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''s’ *THE r iawto’ ferttc, Commercial limes, A failuwjj Monitor, anti insurance frontal WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. YOL. 2. SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1866. CONTENTS. dence, of which The Financial Situation Debt Treasure Movement at New York for the last Seven Years Commercial Failures. Europe and America in 1866 The Broadway road Commercial News *.. and ment of the Miscellaneous 38 36 THE BANKERS GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. Commercial Epitome Exports and Imports Cotton Trade Breadstuffs Dry Goods Trade Prices Current and Tone Market S. Securities, Gold Mj&rket, For¬ eign Exchange, New York City Banks, Philadelphia Banks, Na¬ tional Banks, etc 42 Exchange 45 8ale Prices N. Y. Stock National, State, etc., Securities... 46 47 47-48 Bond List 56 I 57-68 Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List... I Insurance and Mining Journal.... I Advertisements and con¬ move¬ this general pass away when the so, cur¬ Treasury such own T9 60 60-64 If of practical character of that measure is better understood. The well-known mischiefs of violent contraction of the 53 by our business men; prospective condition of the National violent sudden contraction would defeat its purpose, and is equally unnecessary and improbable. FUNDING THE NATIONAL DEBT. Monday Mr. Morrill, from the Committee of Ways and Means, reported to the House of Representatives a bill On l!)e €l)rontcle. The Commercial Secretary of the Treasury. distrust will probably rency are what seem to be dreaded but in the present and of the our account the contraction vague 49 50 61 THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. Epitome of Railway News Railroad, Canal, and Miscellaneous feeling of in Market, is closely anticipated effects of Foreign Intelligence Underground Rail¬ proof will be found the week’s fluctuations in the Stock nected with the THE CHRONICLE. Funding the Mational a NO. 29. Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ for consolidating the public debt. This bill with some modi¬ day morning with the latest news by mail and telegraph up to fications will no doubt become law, anjl as it is, midnight of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued beyond doubt, every morning with all the Commercial and Financial the most news of the important financial measure of previous day the session, we up to the hour of publication. print it entire on another page. In the examination of its TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE [Canvassersfor Subscriptions are For The IN ADVANCE. not authorized to make Collections.] Commercial and Financial Chronicle, with The Daily Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, and mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage) $12 00 and Financial Chronicle, without The Daily Bulletin, (exclusive of postage) For The Daily 10 00 Bulletin, without The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage) 5 00 WILLIAM B. DANA & CO., For The Commercial Publishers, (Chronicle Buildings,) 60 William Street, New York. details THE FINANCIAL SITUATION. prominent topic of discussion in financial circles is the increasing plethora of moaey and the pre¬ vailing loss of confidence are likely to produce on general business. Yesterday the banks and loan institutions were offering freely to lend at 5 per cent. But there were few bor¬ rowers, and the general disposition among conservative men effect which the seems at contract row present to be to avoid all time engagements, and to as far as possible limits. We have outstanding obligations within nar¬ thus an extremely easy loan market coexisting with declining values at the Stock .elsewhere. This ease in monoy is in part due to the usual avenues for employing it, Exchange and closing up of the keep in mind the meet. The chief of these difficulties is the short-date floating amounts millions state of deal, and the difficulties signed to things it is de¬ large amount of our national debt, which obligations. Of our altogether to about 2,800 millions, some 1,100 are represented by long bonds, none of which ma¬ ture before the year 1880. The remainder of the debt, 1,700 millions, is of shorter date, the larger part of it falling due in 1867 and 1868. The problem to be solved by the bill before us then is to raise 1,700 millions almost of dollars during the the money may and other be next two years, or as soon thereafter wanted to extinguish the as greenbacks Mr. outstanding obligations of the Treasury. McCulloch, when he was opinion that the income will be enough to pay all here a of the fortnight ago, expressed the Government from taxation new claims and current expendi¬ If so, the above-mentioned 1,700 millions are all that will be necessary to tures. provide for by a loan. ' among us who say that this amount is too large for us to raise without appealing to foreign capi¬ talists for aid. But the Treasury report recently presented to Congress, shows that during the last year of the war we raised by loans and taxes no less than $1,897,674,224. We shall surely be able to raise 1,700 millions in several years, if during a single year of war we raised 1,900 millionsj without impoverishment, without prostrating our national industry, and without producing more than a Now there and in part to the accumula¬ tion in the vaults of our city banks of National Bank notes. The news of the advance in the Bank of England rate of interest, on the 28th December, has had no influence what¬ ever on our money market, which appears to be governed at present by influences originating in our own financial situation. There is little doubt that the depression in public confi¬ dation ot the must with which the bill has to or A readers our are some transitory retar. swift, deep widening current of our national THE 34 this far-reaching pro¬ vision is too distant to exert much immediate influence. extent of our recuperative On the most cursory examination it will be evident that bear the burdens of the war, the anticipations of the most san¬ the bill in its present state is too vague and general. In guine among us have always fallen short; while the vaticina¬ committee it will doubtless be made more specific. And if it tions of the prophets of evil have been uniformly refuted. be designed to take the place of all previous loan bills whose Notwithstanding these gratifying facts, however, there are, powers have not been exhausted, the aggregate amount of as we have said, a few persons both in and out of Congress^ bonds to be authorized, including those for the seven-thirties, who take the gloomy view of our financial position. It is will approach 1,700 millions, none of which will, we presume, perhaps, in deference to the desponding few that there has be allowed to be negotiated below par. The same principle, been inserted in the draft of the new finance bill the objec¬ of course applies to the foreign loan, if it be authorized; for, tionable and unpopular feature of a foreign loan. obviously, we should not offer our bonds on better terms to This expedient has for some time past been anxiously dis¬ foreigners than to our own citizens. cussed in Washington. It will be remembered that several weeks since we announced that a foreign loan was in contem¬ COMMERCIAL FAILURES. plation. We may state now that some prominent capitalists One of the most singular and gratifying illustrations of are of opinion that 200 millions of five per cents could be the strength of our financial position is the comparatively placed in England at a price equal to about par in currency small number of failures in business during the wTar.- When if the interest were made payable in London. They urge the legal tender act was passed in 1862 some of the most that of the 350 millions of our government five-twenty eminent of our monetary authorities predicted a speedy bonds now in Europe not more than 50 millions are held in collapse of public and private credit such as followed the England; and the demand now springing up among British issue of assignats in France, and was with difficulty avoided capitalists requires only the stimulus of a European pay¬ in the.suspension of specie payments in England. The evil ment of principal and interest, and would probably far out¬ The long predicted omens, however, were not fulfilled. run before long the sum of 40 millions of pounds sterling. crash” did not come. We have had spasms in the money These persons add, moreover, that other points would be market, but they always passed off in a short time; and our secured of no small value to the stability of our future financial machinery with marvellous elasticity accommoda¬ financial position. Prominent among them is the advantage ted itself to the enormous pressure of the difficulties with that the sterling bonds would not be saleable in this coun¬ which it was called to grapple. At length came the close of try. They would then be permanently held abroad. Un¬ the war with a vigorous contraction of the volume of our like the five-twenties, they could not be sent here for sale whenever a monetary panic or the outbreak of war gave paper money; and now there wras a general renewal of the an adverse turn to our foreign exchanges. When we re¬ prophecy that a panic was at hand, compared with which those of 1S47, 1857 and 1861 were to be regarded as of sume specie payments the coin reserve of our banks, it is comparatively limited duration and extent. urged, will be always in danger of being suddenly drawn A most impressive commentary on these unfulfilled pro¬ down while a heavy amount of our bonds are floating in Europe out of the hands of in testers. The safe amount phecies is afforded by the report of failures for the past nine has been reached, they say, if not over-passed; and as years which has just been published by Messrs. R. G. Dun wealth. y » < [January 13,1866. CHRONICLE. And, in estimating measuring the powers, and of our strength to that wealth, in before the oldest of these notes mature, “ foreigners are determined to have more of our securities, it is the part of wisdom in us to provide them with bonds of such a kind as to be at once more acceptable to them and more economical and safe for us. It cannot be denied plausibility in these arguments, and we do not wish at present to controvert them. We only re¬ cur to the subject now to throw light on that provision of the new bill which is chiefly unpopular and attracts the most that there is some attention. observed that the amount and minimum price of the bonds to be authorized is nowhere stated in this enactment. These are grave defects and should be remedied. No loan bill, we believe, has ever been passed without It will be & Co. of this city. The statement is as 1867 1868 ; 4,267 3,113 2,969 1869 2,733 6,986 1860 1861 From this follows for the Northern $265,618,000 73,608,746 51,814,000 61,739,474 178,632,180 report it appears States: 1,662 1862. 1863. 1864. ....I. 496 610 8.679,700 17,626,000 1865. Av’ge 7,899,000 from ’67 to ’65 that while 4,257 failures oc¬ and’ 5,935 in 1861, there were no more than 500 last year and 510 the year before. It is worthy of that the remark pecuniary amount of the failures was twice as large in 1865 as in 1863 and 1864. This is partly ac¬ counted for by the fact that the capital employed by busi¬ ness firms is greater than ever before. There is an increas¬ ing tendency in our capital to move in larger masses than curred in 1857 prescribing limits to the amount to be raised. The fact formerly. Small business firms compete at more disadvan¬ is, however, that Mr. McCulloch possesses already, under tage with richer houses, and are gradually being absorbed former acts, the power to issue bonds to replace the 830 into them. Thus w^e have more men worth $100,000 in millions of seven-thirties, and to pay off part of the other some of our large commercial cities than were reputed five The margin of indebtedness which years ago to be worth $50,000. No doubt much of this re¬ is as yet unprovided for is, therefore, comparatively limited. puted capital is fictitious. But the power accumulating in But the truth is, that the bill seems designed for other pur the moneyed classes from the concentration of capital in large poses than to authorize more bonds than Congress has already masses is attracting the attention of close observers of the short-date obligations. issued. the work of contracting the currency, very directed to be As to little special legislation was needed in this bill, as the existing laws contain authority for funding all the legal tenders except greenbacks, and for converting the latter into compound-in¬ terest notes as *a first step to funding them without dis¬ turbing the movements of the money market. The only novel currency provision is in the sixth section, which de¬ clares that at maturity the compound-interest notes shall cease to be legal tenders. As eighteen months will elapse market. It is one of the signs of the times, and will probably exert no small influence over the future growth our industrial and commercial enterprise. In tracing out the causes of the small number of failures, however, in comparison with what might have been expected, we should not leave out of the account the severe checks money of given at various times to speculation. had more than enough of this malady, no doubt, which have been We have in our grain markets and at the Stock Exchange \ but the -■;f THE CHRONICLE, January 13,1866.] fever has never reached an alarming height without receiv¬ ing from some quarter a sudden timely check. The patient has been let blood, as it were, so that the paroxysm has passed off without very serious or fatal results. of small spasms in the money market has and A quick succession curbed speculation by teaching salutary caution to the great masses of our has saved them from worse disasters. Will this conservative aspect of things be repeated during the present year, or shall we have, at the beginning of 1867, to report a large increase in the number of bankruptcies ? This is a question which each capitalist, merchant, and man¬ business men, ufacturer must answer for himself. The derangement of prices and the feverish condition of the money market, which cannot fail to attend the gradual appreciation of our currency towards the value of coin will introduce a is both natural and so 35 right. And as it is with business men, it is with nations. Emerging at last victorious and reunited from our trial, Europe recognizes in us what Europe could not possibly have recognized in us until the event had proved its existence, an almost boundless elasticity of resources united to an ex¬ traordinary firmness and solidity in our social and political organization. Of course, therefore, the future foreign policy of such a nation becomes at once a matter of the highest importance to all other nations. And equally of course in becoming thus of importance to all other nations, our future foreign policy becomes newly important to ourselves. It will no longer be possible for us to treat our foreign relations exclusively, or even extensively, as we have been too treacherous ele¬ apt in the past to do, from the point of view of sentiment or who keep passion. The reticence and forbearance which of late years large stocks of goods, or are working with borrowed capital. have marked the diplomatic intercourse of the Great Euro¬ These are the classes who profited most by inflation, and they pean Powers, originated in the growing conciousness of will be in danger of suffering most by contraction. The European statesmen that the enormous material and inter¬ ment into the business calculations of all persons causes which diminished the number of failures when our national interests created by modern enterprise and industry lightly jeoparded. A hasty word uttered from the high places of authority in one of the great ous to be in debt under a contracting currency. And our European states, may involve the loss in a single day of hun¬ business men have generally shown an adroit alacrity in ad¬ dreds of millions of dollars throughout the continent. It apting themselves to new circumstances. They are not tra¬ does this not only by paralyzing the movements of a com¬ versing a strange sea. Its soundings have been taken, its merce in which every considerable nation of Europe to-day dangerous points are known. With due caution and circum¬ has a share, the least of which outvies in value the total com¬ spect care there is little cause for despondency and much merce of Europe half a century ago; but also by striking room for confident at every national loan in hope. every stock market of the contin¬ ent. We too, now have entered into the category of nations EUROPE AND AMERICA IN 1866, deeply indebted. Our securities are held on the continent The New Year, which is to the people of this country a and in England in quantities so important that a sudden rise New Year indeed, bringing the end as we see, of war and wast¬ or fall in their prices abroad, must seriously affect all trans¬ ing, bringing the beginning as we hope, of peace and pros¬ actions based on them at home. perity, has been marked for Americans by a striking change Our public voice then will hereafter need to be tempered in the tone and temper with which American affairs are by a discretion born of our fresh responsibilities and of the treated in the old world. new hostages which we have given to fortune. In return This change is particularly remarkable in the British for the press. greater consideration with which we shall henceforth Where twelve months ago we heard only be treated in the councils of the world, we must deprecatory criti¬ expect, were cisms upon our achievements, and it but for our own sake depressing prognostica¬ alone, to exhibit to the world a front tions as to our policy, we now are greeted with of more open and dignified reserve and self-command than was requir¬ earnest commendations alike of our skill in war and of our ed of us when our foreign policy, for the most part, had no¬ wisdom in peace. All this is extremely gratifying, but it is thing more than a passing sensational interest, either for the worth while to consider what it really means, and to ask rest of the world or for ourselves. ourselves whether this new attitude of ours before the world Without departing too far from our traditional policy of may not bring with it new obligations and new duties. avoiding all entangling foreign alliances, it is unavoidable We regret to observe that in some quarters this improve¬ also that we should find ourselves called upon at different ment in the relative position of the Union as a great Chris¬ times to modify our relations with different powers with tian power is treated as if it were an advantage conquered a direct view to successive complications of policy in Eu¬ from the prejudice, and the hostility of mankind in general. rope. We may already observe, for example, a marked dis¬ Nothing could be more unjust or more absurd. position on the part of Great Britain to temper her intimacy So long as the civil war lasted, and so long as our affairs with France by advances to ourselves. Whether it is wise wore the appearance which they presented even so late as in for us to respond to these special advances is not the present January 1865, it was inevitable that foreigners should doubt question. We allude to them simply as illustrating the as to our future. During the four years,—1861-65—as all course which things must henceforth necessarily take as be¬ the world could see, our commerce had been steadily falling tween the greater European nations and this redeemed Re¬ off*, till nearly or quite one-third of its total amount had been public, now become the sixth great power of the world in swept from the seas; and the persistency of the most for¬ the chronological order of promotion, and assuredly not un¬ midable rebellion which modern times has known, might equal to the first of its predecessors in the dynamical order well justify, on the part of those who saw and who of course of importance. could see only the external show of Steam and international law are making all nations mari¬ things, grave expectations of a final collapse of our national system. That a business time. Even Switzerland, enclosed in her mountains, now man who is supposed, and with apparent reason, to be on the floats her flag at sea, and her adventurous sons are to be verge of bankruptcy should fail to command the credit and found trafficking beneath it in either hemisphere. Russia, the influence freely accorded to him when he is seen of Austria, Prussia, as well as Etigland and France, are yearly all men to be issuing triumphantly out of his troubles, ex¬ extending their commercial relations with all quarters of the tending his operations, and reaping harvests of success where globe, and, of course, therefore, yearly increasing their seve¬ he was seemingly destined to gather only ruin and disaster, ral points of contact with ourselves. Our practical men, our currency was swelling its volume will now act in the oppo¬ site direction and tend to increase them. ' It will be danger¬ must not be trifled with or [January 13,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 36 most beyond endurance. Delays are common and vexatious, enterprizing merchants, our property-holders of all sorts, owing to the impediments often existing on the road. Busi¬ must, therefore, make up their minds to take a larger and ness in the city suffers from these causes, and they must be obviated. more lively interest in all matters of foreign policy, than has A tunnel extending from the Battery to the northern part heretofore been required of them ; and in the certain neces¬ of the island, with a freight and passenger railway extending sity of this, lies our best guarantee for such an improvement into the county of Westchester, would afford facilities trans¬ in the calibre and tone of our public men on these points, cending any now enjoyed, and relieve Broadway of half its as shall raise our public action to the height of our new posi¬ Transit from one end of New York to the other blockade. be could accomplished in a few minutes, in safety, which now tion, and make secure at once the assertion of all our rights, requires hours, with risk of detention and other discomforts and the performance of all our duties as a nation of the first too numerous to repeat and too easy to remember. A tun¬ rank and weight in Christendom. nel railroad has become the next requirement of the business UNDERGROUND RAILROAD. first business of the New York Legislature was a bill for a subterranean railroad in this city, THE BROADWAY Among the the notice of this subject will receive much attention dur¬ ing this session. In the refusal of Governor Fenton to ap¬ prove the bill which passed that body in April last, he has indicated certain features which will have to be stricken from any project that may be attempted ; and the several com¬ panies which have organized for the purpose of obtaining a charter for an underground railway will find it to their ad¬ vantage to take that matter into their calculations. The bill of last winter did not restrict the company from destroying Broadway as a thoroughfare, from occupying to an unlimited extent the public parks, nor from improperly prolonging the time of the completion of the road. Besides, it was claimed that the company which had been successful in obtaining the passage of the bill was not organized in good faith for the purpose of performing the work. The project of a Broadway Railroad has been agitated for ten or twelve years in Albany, and a bill passed in 1863 which Governor Seymour declined to sign. It was reason¬ able to suppose that the friends of that measure, having learn¬ ed his objections, would obtain the passage of another , in 1864 which would obviate the difficulty. Accordingly, the Metropolitan Railway Company was organized, having for its professed object the construction of a tunnel under Broad¬ way, and the building of a subterranean railroad. Their bill was introduced in the Senate, and and referred to the Com¬ mittee on Railroads, which reported adversely. Senator White, of Syracuse, at once raised the question of concur¬ rence, at which one of the Committee stated that the idea was chimerical. Mr. White replied that such was not the case. He had examined the Metropolitan Railroad in Lon¬ don, and could assert of his own knowledge that such an undertaking was both feasible and remunerative. But the report was adopted, and New York city railroad bills failed and ^ we presume for that winter. Last winter several bills were brought of the Legislature, every one of them ing contemplating the lay¬ of a railroad in Broadway. The Tunnel Bill was also in¬ troduced into the Senate,a favorable report obtained, and, after The Assembly passed it in Governor the 27th or 28th of April, on the eve of the adjournment of the Legislature. The Governor claiming, however, that the bill amounted vir¬ tually to a confiscating ofthe public parks of the city wherever the road was to go, and did not provide that it should be finished in any reasonable time, and, therefore, that the cor¬ poration might injure the parks, spoil the streets, and t n sell out their enterprise in an unfinished condition, withheld his signature, and the matter came to an end. The importance of such an undertaking can hardly be over¬ efforts, passed that body. turn, and it was received by the two - before each branch engineers have declared it possible ; Canal street, they assert, will not be for the other sewers, the Croton Aque¬ now engaged in rebuilding them and of this port. Our best even the great sewer of an As obstruction. duct Department are adapting them to a new system ; so structed at the present period, that a tunnel if con¬ will make little or no disar¬ rangement ot their plans. The other obstacles pipes and gas-mains, of course, are not difficult to of watersurmount. The readers of the Chronicle are aware that the Metropo¬ litan Railway of London has been a similar manner. In an evil hour, after the great fire of 1666, the advice of Sir Christopher Wren, to widen the streets, succesfully laid down in was not heeded ; and now, since commerce has extended that city beyond its predicted dimensions, the thoroughfares have become inadequate for the transactions of the daily increas¬ ing business. The press and crush at Ludgate Hill, High Holborn, and the Poultry, are not unlike our Broadway at the intersection of Fulton street. Widening is out of the question, tram-ways have been declared a nuisance, as our city-railroads may yet become if they are not better cleansed The with power to lay their track over the city, under it, or through it, as the case might admit. They have constructed the road they judged most suitable—making it by a tunnel. The policed ; and engineers had to devise the remedy. Metropolitan Railway Company was incorporated and as crossed by bridges, but it is their buy the tunnel for a million dollars in gold, and Thames was intention to lay a track They have excavated from the heart of the city for several miles beyond its limits, made the road, secured upon it an immense traffic, and are now realizing handsome divi¬ dends ; indeed, it is allowed that the company can hardly do all the business required of them. The number of passen¬ gers carried average thirty thousand a day, at a fare of two¬ in it. the speed, compared with that oftransit above ground, incomparably greater. ' The passenger finds his journey shorter, easier, and noiseless; no delays of cabs and stages, carts and mammoth express wagons; but a transmission in a very few minutes from the place of starting to the place of destination. It is the purpose of the company to push on their enterprize till all their various lines can be joined. Their business will then be better organized than is now pos¬ sible, and greatly increased. At present the connections are very incomplete, which is a great source of embarrassment to passengers, particularly to persons not familiar with the topography of the city. In a similar manner must Broadway be relieved. The jam and blockade extending from the Astor House downward is a great injury to the business of the city. Many of our citi¬ zens are opposed to a railway on that street, and it is a ques¬ tion whether such a railroad instead of removing obstructions would not make them infinitely worse. Its cars must pass up and down so frequently as greatly to interfere with, if not practically to exclude private vehicles; and carts, ex¬ press wagons, etc., would then take entire possession. Be tween the two dilemmas—the intolerable obstructions which a railroad would create, and those which now exist—the rail¬ way under ground appears to afford us the desired relief. It is possible; engineers assert this, and the engineers of Lon¬ don have proved it. It would be remunerative, for.it would add thirty per cent, at once to the business of this city. pence ; is These two points determined, all that remains is to organize population of New York is 700,000 a company of enterprizing and intelligent capitalists to ob¬ or a million, it is certain that the present railway and other tain a suitable charter, and hasten the work forward to an accommodations are inadequate. We have the 2d 3d 4th The matter is of vital importance, but we 5th 6th 7th 8th and 9th avenue railroads, also the Broadway early completion. trust that our legislators will see to it, that the interests of Parallel, East Broadway, and the “ Belt,” using almost all the city are not sacrificed, and that the company is properly our thoroughfares which extend up and down on the island; restricted while executing the work, and when it has become and yet the accomodations for passenger transit appear to be remunerative that the city shall receive suitable recompense no more abundant than they were five years ago. The cars are for the franchise. crowded every night and morning beyond comfort, and al¬ estimated. Whether the TREASURE 37 THE CHRONICLE. January 13,1866.] MOVEMENT AT NEW YORK FOR THE LAST SEVEN YEARS. the interior, and the amounts shipped in hanks and the Sub-Treasury at the com¬ port for the period stated. Statement of the movement of treasure at New York, showing the amounts received from California, foreign ports, and to foreign ports and the interior monthly and yearly for the seven years ending December 31, 1865; the amount mencement and close of each month and year—the whole forming a complete history of the movement of treasure at this also 1865. Treasure in banks and Sub-Treasury 1st of month. on Months, etc. January, February March • April .. . May 34,522,341 36,851,995 39,897,087 Juue 44,0911,101 49,432.500 52,404,893 46,595,974 Treas. in Total snp—Accessions of treasure during month, etc. v Received ply of treas. Imported From inland from from foreign sources Aggregate for month, etc. accessions. & hoards. California. ports. $2,043,457 $52,268 914,735 1,668,975 2,307,025 106,704 October November 44.566,493 December 50.695,037 1,092,805 1,676,177 2,040.446 2,481,088 1,952,675 3,346,283 30,054,450 July. August September Year 1865 January February. March April May— June July August September October November December. ... ... Year 1864. 249,732 253,640 4.710.940 182,072 194,224 2,668,542 236,492 177,085 $33,527,103 $3,472,653 4,181,S53 799,350 1,372,824 8,S92,448 5,329,172 243,242 1.257.651 750,469 $1,376,928 77,942 236,526 5,985,523 127,084 2,214,731 l 21,531,786 2,137,011 37,532,311 $37,992,534 $9:19.201 $141,790 $6,348,554 39,963,000 1.“250,069 88,150 43,111,000 47.164,843 41,025,220 1,121,838 854,242 101 437 4,825,148 4,624.627 98J.770 6(50.092 36,564,325 31,057,550 723,951 711,645 146,731 128,052 31,898,050 33,206,799 31,943,614 33,95-1.867 1.241,155 1.089.159 245,858 28.960,268 37,992,534 35,545,542 37,233,908 40,768,336 50.224,271 49,298,573 50,156,486 53,959,291 5-1,639,563 49,155,004 52,741,217 56,383,135 5,203.292 2,711,567 3,916,341 10,327,181 6.320,373 6,057,385 4,526,791 2,284,670 2.559,030 8,174,724 5,688,098 > banks and ^-Treasure withdrawn from Returned Sub-Treasury Exported inland and to foreign Aggregate on last of month. to hoards. \vithdrawn. ports. 381.913 871,249 723.986 723.986 1,554,39S 2,494,973 1,554,398 52.404,893 8,043,589 4,588,511 2.046,180 2,752,161 46.595.974 44.566,493 50,695,037 53.630.974 37,624,504 53,630,974 $5,459,079 $39,963,000 3.015.367 43,111,000 ........ 1,800,559 1,392,602 7,275,679 47,160,813 41,025,220 $45,422,079 $5,459,079 46,126,367 3.015,367 48,961,402 48,300,899 43,025,255 1,800,559 5,883,077 37,435.007 5,170,551 3,309,887 2,000,035 3.310,690 870,682 4.150,387 7,620,901 $ ... 35,207,937 34,207,813 58,220 855,378 129,775 3,522.321 882.276 161,627 1,229,160 4,507.474 2,273,063 34,779,012 36,451,088 36,227,930 ........ 2.205,679 114,976 4,876,964 7,197,559 36,157,827 7,267,662 6,103,377 12,907,803 2,265,522 30,291,221 45,464,546 83,457,080 50,803,122 $45,019,360 45,016,085 $4,624,574 2,835.398 3,309,887 31,898,050 1,001,014 33,206,799 31,943,614 33,954,867 -2,835,39S : 2,496,221 7,267,662 6,103,377 2,496,221 ........ 2,599,508 , 36,564,325 31,057,550 6,377,457 1,206,906 1,001,014 2,309,763 * 6,460,930 6,460,930 822.750 324,834 1,572,213 , 2,752.161 $7,429,5-15 6,163,367 5,850,402 406,173 5,5-48,616 2,072,285 2,516,226 2,046,180 30,003,683 1,140,056 i 5,199,472 91,255,558 285,814 36,851,995 39,897,087 42,969,200 44,099,101 49,432,500 7,255,071 61,201,108 1864. ' $30,342,250 34,522,3-41 $3,184,853 1,023,201 381,913 871,249 7,255,071 5,199,472 $ $3,184,853 1,023,201 28,960,268 30,054,450 53,402,630 30,054,450 $4,624,574 3,965,684 6,585,442 $40,394,786 41,060,421 1863. $1,609,382 3,455,505 $40,971,000 40,394,786 41,050,421 $2,337,682 951,823 1,697,176 $101,906 123,616 1.052,999 April 37,338,770 May...... 38,465,314 40,160,452 724,9:34 776,122 107,061 197,217 2,267,383 2,837,478 809.176 109.997 726,027 831,113 750,259 182,245 113.877 78,231 2,929,224 1,363,751 888,063 January $4,048,370 July August September.... 42,641,085 39,644,227 3,786,333 4,621,299 2,873,791 3,099,378 3.810,817 3,848,397 2,272,023 1,833,053 4,614,823 October 39,146,457 38,370,251 1,032,899 78,053 4,322.998 5,433,950 713,021 103.144 3.099,137 36,847,190 857.(588 118,961 5,427,748 3,915,392 6,404,397 44,913,108 41,477,280 42,626,842 44,580,407 42,285,553 43,251,587 Year 1863. 40,971,000 12,207,320 1,528,279 33,040,001 47,775,600 ,Tanuary....... $29,030,000 29.659,711 31.335,000 $2,199,533 2,250,795 1,846,752 $163,658 April 34,353,000 May July August September.... 35,729,000 38,396,000 36,863,000 47,758,000 37,827,000 1,834,117 1,939,771 1,911,099 $921,794 3,142,406 3,554 154 3*553,406 5,781,477 6,362,492 6,781,868 October. November December 41,381,000 40,800,000 39,153,000 2,837,298 2,651,211 1,435,627 29,030,000 25,079,787 February March : . June. 38,012,019 November.... December. 213.971 3.965,684 6,585,442 1,972,834 2,115,679 43,924,212 40,438,148 37,338,770 5.438,363 5,438,383 5,259,053 5,259,053 38,465,314 40,160,452 42,641,085 39,644,227 38,022,019 39,146,457 38,370,251 36,847,190 37,992,534 87,746,590 49,754,056 49,754,066 37,992,534 $32,314,985 35.111.919 36,824,233 46,730,614 45,825.337 $2,658,274 3.776,919 2,471,233 4,037,675 5,164,636 9,867,614 8,0 i7,337 41.540,532 3,713.532 4,566,251 5,490,112 44.466.919 47,507,519 45,366,251 44,843,112 3,085,919 6,707,519 6,213,251 3,673,1 2 $2,658,274 3,776,919 2,47',233 4,037,675 5,164,636 9,867,614 8,067,337 3,713,532 3,085,919 6,707,519 3,673,112 $29,656,711 31,335,000 34,353,000 35,729,000 38,396,000 36,863,000 37,758,000 87,827,000 41,381,000 40,800,000 30,153,000 40,971,000 71,378,021 100,408,021 59,437,021 59,437,021 40,971,000 $41,547,334 45,894,960 52,617,303 57.204.254 67,884,639 64,999,215 65,151,866 67,195,307 62.346.255 57,320,143 $58,894 1,102,926 301,802 1,412,674 128,900 244,242 11,020 3,600 15,756 15,038 48,385 893,013 $1,488,440 94,034, 15,501 3,391,580 135,739 .9,054,973 3,240,846 8,891,707 8,530,499 6,305,105 744,782 26,919,906 $1,542,334 1,196,960 317,303 4,804,254 264,839 9,299,215 $40,000,000 44,700,000 52,300,000 3,251,866 8,895,307 8,546,355 6,320,143 793,167 27,812,919 51,900,000 53,800,000 29,030,000 101,674,362 4,236,250 68,408,112 72,644,362 29,030,000 $3,871,894 $30,461,894 $853,562 32,747,S83 33,881.663 977,009 $308,332 370,874 $1,161,894 3.447,883 42,276,131 44,008,859 1,972,834 2,115,679 1.367,774 1.367,774 5,268.881 3,465,261 3,480.385 5,268,881 3,465,261 3,480,385 6,210,156 6,210,156 1862. February March June Year 1862. 62,007 88.327 26.152 110,388 61.023 219,001 92,703 121,318 256,676 109,708 78,316 1,961,468 2,070,198 2,641,918 t 1,390,277 $3,284,985 5,455,208 5,480,233 5,413,675 7,831,636 8,334,614 8,962,337 3,782.532 6,639,919 6,126,519 1,619.631 3,876,683 3,532,545 1,805,332 3,976,169 43,907,957 39,706,675 43,560,636 6,213,251 1861. $4,185,11)5 3,622,893 April May $30,100,000 40,000,000 44,700,000 52,300,000 52,400,000 June 57,600,000 2,370,897 2,951.253 1,977,827 2,012.062 July August September 55.700.000 2,055,368 61,900,000 4.245,755 58.300,000 2,815,243 2,980,815 January February. March . October November.... December. 53,800,000 51,100.000 53,800,000 Year 1861. 30,100,000 ... 2,274,067 5,546,406 1,953,001 3,486,812 5,387,153 6,996.498 1,049,552 1,231,012 639,328 908,825 2,584,342 2,684,389 34,485,949 $11,447,334 $7,262,229 * * . . .., , 358,530 5,896,960 7,917,303 4,90-4,254 5,464,639 7,399,215 9,451,866 5,295,307 4,046,255 3,520,143 3,493,167 3,042,919 71,574,362 37,088,413 54,593,167 56,842,919 • 52,400,000 57,600,000 55,700,000 61,900,000 58,300,000 53,800,000 1860. January February $26,590,000 29,300,000 31,400,000 31,000,600 30,530,000 30,400,000 $3,643,844 $228,050 195,175 6,174,041 December.... 21,000,000 3,252,708 2,404,550 2,601,548 2,762,094 2,927,232 2,218,174 2,790,893 2,928.881 2,678,866 3,240,630 4,130,851 Year 1860. 26,590,000 34,580,271 8,852,330 13,162,858 $32,233,000 $2,587,013 2,607,890 1,966,414 $71,308 $. 2,211.337 $2,658,321 55,597 2,103,677 6,039,167 March April...-. May June July August September October November. 27,500,000 27,000,000 22,500,000 at,400,000 ... 26,900,000 ... 6,563,985 7,454.815 6,563,985 7,454,815 28.158.734 29,006,395 30,587,428 31,304,892 3,758,734 3,758,734 2,106.395 202,401 9,062,337 1,002,491 9,587,428 1,204,892 $29,300,000 31,400,000 31,000,000 30,530,000 30,400,000 27,500,000 27,000,000 22.500,000 24,400,000 26,900,000 21,000,000 30,100,000 83,185,459 42,191,171 10,894,288 53,085,459 30,100,000 $34,891,321 $2,305,688 2,371,427 3,343,677 $265,633 $2,571,321 $32,320,000 2,976,576 2,981,663 2.650.734 5,429,936 5,942,080 64,351 3,781,460 6,063,985 140,750 255,695 1,083,838 23,172 2,954,815 5.658.734 4.606,395 3,687,428 10,304,892 29,954,815 56,595,459 85,094 49,186 96,060 38,272 492,019 2,571,782 2,474,158 843,691 446,798 33.650.734 35,959,936 36,342,080 33,563,985 2.381,663 2,381,663 2,965,500 5,559,936 8,842,080 1,347,883 3,120,734 155,234 5,559,936 8,842,080 - 2,106,395 525,091 1859. January February 32 320,000 March 34,860,000 33,620,000 33,490,000 32,870,000 April May 92,200 81,666 272,441 ...... 67,240,416 99,473,416 69,715,866 3,467,550 72,883,416 26,590,000 Recapitulation. $61,201,108 $91,255,558 $7,620,901 2,599,508 $37,624,584 $53,630,974 3,167,550 53,402,630 49,754,056 59,437,021 72,644,362 53,085,459 72,883,416 92,690,357 308,831,526 October Novemher.... December.... 28,230,000 25,800,000 26,330,000 24,310,000 26,120,000 Year 1859. 32,233,000 39,592,720 2,816,421 24,831,275 $30,054,450 $2,137,011 29,030,000 $21,531,786 12,907,803 12,207,320 25,079,787 30,100,000 26,590,000 32,233,000 34,580,271 39,592,720 2,265,522 1,528,279 1,390,277 87,088,413 8,852,330 2,816,421 $37,532,311 30,291,221 33,040,001 43,907,957 $32,233,000 180,385,636 56,078,253 June July 28,910,000 August September... 1865.. 1864.. 1863. 1862.. 1861.. 1860.. 37,992,534 40,971,000 1859.. Six years, 1860-65. .. 34,485,949 34,860,000 33,620,000 2,371,427 3,343,677 6,259,167 11,421,032 3,462,297 2,639,164 7,349,812 3,127,562 3.418,784 3,555,215 3,881,861 3,986,606 4,088,369 3,805,894 3,289,449 3,277,663 122,436 485,892 175,139 ! 37,231,427 36,963,677 39,659,167 44,291,032 36,911,107 38,281,019 32,565,025 34,597,681 30,766,540 30,503,123 29,582,297 4,911,427 10,891,032 4,041,107 5,314,019 9,371,019 4,335,025 348,419 184.553 630.646 4,524,759 167,087 2.736,587 8,797,681 4,436,540 184,634 6,193,123 6,259,167 11,421,032 7,496,981 10,051,019 6,409,783 8,267,681 5,344,159 4.383,123 2,062,129 83,457,080 87,746,590 100,408,021 101,674,362 13,162,858 24,831,275 45,464,546 46,775,600 71,378,021 71,574,362 56,595,459 67,240 416 83,185,457 99,478,416 $30,003,683 50,803,122 49,754,056 59,437,021 4,236,250 42,191,171 69,715,866 182,765,623 419,229,512 452,463,502 306,141,169 355,242 10,051,019 6,765,025 8,267,681 1,112,381 6,456,540 930,168 2,992,297 33,400,000 32,870,000 28,910,000 28,280,000 25,800,000 26,380,000 24,310,300 26,120,000 26,590,000 ........ 504,126 68,408.112 10,894,286 8,001,107 4,383,123 30,054,450 37,992,534 40,971,000 29,080,000 80,100,000 26,590,000 _ 53,630,974 EXPORTS FROM NEW TORE FOR THR WEEK. jForttgti Ntrofl. LONDON AND LIVERPOOL DATES TO DECEMBER 30. The stock and share market has been very dull during the week. The apprehension of dearer money induced caution, and a general tendency to realize, which depressed the prices of nearly all kinds of securities. Consols receded from the extraordinarily low quota¬ tions of last week. The demand for discount at the Bank of Eng¬ land and private houses was large, owing to the pressure of money for mercantile balances at the close of the year*. the date named the coin and bullion have declined from £14.465,032 the date of the present Bank difference of £1,061,930, and the reserve has fallen £13,403 102 (the amount held at return), being a of £939,805. Of this diminution, £469,307 in the coin and bullion and £569,532 in from £8,531,072 to £7,591,267—a reduction the has taken place in the week ending December 27. No corresponding advance has yet been notified by the Bank of France, and the anomaly therefore is presented of a difference of 3 reserve is not encouraging Ser centcircumstance between the which rates respectively currentas inregards Paris theproba and Lonon—a $2,596,815 $4,091,557 In the commercial department will be found the official detailed statement of the imports and exports for the week. The following will show the exports of specie from the port of New York, for the week ending January 6, 1866 : Jan. 8—Steamer “ Eagle, Havana— Spanish gold 8—Steamer Europe, Havre- $10,625 Gold bars 6-—Steamer City of Washington, Silver bars ‘ The Bank of England rate of discount was advanced from 6 to 7 per cent at the weekly meeting on Thursday. From the latter rate it was reduced on the 23rd December to 6 per cent. Since $1,916,698 * 1666. 1864. 1868. For the week GREAT BRITAIN. to [January 13,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 38 • .....' Liverpool— 65,451 17,717- Specie “ 6-—Steamer Saxonia, Hamburg-— Gold bars : Silver bars German silver 212,725 116,809 800 $552,027 Total since Jan. 1,1866 Same time m 1866 1864 128,400 $594,358 1863 1862 1861 I860 1869. . 1857 1866... 275,809 23,210 15,799 1856 1854, 287,779 85,080 1863 1,808,466 325,038 442,141 * Same time in 1868 ... 65,056 848,977 1,052,558 1852 moderate charges at London, since the difference of 2 per cent, which had already long existed between the two capitals, must have drawn thither a con¬ The New Financial Measure—Mr. McCulloch’s Bill.—The siderable amount of Continental money for employment. following is the financial bill introduced into Congress on the 8th inst, The action of the Bank Directors in advancing the rate was not drafted by Secretary McCulloch, aDd presented by Mr. Morrill, and anticipated by a large number of speculators. The consequence referred to the Finance Committee. The bill 13 entitled : “ A bill was that a check was given to transactions in the market for pub¬ lic securities. The funds at one period experienced a fall of nearly to authorize the issue of bonds for funding the obligations of the A per cent, but the closing quotation of consols for the account United States, and for other purposes showed a decline of only A, while the price for money was unaltered. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the A number of the speculative foreign stocks left off rather lower, United States of America in Congress assembled, That to enable the though above the worst point. Banking financial, and miscellane¬ Secretary of the Treasury to fund United States notes, Treasury notes, ous shares were dull, the chief exception being a partial recovery temporary logos, Clearing-House certificates, certificates of indebted¬ oility of any early permanent return to more in London financial. there have been sixteen variations in the Bank rate It fell from 6 per cent to 3 in June, and rose to 7 per cent in October and December. The bank’s stock of bullion has ranged from £16,260,000 down to £13,180,000. Con¬ During the year 1865 of discount. sols have varied from 911 down to 86$. The magnitude of the demand for gold for exportation to the continent is shown in the fact that the whole of the £498.000 by the steamer Great Britain, from Australia, has been bought for transmission to Paris, as well as the supplies from America, besides the amount withdrawn from the bank. These remittances are un¬ derstood to be chiefly in payment for silver, which is sent from Mar¬ seilles to the East, to a very large extent on English account. The discount establishments now allow 5 per cent for money at call, 51 at 7 days’ notice, and 6 at 14 days’ notice, showing a rise of A to i per cent. The joint stock banks have also raised their terms for deposits from 41 to 5 per cent, except t hat the London aDd Westminster Bank give only 4 per cent for sums below £500. The Board of Trade returns for the month of November, and the first eleven months of the year, have been published. The follow¬ ing i« a statement of the total declared value of the exports of Brit, ish aDd Irish produce and manufactures for the month and eleven months of the last three years : Month of November. 1868 £12,768,323 12,066,213 16,567,742 1864 1866 Eleven months. £182,186,368 , 148,340,865 160,882,344 These figures are very remarkable. The total for the month is by £3,502,529 than it was in the corresponding month of last year, and more by £2,809,419 than in November, 1863. For the first eleven months of the present year, the exports, it will be seen, are £2,491,479 more than in the same period of last year, as compared with 1863, there is an increase of no less than more £18,696,976. ness, and the floating debt of every description, and to pay amount may be required for the payment of the existing and whatever matured indebtedness and the current expenses of the government, he is hereby authorized to issue to the amount that*may be required for the abovenamed purposes coupon or registered bonds of the United States, pay¬ able in not over forty years from date, and redeemable at such time after date as may be fixed by him. Such bonds may be sold, and the principal and interest may be made payable either in the United States or in Europe ; and such of said bonds as may be made payable, prin¬ cipal and interest, at the Treasury of the United States shall bear in¬ terest at the rpte of not over six per centum per annum, payable semi¬ annually ; and such bonds as may be made payable, principal and in¬ terest, in Europe, shall bear interest at the rate of not over five per centum per annum, payable semi annually. The principal and interest of the bonds issued under this act which may be made payable at the Treasury of the United States shall be payable in the coin of the Uni¬ ted States ; the principal and interest of the bonds which may be made payable in Europe shall be payable in the coin or currency of the country in Europe in which they may be made payable. And the bonds hereby autthorized to be issued shall be of such denominations, not less than fifty dollars, as may be determined by the Secretary of the Treasury, and be may dispose of the same, at any time, at the market value thereof, for coin of the United States, or for foreign coin or exchange, or for United States notes, Treasury notes, notes of the banks organized* under the act entitled “An Act to Provide a National Currency* etc., approved June 3, 1864, or any other obligations of the United States ; and he may exchange any bonds authorized by this act for any other bonds of the United States, or for any bonds authorized by this act. And all bonds issued under this act shall be exempt from taxation by or under State or municipal authority. Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That the bonds authorized by this act shall be in such form as the Secretary of the Treasury may direct, and shall bear the written signature of the Register of the Treasury, or some officer or officers appointed by the Secretary to eign the same ; and also, as evidence of lawful issue, the imprint of a copy of the seal of the Treasury Department. Sec. 8. And be it further enacted, That the necessary expenses of engraving, printing, preparing and issuing the bonds hereby authorized, and of COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. . disposing of Exports Week.—The selling the payable in f>y Imports or same, and of paying the interest that through may be made Europe an agent or agents for this purpose the Secretary, shall be paid out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated. Sec. 4. And be it further enacted, That any person or persons who employed following are the imports at New York for the week ^ending (for drygoods) Jan. 4, shall, in any way, aid or abet in importing, or purchasing, or selling, or and for the week ending (for general merchandise) Jan. 5 : engraving, or transferring, or printing, or issuing, auy bond or cou¬ pon authorized by or issued under this act, or who shall, in any manner FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NSW TORE FOR THE WEEK. or by any process, aid or abet in importing, or purchasing, or selling, 1864. 1866. 1865. or engraving, or transferring, or printiug, or issuing, anything in imita¬ Drygoods $2,501,626 $1,600,487 $1,996,898 tion of any bond or coupon, or of any part of any bond or coupon, de¬ General merchandise 2,980,028 632,884 2,108,070 signed either for ornament or obligation, so authorized or issued, except under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury ; or who shall, in Total for the week $6,481,664 $2,082,821 $4,108,468 any way, engage or assist in manufacturing, or importing, or purchas¬ In our report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports ot ing, or selling any pader for the purpose of printing thereon any bond or coupon, or anything in imitation of any bond or coupon, or any dry-goods for one week later. part The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) or parts thereof designed either for ornament or obligation, so authorized or issued, shall be deemed guilty of felony, and shall, on conviction from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending thereof, be punished by fine, not exceeding twenty thousand dollars, or January 8th. by imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years, or by both. and for the - THE CHRONICLE. 13,1866.] January Requisition®. enacted, That all acta or parts of acts here¬ to prevent fraud or counterfeiting, and for the punishment thereof, which are or may be made applicable to the issues herein authorized, are hereby re-enacted and made applicable And be ii further tofore enacted by Congress j 2,396,350 3,397,330 Sec. 5. Total of all debt, except authorized by or issued under thisr And be it further enacted, That the interest bearing Treasu¬ ry notes of the United States which may have been declared to be a legal tender to the same extent as United States notes, for their face value excluding interest, shall cease to be a legal tender from and after and all bonds or coupons to any act. Sec. 6. the maturity thereof. Date of Acts. Western R.R. Sterling Coupon Acts 1888-39-41 do do do do do do do do do enacted, That so much of the act entitled of United States notes, and for the re¬ floating debt of the hundred and sixty-two, as provides for M the purchase or payment of one per centum of the entire debt4 of the United States, to be mode within each fiscal year after the first day of July, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, which to be set apart as a sinking fund, and the interest of which shall in like manner be applied to the purchese or payment of the public debt, the Secretary of the Treasury shall, from time to time, direct,” be, is table this port New York for 1865.—The following 6hows the total number of passengers that have arrived at their numbers in each respective month of the year, and the names of the various ports of their embarkation with the totals of each separate port of embarkation : during the year 1865 ; NUMBER OF EMIGRANTS AND PORT8 FROM WHICH pon 43 r1 < O O Months. 3 3 a 0 t- £> ■3 <0 3 0 •H 1865. iJ January.... February... 3,363 March 4,394 1,521 May. 16,315 June 15,910 3 0 S <s$ txi Qti > 0 a3 O m 3 M 102 100 117 1.26 228 513 821 1622 661 1135 237 928 386 904 d O 3 3 cS 0 0 *3 "So k <0 «-> O) CQ -e , 63 208 209 47 m • m , # . 10,818 24,845 27,219 21,296 21,811 23,096 20,179 25,045 12,248 #. . , 24 .. ., ... • Totals 111,790 5,560 27,933 Grand totals , .. i20 4,369 July 452 58 3,805 12,466 August 187 1017 104 3,298 203 September. 12,208 1 ,257 3,377 1,445 4,537 218 238 2.539 :1,018 1411 October.... 10,218 ►-1 00 -a 7.017 7:10 1218 November. 9,274 11,651 4,968 86 29i 56 267 2,311 549 182 December.. 2,473 5,931 12,623 H 6.178 , 6,241 9,462 290 . • # Coupons and the ,, • 72 ed above, * -DESTINATION OF cent 1865. Carolina 412|New Brunswick... 294! Oregon 241 Louisiana Bv Columbia Canada 1,6011 Massachusetts. California Connecticut 1,0701 Maryland 2,682'Maine 3i Michigan Colorado Cuba Central America... Delaware Diet. Columbia Florida 9,S99iOhio 2,077 Pennsylvania 422! Rhode Island 3,024 S. Carolina “ ‘ 1,892 Texas 4,971 Tennessee 1888 » 55 1889 £23,500 39,300 62,700 April A Oct. it 5 1890 5 5 5 5 1890 1891 1898 1894 $900,000 April A Oct. 916,500 909,000 541,000 <( Cl cc 5 5 5 5 5 5 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1871 Jan. A 75,000 75,000 July. 14 75,000 75,000 75,000 44 44 C 4 60,000 44 6 1877 Jan. A 400,000 July. Department.—It is stated by a the Treasury Department has been of late as money, and that if stolen presented to it for payment. Illinois.—The Public Debt of the State of Illinois, on the 30th of December, 1865, was $9,982,961 49, against $11,121,564 45 on the corresponding date in 1864—a decrease within a year of $1,138,602 96. The following is a detailed statement of the debt due on the 30th Debt the of State of 27 49 18 December, 1865 : 11,240 25,810 Ill. and Mich, canal bonds, dated 1837 and 1839, due after 1860, un¬ registered 1,357 83 Ill. and Mich, canal bonds, dated 1837 and 1839, due after 1860, reg¬ 12,098 IN. 27j Kansas it ment EMIGRANTS FOR 6; Kentucky 180,000 157,400 and in possession of inno¬ parties, such holders would be the legal owners, the depart¬ has decided that in no event will they refuse to cash coupons exchanged during the year : Arkansas Alabama 90,000 4% 5 5 5 annoyed by applications from persons who, having lost coupons, ask the department to suspend payment on the same, and return them to the applicants. Recognizing the fact that coupons are 24 7* 35,051 2253 514 602 47 Treasury Washington paper that 199,839 The following is the destination of the emigrants arriving, as stat¬ ... R. R., Act® 0 5,218 2,416 112 80 30 1,621 140 3,056 287 2,987 470 •. OB 959 £473,500 April A Oct. 5 $425,000 3 1,091 . 1868 outstand’g Payable. $1,166,500 Acts 1854-57 a <5 Ph Coupon Bonds, Norwich and Worcester 0 V - do do do do do do Eastern R. R. Coupon Bonds, 1857 do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 3 a 4a 3 0 do do do do do do do do do e w 1 1869 1870 1871 R.R. Sterling Cou¬ Bonds, Acts 1854-59-60 Troy and Greenfield Acts 1854-59-60 © sS & -u> Ut O O 268 oS 3 a a> 134 160 591 75 268 123 840 107 236 1,738 314 5,487 920 2,075 297 3,443 7,567 April . St t-i a a Bonds, Amount Interest— Rate. £114,500 THEY EMBARKED. ►» CORPORATIONS. Principal payable. £899,900 hereby, repealed. at RAILROAD Troy & Greenfield as Immigration 13,888,008 $7,715,141 LOANS TO demption or funding thereof, and for funding the Uuited States,” approved February twenty-five, eighteen and the same is 90,608,144 and cash, ap¬ Net debt Sec. 7. And be it further An act to authorize the issue u railroad loan® sinking funds. Back Bay lands, railroad stock plicable to the redemption of the public debt Less 40 430 268 1,080 istered Ill. and Mich, $268,000 00 due after 1870, un¬ HI. and Mich, canal bonds, dated 1841 and 1839, due after 1870, reg¬ 1,304 Mississippi.... istered 216 Virginia 585 -5 N. Hampshire. 5,219 Ill. and Mich, canal bonds, dated 1847 and 1839, due after 1860, un¬ 46 Wisconsin 21 Nova Scotia... Georgia 16 registered 91,480 West Indies 17,914 New York Dlinois HI. and Mich, canal bonds, dated 1847 and 1839, due after 1860, 6,056 3,720 New Jersey Iowa 117 registered Indiana 2,852 Nebraska Ill. and Mich, canal bonds, £225 each, due after 1870, interest pay¬ able in New York, registered Public Debt of Massachusetts.—The following, taken from Ill. and Mich, canal bonds, £225 each, due after 1870, interest pay¬ able in New York, registered a special circular issued by Dupce, Beck & Saylcs, of Boston, gives HI. and Mich, canal bonds, £225 each, due after 1870, interest pay¬ able in London, unregistered a complete exhibit of the public debt and railroad loans of the State Ill. and Mich, canal bonds, £225 each, due after 1870, interest pay. able in London, registered of Massachusetts, as it existed ou the 30th of November, 1865 : Ill. and Mich, canal bonds, £300 each, due after 1870, interest pay¬ -Interest Amount Principal able in London, unregistered Aiifatond V outstand’g Payable. payable. Rate. Date of Acts. and Mich, canal bonds, £300 each, due after 1870, interest pay¬ $100, 0<X) HI.able June & Dec. 6 in London, registered 1856 150,000 6 April & Oct. 1857 15,000 HI. and Mich, canal bonds, £100 each, due after 1870, interest pay¬ June & Dec. 5 1868 1861 able in London, unregistered 75,000 6 HI. and Mich, canal bonds, £100 each, due after 1870, interest pay¬ 1861 150,000 Jan. & July. 5 1870 1861 able in London, registered • • • — ••••••• 21,000 June & Doc. 5 HI. and Mich, canal bonds refunded under act of 16 Fed., 1865, due 1859...... 89,000 6 35 j Minnesota 3! Missouri ... 54 Vermont. 24 Utah 180; Mexico canal bonds, dated 1841 and 1839, registered — .. 625,000 00 46,000 00 60,000 00 191,000 00 254,400 00 .. 35,000 00 26,200 00 699,000 00 310,800 00 60,000 0$ , PovoKlo 439,200 00# 12,888 89 C4 , 44 1861 1852 1861 1861 1861-2-4 1853 1861-2-4 1854 1854 1361-2-4 1861-2-4 1861-2-4 1857 1861-2-4 1861-2-4, 1860-62 44 July. April & Oct. Jan. & July. April & Oct. Jan. & July. Jan. 5 6 6 t k 44 44 6 6 .. ' interest payable in . Re¬ Temporary loan from banks, solves 1865 Acts 1863 Temporary loan, 1865 Resolves Payable. 304,000 150,000 94,000 300,000 420,000 1,430,000 July. 400,000 200,000 220,000 1,088,000 6,429,000 44 May & Nov. July. May & Nov. Jan. & $12,556,000 gold) Rate. Amount. 6 2,594,736 var. 6 274,400 2,880,758 (principal and interest payable at legal tenders) Debt past due 125,000 50,000 30 d. notice. 6 to 12 mos. 83,000 341,000 June & Dec. Jan. & 6 6 5 6 5 1 Deposit Loan, Acts 1863, Total June & Dec. 5 6 5 Total (principal and . April & Oct. 6 6 1863-64 1863-4-5 _ Jan. & July. 6 5 5 1861-2-4 205,000 100,000 17,000 7 3-10 maturity in 1.. io00 after 1860 Thornton loan bonds, due Bank and Internal Improvement after 1879 — Bonds due after 1860 Internal Improvement Stock due after 1870 Liquidation Bonds due after I860. New Internal Improvement Stock due after 1870 New Internal Improvement Interest Bonds due after 1877 Interest Stock of 1857. due after 1860 Refunded Stock dated July 1,1869, due after 1860. Refunded Stock dated July 1.1S59, due after 1862 Refunded Stock dated July 1,1859, due after 1865 Refunded Stock dated July 1, 1859. due after 1869 Refunded Stock dated July 1,1859, due after 1870 Refunded Wbck dated July 1,18'9, due after 1876 Refunded Stock dated July 1,1869, due after 1877 Refunded Stock dated July, issued to Normal University after Illinois War Bonds dated July 1,1861, due afterl879, $1,000 each.. Hlinois War Bonds dated July 1,1861, due after 1879, $500 each.... niinois War Bonds dated July 1,1861, due after 1879, $100 each.... 108,799 99 22,000 176,000 81,000 42,000 00 00 00 00 198,372 00 1,817,724 69 1,136^76 97 689.198 96 1,000 00 436,000 00 31,090 00 107,000 00 406,000 00 97,000 00 545.000 00 66,000 00 621,000 00 317,000 00 219,700 00 9,982,961 49 11,121.664 45 12,222,388 22 Debt Cook County, III.—On the 31st of December, 1864, the debt of Cook county amounted to $774,000. During the past year, however, in order to fill the call by the Government, the coun¬ 5,749,894 ty issued $2,100,000 for bounties. This scrip beam interest at the Total Same time Same time in 1864 in 1862 of 40 THE CHRONICLE. rate of 10 per long 7 tail cent per annum but it is being rapidly funded into following is a statement in de¬ ; per cent bonds at 90. thorized to withdraw its bonded securities, and make a for the redemption of the remainder of its notes. It deposit of cash is evident, there¬ The fore, that the final closing of the affairs of : II..BTehat is Ten per cent old Bonds Six per cent Bonds, 73 150,000 2,100,000 Add premium for I.Neithr Funding Scrip 2,293,000 210,000 ? Total County Debt Total Debt 31st Dec., ’64 Debt of City of the Debt of the of Chicago.—The following is city of Chicago, Dec. 31, 1865 Water Debt closing of 1,184,000 00 371.000 00 956.500 00 Funded Debt, old issue Funded Debt, new issue School Construction Bonds Police Bonds Certificates of Indebtedness for sanitary purposes Floating liabilities and bills payable 25,000 90 6,000 00 20.000 00 ' 205,244 98 DTotal 4.231,744 98 3,830,795 30 Chicago, 31st Dec., 1864 Increase in 1865 The statement $1,464.000 00 Sewerage Debt ebt of a : 394,949 59 South Carolina Stay Law.—The* Charleston Courier fiublishes following official egislaturethe of South Carolina : copy of the stay law passed by the three hundred banks, ing notice of closing, before a cash deposit can be made for the 1,729.000 the a redemp¬ tion of the balance and the statute of limitations be set in operation. The time at which the amount of outstanding circulation is computed is purely arbitrary, and operates greatly to the disadvantage of banks that may have retired a large part of their circulation before giving the notice required. A further proviso, that the cash deposit might be made whenever the outstanding circulation should be reduced to $10,000, would facilitate the 2,503,000 774,000 Increase in 1865. over labor that cannot be speedily accomplished. To facilitate this, however, I would suggest an amendment of sec¬ tion 1, chapter 236 of the laws of 1859, which requires the return of seventy-five per cent of the circulation outstanding at the time of giv¬ $43.(MI0 . Scrip [January 13, 1866. number of banks, and be in no respect result might be reached by caus¬ ing the circulation, of which seventy-five per cent must be returned, to be estimated at the time of greatest issue, as ascertained from the quarterly statements made by the bank. The sweeping chaiacter of the silent revolution which has been pro¬ gressing in our financial system, will be more fully disclosed by an ex¬ amination of the general statement, pp. 3 and-4 of the appendix, and a prejudicial to public interests. Or the of tables 7 and 11. For more convenient brief summary : reference, I condense from them The capital invested in banking, under odr State laws, day of September, 1864, was On the 30th day of September, 1865 on the following the 24th $107,306,948 20,436,970 Decrease during the fiscal year The greatest decrease in any previous year, during the last ten An Act to amend the law known it enacted $86,869,978 as the “ Stay Law” years by the Senate and House of Representatives, now 1,951,199 circulation returned and destroyed met and during the year ending Sep¬ sitting in General 4 ssembly,and by the authority of the same, The tember 30th, 1865, was that the act of the General 16,728,179 Assembly, entitled, “ An Act to exteud relief to debtors, and to prevent the sacrifice of property at public which exceeds by about $2,000,000 the amount returned during the sales,” passed the twenty-first day of December, in the panic year of 1857. and by about $9,000,000 the averege yearly amount year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty one, and all Acts amending for the last ten years. •aid Act be, and the same are hereby, continued in force, until the ad¬ The circulation issued and outstanding on the 30th September, journment of the next regular session of this General 1864. was $40,118,635 Assembly, and The that nothing herein contained shall be construed circulation issued and outstanding on the 30th September, 1865, to apply to any cause was of action 27,009,449 arising ex delicto, nor to any process of distress for the collec¬ , . tion of rent. nothing herein contained shall be construed to apply to any of action which may hereafter orginate; nor shall any debtor be entitled to plead the benefit of this act who shall fail, if demanded at least three months previously, to pay, on or before the first day of December next, one-tenth of the aggregate of the debt and interest due at the time such demand is made ; but in such case the creditor shall be at liberty to proceed to judgment as if this act had not been passed, and to enter execution ; Provided, that no execution so obtained shall, during the continuance of this act, be enforced for more than the costs and one-tenth of the aggregate amount of the debt and interest. shall any debtor on final process now subsisting be en¬ titled to the benefit of this act, who shall fail, if demanded at least three months previously by the creditor, or his or her attorney, to pay, on or before the first day of December next, the costs, and one-tenth causes part of the aggregate amount of principal <md interest due on such pro¬ And when such debtor, on demand made as aforesaid, shall fail to pay as aforesaid, it shall and may be lawful for such creditor to enforce such process for the costs and onetenth part of the aggregate amount of principal and interest due. IV./ During the continuance of this act the Statutes of Limitations be and are suspended against the claims of all persons in possession of property of debtors on final process, and on which such process may have a lien. cess at the time of such demand. In tbe Senate House, the twenty of our Lord one thousand first day of December, in the year eight hundred and sixty-five. W. D. Porter, Approved : James L. Orr. The Banks of tendent of the Speaker President of the Senate. C. H. Simonton. of the House of Representatives. intendent of the his Decrease during the fiscal year $11,834,366 61 The decrease of the different clasess of securities has been as follows Of United States stocksNew York state stocks Illinois state stocks./. Bonds and mortgages Increase of cash Total decrease of the Superin¬ Keyes, ActiDg Super¬ Banking Department of this State, has submitted report to the Legislature, from which we extract the following : Bank Department, ) $8,528,600 00 -. : $11,924,582 00 deposits to redeem circulation as 2,225,706 00 233,40C 00 936,876 00 90,215 39 stated above $11,834,366 61 incorporated banks. On tbedst of January, 1866, will expire the limited charters of the remaining incorporated banks in this State, Four of these have already commenced doing business under the auspices of the national system. The bank of the Manuhattan Company and the bank of the New York Dry Dock Company, with unlimited charters, still survive the de¬ cay of the system that gave them birth, and of the systems that have sprung into being since. THE Contributions to this fund will BANK FUND. after’January 1, 1866, and the charges upon it will be liquidated, so far as presented, on the first day of February following. There will then remain an estimated balance of about $86,000, for the application of which there is no legal pro¬ cease vision. I on New York—Annual Report Banking Department.—Mr. Decrease during the fiscal year $13,109,186 Securities, including cash, held under general laws to redeem cir¬ culation, Sept. 30, 1864 ' «. $37,303,524 05 Securities held under general laws to redeem circulation, Sept. 30, 1865 v 25,469,157 44 quote from the last report of Hon. H. H. Van Dyck his remarks up¬ this subject/ as conveying the information necesaary for gent action: your intelli¬ “ accumulated was designed to secure the redemption of the safety fund banks. But the over-issue of several insolvent institutions, and the failure of others, exhausted the contributions on hand, and mo.rtgaged those of the future to such an extent that the fund ceased to be re¬ garded as a means of redemption; and, consequently, the outstanding issues of the Lewis County Bank, Yates County Bank, and Bank of Orleans, have been left in the hands of the community, save so far as they have been absorbed by the receivers appointed to administer upon the effects of the defunct institu¬ tions. According to the latest returns, there would seem to be still outstanding, or in the hands of the receivers, $168,043 of the notes of the aforesaid hanks. As a considerable period has elapsed since their failure, very little of this circula¬ tion is still in first hands, and much^of it has probably been destroyed in view of its regarded worthlessness. Whether the fund on hand shall be applied to the redemption of notes, and if sovin what order, or what disposition is to be made of it eventually, should be indicated either by legislative or judicial action. The fund thus notes of insolvent Albany, December 23, 1865. j of New York : commonly known as the enabling act, precipitated what, under existing conditions, could not long be delayed, the fourth, and, to appearance, the concluding era in the history of State banking in New York. An adjustment of the question in some authoritative form seems in every way Since its passage one hundred and seventy-three banks have closed desirable.” business as State institutions, and been received into the flUional I most earnestly renew the fold, concluding suggestion, that some appro¬ and though some of these had already taken steps in that direction, priate disposition of the balance of the fund be authorized. * -x-xthe passage of the act * * -x* * * greatly facilitated their transfer. Besides these, twenty banks had receivec^authority, and were doing business under the TAXATION OF NATIONAL BANKS. national system prior to the passage of the act, and of these, ten had The object manifestly is, to make and to mark a distinction between effected the change prior ?o October 1, 1864. The last fiscal year, the capital owned by the corporation and the remoter, though still very therefore, has witnessed the practical extinction of one hundred and near interest of the shareholder in the business in which that capital is eighty-three State banks, with all their wealth and influence, to the employed. This interest, re preset ted by shares, is, by act of Congress, national guardianship. declared to be property. This is what the shareholder * * * owns; it is sub¬ * * # * # * ject to his control; he can dispose of it at will: in short, it is his prop¬ Some time must necessarily elapse before we -shall see the end of erty. The shareholder has no ownership whatever in the capital that what is now the beginning, as under the operation of our present law is invested in the business of the corporation, more than a citizen of this it requires six years to close the circulation account of any bank, even State has in the Erie Canal. He has an interest in the proper manage¬ After, by the return of seventy-five per cent of its circulation, it is au¬ ment and control of that capital as the citizen has in the management o To the honorable the Legislature of the State The passage of the act of March 9, 1866, ... ,. ..... -t January 13,1866.J THE CHRONICLE. the canal. Bnt he has no property in that capital, he cannot dollar of it in whatever form expressed. Upon dissolution of touch a the cor¬ poration he cannot claim a dividend in kind—he can get, after the de¬ mands of creditors are satisfied, only the proportion of assets represent¬ ed by his shares, in lawful money. The stocks were not his; the real estate was not his; the notes or other forms of indebtedness were not his; the shares were his, and for them he will now receive in exchange, lawful money, such as in the inception of the enterprise he gave for them. The individual owning shares is*thus clearly distinguished from the corporation owning capital. Under our system banking (as well as H other) corporations are taxed not taxed. upon their capital, and the shares in the hands of owners are To have conformed to the provisions of the act of Congress, our State law should have been so amended as to direct the taxation of the shares in State banks in the hands of shareholders. But this was not done, and those shares remain to-day—what they have ever been—free from taxation. Having provided for the shares in associa¬ taxing tions, how shall national higher rate than is imposed we say that this is not at a upon the shares in State banks, when no tax whatever is imposed upon the latter ? Taxing the capital stock of State banks at the same rate with the shares in National banks will not relieve us, for the corpora¬ tion that owns the capital stock may lawfully claim exemption upon so much as is invested in government stocks, while upon the shares in na¬ tional associations there is no exemption. I cannot 41 Teas.—A leading house in the trade has prepared the statistics of the trade of New York, for 1865 : greens. Half chests. Direct import... Indirect import Held on speculation Stock, January 1,1865 Stock, July 1, 1865 shipper at Memphis, recently addressed Total Stock, January 1, 1865 Stock, July 1,1865 Bayliss, weight of the bagging and rope in which the cotton It will be seen from the decision put up be refunded to him. subjoined, that though the sums thus paid cannot be refunded, there will be here¬ after “ reasonable a was allowance ” for at “ 1 Revenue, V Washington, Dec. 13, 1865.) Sir,—In reply to your letter of the 6th instant, enclosing a commu¬ nication from B. Bayliss, Esq., relative to the tax on cotton, I have to say that hereafter, in asssessing cotton, you should make a reasonable allowance for the weight of bagging and rope. The decisions of this office upon the subject are not intended to be retrospective, as the allowance above named is a matter of liberality rather than of right. Consequently, Mr. Bayliss will not be entitled to the refundment Total 76,247 Stock, this date Stock, January 1, 1865 Stock, July 1, 1865 Cotton “ H. F. Cooper, Esq., “ Assessor First District “ Memphis, Tenn.” 55,974 106,713 118,965 following is statement ton, and the stocks the 30th on hand at each of the day of November, 1865 : Keweenaw district.. Ontonagon district... shipments 4,696 Lbs. 856 3,234 1,673 2,140 845 9,971 1,374 Or within 28 tons of a grand total of 10,000 tons. In each district there has been a considerable increase over the product of 1864, the greatest being in Keweenaw district. The following are the amounts of increase, as near as can be ascertained : Tons. 775 420 350 Kewenaw district. Ontonagon district Portage Lake district Lbs 1,593 .... 1,431 1,646 Amsterdam Rotterdam........, Antwerp ........ Havre Bordeaux Marseilles Genoa - 1845 to 1854 1855 to 1857 1858 1869 1860 1861 Tons. 25,697 . Sugar . 1865. 2,400 1,204 267 15,787 31,010 6,232 4,149 4,400 2,400 17,486 • 256,990 « • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 7,723 • 550 .... • 28,475 815 • • « 61,830 83,808 22,796 - • 2,600 600 • • • • • 910 2,046 2,447,633 50,076 2,489,268 603,994 356,800 3,114,841 3,173,512 581,835 444,960 Coffee and in Europe.—The following isastatement of the at the ports named, up to November 80, for 1S64 and 1865, and the stocks on hand November 80, of each year : SUGAR 1 MFC >RTS , .... . . Leghorn... Trieste.... Gt Britain. 39.5 12.7 127.4 79 1 28.4 105.6 6.7 24.9 103.0 81.8 3.0 85.9 25.4 122.1 42.2 220.8 60.6 21.7 2.8 . . . . .... , COFFEE , . STOC :ks 12.5 126.2 . Bordeaux.. Marseilles Genoa , 60.0 . Bremen Amsterdam Rotterdam. Havre . IMF'ORT3 / v , , 8TO< 2KS v 1864 1865 1864 1865 1864 1865 1864 1865 Million Million Million Million Million Million Million Million lb ft ft ft ft ft ft ft Hamburg.. . 40.2 . 20.1 . . . 18.7 707.9 • 6.0 4.3 0.7 9.2 7.7 17.7 2.5 1.0 61.5 97.1 8.7 78.1 16.6 69.4 63.2 68.9 21.1 12.0 45.8 2.3 22.8 2.2 14.2 28.7 7.1 87.0 68.7 18.7 32.0 18.2 1.0 3.4 16.9 2.4 1.1 17.9 17.7 620.1 400.9 823.8 102.0 122.6 5.5 1.0 20.0 1.6 18.7 8.0 6.8 14.2 2.5 14.8 6.1 6.5 1 7 0.1 6.4 18.4 5.0 19.4 2.0 • • • • • 7.4 7.8 29.5 31.7 Totals... .1828.6 1842.4 494.9 392.3 446.9 586.2 108 0 127.1 Cotton at New Orleans.—The following is a statement of the com¬ parative arrivals, exports and stocks of Cotton at New Orleans, for ten years, from September 1, each year, to Dec. 29 : Year. 1864 1863 Tons, 1862 1861. 1860 1869 Total 1864. importations of Sugar and Coffee 1863... •\ Stc>cks , 156,900 49,941 14,425 . \ No returns. 1862 1864 1865 * -19,200 Totals * ' 7,186 185,014 Great Britain..., 1,027 table of shipments. 4,830,670 following named ports 1865. 124,600 24,005 14,170 28,160 9,906 155,046 Bremen... 1865 Total increase 4,055,094 v Imports. ■■ rn. Antwerp... Tons. Portage Lake district, Total a 2,127,012 Europe.—We have received from our London corres¬ pondent the following statement showing the importations of Cot¬ ... Shipments of Copper in 1865.—The of the shipments of copper last year : 2,944,046 6,335,446 5,735,502 in that he asks for. Very respectfully, “D. C. Whitman, “ Deputy Commissioner. 1,062,724 830,656 1,050,666 189,840 150,193 “ “ 1,558,120 136,600 OOLONG. “ “ 553,860 88,953 27,702 ,s.... Trieste Treasury Department, Office of Internal 13,884 21,145 bagging and rope. The asses¬ Memphis has accordingly fixed twenty pounds per bale at the Leghorn*....... allowance. sor 61,800 848,920 142,640 27,400 large cotton Hamburg a 1,545 8,723 8,415 1854. note to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, stating that he had paid the tax of two cents per pound, gross weight, and asked that the amount included in the 8,086,745 BLACKS. on a 55,797 8,566 Deputy and Acting Superintendent. The Cotton Tax—Decision.—Mr. B. 99,297 8,639,810 5,518,270 Direct import. Indirect import Held on speculation the I Emerson W. Ketes, 65,470 cncolored japan. Stock, January 1, 1865 Stock, July 1, 1865 proceeding, the matter of form becomes of essential importance. am aware that the highest judicial authority of our state has dis¬ regarded the incompatibility between our state law and the law of Congress upon this question. But I am far from sanguine that the United States court, by whom the question must be finally adjudicated, will view the question so complacently. In any event, it is so easy to remove this question from the arena of discussion, in courts or else¬ where, that I earnestly urge upon the legislature to amend the laws of this State relating to the taxation of banks organized under its author¬ ity, in such manner that the same shall be strictly and unquestionably conformable to the requirements of the act of Congress in the particular above mentioned. * * ° 2,490,995 509,390 689,425 ' Direct import... Indirect import Held on speculation stantial character of this distinction. But if the distinction were of form only we should remember that where the sole authority for a proceed¬ ing is a provision of statute, and this provision prescribes the form of Lbs. 44,914 8,902 11,654 Total regard the distinction between taxing the capital of banks taxing the shares of stock in banks as one in form only. Our whole asgument for taxing the shares in national banks rests upon the sub¬ and following 8,472 9,971 1868 76,107 1857 1856 Arrivals. 363,085 17,683 61,680 2,819 . Exports. 276,661 17,199 46,403 4,238 5,059 6,938 717,544 745,975 350,672 1,789 994,289 * 4. 1,224,926 1,012,479 727,135 921,692 Stocks. 169,668 11,907 623,876 874,647 624,648 604,973 418,883 859,809 404,041 We give in our Bulletin dividends declared. These t morning, such as have been from da ,, and published in will be collected published the last week in the The and sellers have ©alette. Bankers’ 0_ the Chronicle. Below will be found those Bulletin. 1 - ■ PAYABLE. BATE Insurance. Nassau Fire Ins. Oo. of B’k’n Empire City Fire Ins. Co... JStna Ins. Co. of Hartford Long Island Insurance Co... Jersey City Insurance Co... Mercantile Fire Ins. Co..,... Standard Insurance Co^ .. N. Y. Equitable Insur. Market Fire Insurance Co... Co... Pacific Fire Insurance Co... Fulton Fire Insurance Co.... N. American Fire Ins. Co ... Niag >ra Fire Insurance Co.. Hoffman Fire Insurance Co. Continental Insurance Co... Exchange Fire Ins. Co. o’t. BOOKS CLOSED. WHEN. WHERE. 5 5 5 5 4 5 4 leading rate being now 7 per cent, with fewer exceptions 8 per cent. There is an ample supply of paper good ” offering at 8@9 per cent; for which the cannot be reported active. Lower grades are at ranked demand still slow of 10@15 per cent. It is against this class of notes that the discrimination above alluded to is more especially directed. The banks are indisposed to encourage the put¬ ting out of 8. Company’s Office 6. Company’s Office 8. Company’s Office 6. Company’s Office 6. Company’s Office 4 Company's Offi ?e Jan. 9. Company’s Office Jan. 9. Company’s Office 8% Jan. 9. Company’s Office 5 Jan. 13. Company’s Office Ian. 11. Company’s Office 5 Jan. 9. Company’s Office 5 Jan. 15. Company’s Office 6 Jan. 20. Company’s Office 5 Jan. 11. Company’s Office 7 8% Jan. 10. Company’s Office 7 the sale at DIVIDENDS, p. make rather better terms; been able to “ following dividends are announced— NAME OF COMPANY. [January 18,1866. CHRONICLE. THE 42 _ Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. — — until financial affairs solid basis and the inevitable crisis credits to any large extent, settled upon a more of decline is past. are — — The following are the current rates for loans: Per cent. — Per cent. — — " —— — — Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Primel endorsed bills, 2 months 5 @6 6 @ 6# 7 @ 8 Good endorsed bills, 4 months..., do Lower single names grades 8 <fc 8 9 8 @10 10 @15 . — — — — Securities.—The presentation of the new by Mr. Morrill,on Monday, has somewhat disturb¬ United States loan bill Securities. The proposal 5 Jan. 11. Company’s Office to authorize a foreign loan, with principal and interest paya¬ 8% Jan. 11. Com pony’s Office 5 Feb. 1. Company’s Office ble abroad, at first depressed five-twenties of 1862, as being Railroads. likely to be injuriously affected by such a negotiation; but Jan. 10. j American Nat. 4 Cleveland & Pittsburg RR.. 1 Bank. N. Y. 3 to Jan. Jan. the discussion of the proposal upon the street developed J Comp.Office, 69 2% Jan. 15. 10. Central RR. Co. of N. Jersey 1 Wall St., N. Y. such a strong opposition to it that it was concluded Congress LOST BONDS. would throw out that clause of the proposed bill. The bill ISSUED. is construed as foreshadowing an early attempt to fund ISSUED 328,785. A-86. BSeven-thirties into a long loan, the effect upon Treasury S7.C-88.D-89.A90.B-9i.C-92.Dnotes being to make them decidedly firmer. 98.A-9i.B-95.CThs market has been sustained throughout the week by a 9fi.D-97.A-98.BAug. 15, ’64. $100 each. 7-00 U. S. B’ds 99 C, 328,800.D, Refer to Hans 828.987. A-38.Bfirms unable to find satisfactory em¬ ’Rees, 37 Ferry St steady demand from 89.C-40.D-41.C42.B-48.C-44.D, ployment for their surplus funds, Seven-thirties and Certifi¬ 324,017. A-18.B. cates being especially wanted. 28.280.D-8l.A82.B-S8.C-P4.D, June 15, ’65. $50 each. do do To-day’s intelligence by the Scotia, reporting a decline in 28,292.D, 28,097. A, 28,101.A. Refer to Office of Five-twenties at London to 65£, slightly depressed the mar¬ $509 each. June 15, ’65. do do 70,703-4-5. New York Times ket; Five-twenties of 1862 falling £, but the market closes Friday Night, Jan. 12. generally steady. The Money Market.—The ease in money has shown a The decline in gold has tended to depress the quotations steady increase during the week, the result partly cf a mod¬ for gold interest bonds, and has in the same proportion ap¬ erate demand for loans and partly of an increase of unem¬ preciated the value of Seven-thirties; but valued in gold, ployed funds arising from the disbursement of half yearly both classes of securities are now worth 2@3 per cent, more The brokers have required only a moderate than a week dividends. ago. amount of accommodation; but for discounts there has been The following are the closing quotations for leading secu¬ rather more demand. Some of the banks have remitted to rities compared with those of last Saturday: the West on an increased scale, to meet the growing demand Jan. 6,’66. Jan. 12, ’66. 104# 104 * U. S. 6’s, 1881 coup from the pork trade: the remittances, however, appear to 104 105 U. S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupon* 101% 10214 U. S. 5-20’s, 1864 “ have been based upon balances held here rather than upon 102 101% U. S. 5-20’b, 1865 “ 98% 93% U. S. 10-40’s, produce bills, of which the Western bankers are at present 98% 98% U* S. 7-30’s let series 98% 98% U. 2d Series S. 7-30’s sending but few forward. 98% 98% U. S. 7-80’s 3rd series.... 98% 98% The most prominent feature of the market is a steadily U. S. 1 yr'a certificates growing caution among lenders, inspired on the one hand by Railroad and Miscellaneous Securities.—The business the important financial measures foreshadowed by the loan of the week has been characterized by a general weakness bill presented by Mr. Morrill to Congress, and on the other and decline of value. The under tone of weakness, which by an expectation of a decline in prices—an apprehension we have for some time past noted as underlying the fictitious which has been confirmed by the heavy decline in the pre¬ mium on gold. The decline in stocks and the semi-panicky strength got up by bull operators, has at length matured into a general break down of prices. A decline in the earn¬ feeling exhibited early in the week has produced a degree of discrimination in loans upon stock collaterals; and borrow ings of railroads, for some weeks past, averaging nearly 20 ing upon second class securities is more difficult, while broad¬ per cent., has been accepted by the dulls as necessitating a reduction of quotations; and hence, at the beginning of the er margins are exacted. The downward tendency of the rate of interest has in¬ week, they commenced a process of gradual unloading which, with slight variations, has been kept up during the duced lenders to invest a portion of their surplus in govern¬ last five days. The dears, anticipating this course of affairs, ment securities, especially in Seven-thirties and Certificates have continued selling short, covering their contracts from of Indebtedness; some amounts have also gone into the Subday to day, so as to escape liability to a “ corner.” The fall Treasury on temporary loan. in railroad stocks, since last Saturday, ranges, at the closing To-day, large amounts have been offered to leading bro¬ kers at 5 per cent; but without finding borrowers. With quotations of to-day, from 3 to 7J per cent. At periods during the week, the decline has exceeded this ratio. Yes¬ these exceptions, the rate on call must be reported generally terday morning, the list was on an average about 2 per cent, at 6 per cent. ower, and at the afternoon boards prices fell about 1 per There is quite an active demand for prime business paper, Am. Yonkers & N. York Ins. Co. Excelsior Fire Insurance Co Lamar Fire Insurance Co... Firemans Fund Ins. Co Commerce Ins. Co of Alb’y Jan. 15. Company’s Office 3% Jan. 11. Company’s Office — 5 — ed the market for Government — — — ’ NAME OF PARTY NUMBERS. BY WHOM AMOUNT FOR. DATED. TO WHOM * . ... ... * e' THE .CHRONICLE January 13, 1366.] 43 “ 1,932*868 89,868,735 34,547,904 60,157,697 4,816,881 further; this morning a further slight decline follow¬ Nov. 28.... 4.... 2,687,656 24,798,070 20,717,008 55,076,645 5,081,051 11.... 2,483,163 11,484,939 14,784,681 incr 58,376,337 8,299,692 ed, but at the second and third boards prices recovered about 18.... 2,535,485 21,211,286 22,791,744 59,967,797 1,581,459 25.... 1,949,099 10488,786 1 per cent. 18,411,088 68,180,049 8,228,252 The market closes decidedly weak, nor does Dec. 2.... 2,231,767 14,616,299 23,695,742 77,259,601 9,079,661 9.... there at present seem to be any disposition among operators 1,752,256 25,302,306 18,865,048 dec 70,822,344 6,4:s7,257 16.... 2,134,863 16,150,457 incr 24,387,645 79,050,532 8,237,188 23.... to combine for promoting a reaction. 1,841,075 17,302,808 dec 15,660,224 77,416,949 The bear feeling of 1,642,583 30.... 1,654,875 dec 19,817,205 18,396,097 75,995,841 1,431407 the street has been long brooding and does not appear to Jan 6 2,107,141 dec 23,868,750 15,861,866 67,988,957 8,006,888 have yet exhausted itself, so that, in the not improbable Foreign Exchange.—The transactions in exchange have event of the bulls attempting to rally the market, it is quite been limited, the decline in gold having unsettled the mar¬ probable their movement would fail from lack of sympathy. ket. The advance of the rate of discount of the Bank of The following are the closing quotations tor leading stocks, England has to-day produced rather more disposition to buy compared with those of Saturday last: at the present quotations. Jan. 6, ’66. Jan. 12, ’66. Decline. Canton Co The following are the closing quotations : 44% 43# 1# Cumberland Coal 42 44# cent, “ “ “ “ “ “ “ • . 42# .95# 96# 108 ;... Reading Illinois Central Cleveland and Pittsburgh. 1 Chicago 126 83# 61# 108 101# & Alton days Bank of England rate to 7 per cent put up the quotation to 139; subsequently it receeded to 138^, and closes at 138f. The market closes steady without any speculative move¬ and the prevailing expectation is that the price will time at least below 140. Aspinwall Steamer New York to-day brought $685,610 in California gold. On Saturday last European steamers took out $200,-276, chiefly in gold and silver bars; On Wednesday the export of specie was $225,730. The following are the highest and lowest quotations for gold for the last six days : Highest. Lowest. 6. 142f 8. 9. 1381 .. 137* The transactions for last week Sub-treasury were as follows Highest. Lowest Jan. Jao. Jan. 141 f 10 11 at January January 5 6 139 the Custom-house and -Sub-Treasur Receipts. Payments. $366,508 82 $17,965,410 01 490,588 395,899 427,403 426,942 .... 188 13 25 18 05 Balance in 2,032,322 04 1,306.794 82 1,251,182 95 1,313,040 89 Balance on Decrease Total Greenwich Leather Manf. Seventh Ward State of N. Y Broadway 7... 14... 21.., Sub-Treasury Payments. Receipts. Balances. / 1.991,742 2,561,580 21,552,912 21,530,488 , 69,898,621 67 713 079 8 601,259 People’s North Amer Hanover ... Commonwealth... * 1,818,944 ► Imp. and Traders.. Park Mec. Bk. As 269,199 67,218 560,711 917,717 1.407,212 145,847 88,043 180,000 104,494 297,896 25,561 73,126 45,512 129.376 293,994 138.883 189,900 839,700 112,803 1,573,198 4,907 1,926.875 400,000 553,834 430,000 80,800 476,509 219,427 2,036.920 1,279,5j5 2,371,654 129.153 220,350 72,555 476.627 999,500 221,000 57,500 26.565 Manufacturers’ 2,185,54ft 2,789,550 7,906 17,093 13,225 283,531 1,215 1,859,188 1,243,042 269,711 S93,390 361,110 15,041 115,422 follows 4S5.414 646.080 579,234 470,400 2,522/00 6,043,822 1,151.077 467,125 788,161 872, le7 621,817 t 1,087,000 2,822,628 2,447,989 3,260. lf»l 341,000 776,000 842,240 988,486 305,254 893,600 275,226 1,078.143 4,484,963 1,939,481 914,356 3,525,593 13,459,603 1,526,818 898,725 455,392 811,054 1,371,409 847,989 580,600 1,142,511 12,188,429 12,656,179 261,155 824,382 3,284,062 4,894,432 850,522 315,013 6,556,181 ■3,154,528 147,699 1,031,673 356,965 115.026 15,778,471 18,588,428 195,482,254 71,617,487 5,993 87,953 The deviations from the returns of the as 4,183,522 2,612,078 1,802,368 45,000 9.141 12353 $283,185,059 815,297 477,160 258,513 57,424 54,876 516,250 505,410 2.484,844 808,898 769,819 Dry Dock 66 258,782 848,512 186,379 961,66$ 1,306,639 2,205,901 1,705,653 58 985 135,615 853,149 317.904 821,606 42 ■ 617,109 2,813,689 604,898 3,454,010 2,043,984 77 Bull’s Head 616*119 122,051 177,863 47,184 21,141 5,518,116 2,381,304 1,266^806 1,022,489 685,550 132,200 8,417,460 8,910,217 8,012,589 1,188,759 1,860,056 1,188,425 8,628,688 804,061 104,807 7 4,876,408 298,950 3,180,300 941.192 3,104,140 1,829,878 1,421,181 75,613 82,427 115,925 37,445 * $2,757,011 1.920,924 9,041,602 7,886,182 8,035,038 2,819,422 1,647,719 139.884 1,696,853 Grocers 7,630 2,258,478 2.561,972 2,569,795 811,187 4,119,115 13,344,245 ... 14,194 156,972 67,976 24,600 9,787,245 Citizens’ Nassau ; Market St. Nicholas...' Shoe and Leather.. Corn Exchange.... Continental 3,786,700 2,279.028 869,087 1,224,144 24,892 119,882 40,940 1.848,800 Irving Metropolitan 6,998,691 21,215 289,755 76 Balances, dec 1,073,544 “ . 3,024,807 1,974,616 4,630,081 1,976.149 1.888,471 2,341,614 2,508,287 Chatham.. 253.400 2,249,515 283,884 23,885 61,977 77,186 12,271,249 81 Changes in “ 669,921 19,489,077 7,830,720 Ocean Mercantile Pacific 14,186 ' 825,776 Central Second National... Ninth National.... First jNational > $67,988,957 29 8,006,883 79 week 34'835>221 19,367,370 9 8,225,413 8,544,198 2,967,901 2,182,839 2,042,602 5,220,899 1,826.828 952,136 1,927,711 1,326,252 810,489 2 048,012 582,212 6,599,084 162,267, 86,544 24,533 shows the aggregate transactions at since Oct. 7th : ^ 769,112 5,245,552 Amer. Exchange... Commerce previous week are : Loans Inc. Specie Inc. Ci rculati on..... Inc. $3,789.829 1 Deposits 446,702 | Legal Tenders Inc. Inc. 597,739 | The several items compare as 6,257,898 482,491 follows with the returns ot previous weeks: amount of Custom House. 2,991,666 8,380 808,436 \ Legal Tenders. $7,884,269 4,868,753 5,047.473 4,018,842 298,926 201,625 2,110.283 176,236 588,547 60,881 197,206 1,005,812 ■ $329,770 14,156 874,820 803,703 817,916 879,129 1,175,662 105,796 44,443 23,868,750 21 Saturday evening during the Sub-treasury Weeks National Butch. <fc Drovers.. Mech’a <fc Trad’s.... $2,441,442 1,459.263 following table Ending “ Tradesmen’s Fulton Chemical.... U.... Mercht. Exchange.. $6,885,990 5,790,208 7,174,688 5,626,271 4,598,300 7,068,120 8,998,188 4,111,975 8,087,520 2,056,675 6,230,607 2,773,600 2.500,806 2 299,727 1,782,971 880,123 16,086,153 gold certificates issued $3,122,440. In¬ receipts of customs wrere $734,000 in gold, and $1,348,832 in gold certificates. “ City commencement of busi¬ Ave rage amoun t of Circula¬ Net tion. Specie. Deposits. — Fourth’National... I—. $6,169,973 3,068,210 2,450,907 1,613,550 2,669,223 ■ 64.065 cluded in the Oct. Banks. New York Manhattan Merchants Mechanics Union America Phenix Oriental Marine Atlantic 1 Loans and Discounts. 17,232 $91,857,707 60 during the week. . : 604,831 Recemts. , the Jan. 6, 1866 1,652,180 $2,107,341 43 $23,868,750 21 $15,861,866 42 Sub-treasury on the morning of Jan. 2.... 75,995,841 08 Deduct payments The ness on Totals T°tal 5.13#<g^5.12# North River East River......... Man. and Mer : Custom-house. January 2 January 8 January 4 138* 12 Amsterdam Frankfort Bremen • Prussian thalers @ 108# 5.17#@5.15 Republic The Jan. Jan. Jao. Hamburg @ 108 York, for the wreek ending with the produced a decid¬ the premium on gold. 4 So soon as it was was proposed to issue a foreign loan, and, at the same time, to fund the Seven-thirties as a supposed pre¬ paratory step toward the resumption of specie payments, the foreign bankers, and other holders of gold, sold out their hoards, producing a sudden decline in the premium to 37£. The exportation of a larger supply of cotton coming out of the South also aided the downward tendency. Since Tues¬ day the premium has remained below 40. This morning the price opened at 138; but the news of the advance of the some <3d5.l7# 5.17#®5.16# 36#@ 36# 40# (& 41 40% ©■ 41 79 @ 79# 71#@ 71# shows City of New ed effect upon known that it remain for 5.20 Swiss New York City Banks.—The following statement the condition of the Associated Banks of the The Gold Market.—The loan bill has ment ; 110 * Paris, long date Paris, short date 7 2 103 Antwerp 108#@ 109 Sterling, 3 Commercial 7# 3# 3# 4# 94# 105 Bankers’ 4 - Sterling, 60 days 3# 5# 76# 31# 57% 103% 35 preferred Bankers’ 3 .101% 67# 130 Chicago & Northwestern. ‘T Rock Island Fort Wayne 105 105# 73# Michigan Southern 2# 1# 2# 4# 41# 93# 91# 1 uicksilver ew York Central Erie Hudson River 3 Circula- Loans. Oct. 7.... Oct. 14.... Oct. 21.... Oct. 28.... Nov. 4 Nov.ll Nov.18 Nov.25.... Dec. 2— Dec. 9.... Dec. 16 Dec. 23.'... Dec. 30 Jan. 6, ’66. — 228,520,727 227,541,884 224,080,679 219,965,639 220,124,961 224,005,672 224,741,853 225,345,177 229,197,844 227,839,344 227,814,356 228,572,034 229,445,730 Specie. tion. 13,470,184 10,970,397 15,890,776 11,722,847 15,586,640 12,838,441 14,910,561 12,923,735 13,724,268 13,289,381 11,995,201 13,825,209 12,449,989 14,333,168 12,343,542 15,340,528 13,431,103 15,867,400 15,622,780 16,570,613 16,981,435 16,724,725 Legal Deposits. 188,504,486 182,364,156 174,192,'110 173,624,711 173,538,674 174,199,442 173,640,464 175,588,073 175,523,894 176,480,562 Tenders. Aggregate Clearings 58,511,762 572,703.282 50,459,195 699,848,495 46,169.855 65A 166S64 46,427,027 575,945.580 47,778,719 563,524,873 47,913,888 47,737,560 49,997,271 48,220,805 48,271,757 180,913,753 48,877,556 16,055,037 17,629,425 183,021,870 53,891,520 15,331,769 17,990,680 189,224,861 71,134,996 588,441,862 503,757,650 452,612,434 487,045,569 420,106,053 501,690,808 507,237,904 396,281,041 233,185,059 15,778,741 18,588,428 195,482,254 71,617,487 370,617,523 Banks.—Owing to the incompleteness of of the banks of Philadelphia for last w eek, we Philadelphia the returns Accounts current at Paris Ditto in the provinces Dividends payable Various discounts of aver¬ usual weekly comparison unable to present our are [January 13,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 44 Re-discounts distributed Surplus of receipts not Sundries ages. Boston Banks.—The last statement of the Boston banks, as of compared with the preceding, shows an increase in loans $823,652; in specie of $229,912; in legal tender notes of $106,765; in deposits of $3,266,338 ; in national circulation of $408,826, and a decrease in State circulation of $75,928. The following are the footings as compared with the two previous reports: Jan. 8. Jan. 1. Dec. 25. $41,900,000 Capital 92,245,129 Loans Specie. Legal Tender Notes Deposits .... organization under .the during the present week : Whole number national banka ital of Amount of circulation issued ending December now authorized is 1,626, with a cap¬ to the 30, is stated at national banks for the week ... Total following comparison shows national banks, in respect to number, from Oct. 7th : The Date. 7, .... 14 .... 28, Nov. 4, 18, the progr capital and Dee. o 9 Dec. Dec. 16 Dec. 23 Dec. 80. 194,182,630 401,406,013 402,071,130 402,573,793 197,798,880 200,925,780 208,877,866 408,308,793 207,212,980 403,741,893 403,916,893 214,110,815 404,609,493 221,557,150 224,953,976 229,746,085 233,760,185 237,371,165 240,094,566 1,613 1,619 1,623 1,624 .... . ... .... 405,059,203 405,809,203 406,409,208 - provinces the State Increase Decrease 13,235,938 No 9,891,100 22,507,314 Securities Other Securities Notes unemployed 6,877,840 (Marked thus * not c3 *,C City) . American American Exchange. Atlantic Atlantic Bowery (Brooklyn). I Amount. Chatham Chemical. Citizens’ i... City City (Brooklyn) Commonwealth Continental Corn Exchange .. .. .. . 200 000 100 30 50 100 100 100 Dry Dock* East River Eighth Fifth First First (Brooklyn).... Fourth Fulton Far. & Cit.(Wm’bg). *. Greenwich. Grocers’ Hanover Importers & Trad... (Brook.) Manhattan W'hen Marine Gold coin audbullion. BANKING DEPARTMENT. Government securities Other securities Notes Gold and silver coin.. Proprietors*capital... £14,653,000 3,254,074 Public deposits. Other deposits Seven day dr other bills 12,689,675 £27,339,675 £27,339 675 8,544,343 13,235,933 402,826 £9,891,100 22.507,814 6,877,840 '113,427 £39,989,681 £39,989,681 of the Bank of France made The return for the previous week is following is the return 21st ult. added: DEBTOR. Dec. 21. 1S65 f. 182,500,000 0 7,044,776 2 22,105,750 14 Capitafof the bank Profits, in addition to capital Reserve of the bank and branches New reserve Notes in circulation and at the branches.. Drafts drawn by the bank on the branches of the bank payable in Paris or in the provinces Treasury account c. 4,000,000 0 859,417,675 0 Dec. 14, 1865. f. 30 20 100 25 50 100 100 .. Merch... c. 182,500,000 0 7,044,776 2 22.105,750 14 4,000,000 0 875,567,525 0 Mechanics’ Mechanics' (Brook.). Mech. Bank. Asso... Meehan. & Traders’. Mercantile Merchants’ Merchants’ Exch.... Metropolitan* Nassau Nassau 50 50 100,806,476 19 6,754,362 74 104,501,681 37 ... .... — 12 225 ’66 ’66 ’66 ’66 Nov. ’65 Jan. ’66 Jan. ’66 Jan. ’66 Jan. ’66 Nov. ’65 Jan. ’66 Jau. ’66/. Jan. ’66 Jan. ’66 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. — .... 4 5 6 107” 6 7 130 6 ...5 6 5 5 103” 5 100 ..5 .... 108 135 .... .... Jan. '66 Jan. ’66 -. 250,000 Jan. aud July... Jan. ’66....' 150,000 Jan. and July... Nov. ’65 500,000 May and Nov... Jan. and July... Jau. ’66 Jan. ’66 5,000,000 Jan. and July... Nov. ’65 600,000 May and Nov... Jan. ’66 160,000 Jan. and July... Oct. ’65 ...' 1,500,000 April and Oct... Nov. ’65 200,000 May and Nov... Jan. ’66 300,000 Jan. and July..-. Jan. ’66 Jan. and July... 1,000,000 Jan. ’66 Jan. and July... 1,500.000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 500.000 . . . 405# 5 112’ 102 99 .... 15 3# 4 5 5 10 208* ‘ 212 10 96 5 96 165 5 150 5# 5 105” .6 5 6 105 100 4 96 5 110 .... . . .... .... .... .... • • . . V •. .... .... .... 5 600,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’65 5 400,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’65 50 5 166” 50 2;050,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’65 Jan. ’66 5 30 210,000 Jan. and July... 5 Jan. ’66 100 500,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 6 100 400,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 6 106 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... 115 5 Jan. ’66 25 2,000.000 Jan. aud July... Jau. ’66 6 100 50 500,000 Jan. aud July... 5 100 Nov. ’65 50 500,000 May and Nov,.. Nov. ’65 5 May and Nov... 25 600,000 Nov. ’65 5 100 1,000,000 May and Nov... Dec. ’65 5 lio” 3,000,000 June and Dec .. Jan. ’66 5 96 Jan. and July... 50 1,235,000 Jan. ’66 -....6 119 Jan. and July... 100 4,000,000 Nov. ’65 5 108 110 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July .. ’66 Jan. 5 100 300,000 Jan. and July... Oct. ’65 5 105” 50 i,5a>, ooo April and Oct... iio ’66 5 Jan. 100 3,000,000 Jan. and July... Jau* ’66..„ 9 100 2a),ooo April and Oct... 6 Jan. ’66 100 300,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 5 103# 104 100 1,000,000 Jan. aud July... 112 Jan. ’66 5 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 6 Jan. and July... 50 400,000 4 66” Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’65 50 .... • . .... .... • National* New York New York County.. New YorkExchange. Ninth North America North River. Ocean .... .... . . ‘ .... .... • . .... .... • 1,000,000 Oriental 50 Pacific Park 50 800,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’65 Nov. '65 422,700 May and Nov?.. Jan. ’66 100 2,000,000 Jan.and July... Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 412,500 Peoples.’ Jan. ’60 20 1.800,000 Jan. and July... Phoenix 100 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’65 Republic 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. ’66 St. Nicholas’ Jan. ’66 100 500,000 April and Oct*. Nov. ’65 Seventh Ward May and Nov ✓. 100 300,000 Second Jan. ’66 100 1,500,000 Jan. and July.. Shoe & Leather Nov. ’65 and May Nov... 200,000 100 Sixth Nov. ’65 State of New York.. 100 2,000,000 May and Nov... Jan. ’66.. 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Tenth Jan. ’66 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Third Jan. ’66 40 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Tradesmen’s Nov. ’65 May and Nov... 50 1,500,000 Union Jan. ’66 500 000 Jan. and July, 50 Williamsburg City*. • . • (Brookljm) * • • • .... 7,936,127 54 ... .... Market £11,015,100 3 634,900 debt Other securities Rest Mauufac. & DEPARTMENT. £27,339,675 Government Notes issued ioo LeatherManufaet’rs. Long Isl 6 100,000 Quarterly Jan. ’66 200,000 Jan. and July... ’66 259.150 Jan. and July... Jan. .. 100 4 5 6 100 " 200,000 Quarterly 800,000 Jan. and July 2,000,000 May and Nov .. 200,000 Jan. and July 450,000 Jan. and July 300,000 .Quarterly 400,000 Jan. and July... 100 1,000,000 May and Nov... 300,000 Jari. and July... 50 100 10,000,000 Jan. and July. 100 750,000 Jan. and July... 100 2,000,000 Jan. and July... 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Aug. 65 Currency Irving — 500,000 . 135 103 5 132 and July... Jau. ’66 100.000 Jan. and July .. July ’65 Oct. ’65 500,000 April and Oct... Nov. ’65... Nov,.. May and 5,000,000 Jan. ’66 July... Jan. and 300,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’66 . Commerce in circulation is £20,461,835, being of £100,225; and the stock of bullion in both ISSUE Bid. Ask. Last Paid. Periods. 1,000,000 Jan. and July... 300,000 Jan. and July... Central. Central (Brooklyn). Gallatin. 453,895 Market. * Dividend. 25 50 50 25 100 50 25 100 Bull’s Head Butchers & Drov change. Decrease 1,410,426,870 80 . 3,000,000 Jan. Brooklyn* 864,298 897,461 8,371,389 0 2,410,262 86 11,601,741 40 LIST. 100 25 100 100 100 50 Broadway Manufacturers’ £ o National.) America* America (Jer. 1,168,488 Increase 621,500 0 439,050 0 60,000,000 0 12,980,750 14 36,449,737 91 IK),000,000 0 AhOC £13,403,102, show ing a decrease of £469,307 compared with the preceding return. to the Capital Companies. departments is up & branches 30.276,900 0 19,886,580 0 653.300 0 450,450 0 60,000,000 0 12,980,750 14 36,449,737 91 100,000,000 0 8,361,267 0 2.759,650 78 9,869,518 8 BANKS T O C K. The amount of notes increase 434,523,440 79 164,853 39 329,435,280 31 321.073,185 0 13,684,300 8,494,700 13,143,400 7,505,300 30,002,200 19,526,780 of the previous week, shows and of 16,150,000fin of 13,659,OOOf in the in deposits. of the account: On the other side 448,182,963 29 2,971,450 26 307,865,628 79 315,359,500 0 11,266,000 0 9,506,800 0 The return, compared writh that decline of 27,283,OOOf in discounts, the circulation of notes, and an increase coin and bullion, and one of 7,563,OOOf Dec.Increase 27, 1865: £15,868 8.544,343 Public Deposits Other Deposits The ' a the return of the £8,264,074 Rest an on Croton Banking.—The following is 1,410,426,870 70 1,397,388,796 16 217,384,440 407,409,203 407,509,203 England for the w eek ending Government provinces securities in the Credit Foucier Securities held Hotel and property of the bauk Expenses of management Sundries circulation 899,854,212 6, 1866 Bank of on in the Ditto to the ot 1,578 1,592 1,612 26, ess ,684397,796 17 752,993 36 11,719,619 41 13,257,300 0 7,289,000 0 in tne Government stock reserve Ditto other securities. $240,094,665 Capital. U Foreign ' public securities in Paris provinces obligations and railway shares on Ditto in the 2,723,410 237,371,155 Banks. « Jan. •.... provinces $407,509,208 Circulation. 21 « in the in Paris $100,000 407,409,203 — Previously a Ditto Ditto Ditto Ditto Ditto Ditto national banking system made Md., capital First National Bank of Sedalia, Previously authorized capital <1 bills overdue Ditto discounted in Paris Ditto in the branches Advances on bullion in Paris Commeial ... new Oct Cash and bullion 21,497,854 21,146,721 21,806,180 1,828,793 1,404,721 1,480,718 Banks.—The following national bank is the only Circulation (National) Circulation (State) National 1,031,327 19,914,066 41,718,132 155,570,908 19 24,308,637 0 832,271 75 13,340,722 65 1,427,623 17 CREDITOR. $41,900,000 88,482,510 « 657,005 19,365,928 38,451,794 $41,900,000 91,421,477 801,415 19,807,300 38,451,794 164,931,735 93 22,510,983 0 781722 75 13,646,026 69 1,427,623 17 752,993 36 9,526,906 38 5 5 .7 5 4 5 5 .... 156” . . . .... 95” 110 103 • • • 110 • • ioi” 6 5 5 5 114 • .... • — 5 5 . . .... • • • • 101 105 7# 130 5 3# ...J • • • • 1866.] January 13, YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW CLOSING SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH (REPRESENTED BY THE Satur.! Mon. Tue». SECUR1TI.ES. Gold Coin National. States 6s, 1867 registered. do 6s, 1868 coupon. 6s, 1868 registered. do do 6s, 1881.... coupon. do 6s, 1881 registered. do 6s, 5-20s coupon. do 6s, 5-20s registered. do 6s, 5-20s (2d issue) coupon do 6s, 5.20s do ....registered do 6s, 5.20s (3d issue) coupon do 6s, Oregon War, 1881 do do do do ,do * do do do do do do do •do do do do do do do do do do 6s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, 5s, do do do registered. coupon. registered. 10-40S coupon. 10-40s registered. 6s, Union Pacific R. R .. (cur.). 7-30s Treas. Notes.. ..1stseries. do do do ....2d series. do do do do do do do do do ....3d series. do 6s, Certificates, do do ;... State. Railroad Stocks. Chicago and Alton 93# 93# 93 93# 93# 93# 98# 98# 98# 98# 98# 98# 98# 98% 98# 98# 98# 98# 98# 98# 98 98# 1860 Ifc * Chicago and Alton, do do 98# 98% 98# do do a 67 69% 50 105 99 96# 95 26% 95# 93 93# 26# 25# 26# 27 240 99# 103# 98# 98# 94# 94% 101% 02 102# 101 68 71 100 100 100 87 1877... 92 1st mortgage Income.. 87 72 72 Interest Extension 85 62 85 84 84 82# 1st mortgage consolidated and Rock Island, 1st mortgage Chicago Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage do do 3d mortgage, conv.. e do 4th mortgage do Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund 95 89 98# 98# Sinking Fund do do dodo do do do do 99 88 Loans 72 Municipal. 6s, Water Loan 6s, Public Park Loan... Delaware, Lackawanna * do do and Western, 1st mort. do 2d mort Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 102 do 2d mortgage, 1664. do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 do 4th mortgage, 1880 do 5th mortgage, 1888 Galena and Chicago, extended do 2d mortgage do Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage Stock Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72 do Consolidated and Sinking Fund.... do 2d mortgage, 1868 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885 do 3d mortgage, 1875 do convertible, 1867 Loan - 95 Illinois Central 7s, 1875 Lackawanna and Western Bonds Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72. ;. 5s, 1898 5s,F. Loan, 1868 Miscellaneous. American Coal Atlantic Mail Steamship Canton, Baltimore :. .100 100 100 Central Coal ioo Central American Transit 100 Cumberland Coal, preferred Delaware & Hudson Canal Harlem Gas Manhattan Gas Light 100 Mariposa Mining Mariposa Preferred Metropolitan Gas New York Steamship Nicaragua Transit Pacific Mail Steamship Scrip United States Telegraph Western Union Telegraph.. Wyoming Valley Coal 100% Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund.... S6 do 100 and Chicago 103# 105 96 100 ..100 100 100 Railroad Ronds: Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort do 2d mort do Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., Brooklyn 6s do 104# 102 70# 69 100 B-72 100 guaranteed. ..100 Toledo, Wabash and Western 50 do do do preferred.... 50 95 Pennsylvania Coal Quicksilver Mining preferred Terre Haute 100 do ! preferred. 100 71# St. Louis, Alton and do do Second avenue Sixth avenue Third avenue 77 78# Virginia 6s, coupon Wisconsin 6s, War Loan do ^ Reading 6s, 1881 6s, 1886 do 50 100 100 100 100 preferred Pittsburg, Fort Wayne Joseph RR.). 6s, Improvement 106# 104#;105 107# 106 126# 127 125# 126 99# Morris and Essex New Jersey. New York Central .* 100 95# New Haven and Hartford 100 Norwich and Worcester 100 27 Ohio and Mississippi Certificates do do preferred.... do 100 Panama .' ersey City 6s, Water New York 7s, 1875 do 6s, 1876 do 6s, 1878 do 6s, 1887 do 5s, 1867 do 5s, 1868 do 5s, 1870 do 5s, 1873 do 5s, 1874 do 5s, 1875 do 5s, 1876 do 5s, 1S90 50 100 108 100 130 2d preferred do do 91# 85# 100 100 50 Mississippi and Missouri J do do do 1st 96# 93 96# 94# 95% do do Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien 100 do do do 1st pref.. .100 do do do 2d pref... 100 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 1862 1865 1870 do 6s, 1878 do 6s, 1883 do 7s, 1868. do 7s, 1878 do 7s, War Loan Minnesota 8s Missouri 6s do 6s, (Hannibal and St. do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 do 6s,1866 do 6s, 1867 do 6s, 1868 do 68,1872 do 6s, 1873 do 6s, 1874 do 6s, 1875... do 6s, 1877 do 58,1866 do 5s, 1868 do 5s, 1871.... ....: do 5s, 1874 do 5s, 1875 do 5s, 1876 do 7s, State Bounty Bonds North Carolina 6s Ohio 6s, 1868 do 6s, 1870 do 6s, 1875 Rhode Island 6s..; South Carolina 6s Tennessee 6s, 1868 do 6s, Long do 5s do do 158 50 .100 100 100 76% 105# 50 100 Michigan Central Michigan So. and N. Indiana Michigan 6s, 1873 do do Cincinnati 120 75% 79% 80# 108# 109 50 Indianapolis and Cincinnati Joliet and Chicago Long Island McGregor Western Marietta and do do Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 do Registered, 1860 do 6s, coupon, ’79, after do do do do do do do do do do 1877 do do do 1879 do do War Loan.. do Indiana 6s, War Loan do 5s do 2is Iowa 7s, War Loan 100 103# 100 Erie do preferred Hannibal and St. Joseph do do preferred Harlem do preferred Hudson River .Illinois Central 103 105 32% 33% 31# 81# 58# 59# 57# 57# 105# 105# 103# 103% 33 59 106 123 82# 81 1001 60# 50 Fri. Wed 113 60 100i 100; 33% Eighth Avenue 96# 98% 98# 9S# 98# 100113 Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati Cleveland and Pittsburg Cleveland and Toledo Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Tum. 103# 104# 104 107 112 100 Chicago and Rock Island 101# 101# 101# 101# ... preferred Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Chicago and Milwaukee Chicago and Northwestern. do do preferred 103# 103# 104# 104 104# 104# 104# 104% 104# 104# 104 105 104# 103# 104 102# 102# 101# 101# 101# 101# 102# 104# Georgia Louisiana 6s do do 98 10 100 Mon. 100 Central of New Jersey 120 102 Satur 1 Brooklyn City California 7s, large Connecticut 6s, 1872 Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JAN f ARYThur. 12.) SECURITIES. Fri. Thur. i (* yearly). coupon. do. do. 1871 1871 1874 1874 Wed. 137# 139# 138% American United 45 THE CHRONICLE. 68 133 44# 52 23 44 53 '.32 44 132 43# 52# 53 14 43 100 145 50 145# 147 50 100 65 132 42 43# 145 Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants New York do do do do do Ohio and 13# 14# do do 8s, new, 1882 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund do do 2d mortgage, 7s do do Goshen Line, 1868 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort... Milwaukee and St. Paul, let mortgage do do Income Central 6s, 1883 do 6s, 1887 do • 6s, Real Estate do do do do do 81 80 80# 50 93 50 92 eo# 50 93 Mississippi, 1st mortgage.... do do 110 96 6s, subscription.... 7s, 1876 78, convertible, 1876 Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne 100 96 100 and Chicago, 1st mort.. do do 2d mort... 3d mort.. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute, lBt mort.. do do “ do 2d, pref... do do » 2d, income do Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage 82# St. !!!!...100 ioo 50 100 100 .......100 49# „.10Q 167 41# 41 47 45 42# 40# 41# do do 45 45 do do do do do do 1st mortgage, extended 2d mortgage.. InterestBonds Equipment 81 75 [January 13,1866, THE CHRONICLE 46 NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES’ LIST. 1 1 Amount Princi INTEREST. DENOMINATIONS. |Rate- I?ue. Payable. 1 American Gold Coin National Securities. Bonds of 1847 registered. do 1848...., coupon do do registered, f do 1860 coupon. I do do registered, f do 1858...., coupon.) do do registered, f do 1861..,.. coupon. | do do ., tgtsi registered. 8,908,3421 Jan. & 6 Jan. & 20,000,000 5 goo 74*5 rwv. 6 ) | May & Nov. 172,770,100 5 5 Mar.&Sept. 1,258,000; 6 ;Jan. & July 300,000,000)7.30;Feb. & Aug. do do 300,000,000 7.30 Jun. &Dec. (2d series) do do (3d series).,..... 230,000,000 7.30 Jan. & July Debt Certificates 55,905,000 6 | Maturity ... . 490,0001 236,000; Loan Loan Loan Loan Foreign Loan Domestic Loan Bonds Pennsylvania—State Bonds..... do State Stock .... Military L’n Bds Rhode Island—State (War) Bds. South Carolina—State Stock... ... Improvement Bonds do Vermont—State Certificates do War Loan Bonds Virginia—Inscribed Certificates. Railroad Bonds do Wisconsin—State Bonds do do “ War Fund Bonds.... War Fund Certif.... 200,000) 7 7 7 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 800,000 Foreign Loan Tennessee—State Bonds do Railroad Bonds. 6 6 5 200,000; 4,800,000; Ohio—Foreign Loan . do do do do do Jan. & July 6 5,825,500, 2,058,173, 1,226,500) 800,000: ’ do do do 2.000,000: 6 .... Foreign Foreign Foreign Foreign Oct. & Apr. do Jan. & July do Jan. & July do 1,116,500: War Loan Louisiana—State Bonds do State Bonds do State Bonds for Maine—State Bonds do War Loan Maryland—State Bonds do State Bds .coupon. ) do StateBds inscr ibed f do State Bonds.cowjtxw. Massachusetts—State Scrip, do State Scrip do Bounty F'd L’n. do War Loan Michigan—State Bonds do State Bonds do State Bonds do State Bonds do War Loan Minnesota—State Bonds Missouri—State Bonds do State Bonds for RR. do State Bonds (Pac. RR) do State Bonds (H,&St.J) do Revenue Bonds New Hampshire—State Bonds War Fund Bds do do War Notes.... New Jersey—State Scrip do War Loan Bonds.. New York do do do General Fund. do do do do do Bounty Bonds. do do do do do Canal Bonds. do do do do do do North Carolina—State Bonds do do do do do do do 3,926,000 803,000 8,000,000 2,000,000 2,073,750 525,000 3,747,000 3,293,274 1,700,900 803,000 6 28,000; 6 Kentucky—State Bonds... State Bonds... do do Jan. & July do do do 2,709,000 688,000 . 91 104 ’70 ’74 ’65 ’69 ’70 ’82 1879 600,000 Jan. & July do do do Jan. & July do 4,963,000! J.,A.,J.&0. Jan. & Water Loan... 820,000 6 1,500,000 : 6 3,500*000 : 6 York&Cum.R. i,ooo,oou; Securities Icipal 2,000.000' 516,000, 3,942,000' 5.398,000: 532,000 4,800,000, 8,171,9021 3,192,763 ! do ¥ jMay & Nov. j 1,727,000 ’ 1,200,000 6,500,000 2,100,000 6,500,000 250,000 1,000,000. 700,000: 750,000 700,000 250,000 602,0001 13,701,000 7,000,000 3,000,000; 431,000 535,100; 1,650,000; 2,500,000 ! 8 95,000: 6 731,000 6 700,000! 7 1,189,780 6 500,000; 6 800,000 909,607 442,961 900.000 800,000 25,566,000 702,000 3,050,000 6,000,000 2,250,000 500,000 900,000 192,585 1,163,000 167,000 4,500,000 9,129,585 705,336 1,015,000 379,866 2,183.532 1,600,000 4,095,309 2,400,000 679,000 6,168,000 29.209,000 3,000,000 3,889,000 2,695,516 6 l,125,000i 6 12,799,000 R 104 102 104 98” $90,00$ ioi* Water Loan Alb. Nor. RR... City, Pa.—City Bds. RR. Bds. do Miscellaneous. do do do do do do do 104* 104* N.W.Virg.RR. B.&O.R.coup l f B. & O. RR.. Park 101* Bangor, Me.- -City Debt Railroad Debt do 1904-j Jan. & July |1887 1877 do Jan. & July ’76 ’78 Jan. & July var. do •68’74 1871 do dem. ’67 .69 5,000,000; Buffalo, N. Y.—Municipal Bonds! do Municipal Bonds Chicago, Ill.—City Bonds do City Bonds.. do Sewerage Bonds .. Water Bonds 6,580,416 1,265,610! 1,949,711 993,000 634,200 ' 1,281,000 ' 121,540 ! 97 96* 97* 360,000; 6 913,000; 7 1,030,000 ! 6 6 Dubuque, 100 90 90’ 98 do 50,000 650,000 319,457 Railroad 400,000 125,000 Hartford, Ct.—City Bonds do do do Jersey City, do do do do . 130,000 Park Bonds Railroad Bonds., Water Bonds.... 500.000 375,000 ! 6 122,000! 6 N. J.—City Bonds, CityBonds. Water Bds 118,000 660,000 . Louisville, Ky.—City Bonds.... do City Bonds.... do 77 20,000 256,368 Io.—City Bonds Water Bonds Marysville, Cal.—City Bonds do .. 911,500' City Bonds New Bedford, Mass.—City Bds. 101 Quarterly 1890 101 101* New London, Ct.—City Bonds 101* Newport, R. I.—City Bonds.. 101 Quarterly 1870 101 New Haven, Ct.—City Bonds. Jun. & Dec. *68 ’74 93* 95 100,000' 425,000 60,000; 96 96 85 219,000' do -j do ’65 ’80 107 Jan. & July ’71 ’78 Mar.&Sept. 1865 Jan. & July 1868 do ’73 ’78 do 1878 do 18S3 do '1866 Jan. & July 1867 do 4883 Jan. & July *71 ’89 do ’72 ’87 do ’72 ’85 do 1866 Feb. & Aug. 1876 94* 85” 75 77 77 91 short Jan. & July Jan. & July do do do do do var. ’71 ’72 1870 101 98 pleas. 1868 1878 pleas. May & Nov. 1868 Jan. & July 1875 do 1878 Jan. & July 1877 99 £ § OS C3 a a 95 95 94* 8T 91 94 94 do var. 89*| 89* Feb. & Aug. 1871 100 Various. 71 ’94 91 100 605,000- Apr. & Oct. ’93-’98 Pittsburg, CityBds,new Pa.—City Bonds..... Railroad Bonds. Me.—CityBonds Railroad Bonds, do do Rochester, N. Y. Railroad B’ds City Loan.... City Bonds... City Bonds... Railroad St. Louis, Mo.—Municip Real Estate... do do Sewerage do Improaement.. Water do Harbor do Wharves do Pacific RR do O. & M. RR... do Iron Mt. RR do San Francisco, Cal.- City Bonds: .., 87 var. 1.200 000 CityBds,new City Bds,old do do do ... *68 ’90 1868 Jan. & Dec. ’71 ’78 Jan. & July ’83 ’93 do ’85 ’93 Jan. & July ’67 ’68 do ’77 ’88 Pub. Edu. S’k. Sacramento, Cal.—City Bonds.. do County B’ds 90 var. Docks&SlipsS 95 97 72' 72* 900,000 « 100,000 483,900 1,878,900 190,000 402,768 399,300 3,066,071 275,000 2,083,200 1,966,000 600,000 1,800,000 2,748,000 150,000 500,000 154,000 102.000 do do var. 175,000 Real Estate B. Croton W’r S. Fl.D’t. F’d. S. Pb.B.Sk. No. 3 Providence, R. I.—City Bonds. Various. 2,871,000 C.P.Imp. F. S. C.P.Imp. F. S. 3,000,200' 2,147,000! 895,570 490,000 1,000,000 2,500,000 1,400,000 2,000,000 949.700 do !May & Nov. ’68-’71 July Water Stock.. CrotonW’rS’k Croton W’rS’k W’r S’k of ’49 W’r S’k of ’54 Bu. S’k No. 3. Fire Indem. S. Central P’k S. Central P’k S. Central P’k S. 150,000' 200,000! Union Def. L. Vol. B’nty L*n Vol.Fam.AidL Vol.Fam.AidL vYorkC’nty.-—C*t House S’k Sol.Sub.B.R.B do do do Sol.S.&Rf.R. B do do do Sol.B’ntyFd.B do Riot Dam.R.B do Portland, var. Jan. & do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do - Tomp.M’ket S do l|1874 Jan. & July 1860 do 1865 do 1868 do 1870 do 11875 do 1881 do 188(5 City—Water Stock.. Philadelphia, Pa.—City Bds,old 1866 1872 1873 1874 1875 1877 1866 1868 1871 >» 99* New York do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do .. 7 7 7 6 6 10 .. City Bonds... 4,996,000 1.442.100 652.700 739,222 2,232,800 7,898,717 1,009,700 1,800,000 8 4 6 7 5 6 5 6 5 5 5 6 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 5 5 6 6 6 5 6 6 985,326 1,500,000 600,000 6 500,000 6 300,000 5 200.000 150,000 260,000 1.496.100 446,800 1,464,000 523,000 425,000 254,000 484,000 239,000 163,000 457,000 429,900 285,000 5 7 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 1,352,600:10 City Fire B. City Bonds. do 1,133,500 6 do C.&Co’tyB. C.&Co’tyB. C.&Co’tyB. do C.&Oo’tvB. 1.000.000j 7 178,500 10 329,000 6 300,000 : 7 960,000 7 338,075' . Apr. & Oct. |18©5 97* .... 8i” 85” 96* 96* 98* 100 100* 101* 98 100 100 100 100 103 101* Various, „ .... 82” .... 95 93’ 95' 95* 96 96* 100 89 90 var. 1879 1890 1871 ’69 ’79 Apr. & Oct. 1865 Jan. & July 1871 ’65 ’72 Various. Jan. & July ’75’77 ’65 ’80 Various. Feb. & Aug 1882 Jan. & July 1876 June &Dec. 1883 Various, ’65 ’81 ’65 ’75 do Jan. & July ’77 ’88 90 93 var var do May &Nov. Jan. & July 1887 do June &Dec. 1894 Feb. & Aug ’70’83 Jan. & July 1873 Apr. & Oct. ’66 ’84 Jan. & July ’67 ’87 Apr. & Oct. ’73 ’84 Jan. & July ’70 ’81 May & Nov. 1870 1880 do Feb. & Aug 1890 1890 do May & Nov. ’75 ’79 Apr. & Oct. 1875 May &Nov. ’70 ’73 1868 do Jan. & July 1898 1887 do 1898 do Feb. & Aug 1887 93* 93* May & Nov. 1876 1873 1883 1878 1866 ’67 ’76 1873 do do do do do do 93*' Jan. & July ’65’ 69 May & Nov. 1864 1867 1865 ’66 ’73 do do do May &;Nov. ’75-’89 ’73-’76 ’80-’81 ’83 ’90 ’77-’82 do do do do . Jan. & 92 95 95 July '65 ’81 do do do Jan. & July do Various. ’65 ’82 '65 ’93 '65 ’99 91 1893 do Various. ’65 ’82 do ’65 ’82 Jan. & July Jan. & July do Jan. & July do do do do ’65 ’76 ’88- 98 ' 00 ’ do do do do 1884 ’65 ’83 ’65 ’79 ’71 ’71 ’65 ’67 ’71 ’72 Y4 ’90 ’88 ’87 ’83 ’86 ’81 ’73 ’74 ’77 May & Nov. 1871 Jan. & July 1866 . do do do 1875 1888 ’77 ’78 April & Oct. 1883 ;Jan. & July 1884 1 various. 85 92 var. 70” 1913 ’66 ’83 94 ’68 ’71 94* Apr. & Oct. Mar.&Sept. 1885 Jan. & July 1876 6 6 6 6 6 do do Wilmington, Del.—City Bonds.. Jan. & July ’65 ”71 J 65 ’Get ’95 do 1869 do ’81 ’97 do ’66 ’79 *65 ’82 Apr. & Oct. 1881 Jan. & July 1876 ’79 ’87 do 1888 do Jan. & July do do do do June &Dec. _ Water Bonds... • n 6 216,000 6 299,000 ’ 7 571,000! 7 City Bonds City Bonds • .... 6 6 5,550,000' 6 Sewerage Bonds. do Detroit, Mich.—City Bonds • 99 ’65’82 90 92 ’65 ’74 90 ’78 ’79 ’65 ’85 95” l66” ’67 ’77 100 100 ’72’73 ’70 ’78 109* 5 Water Bonds.... do do do M.,J.,S,&D. 1890 4* Water Bonds.... do • Asked .... Cleveland, O—City Bonds 57 94 1 583,2061 Cincinnati, O.—Municipal do ;J.,A.,J.&0.|1890| 197,700) Milwaukee, Wie.—City, re-adj’d Newark, N. J.—City Bonds Mar.&Sept. ’66 ’67 Jan. & July ’80 *89 Quarterly var. _ 6 MARKET. Bid var. 1913 1870 1870 1873 July May & Nov 1875 ! Jan.'& July 1886 740,000' - do do 654,000’ — Mass.- -City Bonds 1885 ?01* 101* Boston, do City Bonds 93* 93* do 93 * City Bonds Water Loan Stg. do 1895 Water Loan do 1867 98* 99 1868 98* 93* Brooklyn, N.Y.—City Bonds — do 1868 Improve’t St’k 98* do Pub. Park L’n. | 1 year 98* 98* Water Loan do 1877 1876 '78 ’80 113 1872 ’72 '84 86' 1886 1880 90‘ 1872 1870 '70 ’77 95 1860 1862 1865 1870 95 1877 1879 1879 96 1866 1866 70 1881 225,000 850,000 300,000 City Scrip Baltimore, Md.—Improvement 102 j 1884 var. 1,650,000 18,264,642 12,624,500 300,000 96* do do do Alleghany do 104* 104* 1881 July Jan. & July, 1881 May & Nov.! 1882 \ May & Nov. do Registered Bonds. do Coupon Bonds do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do War Loan Bonds do Indiana—State Bonds do do do do War Loan Bonds. Iowa—State Certificates do War Loan Bonds.... Kansas—State Bonds 95 ;Jan. & July 6 6 B'ds. 96 July Treasury Notes (1st series) California—Civil Bonds do War Bonds Connecticut—War Bonds do Tax Exempt. Georgia—State Bonds do do do Illinoi»—Canal Bonds 9«* Jan. & July 1871 7,022,000 ; 5 100,000,0001 50,000,000’ State Securities. Alabama—State Bonds do do do Payable. Due. Rate., 138* 123 pal Outstanding DENOMINATIONS. uTST" | Asked 121* 123 July July | Jan. & 9,415,250; \ j f i Princi¬ INTEREST. amount MARKET. Albany, N. Y.—City Scrip—^. OregonWar Bds (yearly) / coupon. 1,016,000 do do yearly)j Bonds (5-20s) of if:1862..'. .coupon. \ 514,780,500 ; 6 do do .registered do — | 138 \\S82^4b,1000 do do 1864 coupon . do .registered, do do do 1865 do do (10-40s) 1864 ...coupon. do .registered, do do Union Pacific RR. Sonde of 1865 i var, 85 85* 96 January 13,1866.] $f)e " 47 THE CHRONICLE. Comnurcial SimtK.- ' COMMERCIAL EPITOME. Friday Night, gold below 140l\and the failure of all efforts to put it above that figure, have had a depressing effect upon most articles of domestic produce, and totally defeated the anticipations of those who looked for activity and buoyancy with the commencement of the new year. The trade 01 the city has seldom been duller than it 6,595 141 683 9,034 2,426 1,686 549 bags pkgs do Teas, PORTS FOR THE 494 the influence of elsewhere at the an active Apparently on the idea that prices Com 59 2 pkgs Soap, lbs ... .1000 Nails, kegs....100 Cement, bbls... 60 Hardware, cs . . .22 112 Hops, bis 1 Lard oil, galls.232 , Oars 100 64 185 lbs Clover drooping. Groceries have shown but little animation, except in coffees, which have improved half a cent in gold, with free sales of Rio, Ceylon and West India growths. Sugars have been in better de 24,263 400 60 1,900 8 2,400 Cotton, bales,.112 47 Flour, bbls BELFAIT. Clover seed, 600 12,22* bags Com meal, bbls ,..1201 6,006 14,856 4,267 $37,334 16150 16,840 bush Tallow, QUEENSTOWNCora, bush..14029 14,029 CORK. 13,602 Cora, bush..17927 14,210 lhs........ 88298 1,500 7,600 Butter, lhs.. .6600 Bacon, BRITISH NORTH AMERICAN COLONIES. 175465 28,298 Flour, bbls.. 4596 86,383 500 lbs...283558 19,651 Pitch, bbls;... 100 Hams, lbs...82253 3,560 Pork, bbls....240 6,165 4,000 Com, bush...3150 8,000 5,386 Rosin, bbls...580 663 27,840 Corn meal, 2,256 Beef, tcs bbls 100 400 16,830 Pork, bbls ....450 11,801 Tobacco, cs.... 15 819 863 Clover seed, 607 bags 738 11,480 Kerosene, gls 4148 2,567 461 8,082 cs 2 77 Tea, pkgs 38,391 Seed, 2 2,289 Mfd Tobacco, 196 Ptg mach 110 cb—23 Sew mach, cs.492 Clocks, bxs.... 61 Hardware, cs .42 . 90 Segars, cs Staves 68 Flour, bbls... 1300 lbs bgs 452 9,364 Cotton, bis... .648 212,676 Cheese dull and . 125 Sperm Oil, galls ..7295 19,342 133 11,700 $19,570 Com, bush.. 74086 72,016 4898 bis. Ess. oils, 1,900 52 160 Whpftt 559 Seed, Sarsaparilla, 12,000 28 1 Flour, bbls.. 1660 5318 1,194,547 Bacon, lbs..28650 bales 191 421 127 ...18 Whalebone, falling off. A portion of the defi¬ ciency in numbers will be made up by eycets in weight. Lard has recovered one cent per pound. Bacon is very scarce and brings steady prices. Beef is in limited ^supply and very firm. Butter is Bacon, bbls.88291 Clocks, bxs... .94 815 103 Beef, tcs lbs.. 12900 75 Cheese, 48 Com bush .17286 1,838 7,825 1,100 18,000 1,600 16,868 LIVERPOOL. Cotton, HAMBURG, yards show a great 285 Flavine, bxs.. 100 169632 110,565 gals 106 Miscellaneous.... 4,509 .. Beef, bbls ANTWERP.% Petroleum, 145 Paints, pkgs....7 Tallow, Tbs.. .1275 Boiled oil, galls .650 47 Rosin, bbls $31,100 467 Preserves,cs.... 5 Drugs, pkgs Quan. Value 46 galls 1312 s 919 825 Pork, bbls 85 Com, bush.. .2410 2,547 bush..500 1,217 Beef, hhds 71 Wheat, 176 551 Dry goods, cs.. 1 bales.... 162 16,45 Hay, hhds..8 2,593 bbls.. 15 140 Tobacco, 814 Vinegar, 177 bxs... ,.300 546 Miscellaneous.... 110 Soap, 897 440 Miscellaneous... $98,914 meal,DDls.l0 Perfumery, bxs.75 Cheese, lbs.. ..448 Butter, lbs....203 speculation has sprung up. have “ touched bottom,’* speculators have entered the market and bought freely, carrying the price of pork up fully three dollars per barrel above the lowest point, closing with some indication of a purpose to “corner” the market against the “short” sellers for January delivery. The deliveries of packed provisions at this mar¬ ket are scarcely more than a third of the deliveries for the corres¬ ponding period of last season, while the export movement is about as large; but as there is little or no army demand, the diminished supply has not as yet been seriously felt. Notwithstanding the ac¬ tivity in packing during the past ten days, the accounts current at FOREIGN GLASGOW. 5 Coal, tons Kerosene, 435 .61 Trunks, pkgs. TO 1866. Quan. Valne. Spts turpentine, DANISH WEST INDIES. bbls ..1 Flour, bbls....845 8,385 Whale oil, Potatoes, bbls. .15 45 172 galls Pork, bbls 20 580 1 pkgs Beef, bbls 1 36 Wine, qtls... 19 2,708 Codfish, Lard, lbs ...7290 cs .5 Hoop skirts 6 1,537 Hardware, 195 Hoop skirts,, cs .1 Glassware, cks. 12 1 Dent’l Mat’l, cs.2 104 Shoes, cs 1 Furniture, cs . .20 200 Cart Mfd iron, pkgs .45 Tea, days, pork and hog products declined daily, under large receipts of hogs at Chicago, Cincinnati, and West; but, with a partial cessation of these receipts, YORE JAN. 9, WEEK ENDING Quan. Value. Till within the past three irregular. 3,191 13,280 1,689 8,789 1,998 Wool, bales .. Provisions have been very 1865. 1,605 5,925 tcs Sugar, hhds, bbls & specie) from the poet of new OF EXCLUSIVE been depressed, but without established decline. Breadstuffs have declined very materially, closing with a downward firm. 2,756 Same time For the week. EXPORTS is. Western Same time 1865. ds. Molasses, Cotton has tendency. For the week. Coal, tons Cotton, bales Coffee, ' Jan. 12, 1866. The fall in now leading articles for the been as follows: The imports from foreign ports of a few week and for the same time last year, have Mia iron, pkgs.. 3 2 Effects, cs Lard, 8898 2,402 300 lbs 200 Herbs, pkgs.... 16 pcs.... 179 1,600 Molasses, hhds.25 1,255 493 Maple, 357 Tobacco,hhds 86 38,992 Lard, lbs....2,200 mand, but no recovery in prices has taken place. The stock is 280 bis 58 23,070 Fancy goods.... 4 432 Furs, Alcohol, hhd...47 2,971 Petroleum, •„ ~ large. Molasses dull, except for fine qualities. Teas 36,788 20 150 galls.... 144883 101,016 Tea, pkgs 500 Staves In Rice the business has been very light. Spices more demand. 25 2,500 16000 3,000 Hops, bis 200 Sugars, cs 1 70 turpentine. have been more active. In fruits, we note a decline in Raisins. 5,196 Spts bbls. 100 5,000 Ext. Logwood, $67,902 bxs 6 200 Fish is dull. bxs j.... .50 300 Ore, BRITISH WEST INDIES. Amber grease, 355 Miscellaneous.... 700 Hardware, cs^ .70 3,217 1 bx In East Indian Goods, we notice a decline of one cent, gold, in 2,080 Drags, pkgs.. .108 2,426 Clocks, bxs... .17 $338,532 Manilla Hemp, leading to more business. Groceries firm, but quiet. 2,200 Flour, bbls. .6,955 54,463 Drags, pkgs.... 11 BREMEN. Skins, Dales 9 3,700 Live stock, hd.164 18,500 Petroleum, Linseed unchanged. 2,133 Hay, bales....300 1,222 Machinery, C8..24 gallB 68873 46,145 Books, cs 345 Commeal,bbl 1118 5,212 :.2 Hides have been firm, and latterly more active. Southern steady. Tobacco stems, 1,800 Cora, bush..3,620 3,878 Dent’l matls, cs.l 60 hhds...; 4,984 805 Lumber, ft. .6,000 212 Tallow more active and firm at the decline. Whisky quiet. Wool Pumps, bxs Apples, bbls. .128 4 182 Hardware, CS....9 821 Pork, bbls....343 9,024 nuts, in more demand. 143 3,503 Hops quiet. Building materials scarce and Ivory bis 2 2.000 Beef, bbls lbs r. 100000 3,100 Waste, 350 Kerosene, Beeswax, lbs..716 Shooks & heads, prices nominally supported. 4,000 1475 903 galls bbls 392 1.900 Naval Stores have come forward less freely, and are firm, not¬ pkgs,..;....197 1,400 Nuts, Bread, pkgs.. .498 2,364 bxs —100 Rosin, bbls...200 1,522 Seeds, 100 Peas, busn....715 1,515 withstanding the decline in gold. Oils have been very dull, and Rye, bush.. .15419 14,639 Sew. mach, cs ..1 223 Lard, lbs...60,436 12,564 Miscellaneous crude whale, and crude sperm are easier. Petroleum has declined India Rubber, Butter, lbs. 17,251 6,126 cs 3 797 and closes very flat. $1,609,926 Paper, reams. .500 302 200 Furniture, cs... .2 LONDON. Cheese, lb.. 11,062 3,034 Freights have been dull, lower rates have failed to stimulate ship¬ Com, bush 43 46 Oil cake, Pk’d fish,bbls. 150 1,250 ments. The room on the berth for British ports is of quite moder¬ Cotton, bales..30 6,125 177 lbs 842701 23,893 Candles, bxs.. .40 100 Tobacco, hhds221 75,355 Guano, bgs Mfd iron, pkgs.. 5 118 11 ate extent, and a revival of shipments would probably cause an Hardware, cs .7 250 Soap, bxs 12 118 Sperm oil, advance in rates. Tobaeco, cs.... 35 2,725 181 14358 35,430 Paper, reams.. .80 galls bxs 85 1,420 Clocks, BiHiard 390 flit, bxs.2 The receipts of domestic produce for the week, and since Jan. 1, Mfd. wood, Ext. Logwood, 705 Potatoes, 135 403 pkgs 10 have been as follows ; bxs.. 500 2,821 5,445 Hoop iron,lbs7000 500 Flour, bbls ...625 Cedar, bags...550 5,000 Mfd tob, bxsl2851 RECEIPTS OF DOMESTIC PRODUCE FOR THE WEEK, AND SINCE AN. 1. 2,749 Shoe pegs, ’ Cedar, Mfd Since This Since This bbls....' 258 928 Sew mach, cs..25 1,400 .....19 3,000 bxs Jan. 1 week. Jan. 1. 7 1,735 week. Corn, bush..19374 23,274 Carriages 60 Tobacco, hhdslll 28,841 798 158 252 155 Spirits turpentine Cheese, lbs.166248 31,100 Apples, bbls... 10 Ashes, pkgs 634 Shoe pegs, 8,881 have been in Annatto, bkts.140 Dried apples, bbls 20 Tobacco, bis. .870 Tobacco, cs.... 19 Com, bush.... 100 Skins, pkgs—10 .... --- ... .. — ■ Flour, bbls Wheat, bush ... Oats Com Rye Malt Barley Grass seed Flaxseed Beans Peas Cora meal, bbls.. Com meal, bags. B. W.Flour, bags Cotton, bales Copper, plates Copper, bbls Dried fruit, pkgs... Grease, pkgs....... Hemp, bales Hides, No Hops, bales Leather, sides Lead, pigs 27,364 53,018 4,657 26,445 17,901 15,823 7,075 330 1,698 2j028 ’95 1,477 680 11,399 94 265 167 4 2,141 154 32,514 Molasses,hhds,bbls 5i2 Naval Stores— Crude turp bbls.. 24 2,339 Rosin Breadstufls— Tar Pitch 46.061 Oil cake, pkgs — 27,765 Oil lard 250 Oil, Petroleum 11.000 Peanuts, bags ... 921 1,460 752 36 4,284 22,854 41,906 270 375 9,060 1,444 15,965 5,087 1,820 330 Provisions— 3,640 Butter, pkgg..... Cheese 2,367 1,400 868 9,216 1,036 29,156 Cut meats Eggs Pork Beef, pkgs Lard, pkgs Lard, kegs 274 Rice, pkgs 302 Starch 461 Stearine 167 Spelter, slabs...... 36 Sugar, hhds & bbls 13,541 Tallow, pkgs 331 Tobacco 70,087 Tobacco, hhds 416 Whisky, bbls 512 Wool, bales Dressed Hogs, No.. 1,503 Rice, rough, bush.. 755 740 1,630 949 1,628 61 1,555 3,487 2,571 3,122 *32 66 129 2,625 3,025 43 113 Perfumery, cs.200 $196,130 Lamp oil, gal. .50 Tobacco,bis. ..181 Paint oil, gal.. .50 BRISTOL. $128,335 Tallow, lbs. .46104 6,400 Paint, pkgs ....20 6 Rosin, bbls ... 358 4,950 Rope, coil DUTCH WEST INDIES. 502 bbls - Mfd tobacco, lbs 5,030 1194 324 Leather, sides... 4 bbls..1105 11,00b 433 Flour, Rye FI our,bbls .70 Pork, bbls 48 Bread, pkgs...126 <00 614 1,515 1,175 206 lbs...3089 127 Beef, bbls 878 Hams, lbs Butter, Lard, lbs Rosin, bbls 2759 11 17 2 Tranks, pkgs.. .1 Furniture, cs .. Tinware, cs 55 209 1,902 3,535 294 679 1,568 3,166 2,065 12,309 878 8,586 Sew macn, cs.. Lam-s, pkgs.. Candles, Com , .2 . 73 233 Peas, bbls Lard oil, gals 285 ..24 4 Tallow scraps lbs ..3410 lbs....480 BeeSwax, pkgs. .4 6 Beef, bbls Butter, Middles, lbs.27815 Hams, lbs.... "824 10 30 meal,bbls.60 Tar, bbls 48 770 154 120 418 70 48 118 333 6 Boots & shoes,cs2 bbls...1312 12,306 Wine, pkgs 4 318,138 Shoulders, Ill Sails, bales 5< »9 94 114 Oil cake, lbs Flour, 2,460 3,900 5 366 bis...80 3 Cora, bush...2414 Peas, hush... 3418 125 75 263 242 8636 lbs Cheese, lbs.199300 seed, hags. ....100 Clover Bacon, lbs. StaveB .20,000 1800 Miscellaneous ... 14,532 Tobacco, cs Books, cs Chains, cs 1 6 600 Furniture, cs.. .49 120 Hams, lbs....2723 200 Tongues, bbl—4 106 Onions, bbls.. .30 Coal oil, gal. .1000 1,499 600 156 81 730 600 600 1,123 Sh«oks 2,915 4,302 Miscellaneous.... 1,330 $147,177 35,855 BRITISH HONDURAS. 1,880 Hardware, cs...24 4,200 Matches, cs.... 15 250 Petroleum, galls........610 Perfumery,bxs.92 $96,684 Candles,.bxs., 125 170 1,023 310 478 427 830 Quan. Value Quan. Value. Onions, crates..8 111 Tobacco, pkgs. 39 3,124 Cond milk, cs.. .6 90 Glassware, cs..38 2,312 Furniture, cs.... 7 216 Mach'y,pkgs. 1469 28,486 Drugs, pkgs 2 138 177 Toys, cs 7 Hoop skirts, cs.l 75 Hoops, bdls.5,977 20,810 Pork, bbls... .141 3,075 Bricks 25,300 1,970 2 ..30 460 Sugar, bxs 56 Ale, bbls Codfish, qtl... .74 549 Perfumery,pkg.51 3,521 Soap, bxs 208 328 China, cs 1 250 Butter, lbs.. 1,474 685 Nuts, bbls 18 300 Lard, lbs.... 1,739 279 Stone, tons...850 3,340 156 Wick, bales Hams, lbs 613 8 600 Bread, pkgs. . .45 172 Cement, bbls 825 1,787 Cheese, lbs.. 1,432 273 Tallow, lbs.21,712 3,357 Woodw'e, pkg.20 65 Onions, crates .28 193 Tobacco, bals.. 10 216 Turpentine,bbl. 24 732 Agl implts, Corn, hhds 50 1.150 pkg 77 Tobacco, cs.... 20 6 973 3,309 Cora, bush..2,140 Flour, bbls....559 2,195 Stationery, cs.. .1 110 Oakum, bales. 120 656 Beans, bbl.... 100 430 Potatoes, bbl 7354 21,782 Match 46 Potatoes, bbls .24 378 sticks,bx.9 Pkl fish 5 67 Mach oil, gls.2180 1,308 Bone Lumber, ft .50,000 1,021 black,hhd52 3,142 Miscellaneous.... 773 Roofing, pkgs.. 18 422 300 Figs, cs 10 $15,424 Rivets, kegs...10 170 HAVRE. Ut Cotton, bales .431 Whalebone, 97,849 lbs 22,272 Sew mach, cs..32 1 Effects, cs 32,076 2,695 1,000 Tobacco, bxs.. .1 oil, bx.. .1 Seeds, cs 2 Ess oils, cs 1 Preserves, cs... 21 120 1,680 700 110 380 Miscellaneous.... 150 Watch Metalc bur cansl2 391 Nails, hhds 250 3 Beef, bbls $136,760 MARSEILLES. Ext Logwood, 3,053 Kerosene,gals.l64 Lumber, ft.34,924 Hardware, cs.. .53 Fancy goods,- cs. 3 Paint, pkgs 3 Cutlery, bxs... .2 Lard, lbs....3,274 8 Tobacco, cs 140 1,092 1,159 437 72 Matches, cs.... 15 Boots & shoes, Crockery, hhds.. 6 Mf d iron, pkg.. 1 139 Candles, bxs.. .55 328 Bread, pkgs.... 27 Hams, lbs.. .1,694 Nails, kegs 41 543 Preserves, .57 5 5 526 45 80 Dry goods, cs.. .2 Stationery, cs .21 Cutlery, cs 1 Drags, cs.; 64 Rope, pkgs ... .33 Tea, pkgs 4 Whisky, bbls .2 403 220 60 1,007 1,250 63 311 60 125 cs.. Soap, bxs Ale, bbls... 959 Lumber, ft 125,000 Com meal,pkgs40 Jute packing... 10 Sew mack, bxs.19 4,425 718 Boat 1 495 Straw braid, tcs40 140 Tobacco, bis.. ..2 64 Wine, 102 250 Sugar, bbl stores,pk54 12 Pitch, bbls Ice, tons 50 300 Wine, pkgs... .5 Furniture, cs ..19 cs cs 125 400 160 102 200 3,116 $453,545 374 PORTO RICO. Corn meal,pkgl30 3,120 hhds 652 211,167 Pork, bbls 50 1,421 Oak planks,pc. 112 240 Lard, lbs...11,250 2,475 100 Hams, lbs.. .2,738 Beef, bbl/. 4 1,310 Staves 81360 19,063 Cheese, bxs .796 202 Potatoes, bbls .65 195 $231,460 Onions, bbls.. .45 126 TRENCH WEST INDIES. Paper, reams..200 120 Shooks &Hds 2968 9,348 Agl implts, pkgs5 251 Petrol, gls 250 194 Furniture, cs .3 78 1 37 Shooks Beef, bbl 2,915 7,648 Rosin, bbls 8 57 Hoops, bdls.3,222 10,421 330 Drugs, pkgs Turpentine, bbl.8 6 223 Hoops 20,000 1,300 $9,966 Coal oil, galls. 100 100 CUBA. Hardware, cs .2 95 Hardware, cs..810 8,170 Beef, bbls 10 201 Furniture, cs..180 6,064 Butter, lbs.... 656 212 Drugs, pkgs.. .627 14,484 Tallow, pkg82,196 309 Hoop skirts, cs. .5 3,376 Oats, bush 109 74 Shooks 15,979 40,031 Candles, bxs.. 100 407 Butter, bxs. 32539 11,362 Bread, pkgs 70 2 Rifles, 75 10,000 Sew mach, cs.. .1 75 18 Paper, bdls... .403 1,250 Miscellaneous.... Lard, lbs..816,724 60,361 Hides, cs 1 100 $30,451 OPORTO. Paper, rims..22650 16,115 Carriage 36 3,505 Wheat, bush7,000 12,600 560 Agl implite, pkg.2 120 Petroleum, gls800 Bran, bgs 200 200 Cider, bxs 50 175 $13,160 CONSTANTINOPLE. Corameal, bbl.100 465 176 Nails, kegs.. .226 5,575 Woodware. pkg23 60 Pork, bxs.. a-.. 8 718 Blacking, cs 8 Lard oil, gal...597 48 1,195 Mfd iron, pkgs. .4 126 Beans, bbl....409 3,819 Glassware, cs... 4 Hay, bales...2353 6,191 Rum, bbls.. .1,710 30,874 60 Onions, bbl... 883 2,208 Alcohol, bbls....2 Codfish, qtl....50 329 Candles 750 4,389 $31,344 HAYTI. Stationery, cs. .34 903 Saddlery, cs... .12 7,308 Pork, bbls....355 10,255 Pork, bbl.....275 8,788 Tobacco, bales269 5,034 Lumber, pcs. 1002 1,208 220 Butter, lbs..3,425 .. Pickets 2,000 Oakum, bis.... 22 1 Clothing, 472 113 Alcohol, bbls... .2 54 Tin plate, bxs...6 84 Spirits, bbls ...12 306 Alcohol, bbls... .5 Mfd iron, 4 141 cs.20 Billiard fixt, cs. .1 Cart boxes, cs.. .4 120 328 118 Syrup, Iron, bars 150 1,946 80 Miscellaneous.... .. .. .. Hemp, lbs..21634 Bread, pkgs... .12 Apples, bbls..700 Rice, bgs 100 Cheese, lbs..9,040 Flour, bbls.... 840 12 Books, cs mi $ Ptg matl, pkgs. 29 Rope, pkgs .230 Exps pkgs, cs.. .5 2,700 2,301 2,828 5,445 800 Lamps, pkgs.... 3 Mfd iron, pkgs .84 Clocks, bxs 4 Boat 1 Fancy goods, cslO Paint, pkgs 72 Confectionery,cs5 — I R goods, C8....1 Salt, sacks....239 Exps pkgs 1 Butter, Its..7,000 3,300 1,600 1,200 600 150 2,500 21,350 VENEZUELA. Gunny cloth, bales.........25 812 Butter, lbs.. 3,056 Potatoes,bbls. 100 25 Oysters, cs 1,009 288 Flour, bbls....292 2,774 Furniture, cs.. .22 Billiard table... .1 386 490 Agl implts,pkgs.7 101 600 6,044 Shooks 4,000 Lard, lbs.. .28,600 220 , Kerosene oil, gals 3,200 WTieat, bus. .2,483 Candles, bxs... 25 Mfd tobacco, 2,463 6,636 306 885 284 Tobacco, cs 3 Powder, cs 4 Drugs, pkgs.. .14 4 Nails, bxs 188 63 lbs 282 80 150 750 Books, 2 cs Hoop skirts, cs.2 Drugs, pkgs....32 Candles, bxs.. .25 Butter, lbs..3,170 Cheese, lbs..2,308 Machinery, C8..10 Hardware, cs .66 Sew mach, cs.. .2 . 120 Nalls, kegs .. .100 6,348 Hams, lbs.. .1,922 260 Blacking, bxs.. 24 1,427 Sand paper, bxs .4 2,367 Preserves, cs.. 220 1 3,610 Nickel, box 577 Books, cs....;.,6 550 Onions, bbls... 30 5 245 Hops, bis 300 24,019 BRAZIL. Drugs, pkgs—41 Cotton 947 gins,cs.162 12,413 Flour, bbls..6,070 Staves, bdls.. ,800 Hoops, bdls.. .360 Headings Nails, kgs 129 74 Bread, pkgs.. .515 Lard, lbs... 13,566 Tea, pkgs 110 1 Boat Perfumery, pkgs 68,030 729 324 367 610 1,214 3,680 4,400 250 105 2,468 Coal oil... .".5,058 1 3,683 72 137 1,313 Hardware, cs .9 820 Matting, rolls.. .5 496 150 809 Rosin, bbls.... 10 Tobacco, cs .. .2 240 Furniture, cs 1,249 Glassware, pks.10 615 Lumber, ft 10,483 102 57 365 1,427 Miscellaneous.... 20 .. 3,041 140 836 479 * 100,514 CISPLATINE REPUBLIC. mach, cs.. .1 100 576 Lumber,ft. 237,157 7,115 160 7,215 1,031 Total $4,091,557 210 1,146 63 626 Sew 1,326 1,377 fct>27 Hides, undress 885 Bark, Peru’n.235 2,919 Barytes Brimstone, tm30 157 830; Castor oil 24 426 Camphor 63 2,165 1,745 do do ed.... 522 Brandy. .27 364 25 1,294 77 20 512 Cordials Gin "Wine Champagne,.. 252 Metals, &c.— Brass goods.. 10 Bronzes 7 Chains and an¬ 51 chors 300 752 12,762 2,712 Guns... 77 Hardware... .153 Madder 47,113 19,834 Iron, sheet, 880 1.899 Iron, other, 375 ...269 ess Nut Galls Oil olive ...... 28 Opium 40 Paints Reg Antimony42 Rhubarb Soda, bi tons.... 4 1,657 9,187 6,941 Sugar of lead .35 3,136 1,552 Sumac:".. ...408 Soda, nitrate.... 13,718 Santonia... Senna 245 p’vs. 12 525 Coal, tons... 2756 28,006 4,672 Cigars Corks Clocks 625 22 2,434 5,976 Cocoa, bags.. 301 Coffee, bags 9,034 148,018 Emery... 222 227 Feathers 929 15,546 4 413 Guano,tons. 1226 5,834 1,744 Hair Hair cloth 11,580 Hemp, bales.7251 Honey 36 Hops ....40 19,147 2,479 5.095 02 6 India rubt...623 Machinery 37 Maccaroni... 300 Molasses 549 12,634 2,503 94,782 856 2,354 25,990 1,953 475 13,127 Oil paintings... 3 Paper hangings. Pipes 2,253 34,331 lbs 314,367 Silverware..... 1 14,620 700 Statuary Tin, bxs..12,394 Tin, slabs2,573, 78,734 Seeds Linseeds 27,867 11,928 Perfumery, Potatoes Provisions Rags Salt 509 507 400 .. .97 12,366 5,090 163 1,910 1462'51,022 1,492 648 593 2,657 4,180 731 Cloves Mustard... 6,606 Nutmeg Pepper 2,545 310 Soap 5 Sugar, hhds, tcs and bbls..1,305 76,165 Sugar, boxes and bags ....5,925 70,482 Trees & plants. 616 Tea 1,298 31,303 9,269 Toys 208,551 776 107 Paper 47 Other 115 Woods— 48,373 Cedar 1,698 Cork Pork Packing Cheese 3.732 1,565 3,076 Prunes Raisins Sauces and Total 1,129 46,285 761 242 218 Build’g stones.. 6 195 Stationery, &c.— 66 6,700 Books 8,588 Engravings ....5 Oranges 1,323 Bncks Buttons Plaster Figs Grapes 6,583 3.839 Bags 2,083 3,518 3,241 Lemons...' Nuts 227 5,708 9,701 29,244 12,333 Citron Dried fruits 314 6,289 1,607 Lead,pigs ..2598 155,430....... 95,601 5.029 Fish.. Furniture Grain.." 990 Zinc Furs 1318 Fancy goods.... 131,962 Spelter, Fruits, &c lbs Mahogany Effects 10,654 689 Spices— 38 452 Logwood. M. 2,905 1,172 160 Steel 974 359 2 13,961 2,095 Iron tubes.... 63 Saddlery 2,372 2,299 Sulph. cop’r.. .66 ..113 Metal goods ..88 Nails 7 Needles 16 Old metal Platina 2 Per Caps...... .22 car¬ bonate..2928 do sal.... 1161 do ash 98 . tons 16,641 11,502 1,991 617 116 47,700 copal. .36 1,130 Indigo 99 10,600 646 Iodine, pot 8 Oils, 445 1.398 Copper. Cutlery Quan. Value. Clay 121,493 Liquors, Wines, &c.— 1,797 arabic. .35 16,046 360 1,302 Ale Fustic Wallow 29,305 Other 52,722 Miscellaneous— Baskets 99 363 141,958 r ed Horns 2,858 Furs, &c— Felting 270 2,616 1,240 Steel pens, cs... 4 Gas flxt, cs ... .11 cs 3 Sew mach, cs.. .5 Ammonia, sal. .9 36 Argols 3,200 Miscellaneous.... 44 44 .. Books, Hides, dress¬ 4,076 180 243 toap, bxs... 3,800 6,295 .. Enn'd cloth, cs.. 4 Leather, cs 9 .,..11 Photo mtls, cs. .4 cs 1,887 6,063 Boots & shoes, Bristles 80 Boots & shoes.3. 32 Other 8,800 Watches.....-.29 342 Baltpetre 4,978 *18 3,355 Photo mtl ugar, bxs.. ..115 547 4,495 Flour, bbls.. 1,570 14,420 Sew mach, cs.. .2 541 Pepper, bgs.... 20 922 Candles, bxs.. 185 91 1,758 Rice, bbls 1,270 8,215 Beef, bbls 623 25 2,780 Pk codfish, bbl310 3,602 Mf tobac. bxs2286 1,030 Codfish, qtl.. .349 2,565 Wast, bales 3 124 Cheese, Ids .947 • 238 620 Soap, bxs.. ..,408 820 Lard, lbs.. ..3,100 Coal oil,gls.52,134 35,505 Bread, pkgs 2 26 Met goods, pkgs6 105 161 Coal oil, galls .100 Oysters, bxs..360 2,000 Nails, kegs 80 240 Woodware, pk445 400 2,631 Shingles, bdl8.400 286 Tacks, bxs 6 117 Hams, lbs.. .1,180 495 Trunks, pkgs.610 2,479 Lumber, ft. 15,000 481 Domestics, oals32 4,714 Miscellaneous.... Spts turp, gls2,293 2,554 Pk codfish, bbls50 $52,059 740 MEXICO. Cotton cards, cs.2 1,900 6,693 Vinegar, bbls..22 669 Flour, bbls. .525 4,854 Bacon, bxs. 18,861 4,039 Lard, lbs...24,890 Preserves, cs..231 1,545 Soap, bxs 350 6,460 Cutlery.. Eggs, bbls Dry goods, cs.. .8 Clothing, cs... .22 1,725 6,786 Leather, Hides, &c. 22,112 NEW GRANADA. 16,234 5 20 Gums,crude. .705 ■r 76 Jewelry .......16 960 6,456 Carmine 3 Cubebs Cream tartar. .10 3 Cochineal Cudbear 31 37 420 3 97 Musical..- 282 Aloes Anoline colors.11 Arsenic 207 139 pkgs.26 Pork, bbls Alkali Ammonia 528 2 Pepper, bgs Drugs, &c.— Mathematical.. 1 3,410 Optical 7,496 Jewelry, &c.— .. 36 119 12 cs Car wheels Bottles China 96 Earth’nw’e. ..330 Glass 418 Glassware .100 Glass plate... .42 429 338 9 Shoes, ware— 83 Cheese, lbs.... 567 5, 1866. Quan. Value. Quan. Value.! Instruments— China, Glass & E. 1 2,362 533 41 cs AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE JAN. [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] 56 701 549 278 ENDING WEEK 33,770 Flour, bbls....273 SPECIE) (OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND CENTRAL AMERICA. 250 391 Tobacco, 496. 940 510 Miscellaneous.... bxs 10 Ext Fustic, bxs 10 Ext Hyp, bxs. .20 Miscellaneous 18 2 cs.... cs IMPORTS Quan. Value. 486 Telegraph inst.. 7 25 Matches, Oilcloth, Naval Ii [January 13, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 48 at the 850 12,298 Twine Tobacco Waste..... 6 146 54 960 3,632 30,270 10,226 53,384 48 5,597 Wool,bis ...,494 3,094 Other Boxes 605 587 120 $2,108,070 West.—The feature of the past week vast increase in the receipts of hogs at the principal packing markets. We subjoin late reports : Chicago.—The receipts of Hogs, live and dressed, in Chicago (luring has been a the week ending Saturday, 6th, ceived during the corresponding amount to 80,521, against 48,488 re¬ period last season. The shipments of Hogs, live and dressed, during the past week, amount to 6,473, against 6,261 shipped during the corresponding week last season. Deducting the shipments from the receigts, there has been left over for packers Hogs, against 42,227 left over during the corresponding week last season. The total receipts of live and dressed Hogs from the 1st of October to the 6th of January amount to 376,995, against 938,148 during the corresponding period last season. The total shipments of live and dressed Hogs from the 1st of October to the 6th of January amount to 170,887, against 213,683 shipped during the corresponding period last and butchers this week 76,048 season. deducting the shipments from the receipts from the 1st of October to January, the balance left compares as follows: the 6thof 1865-66. Receipts to date..,. Shipped to date Left for packers and butchers . 1864-65. 170,887 875,995 938,148 213,683 205,108 724,465 Cincinnati.—The Price Current of the 10thsays: It is exceedingly difficult to arrive at any correct conclusion regard¬ ing the supply of hogs in the country until the bulk of them have been brought into the market. Under the large receipts prices declined fully 75c. per cental during the week, but closed firm at the decline. The following were the receipts for the week and the season at this post: By railways By river.. 51,808 . ..." 2,782 From Kentucky Driven in 3,733 Slaughtered at Plainville 8,100 2,260 63,688 Previously reported Total for the 228,899 season. 292,682 THE, CHRONICLE" JJJanuary 13,1866.] 49 Conn. & Mass. 850,600 do do 870,628 608,457 do do 474,467 483,799 annual review of the market for tobacco in New York ANNUAL STATEMENT OF STOCKS Havana. OF : Yara. 156 160 39,108 127 769 2,567 119 Total 42,804 886 Delivered since 33,866 886 Stock Jan. 1, 1866.... ANNUAL STATEMENT OF THE 3,696 8,948 NEW • YORK • Cienfuegos. 2,7?a 1,367 1,366 • AND BROOKLYN 4,139 42,558 279 • • TOBACCO WAREHOUSES. TION Virg. Kentucky. hhds. Stock in the N. Y. Inspection wareh’e Jan.l, 1865 Received since .** Delivered since & N. C. hhds. hand Dec. 28, ’65 Stock in the Brooklyn In¬ on Maryland. hhds. 1 81 82 4,882 6 1 72,847 4,883 3,428 37 20 33 49,619 — Stock Ohio. hhds. 28.843 44,004 15 — — 17 18 1,455 24,718 • • • • • • • • • • 20,046 • • • • « • •ft .. • • • • ♦ • • • • • • ..... 10,466 surplus of 1863 and the additional stocks estimated at S5,000 hhds, which became available on the opening of Virginia. The best evi¬ dence of the disappointment the maintainance of uniform gold values was to the exporters, is the fact that foreign markets ruled during the whole season, with slight exception, below our quotations, leaving no margin for speculative operations, and compelling them to confine their purchases only to orders in band, and they even now rely upon the unusually large crops in Germany, Hungary, Holland, and other parts of the world, and the probability of very large plantings next season in all the tobacco growing sections of this country, as well as elsewhere, to counteract any tendency to higher prices next season. crop “ “ ‘ 35,000 42,000 140,000 25,000 20,000 27,000 90,000 16,000 5,000 16,000 16,000 60,000 consumption Of which 40,000 cases have been exported, mostly to Germany, balance gone into consumption or held by manufacturers. “ in the West is estimated at Maryland and Ohio Virginia and North Carolina hhds .. 65,000 40,000 10,000 115,000 Of the Western crop reports are that the yield in the Clarksville and Western District is less than one-half of last year’s, and not as good, from the other sections the leaf to be of fair and good color, but in gen¬ eral lacking substance. Since the reopening of the Southern ports we received 6,796 hhds. from Virginia and North Carolina, the greater part of which consisted lowing statement of the Hide market for 1865 The total importation of Hides into the United States for the as will be seen by the following figures: Total imports into New York 1,771,141 Dealers’ purchases in neighboring markets...., 61,684 : markets *418,799 Foreign imports into Philadelphia “ “ “ “ “ “ 9,722 Baltimore Salem (estimated). 25,616 50,000 2,170,206 Total imports into New York last 1,744,142 year “ “ “ Bostou “ “ « “ “ Salem “ “ .. Philadelphia“ “ ....... Baltimore “ “ “ “ “ u “ “ 450,279 78.288 2,356,673 Decrease this year “ compared with last “ “ M IMPORTS OF 1859 HIDES . INTO NEW Description—Foreign. Buenos Ayres, and Montevideo Dry. “ “ Salted “ “ Rio Grande , Dry “ Salted “ and Buenos Ayres Horse Cabello, Laguayra, etc Maranham, Para, Pernambuco & Bahia Maracaibo Richmond Petersburg Lynchburg hhds. 12,853 4,408 2,306 Total 1864 690,057 14,193 674,777 10,878 179,840 18,671 1,630 134,448 19,017 8,276 15 196 2,792 3,677 17,781 60,198 12,550 68,916 118,166 4,913 Tampico, Vera Cruz, etc 56,742 56,753 Central America, San Juan, etc Port au Platt, West Indies, etc A fricans 8,154 105,929 114,105 5,369 European Ports descriptions Other Foreign 20,158 101,806 12,910 1,681 1,423,373 1,439,364 169,617 246,420 83,212 Coastwise. etc........ of tobacco from the resumption of business to 23d Total 1865. 117,402 Savanilla, Carthagena, etc. Rio Hache, Curagoa, .etc Total VORK. 254 Orinoco Porto 186,467 1,012,072 2,500 195,573 22,681 , “ in 43,758 40,206 ....... , are year 794,210 ordinary grades and mostly out of condition, classing only with the California Dry Salted grades of Kentucky, and at similar prices* For better sorts in good condition full prices were made, but purchasers in Richmond pay¬ Texas, Southern, etc ing full prices for foreign account, very little of those sorts has of late Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Boston, inst., : 2,170,206, of lower been offered here. The inspection and the Hides.—We condense from the circular of Hale & Co. the fol¬ 35,184 the yield of that year, with what had been consumed in the interior and the Canadas, full up to 2<>0,000 hhds, the largesf ever made, left our own as well as foreign markets so amply stocked, that any deficiency in the Western crops in 1864 and 1865 was amply made up by the year’s 33,000 18,000 30,000 Sales and 375,411 132,000 hhds, and in 1866 with at least 30,000 hhds more, making “ 20,000 60,000 80,000 1,709,457 Looking upon the whole of the transactions of the past year, we find that the result has not been quite satisfactory to either sellers or buyers. The immense crop of 1863, furnishing this market during 1864 with This 20,000 Total imports into Boston Dealers’ purchases in neighboring 22,385 Total. over Crop of 1864 1866 is 12,805 hand Dec. 28,’65 on 22,000 — 32,861 Stock 15,000 more. 28,228 • Delivered since Total. 15,000 15,000 importations for the year have been 1,423,373 ftom Foreign, and 46,692 from Domestic ports; total, 1,771,111 Hides; showing a de¬ 347,768 36,888 crease of 16,779 when compared with last year, and of 14,528 in com¬ 10,304 parison with 1863. From Buenos Ayres, Rio Grande and Africa there is a small increase, and from European ports the excess is over 100,000 INSPECHides, or nearly ten times the receipts of last year. From all other Foreign ports the imports show a falling off from those of last year, the greatest decrease being from Orinoco and Central America. The ar¬ rivals from Domestic ports, in the aggregate, are very nearly the same Total. hhds. as last year, though from California aloue the receipts are 85,000 leas this year than last. This deficit is, however, very nearly made up by 28,907 the increased receipts from Texas and the othei Southern States, from 48,893 whence the arrivals during the last three months of the year have been large. The purchases of the trade in neighboring markets have been in 77,800 excess of those of last year by about 18,000; comprising, principally, 53,082 California from Boston, and Slaughters from Philadelphia and Balti¬ spection warehouse Jan. 1, 1865 Received since Ohio <fc Western The 279 • Total. Penn. 8,000 25,000 Stock Jan. 1, 1865 SPANISH TOBACCO. Cuba. Stock Jan. 1,1865,bales Received since Stock Jan. 1, 1864,... .cases N.Y. State. Total Coastwise Total Foreign and Coastwise Liverpool.—We have dates We quote : 27,000 89,467 25,146 61,684 48.778 347,768 848,566 1,771,141 1,787,920 by the Scotia to-day to Dec. 31. Ashes are rather lower, 41e@42s having been accepted for Pots; Making a total quantity inspected in Virginia 19,667 Pearls have sold at 38s to 39s 6d. Bark—Some small sales of Phila¬ leaving a stock of uninspected in Richmond about 1,300 hhds., in delphia @ 7s 6dper cwt. No Baltimore here. Naval Stores—Rosin : Petersburg 1,655 hhds., and Lynchburg 792, together 3,747 hhds. And common French has sold at 14s 6d, and some low medium at 15a; in this sort has been large* Spirits of Turpentine very dull at 46s@47s per cwt. Petboleumsatisfactory to all parties, to which we are largely Lower priceshaving been accepted, more business has been doing iL, indebted to an export demand, exceeding in amount that of all previ¬ 2s 10@3s Id for Refined Pennsylvaniau. Small sales of Spirit at Is 4d ous years. The transactions for the first few months of the year were per gallon. Lard—Fifty tons French have been sold on the spot @72s small, although prices were low considering the rate of gold being over per cwt, and fifty tons American for May and June delivery at 60s, 200; but soon after a lively demand sprung up for export, German Tallow has been very dull, as is usual at this time of the year; here buyers taking largely of the good and medium sorts of Connecticut, the demand is small at last week’s rates, namely—49s@49s 6d for which conti ued, including a steady inquiry for New York State, with¬ South American, 60 for North American and 49s 6d@50s for P. Y. C. out much abatement until the close of the year, at which time Ohio In London there has been a slight improvement on the spot and for seed was more freely offered, and several thousand cases taken. forward delivery ; Buyers for P. Y. C. at 48s 3d on spot, and for Janu¬ The transactions for the year are shown in the following statement: ary and March delivery; 49» 3d@49s 6d for March only, and 60s for Seed Leaf.—*-The business for the year and on the wholy - 50 [January 13,1866. CHRONICLE. THE 4—Limited demand ; money scarce; exchange difficult Sales 400 bales at 46@47c for middling, closing quiet Mobile, Jan, chaDge. Good qualities of both Old and Sales for the week are about 700 tierces. last three months. Beef—No New are in good request. to negotiate. and easier. waDted. fair American has arrived, for which*90e@92g 6d is Bacon still continues to droop without leading to business; we quote Middles 63s@59s ; Hams 50s@56s. Cheese—Fine qualities in demand at 60s@64s; lower qualities neglected. Butter—No business passing; nominal value 1128(3)1148. for the past sell, in conse¬ quence of which the offering stock has been light. Good cotton readily brings 45, and middling 48 cents. Columbus, Ga., Dec. 31st—During the week the market has been active. The higher grades, from middling up, are much in demand COTTON. Buyers do not wish the lower grades. There ia a scarcity of money There is less speculative strength to the market, and with the among all classes. This greatly checks transactions and prices. The week being rainy the receipts have been very small. Middlings have decline in gold on Tuesday, prices were one cent lower. This de¬ averaged 38(5)39, good middlings 40c. 5,004 cline has since been recovered, but the market lacked buoyancy and Stock hand Sept 1, 1865 .bales 219 steadiness. The Southern markets have all been irregular. Gold Received this week 17,974 Received previously 17,765has touched a lower figure in New Orleans than in this market. 22,978 The receipts keep up well at all points from which we have any Total amount received, 1,836 Pork—Some new 4—The market has been active days.-with full prices, but traders are indisposed to Augusta, Ga., Jan. three on condition. export business at this market has again become light, and accounts. The The riveis are spinners buy the in fine boating Shipped past week. . Shipped previously........ Total amount shipped. sparingly. 7,641 9,447 13,601 Stock hand Dec. 80 of preparation judge by Galveston, Dec. 23d.—Cotton statement. 1860-4H Year. 3,168 The favorite Stock hand 1st Sept., 1865. bales 13,857 2,002 Received this week..... 3,812 plantation, 60,885 Received previously 65,267 9,798 Cotton planting Received at other ports... 9,038 Mining, 75,854 the speculation of the hour. If the yield should be excessive, Total.92,689 18,660 low prices may produce a disastrous revulsion. The manner in Exported to Great Britain 15,218 816 Exported to other Continental ports. 10,480 which speculators are entering upon the work threatens this. They Exported to New Orleans 26,886 19,060 paying extravagant prices for plantations, and such wages to Exported to New York 25,544 7,807 laborers as have heretofore been unknown in the South. A gentle¬ Exported to Boston 1,766 69,504 56,723 from Tennessee informs us that that State, with a favorable season, will produce the coming year double the quantity of Cotton On hand and on shipboard not cleared 28,080 18,631 Liverpool—Dates are to the 31st December.—Saturday the 28d and yet grown within its borders. The northern parts of Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina, have a fine climate, eminently favor¬ Monday, 26th (Christmas day,) were close holidays. On Tuesday the market opened tamely, in consequence of the Scotia’s advices reporting able to the erapl oyment of white labor, and indications are that large receipts at the ports ; since then, however, there has been a fair their capacity for raising Cotton will be brought into full exercise. demand, which have been freely met by holders giving buyers a slight Florida also promises well. From other points our advices are less advantage in price, particularly yesterday on the announcement of the advance in the Bank rate to 7 per cent. The tone of the market has, tangible, but it is a fair inference that they will not fall materially however, recovered to-day, on the announcement of the stocks as given behind in the furore for growing Cotton. below, which are almost identical on the total amount with the esti¬ comparing these figures with the estimates in the table This market opened flat this morning, but the Scotia’s news being mates above, it will be seen that the stock of American and all other descrip¬ favorably interpreted, there was a revival and considerable activity tions, except East Indian, are actually less than the estimates, but tins in the afternoon at steady prices. Sales of the week 18,000 bales. is made up by an excess of the latter, accounted for by re-shipment from New York, which has thus caused them to be classed as Ameri¬ The following are closing quotations : parts of the South we have the notes for the next Cotton planting season, and so lar as we may these the danger is, that the work will be overdone. prepara¬ speculation, seems to be, to buy or rent a tory to raising a crop of Cotton. In fact, seems about to succeed Petroleum, as Petroleum succeeded From all on This on as are man ever on : ' N. O. Upland. Florida. 42 42 46 46 47 50 47 60 60 ' 48 61 52 58 54 54 45 47 • receipts of cotton at this evening (Friday) were as follows : The Bales. From 521 157 New Orleans Texas 1,000 1,189 2,732 Mobile Florida Savanrah... &. Tex. 41 45 41 Ordinary, per lb. Good Ordinary.. Low Middling... Middling Good Middling.. Middling fair ... Mobile. • • • • • • • market for the week ending last QUOTATIONS. South Carolina North Carolina Norfolk, Baltimore, Ac.. Per Railroad. 203 980 722 8,855 11,459 600,147 Since July 1, 1865 611,606 We subjoin some of the latest reports from the Southern markets. New Orleans, Dec. 30th.— Arrivals since the 26th instant, of Louis¬ iana and Mississippi 11,021 bales, Arkansas 738, Mobile 216, Florida 123, Texas 626 ; together 12,728 bales. Cleared since the 26th instant for Havre 2,045 bales, New York 660 ; together 2,695 bales. Stock in .. Upland shipboard not cleared on the 29th instant 169,663 tributaries, however, liberal receipts are looked for, and the expectation of accumulat¬ ing stocks has made factors willing to meet the demand freely. 83,239 Seock on hand 1st September, 1865 .bales Seceived since Saturday ... 10,347 New Orleans, Jan. 2d.—From the rise in the Ordinary A Fair A Good Middling. 19 @20£d Mobile New Orleans Texas. Sea Island .. 19 @21 d Fair. 22 @..d 22$@.. d 22|@..d 2?*@..d 40 @50 Good A Fine. @. .d (9 • • d (9 • • d .. • • • • @..d @75d .. 60 • SALES. SpeculaExport. Trade. 7,060 Brazilian 6,720 West IndiaD... 1,400 American Egyptian .... .... East Indian... 4,870 11,850 Total tion this Year 420,510 853,260 113,210 1,930 11,610 2,190 660 8,560 70 320 250 710 1,720 6,900 4,790 8,640 20,180 470 82,070 9,430 This Fear. West Indian.... 26,384 10,128 528 Egyptian 12,896 American Brazilian East Indian. ... China A Japan.. Total 469,369 834,068 113.328 411.328 1,634,880 48,680 3,694,700 2,782,420 , 1864. 197,116 206,129 53,531 310,827 1,096,744 1,164,693 340,459 125,871 14,257 12 62,204 2,689,708 263,550 208,090 44,600 841,010 610 IMPORTS This week. Same time 1864. 611,280 2,003,859 292,650 ... 7,080 Total Total this week, 1,920 140 China A Japan. Previously reported warehouses and on bales. ' . Bales From Total for the week can. 393,790 STOCKS This day. 1864. s 168,410 46,780 23,210 16,140 18,100 40,640 29,060 4,280 99,770 4,790 316,190 2,247,765 368,490 466,300 78,420 more BREADSTUFFSr continued dullness of the export trade 366,141 375,488 have quite broken down prices the past week, especieally for wheat previously Y ' and corn, in which considerable pressure to sell has been felt. The 458,727 large stocks have not moved off according to the anticipations of 820 Cleared to-day for New York., holders, and they begin to show some uneasiness. 278,882 Cleared previously \. Flour has been less pressed, but it is still lower. At to-day’s 279,662 market, straight lines of good extra State would have been taken Stock on hand and on shipboard not cleared............. 179,075 freely at $8 for shipment, but holders were firm at $8 10a8 25. New Orleans, Jan. 10.—Cotton quiet; sales to-day, 1,900 bales at The inferior grades of extra State were difficult of sale at 20a40c 48@49 for middling. Gold, 186. Freights—Cotton to New York f, lower. The medium family grades were firm. Received and to Liverpool, 1 l-16d per pound. The decline in gold, and THE CHRONICLE. January 13,1866.] THE DRY GOODS TRADE. Spring of folly 10c per bushel—best Friday, P. M., Jan. 12,1866. Amber was offered freely at $1 80, with no buyers at over $1 75a The Dry Goods trade has been unusually quiet during the week. $1 77. Winter Red wheats are not offered, and white wheats are This has resulted from a combination of unfavorable circumstances quite unsettled. The inferior Spring wheats are very unsettled. Corn closed at a decline of 5c per bushel in Western mixed for which threaten to continue for the present. The period between the Fall and Spring business is generally a the week, with a fair export business at the concession. Rye is in large stock, and our quotations are quite nominal. It would seem quiet one ; but the present season, the unsettled condition of mone¬ that there is no outlet for it, except to export to Germany. Oats tary affairs, the uncertainty with regard to the contraction meaghave been steady. Barley and Barley Malt quiet. Canadian Peas sures Congress may adopt, and the decline in premium on gold, have nominal. served to weaken confidence, and check all speculative movements. The following are the closing quotations: Prices have remained unchanged with agents, merely because there Flour, Superfine State and Western.. ...per bbl. $7 00 @ $7 85 is no inquiry to change them. With jobbers, at one time during do Extra State 7 75 @ 8 25 the week, there was an advance of a half cent, but now they are hold¬ do Shipping Roundhoop Ohio 8 85 @ 8 00 The reason for this reduction do Extra Western, common to good .. 8 00 @ 10 00 ing at a half a cent below agents. Double Extra Western and St. Louis.. /.. do 10 25 @ 14 50 by jobbers is the fact that they do not like to hold goods purchased do Southern, supers 8 75 @ 9 85 some weeks ago. The only demand is a limited call from the South¬ do Southern, fancy and extra. 10 00 @ 16 00 ern States for Spring styles. Goods of almost all kinds are accumu¬ do Canada, common to choice extra 8 00 @ 11 25 Rye Flour, fine and superfine 5 60 @ 6 25 lating, and the Spring trade will find a good supply. Corn meal, Jersey and Brandywine 4 25 @ 4 65 Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are quiet and nominal. The Wheat, Chicago Spring per bushel 1 50 @ 1 75 demand is confined to a mere present consumption, and prices are Milwaukee Club. 1 60 @ do 1 80 do Red Winter 1 86 @ 2 25 nominal. Jobbers advanced half a cent early in the week, but have do Amber State and Michigan.. 2 80 @ 2 40 reduced them one cent during the past two days. The price with Corn, Western Mixed 85 @ 90 do Western Yellow 47 @ 68 jobbers is 33c for standards, while agents ask 33Jc ; Appleton A Rye, 95 @ 1 08 and Atlantic A, Indian Head A, Amory, Lawrence C, Amoskeag Oats, Western 90 @ 1 06 A, and Stark A, are held at 33£, Indian Head E 48 inch sell at 50, do State 58 @ 62 Barley.. 95 @ 1 20 Nashua fine C 40 inch 32, dp D 30, Barrington 40 inch 26, Augusta Wheat shows decline in a . . Malt do 1 Canada Peas, EXPORT OF 86 BREADSTUFFS TO G. BRITAIN AND IRELAND FROM SEPT. Flour, Commeal, From bush. New York, to Jan. 5, 1855.... 75,381 2,211 1,094,413 New Orleans, to Dec. 29,1865. 300 Philadelphia, to Jan* 2, 1866.. Baltimore, to Jan. 2, 1866 2,200 Boston, to Jan. 5, 1866 To about do do same do do • bush. • 20 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ports, to period, 1865... • *••••••• JC 6,007 • 83,888 65,920 • • • 67,877 • 1.151,790 1,407,246 2,231 • • 861,976 411,563 • • 80 5,247,318 50 12,859,178 E CONTINENT. Flour, From bbls. New York, to Jan. 6, 1866,... Other ports, to latest dates... • Rye, Wheat, bbls. 19 • • • Com, bush. 2,406 80,691 Atlantic P A 37 inch 334, do A H 37 30 inch 28, do do A G 27, do fine sheet Corn, bbls. • 1, 1866 Mills 4-4 32, do 7-8 26, Indian Head B 30 inch 28, Nashua extra A 36 inch 3l£, Wauchusetts 33, Indian Orchard W 33 inch 26, do BB 33 inch 28, do C 37 inch 30, do N 36 inch 32, do P 36 22$, inch 33$, heavy shirt A V AL 364 inch 30, do PL 3,222,771 7,790 364 inch 30, do D 31, Massachusetts A 4-4 29, do do B 4-4 31, 97,306 Medford 32, Newmarket Manuf. Co. 33 inch 28, do do 36 inch 30, 192,569 do do heavy D 36 inch 33, do do C 39 inch 324, Bristol 40 inch 24, G. Washington h,y 36 inch 31, Griswold 3-4 16, Warren 36 3,000 inch 28, Auburn 36 inch 24, Indian Queen 36 inch 27, Pittsfield A 36 inch 27, Rocky Point Sheetings 36 inch 28, Pocassett Canoe 39 8,523,426 78,359 inch 344, do K 36 inch 28, do family cot 33 inch 25, do H 28 inch 239,459 21, Appleton B 40 inch 37, do C 24, do D 30, do W 48 inch 474» 3,550,786 do shirtings E 30 inch 23, do do N 30 inch 28, Grafton 28 inch 214, Shetucket B 27 inch 22, Manhattan K 27, Graniteville Wheat, bbls- Calfornia and other 1 45 1 30 @ 1 25 @ .; bush. 57,333 14,849 • 4-4 30. Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings quiet, and though prices nominally unchanged there are no goods selling. The finer qualities are sold ahead, especially for New York Mills, which are still quoted at 50 cents. Wamsutta are also quoted at 50 cents by agents. Bartlett steam mills 5-4 45, do. 7-8 324, Newmarket 33 inch 33, do. C 36 inch 37, Waltham L 72 inch 874, do. K 54 574, do. N 90 inch $1 15, Amoskeag A 37 inch 39, Aquidnecks 4-4 30, Kent River 3-4 18, Uxbridge imperial 4-4 40, Aquidnecks 7-8 274, Canoe 27 inch 20, Wetumpka 4-4 374, Palace medal 374, Gold medal 374, Waltham X 33 inch 324, do. W 42 inch 40, do. M 81 inch 81 05, White Rock 36 inch 424, Aquidnecks 7-8 274, Rock¬ dale 4-4 40, do. 7-8 33, Uxbridge imperial 4-4 37. are are 2,426 80,691 To about do do same period, 1865... do do 1864... 1868... Weekly Receipts 10,017 67,833 14,349 68,521 135,188 ..... 26,551 18,965 63,866 86,605 767,724 16,669 Lake Ports.—The following shows the receipts at the following lake ports for the week ending Jan. 6 : Chicago Milwaukee Toledo Detroit Cleveland Total Prev. week’ ...... at Flour. Wheat. Com. Oats. 15,890 2,995 2,898 101,600 96,385 4,160 14/,165 163,674 3,0o5 9,895 2,065 227 1,420 26,065 81,640 6,160 5,080 3,856 277,654 115,081 182,053 64,600 * Barley. 2,000 22,664 5,350 2,859 1,944 3,768 836 400 708 180,781 6,803 106,836 19,691 Rye. 14,206 2,619 1,840 1,185 • • • • 19,800 15,686 Only partial returns from Cleveland. v Liverpool.—We have dates to the 31st December, which re¬ port: supplies of wheat and flour into this port, and at ports of call a large fleet of grain laden vessels have arrived; and to¬ day’s list shows 68 cargoes of wheat and 80 of maize still on sale there. At to-day’s market wheat was in very limited request at a decline of 1 to 2d per cental. Flour was 6d per sack and barrel, and Indian corn 8 to 6d per qr. lower than on this day week. QUOTATIONS, s. Flour, extra State, per Canadian bbl. Sour and heated Wheat, Chicago and Milwaukie do do do Amber Iowa Red and Amber winter per 100 lbs. Corn, Yellow do do White... Mixed... Peas, Canadian Oatmeal, Canadian. 27 29 23 9 10 10 10 White—Western Indian quiet, prices remaining the same as last week. Androscoggin, and Bates each sell freely at 324 for colored and bleached, Newmarket 32, Whittenton’sG2-4 for colored, Uncas 31, Naumkeag 36, and Satteen$ 40 cents. are Indian Orchard, Cotton Flannels We have had liberal do do Corset Jeans per 480 lbs. *.* per 504lbs. .per 240 lbs. bias are in very light demand and nominal. Columquoted at 274, Nashua A at 30, Falls 27, Suffolk 35, and are Slatersville 40. quiet with the general condition of trade, prices yet changed. American Stripes sell at 30 though are not cents for 3-3, and 31 for 6-3. Albany Ticks 27 inch 23, Pittsfield 23, Ontario A 41, ACA 80, do. A 60, B 55, C 50, and Amoskeag d. 6. d. 0@28 0 D 45, Amoskeag stripes are sold at 50. Atlantic ticks 36 inch 624, 0@30 6 do. 7-8 474, Chattanooga 3-4 24, Concord 4-4 35, Passaic 7-8 33, 0@25 0 0@10 0 Pacific extra 7-8 45, Peabody 4-4 35, Sacondale 3-4 21, West 2(5)10 6 Branch 4-4 65, do. No. 2 7 8 37, Windsor 7-8 32, Henry Clay 3-4 4@10 6 31, Suwanee 4*4 35, H. Simpson & Son 4x2 checks 34, Louisiana 5(5)10 9 jlaids 34, plaids 324, Willow Grove 474Ringgold fast 0@.... 80 81 6@32 6 29 0(5)80 0 38 0@88 6 24 6(5)26 6 Stripes and Ticks are Print Cloths have been sales very quiet during the week with no reported. Prints are uncalled for, though there has been no reduction in [January 13,1866., THE CHRONICLE. 52 The spring styles are in market, but there is present from any quarter. Some speculators who do not wish to hold their goods have pressed sales at a reduction. Merrimack W 28, do D 27, Spragues Nationals, light colors are sold at 25, dark 24, Madder Rubies 27, Blue and White 28, Blue and Orange 29. Canary Y 26, Solid colors 27, Black and Green 27, Shirting prints 32, Garners are held at 28, Amoskeag pink 27, do purple 26, dark 25, light 25, mourning 24, Swiss ruby 25, Duch¬ ess B 23, Lowell dark 23*, do light 23*, Wamsutta 22, do light 23, American Print Works madder 26 nett, Empire 19, Columbia, full madders 23, Concord madders 23, do. purples 23, do. pinks 23, WITHDRAWN prices published. little demand at plain shades 24, Glen Cove full madders 20, Greene Co. fancies 25, do. rubies 26, do. figured green 26, Wauregan fancies 25, do. rubies 26, do pinks 26, do. purples 26. Ginghams are dull, and with the quietness of trade prices are nominally lower. Lancaster 21, Glasgow 30, Willow Brook 36. Jaconets are quiet, but the stock of first qualities is not large. White Rock high colors are quoted at 25, plain do. 23, Slaters THE SAME and the for season are Linseys are are 3-4, and S5 6-4 ; Total entered at the port. 3125 $1,043,235 3044 $572,608 5896 $1,901,921 week . .. ... 21 1.938 Worsted 22 5,619 Lastings .. .. can brown 18*, .. a Brodbrook all for for cassimere S2 60 gloves... 14 Matting 7 Clothing..... 93 47 25,830 Carpeting.... 11 2,925 7,389 41 $74,243 Ribbons...:. 33 Laces 20 28,432 13,329 ... light demand there is PORT OF NEW YORK, Pkgs. Value. $406,711 silk... flax.... 477 181 505 Miscellaneous dry gooas. 390 132,724 126,875 149,642 69,007 2568 $871,459 Total cotton.. * 308 201 218 630 1290 2547 Value. $112,308 56,488 60,445 131.901 46,018 $407,160 296 — — Total .388 1449,005 18,123 25 19,469 Thread Hemp yarn 9,848 41 .149 . 9,989 11, 1866. -1866.Value. Pkgs. 932 $431,356 1179 350,078 388 449,005 1234 297,114 574 211,022 3307 $1,738,575 33,976 27,495 Feath & flow.185 1,181 Susp. & elas. 28 14,269 574 Total 36,320 15,343 211,022 WAREHOUSE. FROM . Laces Braids & bds. .686 686 338,616 9 3 62 1,933 1,050 20,023 .738 $239,420 2 10 8,223 .112 $132,481 18 3 3,706 Total 606 Hdkfe 450 Spool 1 Velvets 92,270 COTTON. OF 2 Emb’d mus.. Pkgs. Value Cot & wos’d.208 26 8,456 5 1,504 Hose. . . . MANUFACTURES OF SILK. Silks.... .... -3 5,133 :. Sewings 1 i. Braids & bds. 2 991 Cravats 1,144 986 MANUFACTURES OF FLAX. Laces 4 Handk’chiefs. 38 Linens.......590 $161,915 Linen & cot.. 7 2,060 11,904 . 23,980 . 624 660 $204,189 Total MISCELLANEOUS. Leath. gloves. 9,935 Embroideries 13 Colls & cuffs. 3 Straw goods.. 14 $1,737 6,420 13,408 2 Matting... *. 2500 Clothing 6 FOR ENTERED 3 1,674 2541 $37,413 Susp. & elas. 957 <■ 3,282 Total WAREHOUSING. MANUFACTURES OF WOOL. Woolens Cloths Pkgs. Value. 185 $115,034 25 13,192 - Blankets’ Shawls Pkgs. Value. , 6,826 Hose. 63 42 36,201 Lastings Pkgs. Value. 1 465 11 4.801 Worsteds..:.460 196,455 Braids & bds. 3 Carpeting.... 29 7,272 Cot. & worst.374 166,191 1,551 — 1,192 $547,978 Total MANUFACTURES OF COTTON. Emb’d Mus.. 15 892 146,074 Velvets ..... 8 114 34,047 Laces........ 4 201 $75,403 Cottons ... 3,802 Handkerch’fs 4 . 4,520 Gloves 4 Spool.? 1,529 sp< 4 979 Hose 28 ose 4,793 Braids & bds. 2 14 2,538 1,254 1,548 10,563 790 $287,048 .* Total MANUFACTURES OF SILK. 74 $116,661 1 750 Silks Plushes Ribbons 66 16 Laces 2,138 Shawls 2 Velvets. Pkgs. 36,467 FLAX. OF 8 goods. 117 ... 25 Ginghams goods at this port for the week ending Jant weeks of 1864 and 1865, have been 1864. 3.502 . _ 200 $79,742 91,747 Colored......316 26,520 Prints 89 follows: , 1179 $305,078 3 Silk St worst Silk & cotton 27 Silk & Linen. 1 * Pkgs. Value Shawels 3 1,813 Worsteds.... 287 137,548 Delaines..... 3 1,615 Cottons be purchased at THE WEEK ENDING JAN. -1865., 2,479 2,841 1,793 35,721 8,471 39 MANUFACTURES 11, 1866, and the corresponding ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION FOR .. MANUFACTURES OF WOOL. Pkgs. Value. 127 $76,615 Woolens Cloths Ginghams do do do Straw WITHDRAWN Priuts as — — Total BILK. 6 Corsets 653 11,177 - Colored The importations of dry Hose . 3,783 Embroideries 60 18,539 Millinery.... Kid this immediate locality are small. IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE 13,412 104,760 1234 $297,114 Leathgloves. 35 $52,069 There is some call for Southern prices. trade, but transactions for a 8,762 5,176 12 63 .475 . MISCELLANEOUS. American Linen Co’s B J brown 23, T bleached crash 20^, A and with $431,356 932 . Total B do 16. want of firmness in Laces Hdkfs .1001 $236,633 Linens Linens & cot. 10 3,057 quiet demand Foreign Goods are abundant, Spool 3 2 4 63 Raw Braids & bds. 10 .. figures. Plain scarlet flannel 40a52*, twilled do. 50a72* for F and C, white do. 52*a62£, Shaker do. 72*a82*, blue and mixed twilled 47*a72*. Gilbert’s white and colored opera are well sold up. Army standard are nominal at 77*. Harris’s white domets are held at 42*a80 for plain and twilled. bleached Huckabucks 25, Gloves 1,488 11.423 Shawels Gloves Cravats.. .. easier is in 22,054 MANUFACTURES OF ..155 $250,682 Silks 6.945 13 Crapes.... 4 3,706 Velvets...'. 54 Ribbons... 51,594 ..49 44,608 Laces for 5 fr. American Linen Emb’d mus’n 43 3 Velvets 21 Laces Braids & bds. 20 10 Hdkfs .. for 3-4, and S4 75aS5 25 and Total.. 4,656 MANUFACTURES OF COTTON. Cottons... ..291 $101,893 50.566 Colored.... ..174 60 Prints. 20,737 9 2,448 Ginghams Muslins... 6 3,576 quiet but steady. Lowell Co.’s ingrain SI 60 for superfine, SI 75 for extra super, and S2 15 for imperial threeply. The Hartford Co.’s SI 60 for medium superfine, SI *75 for superfine, S2 07± for imperial three-ply, and S2 25 for extra three-ply. Brussels S2 45 for 3 lr., S2 55 for 4 fr., and S2 65 in but limited request, — — 1,408 5,619 • 22 8 3 ',807 55,496 Braids & bds. 69 Cot. & worst.120 160,193 1,404 5 Hose .. Blankets.. Shawls Carpets are are Worsteds... .348 Delaines 2 Value. Pkgs. Value Pkgs. Pkgs. Value. WoolenS....J74 $101,750 35,513 Cloths 64 77 19,149 Carpeting. for 6-4. Flannels CONSUMPTION. FOR MANUFACTURES OF WOOL. 50. Spring trade to some extent, Rochester gray SI 40., Dighton’s movement the past following is a detailed statement of the ending Jan. 11, 1866 : ENTERED 1,738,575 STATEMENT. DETAILED The for fine qualities. held at $2 25 for No. 1, plain, Suffolk Mills do. SI 60aS2 25 for 193,281 112,489 22.549 $1,163,346 MANUFACTURES Plough Loom and Anvil 65. 287,049 2589 3307 in from SI 75aS2 25, Milville S2 25aS2 75 Merchants’ Woolen Co. do. are held at S2 50 $547,978 407,160 Stark and Laconia wool fancies range silk mixtures. $2,690,694 $165,448 Utica all wool beavers light weight, and S4 for heavy. Glenham Co. C W though not active. 8044 497 2547 for No. 3. S3 50 Tor tricot SI 75, Union blacks S2aS2 Cassimeres are in demand for $781,783 '' 871,459 White Rock are held at Cotton warps are nominal. 4128 $952,119 $171,776 40c., and Stillman & Co’s tartahs 40c. Cloths have been called for to some extent Prices mark’t 3583 $1,294,528 delaines 31. dull and out of season. $2 15 for No. 2, and $2 05 1,738,575 557 very quoted at 30, Hamilton Co. printed 4737 3307 407,160 coneumpt'n 2568 quiet, spring styles not yet wanted others has passed. Manchester Co. dark are Laines $374,623 forconsumpt’n 2568 Total Add ent’d for V Hoop Skirts are quiet at last week’s quotations. S. T. & A. T. Meyer’s IXL 1± inch tapes, 20 to 40 hoops, 48c. Jo 73c. ; 3 inch tapes, 20 tu 40 hoops, 68c. to $1 12. de 1581 2547 67 .... 33*. Mousin $423,069 871,459 .... dry goods. .... and the stock abundant. Saratoga 18, mills 18, Federal 20. Foxhill bank 19, Naragansett 23, do Globe mills are quoted at 30, 2541 flax 127,720 81 306 tING THE THE SAME PERIOD. WAREHOUSING DURING 1192 269 $83,023 Manufactures of wool... 301 $87,009 790 84 33,667 25,305 do cotton.. 63 177 12.665 9 14,131 do silk 16 391 105 26,645 36,957 flax do 156 39 30 9,448 8,374 Miscellaneous drygoods. 21 Cambrics are less firm good supply. 18,083 239,420 132,481 204,189 37,413 .... ENTERED FOR 23. high colors 24, Ilarmouy brown 21, Fancy brand 18. Drills are not abundant for heavy goods while lighter are 66,401 12,605 686 738 112 660 78,963 37,727 136,705 * do Milton $103,045 silk Total th’wn upon $338,616 266 258 37 543 477 84,176 cotton.. 1015 Total Add ent'd PERIOD. $132,657 Manufactures of wool... do do do Miscellaneous DURING MARKET into the warehouse and thrown from 1 Total 53,445 Cravats 1 9,811 Silk & Cloth. 16 1,042 651 8,783 — 177 $193,281 MANUFACTURES OF FLAX. Linens. Thread Total 377 $102,570 7 1,214 Laces...' 4 6,378 Hdkfs . ’» 3 2,261 — 391 $112,439 MISCELLANEOUS. Leather Glov. 2 2,272 Suspenders. 4 2,228 Total... Embroideries 22 13,866 Strawgoods.il— 39 4,183 - $22,549 January 13,1866.] Laguayra.... Domingo. St. WHOLESALE. All goods deposited in public stores or bonded withdrawn therefrom, or the within one year from the date of the originnl importation, but may be withdrawn by the owner for exportation to Foreign Countries, or may be transhipped to any port of the Pacific, or West¬ Coast of the United States, at any time before the expiration of three years from the date of the original importation, such goods on arrival at a Pacific or Western port, to be subject to the same rules and regulations as if originally imported there; any goods remaining in publio store or bonded warehouse be¬ yond three years shall be regarded as abandoned to the Government, and sold under such regulations as the 8eoretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Mer¬ chandise upon which duties have been paid may re¬ main in warehouse in custody of the officers of the eustoms at the expense and risk of the owners of said merchandise, and if exported directly from said cus¬ tody to a Foreign Country within three years, shall be warehouses must be duties thereon paid firm. Sheathing, &c., old Braziers’ Baltimore Detroit lb and Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ ton Rio Grande shin © cent. ad val. .% fb Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent Pilot Navy.... Crackers © © © 10 Breadstuf ffs—See special report. Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair, Welch tubs, strictly fine. do fair to good Firkins, str. fine, yel.. * fir. tubs, strictly fine do com. to good. yellow Pa., fine dairy packed, .. do firkins, finer kinds, do do common to in dium West. Ke-erve, good to fine, yel. do com. to medium Southern Ohio Canada, uniform and fine • mixed Mich ,Ill.,Ind. & Wis., g. tof. yel. do com. toined. do ordinary, do C/hGGSC*—■“ Factory made Farm dairies in 43 5* 4* 15 1 ^ lb. 43 © 37 46 46 37 © © © © 30 25 80 25 25 84 25 , 80 25 © © @ © © © © © © 36 © 17* © dairies 45 4u 47 43 45 38 85 30 88 30 so 86 30 83 80 J8* 16 © 17^. do do - common 14 © 15 English dairy 19 ©, 25 Vermont dairy 16 © 18 Canities—Duty, tallow, 2*; spermaceti and wax, v «• stearine and Sperm do , adamantine, 5 cents $ fb patent, Refined sperm, Stearic city Adamantine © 50 © 40 © 83 © 22* © . . 52 42 34 26 Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ lb. Caracas (gold ).(in bond).. $ lb Maracaibo .(gold).. do ...... ... Guayaquil .(gold) . do .. © 16 00 22 00 © 23 00 12 00 © 12 50 25 © © .. 18 © 27 19 Ameri¬ can or equalized vessels from the place of its growth or production; also, the growth of countries this side the Cape of Good Hope when imported indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents $ Ib; all other 10 $ cent ad valorem in addition. Coffee—Duty: When imported directin Coffee has been steady tained during the week. Rio, prime, * duty paid do good do fair ^.... do ordinary do fair to good cargoes Java,Jmats and bags and prices have been main gold. 20j © 19 (oh © © 25 @ 85 © 4* © 60 © © 24 @ 28* © 3* © 25 © 97* © 85 © @ © © .. © 9* © 24 © Sarsaparilla, Bond Sarsaparilla, Mex .. 5 50 .. 20 Caraway Tb Coriander Mustard, brown, Trieste ... California, brown, do do. do English, white ... Senna, Alexandria do do do do .. .. Alum Anuato, fair to prime Antimony, Regulus of Argols, Crude Argols, Refined Arsenic, Powdered Assafoetida 1 (gold) (gold) (gold) • Bi Chromate Potash Bird Peppers —African, Leon, bags Bird Peppers—Zanzibar., Borax, Refined Brimstone, Crude Brimstone, Am. Roll Brimstone, Flor Sulphur Camphor, Crude, (in Camphor, Refined $ ton $ fb .. .. 24 85 00 50 © © 6* © 45 © Cases Chamomile Flowers Chlorate Potash Castor Oil, $ gallon Tb (gold) Caustic Soda Cobalt, Crystals. . .in.kegs. 112 fbs Copperas, American Cream Tartar, prime Cubebs, East India. Cutch Cuttlefish Bone (gold) (gold) (gold) fb Epsom Salts Extract Logwood Flowers, Benzoin... Flowers, Arnica. Folia, Buchu Gambler ^ oz. bales $ fb (gold) (gold) 18 15 15 1 10 60 7* 47* 2 57* 9 00 55 80 15 16 00 22 00 82 00 1 20 57 © © © © © 85 15* © 18 00 © © © ... ©150 00 .. 85 00 © © © © 24 00 - ... 24 00 23 00 20 88 25 25 26 00 © 00 © 00 © 60 © 00 © .. 26 27 27 120 00 ©125 30 00 © .. _ -© 70 ~ 00 00 50 00 00 90 85 © Americon Colonies, FRKir. There has been Dry Scale Pickled Scale Pickled nod .. © 6 Herring, Scaled Herring, No. 1... Herring, pickled 95 85 Jersey 12 75. © 62*© 42 @ .. © 87*© . © 45 © .. © ... fl> Raisins, Seedless do do Layer- $ i cask $ box Bunch Currants Citron, Leghorn 9* $ fb © 18 00 .. 18 00 @ .. * © 16 ©16 .. .» © .. © 14 14 00 © 14 00 17 © 23 . 25 75 50 ^ © 36 00 © .. .. © 55 © 58 48 © 53 5 00 © 8 00 95 44 55 Dates. 20 Sardines Almonds, Languedoc Provence do Sicily, Soft Shell do 50 $ ^ box $ h£ box 4 .. 4 20 © 4 25 15} © 45 © 16 14* © 81 © 15 82 26 © 27 1 00 © .. 52 © Shelled do . © 4 25 © 4 40 30 © do do 40 .... 17 © Prunes, Turkish 45 - . $ bbl. 20 00 ©. 22 00 Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25 $ cent ad val. /Fruits are still dull and prices declining. 4 12 .. $ bo* © 8 75 © 9 00 22 50 © 28 00 Fruit—Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes, 5; Shelled Almonds, 10: Almonds, 6; other nuts, 2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filbers and Walnuts, 3 cents $ ft); Sardines, 50; Preserved 5w 1 00 © • • @ 2 © ' hf. bbl. 7 00 © 9 25 6 75 © 7 50 Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. 82* 80 ^ bbl. . .' Shad, Connecticut,No. 1. $ Shad, Conrect cut, No. 2 CO 36 9 @ .. © 60 © @ .. © moderate bus'ness done, but $ bbl. Mackerel, No. 1, Mass, shore .... Mackerel, No. 1, Halifax Mackerel, No. 1, Bay Mackerel, No. 2, Mass, shore Mackerel, No. 2, Bay Mackerel, N .2, Halifax. Mackerel, No. 3, Mass, large Mackerel, No. 8, Halifax Mackerel, No 8, Mass.... Salmon, Pickled, No. 1 .. © 3 50 8 55 @ 3 65 .. © 92* © 80 © 2 © 82 © •• © 11 © a :...$ cwt $ bbl. Dry Cod @ 5o * $ 85 © © .. only prices are steady. 55 © 28 (rh 1 80 .. Gamboge Ginger, Jamaica, bl’d, in bbls .... Ginseng, Southern and Western.. Gum Arabic, Picked Gum Arabic, Sorts Gum Benzoin Gum Copal Cow.. Gum Gedda Gum Damar Gum Myrrh) East India - is Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1; Salmon, $3; other pickled, $1 50 $ bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smoked, or Dried, in smaller pkgs. than bar¬ rels, 5t> cents 100 lb.A Produce of the British North 24 Ammonia,in bulk.... Cardamoms, Malabar. • 5* @ bond).(gold) fb Prime Western do Tennessee.....:.... 28 © 80 40 ©. 42] @ 5] . 30 © 32 67 50 © 72 50 4* © 5 Bleaching Powder 26 6 00 2 75 • • Sierra (gold) 55 Feathers—Duty: 30 $ cent ad val. -- Berries, Persian Ri Carb. Soda, Newcastle (gold) Sapan Wood, Manila .. .... Balsam Capivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru... Bark. Calisaya Llmawood Barwood .. ,...$ fb Aloes,Cape Aloes, Socotrine.. (gold) Logwood, St. Domingo Logwood, Jamaica... 3* © © © © © © © © © © 30 24 $ lb $ bush. Logwood, li 8* © ... Seed, Anise do Canary do Hemp is © 10* © Salaratus Sal Ammoniac, Refined.\...(gold) Sal 8oda, Newcastle .. gall. Alcohol 60 8 00 Rose Leaves . 56 50 sold for cash, (gold) 46* © © 6 50 . Cochineal, Honduras Cochineal, Mexican Anthracite (gold) Sulphur, $20 $ ton, and Senna, East India 15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Cam¬ Seneca Root. phor, 40 cents $ ft).; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad Shell Lac val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents $ ft); Soda Ash (80J? cent) Castor Oil, $1 $ gallon; Chlorate Potash, 6; Caustic Sugar Lead, White Soda, 1*; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream Tartar, Quinine, Am $ oz. Sulphate 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ fb; Cutch, 10; Chamomile Sulphate Morphine.: Flowers, 20 $ cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent $ Tartaric Acid (gold) $ fb ft); Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gam¬ Valerian, English.. boge, 10 fi cent; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ do Dutch... cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin,Gum Kowrie, and Gum Verdigris, dry and extra dry 10 cents per Senegal, Damar, fb: Gum Myrrh, Gum Vitriol, Blue Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 $ cent ad val.* Hyd. Potash and Resublimed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Duck—Duty, 30 cent ad val Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Ravens, Light $ pee Tjemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Heavy Bergamot, $1 $ ft); Oil Peppermint 50 cent ad Ravens, Seotch, Gourock, No. 1... val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $ fb ; Phos¬ Cotton, No. 1... ^ yard phorus, 20 $ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yellow, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents $ fb: Quicksilver, 15 I>ye Woods—Duty free. sp cent ad val.; 8al AEratus, 1* cents fb ; Sal Boda Camwood (gold) $ ton * cent $ fb ; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 $ cent at Cuba val.; Shell Lac, 10; 8oda Ash, *; Sugar Lead, 20 cents Fustic, Fustic, Tampico $ fb; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad val.; Sulph. Mor¬ Fustic, Savanilla (gold) $2 50 $ Acid, 20; 6 phine, oz.; Tartaric Verdigris, * do Fustic, Maracaibo cents $ fb; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vitriol, 25 $ Logwood, Campeachy (gold) cent ad val.; Etherial Preparations and Extracts, $1 Logwood, Houd $ fb ; all others quoted below, fkck. Many of the Tabasco » 28 fb 54 orax, Acid, Citric 4 25 5 25 44 95 42 Quicksilver Rhubarb, China Brimstone, $10 $ ton; Flor are now © © 8 00 Phosphorus f! tb; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100 lb ;$6;Refined 10 cents $ ft); Crude Brimstone, Roll Carbonate Liverpool Orrel..$ ton of 2,240 Liverpool House Gunnel 50 Oxalic Add Byes—Duty, Alcohol, 40 cents $ gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ fb; Alum, 60 cents ^ 100 fb; Argols, 6 cents $ lb; Arsenic and Assafoetida, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus, 10; Arrowroot, 80 ^ cent ad val.; Balsam Capivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 50 cents $ fb; Calisaya Bark, 80 $ cent ad val.; Bi Carb. Soda, l*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents bead 3 62* 5 00 © 4 00 Opium, Turkey Drugs and articles under this nominal.) 9* 10 1 25 105 25 © 116 00 00 Oil Lemon Oil Peppermint, pure Prus8iate Potash . 24 © 3 50 4 75 Oil|Cas8ia Oil Bergamot Cotton—See special report. Cantharides 2 25 •• bushftl. Nutgalis Blue Aleppo 19 30 © © © © 54 10 Mineral Phial © Cement—Rosendale bbl Chains—-Duty, 2* cents $ fb. 9 8* ©. One inch and upward $ fb Coal—Duty,bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28bushels, 80 lb to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents bushels of 80 lb $ 52 gross •.. • © © © © © 9* © © 70 © 23 83 30 9 Oil Anise , , © •• Regular, quarts.... Short Tapers and white... $ fb 60 © 2 25 ProBntter and Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. duce of British North American Provinces, free, Butter has been in moderate request, principally for home consumption, though prices are quite steady, Cheese is in fair demand. Butter— N. Y., do do do do © © 6 55 42 Calabria Liccorlce, Paste, Sicily Licorice Paste, Spanish Solid... . Licorice Paste, Greek (gold) Madder, Dutch Madder, French, E. X. F. F. do Manna,large flake...: 26 .. CQrks—Duty, 50 p cent ad val. Lae Dye Lico ice Paste, 5 2 55 4* © 2 50 © .. © 25 © Jalap Juniper Berries Manila, 21 25 ...$ lb Tarred Russia Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia. American, gray •, $ tb. Manila, Amer. made © 85 00 © 85 8 05 5 50 .(gold) — 46 © $ lb yellow American 38 39 38 other untarred, 3* cents .. $ ib upward Beeswax—Duty, 20 $ cent ad val. Oi 209 © © © . ed 8 00 © lb. , Portage Lake growth o*- production ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excep*ed. The tor in all eases to be 2,240 lb. Ashes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. Produce of the British North American Provinces, free. Duty: 2* cents © © Bolts of their A net* or © Sheathing, yellow duties, proper evidence of such merchandise having been landed abroad to be furnish¬ ed to the collector by the importer, one per centum of said duties to be retained by tae Government. In addition to the duties noted below, a discriminating duty •/ 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. On all goods, wares, and merchandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places this side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 por cent, ad val. is levied in addition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from the place or places 100 fb 34 . 60 55 40 1 00 3 12* © © © © 85 flakey... Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng. Iodine, Resublimed Ipecacuanna, Brazil 55 :<5 40 55 55 89 40 89 © $1 lb Sheathing, new return Pot, 1st sort...* Pearl, 1st sort...' Gum Tfagacanth, Sorts. Gum Tragacanth, white 18* Oofper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2*; old copper, 2 cents $ lb; manufactured, 30 $ cent ad val.; sheath¬ ing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. <(£ square foot, 3* cents $1 Ib. All cash. The market for sheathing is steady, but ingot is less ern entitled to 23 21 50 Gum, Myrrh, Turkey.Gum Senegal 28* 21* © © IT* © Maracaibo... CURRENT. PRICES 53 THE CHRONICLE VV’box 46 © 23 © 17* 32 52* 54 THE CHRONICLE. Figs, Smyrna Western 20 $ ft Brazil Nuts 13 Walnuts, Frenoh 15 Dried Fruit— N. State Apples Blackberries Black Raspberries Pared Peaches Unpealed do Cherries, pitted, Maracaibo Maranham Pernambuco 12* $ lb Furs—Duty, 10 f} cent ad val. Product of the British North American Provinces, free. Gold Prices—Add premium on gold for currency prices. v Beaver, Dark do Pale Bear, Black do .. brown. Badger Cat, Wild North, and East. No. I. ft 1 50 @ 2 1 00 @ 1 skin 5 00 @15 4 00 @ 8 50 @ 75 @ 1 do House 15 Fisher, Fox, Silver 6 00 15 00 do Cross do Red do 8 00 I 00 Drey 75 25 Marten, Dark . . . . . . . . . . . 3 00 @ 3 00 @ 4 00 pale Mink, dark Musk rat, dark 5 @ 5 00 @ Otter 30 00 30 Opossum 10 @ Raccoon 75 @ 00 Skunk, Black do Striped 70 @ 30 @ 00 10 @ 20 White do @ 1 50 50 @ 1 00 5 00 @10 00 4 00 @ 7 00 30 @ 60 50 @ 1 00 10 @ 25 5 00 @ 8 00 5 00 @50 00 2 00 @ 6 00 1 00 @ 1 50 50 @ 75 1 50 @ 2 00 5 00 @ 8 00 1 50 @ 2 50 2 00 @ 8 00 5 @ 20 00 @ 00 5 @ 15 50 @ 75 50 5 00 @10 00 do 1 00 . 00 00 70 50 © 30 @10 00 @100 00. @10 00 @ 2 00 @ 1 00 2 00 @ 3 00 Lynx Western. No. 1. 75 50 10 50 25 5 @ 60 Glass—Duty,Cylinder or Window Polished Plato inches, 2* cents fi square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $ square foot; arger and not qver 24x39 inches 6 cents $ square oot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 ents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents fj square oot; on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding 10x15 inches square, 1*; over hat, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 4x30, 2*; all over that, 8 cents $ ft. American Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. (Subject to a discount of i5 @ 25 $ cent.) $ 50 feet 8x10 10x15. 12x18. 16x24. 20x30. 24x30. 24x36 30x44. 32x48 32x56. 5 6 6 7 50 00 50 00 50 00 00 00 00 00 00 7 9 10 11 12 18 15 7 25 6 50 7 7 12 13 15 16 18 00 50 00 00 00 00 00 G unity Bags-Duty, valued at 10 $ square yard, 3; over 10, 4 cents $ 5b Calcutta, light and heavy .. $ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ 24 00 & & @ @ @ @ @ @ 8 25 9 75 10 50 15 16 18 20 50 50 00 50 24 00 Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 10 cents square yard, 3; over lu,4 cents $ 5b. alcutta, standard yard 29 @ $ 5b, 10 cents 5b and 20 $ cent ad val. $ keg of 25 5b Blasting (A) & Shipping and Mining & 8 50 48 Hair—Duty free. Rio Grande, mixed. .(.cash).. 37 32 10 fj 5b Bqenos Ayres, mixed Hog, Western, unwashed or fibs, for shipping @ @ <§> @ 6 50 6 50 85 Undressed 15 83 12 @ 1 00 225 00 Russia, Clean @240 00 850 00 Jute Manila Sisal @375 00 ItrO 00 (gold) $ Sb are in fair demand and prices are @ California, Mexican. .. ft gold $ ft do . „ . do do do do Porto Cabello Vera Cruz do do Tampico do Matamoras do San Juan and Cent Amer... ...do Maracaibo do firm. Bogota do 17*© 19 @ 17 @ 16*@ 17i© 16 © 14 @ 15 @ 15 @ 16 @ @ 13*@ 15 @ .. do '...gold. buffalo White 12* 17 18 14* 16 15* 16* 15* 14 15* do do do 18 28 28 19 @ @ 1 40 <2> 20 @ 65 45 25 .. East India 48 Carthagena, etc Guayaquil 40 .$ 5b Oude 75 90 75 ..(gold) (gold) 70 85 do do do do do do do & & & 45 © 10 30 25 40 15 90 & & & <2> @175 00 Bar, English and American,Refined 125 00 @130 00 do do do do Common 115 00 @120 00 Scroll, 155 00 @200 00 145 00 @155 00 Ovals and Half Round Band @155 00 Horse Shoe 150 00 @155 00 Rods, 5-8 @ 3-16 inch 127 50 @190 00 Hoop 160 00 @225 00 Nail Rod $ 5b 10 @ 11 Sheet, Russia 35 @ 40 Sheet, Single,Double and Treble.. 10* 7| @ Rails, English.. .(gold).... ton 57 00 @ do American 85 00 @ 90 00 .. 50 00 00 @ 4 @ 4 @ 3 @2 00 50 25 50 Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ lOff5b ; Old Lead, 1* cents r — d Sheet, ■ $ $ 5b; Pipe and 2* cents 5b. Galena $ 100 5b & 9 75 Spanish @ German 9 75 English 9 75 $ 5b Pipe and Sheet @ & @ & 12 16 Leather-Duty: sole 35, upper 80 $ cent ad val. moderately active at steady prices. 85 <& 39 Oak, Slaughter, light .....cash.fi 5b 42 (§> do do middle... do 45 42 do do 45 heavy.... do 43 <a do light Cropped 48 do Leather is do do 41 19 Hemlock, B. Ayres, Ac., l’t do do do do do do do do do do do do do do 35* middle, do 38 89 do heavy .do California,light, do do do ..... middle do heavy, do Orinoco, etc. l’t. do 38* 87* 38 .... . do middle do do heavy., do do & B. A, dam’gd all weights do poor all do » Slaughter in rough, .cash. Slaughter indoro mid. gh, &light... do h’vy do^ 32* 35* 88 81 22 80 83 37 Lime—Duty; 10 $ cent ad val. RocklaDd, common fl bbl. do heavy & & @ @ @ @ © @ @ @ @ Southern Pine -- flio IMS 100 00 150 00 & & @ 89 38* $ cubic ft. $ lb Hoi asses—Duty: 8 cents $ gallon. There is a moderate demand only,and prices are in buyers favor. New Orleans Porto Rico Cuba Muscovado do Clayed..... fl gall. 7. , English Islands Nalls—Duty: cut 1*; wrought 2*; horse shoe fl 5b (Cash.) Cut, 4d.@6d. $ 100 5b cents Clinch Horse shoe, forged (8d) $1 ft Copper Yellow metal Zinc Naval cents Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 30 $ gallon; crude turpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 j® cent ad val. Tar and turpentine, product of the British North American Provinces, free. (All cash.) The market has been dull with especially for Rosins. Turpentine, N. C Tar, American... do foreign Pitch Rosin, do do do ..$ 280 ft $ bbl. a decline iu 8 25 8 00 6 50 common strained and No. 2 No. 1 Pale and Extra (280 Spirits turpentine, Am lbs.) fi galL .. @ 27 00 55 00 @ 65 00 ^ 4 50 §7 66 9 00 Oakum—Dutyfree....# ft. 11* @ 13* Oil Cake—Duty: 20 f} cent ad val. City thin oblong, in bbls.... # ton 54 00 @ 55 00 do in bags 52 00 @ 58 00 Western thin oblong, in bags 50 00 Oils—Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 28 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $ 1: burning fluid, 50 oents $1 gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, 10 fl cent ad val.; sperm ana whale or other fish (foreign fisheries,) 20 fl cent ad valorem. 6 37* Olive, 13 bottle baskets W gall. do in casks 1 85 1 90 Palm 18 $ 5b 1 43 Linseed, city 1 44 $ gall Whale do refined winter 1 60 1 70 2 50 Sperm, crude — 2 60 95 05 2 00 1 10 80 1 85 55 82 80 gr. deodorized.. Kerosene. (free)... Paints-Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $} ft; Paris white and whiting, 1 dent fi ft; dry ochres, 56 cents $ 100 ft: oxides of zinc, 1* cents $ ft; ochre, ground China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red and 25 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 fl ton. 70 8 50 @ 14 00 15 00 @ 18 00 1 00 @ 1 05 in 24 34 86 44 @ prices, 6 25 6 50 10 00 84* 35 75 Bahia 87 00 28 00 Mansanilla Mexican Florida do do do Paraffine, 28 88* @ Nuevitas. Mansanilla. Mexican Honduras (American 86* 39 40 85 50 Domingo, ordinary 53 21 North American Provinces, free. fl M feet . do winter, bleached... do do unbleached Lard oil Red oil, city distilled do saponified Straits Lumber, Woods, Staves, Etc,—Duty Lumber, 20 $ cent .ad val.; 8taves, 10 fi cent ad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, free. Lumber and Timber of all kinds, unmanufactured, product of the British Spruce, Eastern . logs Port-au-Platt, crotohes. Port-au-Platt, logs. do 165 00 00 St Rosewood, Rio Janeiro /—Store Prices— do do ; wood) Cedar, Nuevitas * 65 1 to 1* cents $ 5b ty, Jtst Railroad, $ 100 5b; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents 5b; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to 1* cents $ 5b Pig> $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents 5b. Iron has been dull with light sales. Pig, Scotch, Best,No l(cash) $ ton 50 00 @ 51 00 Pig, American, No. 1 50 00 @ 51 00 Bar, Swedes,assortedsizes (in gold) 90 00 @ 95 00 8 8 3 2 .. Mahogany, St. Domingo, crotches, $ foot 05 70 cents Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. fJ . 00 Mahogany, Cedar, Rosewood—Duty @ 18 00 @ 15 00 00 & nominal. Kurpah Bar Swedes, assorted sizes .. . 00 00 00 00 free. free. & & Caraccas .. hhd., culls bbl., extra do bbl., heavy do bbh, light do bbl., culls Red oak, hhd., heavy do hhd., light 00 00 00 @300 00 @250 00 @200 00 @120 Ot @250 00 @200 00 @125 00 @100 00 @175 00 @150 00 @11000 @ 70 00 .. hhd., extra. hhd., heavy hhd., light do do Produce of $ cent ad val. & $ 5b Madras Manila Guatemala • .. . @ 18 00 Illdlg-O—Duty FREE. Bengal $ M. pipe, culls do India Rubber—Duty, 10 Oak, 18* 20* oak, pipe, extra pipe, heavy. do pipe, light HEADING—white oak, hhd.. $ C Para, Fine Para, Medium middle bellies 85 100 do .. of 1864 Ox, Rio Grande Ox, Buenos Ayres 9* @ @ @ 10 @ do black, dry STAVES— . the British North American Provinces do do 65 Maple and Birch .. Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. 15* Diy Hides— B. A. & Montevideo Buenos Ayres Rio Grande Orinoco California $ 5b cash. dead green Hops—Duty: 5 cents $ 5b. Crop of 1865 $ 5b Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salted, and Skins, 10 fi cent ad val. Product of the British North American Provinces free. (Nominal.) Hides 27 17 Honey—Duty, 20 cents $ gallon. Cuba..(duty paid), (gold), fl gall. @280 00 11* @ 12 15 do do Calcutta, city sl’ter Bar 1 Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $-’5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 ter; and Tampico, 1 cent $ 5b. American, Dressed ton 320 00 @880 00 do Sierra Leone Gambia and Bissau East India Stock— African, West Coast, Prime...... African, Scrivellos, West Coast.. 30 ... 12 26 @ .. less Hay—North River, in bales fi 100 . 82 cents Rifle @ 9 @ 10 @ 12*@ 5 55 80 Oak and Ash 9 @ 27 @ 85 @100 00 @ 00 @ 65 00 @ 90 00 @ 70 00 @ 40 00 @125 80 00 .. 18 .. 2300 28 00 Laths, Eastern M Poplar and W. wood B’ds <5n Pl’k. Cherry Boards and Plank 10* @ 9*@ do do do East India, Prime East India, Billiard Ball Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 cents or less fl 1b,6 oents $ 5b, and 20 $ cent ad val.; over 20 Sporting, in 1 5b canisters..5b $ 5b gold. do do do Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip $ $ cash. do @ 12 12 @ Coutry sl’ter trim. & cured, do do do do 11* Black Walnut City cents or less, 31* @ pee do do @ @ - 7 75 9 25 9 50 11 75 14 50 16 00 17 00 18 00 20 00 , to 10x15. to 12x18. to 16x24. to 24x80. to 24x86. to 30x44. to 82x48. to 32x56. 11 11 10 _ @ @ @ English and French Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4ih qualities. (Single Thick)—Discount 10 @ 80 per cent. 6 00 6x 8 to 8x10 7 75 ' $ 50 feet Sxll 11x14 12x19 20x81 21x81 24x36 80x45 82x50 11 Para, Coarse not over 10x15 6x 8 to 8x11 to 11x14 to 12x19 to 18x22 to 20x31 to 24x31 to 25x36 to 80x46 to 38x50 to Above 10 do do Bahia Chili Wet Salted Hides— Buenos Ayres. Rio Grande California Western; 55 new •White Pine Box Boards White Pine Merchant Box Boards Clear Pine 18 @ fl 5b gold. Tampico and Metamoras... do 45 30 .... 15 Dry Salted Hides— m Filberts, Sicily cash. [January 13,1866. oil, $150 fl 100 ft; Spanish brown 25 $ cent ad val.; Lithrage, American $ ft Lead, red, American do white, American, pure, in oil do white, American, puie, dry. Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1. do white, American, No. 1, in oil Oo^te, yellow,French,dry $ 1001b do ground in oil $ ft Spanish brown, dry $ 100 ft do ground in oil.fl ft Paris white, No. l fl 100 fts do do Am fl 100 fts Whiting, American. Vermilion, Chinese $ ft @ 14 14 16 16 @ ' 9 @ »* n 2 75 10 8 50 9* 10* 1 50 8 9 4 75 4* 5 2 00 1 30 49 • *ft Trieste American gold. 1 85 1 25 VfnetUn red, (N, C.) V ewt 85 » to do do vermilion, ' China clay Chalk...: Ohrome yellow Petroleum—Duty: crude, 90 gallon. cents $ Crude, 40*@ 47 gravity .. Refined, free in do 8outh 8ea North west coast Ochotsk Polar Mace Wines and Iilqnors— Liquors — Duty: Brandy, first proof, $3 per gallon, other liquors, $2.50. Winks—Duty; value set over 50 cents fl gallon 20 cents fl gallon and 25 fl cent ad valorem; over 50 and not over 100, 50 cents fl gallon and 25 fl cent ad valorem; over $1 fl gallon, $1 fl gallen and 25 fl cents; relined, 40 Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, w calcined, Paris—Duty: lump, free; cent ad val. 20 ^ Blue Nova Scotia White Nova Scotia @ @ $ ton. — V bbl. Calcined, Calcined, city eaete^....- ' American, spring, 2 50 Produce of the British North At erican Pro¬ steady but not active. Beef, plain mess $ bbl. 1100 17 00 do new do do extra mess. 14 00 do do new 22 00 89 00 do India mess advneed. Porto Rico $ Cuba, inf to common refining do fair to good do do fair to good grocery do prime to choice do Beef has been more Pork, mess, new do prime mess do mess, Western do Drime, do fl lb Lard, in bbls do kettle rendered pickled dry salted Shoulders, piokled... do dry do salted Beef hams . 00 00 00 00 Melado Havana, Boxes D. S Nos. do do do do Loaf 25 18* 161 36* 18 18 Canvas mixed 18* 6* 2* Liverpool, ground fine, Ashton’s do do do do fine, 2 00 4 01 @ 3 50 @ 8 50 @ 8 50 @ 2 40 @ 190 @ 40 @ Worthington’s.... fine,Jeffreys*Darcy’s fine. Marshall’s Onondaga, com. fine do do do do Solar coarse Fine screened do F. F bbls. ...210 lb bga. $ bush. Tea—Duty: 25 cents per lb are very quiet but prices Hyson, Common to fair do Superior to fine Teas Timothy, reaped fl Flaxseed, Amer. rough.. Linseed, American, clean... do do do 13 4 25 2 90 $ lb bush. $ tee — American,rough. fl bush .... @ @ @ Canton, re-reeled, Japan, superior do No. 1 @8 China thrown. Italian thrown No. 1 @ 2 10 9 11 11 ' @ 11 @10 @ 11 @18 00 00 50 50 Product of the _ do do do Buenos do do Payta do do Madras Ayres .. .. @ 10s and 12s—Best do Medium do Common Tampico ... @ .. @ @ @ 60 @ Bolivar Honduras Sisal do Para Vera Cruz do do Ohagres Port C. and Barcelona;.;... 37* 65 55 57 .. .. .. @ 62 40 @ @ @ @ @ @ over 60 60 65 65 50 cents fl ft. 28* @ 2?* @ Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and plates, $150 $ lb 10* @ Plates,foreign ;....fl fi> 10* do domestic.. ... @ Navy % Ibt—Best do do 26* @* The wool market Is do i9 Medium Common moderately active and feeling prevails. American, Saxony fleece .... fl do full blood Merino do * and * Merino a better lb pulled Extra, pulled do native do pulled common, unwashed.. do' Entre Rios, washed unwashed do S. American Cordova Donskoi, washed val. Persian African, unwashed washed do Mexican, unwashed. Smyrna, unwashed do washed 27 12 50 @ 14 00 14 00 @ 14 50 10 50 @ 11 00 at 6* @ m 8* @ 15 18 20 @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ @ 6 90 80 77* @ 52* @ 45 @ 82* @ 70 @ 68 @ @ 90 @ 75 @ Freig-bts- • • , , •. <£ ((.& d& d& d& d& |(c a 50' Beef.. Pork To London : 42 35 8 15 13 Heavy goods Oil Flour 95 „ fl bush. $ bbl. fl ton . 80 1 25 1 00 70 60 80 @ @25 0 ..@20 5 6 @ ..@40 3 0 @ 6* @ 6 @ $ tee. fl bush. v Corn, bulk and bags Petroleum Oil Beef Pork To Havre : Cotton fl bbl. fl bush. fl bbl. fl ton . . ..@20 .. @ 7 " @ .. 6* ..@56 20 0 @ @25 0 @40 ..@80 $ c. $ c. .. fl tee. fl bbl. . fl ft Hops 72* fl bbl. * ton Wheat, in shipper’s bags.. f? bush. 67* Flour. t* " 20 0 $ bbl. Heavy goods • 4*1 ..@30 ..@20 $ tee. $ bbl. To Glasgow : Flour Wheat 00 • .. .. Beef Pork Wheat Corn 1 00 d. s. ,. Petroleum 5* (£n %W $ ton - Corn, bulk and bags Wheat, bulk and bags 24 80 60 50 85 75 65 : d. 15 5-16@ * ..@20 ..@58 @15 0 @25 0 fl ft $ bbl. Heavy goods Oil 14* @ s. To Liverpool : Cotton Flour Petroleum .. 1 20 90 60 50 75 70 65 #lb Sheet steady prices. 5 @ 8* 10 13 16 45 40 block, $1 50 fl 100 lb; sheet Zinc—Duty: pig or 2* cents fl ft. lb ; and manu¬ .. .... *. Medium Common 82,10, and 10 fl cent ad valorem; 82,12 cents fl lb, and 10 fl cent ad valorem ; on the skin, 20 fl cent ad val. Produce of the British North American Provinces, free. 15 00 @15 50 9 lbs (Western.)—Ex. fine, bright... do do Fine do do Medium do do ‘ Common fts (Virginia)—Ex. fine, bright... do do Fine do do Medium do Common do Navy fts—Best 24 and not over ft, 8 6 cents; over 1 15 nominal. 10 X lbs—(dark) Best do do Medium. do do Common Soap—Duty: 1 cent $ lb, and 25 $ cent ad val. Castile $ ft. 19* @ 20 Wool—Duty: costing 12 cents or less fl lb; over 12 and not more than 24, cents 9* Valparaiso, unwashed S. Americaif Mestizo, unwashed.. 25 Manufactured, (tax paid)— .. $ ft do Pennsylvania Pennsylvania and Ohio fillers Havana, fillers @ Matamoras do do do do do lots Yara .. .. New York running Ohio do 8* @ Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain.$ ft 1 20 1 45 1 60 @ .. @ @ YeraCruz Cape..-. Deer, San Juan do do do do fl ft » fl (gold) fillers do Fees. ✓——Gold. Goat, Curacoa leaf do do do do do do do Selections do do Conn, selected wrappers do prime wrappers do fair wrappers . 20 fl ct. off list. 25 fl ct. off list. Texas unwashed moderately activei Common Medium Good Fine ^ Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. I. C. Coke Terne Charcoal Terne Coke Lugs (light and heavy) fl List. No. 0 to 18 No. 19 to 26 No 27 to 86 California, unwashed Common to fine... Tobacco has been 2 75 @ 30 00 12 00 @ 25 00 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered, $2 to $3 50 fl 100 ft, and 15 fl cent ad val. No. 1, Tobacco—Duty: leaf 38cents fl factured, 50 cents fl lb. 15 125 @ 1 50! 85 00 @150 00 Peruvian, unwashed English (gold) Plates, charcoal I. C. .....fl box do (gold) (gold) in cases do 18* Tin—Duty: pig, bars, and block, 15 fl cent ad do do (gold) ....(gold) (go d) Champagne ... analterne plates, 2* Plate and sheets and (gold)....$ lb Banca Straits (gold) 10 50 @ 11 50 16 50 @ 21 00 23 00 @ 24 50 British North American Provinces, 15* @ (gold) Sherry d> Malaga, sweet do dry Claret, in hhds , 14 .(gold) (gold) . Superfine Soochong & Congou, Com. to fair, do do Sup’r to fine, do do Ex t to finest Orange Pecco, (gold) (gold) Marseilles do Ex fine to finest do 3 60 8 60 50 50 25 00 Madeira Oolong, Common to fair do Superior to fine silk. 35 $ cent. 12 50 @ 13 00 Sillt—Duty: free. All thrown Tsatlees, No. 1 @ 3/ fl lb Taysaams, superior, No. 1 @ 2 ... do medium, Nc. 3 @ 4.... 19* Sup’r to fine .. Ex f. to finest. do do do do fair (cur.) (gold! Burgundy Port Sup’r to fine.. Ex f. to finest. Uncolored Japan, Com. to 4 75 8 00 @ Com, to fair., do do do Our.) Sherry 25 @ 1 40 50 5 @ 1 75 nominal. 20 @ 1 30 40 @ 1 55 50 @ 1 86 nominal. 60 @ Superior to fine ... Ex fine to finest... do do do @ 27 50 @ .... 14 $ ft 16* 16* nominal. 90 ... Gunpow. & Imper., Canton made, do ’ do Com. to fair do do Sup. to fine, do Ex. f. to finest do H. Skin fcTwankay, Canton made 10 60 60 60 50 2 00 42 Shot—Duty: 2* cents $ lb. Drop and Buck Common to fair do do do 4 8 8 8 2 ’ 3 55 8 55 Calcutta Bombay 15* @ @ @ 50 made Young Hyson, Canton •• ad val. 18j remain steady. 10 30 (cur.) D- mestic—N. E. Rum Bourbon Whisky Corn W hisky Win s—Port 12* 12* @ Ex fine to finest do .@ 50 48 @ flpkg. 3 00 @ 240 ft bgs. 8 00 @ 8 25 Saltpetre—Duty: crude,2* cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent fl lb. Refined, pure fl ft .. @ 22 Crude 18 @ Nitrate soda 6* @ 6# Seed*—Duty; linseed, 16 cents; hemp, * cent fl lb; canary, $ 1 $1 bushel of 60 lb ; and grass seeds, 30 fl cent Clover and city $ ft 6* 45 fl sack (gold' ....(gold St. Croix (gold Gin—Different brands (gold) Whisky—Scotch and Irish .(gold! Provinces, free. American, prime, country 5 26 5 15 Ruin—Jamaica 12 .. British North American 14 9 00 @ 10 00 sack, 24 cents $ 100 lb; bulk, 18 $ bush. . 50 (gold) (gold) Seignette Seignette Other brands Rochelle 8* 7 @ 11* @ 12* @ 18 @ 14* @ 15* @ 15* @ @ 18* @ 18* @ 17* @ 18 @ “ 9 12 15 18 20 50 50 60 00 10 00 7 00 (gold) Arzac val. $ ton 120 00 @195 00 Tallow—Duty: l cent fl ft. Product of the Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* cents $ ft.; paddy 10 2 cents $ ft. $ 100 lb. 12 00 @ 13 00 Cadiz 14 14 10 5 75 @10 5 50 @ 10 5 85 @ 10 6 45 @ 10 (gold) Alex. Sicily cents, and uneleaned Carolina East India, dressed Salt-Duty: cents $ 100 lb. Turks Islands 11* @ (gold) (gold) (gold) A. Seignette Hi vert Pellevoisen Sumac—Duty: 10 $ cent ad 12* @ 5* @ @ 18 @ Of @ City colored 13 @ 13* @ Granulated Crushed and powdered White coffee, A Yellow coffee 14f @ . do do do do white do do do do do do 7 to 10 to 18 to 16 to 19 to 12 (gold) (gold) ..(gold) United Vineyard Propr.. .(goldl (gold) Vine Growers Co Other brands Cognac (gold! Pellevoi9in freres (gold) 14* 11* Hf nr® . Renault & Co Jules Robin Marrette & Co have slightly in* @ .. centrifugal do do 50 Ilf @ ...fl bbl. Rag*—(Domestic). Country 00 30 00 @ 80 22 50 @ @ .. 22 00 @ 22 lb* @ .. @ 18*£@ 13* @ 11* @ Bacon White, city Seconds @14 @ 20 @17 @ 24 @ 43 18 14 1H@ lb 1 50 X @ 1 55 1 50 Hennessy Otard, Dupuy & Co Pinet, Castillion & Co. not above refin¬ over 20,4; ou refined, 5; and been unsettled and the price of pork materially declined during the early part of the week. On Wednesday it again [advanced and closes higher. • moderately active and steady. Brandy—J. & F. Martell ...(gold) 6 00 @ Su iffar—Duty: on raw or brown sugar, No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on white or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not ed, 8*: above 15 and not on Molado, 2* cents $ fi>. The market is more active, and prices * cent ad val. The market is 24 17 @ @ @ 12 --- lne English, spring Provisions—Butv: cheese and butter, 4 cents, Deef and pork, 1 cent; nams, bacon, and lard, 2 cents vinces. Free. The market has 19 15 11 German ~ 11, 3* cents fl lb and 10 fl English, cast, fl fl) 7 00 2 40 @ valued at 7 cents 18 cents and not above lb or under, 2*cents; over 7 3 cents $ lb; over 11 cents, cent ad vaL kbl. Plaster Hams, (gold) Cloves bond Residuum. $ lb. (gold) (gold) (gold) Nutmegs, No. 1 Pepper Pimento, Jamaica # gall. Naptha, refined @ 1 80 1 25 and pimento, 15; ginger root, 5 cents $ Id. (All cash j ^.~ Cassia, in mats $ lb Ginger, race and African doves, 20; pepper cassda and V ® fishery, % ad val. Whalebone—Duty: foreii $ 1 Spices—Duty: mace, 40 cents: nutmegs, 90 00 JR ®> JP ' V hbL made Carmine* city 55 THE CHRONICLE. January 18,1866.] Beef and pork Measurement goods 1 10 1 .. . fl bbl. Petroleum Lard, tallow, cut meats, etc fl ton Ashe*, pot and pearl 5 6 ,. v i @ 1$ toM27,990 78—making an expenses, interest and taxes. ®l)c Bailtuajj Jltonitor. Railroad Earnings for December.—The diminution of Atlantic earn¬ compared with those of the same months in 1864, and which we have on two former occasions (for October and Novem¬ ber) noticed in the returns of the railroads converging on Chicago from the Mississippi river, has shown itself in December on the roads east of that city, and, indeed, the decliue has become general. The change is radical and indicates a greater falling off in business than the withdrawal of the military transportation would have precipitated, and hence it must be attributed to other governing causes. Water transportation on the Mississippi, and the loss of Government business, however, may be considered as the principal, and if other businesses fail to provide for the deficit we must look for a very essential and further falling off as the curreut year pro¬ gresses. The Fort Wayne railroad has lost in December no les3 a sum than $244,048 in military transportation alone. Future divi¬ dends, except in a few special instances, are therefore only possible where expenses are more than commensurately reduced, but at pre¬ sent there is no indication of any fall in either labor or material. With these facts staring every one in the face, it is astonishing how handsomely the leading railroad stocks are sustained. The slightest panic in the market, however, would instautiy react on this class of securities, and bring them down to the level of non-dividend paying stocks. ings [January 13,1836. THE CHRONICLE. 56 and Great excess of $184,353 63 earnings over Railroad.—The Western Pottsville Miners' Journal says : “ We learn that the Philadelphia and Read¬ ing Railroad, and the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad Com¬ panies have entered into the following arrangement: The Phila¬ delphia and Reading Railroad Company is to lay down an additional rail to make a six feet gauge over its line and branches, and the Atlantic and Great Western Railroad Company is to lay down an as additional rail from Milton to connect with its road, so the traffic passing over the respective roads. By nection will be made with Philadelphia as well as of the conditions of the as to receive this means a con¬ New York. One arrangement is the establishment of a line of steamships immediately between Philadelphia and Liverpool.” an important arrangement if the rumor be true. Improvements in Coal Region.—The Lehigh and Wyoming interests have obtained the franchises and property of the North Branch Canal Company of Pennsylvania, extending from Wilkesbarre to Chemung, on the New York State line, and will proceed to construct a railroad between the two points. This new road is designed principally for passengers and anthracite coal, and will come in active compotition with the Delaware, Lackawana and Western Railroad, which now h^s a monopoly of the business. This is Sturgeon Bay Canal.—This is proposed route between Lake Michigan and Sturgeon Pay, across the portage of a mile and a half to shorten the distance for mails between Green Bay and Mil¬ North Pennsylvania Railroad.—The North Pennsylvania Railroad shows earnings for the year of $875,664—being an in¬ waukee 200 miles, at a cost of $500,000. A grant of public lands is anticipated to aid in its construction. crease of $185,459 17 over the eleven months ending on the same Union Pacific Railroad, E. D.—A dispatch from Leaven¬ day in 1864, when the last statement was made, and an increase of $134,142 68 over the twelve months eudiug October 31, 1864. worth, Kansas, states that the Union Pacific Railroad has been com¬ The working expenses were $462,711—leaving net earnings of pleted to Topeka, and that the first passenger train reached that $412,353. The interest and taxes chargeable to the year amounted city from Wyandotte on the 2d instant. MONTHLY COMPARATIVE -Chicago Chicago and Alton. $109,850 , 101,355 104,372 122,084 132,301 145,542 149,137 157,948 170,044 170,910 156,869 153,294 1,673,706 178,786 206,090 312,316. ..May.. 343,985. .June. 224,257 296,546 315,944. July 391,574. ..Aug.. 399,602. ...Sep.. 2,543,416 1864. 816,801 965,294 1,024,649 1,035,321 1,224,909 1,334,217 8:39,949 1956,445 948,059 848,783 770,148 731,243 687,092 10,469,481 355,077. .Oct... . 294,804. 224,022.. 13,42!),643 . .Nov.. ..Dec.. 3,703,118.. Year Railway. (7*24 m.) $984,837 934,133 1,114,508 1,099,507 1,072,293 1,041,975 994,317 1,105,364 1,301,005 1,222,568 (724 m.) $845,695 . 820,381 320,879 307,803 241,582 Erie 1863. 195,S03 162,723 (281 in.) $261,903. Jan.. 252,583 .Feb. 288,159. .Mar.. 263,149. .April. (281 7/i.) $100,991 154,418 (281 tn.) ' 1865. 1864. 1863. .. $242,073 245,858 236,432 233,495 236,453 20(5,221 $252,435 273.848 348^802 338,276 271,553 265.780 263,244 193,328 215,449 308,168 375,488 339,794 306,186 410.802 3,143,945 3,906,946 346.781 408,445 405,510 376,470 ..Jan.. 8S6.039. ..Feb.. 1,240,626. JIh r.. $908,341. 1,472,120. April. 1,339,279 May.. 1,225,528. June.. 1,152,803. J uly. 1,364,126. ..Aug. 1.315,456 .Sep.. 1,406,385. ...Oct. 1,451.217. ..Nov.. 296.169 473,186 551,122 4:35,945 407,688 1865. 716,378 563,401 3,988,042 6,114,566 18637 ..Year.. — $501,231 472,240 356,626 278.540 190,364 281,759 253,619 273,726 219,561 306,595 268,100 361,600 302,174 340,900. 340,733 507,552 3,726,140 . ..Year — $306,324. .Jan.. . j279,137. .Feb.. 314,228. ..Mar.. 337,240. .April. . ..July. 413,501. ..Aug.. 476,661 Sep.. 490,693. ..Oct.. 447,669. .Nov .. . . 1864. (524 in.) $248,784 230,508 $256,600 257,227 268,613 264,8:15 241,236 18!),145 401,456. ..May.. 365,663. .June. 329,105. 1863. 1863. 1864. (708 m.) $299,944 (708 m.) $327,900 416,588 Jan . . 418,711. ..Feb.. 424,870. ..Mar.. 311,540. .April. 351,759. May 310,049. .J une.. . . July.. Aug ..Sep... Oct... ..Nov.. . ..Dee... Year.. — . 328.869. ..Dec.. ..Year.. 1865. 338.454 413,322. ..Mar.. 366,245. 308,106 375,567 402,219 404,568 332,360 348,048 448,934 411.806 3,302.541 4,110,154 . April. a>3,194. ..May.. 271,085 275,643 289,224 334,687 407,992 343,929 511 305 478,576 496,433 437,679 424,531 4,571,028 469,762 423,797 406,373 510,100 423,578 580,964 799,236 661,391 657,141 603,402 1S63. 1864. (234 7ft.), (234 7ft.) $102,749 115,135 88,221 140,418 186,747 212,209 139,547 $67,130 76,132 44,925 88,177 474.706. 521,636. ..Oct.... 498,421. .Nov... 366,192. .Dec.., 155,417 205,055 138,342 112,913 178,526 149,099 117,013 1,247,258 1,711,281 309,083. ..July.. .Aug*. 484,173. ..Sep.., o-.Year — 113.399 168,218 1861. I860. 1863. 696.738... Feb... 31,619 (238 7ft.) $38,778 54,735 (*233 7ft.) $684,260... Jan.., (238 7ft.) $35,047 886,511... Mar... 36,912 43.058 (210 7ft.) $100,872 147,485 160,497 60,361 (210 7ft.) $109,808 110,603 120,310 123,115 44, $35 72.452 113,798 457,227 611.297 588.066 427,094 395,845 525,751 532,911 506,640 625,547 675,360 701,352 691,556 807,882....Oct.... 713,472... Nov... 914,082 571,000...Dec.... (468 7ft.) 738,107.. April.. 601.238...May... 650.311 June 612,127...July... «Iear,. . .April. 91,172 ...May.. . 49,673 51,281 — 76,136 71,352 - 84,483 87.515 — — — 584.300 627,616 157,786 123,949 89,978 ..July.. 103,627 Aug.. 131,885 .Sep... 118,077 149,855 155,730 144,942 130,378 153,470 144,736 143,748 162,921 234,194 203,735 202,966 204,726 • . ...Oct... ..Nov.. 83,946 — 1864. .Juiie. — . 718 016...Aug... 759.405. ...Sep... s. .Jan.. ...Feb.. ..Mar.. ,. 60.006 — .. 1865. ..Dec.. - ..year.. 218,236 1^918.2,084,074 . 140,952 152,662 160,569 182,655 182,085 181,936 180,246 181,175 180,408 1,917,100 1863. (708 tn.) $546,410. ..Jan. : 522,555. ..Feb. 592,276. ..Mar... 491,297. .April.. 454,604. ..May 590,061. .June.. 527,888. ..July.. 661,548. ..Aug... 706,739 ..Sep... . (204 m.) $139,414 170,879 202,857 $180,048 193,919 ' 203,614 210,314 214,533 264,637 215,568 226,047 243,417 243,413 223,846 220,138 242,171 248,292 220,062 201,169 2,512,315 (2517ft.) $38,203 53,778 60,540 64,306 35,326 40,706 58,704 52,864 1864. 77,112 83,059 624,957. .Nov... 497,402. .Dec... 76,764 68,868 710,225 1,038,165 . Year _. 1865. . . 310,594. ...Oct.. 226,840. .Nov.. , .Dec... ..Year.. (210 7ft.) $170,078. .Jan... 153,903. ..Feb... 202,771. ..Mar... 169,299. April.. 177,625. ..May... . 178,722. .June.. July... ..Aug... ..Sep.... ..Oct..., .Nov... •i>ec,.. — 114.512 1863. 666 7ft.) 920,272 790,167 867,590 911,395 839,126 841,165 818,512 840,450 1,079,551 1,041,522 1,045,401 1,157,818 1864. 1865. (656 7ft.) (656 7ft.) $957,869 613,881 955,659 1,846,734 1,256,521 1,132,701 1,162,024 1,495,751 1,524,434 $921,881 936,587 1,059,028 1,105,664 1,004,435 1,029,736 1,055,793 1,273,117 1,450,076 1,227,113 1,187,505 1,116,829 11,069,863 13,367,714 Wester.i & Toledo, Wabash 1863. 1864. 1865. 162,570. 218,558. 269,459. 222,924. 207,098. 86,626 93,603 82,186 73,842 110*186 108,661 112,155 120,057 117,604 -New York Central.- (234 m.) $98,183. .Jan.. 74,283. .Feb.. 70,740. ..Mar.. 106,689. .April. 146,943. ..May.. 224,838. .June. 177,159. ..July. 170,554. ..Aug.. 228,025. ...Sep.. — (251 ml) $98,1 2 89,901 621,849. ...Oct.... . 1865. (2517W.) $77,010 74,409 72,389 83,993 78,697 91,809 94,375 93,078 90,576 96,908 95,453 St. Louis. Alton & T. Hante. 1803. 135.211 1864. (204 m.) -Marietta and CincinnatL- 6,329,447 106,967 111,260 71,587 69,353 402,122. June. Rome, Watert’n & 1865. Year -Mil. and Prairie dn Chien.-> 330,651 358,862 3,095,470 1865. 304,445 238.012 ., 324,865 (150 in.) $525,936. (524 7ft.) $395,986. .Jan. 366,361. ..Feb.. 267,126 315,258 278,891 224,980 271,140 331,494 1,959,267 (204 m.) $123,808 115,394 ., 243.178 336,617 321,037 1863. (182 m.) $305,554. .Jan.. 246,331. ..Feb.. 289,403. '.Mar.. 186.172.. April. 227,260. .May 311.160.. .June. 232,728. .July.. 288,095. .Aug.. 384.290.. ..Sep 300,707 ..Oct... 261,141. .-Nov... 190.227.. .Dee... 175,482 201,134 196,435 ^-Cleveland and I860. Illinois Central. 4,274,556 (524 »i.) 243,150 185,013 198,679 170,937 139,142 160,306 210,729 216,030 923,886. ..Oet.., 749*191 .Nov... 546.609.. ..Dec.. 1864. 122,512 126,798 747.942. June.. 702.692.. July 767,508. ..Aug... 946,707. Sep... and Rock Island,1 (182 tn.) $158,735 144.995 Mich. So. North and Indiana. (285 7ft.) — 1864. . RAILROADS. PRINCIPAL (182 m.) $140,024 130,225 May.. 585,623. 729,759 (150 m.) . . 669,605 484.550 366,598 461,905 462,987 281,334 295,750 ..Dec... (468 7ft.) $290,676 7,120,465 468,358. April. 202,392 . (468 7ft.) $337,350 5,182,984 421,363 366,802 270,676 244,771 1864. 407,077 (679 m.) $541,005. ..Jan.. 482,164. .Feb.. 499,296. ..Mar.. 425.047 1863. 463,509 505,814 466,300 487,642 (609 7ft.) $273,875 317,839 390,355 (150 in.) $458,953 Pittsburg, Ft. W.. & Chicago. 350.753 (609 7ft.) $232,208 202,321 221,709 240,051 280,209 366,100 1863. 1865. (724 rn.) 1863. (285 in.) 1864. 466,830 565,145 480,710 519,306 OF /—Chicago 18637 -Hudson River. —Michigan1864. Central. 1865. (285 7/1.) EARNINGS & Northwestern a ,-Iear.. 1866. (242 7ft.) $86,321 (242 7ft.) $79,735 (242 7ft.) 91.971 95.843 103^056 132,896 123,987 127,010 166,338 139,626 244,114 875,534 221,570 220,209 265,154 139,171 155,75-' 144,001 132,111 134,272 152,586 105,554 116,379 1590,696 151,052 134,563 111,839 1,439,793 2,050,322 $144,08-; • 138 731 194,52' f 271,72f c" 874,684 *379,98) 3375-Kft l?«,ei( January 13, 1866.] THE CHRONICLE 57 RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS interest. MARKET. Amount outstand¬ DESCRIPTION. Kate. ing. Princpal payule. Payable. Railroad: Atlantic and Great Western Sterling Bonds Baltimore and Ohio: Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834 do do do ao 1855 1850 1853 Bellefonlaine Line: 1st Mortgage (B. & L.) convertible. lst= do do„ extended... 2d 1st 2d do do do do (I. P. &C.) do Mortgage -.. Sinking Fund Bonds Boston and Lowell: Mortgage Bonds Buffalo, New York and Erie: 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Bufalo and State Line: 1st Mortgage Income Erie and Northeast Camden arid Amboy : i . do do do do do & July 1882 18S2 1879 1881 1876 1883 98 • • » 98 • • • • • • • • • .... 988,000 6 Ap’l & Oct. 1866 484,000 6 May & Nov. 1878 6 101 102 101 ’70-’79 J’ne & Dec. 1867 M’ch <fc 1885 Sep Feb. & Aug 1877 150,000 6 May & Nov. 250;000 7 100 000 6 200’000 do 6 do 400,000 6 Jan. & 2,000,000 426,714 7 7 500,000 7 7 7 Jan. & July July Mortgage Mortgage Jersey: do Mortgage W. Div do do E. Div 99 do (Sink. Fund), 1873 95^ 96 J’ne & Dec. 1877 93 94 1st Jan. & July ’69-’72 1870 1st do 7 Feb. & Aug 7 May & Nov 7 M’cb & Sep 7 ApT & Oct. 7 Jan. & July 7 do 1,365,800 1,192,200 Mortgage (S. F.) do convert do inconvert.. Bonds, (dated Sept. 20, 1860) Chicago and Great Eastern: Mortgage 1st Mortgage (consolidated) Chicago and Northwestern: Preferred Sinking Fund Mortgage 109 Sep ApT 90 — — do Cincinnati and 1st Zanesville Mortgage Cleveland, Columbus Cleveland and 1st 2d 3d and Mortgage Cincinnati: 1,250,000 7 Feb. & Aug 7 do 7 May & Nov. 6 Quarterly. 7 Feb. & Aug 1885 1885 1863 1915 1885 90 83 80 8 3% do 7 7 1,300,000 7 7 Jan. & . . . 70 .... 244,200 . Clereland, Painesville and Ashtabula: Dividend Bonds Sunbury and Erie Bonds Cleveland and Pittsburg : 7 8 648 200 900,000 500,000 July 1870 .... May 1867 & Nov. 1880 .... 103 100 •Tan fo July 1890 M’eh & Sep 1864 1875 7 Feb. & Aug 1880 7 do 1874 90 74 Mortgage Con uecticut River : 1,802,000 96 98 1st Mortgage Connecticut and 1st 250,000 Passumpsic River ; Mortgage Cumberland Valley• 1st Mortgage Bonds July 1885 .... . . • . M’cb & Sep 1878 2d do do Dayton and Michigan: 1st Mortgage 6 J’ne & Dec. 1876 161,000 109,500 8 8 ApT & Octdo 283,000 2,655,500 642,000 162,500 8 Jan 8 7 7 do do do 500,000 Delaware^ Lackawanna and Western: 1st Mortgage, sinking fand 1,500,000 2d do 6 Jan & 21 ad do do Toledo Depot Bonds Delaware: 1* Mortgage, guaranteed Lackawanna and Western ; 600,000 Xr, 90 92% July 1867 1881 18— 18— 85 Valley .... mort convertible do ....... do Michigan South. & North. Indiana : 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee & Prairie du Chien 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Mihoaukee and St. Paul: 1st Mortgage 2d do : 1st do Oskaloosa 1st Land Grant Mortgage 2d do do do Morris and Essex : 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Naugatuck: .Tuly 1875 900.000 7 Jan. * Jolv *371 ' Mississippi and Missouri River: 1st Mortgage, convertible 2d do sinking fund 1904 1904 7 Jan. July 1875 7 M’ch* Sep 1881 Long Island: do Sink. Fund, . 800,000 1st Mortgage Little Miami: 1st Mortgage Little Schuylkill: 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Dollar, 72 Jan. & < Michigan Central: 98 98 1,157,000 7 M’ch& Sep 1873 1,728,500 7 do 1875 1,108,740 6 Jan. & July 1892 7 1st Mortgage 2d do 3d do La Crosse and Milwaukee: 1st Mortgage, Eastern Division... 2d do do 1st Mortgage..1st Lebanon Branch Mortgage 1st Memphis Branch Mortgage Marietta and Cincinnati: 1st Mortgage, dollar Scioto and Hocking Ang 1873 do Chicago: Extension Bonds Louisville and Nashville: 2d Mortgage 3d do convertible 4th do Cleveland and Toledo: Sinking Fund do Mortgage May & Nov 1893 1st Mortgage, (convertible) N. Haven, N. London A 102 98 100 1st 3d Mortgage do 102' ;101 98 90 1882 1875 102 95 96 98% July 1883 927,000 Feb. & Aug 1,037,500 1,000,000 18S3 Jan. <fe july 1876 do 1876 Feb. & Aug 1S70 do 1869 J’ne & Dec. 1885 May & Nov. 103 1875 1867 95 May & Nov 1870 80 do 96 Feb. & Aug 1875 7.975.500 2.896.500 April & Oct 1875 2,086,000 1890 do do 600,000 364,000 Jan. & July 1866 do 1870 500,000 400,000 200,000 Jan. 685,000 May & Nov. 187,000 392,000 Mch & Sept 1861 April & Oct 1873 500,000; April & Oct 1883 800,000 April & Oct do do m% 1875 July 1866 1862 1858 : Lehigh Valley: . do 850 000 7 Feb. .. do 379,000 510 000 Mahoning: Mortgage... 1st Portland: 85 1,249,000 : Mortgage Mortgage and Maaison Mortgage, sinking fund Kennebec and & Oct. 1894 85 7 Sterling 1st Mortgage 2d do Real Estate 2d 1898 1,397,000 convertible do Joliet and 1890 July 484,000 Mortgage do "ersonvule; st Mortgage 1st . Mortgage, Indianapolis 93 Feb. & Aug May & Nov. Jan. 500,000 500,000 do 2d 95 ; Indianapolis and Cincinnati: 7 Jan. & 756,000 \ Indiana Central: 1st Mortgage, convertible 59 37 2,000,000 948,000 Mortgage... Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton: 1st Mortgage 1st 7 sinking fund Redemption bonds M% 467,000 8 Jan. & July 1883 3,167,000 8 do 1883 1st 1st 90 85 50 July ‘75-’80 7 M’ch& 1st 2d 102 84 94 90 85 3,600,000 Interest Bonds Consol. Sinking Fund Bonds Extension Bonds Chicaqo and Rock Island: 1890 1890 1865 1865 1876 ’57-’62 536,000 '680,000 do 94 1870 700,000 3,890,000 110,000! 2,000,000. 1,S40,000 1,002,000! do Illinois Central: 7 May & Nov. 1877 7 Jan. & July 1892 7 ApT & Oct. 1882 2,000,000 Chicago and Milwaukee: ... 6 Jan. & 1,100,000 3d 7 Mav & Nov. 1868 7 M’eh & Sep 1879 7 1883 do 7 April & Oct 1880 7 June & Dec 1888 July, 1873 191,000! 6 Jan. & July 1877 Convertible Huntington and Broad Top 101 600,000 2.400,000 income Feb. & Aug 1882 do 95 3,437,750 7 April & Oct!I881 Jan. <fc & July 633,600 7 IJan. Julv)1883 Mortgage 2d 3,000,000' 4,000,000! 6,000,000i 3,634,600; 1,002,500; Jan. & 1,000.00010 'April & Oct 1868 1,350,000 7 Jan. & July; 1865 Mortgage Mortgage 94% 927,000 6 Jan. & July 1870 Mortgage West. Division.; 1st 1st 7 1,968,000 1,080,000 do : Hudson River: S9% 1,000,000 149,000; 7 Jan. & July Housatonic: 91% 80 t 598,000 7 Ap’l & Oct. 1888 Mortgage, sinking fund do S8X 672,600 6 ‘Feb. & Aug 1874 Hartford, Providence and FishkiU: 1st Mortgage 2d do sinking fund 94 S 590,000 5 Jan. & July 1872 '. do East. do Hannibal and St. Joseph: Land Grunt Mortgage Convertible Bonds Harrisburg and Lancaster: New Dollar Bonds Hartford and New Haven: Ap’l & Oct. 1866 7 Feb. & Aug 1870 7 May & Nov. 1875 do Great Western, (111.): May & Nov 1872 900,000 600,000 950;000 do Chicago, Burlington and Quincy : Trust 1st do East Pennsylvania: Sinking Fund Bonds Elmira and 1st T3 ^ Jan. & July 1863 do 1894 600,000 Mortgage 9h% * 1875 1864 do 300,000 2d section Grand Junction 1870 1870 1889 7 Mortgage, 1st section Eastern (Mass.): Mortgage, convertible 1st 2d 5 34,000 7 Feb. & Aug; 1876 Galena and Chicago Union; 6 J’ne & Dec. 1893 450,000 800,000 800,000 Mortgage Bonds Chicago and Alton: 1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref.. 1st do 2d 1st Mortgage Dubuque and Sioux City: 1st do May & Nov. 1,000,000 Toledo: Mortgage 1871 141,000 aiid, 2,500,000; 1st Mortgage Etie Railway : 1st Mortgage 2d do convertible 3d do 4th do convertible 5th do do Erie and Northeast: 1870 1870 6 Milwaukee: Detroit, Monroe k « .2 E Feb. & Aug 1S87 J'ne & Dec. 1874 348,000| Williamsport: 1866" 589^500 • • 1st 100 100 100 100 $1,740,000 Mortgage, convertible • 86 7 6 Del wit and 1st .... 86 1,000,000 6 Ja Ap Ju Oc 1867 1,128,500 6 Jan. & July 1875 700,000 6 do 1880 2,500,000 6 Ap’l & Oct. 1885 368,000 7 Jan. & July do 422,000 7 116,000 7 do do 650,000 7 • Payable. Valley : Mortgage Bonds Income Bonds .... market. a ^ Railroad: Des Moines 98 490,000 7 Jan- & July 1873 7 ApT & Oct. 1879 Cheshire: 1st ing. 493,000 : do Income.. 1st 4,000,000 6,000,000 4,269,400 do 2d 1879 1,700,000 6 Feb. & Aug 1883 867,000 6 May & Nov. 1S89 Central Ohio: 1st 1st 2d 3d 4th 777.500 200'000 Mortgage Central of New 1st 2d 1,000,000 400,000 Dollar Loans.. Dollar Loan Consoldated ($5,000,000) Loan Camden and Atlantic : 1st ApT <fc Oct. 300,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1865 do 200,000 6 1865 do do do Catawissa 2,000,000 400,000 500^000 do Boston, Concord and Montreal: 1st 2d 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 Jan. 1,000,000 do Blossburg and Coming: Mortgage Bonds 1st 1st 2d 2d $2,500,000 347 000 Bdvidere J/eiaware: 1st Mort. (guar. C. and A.)... 2d Mort. 8d Mort. description. Ask’d s : 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) 2d do do Eastern Coal Fields Branch.. do 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y 2d do do 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio) 2d do do Atlantic and St. Lawrence; Dollar Bonds do do INTEREST. Amount outstand¬ j | BOND LIST. Stonington: c . 230,000 250,000 903,000 1881 do do 1870 1S61 1862 1,000,000 Jan. & May & Nov. July 1872 1869 1,465,000 May & Nov. 1873 1,300,000 May & Nov 1883 960,000 April & Oct 1877 500,000 225,000 Jan. & July 1870 May & Nov. 1890 1,804.000 Feb. & 41,000 300,560 do do 90 100 90 91 95 85 Aug 1883 1883 1883 2,691,293 300,000 Feb. & 2.230.500 215,000 4,328,000 Feb. & Ang 69-72 110 April & Oct 1882 4.822,000 2,194,000 682,000 Mav & Nov. 1885 I 443,000 4,600,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 400,000 590,000 8,612,000 695,000 3,500,000 300,000 Aug 1892 May & Nov. 1888 do 1882 82 no' do 1877 Feb. & Aug 1S68 92 88 92 Jan. & July 1891 95 96 91 Feb. & Ang 1893 April & Oct 1893 Jan. 81 &July 1875 do do May 1876 1876 & Nov. 1877 do 1883 50 53 May & Nov. 1915 Jan. & July 1876 M’ch & Sep 450,000 S 1861 900,000 6 Jan. & July 1868 t • • • • ' INTEREST. outstand¬ ing. IRate. * Payable. Princpal payble. « Northampton: (H&mp. and 1st do New Jersey : Bonds (renewal).. Snbscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks). Sink. Fund B’ds (assumeddebts).. Bonds of August, 1859, convert... New York and Harlem: 1st Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage , Plain Bonds Mortgage Bonds York, Providence New 3,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1st Mortgage Northern Central: Sinking Fund Bonds York and Cumberl'd Guar. Bonds Balt, and Susq. S'k'g Fund Bonds.. Northern New Hampshire Plain Bonds North Pennsylvania: 1,088,000 232,000 6 Feb. & Aug ’73-’78 Baltimore). RR ' do 1,500,000 1,000,000 500.000 500,000 Norwich and Worcester : General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage 1,494.000 1st Mortgage do 2d {now stock) Ohio and Mississippi: 1st Mortgage (East. Div.) 1st do (West Div.) (do 2d do do ) Oeicego and Mortgage, guar, by Mo 311,500 7 Jan. & July '70-’80 7,000,000 6 Jan. A July ’72-’87 do do 1,029,000 Mortgage 2,283,840 sterling Baltimore Central: Philadelphia and 1st Mortgage 1st do Erie; (Sunbury & Eric) (general)... do (general)..... 2d Philadel., Germ ant. & Norristown: Consolidated Loan Convertible Loan Philadelphia and Reading: 575,000 Mortgage Sterling Bonds of 1836 Dollar 4,000,000 292,500 182,400 2,856,600 106,000 1861 1,521,000 976,800 564,000 60,000 1843-4-8-9 Sterling: Bonds of 1843 Dollar Bonds, convertible Lebanon Yalley Bonds, convertible Philadelphia and Trenton : 1st Mortgage Philadel., Wdtning. & Baltimore: Mortgage Loan Pittsburg and Connellscille: 1st Mort. (Turtle Or. Div.) Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne ami Chicago: Mortgage do 3d do 1st 2d (guar.)J. Watert.l ) Burlington: do do 2d St. Louis, Alton Mortgage 2d 2d do do and Terre Haute: preferred Income Cincinnati: Mortgage (extended) Sandusky, Dayton and 1st 2d do Feb. A Aug 1881 1881 do do April & Oct 8 Jan. A 500 00< July Mch A s<»pt 7 7 Mch & Sept do 7 do 7 lMav "NTnv 1,800,00 .... let Monongahela an’ally 1894 2,800,00 7 do 1,700,00 7 1 1894 o< 1894 Feb. A Aug 1900 1,000,00 901,500 7 May&NoY 1875 Bonds. 600,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1875 95 399,300 554,908 7 8 Jan. & July 1873 April & Oct • • 1878 90 ... • • ... .... ... April & Oct *68-’71 1875 95* do .... Jan. & July '66-’76 June A Dec D’m’d 2,657,343 6 Jan. & July 1886 2,000,000 4,375,000 6 . • . .. 98 . • 77 98 May & Nov. 1870 Jan. & July 1871 6 6 6 July 1884 Ohio : . . . 80 100 .... 95 95 .... 80 .... 1,699,500 ... JaAp JuOc 1870 5 do 6 .... 800,000 fund. do . Bonds 1890 1885 • • .... .... .... • .... ... • • 6 Jan. & July 1878 80 88 1865 600.000 7 June & Dec 1870 900 000 7 Mch A Sept- Bonds 101 93 Morris: Mortgage Bonds 6 Mch & Sept 1884 1876 750,000 6 April & Oct 690,000 6 May & Nov. 1876 .... 91 1876 182,000 6 Jan. & July ........ North Branch: 1st Mortgage.... Schuylkill Navigation,': 80 1st 2d f... Mortgage do Susquehanna and .... ...: .... i * Tide-Water: Maryland Sterling Loan Loan, converted do Mortgage Bonds Interest Bonds, pref Union (Pa.): Mortgage. West Branch and Susquehanna: 1st Mortgage 91* .... .... 90 95 ... ... 980,670 586,500 6 Mch & Sept 1872 6 Jan. & July 1882 6 May & Nov. 1870 5 Jan. & July 1864 1866 do 5 1878 do 993,000 6 1864 do * 227,569 6 806,000 200,000 2,600,000 6 May & Nov. 1883 460,000 6 Jan. & Jnly 1878 750,000 6 Jan. & July 85 75 76 .... • . . . 44 .... ••4 • * m 46 ... 22 ... •• .... .... Wyoming Valley : 1st Mortgage 95 26 Mining: Mortgage* do insyl 93 ... .... st Mortgage 1st Mi 1,600,000 2,000,000 7 Jan. 4c 7 July April & Oci 18“8 • 609 000 7 Feb. & Ang 1871 ...1 , _ i 75 Quicksilver Mining : Mortgage 2d do 1st • • • 88 miscellaneous: 2d • 87 .... 1st 90 1878 1 27 .... • 1,764,330 8 Improvement • 2,778,341 .... .... .... • 1865 1868 July .... .... • do Jan. & 752,000 7 161,000 6 Navigation; Mortgage .... .. tlanposa , Semi 88 .... Unsecured Bonds. 400,00 10 Jan. & July 1875 329.00' 10 Feb, A Anp 1881 2,200.000 Jan. & July 1883 7 Jan. & .... Lehigh Navigation : .... IQ 1863 1863 1863 6 81 22* 23 1877 Interest Bonds .... — Mortgage 1st 7 Feb. & Aug do 7 do 7 . • .... do Erie of Pennsylvania: .... 116 1R7Q' 800,000 7 Jnn. A Dec 1874 1862 do 200,000 7 123,000 7 Mch & Sepl 1871 1880 do 800,00 7 , 91 18— 7 . , .... 550,600 175,000 25,000 500,000 Covington Bridge : Delaware and Hudson: let Mortgage, sinking 2d do do 95 .... 1888 1888 1876 • , .... • 1912 100 92 1912 1912 1875 .. Cent.): Delaware Division : 1st Mortgage .... 1890 400,000 7 340,00( 7 937,50 440,00 Sacramento Valley: 1st Mortgage 1st 7 7 140,000 1st Mort.. Troy, S. & Rat. Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg: 1st Mortgage (Potsdam A (do do 2d do 1st do (Watertown & Rome) 2d do (do do ) 3d Semi an'ally 250, m Saratoga consolidated Rensselaer & Saratoga . Saratoga & Whitehall.... Mortgage do 7 7 7 1,000,eo< Convertible Bonds 1st 2d 5,200,000 5,160.000 800 00( Rensselaer ft- Rutland and 400,000 • • t .* * ' • • .... .... July 1884 A — 1890 596,000 6 Jan. & /lily 1890 do 200,000 6 Marvland Loan Sterling Bonds, guaranteed Preferred Bonds .... .... .... Feb. A Aug 1889 .1,438,000 Chesapeake and , . . .... • 6 500,000 . .... 97 • • .... 79 5 6 1,000,000 6 150 000 6 Bonds jpe i 1st Mortgage • , • .... .... .... 6 Jan 1,000.000 Cincinnati and 1st Mortgage 1880 92 1870 1871 1880 1880 1886 115 1886 692,000 2,000,000 Pittsburg and Steubenville: 1st Mortgage 2d do Racine and Mississipjn: 1st Mortgage Reading and Columbia: 1st Mortgage. T Raritan and Delaware Bay: 1st Mortgage, sinking fund do 2d 1st Mort. 1st Mort. 100 • Bonds. (Baltimore) Bonds • Canal .... 6 April A Oct 6 Jan. A July do 6 do 6 do 6 do 7 do . f • May & Nov. 1861 Jan., & July 1867 850,000 Mortgage: .... .... 258,000 6 May & Nov. 1868 - 2d . 7 7 4,319,520 ... .... .... .... 1,135,000 guaranteed... , . . . c 6 Jan. & July 1895 7 April & Oct 2,000,000 Mortgage Cumberland (North. Guaranteed 1885 do 5 .... 70 408,000 5 Jan. A July 1867 , 1st July 1876 do 6 .... .... 119,800 6 Jan. A July 1865 Bonds of 1849. do do do do .... April & Oct 1901 6 do let York 1,000,000 7 April & Oct 1877 5,000,000 6 April & Oct 1881 do do do 7 Jan. A .... .... 1875 do 6 Hudson and Boston Western Maryland: 1st Mortgage .... .... 4,980.000 6 Jan. A July 1880 2,621.000 6 April & Oct 1875 , .... .... 1884 Mch A Sept 7 S. 6s, 30 yr.) Sterling (£899,900) Bonds Dollar Bonds Albany and W. Stockbridge , .... 1885 1876 1882 Sep. ■ > • 90 75 July 18V Mar. & 75 .... « . ... 180,000 do 2d , Western (Mass.): .... .... .... 1865 1884 1875 1875 1865 1874 Oct. May & Nov. 7 .... 1863 500,000 6 Jan. & July 1867 do 6 :.... (convert.) Coupon ... registered .: -... Mortgage 1st • • .... 416,000 7 April & Qct 1870 1875 do 346,000 7 1,150,000 7 Feb & Aug. 1872 sterling Philadelphia and 1st 38* 40 7 Jan. & 7 Apr. & .... Dec 1894 7 Feb. & Aug do 7 7 May & Nov. do 7 do 7 7 Jan. & July 200,000 7 Mortgage (guaranteed) Westchester and Philadelphia : 92 91 1880 1872 1875 1870 do 7 1st Jan. & July do 750,000 1,391,000 Warren : .... .... July 1870 Vermont Central : 1st Mortgage 2d do Vermont and Massachusetts t 1st Mortgage .... .... 7 Jan. & 650,000 Pacific: 1st Mort. (conv. into U. Land Grant Mortgage 98 98 30 20 1,180,000 300,000 300,000 Union 99 . 95 94 1885 1885 7 7 7 2,050,000 850,000 Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage 2d do 2d do April & Oct 7 115 98 1873 1873 Sept 1866 M abash: (Toledo & Convertible Troy Union f Mortgage Bonds do do 85* 86 102 Mch & Mortgage 2d do 3d do .... .... .... PenirGula: 1st 1874 1876 7 June & .. . .... 94,000 Warsaw : • • .... July 1871 April & Oct 1st .... .... 7 Jan. & 7 Troy and Boston: .... .... .... Syracuse: Panama: l6t Mortgage, 1st do 2d do r .... 1st‘Mortgage Pacific: 6 Jan. <fc July do 6 do 6 do 6 .... 85* 85* 100.000 7 Jan. & July 1874 300,000 7 Feb. & Ang 1870 Champlain : Ogdensburg and Jfi. April & Oct .... .... 200,000 900,000 Wabash) (extended).. / '..... 2,500,000 (Toledo and Wabash).... 1,000,000 (Wabash and Western).. 1,500,000 152,355 Sinking Fund Bonds 600,000 Equipment bonds .... • .... 2,500,000 6 Jan. & July 1885 500.000 6 Ja Ap Ju Oc 1877 1866 do 150,000 6 6 • • • 1875 April & Oct guaranteed).... (not 1868 Toledo ana 1st Mort. 1st do 2d do do 2d v ... 95 .... 1,400,000 Y.): Toledo, Peoria and 1st Mortgage .... .... 6 220,700 .... 91 York: 1867 7 Feb. & Aug 1872 Richmond: convertible Third Avenue (N. 1st Mortgage .... 98 May & Nov. 1872 Feb. & Aug 1893 do « 700,000 and Mortgage, 1st .... 2,500.000 6 April & Oct 1880 1887 do 360,000 10 (guar, by B. & O. (do do do " do do 2d 3d 3d Terre Haute .. do 104 Feb. & Aug 1876 do 1876 7 7 7 7 1st Mortgage .... . * Syracuse, Binghamton and New 91% 93 912,000 7 June & Dec 1866 and Boston: Mortgage Bonds Cha ttel Mortga ge 1\orth- Western Virginia : 1st Mortgage (guar, by 1st Mortgage 1,398000; 7 604,000 Island: Staten .... .... 1 osq 663 000 6 T3 July 1875 7 June A Dec 600,000 and Pottsville: Shamokin Valley IstMortgage .... .... 1883 1887 1883 6,917,598 6 May & Nov 2,925,000 6 J une & Dec 165,000 6 May & Nov. Haven: York and New Aug 1873 51,000 7 Jan. & July 1871 Premium Sinking Fund Bonds of October, 1863 Real Estate Bonds 3d Mortgage 6 Feb. & Princpal payble. Payable. 7 Jan. & 1,*90,000 1st Mortgage Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage — .... .... Mansfield and Newark: Sandusky, — New London Northern: 1st Mortgage New York Central: New 103,000 485,000 of 1853 Ferry Bonds $500,000 Hamp.).. Jan. A July 1869 do 1873 7 6 Rate. ing. Railroad: - Ilall road : New Haven and 1st Mortgage Amount outstand¬ Description. Ask’d T3 MARKET. INTEREST. market. Amount Description. (continued). MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST AND RAILROAD, CANAL « • • • 600,000 7 0,000 7 u June A Dec 1878 Jau. A Julf 1879 -• • 1 58 [January 18,1866. CHRONICLE THE i*'' t -' - THE CHRONICLE. January 13,1866.] 59 RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Dividend. Stock Market. Last Periods. standing. p’d. Alton anc do do do Baltim< Was n Branch. Bellefontaine urg and Coming... Boston,i, ) Hartford and Erie Boston andProi Boston antFWor ) ) ) ) ) ) ) Jan ..1# Quarterly. do Cape Cod do pre Central of Ne' Central Ohio. April and Oct Oct.. .4 April and Oct Oct... 5 Feb. and Aug Ang. .3 preferred... Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska.. do do Cleveland and 11# 13 and July and July and July and July Jan Jan Jan Jan . . . . 94 115 95 .5# 128 130 .4 .4 .5 pref. 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3# do do nr do do Elmira and do Erie Erie and .. pref. Williamsport do pref... Northeast... Forty-s fiannib do 190 do pref.. do Huntingdon and Broad Top 48 49 do pref. 50 50 50 50 “ Little5 Miami. Mi; ‘ Little Schuylkill ‘ Long Island 50 50 Lomsville and Frankfort..!!.!' 50 Louisville and Nashville ! ’ 100 Chic 100 100 Maine Central ! 100 Marietta and Cincinnati ....!*’ 50 do do ‘ 1st pref! 50 do 2d pref.. 60 Manchester and Lawrence. ion Louisville, New Albany & McGregor Western Michigan Central " [ joo Michigan Southern and N. Ind..l00 do do guaran!l00 MUwauke' and Prairie Du ChienlOO do do 1st pref.100 do do Milwaukee and St. Paul do Mine Hill preferred 2d pref. 100 100 !ioo Schuylkill Haven.. 50 Mississippi and Missouri 100 a Morris and Essex Nashua and Lowell 60 100 Naugatuck 100 New Bedford and Taunton 100 New Haven, N. Loud., & Ston .100 New Haven and Northampton. .100 New Jersey 60 New London Northern*^,... 100, 113# 30# 30# June..3# 56# 66# April and Oct Oct... 5 101# 101# June & Dec. May and Nov. Nov. .5 Feb. and Aug Aug. .5 Jan. and July Jan Jan. and July Jan.’66 4 April and Oct Oct...5 98** 12 118 100 120 74# 74# 105# 106 126 Jan...2# and Aug Aug.. 2 Jan. and July Jan...5 Jan. and July Jan...3 Quarterly. Feb. Quarterly. 160 90 lif riB 136 139# 113 56 iis 58J Aug Aug..3# Aug Feb .3s Feb. and Aug Feb .3s Jan. and July Jan...4 Jan, and July Jan..5 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3# Feb. and Aug Aug..5 May and Nov May and Nov 40“ 26 103# l 80 Nov..4 Nov.. 3# Aug Aug..3s. ' 140 • • •• 193 93 Peb. and Aug Aug. .3# Jan. and July Jan... 4 Feb. and 105’ 104# 104# 66# 66# iis" 99 100 116 Peb. and Aug Aug.. 5 June and Dec Dec. .4 Sandnsky, Mansfield & NewarklOO Schuylkill Valley 50 Second Avenue (N. Y.) 100 Shamokin Valley & Pottsville.. 50 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) 100 Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.100 Terre Haute and Richmond Third Avenue (N. Y.) Toledo, Peoria, do do do do do 1st pref.100 2d pref.100 and Western.. 50 do preferred. 50 100 100 100 100 100 .100 50 100 75 Utica and Black River ~ Vermont and Canada Vermont and Massachusetts... Warren Western (Mass) Worcester and Nashua.". Division and Hudson Junction (Pa.) and Raritan and Susquehanna.... .. Schuylkill Navigation l66" io6‘ •.‘40 240 1,368,100 Apr. and Oct 8,657,300 Apr. and Oct 1,770,414 1112# 113 59# 60 De.'65 10 100# 100# Oct. .4 106# 106# Oct ..5 118# 120 ' do (consol.)! 50 50 Miscellaneous. 25 100 !! 50 100 " 100 6 ’ 100 ! 20 .100 ..! !l00 25 50 Hampshire and Baltimore Coal .100 International Coal 50 Jersey City and Hoboken Gas.. 20 Manhattan Gas 50 Mariposa Gold 100 Metropolitan Gas 100 Minnesota 50 New Jersey Consolidated 10 New Jersey Zinc 100 New York Gas Light 50 New York Life and Trust !l00 .100 113 116 65 70 131 132 July 700,000 May & Nov Jan...5 Nov. 4 1,500,000 Feb. and Aug Aug..4 10 2,500,000 4,000,000 Quarterly. July.25 200,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. 600,000 3,214,300 2,000.000 1,000.000 Jan. and July Jan...4 6,000,000 5,000,000 1,000,11 Jan. and July Jan...4 644 1 100 60 42# 42# 15 61 22 54 120 41# 41# 170 sooiooo 160 12# Quarterly. Oct.... 1,250,00$ 12# 150 205 200 165 215 220 172 .40# 40# 1,000,000 Jan. and July Jan...5 ted)Coall00 2,175,000 Apr. and Oct Oct.... 60 750.000 Jam and July July. .5 4 100 40 Jan. and 1,000,000 1,000,000 4,000,000 Jan. and July July. .5 12,000,000 2,800,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,200,000 1,000,000 May and Nov Nov.... 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. .5 Nicaragua Transit 100 1,000,000 Pacific Mail loo 4,000,000 uarterly. Nov .5 Scrip (50 paid) .100 2,1*00,000 uarterly. Nov..5 Pennsylvania Coal 50 3,200,000 Feb. and Aug Aug..5 25 1,000,000 Quartz Hill Quicksilver 100 10,000,000 Jan. and July Jan..5 q. Ru tland Marble 25 1,000,000 Jan. and July July Saginaw Land, Salt and Mm.... 25 2,600,000 Union Trust 100 1,000,000 United States Telegraph 100 3,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug..4 Williamsburg Gas 93# 130# 95 42 95 83 121 121 58 67 20 5 42 ! .100 Wyoming Valley Coal 94 41 82 1,025.000 Feb. and Aug Feb! .6 1,175,000 Feb. and Aug Feb..5 120 138,086 56 1,908,207 2,888,806 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3# 66 18 2,050,070 2 2,750,000 Central American Trans Central Coal Citizens (Brooklyn) Gas Coal, Md 68 110 !!.25 2,000,000 !ioO 5,000,000 Cumberland Coal, preferred Farmers Loan and Trust Harlem Gas... 40 108 Brooklyn Gas Canton Improvement Cary Improvement Consolidation 70 140 63 145 Susqnehanna.100 1,000,000 . 135 62 145 Aug Aug. .3 Aug Aug.10 398,910 2,298,400 Jan. and July Jan...5 200,000 50 4,282,950 May and Nov Nov. .5 50 726,800 50 50 American Coal American Telegraph Ashburton Coal Atlantic Mail Brans wick City Bucks County Lead 68 100 50 preferred. 50 Wyoming Valley. 862,571 576,000 Jan. and July Jan...6 650,000 Apr. and Oct 869,450 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 3 750,000 Quarterly 1,200,130 1,900,150 Jan. and July Jan... 1,170,000 Quarterly, J. n.. 1,700,000 1,700,000 1,000,000 2.442.350 Juneand Dec June. 3 984,700 June and Dec Dec. .3# 125,000 Jan. and July Jan,..3# 607,111 274,400 Juneand Dec Dec ..3 811,560 Jan. and July Jan ..4 2,860,000 June and Deb Dec ..4 Jan...2 2,860,000 1,408,300 Jan. and July Jan.. .3 5,665,000 Jan. and July Jan...6 1,141,650 Jan. and July Jan...5^ 317,050 Jan. and July Jan...l 60 100 Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 United States Trust 150 62 100 42 25# 26 60 95 40 Jan.. .5 . 25 1,343,563 25 8,228,595 50 1.633.350 Feb. and 100 10,000,000 Feb. and 100 100 50 .. do preferred North Branch Wilkesbarre (Consolid AtJg..5 50 100 and Warsaw.. .100 Western Union Telegraph Feb. and Aug 89# 90 89# 90 Dec Nov .... Union do preferred West Branch and 126 80 112 2,360,700 800,000 April and Oct Oct...4# 500,000 April and Oct Oct...3 Saratoga and Whitehall 50 50 Troy, Salem & Rutland 800,000 April and Oct Oct... 3 Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb'glOO 1,774,175 Jan. and July Jan...5 Rutland and Burlington .100 2,233,376 St. Louis, Alton, &Terre HautelOO 2.300,000 do do May. .7 pref. 100 1,700,000 Annually. Sandusky, Dayton, and Cincin. .100 2,989,090 do do Feb. and 354,866 pref.100 Aug Aug.. 3 Lehigh Navigation Monongahela Navigation Morris (consolidated) i02# 114# 115 'Providence and Worcester Racine and Mississippi 100 Raritan and Delaware Bay 100 Rensselaer & Saratoga consol.. 50 86 90 87 53 Jan.. .3 Jan...4 Jan...3 8,181,126 Quarterly. Jan.. .2# 93# 94 100 94 1,500,000 Jan. and July Jan...4 100 1,700,000 Jan. and July Jan...4 53 35" 91# Jan,..4 21,250,000 Jan ..7 2,979,000 January. 3,609,600 Jan. and July Jan.. .4 482,400 Feb. and Aug Aug. .4 Jan .6 7,000,000 Quarterly 50 20,072,323 Phila., Germant’n, & Norrist’n. 60 Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore 50 50 Pittsburg and Connellsville Pittebure, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolOO Portland, Saco, and PortsmouthlOO Delaware Delaware Delaware Delaware Lancaster Nov. .2 Feb. and Philadelphia and Reading Canal. 106 91# Pennsylvania 50 20,000,000 May and Nov May. .5 Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentlOO 218,100 -50 5,013,054 Jan. and July Jan...3 Philadelphia and Erie Chesapeake and Delaware Chesapeake and Ohio 100 Aug..3 100 Wrightsville, York & Gettysb’g 50 Feb. and Aug Aug..2 Feb. and 100 preferred.. 100 Old Colony and Newport .100 50 Oswego and Syracuse Panama (and Steamship) 100 do Troy and Boston Troy and Greenbush 836,000 500,000 6,627,050 516,573 2,981,267 2,646,100 1,852,715 1,109,594 5,527,871 2,800,000 Mississippi Tioga 102# Bid. Askd Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. .100 3,077,000 Ohio and Toledo, Wabash 122 .... Bloomsburg., 50 Lehigh Talley Lexington and Frankfort. 103 106 50 617,500 do do 190,750 Jan. and July Jan...3# pref. Illinois Central loo 22,888,900 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 5 126 Indianapolis and Cincinnati...! 50 1,689,900 April and Oct Oct...4 Indianapolis and Madison .100 412,000 Jan. and Juiy Jan... 3 do do pref.. 100 407.900 Jan. and July Jan...4 Jeffersonville 50 1,015,907 Joliet and Chicago 100 1,500,000 Quarterly. Jan...l# 90 Kennebec and Portland (new).! 100 70 Lackawanna and do 104# «• pref. buqi 200 .... 366,000 850,000 Jan. and July Jan...3# 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug. .5 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug 5,085,050 1,500,000 Jan. and July 1,000,000 Jan. and July 2,980,839 1,508,000 uarterly. 795,360 3,068,400 June and Dec New York and New Haven 100 New York Providence & BostonlOO Ninth Avenue 100 Northern of New Hampshire.. .100 Northern Central 50 3,344,800 Quarterly. North Pennsylvania 50 3,150,150 Norwich and Worcester. 100 2,888,600 Jan. and July Peninsula 1.490,800 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 1.500,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .3# 120 350,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .3# 126 500,000 392.900 74 1,255,200 Jan. and July Jan.. .3 1,591,100 Jan. and July Jan...4 101# 1,582,169 20 2,316,705 406,132 Jan. and July July. .3 6,832,950 Jan. and July Jan.. .3 150 1,550,000 952,350 1,500,000 1,751,577 1,982,ISO 99# 3,165,000 Jan. and July Jan...4 1,000,000 Quarterly. Jan 500,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2# 52 500,000 Jan. and July 500,000 Jan. and July Jan...3# 82 89# 16,400,100 Feb. & Aug. Aug. .4 8,535.700 Feb. & Aug. Aug.. 3# 86 400,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug. .5 104# 3,540,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .4 750,000 April and Oct Oct ..5 1,900,000 5,253,836 2,350,000 Quarterly. Jan.. .3 168 820,000 1,180,000 Jan. and July Jan...4 6,218,042 April and Oct Oct. ..4 102# Passumpsic. Delaware, Lacka., & Western do 117# 125# 126 492.150 2,250,000 13,160,927 12,994.719 6,000.000 1,106.125 3,000,000 2,000,000 6,000.000 4,000,000 5,253,625 4,654,800 Concord. ■ 127 Jan...l# June & Dec. Dec. .2# 1,000,000 Pittsburg Connecticut and do 111# 115 Quarterly. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. 50 Last p’d. 788,047 100,24,386,000 50 Niagara Bridge & Canandaigua. 100 102 871,900 1,783,100 Feb. & Aug. Aug.. 3# 103 2,425,200 Feb and Aug. Aug.. 3# 105# 8,376,510 May & Nov. N.5C&.20S 112# eyA1 ton. do 91 V 2,085,925 Jan. and July Jan..2.# Chicago and New York Central New York and Harlem do preferred. 4,174,400 Jan. and July Jan... 5 125# 126 378,455 682,600 681,665 Jan. and July Jan... 3# 48 49 1,150.000 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug.. 3# 84 120" Jan.. .2# 118 ) 6,500,000 Quarterly. Amboy. Camden and Atlantic. Atlantic do 1,347,192 1,947,600 800,000 919,153 2,500,000 5,000,000 13,188,902 1,650,000 4,434,260 997,112 600,000 250,000 8,500,000 1,880,000 4,076,974 3,160,000 4,500,000 Periods. standing. New York and Boston Aft* Line. 100' AUc_ Atlanth do out¬ Bid. Askd Railroad. Market. Dividend. Stock Companies. out¬ Companies* 44# 45 60 135 [January 13,1866. THE CHRONICLE. 60 insurance ani» PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Jltining Journal. INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Bid. Adamantine Oil 55 Alleghany Allen Wnght 50* 75 Beekman Dec. 31,1864. COMPANIES. Marked thus (*) are partici¬ pating, ami thus (!) Marine Risks. write! Capital Albany American* American Exchange Arctic Astor Atlantic 30 50 —100 50 25 (Brooklyn) 50 25 25 Baltic Beekman 20 70 210,000 100 100 Commerce Commerce (Albany).. ..100 Commercial 50 Commonwealth. 100 Continental* 100 500,000 50 400,000 100 200,000 40 100 300,000 Exchange. 30 Ear. Joint St’k(Meridian)100 Firemen’s 17 10 Firemen’s Fund Firemen's Trust (Bklyn) 10 150,000 50,000 Citizens1 City 100 Clinton Columbia* Corn Exchange Croton Eagle Empire City 50 Excelsior Fulton Gallatin Gebhard Germania Glenn's Falls • • 10 50 100 25 50 Globe Goodhue* Greenwich Grocers1 Guardian Hamilton Hanover & Harmony (F. Hoffman 50 100 • 50 Home 50 50 100 Howard Humboldt Importers1 and Traders1. 50 Indemnity 100 International Irving Jefferson 200,000 200,000 200,000 250,000 500,000 200,000 200,000 25 30 100 25 Lamar Lenox (Brooklyn). 50 Lincoln Fund Lorillard* Manhattan - (Brooklyn).. 50 Mercantile Merchants1 100 50 204,000 150,000 150,000 and Mar Niagara North American* 100 50 50 25 North River Northwestern (Oswego). 50 25 Pacific Park 100 Peter Cooper 20 People’s 20 Phoenixt Reliei. Republic* Resolute* 200,000 150,000 200,000 Rutgers1 300,000 157,483 358,142 150,000 184,916 do 200.000 298,778 do 150,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 St. Mark’s St. Nicholas! Security*t Standard Star Sterling * Stuyvesant Tradesmen’s United States Washington* Western (Buffalo) 25 25 328,115 708,874 331,793 185,624 242,320 221,815 293,503 200,000 200.000 150,000 150,000 163,247 4 25 Heydrick Heydrick Brothers High Gate.. 45 15 .. 2 10 . Inexhaustible Ken. Nat. Pet & Min. Knickerbocker Pet’m Liberty Lily Run Mouongahela & Kan. McClintockville McElhenny McKinley 249,750 481,551 232,191 208,016 Feb. 159,3361 156,707 Jan. 200,000 200,559, 200.000 200,000 205,070' 150,000 250,000 400,000 200,000 150,000 500,000 do do do 1 00 95 40 26 65 5 00 55 30 2 20 15 20 50 2 00 1 90 35 Manhattan Bid. 45 5 00 46 2 00 2 10 3 95 20 4 00 12 80 12 90 5 25 85 People’s Petroleum.. Phillips Pit Hole Creek Pit Hole Consol President Rawson Farm Revenue 50 75 50* . 60 60 80 70 2 90 90 10 25 13 00 40 23 10 14 00 6 25 7 00 Shade River Southard Standard Petroleum. Story <fc McClintock. Talman Tarr Farm Terragenta Titus Oil Titus Estate. Union United Pe’tl’m F’ms. United States* United States Pe-) troleum Candle.. j Venango & Pit Hole. Vesta Watson Petroleu n Webster 45 23 20 15* 1 05 95 16 W.Virg. Oil and Coal Woods & Wright i Oil Creek f 17 People's \ f Working Gold: Consolidated Gregory 5 00 Cfllfidonia io 66 85 50 00 23 00 July’65 ..8 139% f’npper Falls "Flint fttppl Rivfir. 150” July’65 ..5 July '65 .6 1 00 Hiltrm 10 00 6 00 2 50 . 64 % Feb. '05..5 May’65 ..5 Aug. ’65..5 Sep. ’65 .6 Tsle Royale 2 75 ATpnHntA . New June’6J.3% July ’65 ..5 July ’65 ..5 Jersey Consol.. Norwich 1 00 25 2 50 8 00 Corydon * 10 85 95 30 11 25 1 15 1 28 1 35 Colorado Gold Min. of Gunnell Hope K"ip Huell Manhattan Missouri and Penn... Montana Mount Alpine New York N. Y. & Nova Scotia. Quartz Hill S~mith & Parmelee... 5 00 1 50 80 90 1 70 6 00 1 85 6 50 26 50 1 40 1 50 Lead: Denbo............... Macomb Jan. ’66 ..5 July ’65 .4 Jan, ’66 ..5 . Wallkill Coal: Qninov j British American 3 50 3 00 Rockland jMahanoy 2 00 8 00 Advertisement. QUARTERLY REPORT OP The Central National Bank .8 July ’65 ..5 July ’63 ..4 .5 Asked Bid. Companies. ' Asked. Copper : Aztec Roston Jan. ’65 ..5 Jan. ’661. .6 . Noble Well of N. Y. Noble& Del.Rock Oil North American Northern Light Oceanic Oil City Petroleum.. Oil Creek of N. Y Pacific Palmer Petroleum... Petroleum Companies. Jan.’66 ..5 Jan '66 22 1 00 25 MINING STOCK LIST. .5 . 38 N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons. New York & Newark Maple Grove Jan.'66 ..5 Jan. '66 36 Rynd Farm 50 18 iis* * July’64 ..5 July ’65 .5 97% . OF THE CITY OF NEW ; RESOURCES. Bills Discounted Indebtedness to Directors Notes and $390,044 47 Overdrafts Current Expenses Due from Banks United States Bonds Cash on hand, viz : • National Currency . 81 52 63 00 52,683 06 3,180,866 84 7,824,389 93 $20,979,455 52 LIABILITIES. . ? 2,074 17,345 1,068,491 2,553,650 4,545,085 00 Legal Tenders Checks in Exchange . $9,513,503 63 $45,755 09 Specie July ’65 .5 July'65.3% July’65.. 5 and Aug. Ang. ’65.. 7 Feb. '65..5 do and July. July’63.. 4 and Aug. Aug. '65. .7 and July. Jan. '66 .5 Jan. ’66 ..5 do YORK, morning of the first Monday in January, 1866. On the . 100 25 57 219,139 Feb. and Ang. Feb. ’62..6 180,310, Jan. and July. July’65. .5 Jan.’66 .6 115 343,665 do 600,527 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65. .4 . 303,213! 159,226 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66..! 6 Jan.’66...5 566,543 do $3,000,000 00 854,181 69 Capital Stock Surplus Funds and Profits 1,213,042 00 Circulation Deposits— Individual.:... United State* Banks Dividends unpaid • • $9,085,631 18 86,063 01 7,204,637 64 > 16,376,331 8 5,900 00 $20,979,455 5 .100 3,500,000 100 1,000,000 3,177,437 100 e48,000; 1,322,469 100 56" 135,496 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’64.. 5 664,987 Jan. and J uly. July '65 .5 Joint Stock Marine: do do do 244,289 217,876 263,035 Jan. 100 HamiltonMcClintock Guild Farm Ivanhoe... . 200,000 50 Williamsburg City Yonkers and New York. 100 Columbian* Great Western* Mercantile Mutual* do do do 50 100 26 50 Consol. G’t Western 169,572 233,295 219,046 Jan. and July, Jan. ’66 ..7 249,874 ”37* 2 00 Montana Mount Vernon Tack Petr’m of N.Y. 24 65 Jan. and July, July’65 .1 do July'65 .1 Jan. ’66 3% do ' do July'65 ..5 do July’65 ..6 Jan. ’66 4 do do July ’65 .10 do July ’65 ..5 do July ’65 ..5 50 1,000,000 1,241,874 Feb. 25 112“ 348,467 203,224 110,905 253,079 Jan. and July. Jan. ’66 ..4 200.000 262,076 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65..6 1,000,000 1,164,291 Jan. and July, Jan. '66 .6 110 Jan. '66 ..5 92 do 1,000,000 350,000 ^8,919 April and Oct. Oct.’65 ..6 91% 170,982 Jan. and July, July’65 ..5 150,000 300,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 150,000 25 80% Oct. ’65.7% Jan. ’66 .5 Jan '66 .3% 102 . 1 50 Maple Shade of N. Y. Maple Shade of Phil. Mingo Success Germania July'64 .!5 Jan. ’66 2 00 Fulton Oil . do do do do do do do do do do do 100 90 39 National Fountain Petroleum. do 214,017 433,998 234,925 213,413 159,054 Feb. and Ang. 1,079,164 Jan. and July. 228,083 Feb. and Aug. 261,586 March and Sep 113,325 Jan. and July, 280,000 150,(KM) 50 50 ..' First July’64 ..4 261,138 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’6o..7 214,373 April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5 Jan. and July, Jan. ’66.3% Jan. ’66 .4 do 167,778 200,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 33 1 50 Excelsior . 221,062 150.000 1 30 :... Enterprise Everett Petroleum July ’65 5 July’64.3% 200.000 200,000 200,000 Euniskillen Jan. ’66 .10 Aug4 p. sh. 200,000 300.000 1 60 Emp’e City Petrol’m July’64 ..4 Jan.’66 ..5 do 590.147 159,602 224,667 Jan. and July, July’65 ..5 100.000 77 10 00 42 50 20 Petrol’m 6 162,744 May and Nov. May 225.241 Jan. and July, Jau. ’65 ..5 500,000 200,000 75 Devon Oil Aug! V65. !4 Jan. ’66 5 Feb. ’66..5 Jan.’66 ..5 Oct. ’65.. .5 Jan. ’66 ..7 Mar. ’64..5 10 00 44 7 40 30 Consolidated of N. Y . 200.000 500,000 200,000 100 7 10 35 Commercial Commonwealth . Metropolitan* t 100 1,000,000 150,000 Montauk (Brooklyn).... 50 Morris (and inland) 100 2<K),000 Nassau (Brooklyn) 50 150,000 National 37% 200,000 25 300,000 New Amsterdam New World 50 200,000 100,000 N. Y. Cent. (Union Sp.).100 N. Y. Equitable 35 210,000 N. Y. Fire 41 Bradley Oil.. Clinton do 57% 146.024 Feb. and Aug. 102 72,880 262,121 Jan. and July, Jan. ’66 .5 Jan ’66.. 3% do 141,396 do July'65 ..5 169,340 Jan. ’66 .5 do 230,229 255,112 50 1,000,000 25 1,000,000 100 500,000 100 200,000 Mechanics1 and Traders’ 25 19 70 Blood Farm— California Cascade. Central Cherry Run June and Dec. Dec.’65...5 Jan. and July. June’64..5 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65. .6 do Aug. ’65.10 159,079 Jan. and July do 471,177 306,652 Feb. and Ang. 289,454 Jan. and July, do 495,466 do 229,835 239.144 ; eb. and Aug. 269.319 Jan. and July. 282,243 April and Oct. 1,174,929 Jan. and July. 299,038 March and Sep 227,675 Jan. and July. 401,922 April aud Oct. 246,853 Jan. and July, 100 1,000,000 King’s County (Brook’n) 20 Knickerbocker 40 LaSayette (Brooklyn) ... 50 Market* Mechanics’ 250,000 19 55 30 Buchanan Farm July’66. ..5 May and Nov. Feb. and Aug. 200,000 15 150,000 50 400,000 491.869 M.)+— 50 300,000 403,183 50 200,000 100 2,000,000 2,929,628 Hope Long Island 192,631 233,536 319,027 132,306 264,366 249,764 153.000 300,000 July, 440.0S4 Jan. and July. Jly '65.12% 203.363 Jan. and July. Jan. '663% 529,167 Jan. and July. Jan. 65. ..5 270,827 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65..S 347,723 March and Sep Sep. ’65..5 150.000 200,000 150,000 20 Brooklyn. 200,645 200,000 200,000 50 ►Is paid. 122,248 187,467 300.000 200.000 25 Broadway Brooklyn (L. I.) 17 Capital City (Albany)... 100 100 Central Park Brevoort Last Oil. 12 Brevoort 200,000 200,000 51X), 000 250,000 25 Bowery Periods. 293,142 Jan. and do 211,492 150.000 200,000 300,000 — Bergen Coal and Black Creek Assets. so;ooo 100 Albany City dividend. Net Joint Stock Fire: Adriatic *25 $300,000 200.000 iEtna* 50 Agricultural, (Watert’n). Bennehoff Reserve.. Bennehoff Run Asked. Bid. Companies. Asked. Companies. 987 4901 681)080 Jan. and do do do July, Jan. ’66.8% 85% Jan. ’66.3% Jan. ’66.8% Jan, ’60.8% New York, January U, 1866. W. H. SANDFORD, Assistant Cashier. HENRY A. SMYTHE, President. W« H. FOSTER, Cashier. QUARTERLY REPORT Bank Reports. REPORT OF THE THE ANNUAL 61 THE CHRONICLE. January 13,1866.] Bank Dividends. or THE CONDITION OF THE DIRECTORS TWENTY-SEVENTH DIVIDEND. OF THE Ninth National Bank, National Shoe 8s Leather Hanover Fire Insurance STOCKHOLDERS. TO THE New York, January 9,1866. day, and the undersigned unanimously re-elected Directors for the ensu¬ For this renewed and flattering expression the part of the Stockholders, the ing year. of confidence on their thanks. The following is a Statement of the the Banks: Directors return condition of STATEMENT. TUESDAY MORNING, Jan. 2,1866, “ RESOURCES. $3,696,645 63 1,884,625 54 13,000 00 Government securities Furniture and fixtures Specie and legal tender 2,382,294 6€ — 959,171 71 756,111 23 other banks Due from banks and bankers Checks and bills on $9,591,848 77 LIABILITIES. Capital stock Surplus profit after paying dividend.. $1,000,000 00 192,204 56 53,336 58 Dividends unpaid Circulation 894,940 00 7,451,367 63 Deposits $9,591,848 77 actual SURPLUS, and above all losses, expenses, and dividends, And now exhibit an Over the Notes and bills discounted Suspended debt Indebtedness of directors NINETEEN PER CENT On the CAPITAL STOCK. earnings of the last six months we have $50,000, that is Five per cent on the Capital Stock, and applied it to the extinguishment of the From the taken premium account; and although the Stockholders do not get this Five per cent in a dividend, yet it is re¬ presented in the United States Stocks held by the 1,687,304 80 able to report, that your Bank has well ful¬ patriotic mission, of aiding the placing of the Government Loans. The amount of subscrip¬ tions to the 7-30’s, was Forty-three Millions, Two Hundred and Sixty-two Thousand, Three Hundred Dollars, ($43,262,300), this being the largest subscrip¬ tion taken by any one Bank. To appreciate this re¬ sult, we would remark, that had nineteen other are filled its the whole loan would have been taken by the twenty. banks taken each the same amount, gives us opportunity to say, that having our beloved Country in its hour of peril, we This served desire to turn all our efforts to the now securing in legitimate and honorable ways the increase of our business with the community, to that end, we invite the cordial co-operation of each Stockholder. all Our organization is now so well perfected as to all much satisfaction, and the relief from so government business, gives our officers time us much to attend to individual dealers. Our Deposits have been large, at times during the year reaching almost Twenty-one Millions of Dol¬ lars ; but that was during the* time the people were rushing to us with patriotic zeal, to offer their money to their Country, now we can take the deposits of the business community; and we hold ourselves in readiness to Discount good business paper, payable at ehort dates. Such paper being based on the sale of commodities, is in our opinion the safest business a E. A. .... New erica, Providence, R. I... 1,739 70 National Bank, Brooklyn 1,917 18 118,230 17 Due from other banks and bankers, as follows, Oneida County Bank $711 75 801 05 657 53 52 75 Standard Fire Insurance COMPANY. , 8,141 08 with U. S. circulating bank can do. WILLIAM A. KOBBE, THOMAS A. VYSE, Jr., GEO. A. WICKS, BARNET L. SOLOMON. GEO. A. FELLOWS, SOLOMON L. i HULfi, 801,000 00 i payable demand, free of tax. on WM. M. ST. 271,950 00 30,000 00 Hoffman Fire Insurance of 100,877 42 viz COMPANY, : Legal tender notes Compound-interest notes.. $326,000 561,000 Total . No. 161 New York, 887,000 00 $5,345,561 24 , JOHN T. LIABILITIES. Capital stock paid in. Surplus fund Circulating notes received from Comptroller Less amouut on hand $1,500,000 00 $693,000 outstanding Individual deposits United States deposits. Dividends unpaid ; Due the following National Banks New Haven, Conn, Na¬ tional Bank. N. Haven, Conn $50,825 Taunton National Bank, Taunton, Mass 53,503 Tenth National Bank,New York 669,058 First National Bank, Port¬ land, Conn 71,244 Lockport National Bank, Lockport, N. Y 77,576 First National Bank, Mon¬ roe, Mich 9,970 City National Bank,Cleve¬ land, Ohio HILL, Cashier. JOSEPH U, ORVIS, President. a COMPANY. OFFICE NO. 12 WALL STREET. THIRTY-FIRST DIVIDEND. 77,015 00 : The Directors have this day declared a nual Dividend of SIX PER CENT, 33 23 08 ELEVENTH Germania Fire Insurance 23 338 88 COMPANY. New • 212,616 87 43 298 00 FIVE (5) PER 174,453 62 No. 175 JOHN EDW. $5,345,561 24 New York, County of New York swear my (Signed) W. A. KISSAM. |y thisSworn 5th day to and_ subscribed 1866.before me, of January, * Wm.H. Barker, Notary Public. on demand, at Broadway. KAHL, Secretary. United States Petroleum Company, Company, ) No. 47 Exchange Place, V ce, New York, December 2':>, 1S65. I, W. A. BANK, New York, do solemnly a CENT, (Free from Government tax,) payable office, in Germania Building, Total j day declared their Interest Profit and loss knowledge and belief. York, 3d January, 1866. The Board of Directors have this Semi-annual Dividend of Exchanges 8tamP* DIVIDEND. 45 Manhattan Savings Insti¬ tution... 62,813 04 Union Dime Savings In¬ stitution 18.127 01 German Savings Bank.... 20,107 70 Fifth Ward Bank,Milwau¬ kee 1,263 07 State Bank circulation outstanding.. Discount { Semi-An¬ (reserving all unexpired premiums), payable on and after Monday, the loth instant. J. D. STEELE, President. P. Notman, Secretary. 28 932,514 48 Due to other banks and bankers, as follows: Union Trust Co $110,306 10 Five cent ) f Company have this Dividend of Five (5) Per Cent, free of Government tax, payable on the 20th instant. JOSEPH W. WILDEY, Secretary, 1,975,663 27 that the above statement is true to the best of CHAS. MINZESHEIMER, J. O. WHITEHOUSE, JOSEPH U. ORYIS, Jan. 9,1863. The Board of Directors of this 430,000 00 , Broadway, Niagara Fire Insurance --4 263,000 Amount LEATHER JOHN, Secretary. OFFICE OF THE of Specie Stdte of York, Jan. 9, 1866, Twelfth Dividend.—The usual semi-annual divi¬ dend of Five Per Cent has this day been declared, S Kissam, Cashier of the NATIONAL SHOE AND Directors No. 11 WALL STREET. New deposited with U. S. Other lawful money, York, Jan. 9,1866. The Board of Directors have this day declared an interest dividend of Five Per Cent, free of Govern¬ ment tax, on the capital stock, payable on demand. R. W. BLEECkER, Secretary. 2,974 70 Treasurer to secure deposits U. S. Bonds on hand Other U. S. Securities Cash on hand in circulating notes other National Banks Cash on hand in circulating notes State banks DIVIDEND. No. 114 BROADWAY. 29,214 22 notes.. WALTON, Secretary. INSURANCE COMPANY. Nassau McKim & Co Ward&Bro Easton Bank U. S. Bonds deposited Treasurer to secure free of North American Fire day declared During the past year, your Bank became a mem¬ ber of the New York Clearing House Association, by a unanimous vote of that body. give DIVIDEND*—A dividend of TEN per cent, FIFTY-SIXTH Shoe and Leather National Bank, Boston, Mass BROADWAY, N. Y., Jan. 3, 1863. government tax, is payable on demand. Newark, N. J 5,972 23 City National Bank, Pough¬ keepsie 33,711 87 Mercantile National Bank, Hartford, Conn 14,447 64 National Bank, Newburg, N. Y Nat onal Bank, North Am¬ Insurance COMPANY, No. 156 — demand OFFICE 50,000 00 ...... on B. S. WALCOTT, Secretary. January 2,1866. Citizens Fire $91,850 Bank. We Cent, free from Government tax, payable at their office, No. 45 Wall Street. $1,391,057 77 Other real estate Furniture and fixtures Current expenses Taxes paid Premiums Remittances and other cash items... Due from the following National Banks: Farmers and Mechanics’Naonal Bank, Philadelphia . $9,929 99 Merchants and Mechanics’ National Bank, Troy.... 18,322 64 Mechanics’ National Bank, U. S. Bonds of The Board of Directors of, his Company have declared a Semi-annual Dividend of Five (5) Per New York, RESOURCES. Banking-house explanation we will say, that during the fiscal year, we have paid two Dividends of Five per cent each, and the government taxes. ... — on morning of the first Monday in January, 1866. Overdrafts In Loans and discounts York, in the State of New York, In New The Election was held this were COMPANY. BANK. The United States PETROLEUM COMPANY have this day declared a Cash Dividend five (25) per cent, payable on January 4,1866. of Twenty* THURSDAY, The Transfer Books will close on THURSDAY, the 28th inst.,and re-open on MONDAY, January 8,1866, By order, P. G. FENNING, Secretary. 62 • OFFICE OF Steamship and Express Go’s. ' Wells, Fargo & Co., PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY'S NEW YORK AND CALIFORNIA EX¬ PRESS AND EXCHANGE CO., THROUGH LINE To California, TOUCHING AT MEXICAN AND PORTS, CARRYING THE U. S. MAIL, LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIVER, FOOT of Canal street, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th 21st «f 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 Pan¬ ama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACA¬ PULCO. NO. 84 1st—HENRY ' CHAUNCEY, Captain Gray, connecting with CONSTITUTION, Capt. Farns¬ worth. 11th—ATLANTIC, Capt. Maury, connecting with GOLDEN CITY, Capt. Bradbury. 21st—NEW YORK, Capt. Horner, connecting with COLORADO, Capt. Watkins. Departures of 1st and ‘21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports. Those of 1st touch at Manzanillo. Through Passage Rates, in Currency. Second Cabin. Steerage. First Cabin. $350 $250 $120 discount of one-fourth from steamers’rates allow¬ ed to second cabin and steerage passengers with families. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. SHIPPERS OF FREIGHT TO THE PACIFIC COAST will please take notice that, having been ap¬ pointed Freight Agents of the Pacific Mail Steam¬ ship Company, we are now prepared to receive Freights for California, Oregon, Nevada, Washing¬ ton Territory, Sandwich Islands, Central America, and Western Coast of South America. For rates apply at our office, No. 84 on dock, foot of Canal street. Steamers will sail on the 1st, 11th and 21st of each month; those dates falling on Sunday, on preceding Saturday. No slow freight received on day of sailing. Freight must be delivered on dock foot of Canal street. masters vana. For passage tickets or further information, apply at the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, foot of Canal street, North River. F. W. G. BELLOWS, Agent. FOR SAVANNAH, GA., Every Saturday. Elegant Side-Wheel Steamships SAN SALVADOR, The ife Commander, Joshua Atkins, and SAN JACINTO, Commander, Winslow Loveland, 1,600 Tons Burthen each. Have been placed on the route to Savannah by the Atlantic Mail Steamship Company of New York, and are intended to be ran by them in a manner to meet the first-class requirements of the trade. The Cabin accommodations of these ships are not excelled by any Steamers on the coast, and although their carrying capacity is large, their draught of wa¬ ter enables them to insure a passage without deten¬ tion in the riverSau Salvador, Sat. Jan. 13 San Jacinto, Sat. Feb. 3 San Jacinto, “ 10 “ “ 20 San Salvador, “ San Salvador, “ “ 29 San Jacinto, “ “ 17 Returning, Leave Savannah, every Saturday, at 3 o’clock. P. M. Freight received at all times during business hours, at the Company’s covered Pier 43 North Riv¬ foot of Canal street. er. Bills of Lading furnished and signed on the Pier. For further particulars, engagement of Freight or Passage, apply to GARRISON & ALLEN, Agents. 5 - Bowling Green, N. Y. Agent at Savannah, B. H. Hardee. TO ENGLAND A BREMEN. THE NORTH AMERICAN LLOYD . Sight Exchange on San Francisco for sale. Telegraphic transfers of money made to all points reached by the wires on West Coast. bought at best rates. Exchange on Dublin and London, £1 and On Paris, in s to suit. For sale by California Coupons COAL AT COST ! Buy CHAS. Being thoroughly refitted, for passengers, for the service, will leave for BREMFN, calling at COWES, on the 17th March. ocean PRICE OF PASSAGE, PAYABLE IN GOLD: The Consumers’ Benefit Coal Co., OFFICE, 71 BROADWAY, N. Y., (room 50,) SHARES, $10 EACH. 62 50 STEERAGE 37 50 transportation, and delivery. At present prices of ( oal, the PROFIT to shareholders is equal to a Di¬ vidend of 40 per Cent on their Stock. A few more subscriptions will be received at the office of the company during the present season, and order for a portion of the Coal taken at the same time. Twelve shares entitle the holder to one ton per month, or fifty shares one ton per week, or that ratio. Refrr by Permission. James O. Smith, M.D., No. 81 Clinton Place. James E. Ward, M.D., No. 18 East83d Street. Robert Buck, Cashier Pacific National Bank, experienced Surgeon on board. will not be responsible for specie valuables unless bills of lading, having the value expressed, are signed therefor. Another March. first-class steamship will leave 21st w freight or passage apply to HUGER BROTHERS, Agents, 45 Beaver St. For ill Gold. PAYABLE TEN MILLION DOLLARS In Bonds to be sold at sixty cents on the dollar in U. 8. Currency. The in¬ terest thus equaling twelve per cent in gold, or seventeen per cent in U. S. Currency, at present rate of premium on gold. the first year’s interest already provided. The most desirable investment No. 470 Broadway. Brooklyn, of McKesson & Rob¬ bins, Drusrgists, No. 91 Fulton street, New York. John H. White, Brooklyn, of White & Bohm, Gro¬ cers, No. 245 Washington street, New York. Hxnry Harmks, Hoboken, Grocer, No. 2S6 Washing¬ ton street, New York. M. R. Case, Jersey City, of Reeve. Case & Banks, Daniel C. Robbins, Grocers, Nos. 67 and 69 Front street, New York. Geo. Davis, office No. 1 Cortlandt street, Messrs. J. W. Bricher & Co., No. 129 New York. West 29th street, New York. Herter Bros., No 547 Broadway, and No. 107 Mercer street, New York. Rev. Jamas G. Craighead, Editor, No. 5 Beekman Portage Lake and Lake SUPERIOR SHIP CANAL COMPANY. FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS. SECURED BY PUBLIC LANDS. Ten per Cent Interest—Payable Semi-Annually. These bonds are issued to aid in the construction a recognized by Congress by an act approved March 3, 1865, and confirmed by an act of the Legislature of the State of Michigan, passed March 16, 1865, grant¬ ing to this company two hundred thousand acres of piiblic lands, located in the rich mineral region of the upper peninsula of the State of Michigan. rights, privileges, and tolls oT the Canal Company, together with the said two hundred thousand acres of public lands. The bonds are payafcje in ten years from the 1st July, 1865, with interest at the rate of ten per cent, as Union Trust OF NEW ever offered. Company, YORK, 78 BROADWAY, COR. OF RECTOR ST. $1,000,000 INTEREST ALLOWED ON authorized by the laws of Michigan, payable semi-annnally, on the 1st days of January and July, at the Ocean Bank in the City of New York, and are offered for Bale at the office of the President of the Company, H, A, TUCKER, No 4 Broad-st; also at the office of the Treasurer of the Company, C. H. CARR, No. 30 Broad-st. ! DEPOSITS, WHICH MAY BE MADE AND WITHDRAWN AT ANY TIME. TRUSTEES. ISAAC H. FROTHINGHAM, President. JOHN Y. L. PRUYN, Vice-Presidents. ANDPEW Y. STOUT, A. A. Low, 31 Burling Slip. Samuel G. wheeler, Jr., 54 Wall Street. Edward B. Wesley, 22 William Street. William R. Travers, 19 William Street. Andrew Carrigan, 61 Chambers Street. Horace F. Clark, 65 Wall Street. J. Boorman Johnson, 91 Broadway. James K. Waterbary, Brooklyn, E.D. Freeman Clark, Rochester, N. x. Amasa J. Parker, Albany, “ Allen Munroe, Syracuse, “ Wm. F. Russell, Saugerties, “ Daniel C. Howell, Bath, “ - Benj. H. Hutton, 145 Duanne Street. Francis Skiddy, 101 Wall Street. David Dows. 20 South Street. Daniel Develin, 237 Broadway. Henry E. Davies, 43 Wall Street. Henry K. Bogert, 49 William Street. Palmyra, N.Y. Peter Cagger, Albany, Alfred A. Howlett, Syracu«e, James Forsyth, Troy, Jonathan W. Freeman, Troy, John Mageee, Watkins, W. “ “ “ “ “ F. Aldrich, Crushers and FOR WET OR DRY THE BEST AND Secretary> Pulverizers, WORKING, CHEAPEST IN THE WORLD MANUFACTURED WHOLE AMOUNT OF BONDS TO BE ISSUED IS LIMITED BY THE COMPANY TO 500,000 DOLLARS, And secured by a first mortgage on all the franchises, The Company payable semi-annually In the city of New York. George W. Culyer, , Each share of stock entitles the holder to purchase one ton per year AT ACTUAL COST of mining, THE $105 00 SECOND CABIN An Stock in an Established Company. Ship Canal from Portage Lake to Lake Superior, tne promontory of Kewenaw Point, forming a link in the chain of the navigation of Lake Supe¬ rior, via Sault St. Marie’s Canal, with the Lower Lakes: The importance of this enterprise has been HOYER, Commander. FIRST CABIN your across 2,600 Tons, 1,000 Horse-Power, or Miscellaneous. of METROPOLIS, *,$50, $100, $500 & $1,000. Interest 7 per cent, upwards. WELLS, FARGO Sc CO. Steamship Co.’s First-Class Mail Steamship WESTERN BONDS, IN SUMS or CASH CAPITAL street American Line Republic of Mexico. TWENTY-YEAR COUPON envelopes. days. Has been organized nearly six months, and has de¬ livered to the Shareholders all the Coal they are en¬ titled to up to the present time; and it has given entire satisfaction. References given on application at the office of the Company, where a list of subscri¬ bers who have been supplied can be examined. Empire Line OF THE Subscriptions received and full particulars commu nicated by JOHN W. CORLIKS & CO., No. 57 Broadway, New York. Subscriptions also received by Banks and Bankers generally throughout the United States. accompany baggage through, and attend to ladies and children without male protec¬ tors. Baggage received on the dock the day before sailing from steamboats, railroads and passengers who prefer to send down early. An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and attendance free. A stfcamer will be placed on the line Jauuary 1st, 1866, to ran from New Orleans to Aspinwall, via Ha¬ $30,000,000 LOAN. Bills of Lading will be issued at No. 84 Broadway. Our usual Package Express will be sent by each steamer, and will close at 10 a. m., on sailing Our Letter Bags will close at 11)4 a. m. For con¬ venience of our up-town customers, a letter bag will be kept at the Metropolitan Hotel, and on the dock foot of Canal street. Our franked envelopes will be on sale at the office of the hotel, and at our offices, No. 84 Broadway and Canal street dock. All letters sent through us must be in Government One Hundred Pounds Baggage allowed each adult. » Mexico! Mexico! PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST Broadway, or Freight Office DECEMBER: [January 13,1863. THE CHRONICLE. BY THE BOSTON MILLING AND MANUFACT¬ URING COMPANY, STREET, BOSTON, MASS. purchase machinery before seing, or sending their friends to examine, the practical work¬ ing of this series of machinery. 83*“ The Whirling Table, or Crasher, weighs less than two tons, and crashes from ten to twelve tons of ore per hour to fine gravel, or two hundred and fifty tons in twenty-four hours., The Pulverizer weighs two tons, and pulverizes to dust infinitely finer than stamp work, thirty-four hundred lbs per hour, or thirty six tons per diem, equal to the yield of forty stamps ; and the first cost and wear, as compared to this number of stamps, Is about one-tenth—the entire yield being fit for amalgamation 105 STATE Miners should not without further reduction. The fine dust is not ob¬ tained by screening, bat by the immediate action of the Pulverizer. Fifteen horse-power, net, is the maximum power re¬ quired lor one machine. The cost of wear per ton is less than any All wearing parts are now made of Frankmachine. linite iron. Let miners and their friends prac¬ tical working of all other machines and processes offer¬ ed, and then see ours working in East Boston, Mass. We ask only this. All our machines ar enow made in our own shop. No Contract Work. Address— by other careftilly study the JACOB J. STOKER, Agent and Treasurer, 105 State Street, Boston. CHARLES H GARDNER, 16 Cmrtlandt Street, Boston. General Or Southern Land, Emigra TION AND PRODUCT COMPANY. No. 71 BROADWAY, near Wall St., N. Y., Offers for sale 4,000,000 acres of the finest and most valuable Land in the Southern States, at exceedingly low prices. Tracts from 1,000 to 500,000 acres. Cotton Plantations, Farms, Mineral and Timber Lands, etc. Iron Works-and Furnaces, Coal Lands, Silver Mines, etc. Titles guaranteed W. H. QUINCY, Secretary January 13,1866.] Dry 62 mg Leonard Street, Boston, 66 $2,383,487 45 DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT. This Company insures against Marine Risks on Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland Commission Merchants, AND 58 Navigation Risks. Premiums paid in gold will be entitled to a return premium in gold. MOSES H. GRINNELL, Pres't. EDWARD P. ANTHONY, Vice-Pres't Isaac H. Walker, Sec'y. Negotiate Loans and Business Paper, make Collec¬ tions, purchase and sell Government and other Securi¬ ties on Commission, receive money on deposit and allow interest at the rate ot four per cent per annum, on daily balances which may be drawn at any time; or will issue Certificates of Deposit bearing interest payable en demand. JOHN J. CISCO, of the U. 8. JOHN ASHFIELD CISCO. & 4 Mercantile Mutual Miscellaneous. Kroll & Co., STREETT, N. Y. INCORPORATED, APRIL, 1842. ASSETS OVER $1,500,000. - - . Co.,* Bankers, WALL STREET, INSURANCE COMPANY, 36 WALL Geo. Fred. Treasury in N. Y Lj. P. JVloR'JroN - MURRAY STREET. STREET, NEW YORK. No. 33 WALL (insurance buildings,) 49 WALL STREET. ASSETS,Oct. 4, 1864 Goodrich & Foster, Domestic COMPANY. 57 Stark Mills. Co., and John J.BANKERS, Cisco & Son, Mutual Insurance Sun & Co., New York, and Federal Street, Banks and Bankers. Insurance. Goods. Gardner, Brewer 63 CHRONICLE. THE 35 LAND AGENCY, This Company has b°en In operation for twenty-one No. 57 BBOADWAY, NEW YORK, years, and continues to m*ke Insurance against NEW YORK. Marine and Inland Transportation Risks, Will purchase and sell REAL ESTATE, of all des¬ upon Merchandise, Vessels and Freights, on terms and Are prepared to draw Sterling Bills of criptions, In different sections of the country, on COM¬ conditions adapted to the present usages of business. To those dealers who prefer a Cash discount from MISSION, having made extensive arrangements for Exchange, at sight, or sixty days, on the Current 'ates, on payment of premium, instead of reliable information in relation to the valne, location, waiting for a prospective and uncertain Scrip Dividend, and advantages of different localities. this Company will offer such arrangements as will se¬ Union Bank of London, Large and small Tracts of Land, Plantations, Farms cure to them as favorable terms as any other. For the accommodation of shippers to Foreign Ports, n sums to suit purchasers ; and also to and Mineral Lands, will receive particular attention. making by Rath policies are issued loss payable bonk Letters of Credit, on this .ssue Circular Loans negotiated and Emigration facilitated. Brothers Sc Co. in Liverpool, or London, if desired. Policies are a so issued, loss payable here in Gold Business promptly attended to. Bank, for Travellers* use. coin, when preferred. Government Securities, Stocks and TRUSTEES The Bonos bought and sold on Commission. Aaron L. Reid, Joseph Walker, Ell wood Walter, James Frkiiland, NO. 60 BBOADWAY, NEW YORK, Orders for Securities executed abroad. D. Golden"Murray, Samuel Willkts, E. Haydook White, Buy and sell MINERAL LANDS in Pennsylvania Robert L. Taylor, Interest allowed on Deposits, subject to N. L. McCbeady, and other States, and improved and unimproved William T. Frost, Daniel T. Willets, William Watt, AGRICULTURAL LANDS in the Southern and Cheques at sight. L. Edgerton, Henry Eyre, Western States, on Commission. Henry R. Kunhardt, * Cornelius Grinnell, Prompt attention given to the Co ee John S. Williams, European Agencies for the sale of properties and to E. E. Morgan, Jon of Dividends. D*-nfrs. &r William Nelson, Jr., Hkr. V. Schleicher. encourage emigration are being establi4hed. Charles Dimon, Joseph SlaGG, A. N. MEYLERT, JOHN BRANNON, A. Wm. Heyk, Jas. D. Fish, Duncan, Shf.rman Harold Dolkner, of New York. of West Virginia- Geo. W. Hennings, BANKERS, UNITED STATES > National Land.Co., & Co., Paul N. Spofford. Francis Hathaway, Treasury Department, Comptroller of the Currency, | Washington, Dec. 30, 1866. j satisfactory evidence presented to the Whereas, by undersigned, it has been made to appear that the Louisiana National Bank of New Orleans in the city of New Orleans, in the Parish of N. O. and State of Louisiana, has been duly organized under and according to the requirements of the acts of ELLWOOD WALTER, President. CHAS. NEWCOMB, C. J. DESPARD, Office of entitled “an act to provide a national cur¬ pledge of United States bonds, the circulation and redemption thereof, approved June 3, 1864,” and has complied with all the provisions of said act required to be com¬ plied with before commencing the business of bank¬ Congress, rency, secured by a and to provide for said act. Now therefore, I, Frekman Clarke, Comptroller of the Currency, do hereby certify that the Louisiana National Bank of New Orleans, m the city of New Orleans, in the Parish of New Orleans and State of Louisiana, is authorized to commence the business of hanking under the act aforesaid. In testimony whereof, witness my hand and seal of office this 13th day of December, 1865. FREEMAN CLARKE, Comptroller. The bank will be in operation by the 20th inst. CASH $1,000,000 Capital..., 1, 1865, over B. C. Wm. M. Whitnry Company insures at customary rates of pre¬ mium against all Marine and Inland Navigation Risks on Cargo or Freight; also against loss or damage by Fire. If Premiums are paid in in Gold. The Assured receive Gold, Losses will be paid twenty-five percent ofthe n< profits, without incurring any liability, or, in lie thereof, at their option, a liberal discount upon tt premium. CASH CAPITAL, THE OFFICE OF THE Germania Fire Insurance COMPANY Has been removed to THEIR NEW BUILDING, No. 175 BROADWAY. B Seven-thirty Loan Agent. all descriptions bought $1,000,000 270,353 equitably adjusted and promptly Losses paid. Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, P. NOTMAN, Secretary. lIfE EDWARD A. JONES, PARK. • AUTHORIZED CAPITAL, Is now prepared to issue GENERAL $500,000 ACCIDENT INSURANCE TICKETS from one to twenty days. These tickets insure against ACCIDENTS o» every description for $5,000 in case of DEATH, or $25 per week COMPENSATION for disabling accidents. TARIFF OF RATES. ..2.->c. Tickets for 8 days... ...$2 Tickets for 1 day . 44 « M 2 *4 3 6 « ...50c. 44 .75c. <t .. “ 12 20 30 “ “ “ .$1 25c. above tickets commences at (i Ninth National ... ... ... .. ... .. 8 4 5 Bank CITY OF NEW YORK. 363 BROADWAY, COR. FRANKLIN. J. U. OR VIS, President. J. T. HILL, Cashier. Nkw York. July 22 1865. Lockwood & Co., RANKERS, No. 94 President. and Designated THE OF THE THE NATIONAL & TRAVEL¬ LERS’ insurance: company. 243 BROADWAY, N. Y. and individuals re¬ Depository of the Un ted States. Joseph U. Or vis, Pres’t. John T. Hill, Cash’r. President. against Accidents OPPOSITE CITY HALL Gold Bonds and Stocks of and sold on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers, ceived on favorable terms. Government Agency, STREET. ... BROADWAY, No. 139 MORRIS, Pres't. SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1866 the United J. ANKER, Messenger, damage by Fire COMPANY. adjusted and promptly paid. Scrip Dividend declared Jan. 10, 1865, REMOVAL. H. - ,/S^c’y. NO. 12 WALL All losses equitably FIFTY PER CENT. JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, President, ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice President, JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, Jr., 2d V. P. Henry H. Porter, Secretary. - Niagara Fire Insurance 1,600,000 This Inland Policies of Insurance against loss or issued ou the most favorable r*VrD>s 253 per Assets Nov. - LETTERS States, available in all the principal cities of the world; also, . COMMERCIAL CREDITS, For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, South America, and the United States. $5,000,000.00 CAPITAL, paid in, & Surplus, 885,040.57 AUTHORIZED CAPITAL Marine & Fire Insurance. Insure Cash CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in INSURANCE COMPANY, 31 PINE STREET, N. Y. New York, July 1st, 1865. Chartered 1850. METROPOLITAN INSURANCE CO., NO. 108 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Secretary. Morris Fire and AND NASSAU STS., ISSUE OFFICE OF THE ing under Insurance. CORNER OF PINE Vice-President. BROADWAY AND No. 6 WALL Dealers in Interest ST. Government and other Se¬ curities. allowed subject to check at and bankers upon upon deposits of gold and currency, sight Gold loaned to merchants favorable terms. Ranking and Collecting Office of J. Nelson Luckev, • 243 Interest allowed on BROADWAY, call deposits at the rate o four of three months and over, five deposits of six mouths be drawn on ten days’ REMEMBER THAT 25 CENTS per day insures notice, and interest allowed the same as deposits on you for $5,000. ASHER S. MILLS, Secretary: call. Collections promptly made and returned with W. E. PRINCE, Vice-President. quick dispatch. Government and other securities bought and sold. Possessing every facility, will ex¬ ecute all orders and commissions at the very best The market rates. Refer by permission to S. C. Thomp¬ son, Pres. 1st Nat. Bk., N. Y., A. N. Stout, Pres. Nat. RANCE COMPANY OF NEW|10RK. Shoe & Leath B’k, N. Y., W. H. Johnson, Pres. Han. CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1866, over $13,500,000 00 Bk., N. Y., James Buell, Pres. Imp. & Trad. Nat. Bk., FREDERICK S. WINSTON. President. N. Y., S. K. Green, Pres. 3d-av. Savings Bk., N. Y., R. A. McCURDY, Vice-President. N. L. Buxton, Irving Savings Bk., N. Y., Hon. Geo. ) ISAAC ABBATT, secretaries, Gpdyke. Ex-Mayor, N. Y., Hon. James Harper, Ex}THEa w> MORRIS. Mayor, N. Y. Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS Iusnrance on A. M., 12 o’clock noon, 6 o'clock 6 o’clock P- M. Mutual Life Insu- ~ • „ per cent; on deposits per cent, and six per cent on and over. Any deposit may No. 240 BROADWAY. 49 EXCHANGE Designated Depository of the Government. D. L. J. H. Central RANKERS AND BROKERS. ROSS, President. STOUT, Cashier. National Bank, W. T. Galwey, J. L. Kirkland, W. B. Dinsmore, Jr. NO. 5 WILLIAM y John Munroe & Co., AMERICAN No. 5 RUB DE B. C. Morris, Harbecks & Co., ' RANKERS, NO. 10 WALL Department. ( SECURITIES, STOCKS, BONDS, &c., bought and sold <>n Commission for OitsH Only. Deposits received subject to check at sight, as with Banks. DEWITT C. LAWRENCE, Member New York Stock Exchange. CYRUS J. LAWRENCE, JOHN R. CECIL. late Butler, Cecil, Rawson & Co. WM. A. HALSTBD. Treasury $2,250,000 DIRECTORS. Joseph Church Drayton Hillyrr, Robert Bukle, Thos. A. Alexander, Ebenkzer Flower, Walter Keney, Eliphalet A. Bulkelby, Chas. H. Hr award, Roland Mather, . William F. Tuttle, Samuel S. Ward, Georoe Roberts, , Austin Dunham/ Thomas K. Brace, Gustavu." F. Davis, Erastus Collins, Edwin D. Morgan, of New York. Assets, Jan. 1,1865,.., Liabilities, ... NEW YORK JAMES A. liberal terms. Importer and Dealer in TORREY, Cashier. and Commission Hutchings Badger, A EXCHANGE 36 DEARBORN Collections made 83 JOHN of the Northwest. Stocks, Bonds, Gold, and Government Securities bought and sold on commission, either in New York or Chicago, and carried on margins when desired. New York correspondent and reference, W. Goodman, Miss. Goodman & Burnett, Drake & Co., No. 36 NEW GOLD, STOCK, AND BOND BROKERS. Personal attention given to the purchase and sale of SAM’L btocksand Bonds at the Boston Brokers’ Board. CO., PARIS. Dupee, Beck & Sayles, No. 22 STATE BROKERS, First National General Commission Merchants, 20 OLD SLIP, NEW YORK. All orders for the purchase of Goods will receive prompt attention. Hoffman Cash advances made REFER TO Mechanics’ National Bank, N. Y. Messrs. Gilman, Son & Co., Bankers, N. Y. Messrs. Brown & Ives, Providence, R. I. Bank, Francis & $1,000,000 STATIONERS NATIONAL 291 CAPITAL RANK. All kinds of Blank tionery. RICHARD PRINTERS, Books, Diaries, Paper and Sta- Bankers, Merchants, And others should send HARNDEN Is admitted a partner in firm, from this date. L. P. MORTON & CO. our MR. HENRY HOWARD Becomes a by the EXPRESS, 65 Broadway, they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and forwarding of GOLD, SILVER, JEWELRY, & MERCHANDISE of every description.' Also for the collection of notes, drafts, and bills, bills accompanying goods, etc. $1,000,000 BERRY, President. HALSEY, Cashier. safe STURGIS, partner in onr firm from this date. H. P. STURGIS & CO. Boston, Jan. 1,1866. The Mercantile Agency NEW REFERENCE BOOK. R. G. DUNN & CO. scribers and the public beg to intimate to their sub¬ that they have now in press, and will shortly issue, a new and greatly improved REFERENCE BOOK, indicating the Capital and General Credit standing of nearly every merchant, trader and manufacturer in the United States. These estimates and ratings based* upon the Revised Detailed Reports in thirteen branch, and associate offices, and con¬ dense an amount of and description of information most essential and most useful to every grantor of credits. The issue of the work has been delayed in order to include in it all the numerous changes in firms which occur at the commencement of the year, as also to complete Southern information, which will be found largely augmented in the forthcoming vol¬ are our ume. a smaller edition, containing ratings of all the merchants in the FIFTY PRIN¬ CIPAL CITIES of the United States. This edition will be found particularly useful for manufactufeis, commission merchants, importers and others whose business relations are mainly with houses in promi¬ nent cities. * Specimen copies to-.be seen and terms of subscript tion made known at the principal office/ 293 and 295 Broadway, or at the associate offices of E Russell &r Co., Boston, and branch offices in the following cities: Philadelphia, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Pitts¬ burg, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, Milwaukee, Lou¬ isville, St, Louis, Toronto and Montreal, Canada, and London, England. R. G. DUNN & CO., ' * • •. 293 and 295 New York, Jan. 5, 1866. The Broadway, Durango Silver ’4 as BROADWAY, NEW YORK. ANTHONY Loutrel, 45 MAIDEN LANE. MORTON McMICHAEL. Jr., Cashier. GKO. PH ELLER, Manager Loan Dept The Tradesmens AND MILNOR, (Of the late firm of Babcock <fe Milnor,) We shall also issue consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides and Naval Stores, by our friends in New Orleans, Mobile and Galveston, HENRY SAYLES This Bank invites the accounts of Country Banks and Bankers; will allow four per cent interest on daily balances, and make collections at most favorable rates. Government Securities of all classes dealt in. C. II. CLARK, President. Co., on (The First National Bank Organized.) - & COMMISSION MERCHANTS, NO. 24 WHITEHALL ST., NEW YORK. OF PHILADELPHIA. CAPITAL, JVlORRISj Ot AND STREET, BOSTON. JAMES BECK, morris, jr. ^ Commercial Credits for +he purchase of Merchan¬ dise in England and the Continent. Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers abroad. JAMES A. DUFEK, b. c. Successors to Brewer & Caldwell, COTTON FACTORS LONDON ALSO ISSUE STOCK B. CALDWELL. , AND JOHN MUNROE A Merchants, STREET, NEW YORK. V>ALDWEI_iL STREET, BOSTON, ON Merrill, Agents for the purchase of RAILROAD EQUIPMENT and SUPPLIES. BANKERS, BOSTON. RILLS OF EXCHANGE A. P. Merrill, Jr., N. Y. General Commission f prompt at¬ Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, &c., solicited. Best of references given if required. Messrs. L. S, LAWRENCE & CO. 114 STATE ALEXANDER, Agent. MR. CHARLES E. New York, Jan. 1,1866. tention. all parts Page, Richardson & Co STREET, NEW YORK. All orders entrusted to him will receive OFFICE, St., CHICAGO, ILL. on AGENCY, Copartnership. Hardware, Merchant, if BANKING 8 Special Notioes, (of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell & Co.) . B. $3,800,439 128,077 No. 62 Wall Street. Exchange Jeremiah M. Wardwell, RANK} PHILADELPHIA. J. W. 1819. $500,000 Attends to business of Bauks A Rankers L- Co., THOMAS A. ALEXANDER, President. LUCIUS J. HENDEE, Secretary. JONATHAN GOODWIN Jr., Asst. Sec’y. NATIONAL, on Insurance Hartford, Conn. Miscellaneous. J Capital, } STREET, N. Y. GOVERNMENT STREET, NEW YORK, Receive Deposits from Banks, Bank¬ ers and. otliers. Orders for the Purchase ar.d Sale of Government Securities receive partic¬ ular atteution. Special attention is given to the trans¬ action of all business connected with the Co., RANKERS, 19 & 21 NASSAU GARRIGUE, Vice-Pres. KAHL, Secretary. w & Culver, Penn & Co., The Corn /Etna PAIX, PARIS, AND OTHER A. G-. GATTELL, Pres’t. A. WHILLDIN, V. Pres’t. JOHN E. Bros. Also Otiuirercial Credits. HILGER, President. Capital STREET, NEW YORK, parts of Europe, etc., etc. TERMS, INCORPORATED Lawrence Issue Circular Letters of Cred I tor Travelers in all - . RUDOLPH Caldwell & Morris. AND No. 8 WALL * A MAURICE Galwey, Casado & Teller, BANKERS, LA ON FAVORABLE STREET, REFERENCES: FOSTER, Cashier. ' ■ At all the Stock Boards. Collections made in all parts of the United States W. H. f KINDS AGAINST LOSS OR DAMAGE BY FIRE PETROLEUM AND MINING STOCKS, RAILWAY SHARES. GOVERNMENTS, &c, and Canadas. $500,000, THIS COMPANY INSURES PROPERTY OF ALL Broker in Has for sale all descriptions of Government BondsCity and Country accounts received on terms most favorable to our Correspondents. 3MYTHE, President. CAPITAL, WITH A LARGE SURPLUS. J. C. Morris, $3,000,000. HENRY A. CASH Railway Shares, Bonds, and Govern¬ ment Securities bought and sold. 318 BROADWAY. Capital NO/ 4 WALL STREET, N. Y. PLACE, MINES. Office: Wo, 73 WILLIAM ST,, N. Y.