.. do do silk flax do in are 11$, Lancaster 11$, Wauregan 16$. Domestic Gingh ms remain inactive and somewhat nominal. $407,160 warehouse $103,045 258 37 543 477 73,963 690 738 37.727 136.705 660 18,083 2,541 1,581 improvement for the spring trade, and spring styles. American Printed de Laines are in good demand at unchanged prices. All dark *25, Hamilton Co 26, Manchester dark ‘25, Pa¬ cific dark *25, Armures dark 25, High colors *28, Pacific Merinos 40, Mourniug 25, Shepherd checks 25 all wool 42$, Skirtings 85. * Lin8EY8 are hardly as active, but stocks are small and prices steady. Washington 35, Park 45 inch 38, do 35 mch 27$, do 60 inch 37$, do 70 inch 62$, do 75 inch 67$, Kensington 26, Union cotton and wool 26, but slight indications of manufacturers hold back their are do do do Miscellaneous 269 81 9 105 30 cotton.. silk flax .... .... dry goods. MARKET 132,431 244,189 $374,623 . 294 204 41 4’’4 37,413 DURING 1,099 $o3S,610 239,420 112 *781,783 Manufactures of wool... 4,007 $1,553,001 THE . . 2.102 $952,119 1,738,575 4,737 3.307 4,967 8,044 $2,690,694 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAME 1,192 $81.023 33,667 ^ 12.66.5 26,645 9,443 790 177 391 39 $139,026 68,610 51,433 151,1.32 31,182 $441,383 1,553,001 7,069 $1,994,334 PERIOD. $547,978 287,049 $1,030,90S 112,489 2.211 1.756 301 1,748 22,549 2,891 141,562 193,281 626,250 299.136 383,127 consumpt’n 2,547 $165,418 407,160 2,5S9 $1,163,346 3,307 1,738,575 8,913 $2,481,963 4,967 1,553,001 Total entered at the port 3,044 $572,608 5,896 $1,901,921 13,880 $4,034,964 497 Total Add ent’d lor I REPORTS WEEK Todd’s 32$, Black Rock 30. quiet, but prices are unchanged. dull except for a few desirable makes, and quotations SPECIE) AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE JANUARY ENDING 4, 1866. [The quantity is given in packages when not Boots & s' oes.3 China, Glass A-E. 8.038 ed....■*.....218 114,543 . Alkali ..9 Arrow root ...11 Anoline Alum .. 1,620 ..10 505 758 14,196 Burr stones Cheese baskets ..2,042 7,896 2,331 Metals, Ac.— 21,655 .265 Blea Powder 257 Castor oil.... 100 Barytes.... Brass Goods.. .2 1 Bronzes Chains & an¬ :149 chors 314 208 Wines Champagne, 4,782 1,4)0 4,959 Camphor ..175 Gums, crude.600 . 17,629 Arabic .50 2,835 3,973 copavi..5“2 Copper Cutlery 112 2,138 1,286 Guns 107 Hardware.... 221 Glue v. .130 Leeches 8 Oils.. 32 204 do ess do linseed. .78 do olive..... 2 3,181 116 1,697 Iron, pig, Paints..-•••••-. 3,543 - 8,276 6,748 54,269 Iron, hoop,' 8,415 7,812 33 299 • 1,284 1,231 Furs 5,618 Iron, Railroad, bars .4,721 Iron, sheet, 40,299 . . 273 tons Inn, tubes. ...70 Iron, other, Bananas. Citron Nuts 94 7,101 20,411 4,362 Oranges Raisins 17,762 Sauces and pres. Instruments— Musical 748 tons-.: Nails 3 Needles 8 Nickel .15 Old metal Plated ware... .4 Per caps.....25 Saddlery... 4 4,067 Tin, bxs...l0,673 Steel - 22,453 1,224 Tin slabs . 24,596 211 9,125 9.119 1,316 4,827 1,23« 44,198 £4,707 .1,265 67,868 12,595 Wire 5 Zinc..... 417,294 613 25,621 Cassia 25 6,518 213 ....5 Optical Jewelry, Ac.— Jewelry ..10 1,255 8,207 Watches 23 49,59.' Leather, Hides, Ac.— Bristles....... 14 4,718 2,602 13.682 10!500 675 96 99 5,207 627 Ginger... Maccaroni Molasses.. 1,173 Oil paintings. .5 Nutmeg Stationery, Ac.— 123 , Rice Salt 8,577 Statuary 7,772 Linseed.... 8,510 51,495 Soap ...9 Sugar, hhds, tes 647 and bbls. 64,046 1,253 Sug»r, bxs. A bgs ...*...1,110 Trees A Tea Iwine Toys Engravings... 6 1,115 Paper 1,852 42,971 Other. 80 15,490 3,856 342 ,... Seeds. 525 26,345 454 30,239 3,138 Perfumery.... 24 3,482 Pipes.... 4,108 Rags... 203 8,069 171 Mustard Books 8,262 1,858 29,931 Honey 41 1,762 Hops,./ 97 8,707 Ind. rubb’r 3,005 192,663 Ivory 24 7,723 M achinery... 201 12,194 Marble man 5,734 Tapioca 7,641 Spices— Nautical...... ,1 Feathers Firecrackers... Fish. Furniture Hemp 2,830 4 Fruits, Ac. 1,584 8,241 Coffee,bgs.32,707 561,301 Fancy goods.... 79,304 3,008 359 Furs, Ac— 15 200 tons Lead.pigs. 8,165 42,411 Meral goods ..23 8,152 3,413 2,449 8,471 2,930 3,550 Cocoa, bags. .250 8,800 3,591 .. Corks Clocks. 178 tons 4,055 2,222 1,173 228 7,188 Vermillion .71 Yellow ochrelOO Other...: :. 281 .43 Grain Grin-1 stones... Haircloth... .16 21 Safflower Total. 11,714 40,005 152 21 Tong beaus... .7 Building stones. .... Gamboge.. Gum copal... .92 Paris white.. 100 600 31,310 815 Cigars Coal, tons....871 .. 411 ... Bark, Peruv.159 591 85 ...160 Whiskey 613 Soda, ash Sponges Buttons 1,209 Gin.,. Porter Aloes Rhubarb 6,507 8,784 1,402 427 9,386 .. .30 4b5 ... • Cork Fustic Hides, undress¬ L-gwood, lbs325 ed....... 55,161 Mahogany 7,398 Other 8,3b4 Liquors, vVines, Ac.— 114 972 Miscellaneous— 8,552 Ale 17 Brandy 51 2,488 Baskeis... 835 2 264 Bags. Cordials Drugs, Ac.— Potash, bich Reg antimony25 Pkgs. Value. *2,999 . do do 534 Woods- Hides, dress¬ ware— .278 China Eartlrnw’e. ..94 .,972 Glass .598 Glass wave .01 Glass plate. Annatto otherwise specified.] Pkgs. Value Pkgs. Value. , ... are - 2)3.605 PERIOD. 266 Total thrown upon mak’t 4,123 in rather request at Masonville 19, Warren 18. Woolen Goods are still quiet, with little or no improvement. There nominal. INTO thrown and 407,160 Lan¬ White Rock 18, Cloths 190,250 3,307 $1,738,575 THE SAME (OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND unchanged prices. Andros¬ coggin 15$, Bates colored 15, do bleached 14$, Naumkeag 21, Pepperell 23, Naumkeag, satteen 25, Laconia 22, Amoskeag 21(3)22, New¬ market 16$, Lewiston 15, Indian Orchard 16, Berkeley 22$, Quinner baug 13$, Tremont 12£. Cambrios and Silesias are in improved demand, but prices are unchanged. Lonsdale Silesias sell at 23 cents, Victory 21$, Indian Orchard 21$, Ward 21$. Washington glazed Cambrics sell at 14, Victory 13, do E 15$, do high colors 14$, Hudson Mill 12$, Fox Hill 11, Superior 11, Superior, 11$, Smithfield 13. Waverly 13$. S. S. A Sons paper cambrics sell at 14 cents, do high co!ors 20, English 20, are 131,901 lorconsumptT, 2,547 A 22. Coburgs 1,737 574 .... 23$, Hartford 18, Caledonia (new) *21, Glasgow 22, Clyde 17, Berkshire 2.8, German 20, Roanoke 17 Bates 23$. Manchester 2C. Canton, Flannels are in light steady request for finer makes. Other Ellerton N, Bro. 37$, doO do 35, do T do *21, Laconia kinds are dull. do 29, Slaterville do 24, Hamilton do 30, Rockland do 17, Naumkeag do 26, Tremont do 21, Scotts extra do 19, Ellerton N Blea. 37$, do O do 35, do P do 33$, Methuen A do 32, Naumkeag do 27, Nashua Park*Mills No. 65 42$, 211,022 1,234 530 Manufactures of wool... cotton.. do do silk do flax.... Miscellaneous dry goods. caster are 283,727 297,114 3S8 46,018 fair request Corset Jean3 -75.675 289 935 1,179 4 Total Add eut’d 1,109 56,48-8 60.445 dry goons. 1,2‘H) from Value $309,684 Pkgs. $431,356 350,078 449,005 i2,547 withdrawn 597 932 218 Total 1867. Value. Pkgs. $112,308 ... 10, 1866j r 308 201 * Miscellaneous mO / v Value. Pkgs. raw in jobbers hands. Agents have opened a variety of handsome Spring styles, which are now offered to the trade, and meet with a fair demaud. There is also au improved demand for dark goods. Prices are unchanged. American 17$, Amoskeag dark 16$, do purple 18, do pink 18$, do shirting 16$, Merrimac D dark 18, do purple 18, do W dark 20, do purple 20, do pink 20. Sprague’s dark 18, do purple 19, do shirting 19, do pink 19, do solid 18,do indigo blue 18, London Mourning 16$, Simpson Mourning 16$, Amoskeag Mourning 15$. Garners light 18$, Duimell’s 17$, Allen 17, Kichmoud 17$, Arnolds 16, Gloucester 16$, Wamsutta dark 14, Pacific dark 18, Lowell 15, Naumkeag 13, Victory 14, Glen Cove 12$, Home 12$, Empire State Prints ENDING JANUARY ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK ' material, and prices are nominal. and are 62$, Liberty do 37$. Print Cloths are [January 12 1%7., Tobacco WaBte 18,386 „ plants.. ...5,982 54 .13 1,171 2,063 68,343 1,321 1,033 762 19,871 flOO 3.567 Wool, bales. .956 71,976 Other l,0S7 12,449,789 January 12, 1867.] noted discriminating duty of 10 per val. is levied on all imports the duties below, a cent, ad under flags that have no treaties with the United States, On all goods, wares, and $ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 # ton, and # cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Oood Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place orplar.ee of their growth OV produc¬ Hope, tion ; Haw Cotton mid TIjp tor i»» all eases illicit rs— Duty: 21 cents # ft. Ol 200ft) ami up ward #ib 9*@ 10 $ ct. @80 00 Bread—Dnty, 80 # cent ad val. Pilot # ft @ 6) 'Navy. . @ ('rankers..'.. 7 0 14 Breadstuff is—See special report. Grande shin $ toi|35 00 .. .‘22 00 @21 CO @*5 00 hogs hair Philadelphia Front-* isrintles—Duty, 15 cents ; i # lb. 75 @ 3 00 Cheese.-Duty: 4 Amer’mgray&wb. # ft , and Butter ceuts. N. Y Slate—Fiesh pails Firi-ius H. ilt' lit km luiis... ■M K-rhins »rve—FirkUs — Firyell w Firkins, ndqual.ty kii.s, Cheese— do Wet-t rn Farm Dairies * do do ‘.5 14 Wesr^r Common 10 @ 0 @ @ @ 19 17 14 Maracaibo do ..(gold) Guayaquil do ...(gold) St Domingo.., .(gold) Coffee.— See 171® @ 15 (0 10 0 .. # lb Brimstou ‘23 Tarred Russia Tarred American # ft Phial. . ....; Carbonate in bulk 40 @ *2- 0 0 @ 28 @ 29 @ *28 0 22i@ / @ 0 65 @ 50 @ 12 0 ... 26 40 pr.(gold) Cubebs, East India.... Cutch Epsom Salts Extract Logwood Fennell Se d Gambler Gamboge Ginseng, South&West. Gum Arabic, Picked.. Gum Arabic, Sorts... Gum Benzoin ..(gold) Gam Kowrie Gum Gedda.. Gum Damar 19* 22 70 70 40 92* @ 1 75 7f@ 19 @ 14 @ 90 @ 85 @ 2 @ 27|@ 4t 0 25 45 60 33 8 2i 15 i 8* @ 4* l!> 60 @ 2 00 96 @ l O'* 70 @ 80 42 @ @ 32 0 ! 0 89 @ 45 55 87 27 42 55 @ .. @ 30 0 6> 28 CO @ 90 40 Licorice Paste Spanish Solid. Licorice Paste, Greek. Madder,Dutch, .(gold) do, French, EXF.F.do Manna,large flake Manna, small flane Mnstard Seed, Cal.... Mustard Seed, Trieste. Nutgalla Blue Aleppo Oil Anis Oil Cassia Oil Bergamot Lynx 87 @.'40 30 @ 7 0 6*@ 2 00 0 1 75 @ 8 @ 17 0 "f 6f .... .... 12 88 0 $ 75 (fa 4 50 0 .... .... 6 75 0 0 80 tinner .. over 5 00 @ S .10 Of @50 3 00 @ 5 I 00 @ 8 50 @ Ot) 20 00 00 00 <0 00 40 00 80 75 inches, 4 cents.%? 24 inches, 20 cents ^ square foot; all above that, 40 eeuts ^ square foot: unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common vVindow, not exceeding lOx on that, and and not that, 3 cents 15 inches square, 1*; over not over 16x24, 2; over that, fVindow—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. (Subject to a discount of:)f@35^9 cent.) 6x 8 to 8x10. 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50 tol0xl5 8x 7 75 @ 6 00 1 lx to 12x18........ 9 25 @ 6 50 12x19 to 16x24 ; 9 50 @ 7 00 18x22 to 20x30 11 75 @ 7 50 20x31 to 24x30 .14 50 @ 9 00 24x31 to 24x36 10 00 @10 00 25x36 to 30x44 17 00 @11 00 80x46 to 32x48 '.18 00 @12 00 20 00 @rs 00 32x50 to 32x56 24 00 @15 00 Above Evg’ish And French Window—lat, 2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. (Single Thick)—Disoount25@3o $c*rt 6x 8 to8x10.#50 feet 7 75 0 t List 25&80*dis. Inn List 5 * dis. Spades... 7*@ - 3 Li«t 30@35 *adv Planes. Hay—North River, in bales# 100 fts, for shipping 1 tO @ .... Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $-'o; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 # ton; and Tampico, icent # ft. Amer.Dressed.# ton 880 C0@S90 0) Cndressed.. 290 00@800 (0 do Russia, Clean 875 00@885 00 ..(gold) 100 00@150 00 Jute 00 00 , 8hbvels nnd Horse* Shoes 0U square foot; larger and not over x39 inches 6 cents square foot; above that, and not exceeding ,24xfio American List 10* dis. List 65&10 * dis. List 55 * dis. Screws American.. .List 10Jfc?**dis. do Eng’ish List 2o* dis. 00 ack 24x30 ,2* ; all over List 20 * dis. dz.NewList 10* dis. Cut brads 75 2 * 0 @ 4*0 80 @ I6x*2i Auaurs,per Ring do 00 75 @ 1 25 (aluss—Duty, Cylinder or Window Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches, 2* cents $ square foot; larger am; not Phort Cut Tacks -., Raccoon Skin k, B List 40 *adv. Augur Bitts rivet .. handled, do in sets... 21 dis. dis. insets. (lo oo dis. dis. Old List 25*adv. List40*adv. Framing Chisels 00 @42 ( 0 o0 @55 Ot) 5 00 @20 2 10 0 5 Mink, dark 3 00 @ 6 ftl usk rat,............. 10 @ Otter 5 do @ S Opossum 15 0 Marten, Dark do pal«* over 3 75 @ 4 00 6 50 @ Ipecacuauna, Brazil... 4 25 @ 2 20 @ .. Talap Lae Dye 25 @ 55 Licorice Paste,Calabria 41 @ 42 24 @ 25 Licorice, Paste, Sicily. Eng (gold) Iodine, Resublimed... “ Tiunk List 10* St cksand Dies Li 185* 3erew Wrenches—Coe's Patent List 20* do Taft’s List 55@60 * 8in ths’ Vis *s # ft 24 @ .... 10 @ do Cross do Red do Grey 95 95 15 0 11 @ 18 @ 30 @ .* i> Carriage and Tire Bolts List <?0 % dis. Door L css and Latches List 7* tf dis. Door Knobs—Mineral, list 7* % dis. “ Pore lain List 7* % d*s. Padlocks New List 20&7* % dis. Locks—Cabinet, Eagle 5 jfadv. .... £>...... L:st 20 % dis. . . 50 @ 1 GO 50 @ 75 *do House Fisher, Fox, Sliver List 25}(adv. Hinge®,'Wrtuiiht,..;. Door B Its, Cast Bbl 45 @ 50 2' @ 2* Herring, pickled<$bbl. 5 50 @ 7 50 Badger List 5 % dls. List 10 Jtadv, List. Loose Joint.. * Herring, Scaled^ box. * Herring, No. 1 Cat, Wild 8 00 0 9 80 6 17 @ 7 50 Narrow Wrought Butts Cost Butt-*—Fast Joint. 50 50 * Myrrh, Turkey. Senegal (gild) Gum Tragacanth, Sorts Gum Tragacanth, w. dakey (g Id) Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Gum * 0 @ Gum, 23i 80 25 .... . 00 %Tft 16 @ JFruits—See special report. Furs— Duuy, 10 ^ cent. Beaver, Dark.. skin 1 00 @ 5 do * Palo.*. 50 0 3 Bear, Black 5 00 @li do brown 3 00 @ 8 24 @ 21 @ Broad -atch’s 8to3 bst. 15 60 @25 10 mdi ary 12 4*0 @ Coffee Mil s-Iron Hop’r 8 75 @ 7 50 do Bri 6 CO @10 00 Hopper 4 2* @10 69 do Wood Back C‘.tt< n Gins, per saw... $5 less 20 % 01) 00 Jersey.. 17 15 14 do .... Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. Myrrh,East India Gum 40 @ 19 @ 3 Go @ 3 2 40 @ 2 50 @ yg @ Cream Tarar, 151 if* 4? •• Cochineal,Mexic’n\g’d) Copperas, American... and Assafcedati, Cmde and fiegnlus, 80 3$ cent ad val.; Balaam Copaivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balaam Peru, 50 cents $ ft; Calisaya # ft; Arsenic Salmon, Tlekled, No.1.40 Sa moo, i i kled. p. tcr4i 85 Ammonia, Potash (gold) Caustic Soda Cxn away seed Coriander Seed Cochineal, Hon (gold) and Dges—Duty, Alcohol, •2 50 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft; Alum, 60 cents $ 100 ft; Argols, 6 aenta Mackerel, No. 3. H’i'axlJ 75 @ Mackerel,No. 8, Mass 0 6 .. Chlorate 18* 1 S* 21. .. (gold) 1 to 3 do ord nary SO 75 @1S @18 @17 @1 Mac’el,No.3,Mass. l’ge.4 00 @*4 15 @ 13 @ .ordinary Shingling Hatchets, C’t e>teei, best br'ds, Nos. @ 6 5a 25 0 .... 19 (0 @ 85 10 @ do val. Mackerel, No.l,Halifa\17 0* Mackerel, No. 1, Bay.. 17 >0 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay. .16 *0 Mackerel, No. 2, Ha ax 16 00 43 5)@ (iu Chamomile F ow’s# ft Drugs 20; Antimony, 10; Arrowroot, Sul¬ Cardamoms, Malabar,. Castor Oil Cases $ gal Cotton-See special report. . 1 lor 4]@ Camphor, Itolined ami Ingot, Russia @ Corks—Duty, 50 # cent ad val. Mineral # ' Flowers,Benzoin.# oz. Bolt Rope, Regular, quarts# gross 5*@ 8i @ .. Cantbarides Cordage—Duty,tarred,8; unu.rred Manila, 21 other uutarred, 31 cents # ft. Manila, i. bond) 3 cents Baltimore Detroit ....... Portage Lake Crude phur copper.and yellow metal, In sheets42 Inches long and 14 Inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $1 square toot, ft shore ..(gold) 2 50 @ 2 75 Camphor, ci.de, 2£; old copper 2 cents. 38 1b; rnanuiaotured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing # ft. Sheathing, new# Sheathing, yellow Bolts, Braziers’ @ 2 25 (gold).40 00 @40 0 Brimstou', em. Roll special report. etop-pe**—Duty, pig, bar, Mackerel, No. 1, Mass 8 ton jifeteamlO 50 @11 10 Cocoa—Duty, 1 cents # ft. # ft 7o Brimstou*. bushel. boud)(gold) @ Copaivi Borax, Relined Newcastle <4.s (In Pickled Scale..bbl Pickled Cod bbl. 7 Bleaching Powder Liverpool Orrel. & ton of2,240 ft... ...... .. .. @15 00 Liverp’l House Ouunell8 00 @'0 00 Anthracite. 8 (’0 @ 3 50 Cardiffsteam 12 (Hi @ LiverpoolGa- Ca m 1 .Id 00 @ .... Caracas 45 @ 1 10 ?6 @ 31 @ . biand ^.erdiz do ordinary Carpe ter’s Adzes,.;.. . 25 @ 60 Petayo Berries, Persian 46 @ Bi Carb. Soda, New-3 castle 8 @ Bi Chromate Potash... 20, @ Cement—Rosendale.#bl .. 0 00 Chains-Duty, 2* cents# lb. One inch & upward# ft $ 0 8) Coill—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton ut' 28 bushels 30 lb to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28 bushels ol'80 ft $ 4 2*@ _ Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ; Salman $3; other pickled, $1 50 bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smoked, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.tlian bar¬ rels, 5U cents 39 Hh> ftDry Cod f cwt. 6 50 0>ZJJL>^ Ba k . .. 85 23 34 Balsam Peru.. 19 17 30 0 vl 0 90 11* Balsam Tolu 27 Caudles—Duty, tallow, 2*; sperma¬ ceti and,wax d; steariue and' adauiautiue, 5 cents # lb Sperm, patent,. ..# ft) 4S @ 50 40 Retiued sperm,city..., 33 @ 81 Stearic Adamantine 20 .. Hardware— A\es—Cast stee\ best .. Feathers—Duty: 30 $ eentad Prime Western..,^ ft 75 @ Tennessee. 70 0 Ayres,mixed Hog,^Western, unwash. 14'50 @15 00 22 @ 83 @ Balsam @ .. 26 @ 17 14 17 Dairies Factory 2) 0 Buenos @67 50 (gold^O 00 @ (gold) Limawood Barweod 7 50 @ Hair—Duty free. RioGrande,mixed# 1b .. ft, and over Rifle Savanilla(gold)-‘2 50 @ 23 (0 Maracaibo do.25 00 @ ... Logwood, Hun. ;-l 00‘@32 00 Logwi od. L zuna(gdd)30 lO @ ...-. Logwood, St D.-min..i0 JO @21 60 Logwood, Cam .(gold).2 * .*0 @ Logwood,Jamaica ad val.; $ cent Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬ ters $ ft 40 Fustic, Fustic, Argols, Crude Argols, Re lined.. Arsenic, Powdered 3.» • less $ ft, 6 cents $ 20 cents $ ft, 10 cents $ ft and 20 cent ad val. Blasting(A) sp 25ft keg .. @5 00 Shipping and Mining.. .. @ 5 60 20 Dye Woods—Duty free. Camwood. .(gold)I9 t n!90 00@200 00 Fustic, Cuba :..30 ()<• @ 3100 Assaiietida 0 States Western Antimony, ltegulus of cents or 1. 53 82 @ Cotton,No. I... f y. ..., 8f@ <2 @ 24* Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 2 35 50 @ 12 0 18* Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Ravens, Light.. $ pee 16 00 @1S O') Ravens, Heavy...... .20 00 @ Scotch, G’ck, No.l @ 74 t5 0 .. @ Alum Annato, fair to prime. 34 82 @ quali'y North Pennsylvtna — • 40 3 85 52 @ 28*@ Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 1(1 cents or less $ square yard, 3; over 10,4 cents $ ft. 20 @ Calcutta, standard, y’d 4M 38 @ .(g’ld)^lft 10, 4 cents ^ ft Calcutta, light &h’y % 30 80 24 0 IS 0 Tapioca Verdigris, dry^ ex dry Vitriol, Blue Tart’c Acid, 2j @ 75 @ Aloes, Cape # ft Aloes, Socotrine 2* 45 ^ 42*@ ....... 30 @ Snip Quinine, Am78 oz 2 SO @ Sulphate Morphine.... 7 25 @ 57j @ .. gall. 4 (55 @ Alcohol..- 45 50 3a 0 40 @ 3n @ Welsh tubs,.prime. \Yeb*h tuhs, s eo-id Western Be @ .. (gold) Acid, Citric Butter— 10) *2 @ Senna, Alexandria.. . Senna, Eastlndia Shell Lac ...... .. Soda Ash (80^c.)(g7d) Sugar L’d, W e(go d).. ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; .-oda Ash, *; Sugar Lead,20cents # ft; Sulpb. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 # oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents # ft; Sal Ammoniac, 2u; blue Vit¬ riol, 25 # cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $1 $ ft; all others quoted below, frite. @18 50 hard..per M.12 50 Common t!rot mi Seneca Root. Senna, 20 # cent ftt |*< 4* . 40 @ 33 @ Geeda and Gum Bones—Duty : on invoice Rlu Sarsaparilla, Hond Sarsaparilla, Mex Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Tragacanth, 20 $1 cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬ limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, 60; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Auis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $1 # ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 $ cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents # ft; Phosphorus, 20 # cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents $ ft: Quicksilver, 15 # cent ad val.; Sal ^Eratus, 1* cents # ft ; Sal Soda, * cent $ ft ; Sarsaparilla and ** 20 10i@ Cum 15 # cent ail val. I'ot, 1st sort...# IUU lb 8 25 @ S 50 Pearl, 1st sort @ Beeswax—Duty,2d $ cent ad val. American yellow.# lb 87 @i 83 An life*—Duty : S 50 @ Salaratns SalAm n ac, Ref (gold) Sal Soda. Newcastle..... Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers lenzola and Gamboge, 10 # cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 2U $ cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per ft; Haw Silk excep*rd to be *2/240 ft. 92* S@ Sago, Pea. led ad val.; 50 cents $ ft; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon ; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, l *; Citric Aeid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents # ft; growth or produce of of the Cape of Oood East Countries Rhubarb,China.(gold) 8 00 @ Camphor, 40 cents # ft.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 # cent Cardamoms and Cantbarides, mer¬ 50 00 50 00 00 18 00 @15 00 20 50 @16 00 24 00 @18 00 Groceries—See special report. Gunny Bag's—Duty, valued at 10 cents or lesa, $ square yard, 3; ovei 8 25 @ 6 9 76 @ 7 10 50 0 T 15 50 @12 16 50 @18 8x11 to 10x15 11x14 to 12x18. 12x19 to 16x24 20x31 to 24x80 21x31 to 24x86 24x36 to 30x44. 30x45 to 82x48 82x50 to 32x56. 8 25 6 50 Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 75 @ 41 @ Pnosphorus 0 42 @ Prussiate Potash 95 @ Quicksilver 15 30; Refined 2 95 @ 5 00 @ Oxalic Acid.- Roll Brimstono, $10 Brimstone, $6; reciprocal chandise, of the Oil Lemon (gold) Oil Peppermint, pure. Bark, 80 $ cent ad val.; BICarb. Soda, 1J; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents # ft; Bleaching Powder, 30 cents $ 100ft; Refined Borax. 10 cents 38 ft ; Crude PRICES CURRENT. In addition to 55 THE CHRONICLE. 11*@ Manila..# ft..(g.*ld) 12 19 @ 22 17 @ 17* 18 @ 16 @ 14 @ 19 8 0 8* (sold) IIides-Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salted and Skins 10 # cent ad vaJ. Sisal ' Dry Hides— Buenos Ayres# ftg’d Montevideo....;, do do Rio Grande ‘iT-tnoco do California gold California, Mex. do Porto Cabello do . Tampico do ... Texas l4i@ . VeraCruz ... do do Dry Salted Hides— lili (gold) llfornia... . do S in w ch Isl’d do South & Wes\ do Wet Salted Hides— Bue Ayres.# ft g’d. do Rio Grande California do Western l » • Coutry sl’ter trim. 18* 18 @ 18 @ 3c cured. 14* 15* 14 @ 15 lf*@ 16* 16 15 @ 12 @ 13 @ 9 @ 18 14 12 PJ@ 10 @ 9j@ 11 @ 10 .. 11 @ 10 . 12 12 do do 10 @ 12* Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip ?8 # ft cash. '26 @ Sierra Leone.... do 80 @ 82 Gambia & Bissau do 20 @ 21 Honey—Duty, 20 cents # gallon. City Cuba (duty paid) (gold) # gall. 84 0 Hops—Duty: 5 cents # lb. Crop of 1866 . ....# lb 40 @ do of 1865 20 0 Foreign. 40 0 85 70 45 • tf ) Ox,Buenos Ayres.... 12 00@ 14 00 India Rubber-Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val. lb C5 © Par*; Medium Para, Coarse..., East Inaia do do Indigo—Duty 3houlders, 16 ! 5 i6 17 12 @ 12 © 15 © .. Mexican free. Bengal ( old) $ lb 1 00 © 1 05 Oude 75 © 1 85 (gold) Madras.... (gold) 65 © 90 65 © 1 10 Manila :..(gold) 80 © 1 15 Guatemala (gold) Caraocas 70 © 90 .(gold) Iron—Duty,Bar8,1 to 1] cents $ lb. 100 lb; Boiler Railroad, 70 cents and Plate, 1} cents $1 ft; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, If to 1} cents $ ft; Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents $1 ft. Pig,Scotch,No 1. $ ton 47 00© 50 00 Pig, American, No. 1.. 8 00© Bar, Refi’d tug&Amor 90 0 ©100 00 Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold) 95 00©J 00 00 Stoke Prices—, Bar Swedes, assorted sizes @162 .r0 do do do 15 15 14 14 @ 10 © Mansanilla Mexican Florida. $ c. 5 © 4 Bahia. 24 32 20 Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 31)cents $ gallon; crude Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 $ cent ad val. Turpent’e, ■ f ..$280ft G 00 © Bar,English and Amer¬ 112 50&1 7 i0 ican, Refined Tar, Am rlc*. do do do Commonl05 00© Scroll 1 ‘2 00©’70 00 Ovals and Half Round lo7 60@147 50 Band ©142 50 nitrate bbl 2 CO © 2 -5 @ 4 :0 HorseShoe 13- 50© 142 50 Rods, 5-8@3-16 irich.. 1'7 r0@172 50 Hoop 14. 50® 210 00 Nail. Rod 9*© # 1b P* Sheet, Russia 20 @ 22 Sheet, Single, Double and Treble S 6j @ Ralls, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 65 0 @ .. do American 95 00© 90 00 Ivory—Duty, 10 cent ad val. East India, Prime $ft 8 2;@ 3 50 East Ind , Billiard Ball 8 50© 4 50 Afrioan, W. C., Prime 8 25© 3 40 African, Scrivel.,W.C. 2 00© 2 50 Lead.—Duty, Pig, *2 $ 100 ft ; Old Lead, 1] cents $ ft ; Pipe and Sheet, 2| cents $ ft. Galena $ 100 ft @ Spanish (sold) 6 65 @ 6 S7] German^ (gol f 6 65 @ 7 00 i) i) English (gold 6 75 @ 7 12] Bar net @10 V5 @10 25 Pipe and Sheet.. ..net Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper 80 $ cent ad vai. .. ' cash. Oak, Slaughter, light @ 39 @ 40 © 41 © 48 © middle do do do do do do do heavy. light Cropped.... middle bellies do do .... 1 .... Heml’k, B. A.,«fec.. l’t. do do do do do do do do do do do © • 3*@ middle. 3i 35 80 31 34 29 81 © © @ @ @ © © 3> © heavy Califor., light. . do middle. do heavv. Orino., etc. l’t do do ft.- 81 . middle heavy. 3S 44 43 47 53 21 8 i S3 36 31 82 35 30 x-2 31 do & B. A, Refined, © @ @ 36 @ 3G ® dam’gdall w’g’s do poor do Slaugh.in rough Oak, Slaugh.in rou., l’t do do 46 JLlme—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Rockland, com. $ bbl. .. @ 1 70 doheavy © 2 20 Lumber) Woods, Sfaves.etc. —Duty: Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.1 Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, free. • Spruce, East. $ M ft 19 00 © 20 00 STATES— White oak, do do do do do do do do do do do © 65 0J @ 90 00 @ 65 00 85 00 © 40 O0 Whale 1 15 @ 1 20 5 do refined winter.. 1 20 @ 1 2 f<) @ Sperm, crude do do Lard oil Red oil, city distilled Straits Paraffine, 28 Kerosene .. @?00 00 .. pipe, heavy .. pipe, light. .. i, culls 1 SO U0 ihd., extra hhd., heavy hhd., light, hhd., culls. bbl., extra. bbl., heavy, bbl., light.. . bbl., culls.. hhd., light.. — White orotches, $ ft.. . unbleach. 2 90 @ 2 95 I 25 © — 83 @ (free). vermilion 25 cent ad val.; $10 $1 ton. 12 © 12] Litharge, City... .$ft 12 © 12] Lead, red, City do white, American, 14 © pure, in oil do white, American, 12]© puie, dry..1. Zinc, white, American, 9 © 9] dry, No. 1 do white, American, and white chalk, .. do No. 1,in oil whi e, French, 10 © 11 in 14 © 15 Ochre,yellow, French, dry $ 100 ft 2 50 @ 3 50 do gr’t in oil.If! ft 10 8© 8panish brown, dry ^ oil w h'ti-’g, Amer.. 45 do Trieste 1 10 © Cal. & Eng . 1 35 @ do 80 © do American.... Vonet, red (N.C.)$?cwt 3 25 @ 15 @250 00 @200 0C@180 00 @2.10 00 @200 00 @12 1 @100 @175 @140 ©110 @ 60 @130 © 90 00 00 00 00 00 00 OC 00 @150 00 Rose¬ 25 © 50 50 40 Carmine,city made$ftl6 00 @20 Oft clay Chalk, block.. # »on30 00 ©32 00 $ bbl. 5 01) @ ton @23 00 yellow. ..$ ft 15© 40© do in bond 60 © 57 @ 60 Sisal 57]@ 62; @ ... Para Vera Cruz .gold .. .. Chagres ...gold Puerto Cab.gold to $ lb. 17© 174 do ^ ft gold © 10 @ domestic 10* . 1 American, spring 12 @ Amer J 1 @ 10;@ H@ !8 © cm cast English, spring English bister Jhnglisn machinery.... SO © lb ]@ © 22 40 42 25 © © © © © @ © © © do .... 15 80 20 .. washed Mexican, unwashed... Smyrna, unwashed . washed 22 85 .... 31 3o 34 23 24 46 45 80 25 40 25 45 Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 ^ 100 ft a.; saeets 2* cents $ ft. Sheet I'£t © 12] $ ft Freights— To Liverpool: Cotton ^9 .ft Flour $ bbl. Petroleum.......... ]4j 15 12 19 Heavy goods.. .$ ton '.. Oil 14 Pork To London repo t. Tallow—Duty :1 cent $ 1b. American,prime, coun¬ try and city $ ft... ll © d. s. d s. ]@ 5 16 @2 0 ©4 6 .. .. If) 0 © ... .. 11] Tin—Duty;- pig,bars, and block,15 $ cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 23 per cent, ad va r Banca Straits $ ft (gold) 24 @ ...(gold)' 22 @ 2 ] English. (gold) 22]© Plates,char. I.C.$ box 12 5u @13 « 0 do f. C. Coke...s.10 75 @12 50 Terne Charcoal 1 i 0 ) @12 50 Terne Coke.... 9 50 @10 10 do do Whalebone—Duty: foreign fish¬ .... • 20 p. c. ad val. South Sea North west coast Ochotsk Polar Wines and ^ ft .... ^ bbl. Beef *..$ tee. .. Pork $ bbl. Wheat bush. Corn To Glasgow (Ry Strain) : Flour ^ bbl. Wheat....... $ bush. Corn, bulk and bags Petroleum (sa lj^ftbl. Heavy goods $ ton. 20 , Oil Beef.:...tee. Pork... Tobacco.—See sperial report. ery, , Oil Flour Petroleum Teas.—See special report. * ^ bbl. : Heavy goods. ..38 ton .... Calcined, eastern $ bbl @ 2 40 Calcined, citv mills © 2 50 Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ct: lams, bacon, and lard, 2 ts $ ft. Beef, plain mess$ bbl..12 CIO @18 00 do extra mess. 17 00 @20 00 Pork,mesa, new 19 CC @20 50 do mess Old 18 25 ©19 50 © Id Sugar.—See special - Blue Nova Scotiafg toE ... @ 4 50 White Nova Scotia— 5 CO @ 5 50 25 4.7 32 © Corn, b’k& bags$ bus. Wheat, bulk and bags Beef $ tee. 2G Plaster Iff 23 @ 27 © 82 © do 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 10 <{£ cent ad val. (Store prices.) and English, cast, $ ft 18 © 2 -’f . 20 African, unwashed Spices.—See special report. German common... Persian fj .. 9© 47 @ 57 © costing 12 cents Donskoi, washed Spelter—Duty : in pigs, bars, and plates, $1 50 $ 100 ft si Plates, foreign .... do common, unw. Entre Rios, washed ... do unwashed... S. American Cordova © cent ad val. Castile 0C@ Peruvian, unwashed., V alparaiso. unwashed. S. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. @ @ .. 90 60 6 00 43 8 00 1 20 8 00 H 00 1 10 1 10 1 75 1 50 41© pulled do do Texas 60 Soap-'Duty: 1 cent $ ft, nnd25 ^ , $ bbl. 4 50 © Paris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 $ cent ad val. Residuum @ 52J@ . gold ...gold 60 50 or les ft, 8 cents $ ft: over 12 and not more than 24, 7 cents; over 24 and not over 82,10, and 10 $ cent ad val¬ orem ; over 82; 12 cents $1 ft, and 1 $ cent ad valorem; on the skin, ^ cent ad val. Amer., Sax. fleece 1b .'0 ■18 © 58 full bl’d Merino, do 40 © 45 do ] and i &lerino. 50 © 65 Extra, pulled 40 @ 70 Superfine...., to © 40 No. 1, pulled 80 © 40 California, unwashed.. @ .. Bolivar ...gold Honduras ...gold do do do do do do do ‘.9 @ 25 @ •" 85 00 15 $ ct. rfF list. ct. off list. 25 & 5 30 A 6 ct. off list* 6 .... Cape .... W ool—Duty: .. cash Deer, Shu Juan $ ft gold 75© Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain $ft, Brass (less 15 p r cent ) Copper do . .. 49 55 Barites, oreign.. Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents; refined, 40 :ents $ gallon.Crude,40@47grav.$gal. © 10 © Refined, free 46] Vaptha, refined val. No. 0 to 18 No. 19 to 26 No.27 to 36 .. .... . .10 00 @11 00 Madras,eac cash To Havre : Cotton ^ bbl. $1 ft Hops .... @ 1 15 @ 1 25 @ 1 10 95 95 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered $2 to $3 5» $ 100 ft, and 15 $1 cent ad Skins—Duty: Hi $ cent ad val. Goat,Curacoa$ ft g-M @ do Buenos A.. .go'd 85 @ 37] do Vera Cruz ..yold @ do Tampico.. .gold 43 @ 50 do Matamoras.gold @ do Payta goll li> @ 87 do do 90 . Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk. 35 ^ cent. TsatlSes, No. 1 @3.^ ft 12 50 @13 60 Tftvsaani8, saperior, No. 1 @ 2 11 50 @12 1 0 do medium,Nc.3@4 9 1)0 @10 60 Cnnton,re-reel,No.l@2 9 60 @ 9 75 Japan, superior........11 5u @13 50 @ 60 0 60 85© 36© 4 00@ Madeira do 75@ do Marseilles do 75© Sherry d > do 1 35@ Malaga, sweet . < o do dry do 1 10© Claret, in hhds. do S i 00@I50 00 2 25© 30 00 do do in oases Champagne.... do 11 06© 25 00 il-@ .... © • nbf nd) (gold) 2 Burgundy Port, do do 1 Sherry 2f cents ^ ft. $ ft 10]© do Medium China thrown 9l S5@ 85© 85© Corn Whisky( Wines—Port Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Sicily $ ton.. 125 00 ©225 00 40 @ China Chalk 9] . Buck 7 5 5 4 4 4 90© .. 4© gold Drop 9 2*@ ;.... soda, ...@ 0i © 26© 4 2E@ 8 5< @ 2 9(@ Whisky—S. & Ir. do 4 00© Dnm’c—N.E. Rum. cur. 2 45© Bourbon Whisky.cur. 2 46© 18 © Sit of.—Duty: 55 Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents "ft; Paris white and whiting, 1 cent $ ft; dry ochres, 50 cents $1100 ft: oxidesofzinc, If eents $ ft ; ochre, ground in oil, $ 150 $ 100 ft ; Spanish brown 25 $ cent ad val; China clay, $5 ton; Venetian red @ .. ... do do do do Rum—Jamaica do St. Croix Gin —Differ, brands do ft. $ ft pure do Seignette 00 60 20© 10 00 ....© .... © .... 5 15© 10 £0 do J. Romieux.... Other Rochelle, 3 00 .. 1 i€ © 1 05 @ 80 gr.. Arzac S 25 $ ft 12f@ bus 8 2) @ 3 ;0 C-nary bus 4 ‘/5 © 4 75 Linseed,Am.clean<j9tce © do Am. rough ^8 bus 2 f 0 © 2 CO do Calcutta ...gold 2 25 © 90 43© 51 @ . Bank Chrome pipe, ftaliograny* Cedar, wood—Duty free. Mahogany, St. Domin¬ © 100 00 @120 00 HEADING oak, hhd go, .... Vermilion,Clitncse^8ft 1 Red oak, hhd.,h’vy. do .... 33 00 @ S3 00 8t) 00 @100 00 $ M. ext. a .... 100 ft I 50 © 8 © do gr < gr’dinoil.$ft 75 © Paris wn., No.l^lOOft Laths, Eastern. $ M 8 23 Poplar and Whi e wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 00 Oak and Ash 60 00 ... 9]@ 11] Oakum—Duty fr.,^ ft Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val. City thin obl’g, in bbls. $ tonlfO 00 @ in bags do @54 00 West, thin obl’g, do 58 <0 @ Oils - Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1 : burning fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and wbale or other fish (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val. Olive, qs(gold)per case 4 25 @ .... do in casks.$ gaH.. I 65 © 11 Palm $ ft @ Linseed, city...$7 gall. 1 20 @ 1 25 , 00 5b 5 Pellevoi8in freres do A. Seignette . do Hiv. Pellevoisin do Alex. Seignette. do Timothy,reaped (230 lbs.) 8 00 @11 50 69 Spirits turp., Am. $ gr 68 @ 40 00 @ 4’> 00 80 00 © 82 i>0 Southern Pine White Pine Box B’ds White Pine Merch. Box Boards Clear Pine :... Black Walnut Pale and Extra do Clover 5 50 © 7 50 • mid. heavy Maple and Birch No. 1 66 52 50 5 0 -© 10 10 do do do L°ger freres ... do Other br’ds Cog. do @ 2 t'O @ 2 00 © 50 ad val. common 4 25 @ do strairedan 1N02...1 .'0 © 5 00 [do ■ Seeds—Duty; linseed, 10 cts; hemp, ] cent ^ lb ; canary, $1 $ bushel of 60 ft; and grass seeds, 30 cent ' 30 21 33 42 23 21 87 do do do and Pi ch soda, 1 cent Crude Nitrate Rosin, ... .... J. Vassal & Co., Jnlos Robin.... Marrette & Co. United V. Prop, Vine Grow. Co. Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2] cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; Naval ... .... @ © 2 9j Solar coarse 54 © Fine screened 50 @ do ; $ pkg. .. @ F.F 240 ft bgs. 2 85 © 32 80 @ © (gold) 5 20© 10 Hennessy (gold) 5 20© 10 Otard,Dup. &Co.do 5 15@ 10 Pinet, Castil.&Co.do 5 60© 10 5 :i'@ 10 Renault & Co.. do @ 75 85 Onondaga.com.fine bis. 2 50 do do 210 ft bgs. 1 50 do do ^ bush. 45 8 25 © 8 50 Yellow metal © do tinr,Ashton’s(g’d) 2 do fine, A’orthingt’s 2 $ ft. Cut, 4d.@60d. $ 100 ft 6 75 © Zinc J. & F. Martell Liverpool,gr’nd^l sack 1 90 © 1 95 horse shoe 2 cents 28 © 22© 48 @ Brandy— 0 © 9 50 • Cadiz..., Nalls—Duty: cut 1]; wrought 2]; (Gd)$ft Horse-hoe, pressed... Copper ft 9 $1 $ gallon, $1 $ gal $ cent ad vaL over Ion and 25 Salt-Duty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 ft ; bulk, 18 dents $ 100 ft. Turks Islands $7 bush. 66 @ Molasses.—See special report. Clinch Horse shoe,fd valorem; 39 ft. 8 6 @ 9 @, Carolina ....• $ 100 East India,dressed 50 @ 1 00 ft. Rosewood,R. Jan. $ ft do 2‘) 14 @ 14© (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas 1 10 10 @ Kice—Duty: cleaned 2| cents $ lb.; paddy 10 cents, and uneleaned 2 cents Honduras .. .... $ft Bams, .... do 45 40 12 @ Nuevitas Mansanilla do • Cartaagen<?, &c 30 @ logs. o > © *a2 @ @ © Lard, Port-au-Platt, do 6r 15 10 lon 20 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over 5 and not over 100, 50 cents $ gallon and 25 $ o©nr ad .18 75 @17 2> Ilf© 12* prime, do. 7© crotches ' ra,J do St. Domingo, ordinary logs do Port-au-Platt, do Horns—Duty, 10 # cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande... §} C 14 00® r [January-12,1S67. THE CHRONICLE. 56 .... @ 1 Llqnors—Liquors —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 © .. Beef and pork.. ® bbl. 1 00 © Measurem. g’ds.fl ton it) to © Wheat, in shipper’s bags.. $ bush. Flour $ bb @ n 5 Petroleum per Sdlon. other liquors, $2.50. Winks— uty; value net over 50 cent* $ gal¬ Ashes, potaud pear! e © Lard, tallow, cutm t etc # I 8 © 10 gives the aggregates of the railroad interest in each of the great sections of the country January 1,1867 r Casualties of works.—. Miles of road Miles of road ,—Cost projected or completed and in use. Sections. in progress, Six New England States 4,151.44 Five Middle Atlantic States... 9,804.45 Twelve North Interior States . 21,8S7.95 1,307.50 Two Pacific States Five South Atlantic States 6,723.56 Six South Interior States 8,225.64 3,851.04 8,639.90 454,625,620 52,644 24,700,900 133,248,407 116,430,255 72,434 25,489 29,163 614,168,282 341.00 5,227.65 3,992.31 30,896 26 $1,502,464,085 35,361.40 1,383,555,268 3,534.86 321.67 Increase on new Railroad by and Steamboats.—'rise number of if we arc to believe recorded Compan d with the two pre¬ were not excessive in 1866 years they show a very gratifying diminution, and satisfy us that the safety of travel is increasing. The following statement for 10 years gives fall information on tho33 p rints: casualties, whether by way or water, Total Amount per mile. statistics, $159,1:91,463 $41,311 vious amount. 14,644.36 51,606.54 51,284.87 Total January 1, 1867 Total January 1, 1866 opened was Wilkcsbarre to the United States.—Tlie following statement of tue the 31st ult.; also the road from South depot at Market street. TffiTwhole road between Wilkesbarre and the head of navigation of the Lehigh, above Maueh Chunk, a distance of over 50 miles, is now com¬ pleted. Whitehaven |©t)e Hfttlttjatf ill unit or. Railroads 57 THE CHRONICLE. January 12, 1867.] $113,908,817 41,325 81406.29357 $40,723 38,998 $1,725 showing it appears that, we are building railroads at the rate of more than four miles a day ; but at what cost canuot be ascertained, as a large portion of the increased, cost as above, has been made by expenditures in improving and equiping existing lines, and this nearly to the amount given as the increased cost per mile, viz $1,725. The great activity in railroad building jlast year, however, will be largely increased during the current year, and at least a hundred miles of road has been opened since the close of the From this , BY KAILEOAD. Year 1857.... 1858.... 1S5‘>.... 18(50.... 1861.... 1862.... 1863.... 1S64 1865.... ... 1866.... Total . | * . Killed 1 and j ! No. Casual- No. ties. Ki led. V lid'd. Wn’d |1 Year 666 1 1857 53(5 130 126 636 1;185S 417 119 S2 540 1 1859 19 411 129 57 372 | 1860 315 74 459 560 I 1861 63 * 101 99 264 877 1,141 | 1862 935 jj 1863 2 >4 671 * 89 404 140 1,890 1| 1864 1,486 335 183 1,763 1 1865 1,427 72 2 | 1866 115 607 85 BY STEAMBOAT. Casualties. 30 27 s . . . 1,918 ..1,020 9,124 7,-206 i 21 29 19 16 .... 20 26 32 23 Total .. Killed and No. No. Killed. Wnd’d. Wn’d 414 332 82 107 407 300 488 146 342 134 731 597 (9 88 157 220 70 290 340 So 255 358 148 506 265 2,053 1,7 8 156 789 633 243 4,S94 6,17 1,281 Railroads.—Improvements on the Connecti¬ year 1866. In 1827 ive had but 3 miles of road in the country ; in cut River appear to be carried on with the right sort of energy, and 1837 there wore only 1,42L ; in 1847 the length had increased to the railroad companies are following the r track. The Connecticut 5.336, and in 1857 to 22,625. During the last ten years we have River Railroad Company contemplate the construction of a branch «' built 14 271 railroad 31 miles long from Greenfield to Truner’s Falls, Mas3. Consolidation in Arkansas.—The Memphis and Little Rock where the new dam across the Connecticut for factory purposes is and the Little Rock aud Fort Smith Railroad Companies have expected to produce another Holyoke. Another enterprise is also been consolidated under the name of the Central Pacific Railroad on the tapis, and another dam is to bo thrown across the same river at Montague, Muss., which will permit a fall of 80 feet. For the Company. accommodation of the. factories at this point, the New London Leiiigii Coal and Navigation Company's Railroad.—The Northern Railroad will be extended thereto. new railroad constructed by this company between Penn Haven aud (257 m.) $100,991 1.154,418 195,803 1865. (280 111.) (280 tn.) $280,503 $210,171. Jan.. 207,913 ..Feb.. 275,282 304,885. ..Mar.. 299,063 270,889. •April. 258,480 . " 322,277 355,270 835,985 409,250 178,786 206,090 224,257 312,165 354,554 320,879 357,166 307,803 252,015 307,919 236,S24 2,770,484 1864. 401,280 833,432. ..May.. 368.273. .June. 326,870. July 381,559. ..Aug.. . 318,549. ...Sep.. 347,085. .Oct... 322,749. ..Nor. 285,413. .Dee.. . . 3,840,091 3,677,795..Year Erie Rail 186 1864. .. • Year.. — . 338,454 330,651 287,126 315,258 278,891 358,862 402,219 407,107 448,934 411,806 4,120,153 (534 m.) $363,996 366,361 413,974 365,180 351,-189 387,095 301,613 418,575 486,808 524,760 495,072 351,799 4,826,722 (524 m.) $314,598. . Tan. . .Feb.. Mar... 283,177. 412,393 409,427. ’April.. 426,493. ..May... 392,641. .June.. 338,499. ..July... 380,452. ..Aug-.. 429,191. ...Sep... 500,404. ...Oct.... 416,690. .Nov... 339,447. ..Dec... . . Year.. 4,643,422 468 .Jan.. . 5S8.066 678,504 857,583 733,866 474,738. ..Feb.. 654,890. ..Mar.. 606,078. .April. 576,751 637,186 672,628. ..May. 644,673. Juue. 1^640 625,547 6^6,995 m5,3 JO 701,3'»2 691,556 584,523 712,495 795,938 858,500 712,362 914.0*2 680,263 T.U0/-65 8,489,063 . 554,828. July641,848. Aug. 661,698 . ..Mar.. . .April. 518,736 466,830 565,145 * 480,710 519,306 669,405 729,759 716,378 563,401 585,623 747-942 702,692 767,508 946,707 92-3,886 840.354 546.609 735,0.n2 ..May.. - 922,892 .June.. 77 ",990. ..July 778,284 ..Aug... 989,053 . Sep.., 1,210,654 ...Oct.., .Nov.., 1,005,680 .Dec., 698,679 . . ., . . . . 6,114,566 7,960,981 9,<88,994 ..Year., Illinois Central. <708 ?n.) $327,900 416,588 459,762 (70S m.) $571,536 528,972 423,797 406.373 I860. 708 m.) 1S65. 516,608 460,573 582,828. ..Jan. 560,025. .June. 467,115. ..July. 586,074. ..Aug.. 551,021 ..Sep.. 617,682 510,100 578,403 747,469 423,578 586,964 799,236 739,736 639,195. ...Oct... 681,552. .Nov.. 641,589 643,8S7 518,088 661,391 657,141 603,402 . ..Dec.. 6,329,447 7,181,208 — ..Year (234 in.) $102,749 115,135 88,221 140,418 186,747 212,209 139,547 113,35)9 168,218 178,526 149,099 117,013 v .Dec . . .. -Year** 306,231 310,4441 331.494 389,489 (v 396,050 307,523 <$ 422.124 270,0773 £331,006 i01,779 o 339,417 336,617 321,037 — ...Dec— * lear . L., Alton & T. Haute.-^ 1866. > : (210 m.) (210 m.) 100,872 $170,078 $178,119. .Jan... 155,893. .Feb... 147,485 153,903 160.497 192,138. ..Mar... 202,771 167,301. .April., 169,299 157,786 169,699. ..May... 149,855 177,625 167,099 June.. 155,730 173,722 166,015 July.. 162,570 144,942 222,953 .Aug... 218,236 218,236 198,884 sept... 234,194 216,783 244,834 .Oct 203,785 222,924 212,226 Nov-.. 202,966 208,098 Dec-... 204,726 162,694 . . . . — • . ... 1 1865. .Year; 243.413 223.846 220,0 2 .... . 220,138 2,512,315 Michigan C* 1864. (2S5 m.) $96,072 87,791 93,763 78,007 76,248 107,525 $90,125. .Jan. 84,204. Feb. 82,910. .Mar... 82,722. April., $252,435 278,84S 348.802 338,276 2(1,553 106,315. June.. 265,780 91.809 104,004 115,1 S4 125,252 116,495 96,* 23. .July.. 106,410. ..Aug... 108338 ..Sep.,. 203,244 346,7S1 116,146 150,148. 110,932. 105,767 — ..Oct... .Nov .Dee... 1,038,165 , . 95,(Mil. ..May... 1,224,056 — ..Year 1865. (2:34 m.) $98,181 86,528 95,905 106,269 203,018 237,562 251,9 6 241,370 3'>0,841 395,579 86,4 2 164,710 221,638 193,135 129,227 346,717 171,125 2,535,001 1,402,106 1865. 1864. (242 m.l $79,735 $144,084 95.843 189,171 155,753 132,896 123,987 127,010 156,338 139,6? o 244,li4 375,534 221,570 144,001 $131,707... Jan.., 122,621... Feb. 124,175...Mar.. 121,904. .April. 245,511...May.., 212,560.. June. 209,199 ..July.. 188.223. ..Aug... 275,906... .Sep.., . 416,138....Oct.., 327,926 ..Nor... ...Dec. ..Year.. 1271,'; 98 J. 374.534 2379,981 e f361,610 220.209 1247,023 265,154 2,050,323 375,534 - 2,926,678 335,082 324,986 359,665 429,166 493.649 308.649 414,604 Ohio & (340 m.) $210,329 260,466 309,261 269,443 224,957 223,242 268,176 302,596 332,400 27S,006 346,243 275,950 3,311,070 1865. 866. (340 tn.) (340 m.) $259*223 $267,541 239,139 246,109 813,914 326,238 271,527 277,423 233,180 290,916 304,463 253,924 849,285 247,262 305,454 344,700 278,701 350,348 372,618 412,553 310,762 302,425 284,319 3,793,005 Western Union.- 1866. 1865. 1S64. (484 m.> (140 tn.) $256,059 ...Jan... . ..June.. 304.917 July.. 396,248 349,117 Auer... Sept.... 436,065. .Oct 3->4,830. Nov...,. ■ . Dec .Year.. 41,450 48,359 68,118 50,308 49,903 6C,C65 56.871 54,942 42,195 587,075 - 45,102 37,265 32,378 33,972 42 038 ..May... 1866. (177 m) $43,716 37,488 256,407’..Mar... 270,300 April.. - (157 tn.) $30,840 194,167 ...Feb... 138 738 194.52' 365,196 328.869 1864. -Toledo, Wab. & Western. (242 m.) 337,158 343,736 3,970,94G . 1866. (234 tn.) — 1866. (2S5 m.) £282,488 265,796 401,456 365,663 329,105 413,501 460,661 45)0,693 447,669 408.415 / — 279,1a 344,228 337,240 410.802 405,510 37(5,470 .. , . — nL 1S65. (285 vi.) I860. $77,010 74,409 89,901 72,389 83,993 78,697 93,078 90,576 96,908 95,453 — 217, £41 239,088 201,169 (251 m.) (251 m.) 94,375 195,138 189,447 243,417 242,171 248,21*2 Aug... .Sept... .Oci Nov .Dee . 245,627 226,047 214,533 264,637 3,095,470 3,313,514 3,478,3?5 .. Year .. 99,662 Aug... Sep... Oct.... 244.854.. .Nov. * — 2;»4,i 2 1866. (204 tn.) (294 m. $173,557 $168*741 180,140 151,930 222,411 167, C07 me,154 173.732 215,784 198,C82 210,314 . -Marietta and Cincinnati.—n Jniy... 1,711,281 1,985,571 3,084,074 3^40,744 290.642 324^865 203,514 J 16110.. ..I uly... . 261,605 321,818 244,121 72.135.. .Mar... 108,0S2.. April.. 267.488...May... 262,172 June . 310,594 226,840 110,664 April.. Mar..; .Jun— .rob... narcti 183,385 257,230 197,886 243,178 224,980 271,140 (234 m.) $51,965 46,474 64,993 83,702 131,648 126,970 $121,776... Jan... Feb... 74,283 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,833 217,159 170,555 228,020 196,580 234,612 1864. (234 m.) (234 m.) $98,183 289,403 (201 m.) $139,414 110,879 202,857 193,919 ^-Milwaukee & St. Paul 1866. 1865. 246.331 (251 in.) 512,027. ..Feb. 516,822. ..Mar. 406,773. .April. 507,830. ..May 616,665 $158,735 175,482 243,150 185,013 198,679 1864. . Sept 742.00C. .fief. 631,558. Nov — .Feb.. . . 468,358 1865. m.) ^555,488. ..Jan.. . 1865. 1864. 1866. (228 tn.) (238 w. $305,554 $241,395 (228 m.) 421.363 t 1864. (468 m.) $690,144 $541,005 482,164 ' 499,296 1864. Pittab., Ft.W. ,& Chicago. 1866. 1865. (468 m.) $290,676 457,227 £11,297 $273,S75 817,839 390,355 (930 vi.) $523,566 405,634 523,744 -Mil. and Prairie du Chien.- Mich. So & N. In&iana.-x 1865. 1866. 1864. (524 m.) $256,600 304,445 (860 m.) 1864. 1866. (657 m.) (797 tn.) $984,837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188. .Jail.. 983,855 ..Feb... 934,133 9-47,146 1,114,508 1,256,567 1,U70,434 ..Mar... 1,099,507 1,458,455 1,153,295. .April.. 1,072,293 1,333,461 1,101,668. ..May.. 1,041,075 1,177,372 1,243,142. .June... 994,317 1,202,180 1,203,462. .July... l,10o,364 1,331,046 1,290,3 <0 ..Aug.. 1,301,005 1,336,615 1,411,34? ..Sep.... 1,222,568 1,438,615 1,480.261 ...Oct.... 2,224,909 1,522,472 1,417,927 ..Nov... ..Dec.;. 1,334,217 1,429,765 • (600 m.) 1865. 1864. 1866 •/ (657 7ii.) 13,429,643 15,434,775 1865. -Cleveland and Pittsburg, Chicago and Rock Island. r-Chicago& Northwestern ■Chicago and_Alton.' 1866. and -EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. COMPARATIVE MONTHLY 1864. River Dams 86,006 39,299 82J.47 43,333 86,913 102,686 63.780 85,508 63,862 5:»,862 6t\b9« 75,677 84,462 93,715 61,779 37,830 100,303 75,248 54,478 689,383 814,03$ •' •• MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. RAILROAD, CANAL AND Amount T ■ sums c Payable. B.—The sums placed after name of Company shows the Funded Debt. % T3 < 5 ! Railroad: Alexandria and Fredericksburg : Mortgage (gold coupons) st ?2,500,000 Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) 1,000,000 tlo do Mortgage, sinking fund, (X. Y.) 1,014,000 80r), 000 do do Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio)\ 4,000,000 do ) 4.000,000 do 2.000,000 1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex 113,858,000 Consolidated Bonds Atlantic <fe St Lawrence ($1,472,000): j 1st 2d 1st 2d let 2d Dollar Bonds Sterling Bonds I j 1,000,000 Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834 do do do 1,128.500 ! 700,000 ; 2, .500,000 1855 1850 do do do 1853 teUtfantaine ($1,745,000): 1st Mortgage let Mort. 2d Mort. 3d Mort. (guar. C. and A do do 433,000 1st 1st 6 6 6 5S9,500 150,000 do Sinking Fund Bonds Boston and Lowell ($400,000): ($2,395,000) ! do Catawissa ($141,000): ($1,509,000): Mortgage do Central Ohio ($3,673,000): 867,000 4,269,400 1st 909,000 j 600,000 Feb. & Aim 1870 7 7 ; May A Nov! 1875 1,250,000! till 1S70 Chicago, Rock Island <fc P citic: let Mortgage (C. A R. I) Cincinnati <fc Zanesville ($1,300,000): 1,300,00ft! 1st Mortgage Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($475.000): Cle>\, Fain. & Ashtabula ($1,500,000) :j Dividend Bonds ; do i Tan. A 2,081.0th' 300,000 S5 .... i 102# 250,000 I Mortgage 600,000 .... 270,50C 8 ..... do do Toledo Depot Bonds JEpaware ($500,600): 500,000 l“t Mortgage, guaranteed Beta., Lacica. dk Western ($3,491,500): M’ch A - do • Jan. A i[ Jfortgase Bonds.,,J 1,T40,000 8 May A Nov tj | Feb. A Aug j April A Oct; 1875 1875 6.8:47,000 7 2,896,500 do 6 ! do jJan. A July 05# 106 1S90 1866 1870 2,563,0a1 600,000 364,000 7 do 10 500,(XX) Jan. A July Mortgage 187,oat April A Oct 5W,000 Jan. A July;1882 80o.oa> Jan. A July;lb74 800,00ft 230,000 April A ($500,000): Mortgage, siuking fund 1st Joliet and X: Indiana ($800,000): mortgage Mortgage do 2d 3d do La Crosse & Milwaukee ($1,903,000): 1st Mortgage, Eastern Division.... 2d dO May A Nov. Jaii. A July 1,3a, 000 May A Nov 960,000 April A Oct 500,000 6 225,000 7 |Jan. A July ! May A Nov. Jan. A 1,000,00ft 1,092,900 311,100 .... 399,000 1,294,000 Dollar, convertible " Sinking F’nd do * Mich. S. cfe X. IndianaTT*?,5:n,m) 7 4.253.500 855,000 2,253,5ft(' l tiff Iff* i-lunc A Dec. '70-’71' 'A;»\ A Oct. 74-'75j Feb. A Aug. | 1874 - ! - ! 1 [MayA Nov.TSj April A Oct 1882 May A Nov. 8 1885 1877 Aug l868 402,00(0 Tau. A July11893 * 4,600,000 Jan. A 1,500,000 April A Oct 1893 8,612,000 695,000 May A Nov. 11877 , do Morris and Essex; lit Mortgage, sinking fund ■ ■ i'. ! * ics- i ' ti ! 95# ; 91 ••• - . i 91# July'1891 : rrr- 3,500,000 May & Nov,’1915 Mortgage do do 1885 do Feb. A 6-il,000 . Mortgage, sinking fund 2d; do 95 July (Feb. A Aug. ’90-'90 4 Mississippi and Missouri River : 1st Land Grant Mortgage. 100# 1870 1890 2.242.500 8 Feb. A Ang 09-72 Mortgage, sinking fund do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee <& Prairie da Chien 100# 6. 6 6 6 681,00ft Mortgage (P.A K.RR ) Bonds.. do ( do ) Bonds.. Menu his tfc Charleston: Mortgage bonds. . Michigan Central, ($7,46 2d 98 .. 1st 2d 1st ! 2J362,8()0 7 Feb. A Aug 1892 300,0LX) 7 May A Nov. 1888 Mortgage....; 1st 95 Feb. A Aug! 1883 do 1883 1,933,000 :X)0,56. Mortgage 1872 1869 May A Nov, 903,000 Mortgage 1st 2d 1862 i,465,ea> $l,lf0,000 Loaii Bonds $100,000 Loan Bonds •! 96# j 1861 i,oa>,ooo Maine Central: ($•-',733,800) 74 Octjl870 do do 250,oa Lehigh Valley ($l,477,0u>'‘ : 1st Mortgage Little Miami ($1,400,000): 1st Mortgage ...-. Little Schuylkill ($960,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Ixmg Island ($932,000): 1st July 1875 'Ap’l & Oct. 1897 1S70 1875 6 500,000 Madison ($640,000): McGreoor Western: | is— 900.000 7 Jam & duly, 1S71 1S67 500,000 Milwaukee and St. Paul: 6 do May A Nov. let 118- 1,500,006 7 1,500,000 7 Jan. A July 1875 600,000 ? M’ch A Sep 1881 Mortgage, sinking fund 192.000 7 523,000 7 ; 1st. Memphis Branch Mortgage .... Marietta S-. Cincinnati ($3,688,385): 1st Mortgage. ....... ., .. .; Scioto and Hockiug Valley mort .. Sep 1878 " 7 103 i 11869 do |J’ne A Dec.|1885 ,102 ‘May A Nov. 1875 | Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000): . ApT A Oct. 1904 ' 1,907,000 . Extension Bonds Jan. A July 1867 do 1881 283,(XX 2,622,000 642,oa 169,500 Mortgage Jfcs Moines Valley ($2,083,000): .... r I J'ne A Dec. 1876 Cumberland Valley ($270,500) : do 2d Laakawannaand Western .... 1886 Mortgage Mortgage Bonds Dayton and Michigan ($3,782,430): i July 4885 do Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000): - July 1892 j Tan. A 1,108,124 . Connecticut River ($250,000): 1st 83 " 1875 do I Feb. A AugjlSOG" k 640,000 1st Sep 1873 1,619,500 .... Sinking Fund Mortgage.... Mortgage Bonds of 18H6 - ‘ 8S 1874 i M’ch A 7 Mortgage. 1st Feb. A Aug 1880 500,000: 7 i ! 3,890,000 110,000 Kennebec and Portland ($1,280,000): . 1,129,000 7 Sunbury and Erie Bonds Cleveland <t Pittsburg ($3,880,848): 1st 2d 8d | .... ;Feb. A Aug;i873 M'ch A Sep 1864 ! do 1875 900,000 ; 7 i ;Jan. A July 1877 2d A Nov 1SS0 850,000! 7 2 41.2001 7 613,2001 8 . Jan. A July*1876 do :1876 6 ....! Joliet and Chicago 475,000! 7 ; Jan. & July: 1890 Mortgage Cleveland & Mahoning ($1,752,400): 1st Mortgage io d 3d do July 18S3,. 191,000 sinking fund 95 Feb. A Aug 1883 ^ no ‘ j 7 ,1893 1st • 1885 | May & No v l 893 500,0001 7 -Jan. A 1,037,500 1,000,000 sinking fund. Indianapolis 92 69 May & Nov. 1863 1.250,000; 7 1 May New Bonds 7 927,000 | T"1-100C' do April A Oct 1881 Jan. A JulyJS83 7- 700,00(i I Mortgage. 1st 101 -» 1898 i Quarterly. 1915 Feb. A Augrl8S5 ! Indianapolis ana dnc. f$l,362,2S4) 98 92 & Oct. 1895 1,397.000! 7 Jan. & July 1870 do ,1896 6,000,00ft 7 do 1st (new) Cine., Ham. <t Dayton ($1,629,000): 2d Mortgage 1st - 98 , 750,0001 7 2,000,000; 7 484,000 7 . , 633,600 2d do ” Indiana Central ($1,254,500): 1st Mortgage, (interest ceased). -2d do * ! 7' Feb. & Aug'1885 3,600.000* 7 j do 1885 1st Mortgage Interest Bonds 3,437,750! ■ • ! 2,000,000' 7 Jan & July Mortgage (consolidated) Chicago & Northivcst. ($12,020,483): Preferred Sinking Fund ■ . Mortgage 1st . 1st . Julyf.75-'30 Jan. A 7 : Ap'l j Jan. A JulylS70 Illinois and Southern Iowa : 3,525,000’ 8 jJan. & July 11883 5,600,000! -" ‘ ^ T‘" Kcdemption bonds .-... 1100 98 Feb. A Aug.1882 May A Nov! 1875 n , i - July;lS70 1,000,000!|q AprilAAJuly 1S8S Oct;1868 Tan. 1,350,000 j 1st Mortgage 2d do 1 Rlinois Central ($13,231,000): j 1st Mortgage, convertible 1st do Sterling “ 102 1890 ! ! r May & Nov J1877 July 1893 ApT & Oct. 11883 519,000 2.400,000 i 1,100,000 do 4th Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,2S9): j r: Jan. & j ..: ! 7 927,000 i Huntingdon <£ Broad 7bpt$l,436,0S2): May A Nov. 1890 M'ch A Sep 1865 600,000 6 600,000 Mortgage Mortgage do convertible. . • Feb. A Ang 1,086,000; ! ($927,000): Mortgage ($*7,762,840) : Mortgage do 2d * do 3d • do Convertible. i . I 7 1st ist ■ i. Chicago and Milwaukee ($2,000,000): lit . . ... .... do 4 Hudson River 1 I * . i ■ 1st |; 1 . 1,500.000 7 income . do 2d I...,.; 1 *■ Jan. A n 1,963,000! j lartford & New Haven ($927,000): 1st Mortgage j .... . 149,000 • .... 7,336.000; 6 Chic.) Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): Trust Mortgage (S. F.) Chicago and Ot. Eastern ($5,600,000): 2d 3d Feb. & Aim 1382 800.000' conv. • • .... j Ap'l & Oct. 1S79 7 450,000; Chicago and Alton ($3,619,000): 1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref 1st .... • 100# ... (101 j ... ;!■ 0 4,44’,600 7 ‘April A Oct 1880 j 92# 95 Dollar Bonds New j - • July 1S73 ■Jan. A I Cal. ($8,836,000): Consol. S. F. Bonds, Extension Bonds ' ij * *" * • 141,000 ! Mortgage Bonds 1st ...J iFeb. A Aug 1883 May & Nov. 1889 i-J'ne & Dec.;i 1893 6 6 6 800,000; do do .... • j Convertible Bonds Cheshire ($600,000): 1st 2d .... & Dec. 1877 sinking fund Great Western, 111. ($2,350,000): 1st Mortgage West. Division East.do do 2nd do do do Hannibal <£ St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds 1 Jan. & Julv 1S73 i Mortgage j Ap'l & Oct.;1888 7 7 May A Nov. 7976 4,000,000 7 M'ch A Sep.1879 7883 6,000,000; 7 f r do \ in C. & X. IF.): j (incl. I 493,000 E. Div mortgage.! ;;;; 7 ill 926,500. 7 June A Dec 1S89 3,816,582 6 M'ch A Sep;1875 1st Mortgage, 2d do Grand Junction i 82# S3 1894 3.000,000 : Gal. <6 Chic. U. j - Julyjl863 1,000,000 .. 3 1876 598,000 convertible do Mortgage i 1885 Ap'l A Oct. 1866 7 490.000 7 7 Mortgage W. Div Central Pacific of l! •••• May & Nov. 1871 ! Mortgage do do ' ■ Consoldated ($5,000,0(X)) Loan Camden and Atlantic ($983,000): 1st 1st 2d 1867 , 1,180,950 600,000 i 1,700,000 Dollar Loans Dollar Loan 1st 2d i ,Fcb. A Aug| 1877 6 500,000 ■ Mortgage ■ . Mortgage . i Burlington <6 Missouri ($i,902,ll0): j General Mortgage Bonds conv. into pref. stock Camden and Amboy ($10,264,463): j Central of New Jersey ■ J’ne & Dec. M'ch A Sep convertible...» I 420,000 5 Jan. & July 1872 739,200 6 Feb. & Aug:1874 Sterling convertible ..... 2,000,000 380,000 ^ May A Nov 1872 j 1st 1st i 7 ‘J'ne ; Buffalo and State Line ($1,200,000): 1st 2d 11870 . 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage ■' July '70-79 A do do. do do do 2d 3d 4th * 5th .... A 11 364,00ot 7 ! Feb. do AugiJS65 ,1S65 l i I i 6 u ;1889 [ 200,000; 6 j j " . ! ....j 400,000' 6 ‘Jan. & July 1879 Mortgage Mortgage Bonds Buffalo. X Y. and Erie Jail. ! ' 300,000! 7 Jan. A do 660,000; 7 . , Ap JuOcl867 ApT A Oct. 1885 0 : 7 Blossburg and Corning ($150,009): Mortgage Bonds I Boston, Cone. <& Montreal ($1,050,000):' i 6 :Jan. A July 1875 6 *1880 do 7 | * • 6 !Ja 11864 do , 734,000; 7 Feb. & Aug ($1,798,600): Mortgage, convertible do do —.......... East Pennsylvania ($598,000): * j Sinking Fund Bonds. .•.. i Elmira & Williamsport ($1,570,000). 1st Mortgage j Erie Raihvay ($22,370,9S2): 1st Mortgage., j T * ....'! Z & Nov.-TSTS ay j 1,000,000 500,000 do 2d Belvidere Delaware ($2,193,000): * 2d section. do 1st Easter n, Mass. .... .... ApT & Oct.1866 1,225,000 i *.■ ‘ 1895 do' 7 J 1,000,000;! 8 Mortgage Dubuque and Sioux City ($900,000): 1st Mortgage, 1st section { * May A Nov.; 1875 $2,500,000; 7 * ’ DO < S-i j^ 1st |ApT A Oct. 18-4 7 481,000 I Baltimore and Ohio ($10,112,584): 7 ’ApT A Oct. 1877 do 1882 7 1 7 | do 1879 do '1881 7 I 7 do ! 1876 7 Jan. A July 1883 * * «... JX d Railroad: ! 9S8,000 j ...: i -o 11 the outstand-j c* total ing. i ~ Detroit arid Milwaukee ($3.500,000): 1st Mortgage, convertible do 2d 7 iJ'ne A Dec., iS9o 1,000,000 ..... Atlantic & Gt. Western (130,000,000): ! Amount1 N. >> FRIDAY. INTEREST. description. .6%5 o « I ! placed aft*-r the outetand-| ^ ! name of Company shows the iot(ui ing. i -g | Funded Debt. IX ! N. B.—The FRIDAY. : ^ interest. DESCRIPTION. i [January 12,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 58 do ;1888 i ”#j .... 82 RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BONO LIST (continued). INTEREST. FRIDAY interest. Description. Amount placed after the name of 'O O H3 Payable. ing. |Tbe sum tp.aced after the name o I Railroad: 2d r do N. Haven & Northampton Mortgage 1st 200,00f ($650,000): | K •fan. & 435,000 6 Feb. & Aug 140,000 6 July 1885 6,917,598 6 May & Nov 18S3 1887 1S83 1883 1876 1876 ’ i Mortgage.. New York Central ($14,095,S04) ; Premium Sinking Fund Bonds Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal).. Real Estate Bonds — Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts).. Bonds of August, 1859, convert.... Bonds of 1865 New York and Harlem ($6,09S,045) ; 1st General Mortgage —. : 7 May & Nov. 1894 2,925,000: 6 June & Dec165,000; 6 May & Nov. 663,000 6 do Feb. & Aug do do l,0U0,000j 7 ' Mortgage Northern Central ($5,211,244); State Loans 2d Mortgage ($151,400] ; 149.400 6 I 339,000! Mortgage L >an...... North Missouri: 1st General Mortgage ($*>,000,000). North Pennsylvania ($3, ! ( do Steamboat Mortgage Ogdensburg andL. Cham.($ 1,494,000); Mortgage Ohio and Mississippi ($3,650,000); Mortgage.: do ( W.D.) Oswego & Rome ($‘150,000). 1st Mortgage (guar byR. W. & O.) 1st 2d Oswego and Syracuse ($311,500); 1st Mortgage Pacific, (oT W Branch) : Mortgage, guar, by Mo Panama: 1st Mortgage, 1st do 2d do TT.); 2,621,000; 6 2,283,840, “ ($575,000); do do Dollar Bonds of 1S49 do do 1861 1843-4-8-9 do. do Mch & Sept 1884 1880 1875 1875 July April & Oct do July7 April & Oct April & Oct April & Oct July do do do do 200,000 May & Noy. 516,000 1st Mortgage. Philadel., Tf timing. & Baltimore: Mortgage Loan ' .~ Pittsburg and Connellsville: Tan. & July (Turtle Or. Div.)...... P'Vg, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) 1st Mort. Feb. & Ang 1889 Semian’ally Jan. & \pril & Oct July 1912 1912 1912 1881 , Feb. & Aug do 1881 1881 OOo| 182,400 408, 106,000- 564,OOO: 6 60,000 7 5,200,000 5,160,000 2,000,000 200,000 . Pittsburg and Steubenville; 1.000,000 Mortgage 500,000! do April & Oct Jan. & July do Rensselaer & Saratoga consolidated: l*t Mort. Rensselaer & Saratoga . 1st Mort. Saratoga & Whitehall.... 1st Mort. Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.) R. Water, and Ogdens. ($1,60 ,903) ; . 1st Mortgage (Potsdam & Watert.) (Watertown & Rome' Burlington ($8,257,472) ; 2d do Rutlandand . 1st Mortgage 2d ... do .. Jau. & July 1,000,000 140,000 Mch & Sept do do 1883 1876 . ffM iff MIM .... Mch & 400,000 340,000 May & Nov. ,,,, ... ... 9 90 ik .... .... yik 90 90 , . Sept 1866 .... Jan. & July 1870 .... 1894 «••• Feb. & Aug 1865 do 1884 May & Nov. 1875 1875 1865 1874 ‘ |7 do do Jan. & July Jnlv1 Oct.! Jan. & IBS'7 1865 Mav & Nov.! 1875 Mar. & 1882 Apr. & Sep.j Sept 1879 500,000 d > do 91>, 4,319,520 850,000 do 6 .... .... ... *■ 6 s June & Dec; 1861 Juu. & July! 1S67 July! fan. Hr. ;May & Nov. 7 1883 1876 April & Oct do 1878 95 • * 76 76 800,000 800,000 Jnn. & Dec. Mch & Sept 1874 1880 ... uly .... m m May & Nov Jan. & July .... 500,000 do July 4ix .... • • • • 1 103 .... ... .... . 96 1886 Ap Ju Oc 1870 1890 1885 Jan. & Ja do 4,375,000 1,699,500 Jan. & July 1878 Mch & Sept 1S70 752,000 Jan. & July do I860 1868 Mch & Sept do 1870 161,000 ‘ 414.15S 2,667,276 . 93 1884 Juty 1876 182,000 Jan. & 750,000 April & Oct 690,000 May & Noy. 1676 - .... .... .... ... • • • • .... • • • . • • . . .... .... .... 1.000,000 1,1* >0,000 325,000 '. . 1st Mortgage Wyoming Valley: ist Mortgage Miscellaneous: American Dock & Improvement: , Bonds (gu ir. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) Cincinnati and Covington Bridge : 1st .... • Jan. & July do do 62 1864 2,500,000 May & Nov. 1883 450,000 •Jan. & July 1S78 750,000 Jan &July 1878 1,000,000 Jan & 1886 1,500,000 do 2,000,000 IstMortgage 1 six .... 1st Mortgage. 2d .... ; r*'. Western Union fill ... Pennsylvania Coal: .... f * t * let July 1865 1878 Jan. & Mortgage Bonds tlanposa Mining: 1st Mortgage 2d . Mch & Jan. & 80 586,500 Mortgage 1st .... .... 96 1876 Sept 1872 July 1S82 May & Nov. 1870 1,764,330 3 980,670 do Maryland Loan Coifpon Bonds Priority Bonds, . • 1870 1871 1877 641,000 Mortgage Bonds ..... Pennsylvania & New York; 1st Mortgage (North Branch)... 2d M .... ‘ Monongahela Navigation: Mortgage Bondfe* 1st M< I ortgage. Jan & July 1875 J Feb, & Aug ‘ m 1 .... .... 1890 1890 . 800,000 Improvement Feb. & Aug 1863 1863 7S 1875 Jan. & do 2,000,000 Lehigh Navigation : ($3,0S1,434). 96. . 95 "S . ’GS-’D 175,000 25,000 Mortgage, sinking fund Erie a ~Pennsylvania: 1st Mort gag Bonds ortgage Interest Bonds. .... • .... July 1873 Jan. & 2,356,509 j Schuylkill Navigation : 1st Mortgage .’ :oo 94 84 .. ... 1867 596,000 200,000 - Loan of 1871— 1 o n of 18S4 .... • ... 1 554,908 8 April & Oct .... Sterling Bonds, guaranteed Preferred Bonds Delaware Division; 1st Mortgage Delaware and Hudson: .... 1888 1890 1890 1880 400,000,10 Mch & 600,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1875 registered ' do .... Canal aeramento Valley: Mortgage ■ Chesapeake and Delaware ; 1st Mortgage Bonds Chesapeake and Ohio: Maryland Loan : .... 1875 937,500 1876 .... j 1,438,000 1,800,000 April & Oct 2,000,000 7 1,510,000 7 West Branch and Susquehanna: 250,000 ..... Mo/'iis. 800,000 Mortgage : — Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds 97>i • . m 189 Reading and Columbia: 1st 200,00< 180, OOf!! : Union (Pa.): Quincy and Toledo: lstSlortgage Racine and Mississippi (W. Union); 1st Mortgage... * Raritan and Delaware Bay: let Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Convertible Bonds • 1884 400,0001 • 97 1S68 6 | 1,521,000 976,800, 6 Bonds, convertible Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible Philadelphia and Trenton ($200,000); 99^ .... 7 7 '7 1 1st Mortgage ..... 1st do , guaranteed York <S- Cumberland (North. Cent.): 1st Mortgage 2d .1 do .... ♦ 1871 i (6,269,520): (£899,900) Bonds... .... • ... i 7 399.300 . .. 500,000 j 6 Jan. <fc July! 1863 ($3,500,000) . 1872 Ang 7 152,355 ' , 1867 ... I 7 i 7 Sterling Dollar Bonds Western Maryland: June & Dec • • 7 7 550,600 • • ... 1867 18S0 1870 1871 1880 1880 1886 1886 1,000,000 5,000,000 2,856,600 Sterling; Bonds of 1843 Dollar • 1875 7 June & Dec 1st 2d do , Western (Mass.) •I 183,000' :. • . .... 1865 Jan. & July do • . . 1877 1881 1901 Jan. & • 7 1st Mortgage Verm. Cen. & Venn. & Can. Bonds Warren ($600,000) : 1st Mortgage (guaranteed) • 1876 4,000,000 do mortgage. do Feb & Aug. April & Oct • % .... • July July 7 ($962,300). Mortgage (convert.) Coupon .., Jan. & July Tan. &, 575,000; Philadelphia <fc Reading ($6,900,603); Sterling Bonds of 1836 • .... ... 1870 1675 1872 Jan. & 3 Westchester & Philadelphia Jan. & 7 4,980,000 Convertible Loan 1st 2d 7 7 7 7 3 A7.) ... 1916 5 3 do do do Ventwnt Central 1st Mortgage 2d do 1872 .89 1874 May & Nov 5 Jan. & July 1866 6S-74 Various. 5 Mortgage Vermont and Massachusetts 7 7 Feb. & 3 3 Troy Union ($680,000): Mortgage Bonds 350,000 7 D 3d. do Convertible Jan. & Juh do 1,029,000 do do 1st Mortgage 2d do 3d do Akron Branch: 1st 1 st 2d 7 7 346,000 (general). (general) Philadel., Gerniant. & Norristown: • : iin 2,900,000 750,000 7 Jan. & f) Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. & Equipment bonds. Troy and Boston ($1,452,000) : 9% 1,150,000 Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000); 1st Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie) — 1st 2d I860 416,000 let Mortgage Pennsi/lvania ($16,750,124); 1st Mortgage • 1867 April & Oc . Aug 1900 May & Nov 1375 Toledo. Peoria and Warsaw : 91X 1,139,000 do do 2d do 2d do , sterling Phila. and Balt. Central 1st Mortgage.... Mar. & Sep. 1874 1870 7 • .... 9 1st Mortgage Toledo IT abash and West ($6,653,868): 1st Mort. (Toledo & Wabash) 1st do (extended) do 2d (Toledo and Wabash).... do 2d (Wabash aurt Western).. Jan. & 1,494,000 • .... 1st Mortgage Terre Haute & In dtan apolis{$60,000).. 1st Mortgage, convertible Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage.; 91 70-’8( 225,000 7 Jan. & Jul) sterling Peninsula {Chic. & N. April & Oct July • 1st Mortgage Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191); 1873 1873 1885 1SS5 100,000 300,000 .... Staten Island: *73-’78 Jan. & July do do do 7 7 • ($791,597) i 94 1875 1886 1880 1887 6 • n 1 &Julyj 500,000 6 500,000 0 do do (not guaranteed).... Norivich and Worcester ($580,000): General Mortgage .'. 1st 1868 Jan. (guar, by B. & O. RR/ 1,000,000 do do do 2d 3d 3d • Sterling Loan Domestic Bonds..., ; 1,500,000 6 Mortgage Virginia: Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore). * I 1874 860,00010 April & Oct Chattel • IstMortgage South Carolina: lUOKl 2,500,000 j 6 — North- Western 1st ; 1896 50,000! 7 Jan. & July t05,785): Mortgage Bonds 6 .... Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark: 1st Mortgage Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage. . Shamokin V. & Pottsville irred 1,500,0001 6 Jan. & July IS80 Jan. & July 2,500,000! 6 Sinking Fund Northern New Hampshire Plain Bonds North Carolina: 95 - let ... 0 7 Feb. & do 2d .... 97 April & Oct. 0 800,000 7 Jan. <fe July 1192 iandusky and Cincinnati: 1st Mortgage (extended) 93 1S76 109 1872 3,000,000; 7 May & Nov. 1893 1,000,000; 7 Feb. & Aug Consolidated Mortgage. do 3d Mortgage : lork and New Haven ($2,000,000) ; N 1,088,000: 6 April & Oct Mortgage Bonds 1,000,000 - 7 Mortgage Bonds ... . N. Y., Prov. and Boston ($232,000); 232,000 6 Feb. So Aug 7 7 *2d do Si. Paul & Paiific of Minn : ! 1st Mortgage (tax free) i 90 61 1694 1894 0 income do < Semi an'ally do | ($6,700,000); i \ 4 1,398,000; 7 2d m 5 : iSt. Louis, Jacksonville & Chicago: ! 1st Mortgage... 1873 Jan. & i 1869 j ($140,000)) ; New London Northern •Jan. & J uly $500,000; 7 ..; ($805,000); Bonds of 1853 1st General Sepjl861 Juh I'-GS «. Louis, Alton & T. H. 1st Mortgage 2<1 Mortgage preferred July'1376 450,000; 7 M’ch & New Jersey Fei ry Jan. & 800,0001 7 Mortgage (convertible) ... New Haven « N. London ($766,000); J st Mortgage 1st j? 7 7 I Naugatuck ($300,000) .* £8. Rate Debt. Railroad •0 -6 5 Payable. mg. Deot. < ’S’S G 0 Cornpan y shows the total Funded 00 n FRIDAY £ i H —— outstand¬ the total Funded Company show ( Description. . The sums 69 THE CHRONICLE. January 12,1867.] July 1884 Jan. & July April & Oci 16'*8 > 600,000 Jan. & July 1881 *00 000 Feb. & Ang 1671 W),000 June & Dec 500,000, T&n. & July 1873 1879 Telegraph: Mortgage convertible,.,, »»»i»» 3,000,000' 7 May * Noy. lc67 >,<w 81 Companies. Harked thus (*) are and have leased roads, fixed incomes. Railroad. Alton and St Louis* Atlantic & Great Western PeriodB. , ;100} 153,000 50,11,52*2,1501 50 1,910.000 100j 2,494,000 April and OctjOct ...4 100! 13,1SS,902 April and Oct Oct...5 W0 North Missouri North Pennsylvania • Norwich and V orcester— ... - O-densbur?*L. 100i 000,000 June & Dec. Dee .2>K Blossburg and Corning* 50, 250,000 Boston, Hartford and Erie, 100 8,500,000 •Jan. and July Jan ..4 Boston and Lowell 500,; 1,830,000 Jan. and July Jan... 5 Boston and Maine 100 j 4,070,1)71 Jan. and July Jan .5 109 3,100,000 Jan. and July Jan...5 Boston and Providence Boston and Worcester 100; 4,5(K),000 Jan. and July Jan...5 Broadway & 7tn Avenue 1 0. 2,100,000 Brooklyn Central 100 492.150! Feb. and Aug Aug"^ Brooklyn City.. 10 1,01K),000; Brooklyn City and Newtown.. .1001 300,0001 Jan. and July j-in.. .3)4 850,000 Buffalo, New York, and Erie*.. 100 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug..5 30;'g Buffalo and State Liuc 100 4.5 3,800 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 5 Camden and Amboy 100 3 78.455 Camden and Atlantic 50 (582.000 do do pi e for red.. 50 081,005 Jan. and July •Jan. .3)i 00 1,150.000 Cape Cod •i he 32 y. Catawissa*. 50 2,200,00.) Feb. & Aug do preferred 50 ! 0,085,940 Quarterly/ Jan...2>j 61 1 0 63 Central of New Jersey 100 2,085,925 Jan. and July Jan.. .2’a Cheshire (preferred). 104 1,783,200 Mar and Sep Sep.. .5 lit)” Chicago and Alton 100 2,425,400 Maraud Sep. Sep... 5 do preferred... .100 10,193,010 May & Nov. Nov. 5 i'OOX 35* Chicago Burlington and Qnincy.100 4,390,000 100 1,000,000 Jan and July July .5 79 ‘ Chicago and Great. Eastern Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*... 100 2,250,000 46 n Chicago and Milwaukee* 100 13,100,927 10)4 Chicago and Northwestern 100 12,944.719 June it Bee. Dec ’66.7 101 162 h do do pref. .100 0,500.000 April and Oct Oct ...5 Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific. 100 1,100,125 . 1«500,006 Jan. and July 1-755,2^1 Quarterly. • • Bid. I Ask . . . 107*f Nov. Oct.. 0 o'?-n f 106 42 Jan. aud July Jan.. Mgt^ng *S&«8 Apr. and Oct 162% 26% Oct.. Jan ; .... 27 15 . . 90% Jan.. 100 4,8_9,76C Jun. and July Aug. 432.400eb. and Aug 50 3,581,5981 Pacific of Missouri JWJ Quarterly. Jan Panama (and Steamship).. -^00 i,000J^' May and Nov Nov. Pennsylvania • 9^ ’"OdW-tHH) Philadelphia and BaltimoreCcntlOO 2x8,10 Jan. and July Jan.. Philadelphia and Erie* 50 *>,0fi9,4o0 Jr 11. and July Jan.. Philadelphia and Reading ...... 50 20,l40,6»3 Oct.. Apr. and Oct Phila., Gcrmant’n, &> Novnst’n* 50 1,4 *6,300 Quarterly, Oct.. Phila., Wilmington it Baltimore 50 8,9*3,300 Fittsburg and Oomiellsville 50 l,7'i4,02^ Quarterly. Jun.. and Newport Oswego and Syracuse Old Colony 75 74 Jan.and July Jam. January. . .... ,. ^ . 56%' • ■ • Jan Jan Jan 5,085,0501Jan. and July Hampshire... 100 3,068,400 May and Nov 4,518,.hJU Quarterly. • e0 Northern of N ew Northern Central 1,050,000 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3 100j 4,43-1.250 .100j 997,112 Quarterly. Jan...l,3£ {Last p’cL Periods. standing. New York and Harlem .. L..... 50 do preferred 5b New York Proviuence it BostonlOff Ninth Avenue 1**0 I Jan. .IJiv Atlantic & St. Lawrence* Baltimore and Ohio Washington Branch*... 100 Bellefontaiue Line Belvidere, Delaware Berkshire* out¬ roads, FKIDAY. Dividend. Stock Companies. Marked thus (*) are leased and liave fixed incomes. FKIDAT. p*d.j;Bid.; Ask. ;Last Quarterly. preferred do Dividend. | Stock outislanding. I STOCK LIST. AND MISCELLANEOUS RAILROAD, CANAL, 12,1867. [January THE CHRONICLE * 33,M 31%: 1U4% 164% 62 61 £6 Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & Chica^olOO 0,312,442 June and Dec Dec. Portland, Saco, & Portsmouth.lOG 1,S00,JKK>| Jan. and July Jan.. Providence and Worcester 100 1,*00,OOU Raritan and Delaware Bay..... .100 2,ort), dW Oct.. and Rensselaor & Sarat«»ga consol.. 100 800,000 April and Oct Oct April Oct Saratoga and Whitehall...,. • -0( “jJMJJv April and Oct Oct.. 800,000 Jan. and July Jan.. Trov, Salem & Rutland .... 100 & Ogdensb glOfi 1,991,300 Rohm, Watertown Rutland and Burlington . ....100 Sr l ouis, Alton, & TerreHautelOO 2..-,90,001 May. .7 do do pref.100 1,700,000 Annually. St. Louis. Jacksonville & Chic*100 Sandusky, and Cincinnati 100 2.989,090 do * do pref.100 393,ff*3 Feb. and Aug Aug..3 S62,571 Sandusky, Mansfield *t NewarklOO Saratoga and Hudson River... .100 1,029,000 Savannah it Charleston 109 1 /to, 000 Jan. and July Jan...; Oct...5 676,050 Schuylkill "Valley* .*. • • 50 650.000 Apr. aud Oct Second Avenue (N. Y.) -ICO 869,450 Feb. and Aug Aug..; Shmnokin Valley & Pottsville*. 5(>| VAX Aug. .4 750,000 Quarterly. Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) loo Nov.. 4 5,SI 9,275 South Carolina Jan...5 oo;* Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y .1001 1,200.130 Jan.and July Jan...6 Jam’63 4 -23 Terre Iiaute it Indianapolis, .v. 5y 1,929,150 Oct.,.8 Third Avenue (N. Y.). 1^' 1,170,000 Quarterly. J<«n.. .2 y Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw...100 1,700,(MX Ian. .5 do do let pre 1.100 1,700,000 Nov 4 .... 162% 102% 100 • » ... ..... ....... Cincinnati and Chicago Air Linei00 3,000,000 Apr and Oct. Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 470,040 . CInpinnafi,Hamilton & Ghicago.100 2,000,000 . . Cincinnati and Zanesville 100 0,000.000 Feb. and Aug Cleveland, Columbus, &Ciucin.l00 1,030,000 May & Nov. 50 5,000,000 Jan. and July Cleveland & Mahoning* Cleveland, Painesville & Ashta.1001 Jan. and July Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 5,103,910 April and Oct 4,841,000 Cleveland and Toledo 50 Quarterly. Columbus & Indianapolis Cent.100! Jan. and July Columbus and Xeuia* 50j v. ay and N ov Concord 50 i Jan. and July J.m.. 3y Concord and Portsmouth 100 850,000 Coney Island and Brooklyn 100 Jan. and July 'Con’ticut and Passumpsic. prof. 100 1106.L! Jan. and July Connecticut River 100 1.-190,800 1.500,000 do • do 2d pref.lOt) Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 do do preferred. 50 Troy and Boston. 109 Troy and G.reenbush* 100 Utica and Black River— 100 Vermont and Canada*— 100 Vermont and Massachusetts. • • .100 500,000 1,511,306 1,591,100 100 1,582,1(59 100 2,381,931 Jan. and July Jan...-3 130 50 400,132 Jan. and July July. .5 Delaware* Delaware, Lacka., & Western .. 50 10,217,050 Des Moines Valley KK)j 1,550,050 100 952,350 Detroit and Milwaukee do do pref..... 100 j 1,500,000 Mar 7<s\. 100j 1,07),(ill March Dubuque and Sioux City do do pref. ..100 1,937,351 Jan. and July Jan.. .4 Eastern, (Mass) 100 3,155,000 Quarterly. Jan 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2A Eighth Avenue, N. Y* Elmira, Jefferson.& CanamlagualOO 500,000 Jan. add July 500,000 Covington and Lexington Dayton and Michigan 110 Warren* Western (Mass).. v Western Union (Wis. & Worcester and Nashua ‘ Elmira and Fitchburg too! Georgia Hannibal and-St. 'Joseph do do pief.. .100j Hartford and New Haven lot: Housatonic 3,540,000 100j 4,360.800 pioi 1,9*.K),09o .. and July May and Nov 5,253,83i 3,009,90*. 820,003 Iff)! 1,180.000 Morris (consolidated) no;v Jan...5 Nov. .3>j 6b 70 May hud No\ Nov. .4 :3i April and Oct Oct.. 4 LOO 0,503,250 494,330 Huntingdon and Broad Top *... 50 190,750 Jan. and July Jan... 3)2 do do pref. 50 23,374,400 Feb.and Aug Aug. .5 1O0 1,689,900 Mar. & Sep. Sep .4 Illinois Central 50 412,000 Jan. and July July-. 3 Indianapolis and Cincinnati Indianapolis and Madison 10c 407,900 Jan.and July July.. 4 Jeffersonville 50 1.997,309 Joliet and Chicago*.. Iff) 1,5 UKW Kennebec and Portland (new). .100 Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. DO j Lehigh Valley pref. 50 do do Quarterly. Oct. ..ijj Frankfort Memphis and Charleston Michig in Central Michi.gm Southern and N. 100 5,312,725 lfXj 0,9'2,800 Inc!.. 100 0,381,800 guaran.lCO 1,089,700 Milwaukee and Prairie Du ChicnlOO 3,014,000 do do Ashburton Butler Consolidation Central Cumberland 87 93 Wyoming Valley ...! Gas.—Brooklyn Citizens Harlem ... .... New York and New Have 2. 5( 100 100 .. 5,090,000 Feb. and Aiu 700.000 Maraud Sep 24.891.000 Feb.and Au? New York 100 5,000,000 Irregular. 6,000,00! 2,000,000 •Jan. and July 5,000,000 3,200,0001 Quarterly. Boston Water Power 35 lio” 60 106% 79% " ' k • ... 114 Oct. .6 . ' £0 140 6-14,000 £0 l,060,00r 50 4,000,000 Jan. and July •Jan...5 Brunswick City. 100 Telegraph.—Western Union... 100 Western Union,liuss. Ex..100 100 Express— Adams 1,000,000 2S;450,000 10,000,00( 10,000,000 500 8,000,000 .100 20,600,000 Merchants’ Union United States ..100 6,000,000 Wells, Fargo & Co... 100 0,000,000 'h ansit.—Central American —100 4,000,000 45# 29X July 20 Jan. and July Quarterly Quarterly. Quarterly. 148 May!!!. July Jan... 5 4,000,00f( 1 American Jan. and 145 K Jan. 2... Aug 3... Aug. 3. Quarterly. Aug. 3.. ■ • 30li Jail...5 1,250,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .6 Jan... 5 .10 1,000,000 Jan. and July 100 2,175,000 Apr. and Oct 100 i.aso.nfn Feb. and Aug Aug..*.... 25 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug Jan...5 20 1,000,000 •Jan. r.Dd July 750.000 Williamsburg....... 50 4,500,000 Improvement.—Canton 100.(16) p 95 Sep...4 Aug..3 Dec...4 Id 00,009 Jan. and Dec. 100 2,800,006 50 1,000,000 May and Nov Metropolitan 23 C4X 50 Manhattan . iJau — (Brooklyn) Jersey City & II -bokcu • New London Northern New York T!enlr«U v wilkesbarre <lo New Jersey ...100 100 50 50 v Pennsylvania Spring Mountain Oct...2?< do - 2,051,90C 50 100 ...... Feb!!S* ‘ lstpref.100 3,082,000 February 85 95 Feb.. 7 2d pref. 100 1,014,000 February.... Tan..l0 41 41% Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 1.000,000 2,400,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. 3% 603-4 69% do preferred 100 59 Jan. and July •Jan.. .4 Mine IIlll «fc Schuylkill Haven.. 50 3,708,200 78 3,500.,000 Feb. aud Aug Au«3XA Morris and Essex 50 124 000,009 May and Nov Nov.. 4 Nashua and-Lowell 100 and Aug Aug.. 7 Naugatuck 100 1,100,000 Feb. and Jul v Ian...5 500,000 Jan. New Bedford aud Taunton 10( Jan.. 3 do 738,538 New Haven, N. Loud., it Ston .100 New Haven and Nortliamptoui.lOO 1,010,000 Feb!! 5* 132 do do Feb. and Aug Feb ..6 Feb. and Aug Fib ..6 25 1,500,000 Feb. aiid Aug Ang..3X 50 2,000,000 Coal.—American US2, 55 106?4 f> Jan. and July Jan Feb. aud Aug Aug. .3% 79J4 Feb. and Aug Aug. .5 60 56J* 153 50j 750,(KX: Miscellaneous. .... Dec ..3 June 50 2,787.00c • Spruce Hill... Quarterl Tan.. Jan.. •Tan... 5 Susquehanna.10(' 1,100,000: Jan. and July Sept.. 4 Quarterly. Wyoming Valley..... 132 500.000 Feb. and Aug Aug... 2 reb. Alt 8,572,403 June aud Dec Doc. .4 50 Jan. and J uly Jan...2 kittle Schuylkill* 50 2,010,100 Quarterly. An g. .2 1,852,715 l(Oug Island 50 1,109,594 Feb. and Aug Aug. .2 Louisville and Frankfort 50 Feb. and Aug Aug., 3y, Louisville and Nashville 100 5,527,871 Louisville,New Albany & Chic. 100 2,800,000 l^pril.3 Macon and Western 100 1,500,030 Apr and Oct McGregor Western* 100 ’i,417*6o6 Maine Ce ;tral 100 Marietta and Cincinnati 50 2,029,778 Dial1, and Sep .os 1st pref. 50 0,580,135 Mar. and Sop Sep.. 3s do do Sep 4,051,744 2d pref.. 50 do do Suv. .4 Manchester and Lawiencc 100 1,000,000 May and Nov Lexington and Little Miami preferred. 50 2,888,805 TTuion West Branch and *8:15,000 50 6,032.250 514,t; 46 50 25 1,573,963 25 8,228,59c Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 pref. .loG do do July . preferred.do •Jan. and 317,050.1 January. Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 1,90S,207 iso Jan. ..3 100 do preferred nudson River do fi-Lv Quarterly. i,141 *,650 140 50 1,633,350 Feb. and Aug |.Aug. .3 100 10,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug..8 Feb. and Aug Aug. 10 :... 100 2,298,400 Nov. .5 and 50 5,104,050 May and Nov Feb .5 ... 10 1,025,000 Feb. and Aug Feb ..5 Aug 100 1,175,000 Feb. Delaware Division Delaware and Hudson Delaware a nd 1 lari tan Lehigh Navigation .. ; Jan. 75 Canal. 500,000 I Jan. and July Jan 3>; 10.570,100 Feb. At Aug, January. •Jan., 7 8,535.700 090,0!);! Feb. & .Aug, Aug.. 5 43 * 100 Id.)...... Chesapeake and Delaware ' Williamsport* pref do do Erie do preferred Erie and Northeast* *2* 2,442,350 984,700 May and Nov Nov. 607,111 274,400 June and Dec 811,660 Jap. and July. 2,800,000 June and Dec 2,800.000 Jan. and July 50 3,408,800 Jan. and July 5.027,700 Jan. and July - Chesapeake and Ohio 60 1,000,000 V'rightsville,Y01k& Getlysh'g* 50 ...... “ 43 63 110 115 mcaragua 100 1,000,000 Steamship.—Atlantic Mail...... 100 4,000,000 Pacific Mail 100 South American Navi ationlOG Union Navigation 100 2,000.000 .... „ an .and ’eb find . KW 106 168^ 1C9 Dec...5 20,000,000 Trust.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25 1.000,000 New York Life & Trust.... 100 1,000,000 Union Trust United States Trust Dec...5 107* ns July! Jail...5 AmrjAug.... 107* 300 1,000,000 an. and July Jan. .4 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July iJan ..5 Mining.—Mari posa Gold 100 5,097,600 Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100! 5,774,400 Quartz Hill Gold 25 1,000,000 Quicksilver 100| 10,000,000 Jau. aud July Jan.. S5 Rutland Marble,,..,.. ... 35 1 OOO.QWlMay attdNov Nov . . 1WX 12, January 61 CHRONICLE. THE INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Bid.-Askd! Companies. Companies. , i Wright Allen Y Heights.... B^mis 2 DO 3 20: 1 t Bradley Oik. Brooklyn Cherry Run Cherry Run Oil Empire City 1 10; 1 Petrol’m. special... First Shade River 20: ....1 National (>! j United Pe’tl'm F’ms.. 1. 1 .... J Yonango (N. Y.) ..T.. Bid.| Askct .paid 3 Adventure HSUni Albany ...It j Lake .... Algomali.. 1 AUouez American ■ I .... Arnold Atlas— . '1 Aztec .... 1 Meudotat i 6- Oak Central Concbrd. 2’56 Copper Falls.... Harbor... JDaeotah — — , Dev n.. .... ' Dudley Portage Edtvards .... Empire... Everett’. .: Evergreen 10 00 Bluff.. Excelsior Fiint Steel River. Franklin French Creek Girard Great Western... Hamilton Hancock.. • • . anover . Hope . ... , . . 2 Hungarian 0 * . • i . . .... Lake .— • • .— • • - - .... 6% par 10 Albin — American Flag Atlantic 2c Pacific Avres M:ll & Mining Bites & Baxter 10 — — .. 50 5 Teuton Bob Tail.. Soscobid Silver Bullion Consolidated 1 50 2 00 2 50 2:) 00 1 95 1 20 — • . . . . r. .... ... • • .... 1 . .... .... 5% -x . 9 00 6 00 8 CO 4 75 • • .... .... X .. • ...| 5 25 10 • — . . . . 1 50 .... — — — 1 . . _ y — ..... SS 10 si — Kip & Buell — — Liberty • separating.. ' } 50, io 20| 4 100 . 5 Smith & Parmelee Texas Yellow Jacket...... Oopake Iron Foster Iron Lake Superior Iron Bucks County Load Denbo Lead Manhan Lead par 5 — .... . 100 5 t .... .... • • • • — • • • • — • • • • — .... .... .... • • • • • • .... . • • . .... 150 .... • • . • 107 • ..... • • • • • • • • • • • • .... .... v • • • • • • • • • • • •• . ..... • • • . .... ' . .... . . . . .... .... .... .... .... .5 . -N. • • .... ..... .... . ... ...A; .... . % . . . .... .... .... .... .... ..... • • • .... • • ..... • . . » • • .... . . € Jan '07 .T> 107 Jan.’07 .5 Jnlv'00 ..5 . . July ’66 ..5 July’06 ..5 July ’65 Jan. *07 .5 . . . • • • . • • •■ • • • • .. • • • • .... • • . . .... .... .5 . . • .... .... • July ’65 .5 July ’65 ..6 . . ... . . ..... • . . . .... • • • • .... .... ... .... W • 885.489 200,000 150,000 200,000 150,000 1,000.000 200,000 200,000 200,00(' 200,000: 150,000 . . Jan. ’06».5 • Jul • • • • • • ..... • ’00..5 Jan. ’67 3% • . ... Tan.’07 ..5 July ’66 ..5 Lily'66 4 Tilly ’06... 5 • . • • • • .... • • ..... Tan.’67 .10 July ’05 .5 ... • - • • • . Jan.’67 .5 . •July ’60..8 •Tan. ’67 ..(} Tan. ’07 ..4 Tan. '07 ..6 . April and Oet. Apr. ’66. .4 229,729 Jin and July. Jan. *67 ..6 Tan.’07 .5 do 191,817 Jan. '07 .5 do 173,091 200.000 • • .... do 001,701 500,000 350,000 • •Jam. ’07..5 244,0(i0 Tan. and July. 222,199 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’OO.. .5 1,000,600 1.175.505 Jan. and July. Tidy ’00 . .5 July’00 .5 150.000 Williamsburg City.50 iLmkers & N. Y.. 100 .... .... .... . . . ^ .... .... .... 92% ..... ..... TT-1 _ . . 154.206 Feb. and Aug. Aug. 06..4 998 087 •fan. and July. Jah ’06. .5 do do do • .... • • • Julv ’05. .5 Till v’60.3% do 1 S3,170 Aug. ’GO..5 457,25? July’00.3% 208,909 200.909 Feb. and Ang. Feb. ’67. .5 350.580 133.90? Tan. 1,277,504 Feb. 230,903 •Jan. 250,090 400.090 237,400 ? 150.009 500.000 ■ and Jnlv. Aug.’66 .5 and Ang. Feb.’66.3% and July. Tan. ’(57 .5 . Tuly ’06 ..5 do 217,843 177,915 . • 203,049 Feb. and Ang. 142,830 •Inn. and July. do 350,412 509,628 Feb. and Ang. Feb. ’06..4 Jan. *67..5 fan. ’67 .5 Aug. ’06. .0 105 . 581,089 FM>. and Aug Aug.’66...2 151.539 Jan. and July. July ’6S ..5 do •Juiy 66 . .5 530.80; 115% .... .... 2 40 A D V E ■.... R TISEMENTS. 60 2 75 5 — 25 10 20 — 1 75 10 5 15 2 25 7 5 20 40 TERMS FOR ADVERT I vINO. 2 GO 25 5 20 3 00 7 75 The rate for advertising in the A discount on this rate will be for three months or more. Commercial Cards . . ,, Cordage.... Bid. Askd Tudor Lead par — Snq-innw, 1^. S. Jfc M.. . 25 Wallkill Lead — — Wallace. Nickel Rutland Marble 25 1 38 • -• Long Island Peat 4 75 3 00 — 6 -r Cotton Duck Drags. Dry Goods 4 00 Railroad Iron Stationers.. ADVERTISEMENTS. I Steamsli«i> Companies I .02-0-1 : Fire , .... Insurance. 63' L'IOh. ,..... Marine and inland Financial. Bankers and Brokers in N.T.. Bankers and Brokers— South 64 35 63 63 Express Company Holiday Goods Metals Chronicle is 15 cents n line for each insertion made when the advertisement is continued c>4 64 ‘ Dividends 1 35 TO INDEX SO 60 Commission Merchants i.PAN’IES. Russell File Savon de Terre 300,009 210,000 200,000 200,900 So _ ... O 1. Washington 12 235.51S 311.970 210,184 150,000 Washington *!. 2 35 200,000 1,090,000 200,000 15 10 10 150,610 25 50 50 100 100 25 25 20 50 Star Tradesmen's United States: 150.000 150.000 309,000 Rutgers’ Sterling * Stuyvesaut 200,000 228,0-14 1,000,00^0 1,192,303 .100 25 St. Mark’s St. Nicholas! Security *! 10 1 0? 1 00 12 1 00 200,000 211,178 019.000 1.322,409 20 a. ' 197.033 : 50,185 159.000 50 50 Reliei 35 ...... • Iron Tank storage » on People’s Plicepix 4 Br’klyn „ Bid. Askd1 .7% Standard MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. ( OMPANIES. Trade’ 25 New Amsterdam. N. Y. Equitable 3 35 N.Y.Firc and Mar .100 50 Niagara North American* 50 25 North River Pacific .100 Park.; 20 Peter Cooper 23 — Ranagat Cen. Silver .. 4 ! :i — Montana Mon tank New York 200,000 200,000 282,35 Resolute* 1 55 10 50 .. 704,308 Metropolitan * t.. .100 Montauk (B”vn). ..50 50 Nassau (B’klyu).. 9 '5 25 LaCrossc 500,090 .100 Mechanics (B'klvn).oO .100 Mercantile Mercantile Mnt’l* M00 50 Merchants’ 80 2 Silver..' 25 1,900,000 1.182.779 . . ..... . do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 200,204 Republic* 90 Hone Keystone Manhattan Market* Meehan’ & (B* !c ly). 50 200, IKK! . Bid. Askd 14 3 252,057 349,521 201,216 100 Long Island Lorillard* • • . . 3 41k • 3 25 A. . .... 2% par Lenox • • . 50 100 25 National .... 100,< CO shares $500,000, in 20,000 shares. Grass Valley. Gunnell Holman Pah King’s Co’tv(Bklvn)20 Knickerbocker... 40 Lafayette (B’kly).. • . • (> 1 People’s Oi. & S. of Cal. 3 25} Perry and Peoples’ 65 Quartz Hill GO 4 25j Iiocky Mountain .. .... ... 24; Ophir 20 1 25 11 3 S') ... — ..... .... 3 75 1% 1% 1 SO 1 90i Columbian G.& S 8 151 Nye Consolidated Colorado... Consolidated Gregory... too i7 50 17 2C! Oak Hill.-. 25 6 40 6 45! Ohio & Colorado G.&S. Corvdon . • .... 2! . • . .... 8 . • .... 2 ;. 00, Mill O.cek 55 2 59 SO _v . .... do 1 8,82 138,166 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’65 ..5 Aug.’06.3% do 1.024,702 do Aug. ’00..5 195.571 245.984 March and Sep Sep. '00. ..4 200,010 Jan. ’07 5 150,000 150,721 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 .5 do 279,864 280,000 Jan. ’07 .5 no 161,252 150,090 Jan. ’07 ..5 do 300,000 340,-20 do July’05 ..4 150,000 129,044 . Irving do do do do do do do do do do do 2,485,017 ....... ... • Companies. | Liebig — Church Union., G. <fc S. Ore Gold Ilill . . . MINING STOCK LIST. 2 M) 2 35 4 00 30 00 2 20' 1 30 3 00! .100 2,000,000 50 : 200,000 Hope 50 500,000 Howard .100 200,000 Humboldt 200,000 Import’ & Traders 50 100 150,000 Indemnity .100 1,000,000 International 25 200,000 ... • .... . 207.345 Jefferson .... • * • + Capital $300,000, in — Burroughs. Gilpin. • • ... .11% Bid. Askd Alpine 200.000 * 12 3 1 . . In 20.009 shares. Capital of* Lake Superior companies generally Companies. (F.&M.)+ 50 400,000 50 • .... J"ly’66.3^' July’65 ..5 JulypOO .5 6 May and Nov. May Feb. and Aug. Aug ’06 ..5 July ’66 .5 Jan. and July. Jan. and July. JulV’65 ..5 ' 163,800 4 50,295 253,211 300,000 ..... Winthrop 4 00 GOLD AND SILVER L • 36 00 36 50 10 West Minnesota Winona Capital §1,00),tiff), in 20,000 shares. ... .... .... 35 00} Vulcan 4 00 Washington . 200 000 . • Victoria I . i-JJvpital Des Moines Downieville Eehla.. Fall River First National ,,,, 2 <6 5X . Superior 1 . i Kuowlton Crozier .... .15 Toltic 2 05: Tremont .... Huron Indiana Isle Royalc* Keweenaw <hrT* Harmony Iloffman Home • 23 50 24 50 6 00 9 00 40 OO 5% 23 .10,V ; Star , : linmboklt * • • • 180,17- April and Oct. Apr. ’05..5 172 318 .l;im and July Jan. ’<>7 3% 150,000 Hamilton • Jan. and July. Jan. ’07.3% 228,12- Feb. and Aug. Aug ’60..5 1,000.000 200,000 200,000 15 50 • . ... . South Side 1.00 Hudson Hulbert • .... Column an .21 1 ....i South Pewabic Hilton 200,000 . . r ... f . 7 ...J . .100 290.000 .... . 25 50 150,000 200,000 150,000 Hanover . i • • 149,024 156,068 215,079 149,755 224,303 592,394 195,875 3,177,487 150,000 500,000 .... .50 . Rockland , • .11 .... , .... • .... 11 3/ St. Clair n03 To 36 GO; St. Louis St. Mary’s Salem ....! Seneca Sharon.. '(12 GO 12 50! Sheldon & M • 140.324 Feb. and Aug. 230.3 2 Jan. and July. Jan. ’07 50 Globe Great Western*!. .100 25 Greenwich 50 Grocers’ . - .... • • Gi/S Ridge ..... • • ... 208,893 150,000 204,000 10 . • _____ 50 4 Resolute .... .... • ... Quincy % .... 2 00 • • . . Gallatin Gcbhard Germania .... Consol.., .10 Princeton Providence.. .i Eagle 'River — .... Trust. Firemen s Fulton .. 1 Pontiac .... Dorchester Firemen’s Fund.. 2 Pittsburg & Boston.. 5 .... t A Firemen's • • • . 50 30 17 10 Exchange • .... • . Excelsior • • .... . .100 40 .100 Eagle — Empire City . • .... ••• • ..... 500,000 1,199,978 Jan. and July. July’66 ..7 Mar. ’64,.5 400,000 8G ,970 March and Sep July’64 1.5 108,32 Jan. and July. 200,000 Oct. ’06..5 300,000 861,705 April and Oct. 200,000 212,14; Jan. and July. July ’60 .7 Jan. '67.:. 5 do 200,000 258,054 50 Corn Exchange.. 100 Croton «... .... Delaware . .... . Petheriek Go' Pewabic 1 Phoenix Di> • 1% .18% U 50 12 50 10 00 5% Pennsylvania * ..... • • .... •. .... s Ogima •! • • • « * • New Jersey New York .... Davidson - North Cliff ....j North western 47 00 Norwich ,, ,, • o;.< ■ . 3 23' Copper Creek 20 4 00 .... 0 . Naumkeag 80 1 10 - Canada . • 150,000 300,000 210,000 250,000 500,000 200,000 400,000 200,000 250,000 .... • 17A • Native .... Caledonia Dana • 1 Minnesota National to h.... Boston . 9 To 10 00 1 Milton " 5 .... 4% 5% 4% . i .... :i • 10 3 55 6 . 1 Merriniac Mesnard 4 2 Bay State Bohemian Cooper .. Mcdora Amygdaloid....... Charter Superior *....! ! Mass .... • • Bid. Askd j Manhattan i • • , Continental * Madison j iMnndah .... .... 20 • • .. i 7 00 & Boston. 95 0 paid 2 1 J ! Lafayette . 100 20 70 City 100 Clinton .100 Columbia* Commerce (N.Y.). .100 Commerce (Alb’y).lOO 50 Commercial Commonwealth.. 100 _____ .... 500,000 250,000 (Br’klynY.50 Beckman— Bowery Broadway Brooklyn Central Park ’’ 5 200,000 200,000 25 25 25 25 1 ' 200,000 Baltic 5 70 Companies. f 50 50 .100 50 25 Bid. Las Sale. paid. 223.775 Jan. and July. 205,976 Jan. and July. dan. ’67 .5 440,603 Jan. and July. J. ’G7.8i.T3i 213.590 Jan. and Juiy. July ’06 . 4 501,543 Jan. and July. Jan. 65...5 253,232 Feb. and Aug. Aug ’00...5 324,456 March and Sep Sep. ’00...5 200.302 May and Nov. 181,052 Feb. and Ang. Aug. ’05. .4 320,111 June and Dec. Dec. ’65...5 248,392 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’60. .5 Aug. ’66..5 do 241,521 123,577 Jan. and July July’64 ..4 Jan.’67 .10 do 378.440 314,787 Feb. and Aug. Aug. 6 p. b. 231,793 Jan. and Juiy. Jan. ’67. 5 July’64.3% do 391,913 Jan. ’67 ..5 do 212,594 440,870 Feb. and Aug. Aug. Mi ..6 244,29G Jan. and July. July’60 ..5 April and Oct. Oct. ’65...5 $300,000 300,000 200,000 200,000 300,000 200,000 153,000 Atlantic STOCK LIST l MINING Companies. Aster../.. .... .. United States .A ... *j i 5 ...10 2 ...10 10 Union ...,| ! 1 Great Republic G’t Western Consol. • • ... . Germania • ...10 Rynd Farm Second National../.. ...10 io; Excelsior ... Arctie 5 25 10 4 SO S 5 1 ... American Exch’e. 70 • • 25! N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons.. ...10 „.. i Oceanic i .... • , 1 2o Clinton 20 * • » .... 0 ... ... __ • ft .. . 21; Farm Buchanan ± ° 2 • N dural i N. Y. & Alleghany .. / i New York & Newark. 23 i N. Y. & Philadel ....! ....! Brevoort z. . ....i Mountain Oil 1 _ _ • .... Last Periods. Assets. 25 Adriatic /Etna American * .... O' Ivanhoe 30! Manhattan Bliven Central .! ....1 HamiltonMcClintock. Coal and Oil.. Bergen 20: par ....! . Bennehoff Run Hammond .... i>l\l UEND. 31, lsb5. participating, and (4) Capital. write Marine Risks. Bid. Askd I i ; Dec. Varked thus (*) are 1 . 62-63 62 ...62 63 ..... Navigation. “ “ 63 “ Eist... West) . Miscellaneons Financial... ,, ‘ 64 Bonds, Dividends, &c Miscellaneous. 63 64 Bonds stolen Lawyers (Southern) .23-4-6 . .. .. 34 34 58-4 33-6-63 36 ... ... THE CHRONICLE [January 12, 1867. Insurance. Insurance. Citizens’ The Mercantile Mutual Insurance. OFFICE No, 35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. INSURANCE COMPANY. $1,360,699 Assets, Jan. 1st, 1886 NEW OF The Atlantic Mutual COMPANY. INSURANCE Insurance Company NEW ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. YORK. The Company has paid to its Customers, up to the present time, Losses amounting to over > 150 For the BROADWAY., past nine years the cash dividends paid to Stockholders, made from ONE-THIRD of the net profits, have amounted in the aggregate to Hundred and Twenty-one and a half per cent. CAPITAL-$2,'>00,000 CAPITAL PAID IN - -$300,000 issuing.a scrip dividend to dealers, based on the principle that all c asses of risks are equally profitable, this Company will hereafter make such cash abatement or discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general experience o underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬ will be divided maining at the close of the year, the stockholders. This Company continues to Marine and Inland Navigation $533,245 70 Liabilities Risks, on 36,812 0*» Net Assets, Jan. 1,13 7 make Insurance on and Transportation the most favorable terms, including Risks Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or on $5,1,433 70 «.. to Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Ruthbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬ pool. TRUSTEES. The fol’owing Abstract is from a statement mode to the Stockholders of the business for the year ending December 31, I860: income. Premiums received, after dedncting paid for Ro-insurance, Return Premiums and Commissions Interest $-238,335 03 32,661 74 . Aaron L. Reid, Ellwood Walter, D. Colden Murray, E. Haydock White, N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, Henry Eyre, L. Edgerton, Cornelius Grinnell, Henry R. Kunhardt. E. E. Morgan, John S. Williams, Her. A. Schleicher, William Nelson, Jr., Joseph Slagg, Charles Diraon, Jas. D.Fisn, A. William Heye, Geo. W. Hennings, Harold Dollner, r Francis Hathaway, Paul N. Spofford. Joseph Walker, . James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Wait, ELLWOOD WALTER. President CIIAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest $271,046 32 Premiums C. .T. Despard, Secretary. Security Insurance Co., $53,522 GO tied Losses No. 119 ' Catth 137,411 70 Capital, BROADWAY, One Million Dollars, ($1,000,000.) $190,034 33 FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE. A. F. $80,’12 52 Earnings— James HI. Frank W. HASTINGS, President. Ballaeo, Secretary. on $6,933,146 80 Policies not marked off January. 1S65 2,019,324 73 Risks; nor upon Fire Risks nected with Marine Risks. $8,952,471 63 Life discon¬ Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ ary, 1865 to 31stDecember, 1365..... $6,764,148 33 Losses same paid during the period $3,659,173 45 Returns of Premiums and Expenses -• $992,341 44 Company has the following As^ sets, viz.: United States and State of New York. ' ■ Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks, $.4,328,585 03 secured by Stocks, and other¬ wise 3,330,350 00 Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages, 221,260 00 Dividends on Stocks, Interest on Loans Bonds and Mortgages and Loans,- sundry notes, other re-insurance and other claims due the Company, estimated at 144,964 43 3,283,801 96 80,462 00 Premium Notes and Bills Receivable.. . Bank; Coin do U. S. Treasury Note Cur¬ 310,551 78 Germania Fire Ins. NO. 175 The Mutual Life Insu- Six per cent, interest on tlie outstand¬ ing certificates of profits will be paid to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives, on and af.er Tuesday the Sixth of February next. 1364, will be redeemed and pai-t to the holders thereof, or their legal repre sentatives, on an d after Tuesday lhe Sixth of February next, from which date interest on Co., BROADWAY, N. Y. the amount, so redeemable, will cease. The certifi produced at the time of payment, cates to he cancelled to the extent paid. s CASH RANGE COMPANY OF NEW YORK. CAPITAL, $500,000 O A dividend of SURPLUS. Jan. 1st, 1866 205,939 S3 Thirty-five Per Cen premiums Company, for the year ending 31st declared / CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1866, over $16,000,000 00 $12,199,975 17 Fifty per cent of the outstanding certificates Walton, Secretary Total Amount of Assets of the issue of NcLean, f resident. Edward A. . rency Expenses, including Govern¬ Losses including all unset- Marine Risks, No Polices have been issued upon do EXPENDITURES. on January, 1665, to 31st De¬ Total amount of Marine Premiums.. Cash in ment and Local Taxes the 31st December, 1865: cember, 1865 The , amounts on from 1st 1st Instead of Asset?, Jan. 1, 1867 Conformity to the Charter of the Company, submit the following Statement of its Premiums received One AUTHORIZE D YORK, JANUARY 27th, 1866, The Trustees, in affairs EIGHTEEN MILL 10X3 OF DOLLARS. OFFICE: NO. OFFICE OF of the on the net earned December. 1865* FREDERICK S. R. A. Secre'aries, WINSTON, President. TOTAL ASSETS $705,939 83 McCTJRDY, Vice-President. RUDOLPH ISAAC ABBATT. \ JOHN M. STUART. JOHN E. KAHL, GARRIGUE, President. for which certificates will be issued on and after Tuesday the Third of April next. By order the Boai d, Secretary. J. H. CHAPMAN, Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS. Secretary. TRUSTEES: Niagara Fire Insurance •COMPANY. Fire Insurance NO. 12 WALL STREET. John D. Jones, SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 $1,000,000 270,353 Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Chartered 1850. Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, 258 per cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, President. P. NOTMAN, Secretary. Company, Wm. C. Paidi.a 1865 - - - Pickersgiil, Lewis Curtis, Charles H. Russell, Cash Capital- ----- $200,000 00 Assets. March 9. 1866 - - 252*55:’ 22 26.850 OO Total Ll-»bilitlt s - - - Losses Henry K. Bogert, Joshua J. Hentry, Dennis Perkins, Joseph Gaillard, Jr. J. Henry Burgy, Cornelius Grinnell, C. A. Hand, B. J. Howland, Benj. Babcock, Fletcher Westray, Robt B. Minturn, Jr. Gordon W, Burnham, Dennis, W. H. H. Moore, Henry Coit, OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. CASH CAPITAL, Wm. Charles Hope Lowell 201*588 14 Holbrook, R. Warren Weston, ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS SOLICITED. William E. Dodge Geo. G. Hobson, January 1st 1666. -Cash capital 'Surplus $400,000 00 156,308 98 ■Gross Assets Total Liabilities $556,803 98 24,550 00 BENJ. S. WALCOTT. President. HENRY M. TABER, JOSEPH FOULKE, STEP. CAMBRELENG, THEODORE W. RILEY, JACOB REESE, JNO. W. MERSEREAU, D. LYDIG SU Y DAM, WILLIAM REM SEN, THOS. P. CUMMINGS, ROBERT SCHELL, WILLIAM H. TERRY, FRED. SCHUCHARDT. JOSEPH GRAFTON, L. B WARD, JOSEPH BRITTON, AM08 ROBBINS, HENRY 8. LEVERICH. JACOB REESE, President. CHAS. D. HARTSHORNS, Secretary, * Frederick Cliauncey, James Low David No. 45 WALL STREET. A. P. Pillot Caleb Barstow Board of Directors: COMPANY, J. 2Uxa*N Lake, Secretary. Royal Phelps, Company. Hanover Fire Insurance This Company Insures against Loss or Damage by Fire on as favorable terms as any other responsible Stnrgia, Lane, James Bryce, Leroy M. Wiley, Georg Stephenson, William H. Webb. Daniel S. Miller. JOHN D. JONES, President, DENNIS, Vice-President CHARLES W. H. H. MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres’t, J. D. HEWLETT, 3d Vice-Pres’t. f'V ’’tC ' -Aj 63 THE CHRONICLE. 12,1867.] January Financial. Insurance. Bankers, Brokers and Dealers in Government and other Securities. To Mutual Insurance Sun BUILDINGS,) 49 WALL ASSETS, Dec. 31, 1865 This Company Vessels, Freight, N ew PER CENT. and Cargo;• also, Fire Ins. The ROYAL in that proportion for the recovery ol portion of the said Securities. Branch. No. 117 Broad- 5 cent Coupon* 18 74 per 11341, 1-950, ADLARD, Manager. 1449 Steamship and Express Co.’s. STEAM IS951,12952,12*53,12954,12965, 12989,12990,14493,14494, , SIA via PANAMA. Royal 2Uhof and leaving olon) on iho lith of each class passenger-* will be conveyed under through ticket at iho following rates: From Ncw*York to ports in New-Zealand, or to Sydney or Melbourne, $349 to $364 for first class, New-York for Aspinwall ( month. First and second and $218 to $243 for The above rates Isthmus second.class. include the transit across the of Panama, auu the first class tares are for forward cabins of the Austral an steamer; after cabin, latter $25additional. Farespayable in United gold coin. Special steamers run to the newly-discovered gold region of Hokitika, New Zealand. , Children under three years, free; under eight years, quarter fare; under twelve years, half-fare; male servants, one-half fare : female do., threerquar¬ ters fare ; men servants berthed forward, women ■' <t quantity of merchandise will be con¬ veyed under through hill of lading. For Inrther information, application to he made to the Pacific ;>Liil Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall-st., Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, A . limited r No. 23 William-st.. New-York. . Blair, Densmore & Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 165 Chicago, Ills. Files of this Payable to the order of Adam Norrie aDd Benia¬ Committee, and not endorsed. 26 EXCHANGE PLACE, Corner of William 65998, 65999, .66000, 66001, 66002, Bonds, $1,000 Each. 20899, 2?04o, 25946, 25047, 25940, 34556, 75599,116634,117827117828,117829,117S30,117S31, Nos. 12099, 11S903, 124,719. l*OW READY. and Nos. 36551, 28870, 38806, 33805, 38807,-38804, 33808, 28867, 28868. DISPLAY OF Fancy Goods, Rich Bohemian Glass, China, Broiu Clocks. Benin Iron, Terra Cotta and Cabinetware, Mnokers Requisites, Morocco Bags, Port-mounaies, t-pa and Carved Wood Articles, Toilet Articles, ST. Bonds, $1,000 Each. 5-20 St Holiday Goods SIXTY-SIXTH ANNUAL 7-30 Order. - Cooper & Sheridan, 66003, 66004, C6005, 66006, 66007, 66008, 66009, 66010, 66011, 66012, 66013, 66014, 66015, 6G016, 66017, 66018, 66019, 66020, 66021, 66022. Nos. 65907, Paper Bound to STATIONERY, ENGRAVING, PRINTING,. &C., &C 1881 Bonds, $1^000 nacli. min B. Sherman, STREET. WASHINGTON BLANK BOOKS, ' • cent. Coupon G per States do. in ladies’ cabin. AND PROVISIONS. 16766,16767,16768, 16773,16774, 16775 16776, 16777, 16718, 16779, 16780,16781, 16782, 16783, 167S4, 16785, 167S6, 16787, 167>8, 16789, 16790, 16791, 1679’, 16793, 16794, 16795, 16796 .16797, 16798, 16799, 16800, 5989, 14026.) BETWEEN NEWAND AUSTRALA¬ SEEDS CRAIN, FLOUR, 14496, 14962,15159, 15160, 15161, 16761, 16769,16770, 16771, 1677 \ C O .75 M U NTC A- The Panama, New-Zea'aud and Australian Mail Company dispatch a steamer on ibe each month from Panama to Wellington, N. Z., the Australian Colo ies, connecting w.th the steamer of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company Bonds, 32966, 12987, 12988, 16162, 16763, 16764, 16765, > SEAMAN, Cashier. Commercial Cards. 4031,’10895,10696, 1657, 1658, 165\ 1G5C, Nos. II. ROSS, Secretary. TION B. $1,000 Each. N. Y. GEORGE iYORK subsequent meeting of the Board Mr. P. C* Calhoun was unanimously re elected President, and Joseph Smart, Vice President. v way, V, IL LIAM C. E. Detmold. E. L. Bolles, Belknap, Jr., At a cautioned against negotiating said Securities. ----- ImitedSlaies Inspectors of Next Election. For T. The public are and will pay Department at Albany. ance their George Opdyke, Philo C. Calhoun. .1 £1,885<220 S!g. $1^392,115 Fund of $200,000, deposited iu the Insur¬ Surplus Special £2,000,000S<g, Capital «fe Paid up tin box stolen lrom any » Securities contained in Safe on the 10th instant, Joseph B. Hoyt, Henry Swift, Charles L. Anthony, THOUSAND DOLLARS for i the recovery of Government Comp’y - liorizod Capital INSURANCE COMPANY will pay a REWARD OF TEN LIVERPOOL AND LONDON. Subscribed Capital Timothy G. Churchill, Hoyt, Joseph Smart, John M. Furman, a An Directors. entitled to a return GRISNELL, PresU. EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vive-Preset Thaao U. Walf.su, -levy gentlemen were Edwin MOSES H. OF Bank, for the ensuing year, the following duly elected: $ i o,ooo Reward! against Inland York, January 9,1867. of thia At the annual e’ection f->r Directors « Marine R;sks on insures against Navigation Risks. Premiums paid iu gold will be treraium in gold. Queen STOLEN! BONDS Billopp Seaman, Cash. Anthony Lane, Ass.Cash. Prest. Joseph Stuart, V. P. P. C. Calhoun, $2,716,424 32 - - YORK. OF TUB CITY OF NEW STREET. DIVIDEND THIRTY Bank Fourth National COMPANY. (iNSUBANOB $5,000,000. CAPITAL , the STUDY LAMP. GERMAIN Also, Toys aud Games, comprising all that is nor Holiday Presents, and of as large variety as can be found in the city, at and suitable for HS’S, WERCKMEISTER’S, Broadway, (up stairs) New York. H I N R I C Late PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THRDCJGH LINE 6 per cem. Nos. T O A L I F O R N I A the United Mail, LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬ ER, FOOT 3f Canal street, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and list of every month (except when those dates fall on Sunday, and then 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. And Carrying States JANUARY: 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City. lltn—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis York, connecting with Sacramento. Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports* 1st and 11th for cntral American Ports. Those of 1st touch at Manuuijo. Baggage checked through. One hundred pounds lowed etch adult. A n experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and 21st—New -tendance free. For passage tickets or at the farther information, apply Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of Canal street, North River, New York. S. K. HOLMAN, Agent. Bankers, Merchants, and others should send by the HARNDEN EXPRESS, 65 Broadway. as they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and safe iSSi Bonus, $1,000 Each. 8902, 8906, S?03, 8894, 890S, 8910, t907, '904, 8S99, 5905, 35)01, 8900, 8897, 8895. 1267, 1266, 1264, Nos. 35275, SOLICITED BY CUSTOM Loutrel, Francis & STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK MANUFACTURERS. 5 per cent. 10-40. York. We supply everything in onr line for Basiness, Professional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders U. S. Coupon Bonus Nos. 362S9, 98813 YOUR 1265,15486,15487, $500 each. 98814, 102542, $1,000 each. 35276, 35277, 35278, 35279, 352S0, 35231 Lane, New 4 5 Maiden prompt attention. receive 35282, $500 each. Quid & Registered Stock ot 1S81. $10,000 Each. Carrington, AT LAW, ATTORNEYS 11 3 MAIN Nos. 9662, 9663, 0G64. Nos. 7224, 7273, 17404, 18333, 18339, 18340, 7-30 per cent. Nos. 1782, Each. 18,254. Bonds. 1733, $5,000 each. 11273, $1,00 FOR EXPORT AND 192 FRONT DOMESTIC USE; STREET, NEW YORK. Lane, Lamson & Co., NO. 7 RUE NEW£YORK DECEMBER 11 1866. . MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE COMMISSION 56iiWAI.li STREET, V A Henry Lawrence & Sons, 7279, 72S0, 7281, 7282, 6911, 261S. Registered Stock of 1881, $1,000 Nos. STREET. RICHMOND, Registered Stock of 1881, $5,<>00 Each. forwarding of Bold, Stiver, Jewelry, and Merchandise of every description. Also for the collection of notes, drafts, and hills, hills accompanying goods, &c. 8909, 8911 8S93, 8396 150 97 MERCHANTS, SCRIBE, PARIS, FRANKLIN STREET, 1. i* NEW YORK. 64 THE CHRONICLE. ^ Commercial Cards. S. H."Pearce & f J Jl ‘.V*;■ * Commercial Commercial ✓ ' No. 653 BROADWAY, - Importers & Commission Merchaht2, CHINA IRISH & SCOTCH LINEN $1LR$, GOODS, In full assortmem for the and Manufacturers oi Jobbing and Clothing Trade. SILK AND COTTON Oiled HANDKERCHIEFS, Silk, costs but half as much appearance a very real as Agents for the sale of , WHITE LINENS, 45 CLIFF Wm. the most economical collar invented. ever AND nAYE No. 185 REMOVED Church BEST JOHN 150 & 152 DUANE STREET. NEW A YORK, Threads, P. _ CABLED .P- YORK, Oldershaw, BROAD E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. FOR STEWART BROWN, DAVID WALLACE, C. H. HARNEY, COMMISSION CHICOPEE MANUF. CO., VICTORY MANUF. ■? C. S. BODLEY, S. L. M. BARLOW, McANDRbWr & WANN. MILTON Wm. G. CO., COMMISSION G3 Commerce JOHN INDIGO, CORKS, SPONGES, GOODS, PERFUMERY, ETC., ETC., iilGUT, CLARK, Jr. A End, Glasgow. Umbrellas & 49 Parasols, Wilson, Son & Co., Lynchburg, Va C. E. SHIPPING 109 WALL , of merchandise generally. (Offices, for the present, 63 EXCHANGE PLACE), William A. C ellatlt. William N. Clark, Jr. TO GRAIN MILLERS, v Thorburn, AND COMMISSI ON STREET, NEW YORK. Consignments of Cotton and all other South¬ ern Products Solicited. Manufacturing Richards’ Power Corn Of ad sizes and capacity, ranging . Shellers, from 60 to i,fJ0O bushels per hour; built of Iron, and warranted to shell clean in any condition of grain, and clean the corn in superior condition for the Mill or Market. Over 500 in Daily Use Portable engines, Small Burr Mills, Farm Mills, &c. RICHARDS’ IRON 190 & 192 WASHINUTON WORKS, STREET, Chicago, 111. BALTIMORE, MD. Refer by permission to Messrs. Jacob Heald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Baltimore. Ttennahill. McBwafne & Co., New York. STREET, N.Y. SHIPPERS, w e are MERCHANT, , COMMISSION MERCHANTS, For the sale of produce and purchase RUSSELL, Sole Agent, 88 CHAMBERS AND DISTILLERS. MURRAY ST., NEW YORK. Late of SEWING. THOS. New York. Joseph II Westerfield. William II. Senieffelin, CO’S, IS UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE 170 & 172 WILLIAM ST. MANUFACTURERS OF Street, Mobile, Ala. Mile FANCY DOUBLED AY A D MERCHAN TS, Spool Cotton. DRUGS, Nos. 43 A 15 WHITE STREET. NEW YORK. C rs TON FACTORS IMPORTERS AND JOEBERS OF MILLS, ' ’ England & Co., AND GENERAL SCHIEFFELIN BROTHERS A CO., STREET, j : SUCCESSORS TO CO., MERCHANTS, NO. 47 BROAD W. PI. Schieffelin & Co. WASHINGTON MILLS, BURLINGTON WOOLEN Sawyer, Wallace & Co., STREET, NEW References Patterson, N. J. AGENTS AUCHI\CLOSS, Lockport Hydraulic Mills, Locaporf, Ill. Sweepstakes Mills, West Lockport, III. A full supply of our well known brands of Flour always on hand. Eastern orders Will have prompt attention’at low¬ est market price. Onr Chicago mills being simated on the railroad track cars are loaded with Flour, Middlings, Bran, &c., to all points Ea^t, saving ex¬ pense and damas-e from cartage. Orders lor pur¬ chase of Grain, Flour, or provisions in this market will be faithfully a tended to. YORK, Books Examined. Accounts Adjusted. STREET, NEW YORK. ‘ MILLERS & COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 138 LASALLE ST , CHICAGO, ILL., PROPRIETORS OF Oriental Mills, "Chicago, HI. ACCOUNTANT, 6-2 BROTHERS, Co., (Established 1849.) No. 108 Duane Street. SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC. Mills at New York. SOLE AGENTS IN NEW THREADS, HARBOUR HUGH Norton & TO Thread. Linens, Ac., Ac*, 95 CHAMBERS 36 Goods, Irish and Scotch SHOE Street, SIX-CORD Good*, Linen FROM J. & P. Coats’ And l ancy White LEAD, CHICAGO, ILL. OF COM MISSION Staple, Dress Co., LINSEED OIL AND OIL CAKE, LEAD PIPE AND SHEET LINENS, LINEN CAMBRIC HANDKERCHIEFS, AC. MERCHANTS, British. given if required. IRISH Lindsay, Chittick & Co., IMPORTERS Best of references DUCK, AC. Thompson & Co., IMPORTERS Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, <fec., Manufacturers of , Patent Reversible Paper Collars, STREET, NEW YORK. E. W. Blatchford & FLAX SAIL Agents for the sale of the Cards. AC. BURLAPS, BAGGING, and durability. . Railroad Iron, J. M. Cummings & Co., DISTILLERS AMERICAN AND FOREIGN. AND FOR BEST ENGLISH CANNEL A ORRELL Coal FROM For Grate Fires. COMMISSION Delivered from yards in New York Brooklyn. H. J. PARMELE A 32 BRO., Pine Street, N. Y JOSEPH GILLOTT’S STEEL *. PENS OF THE OLD STANDARD QUALITY. JOSEPH Or NEW SERIES, GOOD AND CHEAP, from No TOO to No. 761. TRADEMARK: GIL LOTT, BIRMINGHAM. For sale by ,' With . Designatinj Importers A Commission Merchants, NO. 134 CHURCH Will Remove on STREET, January 1, to their 198 A 200 CHURCH new Warehouse Steam and Street S. DICKSON, FERGUSON A CO., Belfast. And F. W. HAYES A CO., Banbridge. Broadway. Metals, THOS. J. POPE, 92 John Street. Anthracite and Charcoal Pig Irons, Ingot Copper, Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New Railroad Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons. STREET, Agents for W. HOPKINS A Co., 69 & 71 Cotton All Widths LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS, PATENT LIKEN THREAD. Sole Roads, FOR SALE BY SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS, Numbers. SONS, No. 91 John st., New-York HENRY OWEN, Sole Agent. j George Hughes & Co., *' JOSEPH GIL LOTT A , STREET, NEW YORK, Offer for sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class Distilleries, Kentucky. Descriptive TRADEMARK: GIL LOTT, Name and Desig. WARRANTED, ratingNurnbei JOSEPH MERCHANTS, 58 BROAD LIVERPOOL, and ' Ail orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬ solicited. superior finish, and silk, which it equals in 3 Importer and Dealer in Hardware, and Commission Merchant, tention. WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’ Imitation Oiled Silk. Oar “ Imitation''1 has |. '.A l (of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell & Co.) <- EUROPEAN AN*) ; Jeremiah M. Ward well, 65 MURRAY STREET. Importers oi - •. Cards. Brand & Gihon Co., [January 12, 1867. JJL '• Duck, and\ Weights, A LARGE STOCK ALWAYS ON HAND. THEODORE POLHEMUS A MANUFACTURERS AND 59 Broad Street, r - CO., DEALERS, ’ Corner of Beaver,