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WEEKLY

A

REPRESENTING THE

NEWSPAPER,

COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE

INDUSTRIAL AND

SATURDAY, JULY 28,

VOL.. 3.

The
The
•

>

Fiiifuieiftl Prospect
Advauce in
Government

Bonds
The Reconstruction

The Needle Gun
Literature
Latest Monetary

93

England "and its

Europe

•.

Analyses of Railroad Reports

of Central

100

Ten percent, in
Eti'ect on the United

Money
U. S.

CHRONICLE.
97

English News

Commercial

and Commercial

and

Securities,

Gold Market,

Foreign Exchange, New Yftrk
City Banks, Philadelphia
National Banks, etc
Sale Prices N.\r. Stock Exchange
National, State, etc., Securities.

Banks

TIMES.

Breadstuff's
Dry Goods

of the

*) i

.

1SGG differs from

public confidence or public .

is no lack of floating capital

temporarily in 1847, owing
to the heavy investments which for several proceeding years
had been made in railways, and other works, which convert

,

10.r> Exports and Imports
109 I Prices Current, and Tone

N ().

18(H).

and, thirdly, by a disturbance of
credit.
Now, in England, there
in the loan market, as there was

Miscellaneous

News

Suites....
THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL
I Commercial Epitome
Market, Railway Stocks,
I Cotton

UNITED STATES.

those of 1837, 18.)?, and, in
fact, from almost all that have heretofore taken place, either
in England or in other countries.
There are three causes by
which panics may be induced.
First, by a Jack of floating
capital; secondly; by a sudden contraction of the currency,

the crisis of

CONTENTS.
THE

^ounml

disengaged funds which had
previously been seeking employment in the money market.
THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL.
.122-23
Railway News
120 I ous Bond List.ining Journal... 121 Nor, secondly, had there been any sudden contraction in the
125-28
Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.
Mi
121 Adverti andts
Insurance
volume of circulating money, such as produced the great
Railroad, Canal, and Miscellanepanic of 1825, when a violent restriction of the currency was
for the first time tried in England since the reform of the
&\)t €l)uonicU.
There was
The Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ coinage in the last decade of the 17th century.
day morning by /he. publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, nothing, last May, in the state of capital or of the cur¬
with the. latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight
rency to justify the expectation of a panic.
But. in the state
of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all
of the credit-machinery of England there was the greatest
the Commercial and Financial news of the previous day vp to
the hour of publication.
possible reason for anxiety and fear; for its banking houses
some of them hopelessly
insolvent, and not a few
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
Financial Chronicle, with The Daily
of the prominent finance companies had notoriously been
delivered by carriers to city subscribers, and mailed to all
others,(exclusive of postage).
$12 00 doing “bad business,” as the,slang expression has it. Thus
and Financial Chronicle, without. The Daily
Bulletin,(exclusive of postage)
10 (10 the very institutions which formed the basis on which the
The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Financial
5 00 great superstructure of commercial credit is based was un¬
(exclusiveof postage)
Y7amassing Agents have no authority to colled money.
sound and “shakv.”* The wonder, is that, when the great
Postage is paid by subscribers at their own qwst-office. It. is, on the Chroni¬
2<) cents per year, and on the. Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance.
explosion came, alid several of the oldest and most renowned
WILLIAM B. DANA & CO, Publishers,
110

Market,

117-19

capital the floating

into'fixed

semen

were

•Commercial

and

Bulletin,

The Commercial

For

Chronicle,

cle,

60

Neat

Files for

Office.

William Street, New

holding the Chronicle or

York.

Built tin can be had at the

Price $1 f>0.

names were

popular
PROSPECT.

buttresses

regarded by the
mind as the main supports of the great edifice—that

crumbled away
far

THE FINANCIAL

discredited—when the bulwarks and

more

which bad been so proudly

extended mischief was not

It; is claimed

by

a

done.

certain class of

financial men that we

in a position closely analogous to that of England just
with shrewd, far seeing business men before the
panic. Although we have abundance of capital
in all parts-bf the country, is as to the probable working of
in the loan market, and our currency is not likely to be sud¬
the money market during the coming Fall.
At present the
denly contracted, so that we are consequently exempt from the
greatest ease and plethora prevails. But a few weeks before
fear of a panic being developed from either of these causes;
the outbreak of the recent great panic in England a similar
still the state of our credit-machinery, as these persons think,
state of things prevailed.
And yet, suddenly, the bright un¬ is unsound and
dangerous. We must, at present, withhold
clouded financial horizon was overcast, and the hurricane
assent from those gloomy views, for we think that, al¬
swept by, strewing the strand with many wrecks, and mak¬
though the facts warrant caution and circumspection, they do
ing forever memorable the disastrous movements inaugurated
.not justify fear.
op‘‘Overend’s Friday.” Now, it is a question well worth
As it seems now to be well established that our crops of
pondering, whether there is any visible indication that we are cereals will be much heavier than was predicted a few weeks
in danger of a similar calamity.
The late crisis in England has been called a “ credit ago, one of the conditions of a large Fall business is pre¬
sent, and in all parts of the country there are speculative
panic.” This appellation is not unjustly given. For it brings
precisely and positively into view the very point in which persons who are making their arrangements in anticipaThe




great question

are

our

98
tion of

THE CHRONICLE.

[July 28,1866.

of

unparalleled commercial activity. Now, have required an expenditure of 300 millions of dollars,
do not wish to repress the zeal or slaughter the
hopes of adding that amount to the principal of the public debt, and
this class of persons, and we will therefore concede to them I laying on
the people a burden of 15 millions or more of
that it is extremely probable that our products of breadstuff's, annual interest. The defeat of this measure is looked
upon
provisions, and cotton will be unusually abundant, and that w ith much satisfaction, as it is w ell known that no forces
a season

we

put

-

the

European demand will be heavy for all

our

exportable

commodities.

into the field

by any nation have ever been so well paid, or
expensively provided for, as were those which have fought
for the Union during the past four years.
To superadd,
therefore, to the already heavy payments which have been
made, would bring on the country the charge of profuse ex¬
travagance, and of making an unjustifiable augmentation of
the heavy existing burden of taxation.
Economy in the dis¬
bursement of the public funds is a sacred
obligation on those
who hold the purse-strings of the nation,^and we should at
once lay down for ourselves the
principle that the public
debt shall not be increased, and that all future disbursements
shall be made not by loans, but by taxation.
In reference to
this project of equalizing the bounties, Mr. McCulloch
addressed on the 19th of April a letter to Mr. Wells, the
Chairman of the Revenue Commission, who, in his
reply,
made the following very suggestive statement:
so

Still, as the condition of the money market has a very
powerful controlling influence, and as the opinion of financial
men is divided as to the
probabilities, it will be well for all
classes of our mercantile and trading community to be ex¬
tremely careful not to go beyond their depth. Let them in
all their ventures, enterprises, and engagements keep within
their assured means, remembering that at such a juncture as
the present, circumspection and caution are the secret of
safety and success.
THE ADVANCE IN GOVERNMENT BONDS.

It is very gratifying to observe that the growing apprecia¬
tion and the advancing rates of our securities abroad are
equalled or surpassed by the great activity in Five-twenties
and all descriptions of Government bonds among our in¬
vestors and purchasers at home.
The chief topics of interest in this point of view are con¬
nected with Mr. Sherman's finance bill.
This measure, it
will be remembered, was first introduced into the Senate on
,

the 2d of

May, and, after being referred to the Committee
on
Finance, was by them reported on the ISth July, but in
so altered a
shape that its former supporters found themselves
unable to approve it, and justly regarded it as hostile to the
public credit. Notwithstanding this, however, it was passed

In order to at present raise by taxation a sura sufficient to
pay an
annual interest of six per cent, on an addition
two bundl ed and fifty
millions to the principal to the public debt, viz., fifteen millions, the

present rate of taxation must be maintained

on

the following articles,

their equivalents, the receipts for the fiscal year 18rt5
being assumed
as the basis of the estimate :
Hats, caps, bonnets, coats, vests, pants,
overcoats, shirts, collars, stockings, gloves, mittens, bools, shoes, mocca¬
or

sins, salt, cheap soap, starch, paints of all kinds, paper of all descrip¬

tions, books, magazines, pamphlets, maps, engravings, and all printed
ploughs, harrows, cultivators, rakes, winnowing mills, hay and
straw cutters, trunks, harnesses, lime, cements,
building stones, bricks,
stoves, pottery ware, and window glass—the revenue from the direct
tax on all these articles for the fiscal,year
ending June SO, 1805, not
having* een in excess of fifteen millions of dollars. If, however, it is
urged that the government can aff >rd to relieve all the abuve-enumer*
ated articles, and many others, from taxation, and still
pay the interest
on the
proposed addition to the debt, I reply that the condition of the
revenue will not at preseut allow of an exemption of all the
necessities
of life and all the common forms of
industry from taxation : and that
no
principle of political economy is better established than that a tax
upon one of the necessities, or indispensable forms of industry, is in fact
a tax
Under the above circumstances, therefore, it would
upon all.
seem as if
nothing but the salvation of the nation itself could warrant
any immediate increase of the national liabilities or the people’s taxes.
A third point which is apparently exerting an influence in
matter,

by the Senate, and awaits the action of the House. In its
original form, this bill authorized a 5 per cent, consolidated
loan, which was to be issued at par, and would, it was sup¬
posed, absorb in a few years all the outstanding liabilities of
the Government.
The [new 5 percents were to be free from
taxation, and an allowance of not more than 2 per cent, was
authorized for their negotiation.
In the existing and proba¬
ble state of the public credit, it was
rightly argued that 5 per imparting an active character to the movement in Govern¬
cent, is the highest rate which a great, prosperous
nation like ment securities is the postponement by Congress until De¬
the United States should pay on its consolidated public cember of further action relative to Mr.
Hooper’s Bank Bill.
debt. But it was added that there is no necessity for There are some
provisions in that very judicious measure, of
immediate legislation, and that it would be impolitic the
policy of which we are doubtful; but the section enforc¬
and mischievous to remit the taxation on such bonds,
ing redemption of the National Bank notes is so necessary
as
they would be sufficiently attractive to investors that we regret that Congress did not pass this part of the
without any such immunity.
Two per cent, also was law and leave questions of more doubtful propriety for future
believed to be a larger margin than was necessary to in¬ deliberation. It is well known that the notes of National
duce investments in the new consols. Moreover, as the fund¬ banks are so abundant here that our
large holders are glad
ing bills of 1804 and 1865 allow' the issue of five or six per to get rid of them for greenbacks at a loss of $1 per $1,000.
cent, thirty or forty year bonds- at par, in exchange for out¬ There is an obvious
remedy for this if we enforce the rule
that the banks which issue these notes shall make provision
standing obligations of the Treasury, there was no necessity
for the passing of any new law.
To the prolonged discus¬ for their redemption, both at their own counters and at the
sions which were initiated by these representations in Com¬
great centres, New York, Philadelphia, and Boston. Such
mittee is ascribed the long delay in reporting the bill, and an
arrangement, however, has not been made, and the ple¬
the entire change of its character as amended by the Senate. thora of bank notes
consequently tends to increase the ease in
As we showed last week, it is now7 no longer a funding bill the
money market and to stimulate the general speculative
at all, but it has assumed so novel and
unexpected a shape, activity, one of the good effects of which is the advance of
that the most judicious members of the House concur with Government
bonds, while its correlative evils remain to be
the eminent financial authorities here, in the opinion that it
developed hereafter.
has not the slightest valid claim on attention at this late pe¬
riod of the session. The belief that the
of

measure

has

no

THE RECONSTRUCTION OF CENTRAL EUROPE.

chance

passing the House, has produced already a favorable im¬
pression upon the market for Government bonds which, as
will be seen from our record on another
page, have advanced
in price more than £
per cent.
Another circumstance which has contributed to give
firm¬

It will

longer do for us to boast of the United States as
progressive” country of the world. In
the prosecution of the campaign now going on (if, indeed, it
be not, rather, at this writing, already ended) in Germany,
Prussia has shown a combination of thoroughness in military
ness to Government
securities, is the defeat of the bill for preparation with speed in military execution which are
the equalization of soldiers’ bounties, which, if
passed, would literally without a parallel in recent times. In less than




no

the most modern and “

‘

'

July

28,1866.]

THE

has seen an Austrian array of a quar¬
ter of a million men reputed, and not unjustly reputed to be
among the finest and the most stubbornly courageous troops
in Europe, utterly dashed to pieces ; an xAustrian province,
once a kingdom by rank, and a kingdom still in its importance
and population, completely overrun; the haughtiest sover¬

a

fortnight, the world

99

CHRONICLE.
group, have for many
of the southern and

head

years past given to Austria, the
Catholic group, a degree of weight

authority in the Diet of the German Confederation
able patiently to brook, and to

and

which

which
it
the declared purpose of Count Bismark, in the war
waging, to put an end forever. Upon the outbreak of
hostilities, on tlie 18th of June, the Austrian sympathies of
eign of the Continent coerced into entreating the mediation of their rulers arrayed in arms against Prussia the North Ger¬
France to save his hereditary dominions, and offering to pur¬
States of Saxony, Hanover, the Hesses and Nassaun, re
chase that mediation by the surrender to France of that very
presenting a combined population of nearly, or quite, six mil¬
territory of Venetia of which, two short months ago, he had lions of souls. Counting upon these States, as well as upon
declared that he would not even condescend to negotiate in
Bavaria, Wurtemberg and Baden, in the south, with their
regard to ceding it; the whole of. North Germany, from eight millions more, to reinforce her own gigantic strength,
the Baltic to the Bavarian frontier, united under the sway of; Austria not unnaturally expected to overbear and break
the House of Hohenzollern; the unity and the independence
down forever her Northern rival.
It was a duel between
of Italy secured despite the defeat of the main royal army of
twenty millions of people on the one side, and more than fifty
Victor Emanuel; the capital of what was the “ German Con¬
millions on the other.
But steam, the telegraph, and civiliz¬
federation,” thrown open to the irresistible foe; and Vienna
ation, the keen-seeing eye, and the swift smiting hand were
itself preparing to accept a like fate.
with the twenty millions.
Prussia struck while yet the ac¬
Accustomed as we have of late years become to the pace
cents of her declaration of war were ringing on the air ; and,
of the steam-engine and the telegraph in human affairs, yet
to-day, how changed is the aspect of affairs !
this swift aud sweeping rush of the Prussian monarchy upon
Hanover, Saxony, the Hesses, Nassaun, with their vast na¬
its prey fairly takes the breath of Europe.
Men babble tural resources, and their six millions of people, are Prussian
vaguely, in their amazement about the awful “ needle-gun” territory ; their late sovereigns prisoners under the Prussian
the secret of it all; but this is little better than childish¬
flag, or fugitives in the flying camp of Austria. From east
Prussia has canied everything before her, not simply to west the
boundary of Prussia, which six w'eeks ago was a
because her troops are better armed than those of her an¬
broken, irregular line, full of exposed points, and inviting at¬
tagonist powers, but because her whole civil and military tack, stretches now, a front of consolidated power, from the
organization is better than theirs, because she represents the Vistula to the Rhine, enclosing a population of nearly thirty
impulse and energy of modern civilization, because she has millions of Germans, upon whom the Prussian sovereign can
taken the. steam-engine and the telegraph with her, because,
call for recruits and for supplies in the prosecution of his
lastly, the whole body of her strength is wielded and set in grand designs.
motion by a clearer brain and a more intelligent will than
Bavaria, Wurtemberg, Baden, with the lesser States, which
those which guide the affairs of Austria and of the now de¬
had followed them into battle at the summons of the Con¬
funct confederation of Germany.
federation, against Prussia, have been beaten as terribly at
Accepting this as the true solution of the Prussian triumphs, Aschaffenburg as the Austrians
at Sadowa. The traditional
shall find in this solution, perhaps, some light to enlighten
spell of Austria upon the awe and fear of Germany has been
to the probable scope and consequence of those triumphs.
broken forever; her influence with the minor princes has,
That Prussia to-day is mistress of the positiou in Europe
with the minor princes -themselves, disappeared from the
cannot be questioned.
England has no interest which can councils of the Teutonic race., What now has Prussia to
lead her into interfering with the march of events on the
seek from war ?
What has Europe now to fear from Prus¬
Continent; Russia is ruled by men who are far too shrewd sia thus
suddenly sprung up, “ full stature in an hour,” to
to risk the military reputation of the Russian troops, and
the rank of the first military Power in Europe ?
the very existence of the already agitated Russian Empire
That things should ever again be in Germany as they were
by a hasty collision with a State which has proved itself to before the 18th of June, 1866, is manifestly not to be exbe for the present, at least, the most formidable in Europe ;
pected. No Power but Russia, indeed, can desiie that they
France has everything to gain by a wise entente with the
should be so, and Russia is not strong enough to venture
Prussian Premier, and much to lose by the rash provocation
upon the expression of her desire.
For England, the con¬
conflict with Prussia, which would, at once, become a
of
solidation of all Germany, North and South, into one power
conflict with forty millions of people in a united Germany,
under the control of Prussia, would involve, perhaps, no
and which would probably bring on before long a further
great dangers, and the objections of England to such a con¬
conflict with twenty-five millions more of people in a united
solidation, were they never so urgently made, would now
Italy.
command but little attention from the Prussian Cabinet.
If Prussia, therefore, or Count Bismark—for at present and
The France of Thiers would doubtless have protested vehe¬
for all practical purposes Count Bismark is Prussia—has only
mently against the least increase of the power of Prussia;
well defined ideas of the objects to be achieved by this great
but Napoleon III. is a statesman of another type, and he has
war, and is willing to adhere*resolutely to those objects with¬
already made public his conviction that France has no¬
out being tempted by success into straining after further and
thing to fear but much to hope from the erection of
perilous prizes, there would seem to be no valid reason
powerful State in North Germany, as well as from
which forbids the hope that before the summej ripens into
the unification of Italy.
France, indeed, cannot wisely
autumn, we may see peace restored in Europe on the basis
in silence upon such a consolidation of Germany
look
of
complete reconstruction of the political crganiiation of under the Prussian crown as would extinguish the
its vast central territory between the Baltic Sea and the
lesser Catholic sovereignties of South Germany.
Bavaria,
Alps.
Wurtemberg, Baden were creations of the first Napoleon,
Germany is divided not only geographically, but by and the third Napoleon is not likely to suffer them to be sud¬
religion, into two great groups of States, the Protestant denly absorbed into the bulk of Prussia. But why should
group of the North, and the Catholic group of the South.
it be supposed that Count Bismark is bent upon incurring
Domestic ties and other influences acting upon the rulers of the
the active hostility of France by insisting upon the only
smaller States, which, with Prussia, make up the northern
Prussia has never been
was

now

man

as

ness.

o

o

we

us as

a

more

a

on

a




,

[July 28,1866.

THE CHRONICLE

100

which could bring France into the field with
and with Russia against him ?
The South German

course

Austria,

popula¬

having appreciated this peculiar feature of the crisis; nor
can we consider that they have acted otherwise than wisely in

independent States, in placing the borrowing community upon a protracted and
somewhat rigorous probation.
Undoubtedly, the mainte¬
the presence of Prussia grown from twenty up to thirty
nance of a ten per cent, rate has had the effect of injuring the
millions of people, they could do Prussia no harm.
Austria
credit of England in foreign countries, and temporarily divert¬
once
compelled to recede from the German Confederacy,
Prussia would have no rival in her influence, over German ing a large amount of money to the Bank of France. A more
allairs,
reason
be forced
the lenient course would, doubtless, have checked this growing

tions bear

no

love to

Prussia; but,

as

she would
of the other great powers to respect the

and for that very

by

modified the effect of the panic; but the
States. By acting in concert with healing might have covered, under fair appearances, much
Napoleon, Count Bismark may now secure all and more than rottenness; and would have left in the system the seeds of
future "disease.
all that anv Prussian ruler has for a centurv dreamed of deThe policy of maintaining a high rate of discount is prob¬
siring; while Italy can in the same way consolidate her union
ably dictated, to a considerable extent, by the uncertainty
from the Alps to the Adriatic, from Venice to Sicily.
Where the interests both of the victorious belligerents as to what may be the effects of the panic upon the finances
of India. The commitments of London, in connection with
and of the strongest neutral in Europe are so obviously in
the trade of Calcutta and Bombay, are enormous.
The fail¬
harmony, it is difficult to see why that harmony should not
ure of
Agra and Masterman’s must have involved many who *
succeed in getting itself recognized and acted upon by such
have yet given no symptoms of weakness.
A very large
statesmen as Napoleon iu France, and Count Bismark in
amount of India cotton bills, accepted at London and Liver¬
Prussia, and the Baron llicasoli in Italy.
pool, have yet to be provided for; and, as there has been a
heavy decline in cotton since the date of their acceptance,
TEN PER CENT. IN ENGLAND, AND ITS EFFECT ON THE
serious losses may arise from this source.
It is possible that
UNITED STATES.
remittances may be made from India protecting these liabili¬
The recent failure of the Birmingham Banking Company,
ties ; but that is a matter which yet remains to be proved.
may perhaps be regarded as throwing some light upon the
It is certain that the India,markets have always shown thempersistence of the Bank of England in maintaining its rate selves
extremely sensitive in times of panic; and it is there¬
of interest at ten per cent.
It has been surmised that the
fore probable that the Bank deems it prudent to see the full ef¬
course followed by the Directors
is the result of advice
fects of the crisis in this branch of affairs before relaxing the
tendered by the government, upon reasons connected with
pressure of “ the screw.”
.political possibilities growing out of the European situation.
The action of the Bank is of some consequence to American
But while it is quite conceivable that continental affairs may
finances.
The rate of interest being once reduced, it will rap¬
have, in part, contributed to determine the action cf the
idly decline to probably a very low figure. The ease of
Bank, yet there can be little doubt that a leading motive for
money will then produce greater activity in the cotton and
keeping up a ten per cent, rate, lies in the condition of do¬
produce markets, and will stimulate speculation in Fivemestic and colonial finances.
The effect of such a change would be to in-,
The failure above alluded to is, we think, an indication twenty bonds.
crease materially our exports to England ; and, with the
that tlie effects of the panic have not yet been fully worked
out.
There is doubtless yet much rottenness among the augmentation of shipments, exchange wrould become easier;
the outflowr of specie and bullion would be suspended; pos¬
banks and finance corporations. Evils so deep and wide-spread
as those which have crept into
English finance during late sibly even a certain amount of specie might return to this
side the Atlantic; and the natural consequence of such a
years, are not throw n olf with the first throes of a panic.
course of exchanges wrould be likely to show itself in the pre¬
The mischiefs are not confined to the new and wildly managed
mium on gold.
For this reason, the action of the Bank of
finance associations; they exist among the oldest and
England is w atched with much interest among bankers and
most conservative of the banking institutions of London and

pressure
these lesser German

the

provinces.

concerns as

rights of

The reckless competition for money by such

distrust, and have

merchants connected with

Overend, Gurney & Co., has necessitated among

generally, either a loss of business, or the adoption
of a system of management anything but conservative.
Those who have suffered from the firms already failed, are
thus in a condition ill adapted for supporting their loss; and
it may be quite prudent to be in no hurry to afford them
facilities for hiding their weakness.
In judging the action of the Bank, it is not to be overlook¬
ed that the panic has been specifically a credit crisis.
The
extreme abundance and the low rates of money in 1802 and
1803 created a superfluity of banks and discount firms which,
finding little legitimate employment amid the.prevailing dull¬
ness of business, had to resort to bad business, or, in other
words, to making advances upon inadequate security. The
facilities thus afforded to parties doing an unsound business
produced an injurious competition with those w ho were con
ducting their affairs upon a legitimate basis, and thus the
whole system became vitiated.
A banking or currency panic
may, come and go within the same week ; but a credit panic
is so fundamental and widespread that although, like a cur¬
rency panic, it may come with a sudden spasm, yet it is ne¬
cessarily chronic, and the malady lingers long.
We are
quite disposed to credit the bank managers with sagacity in

commerce.

THE NEEDLE GUN.

the banks




British

In contests between

military powers, otherwise

equal, some

discipline, or tactics, has
determined the victory. The first Napoleon
conquered by his peculiar tactics, which wrere finally learned
by the Allied Powers. The Minie ball and rifle accomplished

particular excellence of weapon,
in many cases

the work in the recent

Italian

war;

and in our owrn civil conflict

iron-clads, the rams, and mounted infantry, may .be said
largely^to a decision of the strife. So too, in
the present European wrar, the battles fought in Bohemia, at
Skalitz, Turnau, Munchengrotz. and Sadowra, have been wron

the
to

have contributed

probably, a numerically larger force, in part through
the more perfect discipline of the Prussian and the use of the
firearm known by the Germans as the Zundnadelgelwehr, or
needle gun. The advantages of this gun consisted in the fact
that it enabled the Prussians to deliver their fire several times
as fast as the Austrians. It was not practicable for the latter to
carry out the directions of Marshal Benedek to endeavor to
overcome this advantage by resort to the bayonet.
The
Prussians could easily shoot dowm the columns as they ad¬
over,

vanced for that purpose.

The needle gun

.

is a breech-loading rifle, obtaining its name

July 28, 1866.]

powder by a needle which
pierces the cartridge, and explodes the fulminating material

from the

101

CHRONICLE,

THE

peculiarity of igniting the

several years afterward. A short time before
close of Mr. Fillmore’s administration, the patentee came

this country

breech

the

for

for the purpose of securing its adoption
the army.
But he encountered what other enterprizing men
w ithout
money claim to have since found there—a
this country

to

The construction is very simple. At the
is a knob or handle. This is moved to one side?
stolid
which opens the breech and admits the cartridge into the
apathy on all such matters. The cartridges were pronounced
aperture. The handle is then moved back to its
unsafe,” a fact w hich the experience of the Austrian army
position. The same motion presses the needle back so as to
to have abundantly demonstrated.
be held by a spiral spring.
When the trigger is pulled the
It is certain, however, that the needle is very likely to be
needle darts forward into the breech through a small oritice rendered useless on account of the heat created by the fric¬
at the lower end of the barrel, perforates the cartridge, set¬
tion ; and the storage of the cartridges is made unsafe iw that
ting on fire the fulminating compound contained in it, and the priming is between the powder and bullet, and is set on
exploding the gunpow der. The manual operations by w hich tire by percussion.. The recoil of the gun is a: serious objec¬
all this is done are very simple, and can be performed w ith
tion, as well as the fact that the gas escapes from the breech.
great rapidity. This constitutes the great advantage
The weight and unwieldiness have also created prejudice,
the Prussians have employed so successfully.
which only remarkable successes like those of the Prussians
In the excitement which has been created, it is rumored
in Bohemia would be likely to remove.
that the Emperor Napoleon is giving the matter his personal
Our best military authorities, regarding safety, substantial¬
attention, and is experimenting vigorously w ith needle guns
at the Imperial Ordnance Department at Vincennes.
It has ity, and general usefulness, as of greater importance,*have

by friction.
of the gun

original

“

seems

which

principle.

given the preference to guns of different style and
suggested that he wrould cheerfully yield a province or The
English gun ofWestley Richards, w hich has been
two of his contemplated acquisitions to obtain the invention.
ed to several British regiments, has a sliding breech with a
The mechanism of the weapon is easily imitated by any
screw joint very similar to that of the Prussian weapon,
skillful gunmaker, but the composition of the
while, in other particulars, it contains important improve¬
material is a secret known only 4o the inventor. The Prus¬
We have
Spencer

furnish¬

been

fulminating

sian

Government preserve

under

a

this, it is stated, by placing the man

inspecting his correspondence, and
him from holding any oral communication with

guard of soldiers,

preventing

guard. So far as the
present contest is involved, the advantage cannot be wrested
away,
Prussia has stored her arsenals, while other powers
would be able to supply themselves at a period too late for

any one

the presence of the

except in

mmediate utility.

repeating ride, which is more
rapid than the needle gun. There are several other patterns
which might also be named w ith favor.
But the Board rcccntly appointed by General. Grant, of which Major-General
Hancock is President, it is said, have unanimously agreed,
after comparing moredhan sixty kinds, to recommend for

with

shooting, it is absolutely useless; while
are very much below the stand¬
breech loader, it is a slow arm, its
rapidity of tire being not quite one half that of the Snider-Enfield, and
little more thau twice that of a handy muzzle loader. The escape of gas
at the breech after the arm has been in use for any time is sai I to he
excessive—so great, in fact, that the Prussian soldiers prefer to deliver
their fire from the hip.
The needle and trigger arrangement require
very careful cleaning ; and the employment of a spring is a material
element very objectionable.
The needle itself is much exposed to in¬
jury, and, if bent or broken, is reudered useless. The amunitiou is open
numerous practical objections; among which, its susceptibility to in¬
jury from damp and other causes is very prominent. In short, it is no
exaggeration to say that, of the various breech loading rifles which have
been submitted to the Select Committee, the Prussian needle gun, even
with some recent improvements, is one of the most defective. Its de¬
fects, indeed, were so conspicuous that it was thought unnecessary to
carry out with it any extensive experiments.
For

anything like long-range

its shooting qualities at shorter ranges
ard which we have adopted.
For a

The

It is easy to

of territory. The readiness with which
be spoiled, the liability of the ammunition to
be rendered useless by a variety of accidents, and the facility
of the spiral spring to lose its tension, combine to make it

men, over

anxiety, but of

satisfaction ; because

of w eapon. We have had experience to
aid us in determining the matter. * \\ fill a war embracing
four years of active military demonstrations, and
a million and a quarter of men,
the opportunity has been
afforded to form an accurate judgment. The gentlemen se¬
lected to determine the matter are abundantly competent for
the duty, possessing thorough knowledge and sagacity.
all the excellence
we accord to the needle gun of Prussia
which it has display ed in the present war, w e must regard the
fact as established, that a weapon of ditfer'ent excellencies is

an

not of

England is not behind¬

Europe has taken
any decided steps toward arming its troops with a breech¬
loading rifle; whereas English gunsmiths are actively en¬
gaged in the production of an arm superior to the Prussian
needle gun at all points, the efficiency of which, in every
respect, has been laboriously and conclusively established.
When the authorities shall determine, the Enfield rifles now
hand can be converted within a year into breech-loading
rifles having no equal in Europe, and enough in number for

hand in the matter.

the entire army.
A similar conviction was

entertained by the Ordnance

The inven¬
tion of the needle gun was made in in 1865 by Mr. Dreyse,
at

Sommerlitz,




unsuitable style

employing

\\ hile

of greater

value for tlie military

operations of the Western

hemisphere.

No other country in

on

Bureau of the War

vast areas

the needle may

military

days, the overthrow of one of the leading
the world, the Gazette regards as a source,

has won

Europe, would not answer for general use
in this country.
Our wars, if we are again to be so unfortu¬
nate as to have anv, must be fought bv immense bodies of

of French officers came to a similar condu¬
ct usion.
The fact that with this arm the great battles in
Bohemia have been fought and won, effecting, in part, w ithin
nations in

examination.
perceive that the needle gun, which

much favor in

so

A committee

few

same

Emperor for

the

to

a

ride with the Berdan
breech-loading arm.
weapon has been taken to France by an agent of

adoption in this country, the Springfield
improvement, w hich changes it into a

England, the needle-gun has never been regarded
favor.
It was tested by the War Office w ith very unsatis¬
factory results. The Pall Mall Gazette says :
In

the

ments.

Department of this country.

The Prussian

improvement was

patented in

ANALYSES OF
NEW

The New

RAILROAD REPORTS.

YORK AND

York and

HARLEM RAILROAD.

Harlem Railroad,

which in connection

with the

Railroad, forms the inland
follows :
Line—New York City to Chatham Four Corners..
miles
130.75
Branch Line—Melrose to Tort Morris
2.12
owned by the company
132.S7
’.
Albany and West Stoekbridge Railroad—Chatham to E. Albany
20.25
Albany and West Slockbi-i<lge (Western)
New York City and Albany

route betweeu

is constituted as

Main

*

Total

Total owned, leased, and operated
Second track and sideings on main line 45

ROLLING

153.12

miles.

STOCK.

of each of
following table j

stock belonging to the company at the close
the last ten fiscal years (September 30,) is shown in the
The rolling

102

THE CHRONICLE.
Loco,—Cars rated as 8-wheel cars—%
motives. Pass. Mail, &c. Freig’t. Total.
431
36
65
11
355 •
71
10
400
481
35
377
444
33
56
11
51
365
11
427
42
15
434
33
377

Sept.
30th,
1856
1857

1858
1859
1860
1861
1862
1804

34
32
32
35

36
35
84
40

1865

43

60

4:15
428
481
561
587

13
13
11
17

23

1863

BUSINE8S

The

OF

TUB

City

Cost of

cars,

rol’g .Nto’k.
$663,146

37
55
42
42
42

484
476
526
618

634,727
650,80-1
6-10.804

67

650,804
650,804
811,987

1,105.299
1,469,957

UOAD.

mileage of trains, the number and mileage of passengers, and the
freight and the mileage thereof in the same years, vveie as fol

tons of

Fiscal

/-Train

mileage.—s

Passengers
>
Mileage.
1,223,048
24,552,577
958.777
23,234,(HH)
,

Passenger. Fn ight.

year.
1855-56
1856-57

330,035
488,221

..

..

203,539
255,974
216,356
243,571
266,240

1857-58
1858-59
laio-oo..
1860-61
1861-62

318.471
230.633

1862-63

245,041

339,840
314,459

360,532
368,379

365,502
391,883

405,391

..

317,235
319,748

.

..

..

..

1863-64

.

..

720,070
718,978
767,652
726,363

297.299

Freight.
Mileage.

,

Number.

Tons.
159.406
150.863

14,790,971

16,274,091

153.511

15,772,007

168,527
198,667

12.423.098

680,523
811,877
1,177,789

7,446,561
9,131,851

9,382,119
11.032.070

233.981
236.407

15,322,994
18,201,839
15,571,.'-28

239,603

15,014,360
20,942,621
38.093,353

1,243,545

9.333,743

122,371
145,577

16,270,371

8.799,957

17,153*978

The following statement classifies the freight carried—the quantities
being given in tons :
Fiscal

/-Products of->
Forest. Animals.
3.730
48,308
60.098
10,089
52.478
8,170
52.332
9,485
8.271
63,773

year.
1855-56
1856-57
1857-58
1868-59

,-....

1859-60
1860 61
1861-62
1862-63
1S63-64

9.086

In the

81.384

100,407

2 545

.24.205
17.570

3.825
4.3"2

35,723

2,898

12,487

4,206

20.422

6,698

14,115
17,410

4,186
2,496

12,210
10,845
26,620

37,946

9,833
15.9 8

22,113
29,043
34,861
40,353

39,948
41,244

23,901
11,877

19,479
24,617

14,123
11,063

67.859

25,770

9.809

DEDUCTIONS.

following table shows the relation of the above statements to
mileage of the road, viz.: the cost of road and equipment per mile>
<fec. ; the earnings, expenses and profits per mile, together with the
pro¬
portion of expenses to earnings, and the rate of the profits to cost of road,
&c.—the road from New York to Chatham Four Corners, 130.75 miles,
being taken as the unit:
the

Year

Cost of

ending

Miles

year.
2855-56
3S56-57

by

1857-58

574,800
512,422
504,351

cars.

/—Passengers.—v

Fiscal
year.
1800-01
1861-02
1802-03
1303-03
1804-05

301,312

1859-60

1,746.933

290.593

1858^59

1,799.891

2,014,486
3,069,721

i', 190,000

3,493,113

5,239.069
5.980,401

3.150.000

3,990,934

REVENUE

Miles

run

by

cars,
:

$61,656

554,350

3,530,227

635.044
785.910

4.200,190

5,895.340
0.339.285

5,795.238

7,193,476 10,790,214

ACCOUNTS.

....

...

494.103

490,616
533.091
448.193
411.684

or

expenses.

net rev.

$1,040,393
1,027,572
975,853

$715,501

$324,892

840.731
617.661

180,8-11
358,752

79,364
80,349

1,076,322
1.142,851

163.129
168 577
192.931

1.154,003

1,412.426
1,860,709

695,996
709,1.35
753,727
697,305
957,655
1,409,820

380,326
433,710
391,253

260,709

362,743

443,301
506,342

529,411
533,658
573,742

707,320

1,053.314

...

Profits

Operating

96.744
69.996

2,509,725

2,0;7,397

$83,621

436.725

512,175

Total.

864,558
1,093,668

1,144,980

454,771
450,889
42 %428

receipts from the New York and New Jiaven Railroad for use of
the road from Williamsbridge to the city, are included iu “ other” gross
earnings. They have been as follows : For the year ending Sept. 30th,
1857, $69,426; 1858, $57,814; 1859, $66,932 ; 1860,
$65,096; 1861, $132,220; 1862, $138,000; I860, $161,451; 1864,
$223,175, and 1865, $186,296.
;

The amount

paid from net revenue, on account of interest ou debt, and
dividend on preferred stock in each year has been as follows ;
In year
ending Sept. 30,‘1856, $307,641 ; 1S57, $438,102; 1858, $406,793 ; 1859,’
$388,142

1860,

;

$392,883; 1861, $403,318;

7.859

$2,485

76,085

7,46(4

6,410
4,719

1,449
2,745

76.632
76.659
76.761
76,701
78,026

8,232

5,323

8.7-t 1

5.425
5,76(4
5,333
7,324

2,909
3,316

81.56
63.25
64.66
62 06

2,993
3,493

65.26
60.42

3,478

67.60
75.80

1865

85,496

8,757
8,826
10.802

14,223
19,195

10,7S2

1862, $415,202; 1863

to

3.441
3,230

15,965

to cost

earnings, of road.
68.77
4.03

'2.34
3.61
3.79

4.32
3.90
4.55

J4.45
4.22
3.78

83.17

.

profits to cost of road have been deduced from the

exclusive of real estate.

nominal cost-

Had the amount of stock and debts been taken

instead of this nominal sura, the

profits would have shown at a much
the average, one-sixth lower. Thus the stock debt
iri 1S65 amounted to $97,003 per mile, while
the cost of road, <&c.*
amounted only to $85,496 per mile. Hence the profits to the first sum,
were
only 3.33 per cent., while to the latter sum they were 3.78 per
cent, showing a diffeenee against the company of 0.45 per cent. It
lower

figure, and,

on

be noted, indeed, that the profits for the last ten
on

years have barely
debt and dividends on the preferred

Affairs, however, must have materially improved between Oct.
1, 1865, and July 1,1866, since at the latter date a dividend of 4 per cent

stock.

unexpectedly declared

the

on

MARKET

stock—the first since 1854.

common

ERICE

OK

STOCKS.

The Common Harlem Stock has shown the
tions in

following monthly fluctua
the six years ending Sept. 30, 1865:
prices for

sale

1859-60.
Nov
Dec.
Jan
Feb

834® sys
83-4® 9%

1860-61.
15 @23%
13 @18

S3«® 934
S3-4® 934
8jg@ 93’i

12
15
14

March...

8

Oct

1861-62.
10 3a @14
12 @14
10 @13

@14%
@16%
@17

1862-63.

12%@13%
11%@12%

(310% 15%@16%
April.... 10%@14% 11%@16%
Mav
12 @13%
10%@12%

12
13

June.... 11%®12%

14

Year...

The
Oct
Nov
Dec..

8

@24

33

.

Jan
Feb

.

March.

April...
May
June

@35

32% @35
32% @3 4
32% @34%'
32%@36%

.

.

.

.

35%@40
37 @41%
37

@40
July
38%@44%
August. 45 @51 ‘
Sept.... 43%@55
.

....

.

•

Year.. 32

10

8%@23%

1859- 60.
32 @33%

1860-61.

@85%
@42
@13

@41%
@41%
25%@31%
20% @25% 35% @45'
22% @29% 33% @41
24% @26% 85 @42
25 @25%
:9 @48%
28

25

97%@109%
92
125
115

@125
@179

@179

@48%

88

@110
87% @ 93
86% @105
102 @137*
lOi @152
130 @235
224 @281
260 @285
@—
@
65 @ 65
65

46%@ 53%
42% @ 53%
50
57

@ 54%
@ 87
63%@ 78
76%@ 8G
81 @ 94
95
89
94
119
115

1864-65.

@
@-

—

-

@
@

-

-

-

—

—
—

—

@164%

18

1863-64.
80 @145

—

1862-63.

25% @35
29% @35
25 @31%
29% @32
28%@30%
30 @32%
30 @32%
32%@37

@41

20% @ 253a
18 @ 23
21
@ 23%
27% @ 40
32 @ 373i
85 @ 47
42%@ 76%
79 @116%

has fluctuated

1861-62.

20%@53%

@55

@22

company

38% @53%
31
27
36
34
38

@13

@15
@18%
13 @17%
14%'@17
15 @22

10% @10%

preferred 6tock of the
.

12%@13%

8%@10%
9% @12%
10%@11

July
12%@17%
August.. 16 @20
Sept.... 16%@24

456,698

The

1856, *70,571

$5,472

02,046

8.092.857

804,012

Other.

Passenger. Freight.
$520,527
$436,245

$7,957

profits.

81.409

Number. Mileage.
3,007,889 5,411,838

,

expenses.

1861
1862
1863
1864

was

cars.
555.120

earnings-

earnings.

mile.

/—Passengers. —n

transportation earnings and expenses, and the profits fiom
operations were as follows:
—Gross

Net

balanced the demands for interest

55,122

Expenses Profits

,

Operating

per

1856
1857....
1858
1859......
1860

The

Amounts per mile-

may

The gross

Fiscal
Years.
1855-56
1856-57
1857-58
1858-59....
1859-60..
1860-61
1861-62
181)2-63.....
1863-64
1864-65

G ross

58,077

are given the miles run by the city
carried, and the mileage of passengers

Number. Mileage.

run

/

road, Ac.,

42,956

following statement

the number of passeugtrs
Fiscal

13,718
11.177

17,488
16,920

70,365

12,078
12,283
13,597

-

16,242
20,570

62,053
74,844

7,369

1864-65

Other
Veget’le Oth. agri- Mann- Merchan
lood. cult'l prod, fact's.
disc. articles.
11.140
17.729
3,301
63,662
<1,736

is charged

years

The

Sept. 30.

lows:

1864-65

profit and loss account,” the accumulation of several
to cost of road.

this year

624,6S5

42
42
45
69

670

“

[July 28,1866.

@120%
@108%
@120
@153
@151

as

—

@285

—

follows

1863-64.
107 @130
110 @111
100
102
109

@100
@112
@125
125%@138

®

:

1864-65.
—

-

—

—

—

-

@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@

—
—
—
—
-

@
—
@—
112%@112;
—
@— 75 @ 75
@—- 60 @ 80
@—
@ —

—

—

-

—

—

—

—

42%@153

100

-

@138

75

@ 80

that the stocks of this company
not been in the'jtnarket since June, 1864.

have

From the above it will be

seen

$428,808; 1864, $432,440, and 1865 $420,265.
GENERAL

The financial condition of the company at the close of each fiscal year
from 1865-56 to 1864-65, both years inclusive, is shown in the

following

statement

:
.

Sept,

Capital

30th.
1856
1857
1858

Floating

$5,717,100
5,717,100

.

.

$3,853,305
4,060,498

$299,352

5,717.100
5,717, UK)
5,717.100
5,717,100
5,717.100

5,151,287

5,537,064
5.565,487

43,788

5,722,850
6,585.050
6,585,050

5.877.518
6.1 i 5,800
6,098.045

14.260

.

1859

.

1860
1861
1862

.

.

,

1863

.

1864
1865
*

Funded
debt.

stock. *

.

Includin g

The

$9,869,757
10,430,037

652.439
147,641

$144,312

11.016.028

218,573
218,573
218,573
98.137

12,683,095

81,708

188,573

12,700,850

6.372,179

188,573

11,070,397
11,289,279
11,298,552
11,367.295
11.614,628

5,353,297

$465,000
405,000

188.573

97,074

445,000
4fi5.CHH>

218.573

405,000
244,500
221,000
00.500
62.500

59,5U0

$1,500,000 preferred stock.

t

30th.
1856
1857
1858
1859
I860
1861
1862
1863
1864
1805

debt.

Total stock
Real
Extenand
estate
sion
debts.
mortgages. certif "s.

'

Against which
Sept.

are

charged

■—

Railroad.

as

follows

:—

Construed on account
Equipm's. Extension.

N

Total.

Real estate in
in N. Y. Ac.

$5,398,373

$663,146

$2,000,0(H)

$8,061,519

5.487.914

624,585

8,112,499

1.090.529

7,313,339

634,777
650.804

9,948,116
10,019,671

1,090,529

7,368.867
7,371,982

10.022,786

7,385,739

650,804

1,136,849
1.137,014

7,385,739

650,804

2,000.000
2,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
2,000 000
2,600,000

7,389,919
7,510,789
7,708.611

811,987
1.105,299
1,469,957

2.000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000

large increase in




650,804

Citerature.

ACCOUNTS.

cost in 1857-58 is

10,036,543
10.036,543
10,201,900

$1,090,529
1,090.529

1,137,014

1,141,837

10,616,038

1,120,822

11,178,568

1,144,181

explained by stating that the

The Oicil War in America: An Address
London : Si.mpkin, Marshall & Co.

by Goldwin Smith.

Professor Goldwin Smith of the

University at Oxford has earned
gratitude of every friend of the United States for his sympathy
during their late struggle, when every government in Western
Europe desired their destruction. If we do not concur in every
the

sentiment of his address to the Manchester Union

withhold

Society,

we can¬

acknowledgment of the good will of its author.
If we had had more such friends in England during the late civil
war, the contest would have been briefer and less sanguinary.
Professor Smith most justly denies the theory that the war arose
from a divergence of commercial interest; that it was a struggle be¬
tween free-trade producers on one side and protectionist manufac¬
not

turers

ou

our

the other.

produce the effect.
the

Such

he declares,

inadequate to
No mention is made of it iu the manifesto of
a

cause,

was

seceding States.

He considers free

Christianity _to be at the bottom in this country
that in this war it has triumphed. The
a colony of New England, the little Puritan
great nation. In American Christendom are

and its institutions, and

Western States

are

settlement lo3t in

a

103

THE CHRONICLE.

July 28, 1866.]

Such

selves.

the formation of the world out

are

of chaos, the

decline of clerical authority, and the break¬
creation of man, his primitive state of innocence and happiness, the
ing up of sectarian dogmas, with the consequent approach of a re¬
fall of his godlike nature, which they ascribed to mingling with the
conciliation of the churches. This indicates no decline of religious
accursed giants, the existence of a Spirit of Evil and of a Tree of
feeling; because the flock are more nearly on a level, both intellec¬
Life.”
tually and spiritually, with their pastor. America has produced'no
At the end of the Roman world, the church stood by its death¬
new theology, but she has produced religious liberty, from which,
bed witnessing the birth of the new period, “ accepting changes
in time, better things will spring.
terrible to the world, but full of consolation to herself.” Her
The relations betweeu the employer and employed are sounder
and kiudlier than in England.
Strikes were rare till the derange¬ ground of hope lay in that spirit of independence acd individuality
which characterised the races of Northern Europe, among whom
ment of prices, caused by the Legal Tender act, put the world of
her future was cast.
Individuality was strongly marked in the
industry out of joint. Even then the new comers, rather than the
Christian society from the first. The great complaint of the Pagans
native American workmen, resorted to violent modes ot raising
was that they repudiated the supremacy of the
State, of common
wages.
interests, over the man and his personal interests.
Mediaevol faith
^ Professor Smith proceeds in this temper through his entire letter,
approved itself in its most striking and characteristic features the
defending Americans from the imputation of being slaves to money,
express contradiction of Pagan naturalism.
Iu asserting and
deficient iu courtesy, wanting in filial affection and love of home,
grounding its principles, more generally, more enduringly thau ever
etc.
He scans the evils of democracy and universal suffrage, de¬
before, the church of the Northern nation, the church of the middle
claring that American institutions so far as they are local, are
ages, finally triumphed.
The world was then converted indeed.
good. What Providence intends iu the New World apparently is The
empire, and the world beyond the empire, issued on its career
not a reproduction of the European nations on a colossal scale,
of Christian development; but Paganism, including both the
but a great development of humanity, for which Federation, with
mythologies and the philosophies of the classical world, a3 a spiritu¬
its iufinite power of expansion, its multiplied centres of independ¬
al creed, was now finally abolished through the special fitness of the
ent life, its freedom of local action seems to be the destined mould.
Northern natious for imbibing the great principles of Christian
The growth will be that of peaceful expansion and attraction ; not
Theology.
of forcible annexation, of which, I believe, no considerable party
It is Mr. Merrivale’s object to ascribe to the church of the Gothic
at the North dreams or has ever dreamed.
The British North
people a superior rank to that form which exists among what are
American Colonies will iu time, and probably at no very distant
styled the nation of the Latin race. His reasoning and illustra¬
time, unite themselves politically to the group of States, of which
tions all tend irresistibly to that conclusion, and he finally institutes
they arc already by race, position, commercial ties, and the char¬
a comparison between the two, showing iu a right masterly maimer
No one can stand by the side of
acter of their institutions a part.
The idea thus elucidated may well
the excellence of the former.
the St. Lawrence and doubt that in the end they will do this; but
be expressed by this formula : Protestantism, the Christianity of
they will be left to do it of their owu free will.”
After a review of the peculiar influences which led to the settle¬ Northern Europe, is the genuiue apostolic faith.
®
ment and development of society in the two districts of the Union,
Mr. Smith gives an outline of the history of the war, favorable of
course to the Government.
The reorganization of - society at the Catesl Jllotutarj) anil Commercial (Englisl) Ncros.
South he declares to be the most tremendous problem of all. “ Ja¬
maica tells us with terrible emphasis what are the perils of a com¬ KATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON,
AT LATEST DATES.
munity composed of the ex-slaveowner and the ex-slave.” Kind¬
ness, lair wages, and education he suggests as means.
EXCHANGE AT LONDON—
The object of the Manchester Union Associatian was •* to con¬
EXCHANGE ON LONDON.
JULY 14.
firm the Government of England in neutrality, and see that it was
real neutrality and not a neutrality of Alabamas;” to avert a
DATE.
deadly rupture between the two nations, from a primary regard to
11.65
the general interests of humanity.
tshort.
11 13 @11.14
July 14. 3 days.
“Be these the last words of Amsterdam
25. 5
do
3 months. 25.47^@25.52X
the Association which ends its course to night, (January 22, 1866) Antwerp.
do
11.3*®11.4X
13. 8 @13. !“%
Hamburg
Slavery is dead everywhere and forever.”
do
25.12)4
short.
25. 7%®,'25.nx
Paris

two

things going on ; the

-

“

LATEST

a

TIME.

RATE.

TIME.

ON—

RATE.

■

...

LL

-...

LL

LL

LL

The Glory and Shame of England.
12 Books. Two volumes, demy

By C. Edwards Lester. In
octavo. Bartram & Lester,

Publishers, New York.

appeared some twenty-five years ago, and became
quite popular. It has been written anew, bringing it dowTu to 1866.
Mr. Lester depicts forcibly the social condition of England and Ire¬
land, the colonial system and foreign policy, concluding with two
chapters of what he terms proofs of the prevalent .hostility against
the United States.
“ She shifts her poliey,” he says, “ toward all
strong natious to suit the hour—toward weak ones to suit her con¬
venience.” We cannot agree with all of Mr. Lester’s conclusions on
this or other points, but have no doubt he will now, as heretofore,
find hosts of admiring readers.
This book first

The Conversion of the. Northern Nations. The Boyle Lectures for
the year 1865, delivered at the
Charles Merrivale, B. D.
New York: D. Appleton <fc Co.
1866.

Chapel Royal, Whitehall.

3 months. 25.35
LL
13.50

Paris
Vienna
Berlin

@14.00
6.26^@ 6.27^
25^@ 26&
44 @ 44%

Li

....

LL

St. Petersburg
Cadiz
Lisbon

U
LL

51)i@, 51)4
27.30
27.30
27.40

Milan
Genoa
LL

Naples
New York....
Jamaica
Havana
Rio de Janeiro

@27.60
@27.60

@27.60
—

—

—
—

—
.

Buenos Ayres.

—

Valparaiso....

■

—

—

—

Pernambuco..

—

..

Singapore
Hong Kong...

—
—

—

Ceylon
Bombay

@25.40

—
—

—
—

60

day’s I5l0t<rt@
LL

Madras
Calcutta

15104
Is 10cl

LL

Sydney

@
@

—

do

8 mo’s.

24.80
.

_-.,r

.

—

—

—

—
—

—

—

—

—

—
—

—

-*—

—

—

—

•'

—

—

168
June 30. 60 days.
do
June 24.
2% p o prem.
27 X@—
June 29. 90 days.
do
June 8.
22>s@23
51 @51X
May 29. 60 days.
do
J line 3.
[47 @46)4
June 16.
do
24^ @25
May 31. 6 mo’s. 45. 7^tf.@45. 7%d.
do
4s. l>4tf.@—
June 13.
do
4&@5 p. c. disc.
May 30.
25 0%d.
do
July 3.
■—

—

—

—
—

June 30.

25.0 %d

May 28. 30 days. 1@1 )4

—

p.

"c.

piem.

[From our own Correspondent.]

By

London, Saturday, July 14,1866.

The

Thursday morning last that the Directors of
England had determined to make no chtnge in their rates
created no surprise, inasmuch as the public, who were ac

announcement

the Bank of

on

volume are a continuation of of discount
delivered on the Conversion of the Roman
quainted with the extent of the bullion operations of the bank, were
Empire. They treat upou the revelation of Christ in the philoso¬
fully prepared for the maintenance of the present stringent rates for a
phical and the practical view, setting forth the peculiar views taken further
period. During the week elapsing between the return of last
by Mr. Merrivale, with references to the writings of Tertullian and week and the present statement, the sum of £724,000 was withdrawn
Origen, Athanasius and Augustine of Hipps. In this manner he from the bank for export, whilst only £106,000 was paid in from for¬
brings the subject to the period of the decadence of Roman and eign quarters.
Hence, in this department of the bank’s transactions,
Grecian civilization, when also Christian ideas were amalgamated there is a
deficiency of £618,000; and, from this cause as well as from
with those of the heathen philosophers. He evidently considers the the circumstance of the dividends having been paid, the stock of bullion
true Christian religion as having now been transferred from Asia,
has been diminished by over £810,000.
Hence the public have not
Africa and Southern Europe to the keeping of the Gothic and called in question this determination of the Bank Directors, although it
German nations of the North. Indeed, he declares that through is still maintained that, had the bank reduced its rate of discount some
them “we have derived our Christianity.” Again,—“We may three weeks since, the present withdrawals of bullion for export would
not probably have taken place.
trace in the particulars of their belief an approach to much which
The supply of bills on Par is is now
we trust we have learned from the source of truth more directly our¬
very limited, and as bills held by Parisian merchants and capitalists
The

eight lectures included in this

the previous course




[July 28, 1868.

THE CHRONICLE

104

per cent.; but the aggregate demand for money has been very moder¬
presented for payment, and no similar re investment ate. The
quotations are now as under :
takes place.
It follows, therefore, that, as paper matures, bullion is
PcrOent.
rer cent.
withdrawn from this country to increase the supply on hand at Paris,
10 @11
30 to (50 days’bills
9 @9# 6 mouths’ Dills..
8 @ 9
9 @9% 6&4 months’ bank paper...
and probably to remain for many weeks without ■employment. As bul¬ a months’ bills
4 months’ bills—
9%@ 10
lion thus flows a way from this country, whilst the rate of discount here
On the Continent the tendency in the rate of interest is downward
is much higher than in any other quarter, it is argued that these high rates
The principal changes during the w< :ek have been at Berlin and Hamfoster the idea that our position is unstable, and that, at the appa¬
taken place. The supply of bullion
rently very remunerative prices offered, the investhieut is an unsound burg, at which places a decline luts stock
at Paris continues to accumulate, the
being now nearly £27,000,000.
and an unsafe on*-,
lint, notwithstanding the want of confidence shown
the leadii ng continental cities are as under :
The rates of discount at
by the foreigner as regards our linancial position, the state of monetary
Bank
Open
Hank
Open
affairs is certainly improving ; and, although the small private banks in
rate,
market.
rate,
market,
$ c.
$ e.
the provinces are by no means in a secure position, the bank return of
tjl c.
c.
8
8nom
Turin
At Paris
4
3%
this week indicates a stea ly though slow return oT health.
The prin¬ Vienna
Brussels...
0 bills
5
5
0
6% advances.
Berlin
8 bills 8
cipal feature to be noticed is the diminution of nearly £600,OOu in the
9
Madrid..,.
—
8% advances.

mature, they are

•

“

’

“

amount of

notes in

circulation.

As the ciiculatiou has now

it is held that,

long

the note circa

weeks been very

1

lation remains

extensive, the Bank Directors w ill maintain

.rge,

and

as

so

as

for many

Frankfort

0

-

Hamburg

Amsterdam

7

7

St. Petersburg.

—

5%

5%

6%

chiefly influenced by the polit¬
the week prices improved con¬
at ten per cent.
This falling otf must, under the circumstances, be
Since then, however,
looked upon as most satisfactory. The public have, lor a long period" siderably, aud business was done as high as 88.
been watching for a favorable movement of this description ; aud as the market has been rather flatter, but as intelligence has been received
to-day that there is a possibility, if not a probability, of the present
£4,0UO,0o0 iu dividends have been absorbed this week, it was auticipa
Continental difficulty being settled without further bloodshed, the
ted that, instead of showing a decrease, the note circulation would ex
hibit an increase from last week. It follows, therefore, that the return market closes with a firm appearance, but not at the highest point of
of not* s has been greater than has been expected.
It is also presumed the wmek. The sum of £106,000 has been withdrawn from the Bank
that tiier has been a return of coin from the provinces.
The decline in to day. and it is probable that further sums will be withdrawn next
week.
Foreigners appear willing to purchase prime paper, but
the stock of bullion is, indeed, large, viz. : ESS3,4 79, 'but the excess of
withdrawals for expoit as_ compared with sums paid in from foreign descriptions below this are not iu demand on foreign account; conse¬
quarters is neatly £620,uOO; hence it follows that the dividend-receiv¬ quently, as the supply of'"this paper in the market is limited, foreign¬
ing public either took a small proportion of their dividends in coin or, if ers are not in a position to invest their money in that particu’ar descrip¬
they received the normal proportion, a fair supply of coin has been re¬ tion of security, and prefer to leave their capital unemployed rather
The highest prices of Consols each clay
ceived during the week from the provinces. From these two items in than make such advances.
during the week have been—
tlie bank statement, it is considered that the return of confidence at
home has now commenced, and, it is presumed, that when less distrust Week ending July 14 Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Tkur’day Friday. Sat’rday,
87%
prevails here, the outflow of bullion will not only be entirely stopped, Consols for money...
88
six
87%
87%
S7%
but that a rapid influx will take place, and, in all probability, as rapid
American securities have been in fair demand, and prices have been
a decline in the value of money.
From India, our advices are very
steadily on the advance.
United States Five-twenty bonds have been
favorable ; and it is expect1 d that, in the course of the next month, we
dealt in to a moderate extent, the latest being the highest price for the
shall be receiving supplies of bullion from that quarter.
week.
Erie Railway shares closed with firmness, at 40£, and Illinois
Hie high rate of ten per cent, has now been in existence for a period
Centrals are steady. Canadian Government securities have ruled firm
of more than two months, and with such a high minimum quotation for
but the dealings in them have been far from numerous. Annexed were
accommodation, it is but the natural course of things for trade to the
highest prices on the days enumerated :
diminish.
By some it is supposed that commercial transactions, under
the influence of a high rate for money, have not fallen off. Those who
Sat.
Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. Fri.
For weekending July 14.
hold this opinion base their calculations on the fact that the Board of
08
07%
07%
07%
07%
United States 5-20's, 6 per cent
50
50
50
50
50
50
Trade returns last published, do not exhibit any material diminution in
\rir»nni:i per emit,
4l
14
44
44%
44%
44%
out trade, but it should be borne in mind that
these returns are only Atlanticand Croat Western.New York
07
07
67
07
00%xc
00%
section, 1st mortgage, 1880
made up to the close of May, so that it is quite impossible for the effect
70
70
70
70
70
70
Pennsylvania section, lstm, 1877.. 47
47
47
47%
47%
40%
of a high rate for money on commerce to be indicated in any conclusive
do
cons’ted mort. b’tls, 1895.
40%
40%
39%
39%
39%
39%
Erie shares, 100 dollars, all paid
manner.
70
70
70
70
Indeed, it is probable that when the returns for last month
70
70
do Convertible bonds, 6 per cent
82
82
82
82
S2
8*.
shall have been published, there will not even then be evidence of any Illinois Central, 6 per cent, 1875:...
72
72
72
72
72
72
do
7 per cent, 1875
70
76
70
70%
70%
70%
material falling olf, inasmuch as the large foreign orders in hand in
do
$100 shares, all paid..
09
09
09
09
09
09
Marrietta and Cincinnati, 7 per cent...
April and May were then being completed, aud the extent of these New York Central, 100 dollar shares... 07% 07% 07% 07% 07% 07%
101
101
101
101
101
101
81
shipments will be shown in the next returns to be published. In older Panama Rail, 7 per cent, 1872, 2d mort. 81
81
81
81
81
Pennsylvania 11. Hr 2d mort., 6 p. c
34
3F
34
31
34
34
to see how much our trade has declined from the effects of the panic,
$r>0 shares
we shall have to wait until the returns for the
present month of inly Philadelphia and Erie, 1st mortgage, 73
73
73
73
73
73
1881, (irua. by Penn. Railroad Co)
do
with option to be paid in
have been issued.
In some departments, to be sure, the returns of June
73
73
73
73
73
73
Philadelphia
93
93
93
93 >4
93%
will show a decline from that of May, for it is already known from pri¬ Canada 6 per cent
93%
77
77
70
70%
70%
r.6%
do
5 per cent
vate sources that of cotton goods to America, the "shipments were less
last month than during its predecessors.
At Frankfort, the market for United States Five twenty bonds has
As regards woollen goods, the
statement will probably present satisfactory results; but as our advices
been firm, at 68|(b)6^-§.
from New York state that the supplies of cotton and woollen goods on
The wheat trade during the week has been in a most inactive state.
sale are arge, and in excess of buyers requirements, the shipments of The fineness of the weather and the favorable accounts respecting the
these articles will fall off' as the year proceeds. On the whole, how¬ approaching harvest
have induced millers to confine their purchases to
ever, trade, though limited iu extent, is sound and healthy, and no im
the supply of their most immediate wants, whilst, on the other hand,
portant failures are announced. The hope of peace on the Continent owing to the prevailing uncertainty respecting the war, factors have not
has already stimulated commercial enterprise, many articles of grocery felt disposed to conclude transactions,
except at fully late rates. The
offers made by millers for any considerable supplies of wheat have beeu
produce, including cotton, wool, hemp, flax, jute, aud silk having com¬
manded more attention, whilst prices have had an upward tendency. at a slight coucessiou in price, but to this factors are not at present in¬
13ut the high rate prevailing for accommodation is adverse to the
clined to yield.
The imports of wheat are large for the time of year,
interests of trade, and so long as it remains above six or seven percent,
about 25,000 quarters having arrived into the port of London since
no material increase need be expected.
With the return of peace, and Saturday last. Prices are now 4s. per quarter below the late highest
of easier rates for money, we shall probably witness an extent of busi¬
point.
ness
The accounts at hand from the hop plantations are much more favor¬
equal iu magnitude to many previous periods, and a sounder trade
able ; and, with few exceptions, it seems probable .we shall have quUe
perhaps than for several years.
As the dividends have been paid this week, the supply of money out- an average crop of hops per acre. Under these circumstances, and with
ofdoors has increased. Much discretion has still to be employed, re¬ an increased area of laud under cultivation, the aggregate yield this
so

their rate

The consol market this week has been

ical

uews

at. hand.

In the early part of

° 4/a

-

.

specting the quality of paper, and only the best short-dated bills are
taken at 9$, and, in some instances, at 9 per cent.
There is still some
pquiry for six and four months’ tank payer, which is taken 8 and 9




will be larger than at any
although the supplies on sale are

year

way.

former period. The prices of hops,
small, are already beginning to give

THE

July 28,1866.J

hxPORTS of

COMMERCIAL AND

MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.

from San

Week.—The imports continue large
this week both in dry goods and general merchandise, the total being
$6,258,994, against $6,n00,356 last week, and $8,202,498 the previous
week. The exports are only $2,867,787 this week against $4,076,857
‘last week, and $2,094,882 the previous week. The exports of cotton
again on the increase as the prices here and at Liverpool now
admit of shipments beiDg made at a profit; for the past week the
export reached 2,808 bales against 873 bales last week. Included in
the exports were also 9,729 bbls wheat flour, 1,959 bbls cornmeal,
63,87jt bu oats, 8,131 bu peas, 976,239 bu corn, 682 pkgs candles, 70
Exports for the

Imports and

are

bbls
13,969

THE WEEK.
1865.

AT NEW YORK FOR
1864.
1863.

June 18—Per Sierra

Dry

goods

$3,469,322
96,453,789
$99,923,111

Total for the week
Previously reported
Since

January 1../.

In our

report of the

EXPORTS

For the

week

-..

Total receipts,

Total

reported

$7,879,920

$3,986,390

101,602,165

20—SS. Eagle, gold
Havana—
3,000
American
July 20—Bg Bird of the Wave, Humacoa
American silver...
5,000
July

July

Foreign gold

Gold and silver....
Gold bars
Silver coin

Bremen— 39,320
American gold....

20—SS. America,
For

Southampton—

week. —
Previously reported
Total since Jan. 1,1866
Same

1865
1864.. g
1863
1862

1861
1860
1859

Treasure

wall on the
this port on

FROM SAN FRANCISCO.

$175,055 38
74,716 00
O’Connor Bros
25.000 00
J. & W. Seligman & Co..
97,000 00
Moritz Meyer
20,070 00
Duncan, Sherman & Co..
65.592 00

Brown, Bros.
Eugene Kelly

& Co
&Co

Weil &Co..........
P. Maylor

Agent Bank British N. A.
Wells, Fargo & Co.......
Lees & Waller
i
Dan’l H. Temple, Treas..
Panama

The

r

R. R. Co

April
April
Mav
Mav

May
May

5...
12...
23...
31
9..
20..
1..
.

9

21
31,.
.

oune

June

20...
2...
9...
21...




July

10,000 00
236,835 33
166,723 62
509.000 00
3,000 00

FROM THE

Chas. Everslield
Trevor & Colgate
S. L. Isaacs <fc Ash

74,279
3,000

Total

21,412 33 |

$46,505,359 35
243,228 21
64,141,858 87

,

18,463,365 64
$129,353,812 07

direct tax

receipts
i

EXPENDITURES.

^

public debt, including Treasury notes

$11,821,295 44
3,034,787 22
12,744,022 69
9,168,154 49
36,219,903 32

;

$72,988,163 16

.

War

Navy
Interest on

Total

The above

comprises the actual and

estimated receipts and expendi¬

fiscal year ending with June,
Receipts for Customs During Year

tures for the

ties

on

ending with June 30, 1866, were as
New York.

July, 1865
August, 1*65

.September, 1865..

$1,670 00
8,130 00

400 00

596 50

1,550 00

October, 1865
November, 1865
December, 1865

....

Total for six months.

January, 1866.
February, 1866
March, 1866

,= .

April, 1866
May, 1866.
June, 1866
Total for thefts, year.

It will be

1866..
1365-6.—The receipts for duj

principal ports of the United States during

imports at the four

the fisal year

$2,064,062 68

Grand total

\

Civil, foreign intercourse and miscellaneous.
Interior, pensions and Indians....

$12,646 50

Total

following is an

Internal Revenue
Miscellaneous, including

ISTHMUS.

Wells, Fargo & Co
Trevor & Colgate

$S18,668,839 63

For Customs
For lands

$2,051,456 18

Total

'.

.

RECEIPTS.

500,000 00

seeu

for the fiscal year

follows :

Philadelphia

Boston.

Baltimore.

$9,778,176 66 $1,366,666 24 $471,810 92 $401,850 32
356,663 86
13,113,689 50 1,665,894 32 456,275 66
271.878 00
634.686 70
12,929.615 64 1,597,6(30 23
190,700 53
496,141 95
10.973,513 01 1,225,393 80
272,052 43
435,612 59
9,933,488 76 1,5-17,688 32
190,694 81
349,058 79
953,048 85
8,348,750 31
$65,067,233 87 $8,356,192 76 $9,742,586 61 $1,683,839 95
$12,437,474 16 $1,003,005 22 $508,513 78 $310,462 51
340,188 26
322,549 83
12.008,273 74 1,548,073 33
318,085 01
693,318 53
11,173,164 62 1,824,796 21
1,469,278
947,435
268,839 98
10,950,896 78 1,683.988 09 757,890 48 441,078 89
22
54
11,322,150 10
635,828 21
331,176 68
9,563,539 38 1,407,652 23
$132,522,722 65 $16,792,987 43 $6,616,271 09

that the Grand total of the

$3,676,032 85

receipts from all four port9!

ending June 80, 1866, was $159,608,014 02.

California since January 1, 1866, have

Steamship*
rk

At date.

To date

$ 685,610
799,706

$ 685,6ie

1,449,074

3,879,266

389,837
673,615

7,983,155
8,372,992
9,046,607
9,776,469

1,485,314
2,430,198

.New York

21..

9...

July
July

148.000 74

receipts of treasure from

an follows ;
Date.
January 12..
19...
Janua y
February 1...
February 9...

been

February
March
March
March
March

the

is her treasure list:

Order

:

estimated statement of receipts and expenditures
April SO, 1S66, exclusive of such a9 are connected with
public debt:

The

$14,736,660
$18,446,175 1858
25,677,779
30,612.893 1857
1856
18.475,062
23,637,328 1855
18,363,561
.*
34,894.350 1854
18,122,563
3,254,976 1853
10,997,818
26,106,797 1852
14,411,003
40,838,057
from California.—The steamship Arizona, from Aspin
13th inst., with mails, passengers and treasure, arrived at

Saturday, July 21. The following

$29,190,626 41
15,817,669 89
271,705,679 13
31,195,964 03
96.919,456 38
417.835,395 84
370,833,443 78

including Treasury notes
*

-

,

from June 1 to

$49,779,151

..

$949,159,535 66

receipts...

Total

Same time in

time in

loans,-<fec

expenditures, public debt

Total

$416,013
49,363,138

..

$132,871,519 25
488,311 40
1,486,118 05
245,369,074 50
48,478,119 41
$428,693,142 61
520,466,393 05

.

Interest on public debt,
Total expenditures

5,330
1,300
64,000

Total for the

exclusive of

Navy

10,200

gold....
Foreign coin

$20,961,962 92

War

$2,867,7S7
113,255,9 6

American

68,494 30
28,777 00
3,000 00

Kong

Civil, foreign intercourse and miscellaneous
Interior, including pensions and Indian affairs

50,000 July 20—SS. Tentonia, HamburgForeign silver
1,500

American gold

35,891 44
25,000 00— $1,677,802 73
lOffOOO 00

EXPENDITURES.

97,142,440
Since January 1
$105,588,555 $105,022,360 $87,605,017 $116,123,753
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 July 21, 1866 :
gold....
91,644
July 18—9S. Aleppo, LiverpoolMexican silver
70,800
Gold bars
$6,640

Previously

697,393 23

$4,356,105 93
16,606,856 99

leant1, &c

From

1866.

$2,847,757
84,757,260

$919,018 06

Customs
Sales of public lands
Direct tax
Internal Revenue
Miscellaneous

the imports of dry

1865.

147,966 25

RECEIPTS.

of the exports
1864.

207,681 08

21,050,613 23
$88,650 31
National Finances—Receipts and Expenditures on the Govern¬
ment.—The following is an official statement of the receipts and expen¬
ditures of the United States from July 1,1865,to March 31, 1866 :

$136,801,907 $80,004,186 $181,411,861

1863.

$1,968,730 65

Decrease this year

(exclusive of specie) from
the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending July 24 :
FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.
following is a statement

The

345 831 40
5,000 00—

Total since January 1, 1S66
Corresponding period of 1865

$6,253,994
175,157,807

'

dry-goods trade will be found

week later.

goods for one

$3,687,174
2,317,012

132,878,470

$1,617,899 25

.-

Total since Jnne 1,1866.
Previously this year

$2,378,815
3,875,179

$3,923,437

1,623,733

General merchandise.

$1,240,829
2,446,345

$147 629 92
6,024 00

Nevada to Victoria

20—Per Lizzie to Shanghai
dune 21—Per Wm. Wilcox to Hong
dune 27—Per Aline to Hong Kong
dune

1866.

$1,463,394
2,460,043

$1,845,589

Francisco.—The exports of treasure
date have been as follows :

-

merchan¬

FOREIGN IMPORTS

Treasure from San

Francisco from June 1st to

June 2—Per Swallow to Shanghai
dune 8—Per Carl Ludwig to Hong Kong.
June 9—Per Golden Age:
To New York
To England
To Panama
Jnne 12—Per California to Hong Kong
June 13—Per Sunny South to Shanghai
Jnne 18—Per Constitution :
To New York
To England
To France
;
To Panama

266 bbls spirits turpentine, 4,537 bbls rosin,
87 bbl9 pitch, 6,455 galls sperm oil, 557,799 galls petroleum, 705
pork, 218 bbls beef, 226 tcs do, 117,604 pounds cutmeats,
do
butter, 1,628,480 do cheese, 418,505 do lard, 84,402 do tallow, 1,179
hhds and 27 other pkgs crude tobacco, 62,933 pounds manufactured to¬
bacco, as may be seen in a comparative table of exports which wo
give in our Commercial Epitome.
The following are the impacts at New York for week ending (for
dry-goods) July 19tb, and for me week ending (for general
dise) July 20th :
coal, 35 bales hay,

tons

105

CHRONICLE.

6,088.319
6,557,602

.Arizona
.Henrv Chauncey
.New York
..Arizona
.New York

.Arizona
.Costa Rica
New York

.Arizona—
.New York

.Arizona

729,862
809,459

1,072.820
1,276,505

324,552

949,906

892,865

1,429,833
2,051,456

10.585,901

11,904,199
12,977,019
14,253,524

14,578,076
15,527,982
16,420,347
18,038,246
19,468,079

21,519,535

®l)c SJanfecrs’ ©alette.
bonds, &c., lost, and

We give in our Bulletin
from day to day lists of
dividends declared*- These tables will be continued daily, and on Saturday
morning, such as have been published through the week in the Bulletin
will be collected and published m the Chronicle. Below will found those pub¬
lished the last week in the Bulletin.
"
' *

DIVIDENDS.
PAYABLE.
KATE

NAME OF COMPANY.

p.

o’t.

BOOKS CLOSED.
WHEN.

WHERE.

New York Banks.
Corn Exchange

5

Aug. 1.

Railroads Sc Canals.
Illinois Central RR. Co

5

New Jersey RR & TransCo.
Del. & Hud. Canal Coal Co

5
8

Aug. 1. Co.’s office, N Y. July 13 to Aug. 1.
Aug. 1. 2 Nassau street. July 18 to Aug. 2.
Ang. 1. 7 Nassau street. Julv 13 to July 28.

At Bank.

July 23 to Aug. 1.




AT

BUSINESS
The

following shows the description and number of shares sold at the Regu¬
Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday.

and

ar

Mon.
89

Bank Shares
Railroad shares,

Tues.
610

200

Week.

1,055

Central of New Jersey

•

.

^

•

•

1,712
,600

2,420

Cleveland & Pittsburg....
Cleveland & Toledo

.

500
70

1,300

4,000
8,200

2,000

13.500
10.475

; 1,000

20

4,800
5,500

;,ooo

1,000

2,830

3,600

4,500

....

29.143765,0
3160.
....

55

150

19,335
#

....

.

ioo

300

.

,

.

....

..

386

4,300

5,200

800

15,910
1,300

800

54,245
2,900

1,000

1,806

4.006

400
’813

300

1.050

*3,S50

318

2,231
17,100

60

200

800

800
100

1,500

3,100

2,700

1,800

5,600

50

50

ioo

1,300

682

1,600

2,032
15,380

3,000

7,050
10,200
29,057

Milwaukee & P. du Chien.

Milwaukee & St. Paul

....

New York Central
New York & New Haven.
Ohio & Mississippi ($100)
Panama

...

....

1,700

!

1,010

1,895

4,975

3,250

23

24

30

1,050

400

38

300

1,700

500

700
4.300

....

9

....

Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic.

>,4(X)

1.200

1,700

2.900

3,200

8,100

1,190

4,152

■5.915

50

Rome, Watertown & Og.
Stouington

....

50
300

50

Toledo & Wabash

....

....

112
9

50
100
300

Miscellaneous shares, viz.

200

.

300
100

2. son

500
100

500

100

100

200
000

200

Pacific Mail

300

800

4.200

in

.

.

.

1.000
100

500

150

.

Smith & Pannalee Gold...
Western Lniou Telegraph
W. U. Telegraph—Russian
Wilkesbarre

.

4,8(H)

4,550

14,650

100
600

168
200

3.650

5,800

1,206

18,308

.

.

G,9i6

3,102

800

490

’

*

*

•

*

•

.

....

.

.

.

200

.

The volume of transactions in shares at the

135
278
100

....

-

100

’Wyoming Valley Coal....

400

1,300

ioo

.

000

Quicksilver

1,900

....

4(H)
15

20

.

6,600

300

50

100
TOO

100
4<JU
700

.

100

300
250

4,100

100

Ashburton Coal
Atlantic Mail
Boston Water Power
Canton..
Central Ccal
Cumberland Coal..
Del & Hudson Canal

....

....

....

100

200

»-

Last
week.

Last
week.

Prev’s
week.

30,131
34,370
53,415

rev’s
week.
38.400

l

65,306

17,906

15,600

44.036

20900

40,052

21.744

37,137
19,630

56,730

31.029

30,532

5i>, 100
53,300

58,962

22,932

53,464

66,329

34,925

17,733

41,550

31,000

76,475

48,733

121,265

167,471

14,531
13,770

13,363

Total of week

The transactions in shares

37,218

43,7(H)
61,800

87,736
98,937

306,817 427,771

185,552 260,300

weekly since the commencement of the year are

shown in the following statement:

ending Regular
Board.

Friday.
January 5

Open

Board.
243,900

Both Week ending
Boards
Friday.

Regular Open
Both
Board.- Boards

Board.

208,650

20... .176,956
27....242,738
4....135,949
301.400 549,143 May
11....139,127
239.700 440,807 i May
18.. 205,609
227,800 436.9401May
25... .228,080
Februaryl6... .234,285 228.700 462,985 Juue 1 (5 days) .228,873
8....204,080
Februury23.... 187,913 1 S3,200 371,113|June
March
221,500 439,461 June
15... .126,591
2....217.961
181.350

January 12.... 339,109
January 19.... 243,815
January 26.... 247,743
February 2....201,107
February 9
209,140

328.400
272.300

ending on Friday—
$1,304,000

$238,300
372,850
365,600

274,5tiO

27

1,993,200

882,350

davs)..

$1,785,300
5.809,250
2,18lcj,20
3,349,050

$54,000

$129,000

5.044,400
1,093,650

6 (4
13

425,250 April
667,509 April
516,115} Mav

226.230
182,600
190,450
360,940
454,381

572,000
430,500

«

117,500

150,000

93,000

Friday, July 27, 1866—P. M.
Thf. Money Market.—The

385,606
468,968
318.449
329,597

566,549
682,461
380,306 6! 9,179
278(850 482,930
203,910 395,501

market exhibits the

^effects of the

redemption of Certificates of Indebtedness at the Sub-Treasury, in
a general increase of ease.
The banks hold large balances, for
which they cannot readily find employment at the current rates of
interest, and money is very freely offered to brokers at 4@5 per
cent.
The prevailing rate on call loans is 5 per cent.; but, with
the large unemployed balances, it would seem to be improbable that
the continuance of this rate can be calculated upon.
On Govern¬
ment collaterals the rate is generally-4 per cent.
»
Exchange with the West has again turned in favor of this city,
and moderate balances of currency are daily received from that
section.

-

,

complaint of the excess of national bank currency,
probably found means of sending it to the inte¬
rior, or having forwarded it to the issuing banks for redemption.
Discounts are unusually quiet.
The supply of paper is very
light, which adds to the difficulty of finding employment for idle
funds.
Prime notes of 60 days pass at about 5£ per cent.; longer
dates at 6@7 per cent. ; second class names range at 10@15 per
There is less

the banks having

cent.

The

,

Prev'e
week.

838.700
781,900
515.700

1,614,000

2,485,250

20

Ju y

comparatively, for

two Boards,

day of the two last weeks, and the total lor the same weeks, is shown by
following statement:
Keg. Board.--, "/—Open Boards /—Both Boards—,
Last
week.

781.240

,

19,400

00
300
700

L,i(KI

...

Michigan Central
Michigan Southern

Week

7,463,800

and for the weeks

295

2,400

Indianapolis & Cinn.

the

2,903,600

1,679,500
1,236,600

12,660

4,100

100

Hudson River
lllino s Central

each

3,006,700

3,739,650
2,258,250

1,692,100

139

59

3,300

2,900

530
131

Del., Lack. <fc Western...
Erie Railway

Mariposa

3,931.300

5,798,300
8,002,700

46,356
25,665

50

10

Cleveland, Col. & Cine

.

500
50

150

6,968
'

.

200

200
50

7,050
1,000

9,520

ra

....

25

Chicago & Rock Island...

200
•

50
300

•

IU0

Chicago & Alton
Quincy...
Chicago, Bur.
Chicago & Northwestern.

Marietta & Cincinnati

March

$12,155,700
9,822,000
10,622,840
12,056,150
12,279,450
12,078,750

$3,035,500

$952,900
1,691,500

April
May
June

viz.:

Catawiesa

Reading

Thurs. Fri’y.
10
25

Wed.
321

100

Sat.

Bonds.

Bonds.

$3,340,100
2,591,900

$4,827,200
3,846,500

January
February

Total
amouut.v

Railroad

State, &c.,

/—Governments
>
Notes.
Bonds.

BOARDS.

STOCK.

THE

[July 28, 1866.

CHRONICLE.

THE

106

following

are

the current rates for loans of various classes :

Call loans
Loans ou bonds & mort..
Prime endorsed bills, 2

Per cent.
Good endorsed bills,
4 months
do
single names.
Lower grades

Per cent.
4
@ 5
6

@ 7

months

-

3 &
6

@7

7 @8
10 @15

opened with a general
dullness in Governments. The proposal iu Senator Sherman’s
finance bill, limiting the option of conversion or redemption on
Seven-thirty notes, had a depressing effect upon that class of secur¬
ities, aud the price steadily declined to I03i@103£. The subse¬
quent disapproval of the clause in the House, and advices reporting
the improbability of its ultimate passage had the effect of check¬
ing the decline, and yesterday and to-day the notes have been ac¬
tive, and the price has advanced to 103|@104 for all the series.
United States Securities.—The week

Five twenties have also been more

in demand since the middle of

per cent.
The issue of 1862 has
demand for export. It is estimated that
steady
the Persia took out on Wednesday two and a half to three millions
9
150,864 238,680 389,544
March
206.849 211.300 41M49 June
To-day they have been in demand from domestic houses,
284,931 of bonds.
March
16....206.312
213,450 419.762 June
March
335,910 597,010, July 6 (4 days) 113,413 110.300 223,713
23....261.106
apparently in connection with movements for putting up the issue
202,529 227,640 436,169
March
122,563 208,200 330.763 July
2'0.... 167,471 260,300 427,771
170,934 247.400 418,334 (July
of 1865, for the purposes of conversion ; for there is reason for sup¬
April
121,265 185,552 306.817
250,11S 211,650 464,768. July
April
posing that the ,extreme act ivity of the last two days has been con¬
The Government and State, &c., bonds sold at the Regular Board, daily, last
nected with funding operations. Old Five twenties close quite firm
week, are given iu the following statement:
at 107i@107f.
We discontinue, from this date, our quotations for
Week
Fri.
Wed.
Thnr.
Mon
Tnes.
Sat..
$2,000 $194,000
U. S. 6’s, 1881.
$1,000 $104100
$1,000 $160,000
$204)00
Certificates of Indebtecness, the issue having now been almost en¬
191.000 1,588,200
U.S 6’s(5-20’s).
397,200 172,000 201,500 268,000
358,000
31,5.0
31,500
U.S 6’s (old*..
tirely redeemed.
164,500
22.000
72,000
19.000
37,000
U.S 5's (10-40s
12,500
2,000
The subjoined closing quotations for leading Government securi¬
10.0(H)
1,000
15,000
4,000
U.S 5's (old)..
497,500
852,350 ties will show the difference in
71,050
65,800
U. S 7-30 notes
21,0(H)
130,000
47,000
prices as compared with previous
State

bouds, viz.:

3,000

California 7*s.
Conn. 6’s

...

*

1,000

Illinois 6’s...

Virginia 6’s...

2,000
28,IKK)
50,000

2,000

7,000

5,000

19,000
1,000
2,000

2,500
5,000
10,000

11,000

20,000

25,000

0,000

5,000
....

6,000

30,000
....

following is a summary of the amount of
securities, and railroad bonds sold on each day :
Sat.
.

-

3,000

5,000

Mon.

Tues.

4.000

40,000

50,000
61,500
75,000
17,000
6.0(H)

22,000

16,000
....

3,000
2,000

25,000

The

S. Bonds
S. Notes
ate&Citv bonds
ailroad Bonds..

10,000
61,000

6.000

4,000

City bondft:
Brooklyn 6’s..
Jersey City 6's

.

......

2,0<H)
1,000
1,000

1,000

Kentucky 6's

Louisiana 6’s
Missouri 6’s..
N. Y. State 5’s
N. Y. State 6’s
N. Y. State 7’s
N. Carolina 6’s
Ohio O’s
Tennesee 6’s..

3,000

2,000

.

105,000
4,000
63,000

i

• - .

. •

2,000

Governments, State and City

Wed.

Thur.

Fri. "

Week.

$380,000 $410,700 358,500 274,500 $338,500 $231,000 $1.993,200
21,000
71,050 65,800 497,500
832, .‘150
47,000 130,000
64,000
50,000 113,000
97,000
430,500
42,000
64,500
12,000
18,000
16,000
1,000
93.000
9,000
38,000

454,500

413,550 533,300 826,500 3,349,050

The totals of each class of securities sold

in the first six months of the year

Total amount....

are

$478,900

643,200

shown in the statement which follows;

the week, and

have advanced

been sustained

by

a

weeks:
June 22. June 29.

U.
U.
U.
U.
U.
UU.
U.

S.
S.
S.
S.
S
8
S.
S

6’s, 1881 coup
5-20’s, 1862coupons.
5-20’s, 1864
“

5-20’s, 1865
10-40’s,

“

7-30’s 1st series
7-30’s 2d Series
7-30’s 3rd series

Railroad

and

.....

ilO*
103*
102*
162*
96*
102*
102*

102*

106*

106*

105*

104*

105*

104*
98*
108*
103*

99

103*
103*
103*

103*

107*
105*

105*
98*
104
104
104

Miscellaneous Stocks.—The

took out of town many operators
business

July 6. July 13. July 20. July 27.
109*
109*
109*

no* x.clU8*
104*
105*
104*
103*
104*
103*
98
97*
103*
103*
103*
103*
103*
103*

Saratoga race3
at the beginning of the week, and

consequently opened dull, and with a general weakness in

prices. Subsequently, however, there was a general renewal of
activity, aud the transactions of the last two days have been very
large. Speculation is by no means confined to the brokers. Tuere
is a larger outside element iu the market than has been seen perhaps
since the extraordinary excitement of 1864, and it would appear
that the activity has not yet reached its climax. The current opera*
tions are stimulated less by inventions and sensation rumors than is
usually the case in periods of speculative excitement, and the move

July 28,1866.]

107

CHRONICLE.

THE

Foreign Exchange.—The supply of bills during the week has
much of the character of a spontaneous revival of been in excess of the demand, and transactions have been quite
confidence, based upon the current earnings of the roads.
imited, A considerable amount of bills have been made against ship¬
l The Erie directors have determined not to declare any dividend
ments of Five-twenties.
Importers appear indisposed to remit,
for the current half year, upon either the common or preferred
with gold at its present premium, and the result is a very limited
stock. The decision has not appreciably affected the stock, it being
demand for bills.
considered that had a dividend been made, it would liave been at
The following are the closing quotations For the several classes
the expense of other interests, and would, in fact, have had to be
of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks :
Julv 27.
July 20.
borrowed. The price closes at G4J. Hudson River has been very
July 13.
July 6.
107 @108
107 @108
107
((£1083/
107 (a) 108
London Comm’l..
108)/@ 108?/
10 s3/64 108)6
firm, touching 1201. Michigan Central has also advanced two per
1083/6£ 1083/ 109* @ 109V
do bkrs’/o/i</
110 @110)6
no @1103/
no @1103/
110 <o 110 3/
do
do short
cent.
Cleveland and Toledo is 24 higher. Northwestern has been
5.13?/@5,11 v 5.15 @5.123/
5.15 <f >5.12)6 5.12)/@i.l0
Paris, lone/
5.11)/@5 10
5.10 (f£5.08?/ 5.073/6/5.063/ 5.10 @5.08?/
do short
unsteady, and on the whole weak, but closes firmer.
5.163/@5.13?/
5.15 (J &5.13?4 5.13?/@5.12)/ 5.15 @5.123/
Antwerp
5.163/@5.13?Z
The following are the closing quotations for leading stocks, com
5.15 (f£5.13?/. 5.13?/@5.123/ 5.15 @5.12)/
Swiss
37)/@
373/64
30?/(?£
37V@_37?6
42 @
42 ®
pared with those of previous22. June 29. July 6. July 13 Ju'y 20. July 27. Hamburg
weeks:
413/(7 £ 42
Amsterdam
nominal.
June
43
ment lias very

,

a

-

—

—

—

-

June 15.

Cumberland Coal

River....

Reading
Mich. Southern..

Central
"and Pittsb.
and Toledo.

Michigan
Clev.

59
23

543/
223/

9S%

9836

9836

9936

'Oils
110>*

59 X
11136

613/

68)6

1083s

205

30?/

preferred

59 %
94

Rock Island
..

The Cold

116

120

1093/ xd.107>6
80
783/
xd.10536

10676
Sl%

1103/
82?/

111?/
83?/

8336
108)6
3136
613/

84*6

99

7436

....

30

59)/

109?/
343/
63 V

90)6

94

96

98)6

973/

121)/

121

98)6
122)/

the Gold

$7,595,763
6,069,341

lion.

Specie.

$865,847

$2,516,006

4,601.074

1,888,498

4.552,388

1,885,111
1.912.096

411,416
2,820

8,730,188
4,531,413
3,313,672
2,923,940

Fulton

2,681,761

Chemical
Mcrch’ts Exchange
National
Butch. »fc Drovers..
Mech’s & Traders..
Greenwich
Leather Mauufaet’s
Seventh Ward
State of N. York...
American Exc’ge..
Commerce

5,818,434
3,429,156
2,731,876
2,323,270
1,755,000

1,072,913
3,336,067

12,202

City

571,217
20,534
18,685

452,692
496,656
236,458
150,0()0

28,008
43,555

6,205
157,8:15
168,729
11,132

202,828
44,048

4S2,066

3,145.734

129,404

274,208
41,250
25,893
105,864

556,950

1,596,327
4,474,552
1,909,508
1,365,084
2,219,507
1,744,438
1,361,000
6,337,755

North America —
Hanover

2,353,059
2,501,183

51.430

Irviug
Metropolitan

1,419.000

11.000

191,900

10,300,733
1,581,071

23,335
17,010

2.493,216

149,809

2.613,814

65,386
49,752
34,738
17,793
61,639

903,159
133,500
4,536
504,800

gold

each of the last six days:

on
21

July
July
July

.

23
24

.

Highest. Lowest.
150)/
149)/July
15134
1503a July

.

15034

July

150

Highest. Low’st
150
149%

25
20
27

1493$
150

1497/
15034

exports of specie last week amounted to $430,013. On
Wednesday, the Persia took out $925,804, chiefly in gold bars.
The steamship Arizona, from Aspinwali, brought, on the 21st, $2,051,410 of California gold.
The transactions for last week at the Custom House and SubThe

Treasury were as

follows :
Custom House.

.

Receipts.

$348,453 45

July 16
“*

“
“

418,588
362,354
414,343
482,515
453,389

17
18
19

“

20

“

21

Total...
Balance in Sub Treasury

48
82
00
56
16

$2,480,149 47
morning of July 16

,

Sub-Treasury

lhvymeuts.

$10^26,748 94

1,807,320 32
1,181,121 06
995,339 92
926,062 0 4
1,335,846 62
$16,472,438 90

Receipts.

,

$4,329,'543 52
1,680,540 87

2,210,059
1,506,337
2,245,003
1,825,625
$13,797,169

27
06
3S
25
35

94,248,198 37

$103,045,367 72
Deduct

payments during the

16,472,438 90

week

$91,572,928 82
1
2,675,269 55
Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, $2,452,000. Included*
iu the receipts of customs were $293,000 in gold, and $2,187,149 in

Balance

’i

Saturday evening
during the week

on

Decrease

Gold Certificates.

following table shows the
Treasury since April 7 :
Custom
House.

Ending
Apr. 7
u

11
11

May
May

14....

5....

12....
19....

11

26....
June 2
IV
9....
11
16....
11
23....
...

•*

July
11

41




aggregate transactions at

30....
7....
14....
21....

2,857,703
2,535,567
2,240,307
2,711,181
2,417,391
2,542,814
2,358,454
2,182,395
2,141,086
2,071,621
2,209,676
2,902,264
2,471,626
2,486,296
2,480,149

Bank’g As’n

Grocers’
North River
.-w
East River
Mnnuf. & Merch’ts
Fourth National...
Central
Second National...
Ninth National....
First National
Third National
N. Y. Exchange...

Dry Dock

5:Sub-Treasury

r-

Payments.

Receipts.

5,359,749

1-2,068,189

14,688,239

21,953,904
14,119,991
31,241,874

13,937,517
35,688,713
15,034,333
23,547,689
48,958,044
45,911,432
11,006,409

Changes in
Balances.

90,325,685
97,591,349
97,773,823
93,326,985

12,022,302
34,958,792

98,318,690
20,026,038
28,280,222 103,051,222
50,955.238 111,021,417
85,202,321
20,092,337
89.613,442
15,417,530
94,261,688
13,654,093
97,639,849
18,400,464
80,815,741
18,104,083

18,039,083
10,184,139
16,472,438

91,572,928

9,005,847

the Sul -

25,259,144
16,366,534
13,797,169

88,065,802
94,248,198

Balances.
dec
$1,534,856
i 11c

6,704,395

inc
inc
dec

7,265,064
182,478

dec
inc
inc
inc
dec
inc
inc

4,446,833
4,991,701
4,732,532
7,970,194
25,819,095
4,411.121)
4,648,246
3,378.161
16,794,108
7,220,061
6,183,395

dec

2,675,269

inc

inc
inc

5,746,600
4,050,400
3,892,507

7.222

720<744
898.500

18,118
497.803
213,927
63,757
222.150

34,393
9,729

2,761,565
1.275.893

Totals

46.449

4,728,320
15,268,396

131,973
182,075
10,976

92,500
507,805
1,600,000
307,871

6,146

78.500

19,352

12,152

11,411

1,127,663
1,291,608
"1,500,735
1,0:35,797

1..

282,000
1,100
2,078.755

487

7,052

1.105,510
14 918,332
13 378,171

85,437
13,422

1,582,747

218,132

6

'*49,478
937,590

74,383
7,301

3,419,857

35,223

2

1,4:34,218

2,094,942
2,252,588
1,472,813
3,769.160
2,955,492
2.560,385
3,190,472
1,113.981
1,631,354

614,740

1,283,709
524,225
390,240

945,402
410,645

597,000
1,704,000
544,500
845,578
954,353
690,465
1.341,000
404,000
961,000
804,473
246,850
626,650

876,400

333,246
1.252.156
5.134,711

17,578,797
1,44-1,583
1,234,806
1,210,300
741,595
1,092,702

11,890,688
14,571,993

941,315
6,9S0,327
3,353,635
2,963,486

683,506

660

267.968

718,313

111,820

10,363
7,141

13,273
99,450

225,S67
1,209,665

10,8G0,147 27,579,020

213,049,079

$255,965,018

2.458,651
2,974,629
4,380,160
2,250,517
885,633
1,120,860

3.947.374

934,852
447,615
797,0-11

270.000

1

1,080,747

Bull’s Head

587,786

308,371
242,299
261,590
334,953

3,980,995
4,617,098
302,016
1,703,424
1,377,386
1,225,538
27°,340
27,000
80,524,992

important changes have occurred, during the week, in the
banks, owing chiefly to the redemption of the Cer¬
tificates of Indebtedness by the Sub-Treasury.
The deviations from the returns of the previous week are as fol¬
Some

condition of the

lows

:

Loans

Dec. $3,168,416

Specie

Dec.

...Dec.

Deposits

1,591,537 Legal Tenders
225,152

The several items compare as

weeks

$2,863,009 $13,321,981 $11,790,124 $83,621,790

21....
28....

Imp. & Traders...
Park
Mech.

2.978,707

131.103

1,824,285
952,693

Marine

Atlantic

Circulation

The

Weeks

Continental
Commonwealth. .
Oriental
“...

778,924

11,922

ping rate.

Nassau
Market
St. Nicholas
Shoe and Leather.
Corn Exchange...

2,796,552

46,130

815.626

1,967,272

Citizens’

1,656.264
907,246

918,8.-1
4,323,195
900,000
797,550

£45,787

320,879
282,959

for

<437,544
424,127
448,270
374,124
1,502.547
563,667

4,870,817
7*673,182
9.913,057
4.934,524
2,739,766

436,758

1,345,754

.

670,439

85,613
24,761

*

against it at 109@109£. or ^ per

cent., below the usual-specie ship¬
The price has ranged during the week at 149j@15lf,

906.053

1,462,688
1,025,026
2.202,908
2,668,230

5,491,214
2,591.003
1,157,969
1,752,575

254,822

3.624,113

Mercantile
Pacific

4,691,198

2,434,010
2,417,510

57,754

5,109,795

Ocean

3,636,233

3,'665,536
10,095,725
3,643,268
3,314,635

436,224

25,015,358

Broadway

293,000

180,961
368,728
34,462
113,162

1,147,072
3,556,106
11,613,719

$3,840,1-14

5,637,9:30
5,722,846

487,693

763,367
190,105
97,418
1,447,900

7,711,449
5,772,974

Tenders.

deposits.
$6,851,502

13.201
615,168

474,829

Republic

highest and lowest quotations

|

Legal

Net

Circula-

Loans and
discounts.

Chatham
Peoole’s

have been the

York tor the

of business on Julv 21
v

,3,234,573
1,892,433
5,471,974

The following

@ 793/
@ 73?/

following statement shows the

Tradesmen’s

tlie superior attractions of the Stock Ex¬
change. There is, however, a considerable “ shortinterest out¬
standing among the importers, who appear to think that the present
premium cannot be long maintained. On the other side, an import¬
ant amount of gold is held off the market, by parties who hope to
realise, ultimately, a profit out of the necessities of the importing
interest. In the meantime they are lending gold at a nominal per¬
centage. The high rate of interest at London enables bankers to
remit gold with lower rates for exchange than ordinarily permit of
the exportation of specie.
During this week, one firm lias exported
nearly one millions dodars of gold bars, selling the exeh mge drawn
and closes at 150

79
73

-

:

Merchants’
Mechanics’
Union
America
Plieuix

obedience to

Room, iu

74)/@ 75

with the commencement

Banks.
New York
Manhattan

6436
643/
993/
97*6
1013/
99?/
124)/ xd.120

Market.—Speculation has almost forsaken

O

—

—

*

LHCG

8436
11236
35?/

84 ?6
1103/
35)6

ending

793/

@
79)Z@

-

Banks of the City of New

condition of the Associated
week

43 @
79 @
74 @

Banks. —The

New York City

110

—

....

8236 '
lor.;/

983/
12036

122

Berlin

114 V

95

973 s

Wayne
Illinois Central

Fort

53

26)6
104?/
64)6

8436
10636
2936
5836

82

Bremen

523/
223/
1043/
65?/

23

nom(% —
783/(t£ 78?/
74 6£ 75

Frankfort

'

50

—

....

79
108

109

Northwestern.<..
“

47*6

503/

....

Canton Co
Mariposa pref....
New York Central

Clev.

60
24

473/
55)/
233/

1093-/
793/

Quicksilver

Erie
Hudson

....

....

46

46
51

45

45

Inc.. $5,859,036

Inc.. 4,983,015

follows with the returns of previous

:

Aggregate
Circula¬
Legal
Clearings.
tion.
Deposits. Tenders.
Specie.
$24,127,001 $189,094,961 $71,445/65 $602,315,743
Apr. 7.. .$242,643,753 $11,486,295
578,537,855
244,009,839 11,0:45,129 24,533,981 193,153,469 73,910,370 535,834,774
Apr.14..
196,808,578 77,602,688
Ayr.21.. 242,067,003 9,495,463 24,045,857 202,718.574 80,589,022 545,339,668
8,243,937 25,377,280
Apr. 28.. 245,017,092
81,204,447 603,556,177
May 5.. 253,974,134 10,914,997 25,415,677 210,373,303 85,040,659 523,098,538
257,621,317 13.970,402 24,693,259 217,552,853 85,710,107 579,342,488
May 12..
217,427,729
May 19.. 255,BiH),463 13,595,’465 25,189,864
713,575,444
257,969,593 19,736,929 26,223,867 208,977.905 73,829,947 713,575,444
May 26..
69.178.992
June 2..
250,959,022 21,859,093 20,244,225 198,127.289 74,628,674 633,656,381
J uue 9..
249,5:48,959 15,821,603 25,907,253 202,503,949
79,179,304 613,698,031
June 16. 247,301,547 11,217,305 25,887,876 202,415.676
8,504.096 26,585,394 201,969,238 80,840,578 696,447,630
June 23.
218,436,808
7,797,218 26,706,622 204,357,272 81,882,640 568,842,490
June 30.
250,881,168
9,S65,266 27,296,530 205,799,611 79,541,638 511,182,914
July 7. 257,534.833
75,541,977 637,655,787
July 14. 259,133,434 12,451,684 27,804,172 207,190,043
80.524.992 598,705,726
July 21. 255,965,018 10,860,147 27,579,020 213,049,079
Loans.

.

.

.

.

.

.

-

.

.

.

,




of the condition of the
the morning of July 2, 1866, and June 24,1865 :

City Banks

on

following is the statement of
England for the week ending July 11, 1866 :

Foreign Banking.—The

following is the quarterly statement

The

[July 28,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

108

ofi

ISSUE

LIABILITIES.

July 2,1866.

June 24,1865.

$83,357,309

$84,322,200

Capital
Net profits

23,144,8:38

47.844,158

9.550,343

4,274,737

$403,288,369

RESOURCES.

$131,883,169

$164,155,672

Loans and discounts
Stacks
Bonds and mortgages
Real estate
Due from otlfer banks
Cash items and bauk notes.

97,899.514

83,179,705
792.091

5,7.-2,426
16.219,535

—

256.901

13,476,622

66,841,558
15,552.259
71,542,105

88,212.823

166,339

208,582

Over drafts

$403,288,369

$445,182,152

Tota's

following comparative statement

Philadelphia Banks.—The

condition of the leading items of the Philadel¬
phia Banks for the last and previous weeks
shows the average

Julv 14.

$14,642,150

$14,642,150

49,493.405

Capital
Loans

July 21.

49,009.316

Circulation....

37,575,560

9,427,963

The most marked change in the statement

last week

is

increase of

ail

Notes.

2,726,7x9
21,472.435
706,381

bills

Gold and silver coin...

Increase

£3.659.092
2.720.739

Government securities...
Other securities
Notes unemployed

Decrease.

21,472,485

On the other side of the

29.039.534

3,094.685
705,955

compared with the

gives the following results when
previous week:
The return

Rest
Public deposits
Other deposits

£10,278,123

£43,118,297

£43,118,297

3,003
1,000,896
132,00:

14,183

of £619,035 ;

crease

£45.552
4.073.512

Increase.

.

account—
c

500.000

Decrease
Decrease
Decrease

10,278.123
.......

29.039.534

3,094,685

,710,020

'241,115

circulation is £25.192,830, being a de¬
and the stock of bullion in both departments

showing a decrease of £883,475
preceding statement.

is £13,993,470,
with the

of the averages for the

million dollars of

over a

3.6)9,692

Rest.
Public deposits.,
Other deposits
Seven day aud other

The amount of notes in

21,312.564

20,311,668
37,707,567
9,4-12,146

Government securities
Other securities

£14.553,000

Proprietors’ capital

$484,189

Decrease..
Decrease..
Increase
Decrease..
Decrease..

849,770

852.773

Specie
*■...
Legal Tenders
Deposits

3.984,900

13,287,515

BANKING DEPARTMENT.

6.669,902

60.687.540
5.943.778

Specie
Legal tenders

£11,015,100

£28,287,515

£28,287,515

237,913,572
3,183.006

$445,182,152

Total

Government debt
Other securities.
Gold coin and bullion

21.439,981

2’.',900,155
61.525,575
252,014,047

Circulation
Due banks
Due Depositors
Due all others

DEPARTMENT.

£28,287,515

Notes issued

the Bank

legal tender

BANK

when compared

LT ST.

STOCK

-J

notes.

following comparison shows
phia Banks at stated periods :
The

Apr. 28

Circulation.

$8,779,166

912.023

8,794,348

896,741

8,930,420

897.913

8,918,938

48.036.984
47,564,996
48.118,897

1.988,742
9,022.553

20.568,591
21,105.316

48,616,145

867.094
890,121
859 633
897.381

37.296.648
37.078,417
38.189.506

$18,949,719

5

14,646.263
19.618,232

....

...

..

....

June 2
June 9
June 16
June 23
June 30

..

....

.

.

....

.

21.455.836
20.540,095
20.311,008

..

7

July

Deposits.
$30,032 867
36,987,008
38,414,585

Specie.

$890,244

19,715.093
21,154.9.-9

....

May 12
May 19
May 26

Philadel-

$ 16.832.734
48.0<H),654
48,2 '6,256
48,336.567

Loans.

Legal Tenders.

Date.
Mav

the condition of the

July 14
21,312,504
Juy 21
Boston Banks.—The

9.007,515

38.326,934
36.972,472

37,242,976
38,275.788

48,166.814
48,266.904

899,999

9.219,553
9.290,094

863,454

9,325.475

48,892,594

866,981

49.493.405

852,773
849,770

9,431.664
9,442,146

49,0o9,310

....

36,715.306

3

9,427,303

4

4

footings of the weekly, statement of the

compared with the previous statement, shows the
following variations: Loans have decreased $51,370; specie has
decreased $11,908
legal tender notes have increased $1,176,899 ;
the amount due from other banks has increased $344,258, aud
amount due to other banks has decreased $426,178 ; deposits have
increased $527,958 ; National circulation has decreased $87,291,
,

following are the lootings of the-weekly statement
Boston banks, with those of the two previous reports :
$41,900,000
95,995,866

Loans

441,689

Specie
Legal tender notes

22,786,738
12,016.850

Due from other banks
Due to other banks

16,875,950
40,935,853
24,057,765
401.544

Deposits
Circulation (National)
Circulation (State) ...

Below

we

four months
2

April

May

June

July

July 16.
$41,900,000
96,047,236

of the

Julv 9.

$41,900,000
93,802,870
468,602
21,066,745
11,003,-887
15,903,148
40.010,733
23,302,: 22
391,706

453,597
21,609,839
11.672,601

17,302,128
40,407,895
24,145,056
413,113

for each week for the last

:

Loans.
Specie. Tenders. Deposits. National.
$92..‘151.979 $53-.556 $20,761,014 $36,697,227 $23,087,693

State.

$869,329

9

92,142,975

487.455

20,304,570

37,426,560 23,266,642

830,069

16
23
30
7

91.250,882
86.120,897
86,723,001

457,648
411,693

19,902.647

37.606.696

23,635.043

777.198

90,369,569

14
21
28
4
11
25
16
23

90,328,5. >4

576.150
501.013

21.415,716
22,462,522

36,946,182 22.469,488
38,396.210 22,856,656
41,205,276 23.516,330
42.021.976 29,551,579

744,041

401,113

19,309,145
19.549,614

472.172

22,973,509
23,658,956

ATIO.VAL
was

give the comparative totals

89.634,804
91.833,402

92,287,648
89.878,993
94,336,170
96,017.000

436.391
503.991
374,966
323 835

453,600

95,995,866 441,689

26,148,678
25.470.926

25.019,436

41,610.149
41.631,746
42,992,749
42,858.986
42.587,020
40.407.0o0

23,195,968

23.722,277
23,679.025
22,916,559
23,633.003
24,145.000

21,610,000
22,780,7:38 40,935,853 24,057,765

744,425

719,668
695,527
661,819

,644,658

commence

$50;000. This bank filed its papers
year ago, and has not been allowed to commence business
owing to its State circulation not having been reduced as provided
for by law.
The total number of banks so far established is
over a

1;655.

following comparison shows the progress of the
May 5, in respect to number, capital, and circulation :
The

banks since

Date.
B’ks. Capital. Circulation.
Circulation.
$280,263,890
$271,262,165 June 16.. 1,653
281,234,460
May 12.. 1,650
272,878,895 June 23.. 1.653
282,555,440
May 19.. 1.6.50
274.653.195 June 30.. 1,653
283.627,605
May 26.. 1,650 414,921,479 276.540.510 July 7.. 1,653

June 2.. 1,650
June 9.. 1,650

.
.

Chatham

.

..

.

City (Brooklyn)
Commerce

Commonwealth
Continental
Corn Exchange*
Croton

.

Capital.

277,379,660 July 14.. 1,654
278,905,675 July 21.. 1,655

East River

.

Eighth
Fifth
First
First (Brooklyn). ...
Fourth
Fulton
Far. & Cit.(Wm’bg).

Gallatin
Greenwich*
Grocers’

Importers &

Trad...

Irving

LeatlierManufact’rs.
Long Isl (Brook.) ..
Manhattan*
Manufacturers’
Manufac. & Merch.*
Marine
Market

Mechanics’
Mechanics’ (Brook.).
Mech. Bank. Asso.
Meehan. & Traders’.
Mercantile
Merchants’
Merchants’ Exch....

284,566,675

Nassau*..

(Brooklyn)

.

.

..

..

.

National
New York
New York County..

NewYorkExchange.
Ninth
North America
North River*
Ocean

.

.

Hanover

Nassau

Newport, N. Y.,
business last week, under the National

.

.

Central
Central (Brooklyn).

507,371
413.000

Banking law, with a capital of

Date.
B’ks.
Mav 5.. 1,650

Butchers & Drovers

Metropolitan

401,544

Bid. Ask.

140
5
3,000,000 Jan. and July. 'July ’66
July ’66..,. ..
100,(too Jan. and July
100'
500,000 Ian. and July.. !July ’66. .
iin
100 5,000,000 May and Nov.. IMay. ’66!
100
300,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
500.0(H) Jan. and July.. !Ju)y ’66
50,
ioo‘
25'i,0(l0 Jan. and July. jJuly ’66......
25: 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. I July ’66.
50
300,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
50'
200,000 Quarterly— July ’66
July ’66
25800,000 Jan. and July
112
May. ’66
00 3,000,000 May and Nov
July ’66
2(K>,000 Jan. and July
July ’66
450,000 Jan. aud July
July ’66
€00,000 Quarterly
4(H), 000 Jan. and July.. July ”66
1(H): 1,000,000 May and Nov.. May. ’66
50
300,000 Jan. and July.. Ju y ’66
Julv ’66
5 HO
11
100 10,000,000 •Jan. aud July.
6 1U2^;104
100:
750,00u Jan. and July.. July ’66
5
lUO
UHT 2,000,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
loo: 1,000,000 Feb- aud Aug.. Aug. ’66
100
200,000
16
1()0!
100.000 .Quarterly— July ’66..
3lA
30J 200,(HH) •Jan. and July.. .July ’66
4
50;
350,000 Jan. aud July.. July ’66.
5
100!
250,000 Jan. and July.. .Juiy ’66
5
100
150,000 Jau. and July.. JJuly ’66
10
100:
500,000 May and Nov.. May. ’66
Jan. and July.. July '66
10
IDS*
5
5,000,0(H) Jan. and July.. .Jul- ’66
155
’66
.5
600,000 May and Nov.. .1v* -t
5
160, (XH) Jan. aud July.. .July’66
r1.500,000 \pr. and Oct.. .'Apr. ’66
-..6
200,000 Apr and Oct.. .jApr. ’66
6
800,000 Ian. and July.. July ’60
(
1,000,(HHI •Jan. and July.. July ’66
5
1,500,0(H) Jan. and July.. July ’66
500.000 Tan. and July.. •Jan. ’66
600,000 Feb. and Aug.. Feb. ’66
5
400,000 Feb. and Aug.. Feb. ’66
5
2,050,000 Feb. and Aug.. Feb. ’66
252,000 Apr. and Oct . Apr. ’66
110
5
500,000 •Ian. and July.. July ’66
400,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66....,..
1,000,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
120
2, (XX),000 Jan. and July.. July ’66J
150
6
500.000 Jan. and July.., July ’66
.5
500.0(H) May .and Nov,., May. ’66
600.0(H) May aud Nov... May. ’00
1,000,0(H) May and Nov.., May. ’66
June ’66
3,000,000 J nne and Dec
5
1,235,000 Jan. and July... July ’66.
6
4,000,000 Ian. and July... Ju y ’66
1,000,0(H) Jan. and July
5
300,000 Ian and July... July ’66
1,500,000 April and Oct... Apr. ’66
5
3.000.0(H) Jan. and July... July ’60
9
200,000 April and Oct... July ’66
6
300,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
I'ltf
5
1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
5 104 108
1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
125
5
400,000 Jan. and July.... July ’66
4 100
1,000,000 Jan. and July... Juiy ’66
5 125
300,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66
5160
422,700 Feb. and Aug.. Aug. ’66
7
2,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
5
412,500 Jan. and July... July ’66
102
4 100
1,800,000 Jan. and July.., Jul ’66
5
2,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66
C 105
1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’66
— 100X
500,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
5 105
300,000 May and Nov .. Nov. ’65
5 108
1,500,000 Jan. and July.. July ’66
200.0(H) May and Nov... Nov. ’65 ..f. ..6 105
5
2,000,000 May and Nov.. Nov. ’66
5
1,000,000 Jan. and July... July- ’66
July ’66 ... .. .5
1,000,000 Jan. and July
155
7#
1,000,000 Jan. and July... July ’66
118
May and Nov... May. ’66 . .. .5
1,500,000
600 000 Jam and July.. July ’66
3#
2d

Bowery

Chemical
Citizens’
City

Last Paid.

Periods.

Amount.

100

America*
America (Jer. City)
American
American Exchange
Atlantic
Atlantic (Brookljm)

609,371
480,599

Banks.--The N atiomtl Bank of

authorized to

Par

Dry Dock*

The

Capital

of Share.

National.)

Currency

decreased $11,560.

July 23.

not

Broadway
Brooklyn
37.707,567 i Bull’s Head*

Boston Banks, as

and State circulation has

(Marked thus *

Friu

Dividend.

Capital.

Companies.

...

Oriental*
Pacific
Park

Peoples’*
Phoenix.

Republic

St. Nicholas’
Seventh Wa rd
Second
Shoe & Lea.her

Sixth
State of New York..
Tenth
Third

Tradesmen's.
Union

Williamsburg City*.

.

SJ

1866.]

July 28,

CLOSING SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH

Gold Coin
National.

American

United States
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

SECURITIES;

AND

STOCKS

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

*

registered. 109% 109% 109 109 109 | 109%
coupon.
167%
registered. 106% 106% 107 106% 106%]SlOo
coupon.
104%!l05%
registered.
coujxjn
registered 104% 104% 104% 104% 105 % 105%
105%
104%

_
5s, 1871
5s, 1871
5s, 1874
5s, 1874
5s, 10-40s
5s, 10-40s

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

Union Pacific R.
7-30s Treas. Notes
6s,

6s, coupon,
do

do

War

“

Kentucky 6sr,

do

1860-62-65-70

........... • - - - •.

—

SI

—

—

(Hannibal and St. Joseph RR.)..
RR.)

Marietta and

116

do

Bonds

i

104% 101%
84% 8 %

22
05

Shares.

Ohio and
do

—

94

Spruce Hill
Wilkesbarre

93

(Brooklyn)

Jersey City

and Hoboken..

Metropolitan
New York
Williamsburg

,

43

Canton

Cary

Telegraph.— \merican

100
100
Western Union,Russian Extension. 100

United Spates
Western Union

Nicaragua

Trust.—Farmers1 Loan and Trust
New York Life and Tru t
Union Trust
United States

Mining.—rCanada Copper
Gold

Mariposa Gold
Mariposa preferred
Minnesota Copper
Montana Gold
New Jersey Consolidated
New Jersey Zinc

Quartz Hill

51
5

Quicksilver
Rutland Marble

Saginaw L. S. & M
Smith and Parmelee




.

2d mort

1877...

'

56%

56

55%
116

HO
114

210

211

12

24%

3“
89%

1st mortgage,

78
101

consolidated

99

—

—

90

..

—

78

.

—

77

1

—
—

—

100

—

-—

101

Ifi1

—

1885...

»

100%

.

.

.

98%

-

—

60

Marielta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage
Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72
"
do
do
8s, new, 1882
Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund.
do
2d mortgage, 7s
do

do

86

7.
•>

*1 "4

25%

26%

St.

—

90

do
—

Toledo and
»

do
do

1
_

aa

do
do

do
.do

90

Haute, 1st mort ..
2d, pref....
2d, income.

2d mortgage
*

102
96

95

82%

do
do

Interest Bonds

90
102

9*

103

1st mort.

extended.

60
93

—

2d mort...
3d mort...

Wabash, 1st mortgage
do
1st mortgage,

—

—

•

1876.
7.

do
do

do
do

Louis, Alton and Terre
do

50

7s, convertible,

do
7s, 1865-76
Mississippi, 1st mortgage
PittBburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago,

do
do

49

do

9-r%

Income

Ohio and

i

ill

y-

98%

—

Extension...

1875
and Western Bonds
McGregor Western, 1st mortgage

—

49

—

Consolidated and Sinking Fund

do
do

11%

48%

109~
V

Mississippi and Missouri, Laud Grants
New York Central 6s, 1883
do
do
6s, 1887
do
do
6s, Real Estate
do
6s, subscription....
do
do
7s, 1876..
do

23%

98

98
S9

cent...
Fund....

do
2d mortgage, 1868....
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869
do
2d mortgage, (S. F.)',
do
3d mortgage, 1875.
do
convertible, 1867

—

25
25
10

mort

Lackawanna

-

100

25
10

do
do
do
do

do

Copper... 15

.*.

6C

Illinois Central 7s,

—

100
100

38%

—

do
do
Goshen Line, 1868
Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage

50
5
100
25

Conake Iron
Benton Gold

®

—

-

100
100

.

Trust

Consolidated Gregory
Gunnell Gold

35

36

58

212

100
100
25
.100

Transit.—Ceutral American—

Western, 1st

do

do

114

116

100
100
100
100

Union Navigation

53%

53%

100

Steamship.— A i lantic Mail
New York
Pacific Mail
Pacific Mail Serin

54%

5C

Hannibal and St. Joseph. 1st Mortgage
Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72

34%

—

IOC

Western

110

—

—

extended.—

100
100

*

no

—

do 2d mortgage, 1879
do 3d mortgage, 1883.
do 4th mortgage, 1880
do 5th mortgage, 1888
Galena and Chicago,
do
do
2d mortgage

55

52

52

260

99%

—

Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage
Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage
do
do
3d mortgage, conv..
dodo
4th mortgage.*.
Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort.
do
do
2d mort.
do
Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868

46

149

—

34%

33

33%

100
-.100

Brunswick City

and Chicago.

do
do
preferred....
Railroad Ronds:

do

40

20

Improvement.—Boston Water Power

2S%

28%

98% 98% 100% U>1%
110% '09% 109% 110% 110% *11%
84%

Alton and Terre Haute,
do
do
t

do
do
do

16%

—

50
100
50
50

Manhattan

28

—

—

Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per
Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage
Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking
Interest

1

Citizens
narlem

28%

—

.100 *99%

Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort.,
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund
do
do
1st mortgage
do
do
Income

'

100
25
20
50
20

Wyoming Valley

Gas.—Brooklyn'

do

do

95

50
100

100
10
100

preferred....

do

avenue!

do

1

Mountain

29%

Mississippi Certificates.

Toledo, Wabash and

71

1

Spring

—

—

—

—

Pennsylvania
Schuylkill

104% 103% 104% 104%
111 * ill

—

—

1

Baltimore..

112

—

93%

—

'

104% 104

Sixth avenue.

45

46

70%

—
—

k

Atlantic and Great

T—1 Tt< os

Hampshire and

do

do

Third

—

j

55

69%

—

—

til

44

—

—

St. Louis,

—

Ashburton

pref.

■

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne

97

—

—

—-

—

>’9%

79%

—

100
50

Coat.—American

1st

Jersey
York Central
New York and New Haven.

i

. ...

guaranteed.

New
New

i

Jersey
New York 7s
6s
do
5s
do

83%

—

—

1

94

110

95

i

Loan
6s, Public Park Loan
6s, Improvement Stock
City 6s, Water Loan

82%

81%

81%

—

j 66

6s, Water

Miscellaneous

do

auk^
do

*71

2

x

no
83

110

|107

—

—

.99%

271

271

—

82%

do
do

do

do
do

100%

6s 18f’8
Gs 1890

Indiana
do

do

104% 104
84%' 85

104

—

44

Cincinnati, 1st preferred.
do
2d preferred.

Michigan So. and N.

97%

97%

97%

23

—

79%

97

—

—

95

—

-

-

120

72

—

*

-

U9

—

—

—

1878

119% 116

120

■

12:1191 118% |1IS%
—

—

’.

-

)

>1

97

Virginia 6s, coupon
Municipal.
Brooklyn 6s
do
do
do

-—

1

95

North Carolina 6s
Ohio 6s, 1370-75
do 6s, 18S1-S6
Rhode Island 6s

—

do
preferred
Hudson River...

100%

•

Loan,

do

do

98%

• ••••

1860

do
6s,
do
6s, (Pacific
New York 7s, 1870
do
6s,1867-77
5s, 1868-76
do
do
7s, State Bounty

Tennessee

!

98*

97%

—

1868-72

do
7s, War
Minnesota 8s

Missouri 6s

98%

98%

A

100

—

98%'

64%
75%

64%
15%

65
17%

l

—

Loan

6s
Michigan 6s

111

150

—

’

Louisiana

84% j

111

—

—

1100

100

104

—

do 1377
do 1879

' 110

1

84%

150

64%

65%

Erie.

103%; 103% 03% 103% 103% 103%!
103% 103% 103% 1104 i
103% 1U3%
3d series. 1103% 103% 103%

War Loan

Indiana 68,
do
5s

Eigh

—

—

’79, after

*113

83%

—

—

Registered, 1860

84% 82%
1*1% '10%
1.0

R.. .(cur.).
1 stseries.
.'2d series

State.

116%

>

—

registered:
coupon.
registered.
coupon.
registered.

Certificates,

California 7s
Connecticut 6s
Georgia 6s
Illinois Canal Bonds,
do
do
do
do
do

do
do

do
do

1C5

j

'4% 34%
64% 64%
97% ! 9S i 99%

117

)

—

coupon.

6s.

do
do

64%.
) 97%

>

104%

—registered
(* yearly).

124

33% 33%
63% 63%
96% i 07

r 35

—

coupon

125

104%

105
125

—

—

)

do

do

104%

—

>|

—

1881

do
do
do
do

.

102% 102% 102

—

>[

Chicago, Burlington and Quincy.
Chicago and Great Eastern

1122

124

102%

preferred...

do

do

118

113

—

Alton...*

Chicago and

—

:124

registered.
coupon.

6s, 1367

Thursi

Wed.

Tues

Mon.

Saiur

SECURITIES

Railroad Stocks.

"

129%

6s, 1368
6s, 1868
6s, 1881
6s, 1881
6s, 5-20s
6s, 5-20s
6s, 5-20s (2d issue)
6s, 5.20s
do
6s, 5.20s (3d issue)
6s, 5.20s,
do
6s, Oregon War,
6s,
do.
do.

DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JULY 21.)

STOCKS AND

Fr1

i‘hurs,

V\ ed

Tuea.

Seftur. Mon.

EXCHANGE.

NEW YORK STOCK

SALE-PRICES AT THE
(REPRESENTED BY THE

109

CHRONICLE.

THE

92

92
90

“

77%

84

77%
-—

THE CHRONICLE.

110

[July 28; 1866.

NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES LIST.
I

DENOMINATIONS.

1 FRIDAY”.

INTEREST.

Amount

Amount

DENOMINATIONS.

pal

Outstanding
Rate.

Due.

Pay aide.

Bid

j —1

! Rate.

Asked

Prin a

INTEREST.

i

OuUtauding.

pul
Due.

Payable.

FRIDAY.
Hid

Afked

j

14954:

American Gold Coin
National Securities.
Bonds of 1847
registered.
do
...5151
tw/fxni. I
do
do
.registered. (
do
181)0..
CO)//*)/). i
do
do
.registered. f
do
..8581
..COUpOll. I
do
do
.registered. \
...1081
d»)
mu[Km. (
do
do
registered. I

'.>,415,250

Jan. it

6

July 1807

j

124

8,008,342; 0

..

123% 124

Jan. it July 1871

7,022,000 5

103

(

i00

..

{yearly)

j

do

do

4.631UOO

do
do
Whir Loan

040,01.’*!

1

688,000

,

2,172,000

1

7

:

1,288,887
1.758,466
1,386.570

2,371,725
1,778,677
241.000

1.157,700,
236,000
2,058.173

1,225,500;
200.000
300.000

200,000

do
do
do

:

8,000.000
2,073,750
525,000

do

447,0001

516,000'
3,042,000
5,308.000

1,727.0041

i.s77

i

i'

Jersey

.

...!
11

672.0 0

Quarterly

\S70

1,150,0:14

1

1,088,000

'

250.000

370.866

Loan.
Loan
Loan
Loan..

2.183.532 i
1.600.000

|! 4^3,^
2.400.000

i
:

Tennessee—Improvement Bonds
do
Improvement Bonds

2.115,400! 6

13,011,9001 G

...

\

175,000 ! 6
1

cr.n'noC

Virginia—Registered Bonds..... i gi'ass’sfts!
do
Coupon Bonds
> L'orVnivi

j

WisconsinBonds
I
dp
War F'tPd Bogda,.. I

300,000
1400 000

«

1878
1886

.

Marysville, Cal.—City Bonds
do

u * •

1

-

i

...

I

i‘ ’

9

"
.

.

,

1866

!
.

.

98

-

..." 1SG0 j
Jan. & July rar. ;
Jan. it July -71 ’72!
! J.Ap.J'.itO. 1870
1101
Jan. A July pleas, i
..

.

:

!Jan.

! ) Ja. it J u f

i

J AJ&O
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

!
;

i

10 Ui; >01%

1

I

j

07Vi)
!
I

1-

I

07
j
071;

PiTTsr.URU, Pa.

6

Jan. &

do
do

July,’84 ’05|

do

-

1’86 '05

!187$

'•Jap. ^ Jqlyj’67 ’68

l

(It)

171 ’SS:

Tomp.M’ket. S:
Union Def. L.|
Vol. B'nty L’n
Aol.Fam.AidL

Riot Dam.R.B

City Bds,new j
City Bds,old)
CityBds,new!
City Bonds
j

j

City Bonds
Railroad

Bonds,!

City Bonds...

do
do

Railroad B ds

!

City Loan

City Bonds...!

do

j Sacra men
<
do

Railroad...

Cal.—Ci t v, Bt >nds.
County B’ds.

to,

do

:.j

;St. Louis, Mo.—Municipal
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

...

,01

92% I
...

483.000

1,878,000

...

1
j
j
!

j

San

‘

Real Estate

Sewerage

Improvement..
AVater
.

,..

Harbor
AVbarves;
Pacific RR.
O. it M. RR
Iron Aft. RR

.....

....

Francisco, Cal.—C'itv Bonds
do
City Fire R.
do
do
do
do

CiLv Bonds

var.

j 1871
Dec.!'69 ’79

02

i'65’72
July};75 ’77

|'65’80

Aug 11882

j)65’81
|

65’75
’77 ’83

Various.

1

do

)

02

var.

var.

[May &Nov.jlS87

Jail, it Julv
' |
do
June it Dec. 1894
Feb. it Aug I'70 ’83
Jan. & July 1873

Apr. & Oct.i'65 ’84
Jan. & July!'67 ’87

A nr. it Oet.
d :
July

96

|'73 ’84

AO ’81

%*

A.&N, 1870
11880
r'mao

P- M.

11800

do
do
do
do
do

11890

j'75 ’79
!
1875

!’70 ’73

Feb. it Aug. 1868
F. M.A.it N 1898
11887
do

275,000 6
2.083,200 6

do
do

1,066,000 6

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

)1876

93

)1898

600,000 6
1,800,000 6
,

102.000
490.000

6
5
6
6
6

730.222

5

2.232,800 6
7,898,717 0
1.000,700 6
1.800,000 5
085,326 6
1,500,000 ; 6
600,000: 6
500.000

300,000
200.000
150.000

6
5
5
7

260,000 6
1.496.100 6
446,S00i 6

1,464,000 6
523,000 6
425,000 6
254,000 6
,

484,000

6

230,000 6
163,000 6
457,000 6
420,900; 6
285.000

6

1.352,600 10
178,500 10
339,000 6
1,133,500; 6

836.017

300,000

7

900,000 ; 7
7
.

;1873

11883

^

4878
1866

03
93
93
93
93

'67’76

! 1S73

i ’65’

69
18(H
1867

do
do

6

1.000,000
2,500,000
1.400,000
2,000,000
040,700

4887

May <fc Nov.

6

805,570 6

’Velocity BoBd*..

do

;

do
Jan. & July

300,300 5
3.066,071 j 6

1.000.000

06

06

11879
1800

Various.

i

190.000 5
402.7685

C.itCo’tyB.
C.itCo’tyB.
C.&Co’tyB.
C;-feCo’tvB.

1

96*

[1888

jJan. it July; 1876
[June it Dec', i 1883

500,000 5
154,000 5

Rochester, N. Y.—City Bonds...

—'

100,000

Pub.Edu. S'k.;

Docks&SlipsSi

Railroad Bunds.:

Portland, Me.

....I

...

900,000

1.442.100 6
552,700;, 5

do
do
do

85

i

2.147,000

4,990,000; 6

.May it Nov.!*GS-'71 j
Various. { var. j 92 %d 02%!
do
i var.
02,v j 04 j
!Feb. it Aug. 1S71 (103 PM j
; Jan. it July .71’Oil
100 ;
'Jan. A July 968’00!
Apr. «t Oct.;1868 i
do
1868
Jan.it .Inly, long j
;. ■ var. j
Jnn. *t Dec. *71 ’78!

200,000

3,000,200)

j’79’87

Various.

2,748,000 6
150,000 5

Providence, R. I.

Jan. it July rar.
do
'1000
do
;186()
do
1865
do
,1868
do
1870
do
11875
do
11881 100
do
1886
not

156,000

Sol. B’ntyFd. l>

1

00
84
61

60,000
)

3j

do

do

1871
1874

Real Estate B.
Croton AV’r S.
Fl.D't. F'd. S.,
Pb.B.Sk. No.

do

do

I

do

98%

! 1)7
07

100,000

425.000’

96

July;lS76

July,1871

Feb. &

4
6
7
5
6
5
6
5
5
5
6
5
5

!; Philadelphia, Pa.—(Mty Bds,old

■

1866
1872
1873
1874
1875
1877
1866
1868

I

do
do
do
Vol.Fain.AidLj
NewYorkO'nty.—C’t House S'kj
do
do
Spl.Stib.B. R.Bi
(lo
do
Sol.S.it Itf. ILB

I

do
is78
&• July'IS77

mi, 5001
210,000

1

O.P.Imp. F. S.|
C.P.Imp. F. S. i

(io

do
do
do
do

p/e as.'

May it Nov. 1S68
'Jan. A J uly'is75
!

do

!

'1878
i

do
do

9S%

1868

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

do
do
tio
do
do
do

80

i 6
6
10
| 8

95

Various,

6

..1

Bonds...)

j

....

do
do
do

City

New York City—Water Stock..
do
do
Water Slock..!
do
do
CrutonW'rS'k
do
ild
CrotonW'r S'k
do
do
W r S’k of ’4!)
do
do
AVr S'k of '54
do
do
Bn. S’k No. 3.1
do
do
Fire 11idem. S.
do
do
Central P k S. J
do
do
Central P'k S.
do
do
Central P'k S. |

97

im>7
1 0
f
1SS3
79% SO
’71 \s<)
: »'87 79% 1 80

1S74

j,

..

! New. London. Ct.—City Bonds...;
i Newport, R. 1.—City Bonds..,,. J
j N k w 11 avKN, Ct.—efty Bonds....)

1

90

'72 '85

Water Bonds

j New Bedford, Mass.—City Bds.

L::
91 * ’ !

May

6

3.000.000 : 6
3,880 000 6
3 60L OOOi 6
2.347.310! 5

.

j

83

Jan. 4 J iilv
do
Jan. it J111\
do
do
do
Mail. & July

6

20,200,000) 5

do
do
do

:

5
6
(i
6

670,000! 6
6,168,000 j 5

....

1883

City Bunds

1

City Bonds

It 1
It 1

'75'78;

Jan.

3,000 ixwI
536.70s!
631.0;>3

do
do

•

do

do

,

j Newark, N. J.—City Bonds
do

1*00

'cs'71!
May it Nov. ls80
do
11S04 '
Jan. it July *71 ’74

6
6
7
6
6

..

do

Jan. it

130,000 6
500,000) 6
375,000! 6
122,000 6
118,000 : 7
650,000 7
I 7

'

Apr. it Oet.!I860
Jan. it

310,457 S
400.000, 7

HMilwaukkk, Wis.—City, re-adj'd,

99
101
99

t

Various,

(i

2.450,0**0

i

do
do
do
do
June it

650,000; 7
125,000

94%

Apr. it Oct. 11805
Jau. & July .

20,000; 8

City Bonds.
do
do
Water Bds.
| Louisville, Ky.—City Bonds

...lj
i!

do
do

7

256,368 ; 7
50,000"! 6

City, N. J.—City Bonds.

do

i'70 '78
it July|’65 ’71
do
, 6>5 ’95
! I860
do
do
'81 ’97
1897
do
'65 '79

Jan. it

6

6
6

Park Bonds
Railroad Bonds..
Water Bonds..

no
02

Apr. & Oct J1881

1,030,000 6

Railroad.

i

'65’82

200,000 ; 7
571,000; 7

Water Bonds.

do
do
do

ii

.

6

150,000! 7
216,000! 6

I Hartford, Ct.—City Bonds
i

-Jdii.

5,550,o00! 6

j;Dubuque, Io.—City Bonds

isos
1S86

1S00

g
5
5

i

do
State Stock
do
Military L’n Bds
Rhode Island—State (War) Bds.
South Carolina—State Stock...




do

99

not)

;‘67 '77
I'72’73

l

121.540; 6

360,000
013,000

—

| 98

'78 ’70
! '65 85

Water Bonds.

do

99%; 100

1*65 ’o2
'65 '74

6

1,281,000i.

Sewerage Bonds. |
J Detroit, Mich -City Bonds
|
do
City Bonds
do
City Bonds;
\
’’

J.,A,,J.&OJlS90-j
M.J.S&itD.llSOO

1)93,000! 5'

Water Bonds —!

do
do

11866

j
j Quarterly

6

1

...

do

do

98^ UK)
9->4 90

6

Cincinnati, O.—Municipal

1

...

Sept. *66 '67'
July-’so \s<>
(Quarterly j var. ]

5

|
....

Loan.
Loan
Loan

Sterling Bonds

■

./..j

9o

May & Nov! 1875

6

Pub. Park L’11.
Water Loan
Pros. Park L'n

J2

83

Jjau. & July. 1886

6

631.200

83

Jail. & July 1873
1

l.«.M0.71i; 4v.

do
Municipal Bonds:
Chicago, ill. —City Bonds
!
do
Citv Bonds
do
Sewerage Bonds-..
do
W ater Bonds

...J

"76 '78,
Jan. A July ’66 ’73;
do
i'OS'72
dem. !
!
67 .60

6.420.000: 5

"Pennsylvania—State Bonds

aoc

j’72'80

” May & Nov
7
Jan. it July
'
7
do
7
Jau. & July

r*

Railroad Bonds.
Vermont—State Certificates
do
War Loan Bonds

...J

115% i
116
j
!
■Ian. A; July,‘72 '02
Jan. it July lsso
108%;
do
' 1872
Jan. *n, Julyjl870
do
1870
do
'60 '65;
do
’60 '70!
do
do
1870
do
1870
Jan. it July; 1866

2%

1.265,610

Water Loan Stg.
Water Loan.....!

J.,A..J.itO J1S70
do
j1870

6
.4
6,580,416) 5

■Buffalo, N. Y.—Municipal Bondsi

1816

'

6

3.201.000

220,000

—$2,000,009 Loan

do

1

i

6

do
do

Jan. A

5
6

5,000,000
554.000!
107,700
740,000;
583,205,

j iBrooklyn, N.Y.— citv Bonds...
do
193% 103 % I
Improve’t St'k i
10)%'104

6

1,500,000; 6
3.5(H),tXK), 6.
1,000,006 j 6

...

‘03'4 !037t

5

820,01 K'

Citv Bonds

do

08%)

!

• • -

May & Nov is',7
July 1856

2,109,000i 5

;

Scrip

Domestic Loftn Bonds

9-‘,

08 % i

!

do
do
i 1,750.000
(io
Renewal Loan
216.030
do
War Loan
1.122.000
A Var Bounty Loan
do
315.01 Hi
i
Minnesota -State Bonds...
25u.tH)(i
Missouri—State Bonds
602,000
do
State Bonds for HR... 13.701.000
do
State Bonds (Pac. RR)
7.000.00(1
do
State Bonds (II,&St.J)
3,000.000
do
Revenue Bonds
431,040
New Hampshire—State Bonds..
535,100
do
War Fund Bds
1,650,000
New Jersey”—State Scrip
95.000;
do
War Loan Bonds..
731.000!
New York'
700,000!
do
1,180,780
do
500,000;
do
800.000 j
General Fund.
do
000.607
do
442,061 5
do
000.00(1 5
do
8(H),000 5
do
Bounty Bonds....
25,566,000: 7
do
I
do
702,000j g
do
3.050,000: G
do
6.000,000i (}
do
2,250,(HM) (j
do
j-Canal Bonds....
500,000'
do
900.000: g
do
102,585 5
do
1,163.000!
do
167.000'
do
I
4.500.01 Ht|
North Carolina—State Bonds.,
0,740,500 i
do
do State Bonds (new).

do

;

1

98%

;

4.063,000!

City Bonds

do
do
do

i

6

600,000 ' 4

Water Loan...
YorkitCum.R.
R.itO. \l.couji-l
B. A O. RR.. \
Park.
—C'itv Debt
Railroad Debt

do

:

:

-Jan. &Jul\ 1805

1

96^

!

300,000 6

101% '105 : Bangor, Art*
do
105*4 105 V. i ;
1<5
Boston, Mass.—Citv Bonds

105

7.30, Jan. & July 1868

do

Ohio—Foreign
do
Foreign
do
Foreign
do
Foreign
do
Foreign
do
Foreign
do
foreign

|

’.05% 105' :

J

850,000 , 0

N.W.Yirg. RR.

(io

M.ur. it

do

(io
uiigan-

!

...

106

Jan. *t

do
War Loans
State

‘

jMar.&Sept T.HU

532.000

Scrip

do

do
do
do
do

):u:v:o7%j

-J

May & Nov. 1885

j 4.800,000
j 8,171,0i'2;
IJ 3.102,763

do

i 104

May & Nov. 1884 )

6

ir

—

do
do

1

July 1881

17.30, Eel). & Aug.;lN07
^16,512,650 7.yo'Jun. & Dee. 1868

1

State Securities.
'
Alabama—State Bonds
do
oo
uo
(Sterling)
do
do
do
do
California—St te Bonds
i j
do
8t:Ue Bonds large t
Connecticut—WTar Bonds
1
Georgia—State Bonds
:
do
do
do
Illinois—Canal Bonds
\
do
do
do Registered
do
Coupon Bonds
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
War Loan Bonds
Indiana—Suite Bonds
do
do
do
do
War Loan Bonds
Iowa—State Cortiilcates
do
War Loan Bonds
Kansas—State Bonds
Kentucky—State Bonds
State Bonds
do
Louisiana—State Bonds HUM.... j
do
State Bonds (UK)....
do
State Bonds for B'ks,'
Maine—State Bon ds
j
do
War Loan
Maryland—State Bonds
do
State Bds .coupon.
do
State Bds inset Vied. \ |
do
Stat * Bonds.co>g)on.

Massachusetts—State

09%. i
j
109% !<)!)>. j
109
100 >4!

\

i 171,210,100;1 5
‘
.

it

May it Novi 1882

;

1 !
1 j

a

(3d series)—

,l4 TS0 500; <;

( 10,1000,000 G
j 1
,
C 71003,50.1 6

...

Treasury Notes (1st series!
do
do
(2d series)

|

\

1871-'
)
I
18SJ

July..

i

1,0H>,000; g-) Jan.

\ ;

July

Jan. & July 1881

282,728,150 0

(

do
do
(i yearly)
Bonds (5-20s) of 1862... coupon
do
do
do .registered
do
do
1S64
coupon.
do
do .registered.
do
do
do
805 ...coupon.
do
do
do .registered.
do (10-408)
1864 .. .coujte>n.
do
do
do .registered,
Union Pacific HR. Bonds of 1S65

|

1

it

j

OregonWar Bds

Jan.

20,000,000) 5

...

Jan. & July; 65 ’60
do
i’70’82
do
1870
Jan. & July! var.
do
j 1013

$225,000 6

(100 1 Baltimore, Aid.—Improvement..
do
Miscellaneous.
....!

•

..

..

Municipal Securities

Alban y, N. Y.—City Scrip
do
Water Loan
do
Alb. Nor. RR..
Alleghany City, Pa.—City Bds.
do
do
RR. Bds.

1
j 2 26

1865
’66 ’73

May & Nov. |’75-’89

!’73-’76

do
do
do
do
Jan. it July
do
do
do
Jan. iC July
do
Various.

var.

1913
'66 ’S3
’68 ’71
1885
1876
1893
’65 ’82
'65 ’82
’65 ’76
’88- 9S

Apr. & Oet.
Mar. it Sept.
Jan. it July
do

Various,
do
Jan: it July
Jau. & July
do
Jan. & July
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

93

'80-’8l 93
'83 ’IK) 93'77-’82
'65 ’81
’65 ’82
’65 ’93
’65 ’99 94

94%

96%

97
70
94
96

tt *•

* *«

1884

'65
’65
’79
'71
’71
’65

•

’83
’90
’88
’87

*83

’86
’67 ’81
’71 ’73 f
'72 ’741
'74 ’77!

May it Nov 1871
Jau. it July! 1866
,

do
do
do

!1S75
;18S8

[’77 ’78

April & Oct. 11883
Jan. &

July! 18S4

vanou.4

*

1866.]

July 28,

Ill

THE CHRONICLE.
COFFEE.

Commercial $imcs.

&f)e

COMMERCIAL EPITOME. July 27.
Friday Night,'5

Ent d for cons,

of trade is

Speculative influences
what lower,

v

the demand is

Total
Prev.

The

have beeu nearly nominal, and interfered with
regular supply of ice packed meats, upon which our market has, in

receipts of live Hogs
that

great measure, depended.
supplies, upon a scale much

a

But the prospect of an

as

on

attracted the usual amount of attention.

30,376

Total
&

i

m




5,100

Total

on

130

1,648

Prev.

1,681

6,748

1,2 1

1.251

port

since July 1...

bbls Ac.
tons.

tons.

|

1

1,513

3,240

market

1,513

2,391

reported..

1.175

1,661

2,688

4,952

Total on market
since July 1...

51

100

Cuba.'

IOC galls.

galls.

2,595

74S

5,868

7-1S

8,463
3,661

7 IS

12,124

Other
Ports.

100 galls.

74S

5,868

From

Withdrawn.

2.857

This week
Add ent. for con.

market

74S

8,725

Prev.

reported...

1,098

4,653

Total
sin

e

1,846

13,378

Total

on

market

on

J uly 1..

1.

SINCE JAN.

THE WEEK, AND

PRODUCE FOR

RECEIPTS OP DOMESTIC

Cuba.
100 galls.

Other
Ports.

for the week ending July 27,
have been as follows;
[Of the items left blank in 1865 no record was made.]
Since
This

The receipts of domestic produce
Jau. 1, and for the same time in 1805,
This
week.

*

Since
Same
Jan. 1. time-05

193
3,431
11,620 Rosin
Ashes, pkgs..
Tar.
Breadstuff's—
Pitch
Flour, bbls. 57,8361,236.5851,629,430
Oil cake, pkgs
Wheat, bush.127,900 1,053.945 2,532,970
.167.119 2,971,042,4,764,330 Oil, lard
Oats

which

sell when Congress adjourns,

two deal

the quantity of Coffee, Tea, Sugar and
Molasses imported for the week ending July 25, aqd since July 1 ; the
amount withdrawn from warehouse and the total thrown upou the
market during the same peri. ds.
[These tables are compiled lrom statistics furnished exclusively for tli
Chronicle, and will afford to importers and dealers n these articles inform
tionot great value. The tons (2,240 lbs.) of Sugar imported in boxes and baj_
reported separately from those in hhds,, bble., &cM to distinguish the differ?
ent qualities, Mola^bos is reported in PH) gallons for convenience unci ffecur*
m»
paskaij-es in. w&iefc if graves at tfco -qqH.
at amh
aim
mma mti bwU* fit mm five* m w&ti men of m qmmy
are

5,049

In hhds

In bxs
A bags,

This week
Add ent. for con.

i m port
since J uly 1...

interrupted the
limited. The

reported.

627

2.073

2,264

*

Total

unchanged. Tallow dull and

following tables show

bbls Ac.
tons.

Total for week..
Prev. reported..

pound.
Freights have become dull. A break in the canal has
supply of corn and oats, and the shipments have been
going rates for corn to Liverpool are 4^d. by sail, and 5^d., by steam.
There have been considerable shipments of cotton, mostly to Liverpool,

The

Total on market
since J uly 1...

In hhds

Warehoused

droopi; g. Hops firm and
East India goods rule very firm.
Gunny cloth is in reduced stock;
of Linseed, there is none is first hands, and, notwithstanding the large
stock of Manilla hemp the price has advanced to 10 cents, gold, per

charters are

1,378

reported.. 0,83 0

51

Imported.

The de¬
in June
EfForts are

lb. Several petroleum, and one or

141

344
27S

695

market 5,423

on

Prev.

Withdrawn.

Entered for con.

scarce.

by steam, at a farthing per

237

From

dull, and woollen goods
From this circumstnnce it is anticipated

Whiskey is

Total

....

MOLASSES.

Fruits of

selling satisfactorily,
that there will be a great pressure to
whether the tariff be increased or not.

Other

109
32

tons.

Total for week..
Prev. reported..

•

not

1,833

Add ent. lor cons

A bags,

Entered for con.
Warehoused

firmer for Dry Cod, and otherwise more active.
all kinds have been in good demand and firm.
Metals have been quiet, aud are uniformly weak in prices.
mand does not seem to support the speculative views of buyers

are

5,425

109

In bxs

Imported.

bought up liberally.
supported last week’s advance, with a fair but less active
Leather is firm, with a supply barely equal to the wants of

upon

625

SUGAR.

and closes at a small but decided advance
the past three days foot up about 10,00(J packages, ship¬

quiet The market is very unsettled.
still making to get some sort of a tariff through Congress,
prices are supported, but the regu’ar trade is

109

237

.

.

■

gallon.

Wool has been

1,809

237

5,040

Coffee, hav-

are

2,225
3,209

Withdrawal. China. Japan. Ports
H ch.
eh. % cb
349
5,-128
095
This week

>; eh

}4 eh.

>< eh.

Total import
since July 1...

pers having
Hides have

Fish

525

100

693

Ports

5,040

Petroleum has been active,

,

China. Japan.

Total for week..
Prev. reported..

healthy condition.
Naval Stores have slightly improved, without anyr extraordinary de¬
mand. Oils have been firm, and Crude Sperm sold early iu the week

the market.

24

109

1,472

Warehoused

being in a very

demand.

24

TEA.

ou a

for

2,225

100

693

market since

on

Enter'd for cons

ers

The sales

19,245

reported

Imported.

advanced early in the week, has become quiet. But Sugar has
been active, the sales of the week amount to about 9,000 hhds. and as
many boxes, and currency prices close £c. higher.
There was a liberal
business to day. Refined Sugars have also advanced %. Molasses has
met with a very large sale—some 1,200 hhds. changed hands to-day—
Rice aud Teas have been more ac¬
the market closing about steady.
tive and firm. The stocks of Groceries in the hands of Provincial deal¬
is believed to be very small, and prices being relatively quite low,
gold basis, (except Molasses, perhaps,) the trade is regarded as

$2 T5 per

1,510

200

616

Other

jng

at

324
1.186

....

....

856

market this w'k 11.131

r

an

Groceries have

693

200

k....

July 1

more

inferior qualities.

856

11,!

early renewal of

liberal than usual, is very good. The
present high prices will hurry them to market just as early aud as fast
it is practicable to send them. But stocks of all except Pork are
quite reduced, and a considerable movement will be necessary to effect
such
increase as will materially reduce prices. Beef of all kinds re¬
mains quiet. Butter and Cheese are quiet. The export of Cheese is
checked by the decline in Liverpool, but holders are firm, except for
very

864

Total

generally better.

beeu very scarce and firm.

3,781

reported

....

....

With*! raw it.

carried Mess Pork up to $8*2, but it closed some¬

Other hog products have

864

..

This week
Add cut. for cons

de¬

-

3,784

import since Julyl 10,766

Total

therefore, to be delayed.
Cotton has fluctuated almost daily, and closes unsettled. The crop
accounts are on the whole quite favorable.
A speculative movement in Flour and Wheat has checked the
cline, and produced some reactiou in the market, the whole closing tame,
and not well supported.
Provisions have been firm, and

10,050
710

Previously

last, continues,

however,

S64

import for week

Total

ness.

our

bags.

bags.

bags-

this week
do
10.050

3,7-4

Warehoused

regarded,—it being
subject to so many and varied contingencies—continues to limit busi¬
A groundless fear of cholera caused many people to leave town,
and prevents many from coming to town to make their purchases. The
anticipated “ fall opening,” for which we noticed some preparations in
uncertainty with which the luture

The

„

,,

Indies, land.
bags. bags.

caibo. gauyra.

Brazil.

Imported.
„

Other
East Ports.
Indies.
bags.
24
300

Hoi-

West

La-

Mara-

.805,6619,210,8623,887,450 Oil, Petroleum.
14.870 288,788 120,780jPeanuts, bags.

Com

Rye

1.011

Malt

800

Barley

! Provision?—
158,480 *510,040! Butter, pkgs.

Grass seed

Flaxseed

Cheese.. ....
Cut meats...

4,440
80,100
110,807

888

•*
Beaus
5.104
Peas
...
C. meal,bbls. 2,79.1
C. meal.bags. 1,482

Flour,bg
Cotton, bales ..
Copper, bbls...
do

Copper, plates.

Driedfrmt.pkgs
Grease, pkgs...
Ilemp, bales...
Hides, No
Hops, bales.

91,400

45

40.355
79,449

262,8-16
3.054

2,021

48

400

100

050

*

85

121

3,915

Tobacco,pkgs.

20.003

8,532

28,398

trp.bbl
Spirits turp.

Crude

*

Rice,

3,856
93,013

9,600

2.107

35,558

1,873

hhds.

46,241

35.110

77,163

39,185

No

0,333

* bbls

Naval Stores—

5,805

2.002

bbls

Tallow, pkgs..
13.520 Tobacco,

157,830
76,915
82,270

2,321

Leather, sides. 35,551 1,222,905 l,267,160j Whiskv, bbls
11,830
Wool, hales
29
5,100
Lead, pigs
Dressed Hogs,

Molasses, hhds

92,120

01,512

Sugar, hhds A

i

284.8.0

5,737
1.074

270

'

Spelter, slabs..

53

331,100

855

-

Stearine

3,314
5,487
2,342

15

543,427

227.478
207.342
92.090

232,840 Starch

4,744

....

4,690
24 i,615

1,628 110,817

'

404,026

58.303
3.333

8.485

Pork

147
74

6,618

1,669

£3,703
223

Eggs

0,400

40,183

37.635

9,024

Beef, pkgs. ..
78,172 +201,SG5
Lai d, pkgs...
217,143
Lard, kegs,..
1, Regs
Rice, pkgs
6,305

Buckwheat A

227,739

108
77
116
130
15.100

205,805

100,188

Same

Jan.1. time’65

week.
0,814

.

since

81,769

rough,

bush

0,395

+ Including bags reduced to

Including barley malt.

EXPERTS

OF

LEADING

barrels.

ARTICLES.

following table shows the exports from this port of some leading
for the week ending July *23, since January 1,
1806, and for the corresponding period in 1865 :
Since Same
The

articles of commerce
For

Since

the

Jan.

week.

1, ’66,

2,577

5,895

For
the
week.

time
’05.

i, Pt?, 1
Ashes, Prls,bls
Beeswax, lbs.

2,300

Breadsluffs.
Flour, bbls.

9,729

14

153,857

Same

Pitch, bbls.
cake,100 lb

405 Oil

141,204 Oils.

757,818
1,935
80,316 84.072
137,4931,011,117
513,071

Petrol., gals
Whale, gals

37

Cotton, halos.

Hay, bales
Hops, bales..
Naval Stores,

03,510

137,028

0S2
2.SOS

41,197
265,356

35

*21,2*5

1,310

C. Turp, bbls

27

ti 3 ief

I-*?*

S.Turp.hbb
♦i?-i Hftl *

Beef,bblsAtcs.

823.890

8,119

'

11,924
7.205

i i }!

tfhfiji

Bacon, 100 lb

Butter, 100 lb

28,110

11,873

715
444

52,996

78 797

41,528

62,917

025

109

Cheese, 100

lb 10.235

Lard, 100 t>

4,185

Staves M,

Tallow, 100 lb

56,982
28,290

80,345
11,935

....

Peas, bush..
Candles, bxs.

1,579

374,128
374,128

0,455

....

Oftts,4>ush..

time
'Go.

295,625
552,10414,984,101 4,775,912
11,804
12.625
3,932
3,932

Sperm, gals
C.raeal, bbls
Lard, gals..
Wheat, bus.
199,200
03,457 Provisions.
Rye, bush .
Pork, bbls..
Corn, bush. 976,239 6,630,008 • 080,397
•

Jan.

1, '06.

385
844

234.002

261,835

66,622
112,54? 189,474
11,013

157.870

105.079

62,063

7.99S

80,002 124,859
91.633
58,003

,7092,184,753

m

IMPORTS

OK

LEADING

COTTON.

ARTICLES.

following table shows the foreign imports of certain leading
articles of commerce at this port for the week endiug July 20, since Jaa1, 1866, and for the corresponding period in 1865 :
The

[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]
For
the
week.
109
4.1U2
126

Since
J an.
I860.
3.783

280,939
7,932

124,508’

490,170

327,8.2

1,610

22,099

100
220
107
23
640

14,740

Since
Jan. 1,
I860.

Same

8,021
Hardware...
Iron.ItRb'rs 10,137 1'-4,533
Lead. pigs.. 1,657 208,53 (
0 .773,550
Spelter, ibs.
100.611
2,290
Steel

2,3.51
108,8.15
60,008

For

Samet

Coal, tons
Cocoa, bags...
35,352
Coffee, bags
62
Cotton, bales.
Drugs, &c.
9
Bark, Peruv

Buttons
....

..

Blea

p’wd’rs

Brimst, tns.
Cochineal...
Cr Tartar

...

Gambier....
Gums, crude

Gum, Arabic
Indigo
Madder.

...

Oils,

•••

ess

Oil, Olive..

•

Opium

3,643
11,538
Oil
730

12.623
7.611

293
39
38

2,115
2,263
7,227
2,879

10

58
250

78.170

•

Soda, bi-carb
Soda, sal....

Soda, ash...
Flax
Furs

455

60.310
460
295
441

19,899
24.040

7,797

66
.

Hair

Hemp, Kales..
Hides, &c.
Bristles

Hides,dres’d
India rubber..

4,950

16,331

227

Gunny cloth

2.518

2,030

.3,111
bO.591

27
169
757

1,403
0,230
14,231
440

Ivory

Jewelry, <fcc.
Jewelry
Watches....
Linseed
Molasses
Metals, &c.

11
20

439
077
166.511

5,055

70,400
3.577

78

Cutlery

time!

the

week.
114

1805.

1,457<

2,360!

time
1805.

....

42,1 9
304,790
3,100 442.294
Tin, bxs
1,706 Tin slabs,lbsl44,110 4 ,501.749 1.985,753
19,094
12,727 Rags
31,703
1,441
5.097 Sugar,
hhds,
277.971
18S.952
894
tcs & bids.. 20,112
520
....

Sugar, bxsA.bg
Tea

1,043 Tobacco

1,012 Waste
3,309 Wines, Ac.
2,200 Champ, bkts
1.173| Wines
12,0*71 Wool, bales...

5.833

202.315

194.609

37,575

593,052
12,509
9,002

390,328

110
135

13.674
5.141

Friday, P. M., July 27.
The

bales the pre¬
reaches 1,997,833 bales, and since the close of the war 2,416,426 bales.
In this
statement, besides the week’s receipts, are added 9,902 bales not before
counted at Mobile.
The weekly exports are now on the increase, being
7,993 bales for this week, against 5,840 baies last week, and 6,317 bales
the previous week.
All the exports this week were for Liverpool.
The total exports from the' United States since September 1st now
reach 1,479,848 bales, and the stocks at all the ports amount to
all the

98

receipts, exports, stocks, Are.
RECEIPTS

,

Lemons

305,792
207,843

13.1 A3

l,724j Oranges

3,001
11,963

104.199

285,358

031,539
20.575j Nuts
274,302
4.103
508,190
I Raisins
589 Hides,undrsd. 103.709 4 ,030.077 2,330,537
002.519

450,302

14,010

750,846

125,873

50,510

799

130,036

42, 35

91.001

110,801

11,595
2,008
58,172

....

200
8,9i;0

19,927

J

rec’d

PORTS.

79,041

4,375

97.0-8

152.189

SINCE
SEPT.

1.

:

(BVLES)

SEPT.

SINCE

| EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 1 TO—

!

Great

France Other

Britain.
336.415 130,090

224,573 40,184

105,104

Savannah, July 20..
Texas, July 13
New York, July 27*.
Florida, June 2....
N. Carolina, July 27.

251,181

822
45,040 6,057
90,009 1,492
58,606 1,739 3,214
386,191 36,967 41,327

Cther

....

21

....

18,504

•

....

•

•

35,600

....

18,794

290

....

'

63,607

21

•

....

35,600
....

34,703

....

...

+40,000

....

823,409 338,664

1,997,833 1,194,662 215,629 69,557 1,479,848

Total
*

4671,585

*

34,703

63,607

p’ts, July 24.

237,180 98,904
107,827 34,978
51,107 4,379
152,7:10 10,800
67,685 7,015
138,000
107,673
4,5S8

4S8,S30
260,336
51,919
92,101
63,559

....

108,515
139,415
146,190

Virginia, July 27.

22,325
1,579

8TOCK.

PORTS.

for’gn.

41-7,188

to

NORTH.

Total.

070,931

....

SHIP-

m’nts

July 20.

N. Orleans,

1, AND STOCKS

MENTIONED.

DATES

Mobile, July 20
Charleston, July 20.

33.167

125,454

table of the movement of Cotton
showing at a glance the total

our

COTTON

EXPORTS OK

AND

32,244

45,424-

give

we

ports since September 1st,

24.268
3(1.1:08

70.726
265,206

1.561

7,2 6

,

! Logwood ...
1,275; Mahogany.

Below7,

338,664 bales.
at

AT

34,079iCigars
91.457
73,787
8,402
6,099 Corks
18,039|Faney goods.. 60.060 2 ,399,555 1,150,701
580,228 300,859
7,085!F.sh
2,2d Fruits, «fcc.

1,900; Rice
16,982 Spices, &c.
1,287 Cassia
Ginger
328| Pepper
405 Saltpetre
28, lOl! Woods.
99,231
Fustic

receipts of Cotton at all the ports still continue to decrease, having

the past week only reached 5,701 bales, against 7,033
vious week ; the total receipts since September 1st now

reported by value.
$22,367 $1,051,144 $328.«37

452 Articles

1.9381

[July 28, 1866.

CHRONICLE.

THE

112

t Estimated.

By Railroad, Canal and River,

The belligerent aspect of the European intelligence brought by the
Baring’s Circular reports :—Cocoa irregular*
City of Pari} last Saturday checked the upward tendency which then
and only had of 1,413 bags sold : Trinidad at 80s. 6d.@85s. for mid to good mid
683.(2*1008. for good aud'fine, and Ills, lor superior: Granada at GSs.@6ls.: Sar*
prevailed in this market, and on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday^
inam at 73s.@S5s.
20 bags Guayaquil were withdrawn, and 07 bags Bahia at the demand wa9 limited, at a decline of
fully 1 cent, per lb. On Thuis-

London,

July 13th.

62s.
Linseed Cakes.—As usual at this season trade continues
Coffee advanced early in the week 2s. per cvvt., but this
been lost.
Copper quiet, and prices very nominal.
Tough
,

very

dull.

advance* has since

cake £80, best selected £80,

sheathing Sd.
Corn.—l'he market has again become very quiet, and the late advance has
been nearly all lost. American wheat—Spring 50s.@5-1 s. per qr.; American
flour 24s.@28s. per barrel, but there is hardly any American Wheat or flour ulFersheathiug £91, Y. M.

ing here at present.

Lead dull. Common pig £2010s.@£20 15s.
Hemp.—300 bales fair to good current Manilla, imported via New
for £45 ; a few lots since placed at this price,
a
per ton.
China Grass.—350 bales at auction were withdrawn.
Jute.—Of 2,200 bales at public sale about 1,500 bales sold at a
20s.@:i0s. per ton, viz.: from £14 15s.@£22 5s. for common to
Speliek in raiher more demand at £21 10s.@$21 15s.
Hides.—Of 80,000 Kips offered at public sale about two-thirds sold at last
sale’s rates to %d per lb. decline.
■Indigo.—The periodical sales of East India, comprising
com¬
menced on the 10th in-t. and terminated to-day. Only 2,000 chests sold at a
decline of from 2d.@4d. per lb. on last sale’s rates.

which is

'York, held
further advance of £1

decline of from
good.

10,650 chests,

Rails and bars £0 f. o. b. in Wales.

Iron.—Welsh quiet;

Scotch pigs 52s. 6d.

Clyde.
Linsekd.—No arrivals this week. 0 he market is cleared of Calcutta, of which
the nominal value ra 66s.@66s. 6d. Bombay 6Ss.@68s. 6d. Calcutta'near to
arrive has been taken at 65s. 9d. c. f. and i.; shipping cargoes of Azov are held
at 62s. 6d.@62s.; lor Autumn shipment some sales are mentioned at 60s.
Na,vat, Stores.—French spirits turpentine are scarce on the spot, and 42s.
demanded, at which price American offers to arrive. Petroleum Is. lid. refined
Pennsylvanian.
Oils.—Lin>eed is of slow sale at35s. 9d. for present delivery. Olive: small
cash for mixed Nos. on

sales at the
£51. Palm

quotations

;

Gallipoli £57, Messina and Spanish £06, and

Mogadore

the best Lagos is quoted 40s., inferior qualities 3Ss.@39s. Fish :
Sperm £123, but no sales reported; pale Seal sells at £40 to arrive, and Cod
£46 on the spot.
Rice.—8,500 bags sold at rather easier prices. Necransie at 10s., old Rangoon
and Bassein at 9s. 9d., and a floating cargo of 500 tons Rangoon at 10s. 4%cl. for
:

the Continent.

Molasses.—66 puns fine Antigua sold at 14s. 6d.
Rum very quiet; 110 puns Jamaica sold at 3s. Id @3s. 8d , 250
at Is. 3^d. proof, and 320 puns Berbice and Dememra at Is. 6%d. for the latter.
Saltpetre very flat, and only 400 bag-* Bengal sold at 22s.Tor 10% $ cent.

hhds. Mauritius

Spices.—Black*Pepper quiet; 850 bag* Penang partly sold at 3>&d. Pimento :
of 450 bags about half found buyers from 2>ad.@2>£d. for ord. to good. Ginger:
470 barrels Jamaica sold from 56s. for common to 60s. for good ord. ; 30 cases
Cochin sold at 63s.
Tin steady; Bars 86s., Blocks 85s., Refined 87s.
Sugar steady at last week's prices.
Tallow has been quiet throughout the week.

Upland.

Middling
Good Middling.

Florida.

Mobile.

& Texas

26
31
33

26
31
34

27
32
36

39

41

26
31
34
37

^ lb

Ordinary
Good Ordinary.
Low Middling

36

,

37

follows

St. Petersburg Y. C. on the

38

42

week have amounted to

Exports of Cotton from New York the past
2.808 bales as

-

41

:

To Liverpool per steamers
Virginia, 1,611; Edinburgh, 75; Aleppo, 363;
City of Cork, 90. Per ships: Hemisphere, 131; Webster, 458; Antartie, 21; Ex¬
celsior, 59. Total, 2,808 bales.
Below we give our.table showing the exports of Cotton from New

York and their direction for each of the

exports and direction
the total for the same
EXPORTS

OF

COTTON

last three weeks

;

period of the previous year.
(BALKS)

'

FROM NEW YORK SINCE SEPT.
WEEK ENDING

EXPORTED TO

July

July

10.

17.

Havre....*
Other French ports

July 24.

2,808 3fi6,869
....

Total to Gt. Britain..

804

630

34

46
.

....

..

31

46

Total French

.

....

:!!!
....

■

Bremen and Hanover

..

....

....

Total to N. Europe

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar
All others

—

..

....

•

•

•

•

....

Grand Total

35
....

35

Spain, etc
676

1, 1865.
Same
time

Total
to

prev.
year.

date.
"

29,342

....

20

16,515
363,384 386,191
35,954
T9
,

6,067

29,362
770

....

.

'

770

36,067

181
391

17,811

.

Hamburg
Other ports

to

^
.

804

630

Liverpool
Other British Ports

Total

also the total

since September 1, 1865; and in the last column

Prev.

on the 3d iust. con¬
sold, all being with¬
out reserve.
There is no alteration in prices. The total number of pkgs. real¬
ized at these sales is 40,254, nearly the whole beinsr without reserve. The mar¬
ket has since been quiet, with but*little business doing.
Liverpool, July 14th.—Ashes.— Pots are in more demand, and 600
barrels sold at 28s. 6d. up to 29s. Market bare of Pearls. Bark.—GO hhds. of
Philadelphia at 6s. 9d., and some Bal imore at 6s. Beeswax dull; 5 tons Ameri¬
can at £8@8 5s.
Djewoods.—300 tons St. Domingo Log at £4 7s. 6d. for infe¬
rior ui) to £4 17s. 6d. for verv fine.
100 tons M racaibo Fustic at £4 12s. 6d.
Gambier sells slowly at 21s. 9d.@22s. for heated on the spot. To arrive, 300
tons are reported at 21s. 3d.@2Is. 6d. percwt. India Rubber in improved de¬
mand, and about 40 tons Para sold at 2s. l^d.@2s. 3d. for fine, closing at the
h gher price, and Is. 6d.@ls.7d. for Negrohead; more is now asked.
12 tons
Guatemala at Is. 7d.
Lard.—Nothing doing; 65s.@68s. Naval Stores.—Rosin
arrives freely and is difficult of sale; 2,000 barrels American are reported at 4s.
9d.(3 6s. 3d. for black and common. Spirits of Turpentine very dull; American
42s @40s. Petroleum.—Refined quiet at Is. 10d.@ls. lid. p -rgal.
5(0 barrels
Spirits at 8d.@9d. per gal. Shale Oil Is. 9d. per gal. Beef.—A speculative sale
of 500 tcs.; Indian Mess is reported at 105s. Pork.—Prime Eastern steady j but
Western is 2s. 6d. per barrel lower—85s.@90s. Bacon.—Is. to 2J. lower, with a
limited inquiry; Cumberland Cut 45b.@48s. Cheese.— 3s. per cwt. lower, rang¬




•

Straits 76s.@77s.

spot 44s Od., and Oct. to Dec. 46s. 6d.@46s. 9d.
Tea.—The public sales of China Teas which commenced
cluded on the 10th, when 6,6S5 pkgs. passed, of which 6,260

ing from 40s. to 75s.

entered the market pretty freely ; and the war news by
being interpreted favorably, some shipping orders were
executed, upon which the previous decline was nearly recovered.
Should the Fall trade for Cotton goods, which has been delerred so
long, set in soon, as many expect, " ith considerable vigor, spinners
would necessarily come into the market for much la>ger quantities than*
they have taken for some time past ; and with decreasing stocks at the
ports, might give an upward turn to prices.
Still, European politics
and the probible premium on gold enter largely into calculations for
the future, and may neutralize entirely the influences which ordinarily
control die market.
The crop accounts continue quite favorable, and
larger estimates of the probable yield are now made.* Sales of the
week have been S,00u bales.
The market closes quiet, with but little
doing, and the quotations are as below :
N. Orleans
day, spinners

the Hibernian

873

....

•«.

•

—

....

15,056
5,986
38,853

1,678
761

2,474

....

....

572

38,853
....

....

....

....

2,474

2,808 :460,709 463,585

'

30,70

receipts of Cotton at this market for the

The

follows

ing (Friday) were as
From *
^

New Orleans
Texas

:

Bales. |

From
3,031'South Carolina

Bales.

-

380
92
166
286
62

.-...

155;Foreign

a

Freights-

week ending this even

iNorth Carolina
1.103 Norfolk. Baltimore, &c
1,196! Per Railroad

Mobile...!
Savannah
Flori.

Date.
June 2

Total for the week

984,753

Previously reported
Total since July 1, 1865

991,2S4

....

Savannah July 21.—The receipts for the week ending July 20, were
2,086 hales, against 1,785 last week ; and the shipments this we^k were
4,299 bales, as follows; To Liverpool 2,585 biles, New York 963 bales,

Receipts.
5,243

Shipm’s.
8,183

Stock.
10,855

3.'180

3.081

2,198

Price Mid.
3<>#@—
34 @.35

11,554

3.018

12,374

6

July

we

each of the last four weeks :

give the receipts, shipments, price, &c., for
Jnue 22..
“
29

Below

bales.

Baltimore 751 bales—leaving the stock 12,013

to

“

13

1,785

20

2,089

—

4,299

@32

30 @32
31 ®—

12,013
10,800

2,146

“

>

July 20.—The receipts for the week ending July 19
amount to only 3*»8 bale9 against 299 bales last week.
Shipments
for this week amount to 362 bales against 564 bales last week,
none of which, however, was on foreign account.
Transactions in cotton
‘Charleston,

during the week have been very limited because of the light stock
Sales for the week amount to 350 bales. The receipts, sales, and exports
for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to
Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the cloee of each
week siuce May 5th, were a9 follows :
Freight for Upl'd—n

4.433

Price of
mid.
unsettled
32 ®—
35 ®36
36 ®33 ®31 ®32
31 ®32

4,379

33#®34

Ship-

Date. Rcc’ts. Sales, merits.
460 4.505
June 1.. 1,810
“
281
2.099
8..
1,110
“
7(52 2,023
15..
1,358
“
250 2,417
22..
1,892
“
49.1
800
29..
1,113
626
620 1,274
Julv 5..
“
564
299
450
12..
“
362
308
350
19..

Stock.
6,915
5,926
5,261
5,033

5,356
4,70S

To Liver-

To New

pool.
®-

9..

15..
23..

44
44

July
4 4

80..
6
13.:

gold.
#@- 137® #@- 144® #@— 143® —
#@— 148®150
#@— 153@155
#@— 152® 155
#@— 146@148
#@- 146®148

#
nominal

®—
# ®# ®# ®# ©—
# @#

receipts at Charleston since September 1st, now reach
105,164 bales.
Galveston, July 14.—Wo have received one week later statement by
mail from Galveston.
The receipts were 3S8 bales, against Y2&
'.list week, and the shipments were 957 bales, against 616 last week
The shipments for the week ending July 13th, wete, to New York 911
bales, and to New Orleans, 46 bales. Below we give the receipts, sales,
and shipments for a seres of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates
of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of
each week :

Freights.

,

Price

To New

pool.
Rece’ts. Sales. Exp. Stock,
100 2,291 11,715 nominal 9-16®%
4
1,532
191 2,319 10,657 nominal 9-16®.%
11
1,261
174 2,806
506
8,357 nominal # @9-16
18
155
-28
9,305 nominal # @9-16
25
1,176
219 2,992
7,238 nominal # @9-16
925
1..
(54 1,181
6,5-14 nominal # @—
477
8.
S28
368
6,986 23@25 — @9-16
15.
1,280

May

York.t

gold.

@@—
@—
#®~

125®127
126®128
127@129

#® 1

131®

1

.

.

It

—

.

—

.,

44

.

June
44
44

.

1
1

.

44

oo

44

29.

.

it

1,336

745
725
388

13

•

.

6,753 nominal

—

@9*16

23
616
957

1,093

6..

July
*

,

To Liver-

Date.

7.475 nominal

—

@9 16

.

ioo

Specie, ex-revenue tax.
fhere bus been a

ers are

Mouile.

—

@9-16
@9-16

—

-

1
1

147®...

145@146

@—

onejweek’s later dates

ending July 20 were 826

,

Price of

11

26

1

June
“
“
“

“

July
“
“

8
15.
22........
29

6
13
20

1,505
1,490
1.885

1.070

672
826

,

To

To Now

Sales. Exp’s. Stock* mid. L’pool. York.
5,0(10 12,674 49,782 31®32 #
# ® 1
3,950 9,019 43,808 32@33 #
% @ 1
3,700 3,616 41,782 33®— #
# @ 1
4,250 1,973 42.407 36@— %
% ® 1
2,205 2.680 41,958 — ®34 #
1 @—
1,770 4.674 39,188 33®34 #
1 ®—
1# @—
2,000 3,096 37,596 nominal. #
6:3-5 4,121 34,965 33®— %
IX ® %
510 1,185 35,095 33®- % IX ® %

850 5,018 30,496 30®— %

1,900
2,750

4,310 25,267 29@30
1,017 34,978 31®32

%
%

gold.
126@127#

128® 129#
129® 130
140®152
1:38®,139
140®—
14:J@146
146® 149
149(0*154

before counted.
*
New Orleans July 21.—The mail returns for the week
20 show the receipts to be 1,886 bales, against 2,609
The shipments for the week were 9,499 bales: of
not

ending July
bales last week
which 2,395 bales
to Liverpool, 3,233 bales to New York, 3,871 bales to Boston.
Stock on hand July 13 had been reduced to 101,971 bales.
The
receipts, sales, and exports for a series of weeks, and the stock, price
of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price
gold at the close of each week since June 2, were as follows:
i




#@#@%

gold.
1S9#@144#
137 @141
146#@147
145#@147
152# @153
152#®—
150# @151
148 @149

Py steam.
The* market,

during the week has shown a fair degree of spirit.,
closing at 3f@36 for middling.
Inferior and ordinary qualities sell at
irregular prices.
European
don. writing

*

correspondent in Lon¬

Indian Cotton Markets.—<"hir own

and

under the date of July 4. gives the followiug full review of the
Liverpool, London and other cotton markets.
Liverpool, July 14.—Owing to-[the uncertainty which has prevailed dur*
ing he week respecting the war on the Continent., the Liverpool cotton market
has been subjected to r.oher mimeiouu fluctuations. In tne early part of the
week, influenced by ihe hope that the return ot peace was an event probably
not very far distant, the demand for nearly all descriptions of cotton was
good, and prices advanced #d to Id per lb., the greatest improvement being in
American and Brazilian descriptions. The market during the last few days
has been much less active, and as regards the descriptions most abundant, the
advance in prices has been almost entirely lost. Ihe stock of Egyptian cotton
is now reduced to 36,000 bales, and in consequence of the small supplies of this
description brought forward, the quotations during the week have advanced
Id to 2d per lb.. Brazilian cotton has been freely purchased, but
for this description of cotton closes with some degree of heaviness.

the market
The mar¬

arising from the circumstance that a return of peace is etill proba¬
more buoyancy with au upward tendency in prices.
The
amount to 98,070 bales; of this quantity, speculators have
exporters 23,180 bales, and the trade 64,520 hales. It will be
export demand has materially incr*. ased, only 14,000 bales
having been purchased on foreign account last week, and 10,000 hales in the

ket

to-day,

ble. has exhibited
sales of the week
taken 10,370 bales,
observed that the
week ending

The prices current tor cotton are now as under:

June 30.

1866.

33

Upland

11

20
15

14

Mobile
New Orleans
Texas

1\X
11#
11#

14#

...

38

21

22

24

..

..

..

good fair.

and middling.
24
27
16 # 18

Sea Island
Stained

15#
16
16

14#
14#

? he comparison of the price
last four years is subjoined:

Middling—
Sea Island...

35

.

Upland

-

Mobile
Orleans

-

.

Pernambuco.

.

20#
21#
21#
20#

42

54

19
19#
19

ot the

COTTON.

1803
d.

Middling—

Egyptian

....

West Indian.

19

31#
31#

34

of middling quality of cotton per each

1864. 1865. 1866.
d.
d.
d.
27
84
42
3

*

Mid. Fair. Good

...

.,

COMPARATIVE PRICES OP

1803.
d.

1865.

x,

Good and
fine.
52
70

Fair and

Ordinary

14

if)#

Broach
14#
Dhollerah....
14#
15# ♦Fair

17#

1864.
d.
19# 29
21
2'#
15# 19

19#

15

1865.
d.

RW

17

20*

16#

19#

u

11
11

7
7

of cotton from Liverpool are about 100,000 hales in excess of
total shipments from Jan. 1 to July 12, having amounted to
420,567 bales, against 328,398 bales during the corresponding period last year.
Of this quantity, 128,0:9 bales and 24,213 bales in 1866 and 1865 respectively
The exports
last year, the

American produce.
Annexed are the particulars

were

of sales, imports and stocks, &c.,for the week

and

year:

Specula- this

port.

tion.

hales. 23,320

4,080

4,150

7,920
4,440

990
390
250

240

Trade.
American
Brazilian

.

Egyptian

.

West Indian...
East' India
China and Japan.

2,970
25,850 17,390

.

.

.

20
.

,

’...

American
Brazilian

Egyptian
West India
East India...

100

320
....

5,660

week.

Average
weekly sates.

period

1866.

224,020
122,710
52,580
658,570

749,450
202,160

48.900
120

2,240

6.680

13,690

30

51.480

3,910
3,720

15,820

166,570
186,7:30
276,390

742,030

i865.

18,560
5,840
3,600
1,590

R65.

year.

31,530
9,150
5,150
3,220

3,930

1,540

64,520 23,180 10,370 98,070 1,802,1501,632,780 45,440 82,870
Imports
» /
Stocks
>
To this To this
Same
date
This
date
Total
This
date Dec. 31.
1865.
week.
1866.
1865.
day. ’ 1865.
1865.
‘8,14 925,331 143,753
459,369 411,750 29,520 143,722
2,785 300,235 180,016
334,068 94,150 46.710
36 004

190

1 836
18,322

801

Chiuaand Japan.

131,340 242,089
411,328 35,990 57,600
59.462 58,889
113,328 20.760 12,390
823,841 402,817 1,('95,744 356 240 173,240
4,795 100,324
125,871
4,300 41,510

9,796
144,759
4,971

923,190 361,070

370,275

32,038 2,245,0041,127,890 2,539,708

Total

Same

Total
this

Total
Ex-

31,623

has followed the« ourse of the Liverpool trade,
affected, viz.: by Continental politics. In the
early part of tiie week, prices advanced #d to #d per lb., the greater part of
which improvement has been lost. The particulars of imports, &c., of East
Iudia, Chiua aed Japan cotton, for the last three years are subjoined:

London. July 14.—The market
and has therefore been similarly

1864.

1865.

1866.

156,190

121,816

Stock, July 12

80,021

63,568

54)8,555
156,190

The latest advices at hand from India report a
state of the cotton trade, and shipments were

great want of animation in

Imports, Jan. 1 to July 12
Deliveries, same

period

bales.

150,266

progressing

167,314

77,236
the

at the rate of only

2,500 bale> per week. It was asserted that the shipments from
close f the year would not exceed 300,000 ha es, making a total
months of one million bales.

Bombay to the
for the twelve

BREADSTUFFS.
Friday, P. M., July 37, 1866

IX ® % 151®152

1# @ % 150®152
IX ® X 149@151

#®1
1 @1#
1 @1#
1 @1#
1 @#<&#@~“

#@#
#@#@#@#
#@#
#@#

Price

*

Price of

During the week there has been but rittle business, though under the
European advices prices have advanced, aud the market closed on the
20th of July at 31 @32 for middling. The lower grades are easy at
inside figures.
Exchange sterling ruled dull and closed at New York,
sight, par. The total receipts at Mobile since Sept. 1 now amount to
417,188 bales. I eluded in this amount is 9,902 bales added this week,

were

..

Exchange sight on New York

The receipts for the week

2,274
2,598
2.1811,903

.

..

Total

against 672 bales last week, and the shipments were 1,017
against 4,310 bales last week ; leaving the stock nil hand and on
shipboard not cleared, after adding 9,902 bales, receipts not before
counted, at 34,978 bales. Shipments during the week were ail to New
York, nothing being done on foreign account.
The following are the
weekly receipts, sales, and exports, for a series of weeks, and the stock,
price of middling rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and
price of gold at the close of each week :
Freight

19

..

buy¬

bales
bales

“

..

—

139®140#
140@143#
141@144
145@149

@@@—
@@-

t Per Bteamer.

premium.

Date.
Receipts.
Mav '5
3,114
12.......
3,045

..

129@132

little movement this week in the market, and

July 21.—By mail we have received

Mobile.

IVom

",5S4 nominal
7,015
21®

williug to pay 21c for middliug.

£@V per ceDt.

20..

To Liver- To New
York.*
pool.

8,200 13,088 139,7G9 40®—
5,600 21,723 124,133 38@39
9,750 10.650 121,791 Unset’d.
4,350 7,709 116,375 39@40
3.317 4,600 5.655 1'4,130
3.277 4.500 9,13(5 108,566 34®i.36
2,509 6.000 4.476 106.783 34® 35
1,386 6,7,0- 9,499 98,904 35@36

..

.

Price
Mid.

4,112
5,258
3,842
5,488

..

York.

Price

The total

Price
mid.*

.

44

6,531

-

Rec’ps. Sales. Exp. Stock.

44

44

c

113

THE CHRONICLE.

July 28,-1866.]

But at
the lower prices which were accepted a much better demaod sprung
up, and in some grades there is a slight advance. The receipts are still
on a very limited scale—barely equal to the wants of the market—and
our millers ace doing very little.
There has been some demand for the
British markets, but the business, so far as we could learn, was confined
to some flours, for which $6(a)$7 50 per bbl. was paid.
Wheat has been taken more freely by millers, when offered at low
prices. But yesterday and to-day speculative orders appeared ou the
market, upon which prices advanced 6@ 10c. per bushel, checkiog the
demand. It is rumored that heavy rains at the West have endangered
the progress of the harvest of the Spring crop. But these rumors have
received little credence, and the close was heavy. There is no doubti
There

was some

further decline in Flour early in the week.

.

passing through a critical period for Spring Wheat,
and ten days must elapse before all danger will be passed.
The supplies of Corn and Oats have been interrupted by another
break in the canal, and yesterday and to-day developed some specula¬
tion, but without materially advancing prices.
The export demand is

however,

we are

100,000 bushels, and the

fair for both Oats and Corn—of the former

bushels, having been taken this week, mostly for Grea

latter 500,000

Britain.

Rye has been quiet. Barley and Barley Malt dull
Canada Peas
very quiet and nearly nominal.
The following are the closing quotations of Breadstulfs:
Western
Extra State

6 85® 9 65

•

Western,
to

mon

8 35® 9 00

com-

good

fine

Corn

meal, Jersey
Brandywine

1 20® 1 85
1 00®. 2 10

®
2 35® 2 50
2 25® 2 75

White
Corn. Western Mixed
Western Yellow
Western White

7 00®11 85

Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
12 00®14 50
Southern supers
9 5G®11 10
Southern, fancy and ex. 11 25®15 50
Canada,
common
to
S 25®12 50
choice extra

Rye Flour, fine and super¬

Spring

per bushel
Milwaukee Club
Red Winter
Amber do

$ bbl $5 75® 7 50

Shipping R. hoop Ohio.
Extra

Chicago

Wheat,

Flour,Superfine State and

8-1®

90®
1 10®

....

Jersey and State
Barley

60®.
95® l

47®,
10® 1
1 15® 1
1 SO® 2
1

Peas, Canada

and

White beans

4 65® 5 1C

The movement in Breadstulfs at i is market has been

60
10
20
30
30
60

in wheat aud flour,
Yesterday there was

trade, and though not much actual business was reported
buyer* would had to pay an advance on Tuesday’s prices.

active demand for Indian corn and the market was sw ept of all prime quality
offerings at 27s per qr. At to-day’s market there was an improved tone in the
trade generally, and though rlie business in wheat was not extensive, sales were
practicable at an advance of 2d. to 3d. on Tuesday’s prices. Flour, though more
readily sold and steadier in price, "was not quotably dearer. Notwithstanding
the recent large import of Indian corn, samples of prime ready for immediate
delivery were scarce, and brought fid. per qr. more than on Tuesday.
Flour—Extra State, per bbl., 26s. 6d.@27s.; Canadian, 27s. ®28s. 6d
Wheat
—Chicago and Milwaukee, per 100 lbs., 9s. 6d.®l0s. 6d.; do. Amber Iowa, 11s.
®lls. 2d.
Indian Corn—per480lbs., yellow. 28s.; White, 31s. 6d.@32s.; Mixed,
27s. 3d.®27s. fid.
Peas—Canadian, per 504 lbs., 37s.®33s. Oatmeal—Canadian,
per 210 lbs., 29s.®30s.
farmers’ DELIVERIES.

an

31,285 qrs.

Week ending July 7th. 1866
Same time 18(55

at 54s.

42s. 5d.

Flour.---^

I. corn,

IMPORTS.

Wheat,

,

bbls.

sacks.

qrs.

21,634

United States and Canada
France, Spain and Portugal

2,630

North Europe
Mediterranean aud Black Sea...

1,325

10

919

6,695

Other places
Total lor week

4,785

io

2,508

282,025
205,135

59.217

252.744

64,455

185,017*

28.329
584,596
63.493

1,589

....

830
...

.

Same time 1865

.

follows:

as

6d.

“

5(5,594

qrs.

85® l 10

Malt

Friday
business
the eek
the

was Is. per sack lower, but rather steadier than in the interval since
The large import of Indian corn brought many buyers, and a large
re
suited at 27s. per qr. for prime mixed, being a decline ot Is. perqr. on
w
Oats were in good request.
Peas were dim of sale. Since Tuesday
con
tinned delay in the announcement of an Armistice, and the reported threat or
an “ Armed Mediation ” on the part of France, have imparted firmness to the

85

Rye
Oats, Western

6 00® 6 65

[July 28, 1866.

CHRONICLE

THE

114

b

RECEIPTS.

1866.
\
1865.
For the w’k. Since Jan. 1. For the w’k. S'e Jan. 1.

Flour, bbls
...„
Corn meal, bbls....
Wheat, bnsh
Corn, 'bush
Rye, bush
Barley. «fcc., bush..
Oats, bush.... ;

1,216,010
176,575

8.815

393,290
584,340

201,SOS
2,532,970
3.887,450
120,730

47,745

8,932,725
283,920

30.205

1,425

4-19,265

41,805

549,940

180,595

..

2.757.480

SOS,245

4,764,330

FOREIGN

EXPORTS.

1805.
v
For thew’k. Since Jan. 1. Forthe w’k. S'e Jan. 1.
1S66.

9.730
1,970

Flour, Obis

meal, bbls
Wheat, hush

Corn

Rye, Dash
Oats, bush
The export

>

,

537,270
S7,630
135,380

1-11,600

196,955

63,980

201,655

6,592,295

976,240

Corn, bush

28,500

767,820

27,985

2,-185

778,495

84,075

1,011,120

686,400

63.460
......

of Breadstuff's to Great Britain aud Ireland from Sept. 1*
1866, has been as follows :
Flour,

From
New York
New Orleans

Wheat,

bbls.

bush.

105,609

1.136,979

9,649,291

4,601

711.497

To date.

....

Philadelphia

July 13. 1866

..

.

..

Corn,

bush.

479

..

7,790

4,907

..

929,980

Baltimore

Boston
Calif, and other

Total
To about
do
do

..

1,179
22.795

121,361

17,810

11,316.380

1,022.082

1,262,941
2,542,820
11,039,709

1,366,027

21,197,162

9,616,380

ports...July 17, 1866

..

142,989

period, 1865

same

do
do

1864
1863
TO

THE

591.458

339,165

CONTINENT.

Flour,
..

Corn,

bush.

245,651

68,111

bush.
34,627
7.176

245,(551
41,350

68,111

41,803

97,430

13,965

284,507

340,836

1,719,885

11,485
12,535
68,957

1,125
4.283

Total
To about
do
do

Wheat,

hush.

3.159

..

Rye,

bbls.
From New York to Julv 20, 1S66
From other ports, to latest dates....

period, 1805

same

do
do

1864
1863

Weekly Receipts
at the following lake

..

..

Totals
Previous week
Cor. week, 1865 —

Wheat.

8,099

Milwaukee
Toledo
Detroit

159,809

Lake Ports.—Tiie following shows the
port9 for the week ending July 21 :

at

Flour.
24,468
4.475
10,959

Chicago

22.884
80.319

..

9,510

48,001

290,774

60,835
60,933

390,280

509,571

Corn.

43,380

1,122,160

212.276

52,373
192,280
12,609

25,572

THE DRY

GOODS TRADE.

1,627,430

9117,520

3,130

62,445

receipts

Barley.

Rye.

2.615

Oats.
267,463
87.067

21,500

1.053

17.407

21,250

1,056

3,420

5,283

57

1,379,422
1,581,782

381.069

4,781
7,778

42.327
64.442

792,619

195,192

5,890

20.951

488,891

Eastward Movement by Canal.—The following
what there was afloat last Saturday on canals destined
From Buffalo,

will show about
for tide-water :

Friday, July 27,1866,

P. M.

animation, although it
yet rather irregular and fitful. The adjournment of Congress
without passing the tariff measures dispelled the hopes of higher prices,
The

is

L)ry Goods Trade shows a good degree of

as

while the lateness of the season and

steadiness of the cotton market

changed hands
jobbers taking
whole stocks of particular makes. This refers to cotton goods, while
woollen goods are again very dull from the absence of any hope of a
higher tariff, and as stocks are large, and the wool market depressed
keep prices firm. Large lines of goods have
during the last two or three days, some of the leading
tends to

downward tendency to prices of heavy woollen goods.
Buown Sheetings and Shirtings of particular makes have been
taken in large quantities by a few leading jobbers, and there is a more
decided tone to the market, although quotations are a little under those
of last week for heavy goods.
Standards are now held at 23 cents.
there is

a

This is the

price for Indian Head A, Appleton A, Stark A,

Nashua

inch 25}, do P A 37 inch
do heavy shirt A V 30
inch 20, do fine sheet A L 364 inch 23-}, do do PrL 36} inch 23}, do
shirt P E 33 inch 22}, Indian Head B 30 inch 19, doE 48 inch 37,
Nashua extra A 36 inch 21, do fine D 36 inch 21, Waltham F 40 inch
26, Massachusetts A 4-4 21, do B B 4-4 21, Medford 22, Newmarket
Manuf. Co. 33 inch 19, do do 36 inch 20, do do heavy D 36 in'di 22},
Auburn 36 inch 14, Indian Queen 36 inch 17, New England 36 inch 17,
Pittsfield A 30 inch 18, Rocky Point sheetings 36 inch 17, Wawawanda
36 inch 17, Appleton B 40 inch 23, do C 17, do D 20, do W 48 inch
32}, do shirting N 17}. Ethan Allen C 14, Manhattan K 17}, Pocassett
Canoe 39 inch 26, do K 36 inch 21, do family cot 36 inch 18, do II
X;, and Lawrence C. Atlantic heavy A 37
25, do A H 37 inch 25, do P H 37 inch 25,

X

Grafton 28 inch 15, do 30 inch 16 do
Indian Orchard W S3 inch 18, do B B 19, N 23, do C 21,
and A 24, Bristol 19, G. Washington heavy 21, Griswold § 12, Warren
36 inch 18. Excelsior light 4-4 11}, O. J. Rathburn } 19, Edward Harris
40 inch 30 do } 19, Wachusetts 23, Tigers 15. Ceutral Mills 15, Boston
17, Meiimac 16. Canton 28 inch 12}, Conestoga Steam Mills E 28 inch
13, O 2S inch 15, H 34 inch 18, R 36 inch 20, A 37 inch 13, do 27 inch
14, do 28 inch 15. and 50 inch 24.
Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings have met with less activity,
but the trade has been steady, and with light stocks, prices are still
firmly maintained. York Mills are closely sold up, and firm at 434,
Wamsutta are held at 37}, Lonsdale 33, Rockdale B 27, Uxbridge impe¬
rial 4-4 27}, Kent Iliver 12,Grafton 3-4 14 and 7-8 15, Auburnville 4 4
inch

25

15, Western States 18,

33 inch 18,

Aquidnecks 4 4 21, do 7-8 18, White Rock 36 34. O J Rathbun
20, Social Mill Co. water twist 30, do, 0 7-8 19, Manville
403.802
39,770
R 25, do XX 27}, Attawaugaii XX 25}, Bedford O 15, Indian River
1,001,797
63,115 1,277,790
46,240 XX
335,280
July 16
23, Warrenton B 15, Bartlett Steam Mills 33 inch 24, do 5-4 33, do
SO,010 7-8 21}, do 4-4 29, Newmarket 33 inch 22, do 36 inch 26, Waltham L
799,142
89,965
2,270,587
Totals, 14 days....
49,160
769
72 inch 02}, do X 33 inch 22}, do W 42 inch 30, do M 81 inch 82}, do
84,992
F’m Oswego, 9days.
93,142
N 9o inch S7|, Boston 19, Rockdale A 4-4 27}, Harvard 35 inch 22,
8(5.010
848.002
769
Total afloat
183,107 2,364,579
96.935
Sunnyside 36 inch 25, Woodiawn 34* inch 21, Baltic A 34 inch 20, At¬
594,630
137
Previous week
142,285 2,562.556
37.720
S.090
620,773
lantic 26 inch 15}, Washington 16, Canoe 13, Hallowell £ 15.
372,878 1,201,775
14,970
Corres’ding time,’65.
Drills are in request for heavy goods, while light weights are dull.
Comparative Receipts at five Western Lake Ports.—The fol¬
India 25, Globe Steam Mills 19, Union mill 14, Pepperell 25, Boott
lowing will show the comparative receipts of Flour and Grain at the
ports of Milwaukee, Chicago, Toledo, Detroit aud Cleveland, from Jan. 25, Stark Standard 24 Park Mills 20.
1 st to July 21, for 1866 and 1865:
Canton Flannels are inactive and rather nominal.
Columbia bring
1865.
1866.
1865.
1866.
26 cents, and Nashua 27.
Laconia 35, Massachusetts 31, and Prescott
Oats, bush
6,512,603
8,300,811
1,395,125
Flour,-bbls.... 1,763,276
30, Globe 27}, Clay 27}, Eagle 22.
467,612
373,355
Barley, bush
10,762,889
10,525,723
Wheat, bush
1,063.535
‘358,888
10,8 U,892
Rye, bush...
21,843,819
Com, bush..
Corset Jeans are steadily held, but there is little activity in the mar¬
ket. Indian Orchard 164, Silver Lake brown are sold ahead at 21}@22,
Totals, grain
42,197,273 29,003,974 Newmarket colored 17, Nashua and Franklin each 15, Canoe 16, and
Increase 1866 over 1865 : Flour, 373,151 barrels, aud grain 13,193,299
Uncas 16.
Flour.

week

ending
July 23..5

Wheat.
26.850

Oats.

Corn.

Barley.
-

-

.

Rye.

29,
7-8

-

....

..

..
.

bushels.

Liverpool. July 14th.—A return of extremely fine hot weather, and the ex¬
pectation of an Armistice on the Continent, kept our market early in the week
very quiet. The imports of wheat and flour continue on a very moderate scale,
but those of Indian corn have been extremely heavy. At Tuesday’s market
them wa» a good attendance of millers, who, however, showed but little dispo*
to purchase wheat, and though there .appeared less pressure to sell than
pa Friday, th§ hula fcn»in#sa dona w/n» at a aeeto of 64, io ad, p$r cont/fl fym
m mmrtem oi tm my, or 4$, to
fcstew mm of
vtm,




Stripes

and

Checks

do 3x3 22, Louisiana
Cham brays 22, Concord

22}, and Uplands 22,

are moderately dealt in.
Arkwright 6x2 22}1
plaids 24, Ringgold fast plaids 20, Simpson’s
15, Madison check 18, Roanoke 20, Peuobseot

Wauregau 3x3 23, do 6x3 24, Albany 3x3 13,

Willow B ook Chock 22}.
Ttm mtfnu* rtmdy for
wakes-

do 6x3 14,

Wwt Putsch m quof-etj

THE CHRONICLE

July 28, 1866.]

115

for 4-4 and *25 for No. 2.

Springfield 14, Pacific Extra ■} SO. do 4-4 40,
Henry Clay 8-4 18, Amoskeag A C A 60, A 47, B 42 C 3V} and D 32},
York 80 inch 41, 82 inch 51, Albany 14, American 20, Glen Allen 8 4
18}, Chattanooga 3-4 15, Ontario A 3-4 13, Passaic 7-8 19, Sacondale
13, Windsor 22, Chattauooga 16, Willow Brook 45, Farmer’s auc

MULE

Numbers

Common quality..
Second quality
Best quality

13
14
16

gold

large sales effected. Arnolds are still held at 17}c, Career s 22,
do purple 20, do shirting 19, do dark 19, do light 19,
<1 mourning 18, Swiss Ruby 20, Dutchess B 17, Lowell dark 17}, do
light 17, Naumkeag 17, Spring Valley 18, Wameutta dark 16}, do light
154, Dusters 15}, Glen Cove full madders 14, Wauregan fancies 18},
do Rubies 194.
American regular 19, Sprague’s fancy styles 27, solit
colors 20, Canaries 19, Orange polkas 20, Indigos 20, Blue and Orange
«

22, Madder Rubies 20.
Jacconets

are

Prices

end

The

ft#llows

are

32}, Pacific and Manchester Challies 23}.
Balmoral Skirts are in rather better request, and for some fancy
styles prices are firmer. Pontoosuc Company’s are sold at $66 per doz.
for Imperial, $60 for Picnic, $51@?55 for No. 1, and $42@$45 for
No. 2.

(<t)$3 75; Leicester ladies’ cloths $1 55.
Cassimeres

Satinets

are

moderately active, and prices

22

24

26

28

30

32

19
21

24
25

26
28

28
30

3)

32

34

32

34

gray

36

87}

SHIRTINGS,

YARDS.

""

50 Inches
64
66

,

56

lb.

oz.

8

12

lb.

lb.

oz.

,

72

lb.

oz.

oz.

10 4
11 0
11 8
19s. Od. 21s. Od. 23s. Od

16s. Od.

YORK.

' "*

Pkgs.
784
509
148
878

.

do
do
do

ending JULY

1S65.

,

26, 1866.
1866.

v

Value.
$291,S22
115,587

Pkgs.
2090
1402

161,343

81

79

26,198

1073

Total

19,421

455
939
561

$316,494

2398

$790,983

5447

EIEHOUSE

AND

THROWN

190,033

INTO

THE

Value.

$876,802
431,502
463,283
266,087
192,630

$2,230,304

MARKET

DURING

THE SAME PERIOD.

319
163
2>
487
106

$129,748

1067
1073

$309,615

mak’t 2140

$656,109

.

do
do
do

cotton,
silk
flax

.

...

.

...

.

i.

Total
Add ent’d

forconsumpt’n

Total thrown upon

'

1320
95
85
329
43

346.491

546
162
74
167
8

$234,350

$703,417
790,9S3

947
5447

$444,879
2,230,304

4270

14,380
76,361
38,559

$535,953
23,438
81,005
58,309
4,712

1872
2398

50,567

$1,494,400

6394

$2,675,273

ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE

Manufactures of wool... 2458 $1,066,258

SAME PERIOD.

925
40
87
417
14

$276,773

346,494

1483
2398

$529,119
790,983

Total entered at the port.. .5513 :$1,110,524

3881

$1,320,102

do
do
do

cotton..
silk

553

flax

Total
Add cut’d lor

consumpt’n

260,794

190

90,996

4-140
1073

....

15S,026

249
990

....

$1,764,030

187,956

DETAILED

53,302

107,222
47,524
2,481

897
189
97
321

10,960

123,606
105,435
12,345

$361,190
58,446
'

112^539

13

97,729
9402

1517
5147

$639,006
2,230,304

6,964 ; $2,869,310

STATEMENT.

The

following is a detailed statement of
ending July 26, 1866 : ’

the movement the past week

ENTERED FOR CONSUMPTION.
3-4 heavy fancy cassimeres sell at $2 @
$2 37}, do silk mixed do $1 50@?1 75, Farmer’s and Miner’s double and
manufactures of wool.
twist do 52}c, Farmer’s A Union do47}c, Shaw’s Diagonal cassimeres
Pkgs, Value.
Pkers. Value.
Pkgs. Value.
$1 87}, do doeskins $1 25, Rochester grey do $1 .25, Dighton’s silk mixed Woolens.... 581 $277,459 Gloves
123
29,351 Worsted v’m 53
10,826
Cloths
84
Worsteds
$1 75 for light weight and $2@$2 25 for heavy do,
576 276.180 LastingB..
1
492
Utica 6-4 Carpeting... .225 35,154 Delaines
57,733
5
2,611 Braids & bds. 68
31,007
fancy cassimere $2 12}@$3, Merchant’s Woollen Co.’s silk mixtures $2 Blankets.... 15
68
2,215 Hose
23,076 Cot. & worst.199
84,465
fur 8-4 and $4 for 6-4, Carolina Mills
21
14,095 Merinos
71
fancy do $1 62}@$2, Ameri¬ Shawls
32,138
Total...
can Mills 3-4
.2090 $876,802
heavy do $2 25@2 50, do 6-4 do $4 50@-?5, Fast Windsor
Woollen Co.*8 3-4 fancy do $2@$2 25, Solomon Woodward’s 3-4 blackMANUFACTURES OF COTTON.
ribbed do $2, do tan do $2, Walloomsack River Mills 3-4
.317 $109,422 Emb’d mus'n 7
3.507 Gloves.... ...81
fancy do $1 Cottons
19,875
46
12,540 Velvets.
19
50@$1 75, Taconic Mills 3-4 fancy $1 25, do 3-4 Union silk mixtures Colored
8,006 Spool
13,984
Prints
4
59
1,546 Laces
24,104 Hose
..772 219,963
$1 87}. Fort Ann Mills 6-4 coatings $4, Granville Mills 3-4 fancy cassi
9
Ginghams
3,139 Braids & bds. 20
10,067
meres $1 75@$2, Lake
Austin’s Mills 8-4 mixtures $1 75, Trenton Muslins
2
11
1,893 Hdkfs
.1402 $431,502
3,956
Tqtal
plaids for boys 4‘2}c for plain, aud 47} for twilled, Evans, Seagrave A
MANUFACTURES OF SILK.
Co.’s heavy 3-4 fancy cassimeres $2@$*2 50, F. M. Ballou & Co.’s do
Silks
117 $179, m Gloves
2
5
1,284 Sewings...
4,519
$2@2 50; S. &, H. Sayles do $1 37}@$1 75, Babcock & Moss, do #2@ Crapes
8
4,991 Cravats
9
4,440 Braids & bds. 13
11,399
$2 50, Campbell
37
081 Vestings
Co.’s do $2@$2 25, Mechanicsville Co.’s do $1 75@ Velvets
9
8,063 Silk & worst. 7
7,137
Ribbons
144 134,356 Hose
$2 25, Evans, Seagrave, Mason it Co.’s No. 3 mill do $2@2 25,
2
1,076 Silk & cotton 34
23,184
plough, Laces
63
5
39,217 Raw
loom and anvil cassimeres 50C net.
8,703
Tip top satinets sell at $1 20 for
Total....
K463 283
No 1, and $1 15 for Lower
Valley, Monsen and Hampden 75c@30c for
MANUFACTURES OF FLAX.
mixtures and 85c for blue, Rockland Satinets 82}c, Monseu WoolltnCo
are

steady.

and

17#

16
17
18

1854Pkgs.
Value.
33-4
$139,566
149
cottou..
48.574
silk
77
52,708
flax..
432
86.225

Miscellaneous dry goods.

Linsevs are unchanged.
Rob Roys sell at 26 cents for 3-4, Woo
filling 3-4 84, } 37}, White Rock 85, Stillman <k Co.’s 35, Black Hawk
30, Saco 40, Wool tilling £ 37}.
Cloths are
inactive, and prices tend downwards.
Cotton
warps $2 25 for No. 1, $2 15 for No. 2, and $2 05 for No. 3;
6-4 Conshohocken do $2 25@$2 75 ; 6-4 all wool black doeskins $3 25

100
d.

:

t

Ginghams

activity. Pacific ant
do Robes de Chambre

90
d.

entered for consumption for the week

.

Laines are still without much
sold at 28, Pacific armures 80,

80
d.

importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending July
cornsaponding weeks of 1864 and 1865, have been as

gow at 26,

de

70
d.

26, 1S66, and the

high colors, and 22 for plain.

Mouslin
Manchester

60
d.

IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF

prices. Lonsdale 21, White Rock

are in rather better request
Lancaster sell at 27c., Glas¬
and Dundee at 18.
Silesias are in moderate demand, and prices are
kept up. Indian
Orchard 23, Social Mills 27}, do extra fine twilled 324, and
superior 24.
Cambrics are quiet and unchanged. Manville 14 for black, 15 for
plain and 16 for pink. Clinton 13, Federal 12}, Smithfield Mfg Co 1415, Fox Hill Bank 12, Naragansett 15, Wauregan 16, Pacific 15, Adria¬
tic 15, Hallo well 16.

50
d.

45 Inches
56
64
66
72
lb. oz. lb. oz. lb. oz. lb. oz.
10 0
8 4
9 0
10 8
15s. Od. 16s. 6d. 19s. Od. 21s. Od.

Weights

Merrimac W 22, and D 21.

in fair demand at firm

EXPORT

40
d.

.

some

Amoskeag pink 21,

FOR

.

Reeds

Prints have been reduced in price for most makes, and there have been

24 for

8
10
14

....

Miner’s 50.
Denims and Cottonades are in some request at former prices.
Bur¬
lington Brown Denim9 sell at 14}, Homestead Brown 22, Peabody Blue
174, Arkwright Bine 261, do Brown 26}, Madison Brown20, Providence
Blue 20., Ashton Glenn brown 21, do blue 21, Homestead blue 214,
Lonsdale 30, Albany 19}, and WauregiQ 22.
Print Cloths are very quiet at 14@14} cents for 64x64 square

TWIST

6 to 12 16 to 24 30
d.
d.
d.

Millville

..

...

...

.

.

..

..

,

-

....

...

..

....

....

Linens
726
Lineu & cott.
2

75.
Kentucky

Jeans

Laces.

674

Hdkfs

20
35

in

good request, and prices are firmer
Washington and Union 52}c, Eagleville 35}@42}, extra fine indigo
blue do 47}, common etaudard 22c, and E. aud H, Babcock’s
Alpine
50.
are

cloth

American Linen is

$200,390

steady.

Crash 12@16, and Huckabuck 20@21.
Flannels are in demand, and steady.
Plain scarlet and orange range
from 32}@60, plain white 84@75, scarlet, blue and mixed twilled

24,824

Thread

23,909

Hemp yarn

....

51
..105

14,493
1J97

27,194
2S,159
6,964

..

Total..
MISCELLANEOUS.

Leath gloves. 43
Kid gioves... 15;
83
Matting
Oil cloth
12

$40,<>48
19,865

Clothing

50

12,610

Embroideries 49

Straw goods. 81

31,909

Feath.&flow.l48
Susp. & elas. 18

1,441

Colls. & cuffs.

1,088

Corsets

3

573

56

22,179

Total..

.561 $192,630

37}@66.
Carpets

sonable fabrics.

Manchester Cotton Yarn
in London,

and-

Goods Market.—Our

writing under the date of July 14, thus alludes

own

correspondent

to the state of this

market:

Manchester, July 14.—The aggregate business transacted in j^arns and goods
this week has been only moderate. A considerable
degree of caution has been
displayed on the part of buyers in contracting business, but as at many periods
of the week, strong hopes have been entertained of
approaching peace, holders
of yarns and
goods have been firm, and have demanded fully late prices. The
changes in prices have not been important; indeed, very little alteration from
last week can be noticed. For the East’ the amount of business
doing is
limited. Annexed are the prices current:
water

Numbers....,...,,
Common quality

becoiid

quality
mt quality.




WITHDRAWN

in

good supply, but prices remain the same. Lowell &
Hartford Co.’s superfine ingrain $1 60. and $1 75 for extras, $2 25 for
extra three ply Brussels, $2 45 for 3fr, $2 55 for
4fr, and $2 65 for 5fr.
Foreign Goods are iuactive,
except for a few particular kinds of sea¬
are

twist for

6 to 12
*

export.

16 to 24

28 to 32

d‘

(1*

d-

8

10

16
U

17#

W

VJ

n

19

88 to 42
<L

gj

WAREHOUSE.

manufactures of wool.

Fkgs. Value.
Pkgs. Value.
Pkgs. Value.
95 $45,406 Worsteds.... 269
118,930 Wors. yarn
3
567
Delaines
9
Carpeting.... 32
8,897
5,465 Braids & bds. 2
756
Shawls...... 8
Hose
4,183
12
3,626 Cot «& wos’d. 94
38,207
Gioves
10
12
3,412 Merinos
4,901
Total
546 $234,350
Woolens

..

MANUFACTURES

Cottons

35
Colored
63
Prints
7
Emb. muslins 4

$14,818
17,815

Velvets

OF

cotton.

11
4

4,545

Gloves

1,540

Smool.

1

112
429

10
4
22

2,478
1,134
5,625

162
ioa

$53,302

1
3

2,304

74

Total

$107,223

0 ' 6,693 Kemp yarn., 100
Thread.,,,., 6
1,989
—
11 11
ji »/ t * 11 i i it it 1I»»if 1t, t itttntitnit

1,350

2,000

Laces
Braids & bds.

2,806

Hdkfs. ^

1

Hose

.

.

.

.

MANUFACTURES OF SILK.

Silks

34
14

Velvets

$69,920
17,007

Ribbons
Laces

20
2

15,993
1,560

Tojal
a

Linens

S3

&

FROM

♦

...

J37 $37,603
3
1,241

OtAJ»»»1

i 11 r 11 ,i t n

i

438

MANUFACTURES OF FLAX.

HdkfW

mm

Matting

235

2

Sas. & elast..

1,930

6

Corsets

243
23

1

$2,481

8

Total

105

lbs29,453
Bacon, lbs .7,791
Middles, lbs.4.477
Matting, pkgs. 12
Rope, pkgs... .52

Mfd tob,

$22,212
HAVRE.

FOR

ENTERED

MANUFACTURES OF WOOL.

170
4

$78,603
1,213

Carpeting.... 48

10,403

Woolens
Cloths
Total

MARSEILLES.

....

MANUFACTURES OF COTTON.

Cottons

Colored

22
4

Prints

Ginghams

Laces

Hdkfs

10

585

5

1,440

5,481

Petroleum,

Silks

Velvets

1.560
1,680

2
2

Vestings

36,930

34

-.

Lace-*

1,432

1

Crapes

574

1

Ribbons

64,292

39

.......

6.248

Total

$112,539

3,688

5

785

1

Embroideries

1

519

13

specie)

(exclusive of

PORTS FOR THE

galls

414

531

2

Books, cs

31

Miscellaneous....

$19,064
HAMBURG

Segars,

es....l08

28,153

pkgs

12

2,007

Seneca root,

$30,160
BREMEN.

750

1
cs.623 31,150
150
Maizena, bxs 10
8,190
Tobacco, hhds.90
Effects, C3
Hardware,

Tobacco stems,
hhds
19

1,127

$41,367
ROTTERDAM.

8,636

77.000

Staves

73

Drugs, pkgs ... 1
Staves ....12,000

1,280

Logwood, tons. 65

1„322

Zinc ore, bxs.

Miscellaneous....

144

.21

Mfd tobacco,
lbs
&520

719

Tobacco, hlids.22

6,050

GLASGOW.

1,3-50

2232 346,515
Corn, bus.491,243 432,618

200

800

Tobacco, hhdsl35
Corn, bus.137,176

lbs
Bacon,

1,230.26)4 230,609

5,474

lbs.33.883
Tallow,lbs. 40,311
Butter, lbs. ..4872
Oil cake, lbl9,345
Hams, lbs. 11,000
Wax, lbs.... 1800

5,020
900
460
1,980
700
1,150
22, -61
300
100

Rags, bales
22
Hemp, bales.1115
3
Books, cs

1
hhd.468 135.634
Rosin, bbls. .1232
7,5U3
Spirits turp.,
bb's?
200
6,720

Effects.cs
Tobacco,

Petroleum,

galls.... 69.593

Naptha, gals.6335

Mahogany, log.44
Sew mach. cs.. 60

Logwood, tns.109
Peas, bosh. .8056

No..9600
Bladders, pkgs 17
Fustic, tons...31
Staves,

Miscellaneous

.

29,834
750
3,0(H)

1.950

10,554

1,900

2.000
1,240

620

$1,250,249
Petroleum,

47,627 19,963
39,550
142.685
273
20,096

Oats, bush.62,%6
Corn, bus 161,542
Drugs, pkgs....7
Flour, bbls 2259

Shoe pegs,
bbls :
228
Tobacco, hhds380
171
Beef, tes

Sperm oil,
galls

4316

Prep Corn,

763

111,525
6,327

9,702

1100

3,855

Beeswax, cks.,8
Oil cake,
lbs
873,827

1,190

Tallow, lbs 27,420

8,549

bxs




9.754

Argo Is

50

ITS

Alum

2.992
-

900

Blea
Brimstone,

11

553
651

219
706

1,011

390
484

Matches, grosl20

150

386

Cart wheels,
pai rs
6
Iron safe
1
Ale, bids
40
Comment, bbl 245

100,
460
1.282

380

bales
203
Miscellaneous...

12,890

Bread, pkgs..200

1,705

61

Hugs, pkgs.. .86
Ptg nit l, pkg.. .1
Mf wood, pkg. .4
Cordage, pkgs .40

1,005

CORK.

Petroleum,

68,847

galls.. ..194,268

44,046

Corn, bush.50,065

$112,893
Q' EENSTOWN.

38,600

Corn, bush 50,913

Petroleum,

39,767 15,907

galls

$54,507
BRITISH N. AMERICAN
COLONIES.

Flour, bbls.. 5649
Corn meal,
bbls
1566

1.900

..

Mfd tobacco,
lbs
15,694

Agl implmts,
pkgs

24

250
Coal, tons
70
Com, bush .1200

Oats, bgs

.

gals.7038
Candles, bxs..90
Soap, bxs
20
40
Soap, bxs
Bread, pkgs..530
Mf iron, pkge. 135
Coal oil,

7,808

1,260

110
1,650

12

l,f 04

Shingles, bdls200

400
345

Corn, bush.. .314

524
1 57

Oats, bush...650
Bran, bush...725
3>
Starch, bxs
Cheese, ibs. .1700
Confectionery,
bxs.
9

147

062

2,990

95

5,310
3 140
107 24,010
Cochineal
Cutch
160
1,453
Cantharides
98b

Tartar.23
Chickory
.135
...

Copperas..
Gamhier

1,218

180

Total
$21,022
Grand total. .$2,867,781

640

arabic...o9
4
copal

Indigo
Iodine pot
Lac dye
Lie paste
T 'o root
In,, filer
Ma -i«:

Oils,

c-

..38
4
22

110

2,521
10
58

..<*.58

6.710
5.488
1,950

207
7.579
483
2,130
8,958
8,974
2,731
1.370

5.4G4

do linseed.386
do olive...250
Paints

31,4r6
1.170

Potash, ehlo... 25
do
Prnss..8

600

23,680

480

ash

295

GUIANA.

Petroleum,

3,300

Pork, bbls.... 106

-

5,500

187

540

1,080

Rhubarb

do

...

Sugar of lead .10

Sponges
Sumac

224

..500

Santonine
Soda, nitrate....

Vanilla beans. .1

Vermillion....25
Other.
Furs, <fcc—

Felting.......20

180 Bread, pkgs..350
451

520

Figs

875 Syrup, kegs.... 25
850 Corn, bush....20

500
60

Lemons
Nuts

3.276

10.415

460

7,308

3.134
1,376

21,751
442

Senna

Furs

9,051

4,029

Saltpe re

1,080
1,050
576
900
1.400

Cheese, lbs.. 3,600
Vinegar, cks.. 100

not otherwise specified.] Value
Pkgs.

66

Engravings... j .8 4,958
Paper
1,321 45,146
97
Other
4,949

8,906
4,375

Mahogany

1,099
3,767

29.942

,

66,893

4,083

17,000

Brass goods. ..19
Bronzes
1
Chains and an¬
chors
51

Copper
Cutlery

1,885

78

31.588

1
43
Hardware.... 114

143
5.037
IS,343

125
494

97.403
42.000

Gunny eloth4950
Guano, tns 1,050

19,382

Iron, pig,

7,183
6,716

227
Hair
Haireloth... .14

Hemp
Honey
Hops

2,030 37,121
36 1,347
44 2,551

Ind. rubber..757

31.955

Machinery ...122

6,614

Marble & man..

Iron, R. R

6.040

10,137
Iron,-sheet,

57,923

..409
Iron tubes.. .ISO

53.687
52'

Molasses.’. .5,655 155,588

215

20,569

Perfumery,

Lead, pigs .1,657
Metal goods... 29
Needles
16

7,688
7,741

bars

tons

Iron, other,
tons

...11

Nickel
Old metal

Platina
...3
Plated ware ...5
Per caps
.13
..

Saddlery
Steel..

2
2,290

.85

8.299

1,640

2.226

5,529

1.411

36,705

2.005
7,265
2,150

Rice.

14,610

RopeT

3.801

Sago flour

24,721
763

977

2,442
483
44,431
196

Rags

Soap

279

13,347

Tobacco
Wraste

6,199

799

383

42,035;
79|

.309

1,730

Sugar, hbds. bbls
and tcs20,112 1,027,478
Sugar, boxes &
5,833 127,351
bgs
Tea
37,575 355,126
Twine
Toys

963

1,720

Seeds

33,076

&c.—

..

Provisions

144,116 lbs...

13,lS3i
11,983 Stationery,

2.448

Pipes

Wire
6
Zinc. lbs.211,440

Ginger
Mustard
Pepper
Nutmeg

.3

Oil paintings.
Plaster

21,322

466

5.982
5.054
37,922

...

444
Flax
Furniture
1
Grindstones

3,896

tons..;...1,276

848
66,680

Feathers....
Fire crackers

Iron, hoop,

110

533

7,311

Emery
Fancy goods

96

Silverware.1
Tin, bxs
3.100
Tin, 20-12 slabs,

34,053

97

21,019
1,657

.

2.504

tons

623

Cigars
22.367
Coal, tons..4,102
8,488
• orks
8.462
Cotton, bis ..62
4,960
1,337
Clocks
9
Cocoa, bgs... 126
2,957
Coffee, bgs35,352 414,OSO

2,523

Guns

8,779

Ill

Cheese

-

2.396

Gas fixt

1,945

Building stones.
Clay

300
2,988

.5

240
3.708
11,062

2.337
1,330
...

176
200

1541

lbs

1,632

Spices

Fruits, kc.
Bananas
Citron

17.847

-85

Books

4,653 Woods—
Cprk
4,472 Fustic
599 Logwood, M.

Cham pagne,
bask
1,561
Metals, Ac.—

Soda, sal

$15,483

Shooks

793
20.049

Lumber,ft 692,211
Shingles, bdls 240

2.870
870
260

*'

1,08

...

Gums,crude 293
Gum
Gum

Wines

300

2,140

1,080 Lard, lbs ...5.(H)0

250

REPUBLIC.

Domestics, bales#

51
7,228

Whiskey

Cream

Shellac

2,400

660

ARGENTINE

300

Porter

Chalk

1.000

Beet, bbls
115
7,186 Flour, bbls...500
Peas, bbls.. ... v.25
150 CornmeakbblslOO
550 Tobacco, hhds. 3
600 Candles, bxs. .170

2,629

$40,699

120
2.700
2.838

Ac.—
630 liquors, Wines,154 1,241
2,030 Ale
4.279
222
Brandy

200

Camphor

Horns
Pat Leather...

418

5

Blue galls
Blue vitrol
Castor oil

Sar-aparilla.. .33

1,450

130

tn220

178

346
Miscellaneous...

gals

2,sU0
1.611
5,674

973
4,999

3,000

7,200

1,060
75

Willow
Other
Watches
20 36,527
Miscellaneous—
Leather. Hides, <Src.—
55
Bristles
27
4,782 Baske's
Boots & Shoes .1
435 Bags
Bricks
Hides, dress
ed
169 67,388 Boxes
109
Hides, undres’d. 103,709 Buttons

177

galls

BRITISH

*

11

Jewelry

17

250

Petroleum,

56,782

Sugar, bbls... .99
Pork, bbls
.382
Tallow, lbs..l,0ij0

260
286

-■

Ice ions
...25
Live stock, lid.60
Boots and shoes,
cs

1,144

100

3,824

5

Optical

3.741
933
1,300
679

.9

Borax

Lard, lbs....1762
Soap, bxs
60
Candles, bxs..72

21,076

1,069

22
1

Nautical

1,3*3

328
powder. 1(H)

Butter, lbs..2888

FENARTH ROADS.

89.183 36,550
1,870

l’wood,bxB200
Indigo, cer
6
3
Lamps, bxs

4,103

2,46r> Jewelry. &c.—

Anoline

2,200

Corn, bush 24,795

GENOA.

gals

3,661
1,899

280

Acids

17
60

Alkali

Lumber, ft.30,000
Trunks, pkgs..12
Mfd tobacco,
lbs
1544
Bacon, lbs
975
Hams, lbs...2777

$208,727

913

Petroleum,

10,795

serves

9,699

55

Hogs’ hair,

--

"..

Instruments—
Musical

.75

Glass plate...
Drugs. Ac.—

Barytes

450

2,463
$9,070

105
148

Raisins
Sauces and pre¬

1,432
12,655
Earth’nw’e.. .207
6,011
5,136 9,668
Glass
456
Glassware
13

128

4(H)
1,435

Dry goods, cs.. 2
Oars
1,600

1,258

.400

2()TH, 1866.

JULY

Oranges
Pineapples

227

.9

4,110

2,6(H)

Pkgs. Value.

540

27

ENDING

s..

China

Annatto
Bark Peruvian

5.772

36'. 0

Staves

Beef, tes

421

LONDON

galls

Sperm oil,
galls
2139
Cheese, lbs24.950
Logwood, tua 30
Beef, bbls. ...41

1,888

Staves

IMPOllTS
SPECIE) AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE

& E. ware

141

58,002
121,257

Cheese,

Shoe pegs,
bbls

4,173

..13,000

gals

Rosin, bbls

DRY GOODS AND

Bottles

11,336
19
898

guter’g, cs 3

cs

Petroleum,

500

quantity is given in packages when

China. Glass

INDIES.

Hardware, cs .82
cs..
Presvd meats,

LISBON.

1,037

Liquors, cs .165
Roofing, CS....10

Pkgs. Value.

Flour, bbls.. 1121

$9,588
Cotton, bale

[The

620
326

96,618

Rosin, bbls...450

LIVERPOOL.

{.

344

Chocolate,

895

$252,003

1,976
1,032

Furniture, cs.306
1’reserves, cs..2o'»
Oil cloth, cs.. .17

WEEK

Miscellaneous....

48,394

Corn, bush 56 039

.112

(OTHER THAN

91

$498,464

115
5,647
3,614
100
936
3,080

.2

„

328
675
305

200

Zinc

14

300

Feather, sacks 22
Rosin, bbls ...7

900
193

1,400

200

140
301

Pork, bbls
Beef, bbls

Miscellaneous....

510

Paper, bdls...562
Domestics, bale.l
Rice, bags
300
... 6
Toys, cs
Carriages
51

107
521

Lumber,ft. .49,146

Paper, reams.400
Varnish, bbls..8

WEST

1,884

Ex

leather, cs..l

Beans, bbls..

2,040

Potatoes, bbls500
Butter, lbs. 1500
Cheese, lbs. 2600

BRITISH

282
90

Oakum, bales. .20
Lamps, pkgs...24

427

Machinery,

1.000

4,525

1

Carriages

35

222
316

pkgs

2,000
1,325

Rosin, bbls.. 515

cs..61
Perfumery, cs. .89
Sand, bbls.... 50

380

Wine, pkgs... 15
Leather, sides290
Pictures, cs ...1
Furniture, cs.. .2
Spirits turp,
bbls...,
.9
Cement, bbls 225
Pitch, bbls....37

1,400

nmeal^ hhdsl2

Co:

120

330

1,51)0

Beef, cs
I R goods, cs..

110

pkgs

—

Mtd tobacco,
lbs
12,742

Pat

Wood ware,

Glassware,

pkgs

Onions, bbls. .1(H)
Cheese, lbs..5,253
Pork, bbls
188

7

Shoes, cs

Quan. Value

610
Soap, bxs
25
Ox de zinc,
cks..,.
50 2,240
200
LCotton gin
1
Wowdware,
167 1,495
pkgs
Clothes lines,
980
pkgs
175
1,200
Roots, pkge.. .22
Agl. iniplts,
pkgs
100 4,000
700
Drags, pkgs....3
137
Rags, bales .... 3
1.685
Furs, btles ...11
3,725
Skins, bales.. .12
415
Wood, pcs.... 18
1,400
Bacon, lbs 19,800
280
Books, cs.
3
6,478
Ejs oils, cs
54
Cheese, lb 355,113 70,830
1(H)
Hardware, cs.. .1
Rosin, bbls.. 1392 10,907
360
...10
Pork, bxs
400
Heads, tes
10
Tin, pigs... .1140 15,272

ANTWERP.

FOREIGN

TO

Quan. Value.

61,396^18,088

Rosin, bbls.... 80

YORK

Paint,

Matches, gross.24

2,565

lbs..30,816 7,16.5
Lard, lbs 411.743 87.972
Corn, bush..2,902
3,005
Hardware, cs..44
2,637

24, 1866.

ENDING JULY

WEEK

.Quan. Value.
COPENHAGEN.

Petroleum,

NEW

40
80

Ale, bbls

1,168

700
600
115

.400

Cement, bbls.

Butter, lbs. .7,597

Hams,
OF

PORT

415
463

Palm oil. cks ..4
Rosin, bbls.. .195

7.895

CUBA.

EXPOUTS
T14E

336

1,551

1,051
90

Paper, rms. 15.260

FROM

400

$15,084

$9,102

•

Fancy goods, cs.3
Cloth’inj, cs.....6

Glassware,pkgs43
Bread, pkgs
2
Prtug mappkgs.5

13,943

—

Total

1,600

100
350
192
100
1.054

.

3,119

2

Snsp&elas-.

991

224

.440

Stone, tons..

cs
10
Hoop skirts, cs .1
Sew mach, cs.. .6
Fluid, cs.‘..... .24
Tobacco, cs... .27
Gas fixt, pkgs. .66
Trunks, pkgs..34

Staves, n o. .69,360
Rosin, bills
.266
Miscellaneous..

MISCELLANEOUS.

4

77S

5,582

57 Marches,

$17,581

321 $97,729

Lea’r. gloves.

115

BARCET/'NA.

Total
Corsets
Straw goods.

698

1,190

8,914

35

4,103 Thread.

3

Hdkfs

85,612

.283

569
325

...

MANUFACTURES OF FLAX.

Linens.....

135
3,692

tools,cel
Shooks«teII. .2,120
Beef, bbls
21
Pork, bbls
10
Hams lbs...3,039
Staves. No. 14,200
Bread, pkgs
60
Miscellaneous
Dentists

7,823
97

1,027

2,000

gals

MANUFACTURES OF SILK

worst.
Silk
Silk & cot...

9,793

Tobacco,hhds.. 40

$58,446

.189

Agl im’lts,pkgsl7
Confectionery,cs2
Codfish, cs
50
1
Saddlery, cs
Stationery, cs.15
Cutlery, cs
65
Pkld C'fish, cs 8
Flour, bbls...200
Cider, bxs
400
Hoops
45,650
Empty hhds..285
Nails, kegs... 266
Soap, bxs....225

113

1,3 0

Pepper, bags.. 100
Cloves, bags.. .28

979
156
•845
7.606
628
176
250
189

Drugs, pkgs..401

INDIES.

FRENCH WEST

8,58U

26

2,667

6

5,325

2

417 Glov.-e..
1,582 Spool
Ilose

1
5

756

22

...

Total

Embd musl's
Velvets

24,777
6,836

86

167
500
300
476
900

Candles, bxs. .350

674

pkgs.
.414
Oats, bush... .200
Wick, pkgs
19

$19,831

2,037

..

Mfd iron, pkgs.32
Wood ware,

Staves,No..34,800
8,000
Pkge. Value;
BORDEAUX.
Braids & bds. 5
3,456 ; Staves, No.65.100 1\8-31
58.413 I;
Cot. «fc worst.159
CETTEStaves. No.44,900 13.566
897 $361,190
Tobacco, hhds.22
6,265

Pkgs. Value.
24
7,216
Blankets
Worsteds.. ..334 157.142
Merino*
103
44,744

Pkgs. Value.

\H

8,223

38,520

Staves

WAREHOUSING.

32,874

gals

460

18,302 Turpentine.bbl.27
Tallow, lbs 15,671
16,538 Lumber,bdls. 140
2,400
7,868 Staves
8
1,365 Pumps, bxs
961
Spts turp, pkgs 30
350
1,092 Salt, sacks
3,284 Nutmegs, bxs.. .4

Petroleum,

1,5U0

hd.26

Live stock,

.

Shooks&H..7,364

64

...So
Hay, bales... 35
Oats, bnsh

Quan. Valne

Quan Value

Quan. Value.

MISCELLANEOUS.

Clothing

[July 28, 1866.

CHRONICLE.

THE

116

4

485

131
140

7,107
4,242

135

5,808

98

6,401

Wool, bis
Other
Total.......

470

$3,875,179




llo^per—Duty, pig,bar,and ingot, 21; old copper
38 ft; manufactured, 30 38 cent ad val.; sheath¬
ing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 Inches long
and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 @ 34 oz. 38 square

PRICES CURRENT.

2 cents

WHOLESALE.
foot, 31 cents $ ft. All
All goods deposited in public stores or bonded
Sheathing, new
warehouses must be withdrawn therefrom, or the
Sheaihing, yellow..!
duties thereon paid within one year from the date of
Bolts
the original importation, but may be withdrawn by
Braziers’
the owner for exportation to Foreign Countries, or
Baltimore
may be transhipped to any port of the Pacific, or West¬
Detroit
ern 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 public store or ponded warehouse be¬
yond three years shall be regarded as abandoned to
the Government, and sold under such regulations as
the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe.
Mer¬

chandise upon which duties have been paid may remaiu in warehouse in custody of the officers of the
customs 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
entitled to return 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 the Government.
In addition to the duties noted below, a discrim¬
inating duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied on all
imports under flags that have no reciprocal treaties
■with the United States.

goods, wares, and merchandise, of the
produce of Countries Hast 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 mil. is
levied in addition to the duties imposed on any such
articles when imported directly from the place or places
of their growth o* production ; Raw Cotton and Raw
On all

growth

or

Silk excepted.
The tor in all cases to

be 2,240 ft.

$ cent ad val.

Ashes—Duty: 15

8 25 @ 8 50
••• © 15 h0

38 100 ft

Pot, 1st sort.-.
Pearl, 1st sort

r--'

Anchor*—Duty: 21 cents 38 ft.
38 ft
and upward

101

yi ©

Ot 209 ft

Hceswax—Duty, 20 $ cent ad val.
-Duty: on invoice

10 $ cent.

34 00 ©

38 ton

shin

Rio Grande

41

40 ©

$ ^

American yellow
nones

cent ad val.

«Iread—Duty, 30

63
5*

38 lb

Pilot

©
©

Navy
Crackers

14

special report.

Breadstuf fs—See

10 -r0 © 11 50
A-* CO @1)00
Philadelphia Fronts
(u> “*0 00
Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair, 1 $ ft.
American, gray and white...38 lb
10 @ 2 50
uard

Common

Ot ot

per

M.

»u

Butter and Cheese.—Duty:
The market is quiet for noth Butter

prices

ar
Butter—

and Lheese,but
33;

F.rtins....

F

29
26

3:
32
n

11/>

@

27

erve—Firkils
9'ates—Firrius, yell w
rkins, sac -nd qual'ty... t...

Firkins,

@
@

31

weste n he

Wesurn

40
34
37
34

©
©

82
35>
82!

Half irk u tuns. v.‘
WeL'h tabs, prime
Welch tu -s, scoml quad y
North Penr,sylvan a— F rhin4

-'5

©

89

State—Fresh pails

©

We .-t

'

i and

8; stearine and adamantine, 5 cents
38 ft
Sperm, patent,.
Refined sperm, city

38 lb50

Stearic
Adamantine

$ bbl

Cement—Rosendale

Chains—Duty, 21 cents $ 1b.
One inch and upward
38 1b

40

30
22
...

..

wax

55

©
©
©
©

..

8 50

.

bond)..$ ft
do

19
..

do

1 75
9

@

@10 <!0

@

9 00

@
@

.

Laguayra
St, Domingo

articles under this head

are

Acid, Citric

now

(gold)

Alcohol

...

..

gold
.gold

181 ©
li>! ©
•5
©
16! ©

24
18
17
17

19
17

15!
18*

©

25

©

21*

©

19

©

l'i

16* ©

17

*

(gold)

(gold)

Phosphorus

Annato, fair to prime

Antimony, Regulns of
Argols, Crude
Argols, Refined
Arsen5c. Powdered
Assafcetida
Ralsam capivi
Balsam Tolu
Balsam Peru

.

(gold)

Berries, Persian
Hi Carb. Soda,

.

...

70

1-i
25
42

35
90
25

S71
50

(gold)

Salaratos
;
Sal Ammoniac, Refined
Sal Soda, Newcastle

4i

(gold)

(gold)

7....

5
•

•

•

8 0t
3 0o
50

3§

11

Gum'Kowrie.

Gem Gedda
Gum Damar

Gum Myrrh, East. India
Gum, Myrrh, Turkey
Gum Senegal
(g. Id)
Gum Tragacanth, Sorts
Gum Tragacanth, white flakey...
Hyd. Potash, Fr.and Eng. ..(gold)

Iodine, Resublimed
7
Ipecacuanna, Brazil
Jalap
7^ Hper Berries
Lao Dye
Licorice Paste, Calabria
Liccorice, Paste, Sicily
Licorice Paste, Spanish Solid.....

(gold)

-

371
0

.

.

SO
62
s0

©
©

©
©
©

.

.

^ yard

Cotton, No. 1,

3

85

55*
• •

14

©
©
©
©

85

76

Dye Woods—Duty free.
..(gold). ..38 ton
Fustic, Cuba.!
Fustic, Tampico
Fustic, Savanilla....
(gold)
Fustic; Maracaibo
do
Logwood, Cainpeachy
(gold)
Logwood, Hood

© 81 00
©
23 00 © 24 CO
23 00 ©
20 00 ©
38 bO

Logwood,Tabasco

23 00

Camwood

(gold)

Logwood, St. Domingo
Logwood, Jamaica

(gold)
...(gold;

Limawood.
Harwood

..

©210 00

..

..

..

..

.

..

_

18 00
18 CO
t0 00
....

Sapan Wood, Manila

©
©

..

..

©
© 8{ 00
©
..

..

©

..

Feathers—Duty: 30 3<J cent ad val.
-.38 ft
90

©

95

65

©

70

Prime Western
do Tennessee

Fisli—Duty, Mackerel, #2; Herrings, $1 ; Salmon
#3; other pickled, $1 50 38 bbl.; on other Fish1
Pickled, smoked, or Dried, in smaller pkgs. than bar¬
rels, 50 cents 33 100 ft.
Drr

Cod

is

more

active.

Mackerel is in

fair

demand.

38 cwt.
33 bbl.

6 50

bbl.

4 50
7 00

Pickled Scale.
Pickled Cod

38 bbl.
Mackerel, No. 1, Mass. 6hore .
Mackerel,No. 1, Halifax
Mackerel, No. 1, Bay
Mackerel, No. 2, Bay
Mackerel, No. 2, Halifax
Mackerel, No. 3, Mass, large
Mackerel, No. 3, Halifax
Mackerel,No. 3, Mass
Salmon, Pickled, No. 1
Shad, Connecticut,No. 1.38 hf. bbl.
Shad, Con-ect cut, No. 2!...
Herring, Scaled
38 hox
Herring, No. 1

$ bbl.

9 00

5 00
7 50

©

© 22 50

...

© 20 60
©
© 18 50
©
© 12 25
© 40 00
©
©
©
60
©
50
© 6 00
....

.

88 00
14 25

13 00
57
47

4 00

..

..

..

...

..

ton.

20

©

35*

Fruit—Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs,Plums and
Shelled Almonds, 10: Almonds, 6; other
nuts, 2; Dates, 2 ; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filbera
and Walnuts, 3 cents 38 ft? Sardines, 50; Preserved
Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25 38 cent ad val.
Raisins, Seedless
© 8 50
38 i cask
4 25
do Layer
38 l>ox
8
do Bunch
©
15
Currants
15*
38 ft
f.O
82
Citron, Leghorn
18 ©
19*
Prunes, Turkish
Prunes, 5;

do
do
do
Sardines
do

13!
4!
..

80

©

Almonds, Languedoc
Provence

82

Sicily, Soft Shell

2S

48

Shelled

2 00
1 05
85
41

55

do

Driko Fruit—
N. State Apples

18
25

38 ft

Blackberries
Black Raspberries
Pared Peaches

©
©
©
©
©
©

90
40
28

27*
15*

©

12

©

18

©
©

21
25

25
13

Unpealed do
Cherries, pitted, new
Furs— Dn.y,

87
34
80
50

©
©

...

60
24

©
©

ih

Gold Pmcs—Add

40
Oft

3 62j
■

4 75
•

25
15
11
10

Filberts, Sicily..
Walnuts, French

50

•

38
21

38 ft

85
25
89

1

85

38 box
39 hf. box
38 qr. hov

Figs, Smyrna

•

•

#

#

55

35

North, and Bait.

No 1.
Beaver, Dark ....38 ft 1 '0 © 2 00
do
1 25 © 1 50
Pale
Bear, Black ...^ skin 5 00 @15 00
ao
brown.
4 00 @ 8 00

Western.

No. 1.

.

Badger
Cat, Wild'.;

©
©

42

do House

24

38

©

39

Fisher, 1
box, Silver

40

10 $ cent.
premium on gold for currency

prices.

28

*»1

22
55
45

©

Dates

50.

.

.

....

Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.
18 00
38 Pce
20 00
Scotch, Gonrock, No. 1 per yard.

#

83

©
©
37 ©
©
50 ©
©
80 ©
85 ©
3 50 ©
5 50 ©
4 50
©
2 80 ©
©
25 ©

70
50
55
56

Ravens, Light
Ravens, Heavy

05
05

6f

@

2|

38 ft

Verdigris, dry and extra dry
Vitriol, Blue

Brazil Nuts

...

(gold)

3 ‘-5
3 07
00

®

1 75

Ginger. Jamaica, bl’d, in bbls

75

171

©
©
©
©
©

60

$ oz.
bales
38 ft

Gamboge

H

--

4 >
13

©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©

30

(go d)
38 oz.

Sulphate Quinine, Am
Sulphate Morphine
Tartaric Acid

3*
55

©

80

(gold)

87*
20
11

@

..

Flux—Duty: $15
Jersey.

30
1 1)

301 ©
H ©
©
1 <0 ©
1 00
©
©

.-..(gold)

1 10

•

30
24
18

37*

46
1 00

©
101 @

(gold)

50
50
00
75
25
00

49

©
@
©
@
@
©
@

4
5
9
8
4
6

5

5 50
.

Herring,pickled

,2 50

.

•

5ft

24?

1

Epsom Salts
Extract Logwood
Flowers, Benzoin

•

©

#

Sarsaparilla, Hond
Sarsaparilla, Mex

321

*

•

1=
40 0o

Cutch

.

4

6

Cantharides
Carbonate Ammonia, in bulk
Cardamoms. Malabar
Castor Oil, Cases
38 gallon
Chamomile Flowers..
38 ft
Chlorate Potash
(gold)
Caustic Soda

Gambier.

75

Newcastle.

Brimstone, Flor Sulphur
Camphor, Crude, (in bond).(gold)
Camphor, Refined

Folia, Buchu

40

S
% #,..

ro

Rhubarb, China

Seneca Root.
Shell Lac...
Soda Ash

25

©

©
©
8 10 ©
8 75 ©
©
©
©
40 ©

Quicksilver

Dry Cod
Dry Scale

@
@
@
7 ©
55 ©
©
24 ©
©
*3 ©
25 ©
hO ©
©
@
40 @

GK

.

Prussiate Potash

*9

,

•

7
4J

24

38 ft

©
©
”* ©
2 0u ©
©

Senna, Alexandria
Senna, East India

sold for cash.
61
@

38

Aloes,Cape
Aloes, Socotrine

30
S

4 00
4 75
9 25

Oxalic Acid

7

©
@
©
©

Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, 40 cents
gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft ; Alum, (ft cents $1 100 ft;
Argols, 6 cents ^ 1b; Arsenic and Assafcetida, 20;
Antimony, Crude and Regnlus, 10; Arrowroot, 30 $
cent ad val.; Balsam Capivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30;
Balsam Peru, 50 cents 38 ft; Calisava Bark, 30 $ cent
ad val.; Bi « ’arb. Soda, »1; Hi Chromate Potash, 3cents
38 ft; Bleaching Powder,80 cents 38 100 ft ; Refined
Borax, 10 cents 39 ft; Grade Brimstone, $0; Roll
Brimstone, #10 38 ton; Flor Sulphur, #20 38 ton, and
15 38 cent ad val.; Crude * amphor, 30; Refined Cam¬
phor, 40 cents 38 ft.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 38 cent ad
val.; Cardamoms and Canthandes, 50 cents 38 ft;
Castor Oil, #1 18 gallon; Chlorate Potash, 0 ; Caustic
Soda, II; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas,!; Cream Tartar,
10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft; Catch, 10; chamomile
Flowers, 20 38 cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, l cent 38
ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gam¬
boge, lo $ cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 38
cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum
Damar, 10 cents per ft: Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal,
Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Hyd. Potash and Resublitned Iodine, 75; Ipecac and
Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil
Lemon, and Oil Orange. 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil
Bergamot, #1 $ ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 <j9 cent ad
val.; Opium, #2 50; Oxalic Acid,4 cents $ 1b; Phos¬
phorus, 20 38 cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yellow, 5;
Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents 38 1b: Quicksilver, 15
38 cent ad val.; Sal iEratus. II cents 39 lb ; Sal Soda,
1 cent $ lb; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 39 cent ad
val.; Shell Lac, 10-; "oda Ash, 1; Sugar Lead, 20 cents
$ ft ; Sulph. Quinine, 45 38 cent ad val.; Sulph. Mor¬
phine, #2 50 38 oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6
cents 38 ft; Sal Ammoniac. 2o; Blue Vitriol, 25
38
cent ad val.; Etherial Preparations and Extracts,#!
38 ft; all others quoted below, free. Mo t of the

Gum Benzoin

production; also, the growth of countries this side
of Good Hope when imported indirectly in
American or equalized vessels, 5 cents $ ft; all other
10 $ cent ad valorem in addition.
20
19J ©
Rio, prime, duty paid ....

19
2S

Drusrs and

16J

the Cape

Nutgalls Blue Aleppo
Oil Anise
Oil Cassia
<tt,
Oil Bergamot
Oil Lemon
Oil Peppermint, pure

Sugar Lead,iWhite

Ginseng, Southern and Western..
Gum Arabic, Picked
Gum Arabic, Sorts

or

©
©
©

Cotton—See special report.

22

Coffee—Duty: When imported direct in Ameri¬
or equalized vessels from the place of its growth

Madder, Dutch
(gold)
Madder, French, E. X. F. F. do
Manna, large flake

(80Jp cent)

Cochineal, Honduras
Cochineal, Mexican.'!
Copperas, American
Cream Tartar, prime
Cubebs, East India

can

do ordinary
do fair to go^d cargoes..
•T*va, nmts and bags
Native Ceylon
Maracaibo

12

2 i

©

16 @

.

•

50

Cobalt, Crystals. ..in kegs. 112'fts

Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ ft.

do good
do fair

Short Tapers
Mineral
Phial

si

Coal—Duty,bituminous, $ 1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels
80 ft to the bushel; other than bituminous,40 cents
38 2ri bushels of 80 ft 38 bushel.
Liverpool Orrel..$ ton of 240 1b
..
@ 10 00

Liverpool House Cannel

.

55

gross

@
©
©
@
©
©

'

©

-

cent ad val.
....

Borax, Refined.
Brimstone, crude.. 38 ton.(void)
Brimstone, Am. Roll
38 ft

'■;>

Guayaquil .(gold)

Fork*—Duty, 50
Regular, quarts

,

•

22

10
7

Caracas
..(gold).(in
Maracaibo .(gold)..

.

©

C •mmon
Bair.es

Anthracite

Tarred Russia
Tarred American
Bolt Rope, Russia

Licorice Paste, Greek

Opium, Turkey
.

-

Cordage*—Duty, tarred, 3; untarred Manila, 21
$ ft.
22*
21! ©
Manila,
38 ft

Bleaching Powder

131
10

.

©
©
©
©
©

other uniarred, 31 cents

Bi Chromate Potash.

Westtr
•

31

Portage Lake

25

vl
20
19
IS
15
19

45
38
45
45

3'!

I4

r i

.

3!

27

.

Farm Dairies

Ohi

*

iO

a m non

'4

38 ft

©
'©

1

Cheese—

Factory Dai'ies

cash.

Alum

4 cents.

steady.

New York

117

THE CHRONICLE.

July 28, 1866.]

..
.

..
..

..

10

'.

90 ® 1 50
90 © 1 50

..

©

20

5 00 ©10 00
^.,.10 00 @75 00

..

..
..

1 25 © 1
1 (M) @ 1
5 00 @10
4 00 @ 7

00

40 © 1
40 © 1
10 ©
8 00 © 5

00
20
00

50

25
00
00

6 00 ©50 00

3 00 @10 00
1 00 @ 2 25

do Cross
do Red

do

pale

Mink, dark
Muskrat,

..

California

..

20 @

..

..
..

80

20 @

Opossum

70 @ 1 00

Raccoon

Glass—Duty,Cylinder
and not over

and not over 24x39 inches 6 cents $ square
oot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20
cents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents $ 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
24x30, 2*; all over that, 3 cents $ ft>.

$ cent.)

(Subject to a discount of 30 @ 35
8x10
$ 50 feet

6x 8 to
8x
to
llx i4 to
12x19 to
18x22 to
20x31 to
24x31 to
25x36 to
80x46 to
32x50 to
Above

7
9
10
11
12

50

30x44
32x48
32x56

'fflish and French
qualit es.

Gunny Clotli—Duty,
$ square yard, 3; over 10,4
Calcutta, standard

flair—Duty free.
Rio Grande, mixed, .(cash)..

Ayres,mixed

Buenos

10 50
15 50
16 50
IS 00

do

Oude
Madras
Manila
Guatemala
Caraccas

ordina: y
Cotton Gins, per saw
Narrow V roug it Butts
do

Hinge’, Wrou.ht, Strap nu l i’.... List 25$ ct. adv.
Belts, Cast R >1
L st 2<> $ ct. < is
List 40 $ c . ^is.
Carriage and Tire Bolts
Door L c^s, Latches & Escutcheons.List 71 $ < t. dis.
List 7* $ ct. ms.
Door Knobs—Mineral
“
Pore lain
...Li t 7? $ ct. d s.
Padlocks
List 10&7* $ ct. dis.
Door

Locks—Cabinet,
“

Lh..

Eagle

List 10 $|c\

Tiunt

Stacks and Dies
Screw

Wrenches—Ooe's Putenr.

..

T*fts

“

Smith’s Vises

.

d»
do

dis.
dis.

dis.
26

List 40 $ ct. a.lv

insets

List40$ct aly

Landl d, in sets

Augu" Bitts
Short Augurs...-*

dis.

Id Lis 25$ct.a!v

Framing Cl i eU
Firmer
do

Li t 30 $Tet.
List 20 $ ct.
List «'0 $ ct.
$ lb 24 @
.

per

Ring.
Cut Tacks
Cut Bra^s

Rivet-*, Iron.
Screws, American

List 20 $ ct. dis.
doz. New’ List 10 $ ct. dir.
List 10 $ ct. dis.

List Go&iO $ ct. dis
List 55 $ ct. dis.
List 25 & 80 $ cr. dis.

List 10 & 2* $ ct. dis.

d'S.
8

do
Eng'ish
List 20 $ ct.
Iron Shovels and Spa les—*<*. 2
* @
do
<io
steel edged.... 12 50@i5 00
do
Cast sted, Polished—No. 2... 11 5U@17 00
Horse .Shoes
$Ib.. 7*@. 8
Pjanes
List *5 @ 30 $ ct. adv.

Hay—North Rivor, in bales
100 ft)s,

J ©

for shipping

70

Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, $25; Jute,

$15; Italian, $40; Sunn
Tampico, 1 cent $ ft).
American, Dressed
~

do

Undressed

Russia, Clean
Jute.

Manila
Sisal

(geld)
(gold)

and Sisal, $15 $ ter; and
$ ton 310 00 @325 00

Dry Hides—

Buenos Ayres
Montevideo
Rio Grande

Orinoco




60

75
65
70
95

70

1 65
1 85
90
1 10
1 10

3’0 00 @

120 00 @140 00
$ ft)
....
@
10
~
@
14

$ ft) gold
do
do
do

and Skins,

17*@

16*@
15*@

15 @

Mexican
Florida

Rosewood, Rio Janeiro

$-cubicft.
$ ft)

Bahia

do

©
©
@
©
©
©

20

14
12
It)
10
50
5
4

Mansanilla

50

17
20
12
12
12
!0

(American

©

©
©
©
©
©
©
©

20
10
14
14
1 00
8
6

©
©
©
©
©

SO
65
48
60

B0
16
•6
16
15

Molasses—Duty: 8 cents $ gallon.
$ gall.

New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado
do Claved

60
45
43
55

Euglish islands

90

.

Iron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1* cents $ ft); Railroad,
70 cents $ 100 ft>; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents $ lb;
Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to 1* cents $ ft);
Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents $ ft).
Pig, Scotch, Best,No l(cash) $ ton 46 00 @ 49 ,00
Pig, American, No. 1
46 00 . @ 4*< 00
Bar, Swedes,assortedsizes (in gold)
95 00 @105 00

/—Stoke Prioks—,

Noils—Duty: cut 14; wrought 24; horse shoe 2
,
cents $ ft.
C 75
00
Cut, 4d.@60d
$ 100 ft)
,

Clinch
Horse shoe,

8 50
32
50

$ ft)

forged (Sd)

Copper

@
@
@
@
@

33

Yellow metal
Zinc

*84
20

@160 00
@155 00
150 00 @D0 00

spirits of turpentine 30
$ gallon; crude turpentine, rosin, pitch, and
tar, 20 $ cent ad val.
Turpentine, N. C
$ 280 ft)
4 75 @
Tar, American
....$bbl.
3 00 @ 3 50
@
d« foreign
50
Pitch....
3 37* @

130 00 @185 00
165 00 @225 00

Rosin,common
do
strained and No. 2

@

Swedes, assorted sizes
:..
170 00
Bur, English and American,Refined 125 00
do
do
do
do
Common 115 00
Scroll, '
155 00
Ovals and Half Round
150 00
Bar

i

$ ft)

85 00

American

Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
$ ft)

African, West Coa6t,

@205 00

10, @

Sheet,Single,Double and Treble..
Rails, English.. .(gold)
$ ton

East India, Prime
East India, Billiard Ball

@120 00

11*

27 @
7 @
55 00 @

Sheet, Russia
do

....

@130 00

2S
1)

3 00 @ 3 50

-

Prime

African,Scrivellos, West Coast..

3 50

@ 4 50

3 00 @ 3 25
2 00 @ 2 50

I,end—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 ft); Old Lead, 1* cents
$ ft); Pipe and Sheet, 2* cents $ ft).
@
Galena
$ 100 ft*
German

g

go'd

7 00

English

/gold

7 25

Spanish

»1 l

n.-t

Bar

net

Pipe and Sheet

7 00
..

@ 7 25
@ 7 25
@ 7 50
@ 11 v 5
@ 11 25

Iieatlier—Duty: sole 35,upper 30 $cent ad
33 ©
ft)
:<s ©
4 '<
©
45 ©
50 ©
do middle
do
d<»
17
©
do
do bellies
do
32
©
Hemlock, B. Ayres,«fec..l’t do
34
©
do
do middle, do
.

do
do

do

heavy .do

California,light, do

do
middle do
do
heavy, do
Orinoco,etc. l’t. do
do
middle, do
do heavy., do
do & B. A, darn’gd all
weights

all do
Slaughter in rough. .cash*
Oak, Slaughter in rough, light... do
do
do mid. & h’vy do
do
do
do

do

poor

36
31
33
31

SO
32
2!)
28
21
33
35

3S

21
17

Unie—Duty; 10 $ cent ad val.
Rockland, common
$ bbl.
do
heavy

..

No. 1
Pale and Extra

do
do

$ gall.

69

@
@
@
@

87
50
00
50
70

$ ft*.

9J @

12

val.
36
44
49
50
54
20
33

35*

©
©
©
©
©
©
©

37
32

©
©

32
24
36
85
45

©

©
©

34*
35

3!*
3
32

J

©
©

1 50
2 10

8 00
5 50

(2S0 lbs.)

Spirits turpentine, Am
Oakum—Duty free

7 00

..

Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val.
City thin oblong, in bbls.... $ ton
12 50
do
in bags
Western thin oblong, in bags ....
..

I,umber,

Woods, Staves, Ftc.—Duty
10 $ cent ad val.;

Spruce, Eastern

$ M feet

Southern Pine
White Pine Box Boards
White Pine Merchant. Box

Boards

5000 @ 60 00
25 00 @ 80 00
29 00 @ 83 00

....

....

Oils-Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 28
and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1 :
burning fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa
nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other flsh
foreign fisheries.) 20 $ cent ad valorem.
@ ....
Olive, 13 bottle baskets
do in casks
.*$ gall.
1 90 @ ....
Palm
$ ft) 9 11 @
12
Linseed, city
$ gall
1 SO @ 1.8!
cents; olive

..,

*

;

winter, bleached
do
unbleached

do
do

1 25 @
I 45 @

1 30

2 75 @ 2 85

Sperm, crude

@

..

do

saponified.. *

Paratline,28

—

30 gr
.-

2 i0

l ly

1 10

Straits

Kerosene.

2 85

@

1 05 @
••
@

city distilled

@

1 95

Lard oil
Red oil,

/.

(free)...

@
@
57 @

53
59

Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and
litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ ft»; Pari*
white and whiting, 1 cent $ ft>; dry ochres, 56 cents
$ 100 ft>: oxides of zinc, 1* cents $ lb ; ochre, ground
in oil, $ 1 50 $ 100 ft); Spanish brown 25 $ cent ad val.;
China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red and vermilion,
ton.
5 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10
13
12
©
Li thrage, American
$ lb
13
12 ©
Lead, red, American
17
©
do white, American, pure, in oil
17
©
do while, American, pure, dry.
.

Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1.
do white, American; No. I, in oil

Oc^re,yellow,French,dry $ 100 ft)
do
groun in oil
$ ft)
$ 100 ft)
Spanish brow dry
.

do

ground in oil.$ ft)”
$ 1(H) lbs
Am
;..:$ 100 ftis

do
do
Whiting, American

$ ft)

Vermilion, Chinese

22 00 @ 26 00

©
@ 55 lit)
© 52 00

.

^

Paris white, No. 1

Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Staves,
Rosewood and Cedar, free.

@

2 75

'..

Whale....!
do refined winter

Oak, Slaughter,light
cash.$
middle.
do
do
<lo
do
<!o
heavy.... do
do light Cropped
do

do
do
do
do
do
do

Naval Stores—Duty:

cents

@ 90 00

@250 00

Hide*—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salted,
10 $ cent ad val.

25

Rods, 5-8 @ 3-16 inch
Hoop

84
15

List U $ ct. a iv.
List.

Butts—Fast .To n
u
Loose Joint

Cast

©
©
@
©
@
@

1 00

(gold)
(gold)
(gold)

Band

©
©
©

Rosewood—L>uty

HorseShoe

.

10

15 @ 17
13 @ 15
24 @ ..
21 @ ..
$5 less °0 $ cent
List 5 $ ct. disc.

Carpe iter’s Adzes, besi quality

70

24

.

@150 00

Port-au-Platt, logs

do
do
do

@130 00
@90 00

hhd...,..

Cedar, Nuevitas

85

@110 00
@ 60 00

„„

Port-au-Platt, crotches.
Nuevitas
Mansanilla
Mexican
Honduras

/•

.
..
~

wood)

ad val.

S2* @
67* ©
07 j @

...( old) $tb
,(*o!d)

Bengal

braid ..rer doz
or dinary makers
.

70

40

@

IllilififO—Duty FREE.

20 50
24 00

1

..

Mahogany, St. Domingo, crotches,
$ foot
do
St. Domingo, ordinary
logs
do
do
do
do
do
do

@12‘00
@100 00
@175 00
@140 00

..
..

Red oak, hhd., heavy
do
hhd., light.
HEADING—white oak,

18 00 @ " ..
18 00 @ 15 00

$ lb

Nail Rod

HardwareAxes—Cast steel, best

30 @

25

; $ C

bbl., light
bbl., culls

..

bbl., heavy

00
00
0G
00

@250 00
@200 00

..

IRaliogany, Cedar,

S2*

..

.

free.

80 @

@300
@250
..
@200
120 <0 @150

$ M.

exti a

pipe, heavy
pipe, light
pipe, culls
hhd., extra
hhd., heavy
hhd., light
hhd., culls
bbl., extra

'

,

12

Hog, Western, unwashed

@
@

..

Ox, Buenos Ayres

Para, Fine
Para, Medium
Para, Coarse

8 25
9 75

,

35
83

$ ft)

,

@

..

India. Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent

©
@

do
do

ITorns—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.

Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 centsorless

50
40

12*
13

..

do
do

Ox, Rio Grande

$ ft), 6 cents $ ft), and 20 $ cent ad val.; over 20
cents $ lb, 10 cents $ ft) and 20 $ cent ad val.
@ 5 00
Blasting (A)
$ keg of 25 ft)
@ 5 50
Shipping and Mining
Rifle

11 @
9 @

..

of 1864

do

II

..

do

5.

@
@

..

Hops—Duty: 5 cents $ ft).
....$ft»
Crop of 1865

valued at 10 cents or less
cents $ ft>.
yard
31 @
31*

Sporting, in 1 ft) canisters.-. .$ ft)

@
10 @

@
@

..

$ ft) gold.
do

Sierra Leone
Gambia and Bissau

7 75

23*©

,

@

..

Coutry sl’ter trim. & cured
City
do
do
Upper Leather Stock—
B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip ..$ $ cash.

cents or less,

,

..

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

@120 00

100 00

Black Walnut

@
@

..

do
do

35 00 @ 40 00

STAVES—
White oak, pipe,

..

California
Western

Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th

Gunny Dag'S— Duty, valued at 10
$ square yard, 3; over 10, 4 cents $ ft)
Calcutta, light and heavy ..$ pee

@

@ 65 00

60 00

*.

Maple and Birch

do

Buenos
Ayres
Rio Grande

20 00
24 00

(Slugle Thick)—Discount2 » @ 30 per cent.
6x8 to SxlO
$50 feet
6 00 @
8x11 to 10x15
6 50 @
11x14 to 12x13
7 00
12x19 to 16x24
7 50 @
20x31 to 24x30
12 00 @
21x31 to 24x36
13 00 @
15 00 @
24x36 to 30x44
80x45 to 32x43
16 00 @
18 00 @
82x50 to 32x56

Oak and Ash

..

55 00 @ 65 00
80 00 @ 90 00

Poplar and W. wood B*ds & Pl’k.
Cherry Boards and Plank

@

@100 00
@

80 00
3 25

$ M

...

$ ft) gold.
do

Honey—Duty, 20 cents $ gallon.
Cuba, .(duty paid).(gold).$ gall.

7 75
9 25
9 50
11 75
14 50
16 00
17 00
18 00

@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@

00
00
00
00
13 00
15 00

E

7 25

5 50 @

6 00
6 50
7 00

10x15
12x18
16x24
20x30
24x30.
24x36

Clear Pine.
Laths. Eastern

..

cash.

Bahia..
Chili
Wet Salted Hides—

Window—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th qualities.

12*

.

Tampico and Metamoras... do

90

argar

American

13 @

Maracaibo
Maranham
Pernambuco

Window Polished Plate

or

do

Dry Salted Hidos—

inches, 2* cents $ square foot; larger
16x24 inches, 4 cents $ square foot;

not over 10x15

do
.do

11 @
@

J‘‘*

Western

80

65 @

..

'6*

14 @

i’ampico

5 00 @ 8 00..8 00 @500

Otter

15*@

do

Porto Cabello
VeraCruz

1 00
4 50
1 00
3 00

..

do

California, Mexican

8 00 © 6 00
1 00 © 2 00

50 @ 1 00
@ 2 50
@800
@ 2 50
@ 4 00
10 @ 25

..

1 25
5 50
I 50
3 00

Marten, Dark

..

..

60 @ 1 25
@ 3 50
@10 50
@ 8 00
@ 6 00
10 @ 85

Grey

Lynx
do

[July 28, I860.

THE CHRONICLE.

118

do
do
do

Venetian

Trieste

....

..

California & English..
American

N C.).

$ cwt.

.

io

10
2 50
9
1 50
8
3 75

12
©
12
©
©c 3 50

©
©

10

©
©
©
n ©
1 65
©
1 15
©
1 35 ©
80 ©
3 00 ©

9
4 00

.

.

*

1 70
1 20
1 40

40




16 00
34 00
5 00

19 Tb
19 4 on

Canning city made
China clay

$ bbL
$ ton
19 ft>

Chalk

Chalk, block
Chrome

yellow

15

© 20 00
©
©
© n «>o
©
40
....

....

Spices—Duty:

mace, 40 cent*; nutmegs, 50
cloves, 20; pepper and pimento, 15; and
ginger root, 5 cents 19 ft*.
Cassia, in mats
41 ©
42
gold 19 ft)
cassia and

©
©
©
21* ©
20* ©

Petroleum—Duty: crude, 20 cents ; refined, 40
$ gallon.
24
23 ©
Crude, 40 © 47 gravity .. $ gall.
56
55 ©
Refined, free..
Naptha, refined

5 50 © 6 00

$ bl»l.

Residuum

Paris—Duty: lump, free: calcined,
$ cent ad val.
Blue Nova Scotia
..$ton.
@1-5 00
VV hi re N ova Scotia
....
@
Calcined, eastern
<$1*1)1
@‘2 40
@ 2 50
Calcined, city mills
Plaster

20

Provisions—Dnty: beef and pork, 1 cent;
hams, bacon, and lard, 2 cents 19 ft*.
©
Beef, plain mess
$ bbl.
16 00 © 21 50
;do new do
..

do extra mess
do
do
new
do India mess
Pork, mess, new
do pri me mess
do mess, Old

©
© 24 50
©
31 50 © 31 75
©
20 50 © 30 00
..

20 50

.

:.

....

27 00

prime, do
Lard, in bbls
do

18

19 lb

kettle rendered

do

is

Hams, pickled
do

is
14

dry salted

(Shoulders, pickled
do
dry
Beef hams....

sal ted
$ bbl.

Bacon

50

201

©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©

20*
20*

City colored

>.

Canvas
Country mixed

11
5*
1
11

5*

Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* cents $ ftc; paddy 10

cents, and uncleaned 2 cents <$ ft).
Carolina
.19 100 ft>.
East India, dressed

12 (0 © 13 50
0 50
100

Salt-Duty: sack, 24 cents 19
cents $ 100 ft*.
Turks Islands
<$ bush.

19 sack

e .Ashton’s
.(^old)
fine, «Vorthington’s....
fine, Jeffreys & Darcy’s

do
do
do
do

fin

..

fine, Marshall’s
Onondaga, com. fine

do
do
do
do
Solar coarse
Pine screened
do

.

ft*; bulk, 18

bbls.

bgs.
$ bush.

42
..

50

19 pkg.

,

,

3 00

240 ft) bgs.

P. F

.

©
©
©
©
©

.

•

•

•

.

•

_

2 S5
2 S5

.

,

..210 ft)

55

53

,

Liverpool .ground

© 10 00

©
©
1 80
©
2 75 ©
2 75
©
2 75 ©
©
2 35 ©
1 85 ©

.

2 60
2 00
44
.

.

52
3 50
3 25

..

1<>£ @

,

gold

10$

3$ ©.

4

Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cents; hemp, * cent 19
ft); canary,

30

SI $ bushel of 60 ft); and grass seeds,

$ cent ad val.

19 ft)

Clover

Timothy, reaped
$ bush.
Linseed, American, clean. ...19 tee
do
American,rough.bush
do
do

Calcutta

12
7 0i
.

8

15

....

Bombay

12i
©
© 7 50
© : 28 50

©
©

3 50
.

,.

.

.

Shot—Duty: 2* cents $ ft).
$ ft)

12.!

...

do

medium, No. 3 © 4
Canton, re-reeled, No. 1 © 2

8 50
8 75

Japan, superior

11 50

Medium
China thrown
Italian thrown
do

...

...

do
do

do
do
do
do
do

13 50
..

Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val.
Goat, Curacoa
$ Tb(cash)
do Buenos Ayres
god

Deer,

0

9

Yera Cruz

imld

Tampico

gold....

Matamoras

.

85

© 9 50
© 9 25
© 13 00
© 10 50
© 18 00
©

©
©
©

gold...

Payta
.

..

..cash

Cape
San Juau

Bolivar

.

».

15* ©

American, spring,
English, spring

11 ©
11* ©

gt*ld‘$ft)

..gold

Honduras
.gold....
Sisal
..gold....
Para
..gold....
Vera Cruz
Chagres
..gold....
Puerto CaOello.. ..gold....

..

57 i ©

42* ©
60
©
50 ©
55
©
42* @
60 ©
57* ©
©
00 ©
57* @
..

50

©

40
05
58
55
45
65
55

57*
45

6 *
60
62 j
60
57

Soap—Duty: 1 oent <$ ft), and 25 $ cent ad val.
©
$ lb.
18$
..

Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and plates, $ 1 50 $ B)
Plates, foreign
7$ ©
gold..$J ft)
do

domestic....

12

©

12^

12*

cent ad val.

Brandy—J. & F. Martell ...(gold)
llennessy
(gold)
Otardi-Dupny & Co
(gold)
Pinet, Castillion & Co.
.(gold)1
Renault & Co
(gold)
..

J. Waul A Co
Jules Robin
Marrette & Co

13

ed, 3* ; above 15 and not over 20,4 ; on refined, 5 ; and
on Molado, 2* cents 19 ft).
Porto Rico
3P ®
10* ©
14*
Cuba, inf. to common refining
9f ©
10§
do fair to good
do
...
10* @
11
do fair to good grocery
11* ©
12
do prime to choice do
12* @
13
do centiifugal
12*
'•'* ©

Other brands Cognac
Pellevoisin freres
A.

Melado
Havana, Boxes D. S. Nos. 4
do
do 10
do
do
dv)
do 13
do
do 16
do
do
do 19
do

6

n*

do

Siuuac-

white

.

©
i0 ©
11
©
12* ©
is* ©
15 ©
14* ©
©
©
©
©
©

to 9
to 12
to 15

IS

to

to 20
,

,

.

.

powdered
A

19 ton

100 00

Tallow—Duty: 1 cent 19 ft).
American,prime, country and city
19 ft)
Tea—Duty: 25 cents per ft).
Hyson, Common to fair
do
Superior to fine
Ex fine to finest'

do

Ex fine to finest...

15
40
75
10
50
10
35
f>0
55
70
80

do Ex. f. to finest

1
1
1
1
1

&Twankay, Com, to fair,
do

Uncolored
do
do

Sup’r to fine..

do

Ex f. to finest.

Japan, Coin, to fair
do
Sup’r to fine

...

do

..

Ex f. to finest,

Oolong, Common to fair
do" Superior to fine
Ex fine to finest

do

90
1

...
...

Gunpow. & Imper., Coin, to fair
do
do Sup. to fine,
do
do

14J
15*
16
IS
17
17
15

Souchong & Congpu, Com. to fair,
do
do

do
do

Sup’r to fine,
Ex f. to finest

©195 00

12* ©

1

Young Hyson, Common to fair
do
Superior to fine

do
H. Skin

13

-Duty: 10 19 cent ad val.

Sicily

do

8
10$
HI

90
1 On
1 ’.0
SO
95
1 30
70
90
1 15

12$

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1

©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©
©

05
35
65
on
40
so

25
50
90

65
75
90

95

.©

1 10
1 25

9n
1
0
1 70
80
1 05
1 70

©
©
©
©
©

Till—Duty: pig, bars, and block,15 $ centad val.
Plate and sheets and terne plates, 2* cents 19 ft).
Banca
501
(gold)
$ ft*
2*) ©
Straits
2 *■
("old)
©
20
English
(gold)
Plates, charcoal I. C
19 box
15 50 © 16 On
do
do
do

I.O. Coke
Terne Charcoal
Terne Coke

non
14 75

© 13 50
© 15 00

10 75

© 11 00

$45, $3

pound and 60 per cent ad valorem.
Lugs (light aud heavy) 19 l!9 (gold)

Common leaf do
Medium do do

do

do.

Good
do do
do do
Fine
Selections do do
Conn, selected wrappers
do
do
do

do
do
do

prime wrappers
fair wrappers

fillers
New York running lots
do
Ohio
New York and Ohio fillers
Yara

-

Havana, fillers

Manufactured (in bond)—
& N.Y.

10s and 12s—Best Virginia
do
Medium

X ft>s— (dark) Best Virginia
do
do

do
do

Medium
Common

ft)s(Western.)—Ex.fine, bright.
do

do

ft*s
do
do
do

5
5

-

Fine

Arzac Seignette
J. Romioux.

(gold)
(gold)
(gold)
(gold)
Whisky—Scotch and Irish .(gold)
Domestic—N. E. Rum
(cur.)
Bourbon Whisky
(* ur.)
Corn Whisky
(cur.)
W i nes—Port
(gold)
Burgundy Port
(gold)
Sherry
(gold)
Madeira
(gold)
do
Marseilles
(gold)
Sherry
d >
(gold)
Malaga, sweet
(gold)
do" dry
(gold)
Claret, in nhds
(go d)
do
incases
(gold)
Champagne
(gold)

No. 19 to 26
No. 27 to 36

(Virginia)—Ex. fine, bright...
Fine
Medium
Common

do

do
do

Navy ft*s—Best Virg.nia & N.Y..
do

Medium
Common

©

85
30
.35
30
25

..

•

75
60
40
25

©
©
©
©
82* ©
28 ©
25 ©

.

.

85
70
fO
35
40

30
26

Cigars (domestic).
Seed and Havana, per M
Clear Havana.
do
du Codnecticut Seed
New-York Steed, Conn.
Penn.
do
do

Common

Cigars

55 00

@ SO
©105
© 45
20 00 © 30
18 00 © 25
13 00 © 25
80 00
25 00

Wrapper.
do

00

©
00
90
85
SG
35
85

5
4
4
4
4
4

....

(!0

©
©
©
©
©
©

00
95
90
95
95

4 65
4 00
8 55
2 90
4 00
2 45
2 50
2 2b
2 DO
95
1 25

4 85

©
©
©
©
©

4 00

6 00
3 60
3 50
4 90
2 60
6 00
8
1
8
8

85
90
1 25
1 10

00
45
00
00
20
25
75
50

© 1
© 1
© 1
© 1
84 00 ©150 00
2 40 © 30 00
12 00 © 25 00

19 ct. off list9 ©
10

Wool—Duty: costing 12 cents or less % ft>, 8
19 ft*; over 12 and not more than 24, 6 cents
over 24 and not over
32,10, and 10 19 centad valorem[;
over 82,12 cents
19 5>, and 10 19 centad valorem; on
the skin, 20 $ cent ad val.
60 @
American, Saxony fleece
65
19 ft)
cents

....

do
do

full blood Merino

50

* and * Merino

45
55

Extra, pulled

Superfine
No. 1, pulled
California, unwashed
do
do
Texas

pulled

Peruvian, unwashed
Valparaiso, unwashed
S. American Mestiza, unwashed..
do
common,unwashed..
Entre Rios, washed

42
25
15

43

Persian

African, unwashed
do

washed

24
48
45,

80r
25

©
@
©

45

©

25
25

©

35

washed

45
25
33
30
87
23

©
©
©

85
20
22

Mexican, unwashed
Smyrna, unwashed

45
88
25

©
©
©
©

22

Donskoi, washed

53

©
©
©
©
©
©

18

do
unwashed
S. American Cordova

57
50
to

©
©
©
©
©

47
£8
38
20
30
15
32
27
82

common

45

Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 19 100 lb; sheet
2* cents 19 ft*.
$ ft)
14]©
15*

Sheet

Ireiglils-

Beef
Pork
To London

d.

8.

19 lb
19 bbl.
$ ton

Corn, bulk and bags
Wheat, bulk and bags

15
lu5

5 25

Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain. 19 ft>

20
65
50

C*

..

20 % ct. off list.

Oil

10*

..

....

25

Heavy goods

12
is

....

©
©
©
..
© 10 00

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered,$2to $3 50
19 100 ft>, and 15 19 cent ad val.
No. 0 to 18
5©I0 19 ct off list.

17*

35

*0 © 10 50
30 © 10 50
V5 © 10 50
20 © 10 00
25 © 10 50

©

Other brands Rochelle
Rum—Jamaica
St. Croix
Gin —Different brands

15

1

(gold)
(gold)
-(gold)
(gold)

-

is*

7
9

26 ©
3-'* ©
23 ©
21
©
©
©
•

Seignette

To Liverpool :
Cotton
Flour
Petroleum

©
©

H ©
8* ©
1H ©
16 ©
50 ©
40 ©
30 ©
10 ©
«
©
5* @
4
©
90
©
S5 ©
30

per

(gold)
(gold)

Divert Pellevoisen
Alex. Seignette

do

Tobacco—Duty: leaf38 cents 19 ft*; and manu¬
factured,^) cents 19 ft). Cigars valued at $15 or less
per M
75 cents per lb., and 2) per oent ad valorem;
over $15 and not over $30, $1.25 per lb. and 30
per

5
5
5
5
5

<r*

(gold)
(gold)
United Vineyard Propr.. .(gold)
Vine Growers Co.
(gold)
L "ger freres
(gold)

..

do

©
© 1 87
1 37* © 1 40

Wines
and
Liquor*— Liquors — Duty :
Brandy, first proof, $8 per gallon, other liquors, $2.50
Winks—Duty: value set ever 50 cents fl gallon 20
cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over 60
and not over 100, 50 cents 19 gallon and 25 19 cent
ad valorem; over $1 19 gallon, $1 19 gallon and 25 tp

on raw or brown sugar, not abo>e
No. 12 Dutch standard, 8; on white or clayed, above
not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refin¬
No. 12 and

do
Castile

17*

Whalebone—Duty: foreign fishery ,20p.c ad val$ ft)
1 22* @ 1 25

Sonth Sea
North west coast
Ochotak
Polar

Sugar—Duty:

er

11 I©

Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk. 35 19 cent.
Tsatlees, No. 1 © 5
$ ft*
10 00 © II fO
Taysaams, superior, No. I ©2
9 50 © 10 50

Madras, each

German

,

©

Drop and Buck

do
do
do
do
do
do

Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents $
or under, 2*cents; over 7 cents and not above
II,
over 11 cents, 3* cents <$ ft) and 10 19
(Store prices.)
,
English, cast, 19 ft)
24
18* ©

.

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 23 cents; refined and
partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent 19 ft).
Refined, pure
19 ft)
©
IS
Crude
Nitrate soda

.

ft)

Loaf....
Granulated
Crushed and

H* ©
5
©
$ ©
io
©
5
©

White, city

.

3 cents 19 ft);
cent ad val.

do

Rags—(Domestic).

Cadiz

27* ©

White coffee,
Yellow coffee

Seconds

90
22
21

40

39 ©
3S @

in bond

24

22
90
85

Ginger, race and African

cents

do

119

THE CHRONICLE.

July 28,1866.]

8.

C

l ©
..@10
@46
10 0 @12 6
© 17 6
-

..

19 bush.

4
..

19 tee.
19 bbl.

©
©
©

4*

..

2
1

6

© 25
@ 1

..

0
9

©

0

:

neavy goods

Oil
Flour
Petroleum
Beef
Pork
Wheat.
Corn
To Glasgow
Flour
Wheat

$ ton

17 6

19 bbl.

4
:

$ tee.
$ bbl.
19 bnsh.

(By Steam):
19 bbl.
19 bush.
Corn, bulk and bags
Petroleum (?ail)
19 bbl.
Heavy goods
19 ton
Oil
Beef
Pork
To Havre:
Cotton

©
©
©
©

9

2

9
6

b*
0

6
©
©
5*
..@46
20 0 @25 0
@30 0
..

19 tee.

©
©

.

19 bbl.

19 lb

$c.

19 bbl.

ip ton

00
00
00

GO
00

Lard, tallow, cut meats, eto ft ton
Ashes, pot and pearl

1
10

Wheat, in shipper’s bags.. $ bush.
Flour
$ bbl.
Petroleum

5

_

©
©
©
©

Hops

Beef and pork
Measurement goods

9

8

8

©
@
©
©
©

6
8

0

6

*c..
..
..

..

..

...

[July 28,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

120

Uailwaij ill a nit or.

Feb'v

1865

5
10

August

G

Feb’y

1563

44

8

<4

1866

4k

last five years
22,944

Mail

29.100

1
branch
Mileage of cars
Interest and dividends.
Division of earnings with
L. M. & C. & X. Co.1's....
Miscellaneous

84,127

Rents
Berea

87,905

of this

Court took

1864.

$808,424

$974,220

1,394,683

1,120,452

31,243
84,036

84,308
2,227
7,211
46,183

18.114

14.863

119,824

7,602

5,782

*1,049

472

55,275
31,243
81,837

37.984
31.243

35,983

2,883

3,604

6.585

„

$2,409,348
1,432,060

1,550,622

$728,248 $1,090,747 $1,303,240

earnings

$1,067,288

$835,510

$86,983

$166,013

$172,304

549,667
666,590

899,2iV4

599,635
37,064

848,703

6:44,170

535 005

Expenses

$23,4:30

22,351

474,620
207,847

Dividends
Balance to

credit

$34,245
22,855
736,740
296,907

26,507 !

2,040

.

capital account at the close of each of the above years (Dec* <
31) stood as follows :
- .
Capital stock
$4,746,200 $5,000,0(H) $6,000,000 $6,000,000 $6,000,000
510,000
510.000 510.000 491,500 475,000
Mortgage bonds
Balance of accounts
7,023
304
159.537 ' 2.107
28,225
Dividend payable Feb. 1....
237,300 499,430 249.895 419,692
299,835
Surplus
416,826 444,396 313,081
6,136 43,200
$5,917,359 $6,454,130 $7,232,513 $6,919,435 $6,843,260
Total
Accounted for as for as follows :
Road and equipment
$4,667,953 $4,953,893 $5,220,058 $4,150,(XX) $4,750,000
Stock and bonds
523,152
500,332 1,035,530 1,131,750 1,131,750
Loan to Mahoning R.R. Co.
24,000
24.000
24.000
24 (H>0
24,000
Materials on baud
120,391
134.789 231,Ml
286.973 321.941
Bills, and other assets
136,653 244,476 121,216 1 24.766 101.457
Cash on hand
445,210
596,610 600,208 601,946 514,112
Total
$5,917,359 $6,454,130 $7,2-32,513 $0,919,-135 $6,843,2o0
The date and rate of the several dividends paid from the earrings
of the road for the years iucluded in the above statement have been
The

as

follows




The railroad was sold in divisions—the 1st Divi¬
Davenport and Iowa City including the branch from
VVelton Junction to Muscatine, with rolling stock, shops, &c., was
struck off at $1,000,000, and the Oskaloosa Division from M uscatine
west for $300,000.
The Division West of Iowa City sold for
$000,000. The lands granted to the Company by Congress about
475,000 acres went for $200,000. By adding these several amounts
we obtain $2 100,000 ns the aggregate cost.
Mr. G. Cooke repre¬
senting the Chicago and Ro^k Island Railroad having purchased
the whole.
In a year or two the main line of this road will be
Union Pacific
completed to the Missouri and connected with the
road being
Railroad at. Omaha City, Nebraska Territory—that
already open to Columbus 125 miles from that point.

1864.

1864.

$160,000

(224 m)
$77,378
77,242

(224 m)
$47,393
56,565

399,364
521,174

451,477.

61,612
59,182

76,674
91,987

58.178

142.501..April..
1 8,973... May...

91,075

63,518
88,458

97,145
106,389

87.037
97.876

118.960.. June..
..July
...Aug...
....Sep...

118.610
116.293

94,543
78,111

91.564

...Oct
...Nov...

...Dec...

—

—

—

1,114,508
1,099.507

1,(341,975
994,317

1,105,364
1,301,035
1,222,568

1,224,909

1,334,217

1,331,046

..Aug

1.336.615

15,434,775

(524 m.)
$256,600
304,145
338,454

830,651
267,126
815,258
278,891
858,862
402,219
404,568

448,934
411,806

1865.

(524 771.)
$363,996
366,361
413,322
366,245
353,194
402,122

309,083
424,206
484,173
521,636
493,421
366,192

4,868,951

fan.
283,177. .Feb..

—

—

—

—

(468 m.)

$290,676

457,227
611,297
588,066
525,751
532,911
506,640

625,547
075,350
701,35
691,55
*14,03

733,866

637,186
646,995

8,480,063

177,159
170.555
228.020
310.594

....Sep”..
....Oct...
...Nov..
...Dec..

149.099

r,Year

178,526
117,013
..

1,711,281
St.

...I

uly.

..Aug..
..Sep.

90,576
90,903
95,453

...Oct..
.Nov.

...Dec...

—

..Year

—

1,0:38,165

...

1,985,571

(2:34 m.)

84,897.. .Feb...
72.135...Mar...

103,082.. April..
167,488... May...
..June

—

—

—

—

—

131.0*48
126.970

(210 m.)
$100,872

—

\ ear

..

.oct...
.

~Year.„

.

125,252
116.495
116.146

105,767

1,224,056
1865.

(234 m.)

1865.

1866.

(285 in.)
$252,435
273,848

(285 in.)

(285 m.)
$282,438
265,796

.

338,276

271,553
265,780
263,244
346,181

..

410.802
405,510
376,470

.

—

..

.

—

.

—

129,227

1,402,106

April..

123,087
127,010
156,3:18

202,771
169,299

192.138.
167,301.

149,855

177.625

168,699. May..

155.730

"173,722

167.H99, .June..

144,942

162,570 4

.July..

218,236
269,459
222,934
203,093

Aug.

.

Sept.

335,083

4,504,546

-

447,669

328,869

Ohio &

1864.

1866.
(234 m.)

365.196

490,693

3,966,946

..Oet...
.Nov
.Dec...

—

337.158
343.736

413.501
460.661

408.415

Sep...

—

279,137
814,228
337,240
401,456
365,663
329,105

348.802

..Aug...

—

$306,324

(340 m.)
$210,329
260,466
309,261
269,443

i8<;6.

1865.

*

(340 m.) (310 777.1

$259,223 $267,641
239,139
246,109
326 V36
313,914

86,528

$131,707. .Jan...
122,621. ..Feb.

95.905

124.175 i- ..Mar..,

106,269
203,018

271,527

277,423

245,511. ..May..,

224.957

290.916

283,180

242.560. .June.

223,242

304.463

253,924

..July.
..Aug..
...Sep..

268,176
302,596

349,285

332,400
278,006
346,243
275,950

350,348

3,311,070

3,793,005

$98,181

395,519

Feb...
Mar...

160.497
157,786

346,717
171,125

2,535,001

.

.

..

121,904. .April.
—

.

—

.

—

.

...Oct..
..Nor..
..Dec

—
.

—

—

.

.

*

—

.

Year.

.

(242 m.) (484 m .)
$144,084 $226,059... Jan...
194,167...Feb...
139,171
155.753
256,407.. M a r...
270,300. April..
144,001
138 7:38
194.521

[271,725

139,6? 5
244,154

4,374,534

375,534

58 379,981

221,570

375,534

ci

220.209

f361,610

265,154

[ 247,023

Year..

2,050,823

2,926,673

316,433.. May...
325

.

91.. J une..

(140 in.)

—

"

—

$30,840
37.483
42 038

41,450
48,359
68,118

1865.

(177m)

37.265

36.006

32,378
33,972

39,299
86,9 3

102,686

37,830

Dec

..Year..

587,0783

43,333

82,147

42,195

..

45,102

63.862

..Nov...,.

Sept....

50,308
49,903
60,565

1866.

(157 77’.)
$43,716

54,942

—

—

284,319

56.871

„

—

412,553

..Oct

..Aug...

—

—

—

372.618

68,180
56,862
75,677
92,715
61,770

July..

—

—

—

344,700

-Western Union.1864.

1865.

Oet
Nov;...
Dec—

-

Michigan Central.

—

115,184

223.846

220,138

1864.

1866.

3< >0,841

95.843
132.896

155,893.

2,290,693

—

.

221,638
193,135

(242 m.)
$79,735

(210 m.) (210 m.)
$170,078 $178,119. .Jan...
153,903

2,084,074

—

243,417
243.413

2,512,315

..

237,562
251.9 6
241.370

1864

1865.

162,694

..Year

...

Toledo, Wab. & Western.
1866.

147,485

234,194
203,785
202,966
204,726

OC7
..Nov
..Dec..

(251 m.) (251 m.)
$96,672 ^$90,125. .Jan.
84,264. .Feb...
87,791
82 910. Mar...
93,763
82,722. April..
73,007
95.664. ..May...
76,243
106.315 .June..
107,525
..July..
104.603

164,710

....Oct...
...Nov. •>
...Dec.—

226,047

212,171
248,292
220,0 2
201,169

.

—

1866.

210.314

Cincinnati.—*

1865.

99,662
86,4 2

.

...July...
...Aug...
....Sep...

218,236

Ang.
Sept
Nov.
.Dec

226,840
110,664

1864.

(234 in.)
$51,965
46,474
64,993
83,702

$121,776... Jail...

-

202.857

-Milwaukee & St. Paul.

1866.

—

78.097

91,809
94,315
93,078

L., Alton & T. Haute.
1S66.

1864.

July

—

224.838

168.218

644,573. .June.

680,963

146,943

113,399

606,078. .April.
672,628. ..May..

858,500
712,362

74.2S3
7«). 740
106.689

$98,183

139,547

.Jan..
474,7:18. ..Feb...
654,390. Mar..

795,938

(234 777.)

212,209

...Aug*.

.

1805.

186,747

...July..

—

584.523
712,495

7,181,208

83,993
*

560,025. .June.

.

140,418

(468 m.) (468 m.)
$690,144 $555,488.
857,583

518,088

88,221

1865.

678.504

516.822. ..Mar..

641,589

115.135

0.—>
-Pittsb., Ft. W.,& Chi 18t)6.

1864.

74.409
89.901
72.389

Feb.

512,027.

747.469

(234 m.)
$102,749

.

412,393. .Mar..
409,427. .April.
426,493. ..May..
392.641.. June.
—

(251 m.)
$77,010

..Jail.

.

.

—

3,223,088

—

(204 in.) (204 m.)
$173,557 $16S‘7!i9
151,931
180,140
222,411
107,007
173.782
196,154
198,032
215,164

214,533
264,637

190,227

1S64.

(708 rn.)
$582,823.

170,879

...

.

384,290

Marietta and
1866.

—

232.728
288,095

3,095,470

,-Mil. and Prairie du Chien.-*

(524 in.)
$314,598.

203,514

..Year..

—

739,736

1804.

193.919

Mar...
J mie..

261.141

578,403

6,329,447

April..

264.605
290.642

330,617
321,037

1865.

1864.

(20 i VI.)
$139,414

197,886

300,707

.

'

-Cleveland and Pittsburg.-

227,260
311,180

324.805

507,830. ..May

603,402

1866.

—

Sep...

3,840,091

1866.

...Oct...
.Nov...
...Dec,..

516.608

661,391
657,141

2,770.484

186.172

.

400,573
617,682

799,236

Year..

.

oGS.273

307,919
236,824

—

Year

333,432

357.956

252.015

307.803

.Jan
,lc!i
Iifareh

243,178
224,980
271,140
331,494

406,773. .April.

423,573
586,904

.

-Mich. Soi. & N. Indiana.-^
1864.

(708 rn.)
$571,536
528,972
616,665

510,100

...Dec..

—-

...

540,609

406.373

...\ov..
—

946.707
923.886
749.191

459,762
423,797

.>ep...
..Oct...

1.438.615

..July

1865.

354,554
320,879

.Dec

.

322,277
355,270
335,985
409,250
401,280

312.165

..

(182 m.) - (1S2 in.
$305,554 $237,555
174.104
246,331
226,251
289,403

185.013
198.679

...Aug...

416.588

.

.

1,429,765

767,508

(70S m.)
$327,900

1,333,461 1.101.668, May
1,177,372 1,243,142. .June..
..I uly..
1,202.180

243,150

.

Illinois Central.

1,256,567 1,070,434. ..Mar..
1,458,455 1.153.295. .April.

1,072.293

405,6:34
523,744 ...Mar...
518,736 .April..
735.0-2 ...May...
922,892 ..June...

1864.

<347,146

175,482

.Feb...

..

6,114,566 7,960,981

1,103,S21
—
.. Year..
Erie Railway.—-—p
1864.
1865.
1866.
(657 T/i.)
(657 77i.) (797 m.)
$984,337 $1,001,007 $1,187,188....Feb..
Jan
9S3,855.

.

1865.

$158,735

...Jan...

304.885
370.889

.Ocl
Nov....

6,568,008

(182 m .)

258.480

Sep..

.

719,911
731.270
599,7j2

207,91*3

299,063

Aug....

•

396,847
381,-10
357,556

747.942
702.692

563,401

.

—

585,623

480,710
519,306
669,605
729,759
716,378

—

850,495

934,1.33

(679 in.)
$523,566

565.145

July. \

...

671,625

1864.

(609 z/l.)
$541,005

390,355
421,363
466,830

111.102...Mar...

May.
..June..

695,523
738,527

406,076
440 044

1800.

482,164
499,296
468,358

April.

394.533

215,282

162,723
178,786
206,090
224,257

..

343,403

(280 m.) (28<» m.)
$280,503 $210,171

195.803

408,864
Feb.
388,13 ....Mar...

899.870

Chicago and Rock Island.-

1865.

(609 in.)
(224 in)
$90,415... Jan... $273,875
76,333 ..Feb... 317,839

88,450
75,514

67.822

7,1*0,46

$504,992.... Jan...

327.269

179,011
151,575
131,0)4
186,4 3
186,143
332,098

(257 in.)
$100,991
154,418

(507 m.)

(466 ;».)
$289,100

1865.

186-1.

1366.

1865.

-

(322 m.)

Chicago & Northwestern
1864.

-Chicago and Alton.1366.

—Atlantic & Great Western.-

3,709,970

Groat Eastern.
1866.
1865.

MONTHLY EARNINGS.

COMPARATIVE

:

/—Chicago &

property under foreclosure decreed by the U. S Supreme
place at Davenport, Iowa, on the 9th.instant, aud was

sion between

From which deduct:
Duties and taxes
Interest and exchange

a

more

or

largely attended.

$1,263,253 $1,724,917 $2,151,(743

Total earnmgs..

Net

10,973

1803.

$617,552
1,244.091

25,119
31,154
82,363

737,413

Express

Making

tal,

1S65.

1862.

$444,9)5
1,133,262

1861.

$310,019

Freight

total cash dividend of 61 per cent, on the share capi¬
than 1 per cent, for each month of the five y ars.
There was also distributed in 1862 a stock dividend of 5 per cent.,
and in 1863 a stock dividend of 20 per cent., the stock on the
average being more valuable by 20 per cent, than cash.
State of the Mississippi & Missouri Railroad.—The sale

37,740

nings and expenses for the
Passenger

Railroad.—The earnhave been as follows :

Cincinnati

Cleveland, Columbus, and

5
S
7
5
5

1864

1861. ...1...
1S62

689,383

—

—

—

—

—

—

121

THE CHRONICLE.

July 28,1866.]

RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS
Stock

Companies.

Marked thus (*) are leased
and have fixed incomes.

roads,

Railroad.
do

Atlantic &

Ohio
Washington

153,000

Periods.

Quarterly.

Last p’d JBid. Ask

July .1*

\pril and Oct A pr.. .4
-KM*
Branch*.. .100 1,050,000 April and Oct j Apr. ..5
•

-100

Bellefontaiue Line
Relvidere. Delaware
Berkshire*
•_

100

Biossbiirg and Corning* . —
Boston, Hartford and Erie

•
• -

-100

*50
100

500
10j’

Boston and Lowell
Boston and Maine
Bosfon and Providence
Boston and Worcester

.HH

100

do

’

Atlantic

• •

preferred

do

Cape Cod

.

preferred

Valley*.. 1

2,085,925

50

Jan. and

July

871,900

- •

100

Chicago and Alton

July. .3*
.

J July. .2)4

preferred. ...100
8,376,510 May & Nov. May .5
Chicago Burlington and Quincy.100
4,390,000
Chicago and Great Eastern
.100 1,000,000 bin and July July. .5
Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*...100
2,250,000
do

KM)
100

Chicago and Milwaukee*
Chicago and Northwestern

prof. .100

do

do

Chicago and

Rock Island...... .IqO

13,160,92'

12,994.719 June & Dec. Dec...3)4
6,500.000 April and Oct Apr. ..5
1,106,125

Cincinnati and Chicago Air LiuelOO
Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 3,000,000 Apr and Oct. Apr

Cincinnati,Hamilton & Chicago.100

132* 133

•^7
'0/1

36 *6

120

103 * 104
105
124

35*8
64*
99*

505

125

35*
65

99*

.4

.

470,000
2,000,000

Cincinnati and Zanesville
100
Feb. and Aug Feb.. 5
Cleveland, Columbus, &Cincin.lOO 6,000,000
1,036,000 May & Nov. May..4
Cleveland & Mahoning*
.. 50
5,000,000 Jan. and JulyiJuly. .5

Cleveland, Painesville & Ashta.100
and JulyjApr’66 4
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50 5,403,910 Jan.
4,841,600 April and Oct Apr. ..8
Cleveland and Toledo
50
Quarterly, j July.. 2*
Columbus & Indianapolis Cent. 100
Columbus and Xenia*
50 1.490,800 Jan. and July! J u 1 v.. 5
"
ay
Concord
50 1.500,000 Jan. and N ov j May. .4
and July
350,000
Concord and Portsmouth.......100
July. ."6)4
500,000
Conev Island and Brooklyn
100
392,900
Connecticut and Passumpsic.. 100
do
do
pref.100 1.255,200 Jan. and July!July. .3
100 1,591,100 Jan. aud July July. .4
Connecticut River
Covington and Lexington
100 1,582,169
Dayton and Michigan
100 2,384,931 Jan. and July Jan.. .3
406,132
Delaware*.
50
Jan. and July July. .5
Delaware, Lacka., & Western .. 50 10,247,050
Dcs Moines Valley
1(M) 1,550,050
952,350
Detroit and Milwaukee
100
do
do
pref. ....100 1,500,000
Dubuque and Sioux City
100 1,751,577
Mar 75..
do
do
pref..... 100 1,982,ISO March
Pastern, (Mass)
100 3,155,000 Jan. and July July. .4
Quarterly. July
Eighth Avenue, N. Y*
1(H) 1,000,000 Feb. and
Aug! Feb.. 2)4
500,000
Elmira, Jefferson,& CanandagualOO
500,000 Jan. and July
”
Elmira and Williamsport*... .. 50
500,000 Jan. and July I July. 3*
do
do
pref... 50
Erie
100 16,570.1001Feb. & Aug.iFeb..4
do preferred
KM) S,535.700 Feb. & Aug. I Feb.. 3)4
600,(KM) Feb. & Au^ Feb..5
Erie and Northeast*
50
Fitchburg
..100 3,540,000 Jan. and July July. .3
750,000 April and Oct Apr
5
Forty-sec’d St. & Grand St. F’y.100
Hannibal and St. Joseph
100 1,900,000
do
do
pref. ..100 5,253,836
Hartford and New Haven.
100 3,000,000 Quarterly. July..3

85

111 Jk

85]

ni * 112

.

•

.

.

*

15)

160

do
preferred
Hudson River

30

40

65*
74*

50*

....

37'

Illinois Central

Indianapolis and
Indianapolis and
do

„

Jeffersonville
Joliet and Chicago*
100
Kennebec and Portland (new). .100
Lackawanna and Blooinsburg.. 50
do
do
pref. 50
•

1,500,000

50

Little Miami—
50
kittle Schuylkill*
50
Long Island
50
Louisville and Frankfort
50
Louisville and Nashville
100
Louisville.New Albany & Chic. 100
rT..... .100
Macon and Western
..

McGregor Western*

Quarterly.

July. .2*

120

K>*

....

120"

62*

63

37

38

AugjFeb. ..2

100

Maine Central
1(M)
50
Marietta and Cincinnati
do
do
1st pref. 50
do
do
2d pref.. 50
Manchester and Lawience
100

16

500,000

3,572,436 Jan. aud July; July. .5
2,646,100 Jan. and July!July. .3
1,852,715 Quarterly. I Feb. .2
1,109,594 Feb. and Aug Feb. .2
5,527,871 Feb. and Aug Feb. .3)4
2,800,000
1,500,000 Apr and Oct April. 3

20

22

42

44
24

1,447,060
2,029,778

6,586,135
4,051,744

Feb. and
Feb. and

Aug Feb ,3s
Aug!Feb .3s

1,000,000 May and Nov May. .4
100 6,491,386 Jan. and July July. 5 lU!>* nox
Michigan Central.
Michigan Southern and N. Iud..l00 9,381,800 Feb. and Aug'Aug. .3)4 £3/4 33 *
105
do
do
guaran.100 1,089,700 Feb. and Aug, Feb. .5
60"
Milwaukee and Prairie Du ChienlOO 3,014,000
92
100
do
do D 1st pref.100 3,082,000 Feb. and Aug!Feb. .4*
85
do
do
2d pref.100 1,014.000 Feb. and Aug; Feb.. 3)4 85
56
Milwaukee and St. Paul
56*
100 1,000.000
do
preferred
100 2,400,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. 3)4 71X 71 *
55
Mine Hill & Schuylkill Haven.. 50 3,708,200 Jan. and July July. .4
S)
50 3,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. .3s. 80
Morris and Essex
Nashua and Lowell
KK)
600,009 May and Nov May. .4
Naugatuck
l(M) 1,100,000 Feb. and Aug; Feb.. 7
New Bedford and Taunton
100
500,000 June and Dec June.4
New Haven, N. Loud., & Stou .100
738,538
New Haven and Northampton..100 1,010,000
130
122
New Jersey
50 4,395,800 Feb. and Am Aug. .5
Naw T ondon Northern
100
700.000
1
4
New York and Boston Air Line,100
788,047
New York Centra]400 34,591,0)0 Feb,and Aug;Feb.104* Jf94*




.

.

55*
31
111
57

Jan...3

20.240,673 J»n. and Ju^y July..5
1.476.300 Apr. and Oct Apr. .4

115

44
38

101*
28*

260
5(U

31*
HI*
60

100 1.700,000 Jan. and July July..4

100 2,360,700

800,000
500.000
Saratoga and Whitehall
800.000
Troy. Salem & Rutland ....
Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb’glOO 1.991.900
Rutland and Burlington... '....100 2,233,376
St. Louis, Alton, & TerreHantelOO 2.300,000
pref.100 1,700,000
do
do
St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chic*100

.100
100
100

April and Oct Apr...4)4
April and Oct Apr.. .3
April and Oct Apr.. .3
Jan. and Julv July. .5
34

Annually.

64*

May. .7

34X
65*

Sandusky, Dayton, and Cincin. .100 2,989,090 Fob. and
Aug Feb.. 3
354,866
do
pref.100
do
862,571
Sandusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO
Saratoga and Hudson River
100 1,020,000 Jan. and J
576,050
uly July. .2)4
Schuylkill Valley*
50
650,000 Apr. and Ocit
Second Avenue (N. Y.).
100
869,450 Feb. and Aug Feb. .2
Shamokin Valley & Pottsville*. 50
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)
750,000 Quarterly,
100
100 5,S19,275
South Carolina
Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.100 1,200,130
Terre Haute & Indianapolis.... 50 1,929,150: Jan. aud July July. .6
Third Avenue (N. Y.)
100 1,170,000 Quarterly.
Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw.. .100 1,700,000
do
do
1st pref.100 1,700,000
do
do
2d pref.100 1,000,000
38* 38*
Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 2,442,350 June and Dec June. 3
64
do
do
984,700 June and Dec Dec. 3)4 60
preferred. 50
125,000 Jan. and July July.. 3*
.100
Tioga.*
607,111
Troy and Boston..
100
274,400 June and Dec Dec ..3)4
Troy and Greenbush*
100
LTtica and Black River
100
811,660 Jan. and July Jan. .4
Vermont aud Canada*
100
Vermont and Massachusetts.., .l(M)
Warren*
50
Western (Mass)
100
Western Union (Wis. & Ill.).
75
Worcester and Nashua

Union
West Branch aud

50

2,860,000
2,860,000
1,408.300
5,627,700

June and Dec Dec ..4
Jan. and July July..l )4
Tan. and July July. .3
Jan. and July July. .5

110*

1,141,650 Jan. and July July. .5]
Jan.. .2
317,050 January.
.

June.3
Feb.. 3

56*
150

Aug.. 8
Feb. 10

Consolidation
Central
Cumberland

25
50
........100
100
KM)

Feb..5
Feb. .5
Feb.. 6s.
Feb..6

89*
120

27
15

27*
35*
15*

68

68*

35*

62

1,500.000 Feb. and Aug
2,000,000
6,000,000
2,000,0(H) Jan. and Jnly Jan.. .5

43*
4**

5,<MM),(KX)

50 3,200,000 Quarterly.
50
lq 1,(MM),000 Jan. aud July
Wilkeslmrre
100 2,175,000 Apr. and Oct
Wyomi ng Valley
KM) 1,250. nor Feb. and Ang
25 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug
Gas.—Brooklyn
Citizens (Brooklyn)....
20 1,000,000 Jan. and July
Harlem
so
644,000
20 1,000,000
Jersey City & Hoboken
Manhattan
so 4,000,000 Jan. and July
Metropolitan
100 2,800,000
New York
50 1,000,000 May and Nov
750. (MM) Jan. and Jnly
Williamsburg
50
Improvement.—(’anton
.• l(M> 2,000,000
Boston Water Power
25 1,000,000
Brunswick City
100 1,000.000
Cary (Boston)
iq
600,000
*... .100 12,000,000
Telegraph.—American
United States
100 3, <KM), 000 Jan. and Jnly
Western Union...
...100 28,450,000
Quarterly.
Western Union, Russ. Ex..100 10,000,000
Quarterly.
Express.—A da m s
loo 10,000,000
American
.500 3,000,000

44

45*

151

Apr ..5
Jan...5

60
Feb
Feb....

July. .4

July. .5
May
July. .5

•

51

July 20

53

35*

35*

56

56*

Feb.

lie*

10
17
11?

200

200

114

116

209

215

100
100

6,000,000
.100 2,000,GOO
77 ansit.—Central American
1(H) 4,000,000
.Nicaragua
100 1,000,000
10() 8,000,(MM) Quarterly.
Steamship.—Atlantic Mail
New York
KM) 2,500,000
Pacific Mail
100 7,000,000
Quarterly. June.6
Union Nav;gation
100 2,000,000
Trust,.—Farmers’ Loan & Trust. 25 1,000,000 Jan. and July •Tnly. .4

Wells, Fargo & Co

90
124

2,787.fM)0

Pennsylvania
Spring Mountain.
Spruce Hill

Merchants’ Union
United States

57
153

*7* 58"

May. .5

Suequehanna.lOO 1,100,000 Jan. and July Jan... 5
750,000 Quarterly. June .4
50

Ashburton

July..l*

516,573 Feb. and

Providence aud Worcester
Raritan and Delaware Bay
Rensselaer <fc Saratoga consol.

Coal.—American

835,000

50 6,632,250

Lehigh Valley
Lexington and Frankfort

Quarterly.

255

Miscellaneous.

.

494,380
190,750 Jan. and July; July. .3*
100 23,374,400 Feb.and Aug! Aug 5
Cincinnati.... 50 1,689,900 Mar. &. Sen. Mar .4
412,(MM) Jan. and July July. .3
Madison
100
do
407,9<M) Jan. and July July. .4
pref.. 100
50 1,997,309

July

l66‘

57*
8.973.300 Quarterly. July ..5
Pittsburg and Connellsville
50 1,774,623
101* 101*
»Quarterly.
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagolOO 9,312,442 June and Dec July. .2)4
June. 3
Portland, Saco. & Portsmouth. 100 1,500,000

Wyoming Valley

Jan. and Julv

Huntingdon and Broad Top *... 50
do
do
pref. 50

Jan. and

112

76

Jan ..7
January.
Jan. and July July. .4
Feb. and Aug Feb..4
Quarterly. July. .6
20,(H*0-0UO May and Nov May. .5
218, KM)

5,069,450

Ask

Canal.

820,000

July. .4
KM) 1,180,000
100 6,563,250 April and Oct Apr. 5

Bid.

Last p’d

28*

Chesapeake and Delaware
25 1,575.963 June
Chesapeake and Ohio .. ........ 25 8,228.595
Delaware Division
50 1,633,350 Feb. and Aug
Delaware and Hudson
100 10,000,000 Feb. and Aug
Delaware and Raritan
.100 2,528,240 Feb. and Aug
and
30
50 5,104,050 May and Nov
Lehigh Navigation
Aug
Morris (consolidated)
43
50 1,025.000 Feb.
Feb. and An
do
preferred
J00 1,175,000
65*j
76
Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 1,908,207 Feb. and Aug
do
preferred. 50 2,888.805 Feb. and Aug
Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 2,051,000

„...

100

Feriods.

FRIDAY.

May. 5 111
New York and NewIIaven
100: 5,000,000 Irregular.
New York and Ilarlem
50 5,085,050 Jan. and July July. .4
do
preferred
50 1.500,000; Jan. and July July. .4
Quarterly. July. .3 109
New York Pnmuence & BoetonlOO 1,508,000
795,360!
Ninth Avenue
100
Northern of New Hampshire.. .100 3,068,400! May and Nov May3&4-r
44
Northern Central
50 4.518.900 Quarterly. July. .2
37
North Pennsylvania
50 3,150,150 Jan. and
July July. .5
Norwich aud Worcester
100 2.338.600

Wrightsville,York& Gettysb’g* 50

..

Housatonic

Dividend.

,

111

j

-

'standing.

Pennsylvania
50
Philadelphia and BaltimoreCentlOO
Philadelphia and Erie*
50
Philadelphia and Reading
50
Phila., Germant'n, & Norrist'n* 50
Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore 50

F eb.. 3*

1,783,200 Mar and Sep Mar. .5
2,425,400 Mar and Sep. Mar. .5

out-

preferred. .100 2,950,500
Old Colony and Newport..
KM) 3.609.600
Oswego and Syracuse
50 482.400
Panama (and Steamship)
100 7,000.000

378,455
• 50
50
682,600
60
681,665 Jan. and Julv July .3*
38
50 1,150.000
36
50 2,200,00.) Feb. & Aug
Quarterly. [July. .2* 118
100 10,6S5,940

.100

! Stock
roads,

do

492.150

Fes .5
Feb .10

Companies.
Marked thus (*) are leased
and have fixed incomes.

Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. .100 3,077,000
Ohio and Mississippi
100 19,822,85"

.

Central of New Jersey
< 'heshire (preferred)
Chester

nix

997,112
600,000 Quarterly. July ..lh
250,000 June & Dec. June .2*
8,500.000
1.830,000 Jan. and July July. .4
4,076,974 Jan. and July July. .5
3,160,000 Jan. and July July. .5
4,500,000 Jan. and July July. .5

.

Catawissa*
do

111

4,434.250 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3

Brooklyn Central
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug
Brooklyn City
10 366,000
Brooklyn Citv and Newtown.. .100
850,000 Jan. and July
Buffalo, New'York, and Erie*. .100 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug.
Buffalo and State Line
100 4.988,180 Feb. and Aug
Camden and Amboy
lw
Camden and

FRIDAY.

50 11,522,150
1,910,000
50 2,494,900
100 13,188,902

preferred
St. Lawrence*

Baltimore and

out¬

standing.

.100

Alton and StJLouis*
Atlantic & threat Western

Dividend.

STOCK LIST.

...

*

>

New York Life & Trust.:. .100
Union Trust
1(M)
United States Trust
KM)

Mining.—Mari posa Gold
1(M)
Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100
Quartz Hill Gold
25

Quicksilver

Rutland Marble

,,.,100

Saginaw L, S. & M,
Splits to Purmeted Gold,,.

25

1,000,000 Feb. and Autr Feb. 15..
1,000,000 Tan. and July July .4

1,000,000 Jan. and July July 5
5,097,600
5,774,40!
1,000,000
10,000,000 Jan. and July Jan,..5
i,oou,o"' Jan. and July

2,500,(00
2,500.1 m

121

98'
11*

12

26

26*

49

50

[July 28,1866.

THE CHRONICLE.

BOND LIST.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS

placed aft r the

N. B.—The Bums

Company shows the total

of

name

Amount
outstand
mg.

Payable.

1

Funded Debr.

Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio)
do
do )

2d

Mortgage S’k’gFund (Buff, ex)

‘ do
S'k’g Fund(Silv.Creek
Consolidated Bonds
Atlantic A St. Lawrence ($1,472,000):
'.
Dollar Bonds

do
do

2,500,000

Bdlefontaine Line ($2,037,550):
1st Mortgage (B. A 1.) convertible.

do
do
-1st
do
(I.P.&C.)
2d
do
do
Belnidere 1/eiaware ,$2,193,000):
1st Mort. (guar. C.v and A
2d Mort.
do
8d Mort.
do
2d

116,000

($400,000):

364,0001
250.000

Mortgage

1,700.000
867. (XX)

4,269,400

do

Catawissa ($141,000):

Mortgage

Central of New Jersey
1st
2d

Mortgage..

*.

do

1879

July

1810

J’ne A Dec. 1877

7
7

80

1st

•

.

i

..

Aug

Feb. A Aug i

1870

May A Nov.

7
7

1875

2d

90

82

Sep 1865

M'ch A

600,000

6

Jan. A

519.000

Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref

7

7

May A Nov. 1877
Jan. A Julv 1893
Ap’l A Oct. 1883

97
98
88

109

July '75-’S0

2.400,000
1,100,000

7

467,000

8

inconvert..

3,167,000

8

(dated Sept. 20,1800)
Chicago and Gt. Eastern ($5,600,000):
1st Mortgage
Chicago and Milwaukee ($2,000,000):
1st Mortgage (consolidated)
Chicago A Northwest. ($12,020,483):
Preferred Sinking Fund

680,000

7

Jan. A Julv 1883
1883
do
M’ch A Sep 1890

5,600,000

7

Ap'l A

income

Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,924,909):
Trust Mortgage (S. F.) convert —
do

...

Jan. A

1,250.000

rr

1st Mortgage
Interest Bonds

3,600,000

2,000,000
f484,000

1915
1885

76

July 1870

101

Chicago A Bock Island ($1,448,000):
1st Mortgage
Cine., Ham. A Dayton ($1,629,000):
1st Mortgage
2d

do

-

1,397,000

7

379,000 7
1,250,000 7

Cincinnati A Zanesville ($1.300,000):
1st

1,300,000

7

491.500

Mortgage

7

Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($491,500) :
1st

Mortgage.’.

Cleveland A Mahoning ($1,752,400):
1st
2d
3d

850,000

Mortgage

244.200

do
do

648.200

Cle>\, Pain. A Ashtabula ($1,500,000):
Dividend Bonds

900.000

500,000

Snnbury and Erie Bonds
Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,880,848):

7
7
8

7
7

1.129.000

r*

1,619,500
1,108, f24

7
6

2,081,000
300,000

2d Mortgage
3d
do
convertible
4th
do

7

*

Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280):

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Mortgage Bonds of 1886

7

Connecticut River ($250,000):
lit

*

do

Delaware ($500,600):

2d

guaranteed

Western ($3,491,500):
sinking fund

do

l»a«kawaiiDa and Western




...

lsi
1st

74
100
•

•

Jan. & July
do
do
do

1867
1881
18—
18—

...

7
7

Jan. A July 1875
M’ch A Sep 1881

7 Jan. A

July 11871

40

•

($3,297,000):

Mortgage'

...

mort

98

Jan. A

1,907,000

7
7

192.000 7

523,000;

July

1877

Feb. A Aug 1870
1869
do
J’ne A Dec. 1885
May A Nov. 1875
1867
do

110,000 6

...

;

*

.....
-

7

|

....

105

i

-

....

J06
97
97

*

...

....

....

1S70
0 May A Nov
500,000, o Feb. A Aug 1875

500,000;

April A Oct

7
g
g

do
do

80

1875
1S75
1890

105
.....

'1

Jan. A

July 1S66

•-

•
.

*

640,000

May A Nov.

1S7,000

April A Oct

1873

...

....

....

1874

800,000

Jan. A

800,000
230,000
250,000
903.000

1,000,(XX)

Mav A Nov. 1872
Jan. A Julv 1869

May A Nov. 1873

May A Nov

1S83

April A Oct

1877

500,000
225,(XX)

Jan. A July 1870
May A Nov. 1890

1,804,000
300,56.)

Feb. A Aug 1883
1883
do

July

1861
1862

do
do

•

•

•

•

•

.

-

..

..

92

92 X

\
4

0.2
....

I
'.-j

**

•

Feb. A Aug 1892
May A Nov. 1888

300.000

81

1885

1,092,900

Feb. A Aug. ’90-’90
June A Dec. '70-'71

314,1(K){ 6

6S4.(km) 6'
399,000 6

4

Mav A Nov. 1885
1877
do
Feb. A Aug 1868

1,000,000
400,000

590,000
3,612,000
695,000

3.500,000'

|

Jan. A

July

1891

Jan. A July 1893
April A Oct 1893

‘1

.....

Apr. A Oct. 71-'75
Feb. A Aug. 1S74
Feb. A Aug 69-72
April A Oct 1882

4,600,000

.....

July

2.230.500
4,328,000
855,000
2,253,50(1
651,000

J

■

60

Jan. A

i.500,000

Mississippi and Missouri River;
1st Mortgage, convertible

|

April A Oct 1870

402,000

do

s

I

....

500,000 8 Jan. A July 18S2

:

Mortgage, sinking fund
Milwaukee and St. Paul:
1st Mortgage
1st

4

1881

1,000,000

fund

....

1866
7 Jan. A Julv
1870
do

500,000

..

2d
do "
Goshen Air Line Bonds

Morris and Essex :
1st Mortgage, sinking

t;

191,000;

3,890,000

■i

......

1876

2,362,800

2d
do
sinking fund
1st
Oskaloosa
do
1st Land Grant Mortgage
2d' do
do
do
......

162

....

•

Dollar, convertible

2d

100

....

1883

960,000

Milwaukee A' Prairie du Chien
...

July

1,300,000

Sinking F’nd do
Michigan Sou til.. A: North. Indiana:
1st Mortgage, sinking fund

Sep 1878

1904
1904

rvo

Jan. A

1,465,000

$1.1' 0.000 Loan Bonds .;
$400,000 Loan Bonds
1st Mortgage (P.A Iv.RR ) Bonds..
2d
* do
(
do
) Bonds.'.
Michigan Central:

do

1,000,000;

..:..

1st Mortgage
Scioto and HoekingtVallcy

91

364,00010

Memphis Branch Mortgage
Marietta <" Cincinnati ($3,688,385):
...

•*

April A Oct 18S1
Jan. A “July 1883

1.037,500 7 Jan. A Julv 1876

600,000}

M’ch A Sep 1873
1S75
do
Jan. A July 1892
Jan. A Julv 18K5
1886
do

927,000j

,

Extension Bonds
Lu> or We and Nashville

....

1S83
a Feb. A Aug

Mortgage?.

500,000 6 Jan. & Jnly 1875

-

Mortgage, convertible
do
Sterling
Redemption bonds
Indiana Central ($11,254.500):
1st Mortgage, convertible

Lehigh Valley ($1,477,000) :
1st Mortgage
Little Miami ($1,400,000) :
1st Mortgage
Little Schuylkill ($960,000):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Long Island ($932,000):

...:

....

*

McGregor Western:
1st, Mortgage
Maine Central:

Ap’l A Oct.

8
7
7

s5

.

7

6,837,000!
2.596.500
2,563,0001

Feb. A Aug 1880
1874
do

J’ne A Dec. 1876

2,622,(XX)
642,000
169.500

.

Toledo Depot Bonds
1
Mortgage,
D&a., Lacka. A
1st; Mortgage,

Feb. A Aug 1873
M'ch A Sep 1864
1875
do

283.000 8

do

do

«

8d

Jan. A Jnlv 1890

109.500 8

Mortgage Bonds

••

May A Nov 1893

800,000

Dayton and Michigan ($3,782.430):
1st Mortgage
2d

| May A Nov

1867
1880

161.000 8

Mortgage
do

do

M'ch A

R. ($250,000):

Cumberland valley ($270,500):
1st
2d

Jan. A

250,000

Mortgage

Conn, and Passumpsic
1st

Quarterly.
Feb. A Aug

.

1st Mortgage
do
:
2d
3d
do
La Crosse A Milwaukee ($1.9Q3.000) :
1st Mortgage, Eastern Division....
2d
do
do

9S
89

Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. till 1870
Extension Bonds

7
7
7

Feb. A Aug 1885
1885
do
Mav A Nov.! 1863

7

e

mortgage
Kennebec and Portland ($1,280,000):

7

756,000

7

1st

2,000,000

i

7

do

do

|

April A Oet 1868

ip

Indianapolis and Cine, ($1,362,284)
1st Mortgage
Indianapolis A Madison ($640,000):
1st Mortgage
.’...
Jeffersonville ($621,000):
2d Mortgage..
Joliet and Chicago ($500,000):
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Joliet and N. Indiana ($800,000):

Oct.! 1895
JulyJ 1898

sinking-fund

1st
1st

2d

••

I 97J* 100

si

Illinois Central ($13,231.000):

••

101

(j

700,000’

Huntingdon A Broad 7b/n$l,436,082):
1st Mortgage...
104

...

100

i

633,(XX),

1st

Feb. A

98

100

A Au" 1882

3,437,750;

Harrisburg A Lancaster ($700,000):
New Dollar Bonds

do
2d
do
3d
do
Convertible

1

May A Nov. 1875

7

i,qoo,(xx)
1,350,000

Hartford A. New Haven ($927,000):
1st Mortgage
*
Hartf.. Prov. A FisKkiU, ($1,936,940):
1st Mortgage—*
2d
do
sinking fund
Housatonic ($191,(XX)):
1st Mortgage
Hudson River ($7,762,840) :
1st Mortgage

...

Feb

1,963,000
1,086,000
927,000

($2,350,000):

Convertible Bonds

800,000

Mortgage Bonds

($927,000):

Mortgage West. Division
East.
do '
do"
Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600):
Land Grant Mortgage

••

{....
93

Jan. A Juh 1870

149,000

C.AN.W.):

1st

Feb. A Aug 18S3
May A Nov. 1889
J Tie A Dec. 1893

7

600,000

926,500, ,7 June & Dec 1888

do

Great Western, 111.

.

OJXXUXX) 7

3,816,582 6 jM'eli & Sep 1875

Mortgage

..

.

July 1873
!

1

4,441,600; 7 April A Oct 1880 | ....(96

Mortgage, sinking fund

2d
do
Grand Junction

1882

909.000

convertible
do

Mortgage

7

6
6
6

!

4

do
do

Gal. A Chic. U. (hid. in

;

3,000,000 7
j 4,000,000, 7

Mav & Nov. 1876
M’ch A Sep 1879
do
!l8S3

Jan. A

1

Mortgage
do ' convertible
do

Ap'l & Oct. 1888

Sterling convertible...
Erie a till Northeast ($149,000):

.

Chicago and Alton ($3,619,000):

do
Bonds,

.

May A Nov 1872

450,000 7 Feb. A Aug 1890
800, (XX) 7 May A Novi 1890

Mortgage W. Div
do
E. Div

do
do

-

Jan. A Julv 1873
Ap'l A Oct. 1879

141,000:

($1,509,000):

do
Cheshire ($600,000):
1st
1st
2d

.

I

Mortgage

2d
3d
4th
5th

Jan. & July 1863
1894
do

59S,000| 7
| 1,000,000: 7

Erie Railway ($22,370,982):

.

Central Ohio ($3,673,000):
1st
let
2d

1st
96

1870
1889

490.000 7
1

Mortgage

1st

Jan. A

7

1865
i860

Ap’l A Oct. 1866
200,000 7 Jan. A Julv Y«y-’72
1870
do
400,000 7

Consoldated ($5,000,1)00) Loan
Camden and Atlantic ($983,000):

95
95

1864

Feb. A Aug 1S76

7

734,000

1875

420,000 5 Jan. & July 1872
739,200 6 Feb. A Aug 1874

do

East Pennsylvania ($598,000):
Sinking Fund Bonds
:
Elmira A Williamsjiort ($1,570,000):

9s
94

......

Feb. & Aug
do
Jan. A July
do
do

7
6

($1,79S,600):

do

2,500,000; 7 May & Nov.
do
1,000,000 8

300,(XX)
600,000

2d section

do

1st
1870

($900,000):

Mortgage, 1st section

Mortgage, convertible....

May A Nov. 1871

500,000

.

1st
1st

’70-'79

150,000 6

2,(XX),(MX)
380,000

Income
Erie and Northeast
Camden and Amboy ($10,204,403):
Dollar Loans
Dollar Loan

1st Mortgage
Dubuque and Sioux City

J’ne A Dec. 1867
M'ch A Sep 1885
Feb. & Aug 1877

1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage

Buffalo and State Line ($1,200,000):

•

.

•

1870

do

400,000 6

Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000):

July

do
do

100,000
200,000 6

Mortgage Bonds

1st
2d

Jan. A

7

6

Sinking Fund Bonds

•

•

1885

6
6
6

589,5(H)

f

Boston and Lowell

1st

Ap’l A Oct.

7

500,000

do
do
do

2d
2d

6

$1,740,000 8 Ap’1 & Oct. 1887
348,000; 7 J’ne A Dec. 1874

!

Ja Ap JuOc 1S67
Jan. & Julv 1875
1880
do

650,000
347,000 7

BUmburg and Corning ($150,000):
Mortgage Bonds
Boston, Cone. A Montreal ($1,050,000):
1st Mortgage
I
1st

Ap’l A Oct.
May A Nov.

1,128,500 6
700,000 6

1855
1&50
1853

do

do
do
do

Income Bonds
Detroit and Milwaukee ($3.500,000):
1st Mortgage, convertible
i
2d
do
Detroit. Monroe A Toledo ($734,000):

I860
1878

6
6

6

($10,112,584):

Mortgage (S. F.) of 1834

Mortgage Bonds

•

Payable.

:

($2,OSS,000):

Des Moines Valley

Eastern, Mass.

484,000

Sterling Bonds

Baltimore and Ohio

5

1882
do
7
1879
do
7"
1881
7
do
1876
do
7
7 Jan. & July, 1883
7 Ap’l & Oct. 18-4
1884
7
do
1895
do
7

do

do

1st

B.—The sums placed after theoutetand■ e of
Company shows the totalj
mg.
Funded Debt.

1882

do

,

na

Ap’l & Oct. 1877“-

7
7

Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y.)

2d

1st
1st

!

do
do

do
2d
Franklin Branch

A

I Amount

X.

'6

!

($30,000,000):
Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.)

1st

DESCRIPTION. ‘

ICailroad

Kali road:

Atlantic & Gt. Western
1st

Princpal payble.

©

FRIDAY.

INTEREST.

FRIDAYFI

INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

■

122

....

•

f®*
V,-

I
1

lioji
95^2
90
....

....

....

97
91
...:

j

i

94
92
84

Jan. A Julv 1875 ■"

do
do

May A Nov.
do

1876
J STB
1877
1883

7 May & Nov. 1915

•

.

•

.

#|M

..

9

.£

64

•

ll

THE CHRONICLE.

July 28,1866.]

123

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued).
INTEREST.

I Amount
The snms placed after the name of outstanding.
Company show the total Funded!

FRIDAY

.

73

5

Payable.

pq

300,000 7 Jan. <&
450,000
200.0OT

M’ch & Sep!
.Tan. A- Juh

Jan. A July

...

Aug
July

6,917,598
2,025,000

Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks).
Sink. Fund B’ds (assumeddebts)..

663,000,
1,898,000!
604,000

Bor.ds of August, 1859, convert....
Bonds of 1865
New York and Harlem ($6,098,045) .*
1st General Mortgage —
'
Consolidated Mortgage
3d Mortgage
N York and New Haven ($2,000,0001 :

do
Feb. A Aug
do
do

-

Mortgage Bonds

Yoi'k, Providence and Boston:
Mortgage

...

>d.
>5

July)
July

...

85

'4
16

...

I

Jan. & July
do
do
do

3
3
5
5

Jan. &
Feb. A

4

1,500,000
1,000,000
500,000
500,000
100.000

Mortgage
Steamboat Mortgage

300,000

Ogdensburg and L. 'Champlain :

89^

7

July

94
90
87

96
95

....

April & Oct

9

2,900,000

Jan. & July
do

2

...

4

...

Mississippi:

Mortgage

750,000

(W.D.)....

Oswego & Rome ($350,0001.
1st Mortgage (guar bv B. W. & O.)
Os we go a n d Syracuse ($311,500) :
1st Mortgage
Pacific, {S. W. Branch):

....

350,000

May & Nov

6

225,000

Jan. &

30

July

....

92

.

Jan. & July

416.000
346.000

April & Oct

)

79%

1st
2d
2d

do
do

July
April & Oct

,

sterling
.

Jan. &

Philadelphia and Erie:
1st Mortgage (Suubury & Erie)....
let
do
(general)...,
2d
do
(general)...
Philadel., Germant. & Norristown:
Consolidated Loan
Convertible Loan

5,000,000

408.000
182.400

....

o

90% 92“

y~
...

yy.

564,000
258,000

Mortgage Loan.
Pittsburg and Connellsville :

692,000

Jan. &

2d
do
3d
do
Akron Branch

5.160,000
2,000.000
:

1st

mortgage

200,000

Pittsburg and Steubenville:

1st Mortgage
2d
do
Rac ine and Mississippi:
1st Mortgage
Raritan and Delaware Bay:
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Si
(lb
....'
Convertible Bonds

....

iio

140,000

do

| no int. paid 1865 -j

Sacramento Valley
illey:
1st
2d

Mortgage
do

St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute:
1st
2d

2d

Mortgage
do

do




.

preferred
income..

do
do

78

1865

Jul]j 1874

---

.

...

...

..

1863

•

1867

7
7

June & De<
Jan. & Jul}

6

Jan. & Juh

1883
1876

7
7
8

...

1861
1867

30

...

Feb. &

Aug

1875

Jan. & Juh

1873

April & Oct

l03J^

1878

•

•

.

...

..

J

do
1875
Jan. & July ’66-’76
6 June & Dec D’m’d

Mch &

Sept

6
8

Jan. & >uly
do

• •

| May

May A Nov.

do

1871
1877

•

80

97%

•

.

.

....

•

*

2,356,509 5 Jan. & July 188G
2,000,000 !? JaApJuOc

•

800,000
800,000

y. y.

4,375,000
1,699,500

Mortgage

?

do

>

*

800,000

1870
1890
1885

Jan. &

July

....

1878

Mch &

Sept

l
f

Jan. & July

1866
1868

414.15S

f

1

Mch & Sept
do

86

•

....

1880

..

.

Jun. & Dec. 1874
Mch & Sept 1880

....

....

90

1870
1884

Mortgage Bonds

....

onds.
-

2,667,276

do"

Mortgage Bonds

182,000

6

Jan. &

July

Mortgage Bonds
sylrania <£ New York:
1st Mortgage (North Branch).

750,000

6

April & Oct

6

May & Nov. 187$

1,7M,&30

J

Mch A

...

87

1876

590,000

....

1876

Mortgage.
do

Sept

5 Jan. A July
586,500 b May A Nov.

3 980,670

Improvement

....

•

90

• •

937,500

400,000
329,000
2,200,000

2,800,000
1,700,000

Feb. A Aug 1863
do
1863

Maryland Loan.
Coupon Bonds
Priority Bonds,

91
•

1872
1882
1870

80^

•

•

Jan. & July 1875
Feb. & Aug 1881

Semi

an’ally

do
do

10

•

•

•

J

Mortgage.

1.000,000
?,n.o,ooo
325,000

b
b

Jan. A July
do
do

I860
1878
1864

82

60

6

May & Nov.

1883

24

6

Jan. A

Jnly 1878

750,000

6

Jan. A

July 1878

7

Jan. A

July

50%

....

24%

m

Valley
Mortgage.

—

...

:
80

90

a
1
&
i

tgage Bone's

Mining:

j
Pe
1

i

sylvan ia Coal:

t M(
fortgage.

1,500,000 7

Jan. & Julv

2,000,000 7 April A Oci

18S4

•

»

•

•

-

600,000 S Jan. & July 1S81
Feb. & Aug

1871

500,000 7 June A Dec

1879

•

....

1873

500,000 7 Jan.

600 000

7

...

•

vu

1894
1894

90

JM

We

1894

....r76

1

....

....

2

do

2,000,000* 7

A

July

»fr/

18—
'■8

.

...

►

....

2,500,000

,

do

..

«

Siusquehanna and

M

1,800,000

•

1870

752,000
161,000

•

•

Miscellaneous
d >
do

•>

....

450,000

1890
1890

- •

& Nov. 1870

S

5 Jan. & July

500,000

75
97

1890
1890

r

1879

400,000
340,000
500,000

.

b

175.000
25,000

Mortgage Bonds

jj

110

....

1S88
1888
1876

800,000

.

'

Mch A Sept
do
do

2.50,000

•

92
78

76

1875
1875

641,000

1875

1,000,000

•*

Mortgage

May & Nov
Jan. &

76

1884

n

1st Mort. Rensselaer A Saratoga .
1st Mort. Saratoga & Whitehall....
1st Mort. Troy, S. A Rut. (guar.)
R. Water, and Ogdens. ($1.60 *,908) :
1st Mortgage (Potsdam & Watert.)
2d
do
(Watertown & Rome)
1st
2d

July

>

1865

do

Mortgage, sinking fund.
yf Pennsylvania:

1st
2d

1881
1881

Jau. A

Feb. & Ant

200,000

jeake and C '

1st

Saratoga consolidated:

Rutlandand Burlington:
> urnnywn :

,

1912 101 % 103
1912
94% 96
1912
89
1884

Aug

•

596,000

Loan of 1871.
Lo n of 1884

1884

1,4:18,000

Mortgage

Rensselaer

109
109

Feb. &
do

•

150,000

L

•

1,000.000
500,000

Reading and Columbia:
1st

April & Oct
Jan. & July

•

1,000,000

do

Interest

Feb. & Aug 1889
Semi an’ally
do

...

r

1st

E

Sc

400,000
P'b'g. Ft. W. and Chic.: ($573,500)
1st Mortgage
5,200,000

1894

7
7
7
7
7
7

850,000 6

i

P

July

June & De< 3

4,319,520 5 April & Oct ’es-’Ti

guaranteed..’.

Mform.

1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.)

7

399,300

wake and Delaware :

1st

May & Nov

60.000

•

554,908

Sterling Bonds, guaranteed
[ing

9-‘% 96“

do
do
do

Bonds, convertible
Valley Bonds, convertible
Philadelphia and Trenton:
1st Mortgage
Philadel.,' Wilming. «C Baltimore:
Lebanon

•

600,000

Preferred Bonds
L Delaware Divis

Jan. & July
do

976,800

•

..

ryi
Maryland Loan

....

2,856,600! 6 April A Octi
106,000 6 Jan. & Julv
do
1,521,000

Sterling Bonds of 1843
Dollar

...

Canal
1st

Jan. & Julv
do

292,500

1870

2,000,000
1,135,000

.

Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds

July 1876

April & Oct
April & Oct
April & Oct

:

do
do
do
Dollar Bonds of 1849
do
do
1861
do
do
1843-4-8-9

100
95% 96

C

119.800

Philadelphia and Reading
Sterling Bonds of 1836

85

(

4,000,000

Jan. & Jub 7

550,600

interest)

Mortgage

do

do

1,000,000

7

500,000 6 Jan. & Julj
do
180,000 6

.

Mortgage

1st
2d

94

4,980,000
2,621,000
2,283,840

Philadelphia and Baltimo?'e Central :
1st Mortgage

)
5

575,000

i..,,

Mortgage

.

1st
1st

79

Jan. A

....

.

....

yyy.

v
i
1884

Mch A

...

300,000 7 Jan. & Jubf IBS'7
300,000 7 Apr. & Oct 1S85
650,000 7 May & Nov 1875
200,000 7 Mar. & Sep 1882

Albany and W. Stockbridge Bonds.
Hudson and Boston Mortgage

...

....

Sept

1,029,000

...

1,500,000
152,355
600,000

Sterling(£899,900) Bonds.

]

Pennsylvania:

1S76

1.000,000

IstMortgage (guaranteed)

....

37

1,150,000

April & Oc t

7

900,000

Dollar Bonds

do
Feb & Aug.

1871

2,500,000

Westeh ester an d Ph iladslph ia:
1st Mortgage (convert.)
Coupon
2d
do
,
registered

....

Panama:

1st Mortgage, sterling
do
1st
do
2d
do
do
Peninsula {Chic. & N. TF.);
1st Mortgage

July

Jan. A

1,391,000

:

1st Mortgage
rerm. Cen.
Verrn. <£• Can. Bonds

....

1,139,000

Mortgage, guar, by Mo

1866
68-74

....

1,494,000

Mortgage

July

Various.

.

Vermont Central:
1st Mortgage
2d
do
(no

....

Jan. &

1,180,000

.

.

Tray Union ($680,000):
Mortgage Bonds
do"
do

$7%

1872

:

2d
do
3d
do
Convertible

....

0

Aug

89^

...

Aug

94,000 7 Mch & Sep t 1866

Equipment bonds

0

Feb. A

:

Troy and Boston ($1,452,000)
1st Mortgage

...

1867

1,400,000

.

.

...

2,500,000 6 April & Oct
do
360,00010

General

do

85^1

June & Dec

200,000

1st Mort. (Toledo A Wabash)
1st do
.
(extended)
2d
do
(Toledo and Wabash)...
2d
do
(Wabash and Western)..
1
Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. A iv.)

J

....

1875

1,070,000

’.

IstMortgage
1 Toledo and Wabash

....

July

2.000,000

Toledo. Peoria and Warsaw

j

Aug!

6.000,000: 7 Jau. & July

A orth- Western Virginia:
1st Mortgage (giiar. by Baltimore).
do
2d
(guar, by B. A O. Kit.)
3d
do
(do
do
do )
3d
do
(not guaranteed)
Aorwich and Worcester:

2d

’78

,

1875

•Tan. <fc

700,000

Indianapolis:
1st Mortgage, convertible
Third Avenue (N. Y.):
1st Mortgage

...

April & Oct

220,700) 6

Mortgage Bonds
Chattel Mortgage

1st

Jan. A
Jan. &

1,500.000'
2,500,000

North Pennsylvania:

1st

75

1,088,(W0, 6 April & Oct

Northern Central:

....

Aug 1900

500,000

Mortgage

1st Mortgage
Terre Haute and

.:.

Feb. A

1.290,000

Syra. Bing, and N. Y. ($1,595,191):

102

1894

May A Nov

201.500

Domestic Bonds..
Staten Island:
1st Mortgage

i

May & Nov.

1.000,000

Shamokin Valley and Pottsville:
IstMortgage
South Carolina :

,:r.o
.

<s

:

Sterling Lban

...

)3
>8

do

232,000' 6 Feb. A

State Loans
2d Mortgage Sinking Fund.
Northern Ne w Hampshire:
Plain Bonds.
North Missouri:
1st General Mortgage

72

May A Nov.
Fob. & Aug

3,000,000
1,000,000
1,000,000!

1,700,000

;

Jo

1st

-

i

...

◄

Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark:

....

...

S7
33
33
76
76
76

May A Nov

165,000

Income

i

.Tune A Dec

M

s

»

.

do

1st Mortgage

93
92
88
88
104
1U5

£

April A Oct.

do

2d

i

*

33

Jan. &

Mortgage

Sandusky. Dayton and Cincinnati
1st Mortgage (extended)

i

...

35

May A Nov

140,000; 6

Premium Sinking Fund Bonds —
Bonds of October, 1863 (renewal) ..
Real Estate Bonds..

8

69

T3

£

Payable.

ing.

Louis, Jacksonville & Chicago:

1st
2d
2d

....

1

73

485,000 6 Feb. A

Fei ry Bonds of 1853
New London Northern:
1st General Mortgage
New York Central ($14.6*27.443):

Ohio and

.Tuly'18‘6

St.

...

$500,000:

Northampton :

Mortgage
New Jersey:

1st

6

73

o*outstand

name

Railroad:

i

0

placed after the

Debt.

<1

i

1st

New

sums

Amount

Company shows the total Funded

00

Railroad:

Naugatuck;
1st Mortgage (convertible) ...
N. Haven, N. London dt Swninglon:
1st Mortgage

•2d
do
New Haven and

The

M

2

ft

3

Debt.

5?

FRIDAT

i_N TKHKgT.

Description.

Description.

W. & July Hrrso

•

•

•

•

•

(

*

•>

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST—Friday.

INSURANCE STOCK LIST.—Friday.
Dec.

are

31, 1805.

participating, and (+)
AVrite Marine

Risks. Capital.

-9

dividend.

Last

Periods.

Assets

Bid. Ask.
ed.

paid.

’

Adamantine Oil

*

.Tan

25 $300,(XX)
5°
200,000
American*
50 200,000
American Exch’e. .100
200,000
Arctic
50 500,000
25
250.000
Astor.
Adriatic
AStna

25
..25

Baltic...
Beekman

200,000
2tX),000

25

Bowery
Broadway
Brooklyn
Cent ral- Park
Citizens’

.

300,000
200,000
153,000

25
17

...

15( >, 000
300,000

123,577 Jan. and July
378,440

J ulv'66

210.000

Columbia*

250,000
500,000

Excelsior 1

30

do

J

50
100

Hoffman
Home

2,000,000

50

Hope

50
100

Howard
Humboldt

Import’ & Trade’.. 50
Indemnity
100

152,05'

200,000
300,000
200,(XX)

200,(XX)
150,000

1

8,82

Irving
Jefferson

King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20

Knickerbocker.... 40

Lafayette (B'kly)..

50

..100
25

Blood Farm.

150,(XX)
280.1XX)
150, (XX)
300.000

>

153,000
500, (XX)

200,000
197

2<X),000

150,000
200,000

1
j
1

Metropolitan * t.. .100 1,000,000
Montauk (B'lyn). ..50
150,(XX)
150.) XX)
Nassau (B'klyn)... 50

1
;

People’s

20

Phtrnix t..
Relict

Resolute*....

•)
)

7
1
6
7
)

200,(XX)

St. Mark’s
St. Nicholas!

25
25

Security *!

Sterling *
Stuyvesaut
Tradesmen's
United States

150. (XXI

150,(XX)

50

400,000

Washington *!.
Williamsburg City.50

287.4<X)

Yonkers & N. Y.. 100

....

.6

.

....

Feb. ’66..5

.

*

.

.

'66 .5
'66 .5
’65 .5
'66 v.6
'65 .5
'65 .6

.....

.

.

.

135

.

...

.

,

.

,

.8

•

.

IlamiltonMcClintock
Ilammond..,

.

0

.0

80

.

.

.....

Feb. ’66.3%

•

•

t-....

.

Hcydrick
Heydrick Brothers

.

.5
.5

.

July '66

.

July '65 A
July '66 .4
.

Hickory Farm

.5
.5

.

.

July '66 .5
July '66 .5
.

llomowack
Inexhaustible

75
.

.

.

Julv '66 .5

.

July'66 4
July '66.. .5

Knickerbocker
Lamb’s Farms
Latonia &

.....

Julv ’65 .Id

July ’65 .5
.5
July '66. .8
Julv ’66 .6
.

.

150,(XX)
500,(XX)

•

•

....

*

....

Annita
Aztec

...

85
•

•

•

•

.

2o R ‘ffl
do

4862

4o




|

•

-

|

do
do

f|

do
do

....

•

5
10
.10

5
10

3

10 2 75

2‘

15 ;

IOi

10!

10!

5;

IOi

100‘

Wright

Woods &

24

5

....

i W.Virg. Oil and Coal

!|

.

•

•

.

French Creek

Bid.
....

19
10

j

do

..1803!

do

;

6)4

..1805
..18661

,1866

»

,1860

do

....

....

.....

....

.....

!

•t

dtf

865;,lit

•

r

*

»

'

t

I ? t

t

•

....

/

\%

i

-

Consol

Norwich

..1864!

do

5)4

5

New Jersey
New York

.....

;Wa&b,, ,.1863i

:

2

Merrimac

.

f

999 9

>

1

Hit

Ogima..

lo

'8'40

200
50
2 00

par

5

....

3 00

"75 "90
90

5

100

50

Coal:

—

Co.'duihiau

Schuylkill

-

Russell File

-

Quincy.,..,...
10
Shaldoii ABd Columbian kOtklftud mmi

4 10

—

Mount Pleasaut.

-

3%

Princeton
Providence
Portage Lake

—

West Fellows
Lead and Zinc:
Bucks County
par
Denbo.,..
Manhau
Phenix
Redwood
Wallkill
Iron :

Copake
Lake Superior

-

11

Pewabic

25

30
1 >2
2 00
4 05
8 20

—

Smith & Parmelee
Texas
Union

1

Mendota

..1 SOS
1864

2

"”s
....

Quartz Hill
00 Rooky Mountain

16 OC
5 00

8

Lake Superior
Manhattan

.....

10
5
10

36

1 35

—

Virginia City..

33

Lafayette

a

Manhattan
Montana

1 04

”35
25

Oak Hill

-

Knowlton
...»

1 25

l>e

Hope

i 60

Hope
Keystone.,
Kip & Buell
Liberty
Liebig

2
2
.25 25 50
2>£

90f
74

5
25

I Holman

-

lIudsonr
Huron
Indiana..
Isle Royale

1865,
..I860

,.l862j

2%

1

—

Gunnell
Gunnell Central

$%

Hilton

25

Downieville

-

Great Western

—

! Eagle

24)£
1

i'50

5

—

(Gold Hill......

Franklin
—

—
—

Gregory

1

2 00
2 50

—

Corydun

1 00

31^
5)4

City

Flag

(Bullion, Consolidated...
I Consolidated

3 50

3 50

—
—

Bob Tail

i

-

Forest
•

par

Benton

■

Excelsior
Flint Steel River—... 9#

.

:

I Bates & Baxter

-

Evergreen Bluff

120

.

:

j Atlantic *fc Pacific

3

Minnesota

do

Bid.. Askd

American

Dover

—

..

I860
do
Union ..18CX)
..1861i
!j do
•

23

20

...IOi 7 SO 8 00

Vesta
Watson Petroleum
Webster

Gold

Eagle River—

•

.5

.1865

do

10

: 5

Venango (N. Y.)
Venango & Pit Hole

2 25

5

Dacotah

■

do

do

10

| Ada Elmore
Altona

Copper Creek
Copper Falls
Copper Ilarbor

SO

!

>j

75
....

....

Bid. J Askd!

Central

|!

!

2 00

-

Canada

Sun

j

..

|

2
5
10

17>5
2>i

Caledouia

....

Companies.

j do

do

....

,...10

4%

Boston..

„

Pacific ..1863
..1864

Mercantile .1801
1805
do

2 2Q

.50

Union
United Pe'tl’m F’ms
United States

.13%

Bohemian

•

•

.

•

.

•

.

Ask-;
ed. j

j

10

5

! Titus Estate
Tygart’s Creek

15

—

Bay State.:

Aug i Aug. ’00. .5
Aug .'Feb. ’66...$
July July '66 A
do
'July ’66.. .1

.1800
N. Y. Mut. .1860
1861
do
.1862
do
do
.1863
.18611....
do
do
.1865
do
.1S06I
.1859 57
Orient
i
.I860!....
do
1861
do
do
.1863
1864
do

3

..

Terragenta

.paid 3
Albany & Boston
26
Algoniali
3

Feb. '66. .4
.

I

....

.

Titus Oil

5

Copper:

.

....

.

Bid.

•

| Sugar Creek

Adventure

ft! Jan. and July i July '66 .5

Companies.

2 10

.

....

.

1 Jnlv '66

.

——

July July '66 .5
July '66 ..5

2
do
3 Feb. and
9 F°b. and
9 Jan. and

.

10

10
10

Companies.

.....

....

MARINE MUTUAL INSURANCE SCRIP.—Friday.
Ask-11

4
•

MINING STOCK LIST—Friday.

Hancock

i

....

Tack Petr’m of N.Y
Talman
Tarr Farm

5
1

Hamilton

Bid.! cd. !!

....

,

Success

...

.

177,

1|

,

Story & McClintock

Lily Run

and Aug | Feb.’66.3
Aug

....

....

....

•

•

.

9 Feb. and

5
....

.

.

.

....

.

2 00

.

.

i|Feb.

.

....

Second National
;.
Shade River
5
Sherman & Barnsdale. .'2)4
Sherman Oil
Southard
10
Standard Petroleum
5

July *65 .5

April and Oct. [Apr. '66..4
do
i J uly ‘66 .5
do
[July *06 .5
do
(July '66 .5
Feb. and Aug. |Feb. ’66 . .4
Jan. and J uly j July '66 . .5
do
j July ’65 .5

3 Jan. and
3
do

....

Rynd Farm

20

Liberty

105

.

10

8

.10

President
Rawson Farm
Revenue

..

2 00

Sage R

....

.

Plnmer

—

Island
Ivanhoe
Ken. Nat. Pet & Min

....

.

.

20

Home

....

.

J ulv '66

....

....

1

High Gate
.....

.

Jan. '66
Julv '66

!

Hard Pan

.....

5
July '65 .5

J ulv '66

....

.5

..

.

.

10

.

.

30

Petroleum Consol
Pit HoleC. No. 2..,'...
Pit Hole Creek
Pithole Farms

('6

....

....

Pepper Well Petroleum

30
2

,,.,

5i
Eureka.
Excelsior
5
Fee Simple
2
First National
5
Forest City.....
—
1
Fountain Oil
10
Fountain Petroleum
5
Fulton Oil
Germania
5
Great Republic
10
G’t Western Consol... .100
Guild Farm
10

.5

Aug. ’65.

10

..

Feb. 65 ..5

Aug.

.

.

5

[ Palmer Petroleum
Pennsylvania Oil

.

....

•

1(X)
.10

..

Pacific.

*2

..

M

| Oil Creek of N.Y

:

July '66 ..4
July '66 . .5
July
July
July
July
July
July

.

....

....

.10
.10

City Petroleum.

......

Apr. '65. .5
July '66 3>t>

.

•

5 03

4 75

■

]1 Oceanic
Oil

.

-

..10 i
.

.

.

!

5

..

..

Enterprise
Equitable

.....

....

.

....

....

.10

North American
Northern Light

i

....

....

*.

..10

! Oak Shade

....

1
a

a

75
...

25

5

.

i

-

-S-

3

.

.

!

a

..

Enniskillen

Julv’00.3>j

.

.

a

Empire and Pit Hole

.5
.5

.

a

Emp’e City Petrol'm..

...

do ^
Julv'00.3>i
do
!July'00.3>j
9 Feb. and Aug Aug. ’66. .5
0
do
|Feb. ’65. .5
2 Jan. and July | July '63 . .4

250,(XX)

.

De Kalb
Devon
Eclectic

,

-

.

i

-

...

Consolidated of N. Y”... ...10

....

.

.

•

....

.

!
1

,

i

..10i 1 20

•

1 00

5

.

.

j

30
>

•

....

5
N. Y.
Alleghany
New Yorktfc Keut’y Oil. 100
r
New York* Keut’y Pet
5
New York & Newark..
5
N. Y. & Pliiladel
1
N.Y.Ph. & Balt.Cons
8
Noble & Delaneter
Noble Well of N. Y.... .25

i

....

..10

.

July '66
July '65

...

Commercial

.

July '65 .5
July '66 .5
6
May
.

*.

•

-

5
10i

•

....

.

.r

.

•

.

....

....

....

2 35

.

..

....

....

...

! New England

....

.50
.100

....

.

J ulv '66

2 (X)

..10
.

.

.

..

.

....

.

..

....

Commonwealth

9

20

Washington

Clifton
Clinton
Columbia (Phg)

....

2

50 1,000,(XX)
50
200,000
1(H)
2<H),(XX)
100 2IX),(XX)
25 2tX),000
25
150,(XX)

Standard
Star

.

.

200,(XX>
3(X),(XX)
200. (XX)

Rutgers’

.

....

.

61 Jan. and July. [July '66 . .6
• Feb. and Aug. iFeb.'00.3>*
5 Jan. and July. July '06 . .5
1
Julv ’66 .5
do

1,<XX),000

Republic*....

.

24

.100
5
100

....

.10
5

j Mount Vernon
National

....

Cherry Run Petrol m..
Cherry linn special —

40

.

210,000
200,000

500,000
350,000
200,000
200,000
150,(XXI
150,(XX)

....

Mar. '6-4..5

July '6-1 .5
Apr. '66..5
July '66 .7
July '66.. .5

5
..10

....

.10
Mingo
Monongahela & Kan....

.

5
1 5(T
50
.'27

1 (’0

..10

5
.10
.

v.

25

15

2

...

..

Buchanan Farm
Bunker Hill
California
Cascade
Central
Cherrv Run Oil

•

....

8
>

•

....

200,(XX)
3(X),000

50 1,000,000

North American*. 50
25
North River
Pacific
25
Park
100
Peter Cooper
20

....

•

.

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

1

Niagara

•

do

640,(XX‘
2(X),(XX)

National
7>£
New Amsterdam.. 25
N. Y. Equitable 3 35
N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100

....

5

..

March and Sep Mar. '66
Jan. and July. July '66

200,(XX)
25 1,000,(XX)

100
Market*
100
Meehan' & Trade’. 25
Mechanics (B'klyn) .50
Mercantile
.100
Mercantile Mut’l*tl00
Merchants’
50

uly ’66

a

.20

.

Brevoort
Brooklyn

....

do

Long Island (B’kly).50

Lorillard*
Manhattan

Id

.

Jnlv ‘66

Feb. and

100 1,000,000
25 200,(XX)
30
200,010

International

do
.1861
do
.1862
do
.1863
do
.1864
.1865
do
do
.1866
Gt West’n’01
do
.1862
.1803
do
do
.1864
do
.1865
do
.1866

•

....

Montana.

July *66 .7

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

300,000
200,000

Harmony (F.&M.)t 50

At’antic.lSOl I
do
.18051
do
.1S66!

5
..10
..

Black Creek

170

Oct. '65.. .5

17
204,000
150,(XX)
Firemen's Fund... 10
do
150,000
Firemens Trust.. 10
do
21X1,000
Fulton
25
149,-;
Gallatin
50
150,000
May and Nov.
Jan. and July.
200, tXX)
Gebhard
....100
do
Germania
50
500,000
Jan. and July.
Globe
50
200,000
Great Western*!. .100 1,000,000 3,177,437 Jan. and July.
Greenwich
25
200, (XX)
228,12 Feb. and Aug.
Grocers’
50
April and Oct.
200,000
Guardian...
Jan. and July.
200, (XX)
do
Hamilton
15
150,000
do
Hanover
50
400,000
Firemen’s

aNIES.

5 75
2 00

....

do
258,054
140,324
Jan. and July. Julv '66 .5
230,3
do
149,02-1
July '60.o>:

2tH>,(XX)
150,000

50

Exchange

OH P

5 70

....

....

Marietta
Mercantile
Mineral Point

....

.

(N. Y.).. 100 200,000
Commerce (Alb’y).lOO
400,000
Commercial
50 200,000 214,290 Jan. and July.
Commonwealth... 100 250,000 268,893 April and Oct.
Continental *
1(X*.a!XX).(XX) 1,199,978 Jan. and July.
Corn Exchange... 50' 400,000
'w‘n 30 .970 March and Sep
Croton
100
21X1,000 108,328 Jan. and July.
Eagle
40 300,000 301,705 April and Oct.
Empire City
10o 200,000 212,l4i Jan. and July.
Commerce

Lamar
Lenox

■

10
.10
.

Maple Grove
Maple Shade of N.Y

....

..

Bergen Coal and Oil...

.

....

314,787 Feb. and Aug. F.3& p. sh.
231,793 Jan. and July. J uly ’66 5
-J ulv'64.3)*
391.913
do
do
212,594
July '66 . .5
440,870 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’66). 5

100
100

Clinton

..10
5
2

..

.

.

«...

July '6-4 .4

70

City

.SO

.......

100
20

..

.

nar

McElhenny
McKinley T
Manhattan

Bennehotf «fc Pithole...
Bennehufi. Run
Bennehoir Run Oil.

....

Feb. ’66..5

do

2d, 521

95

McClintockville

100
-•10

Allen Wright
Anderson
Beekman
IP mis Height*

.

Companies.

10

nar

Allegliauy

213,590 Jan. and July. July ’06 ..4
501,543 Jan. and July. Jan. 65.. .5
253,232 Feb. and Aug. Feb. '66...5
324,450 March and Sep Mar. ’66 .'5
200.302 May and Nov.
181,052 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65. .4
320,(11 June and Dec. Dec. ‘65.. .5
248,392 Feb. and Aug. Feb. '66.. 5

300,000

(Br'klyn)..50

and .T11 ly

205, 976 .Tan and July
440,003 Jan. and July. July ’(XL..

....

Bid. Askd

Companies.

Bid. Askd

!

Marked thus (*)

Atlantic

[July 28, 18

THE CHRONICLE.

124

10
5

irilmeellaucon s.
inlandMarbld•
taasell Tile

5 06
if ft

ittt

8U

5 00

6 on

5 12 00 IS 00
I! ti

i

July 28,1866 ]

THE CHRONICLE.

Bankers and Brokers.
H. C.

JAY COOKE,
H.

D

Bankers and Brokers.

FAHNESTOCK,
DODGE,

W. H.

EDWARD

MOORHEAD,
CGOKE,

WM. G.

PITT COOKE.

Jay, Cooke & Co.,
J

BANK E R S

In connection with

our

houses in

Philadelphia and

SALE,

North

on

DEALERS

UNITED

U.

S.

Buy and

on

Street.

New

York,

hand for immediate delivery

a

issues of

STOCKS

STATES

Sell at

STREET,
BANK,

Rates j

U. S. 7-30 Treasury Notes.
U. S. Certificates «>f Indebtedness.
LT. S. Compound Interest Notes.
And all classes of Government Securities.

New Y6rk State 7 per

every year.
The Railroad connects the great City of St. Louis,
with its 200,000 inhabitants, not only with the rich¬

Burnett, Drake & Co.,

est

BANKERS,
BOSTON.

cent. Bounty Loan.

Stocks and Bonds

at the Boston

VERMILYE &

Brokers’ Board.

Page, Richardson & Co

CO.

114 STATE

JL. P. Mokton

&

Co.,

WALL STREET,
NEW YORK.

BILLS OF EXCHANGE
JOHN MITNROE Sc

LONDON

No. 22 STATE
JAMF.S A.

DUPEE,

London,

to suit
purchasers ; and also to
Circular Letters of Credit, on this

Bank, for Travellers* use.
*
Government Securities, Stocks ana
Bonds bought and sold on Commission.
Orders for Securities

Interest allowed

executed abroad

Deposits, subject to

on

Cheques at sight.
Prompt attention given

Co

cc

BROKERS,

JAMES BECK,

A. G. CATTELL, Pres’t.
A.

BANKERS,

RANK,

PHILADELPHIA.
Attends to business of Banks Sc Bankers
on liberal terms.
J. W. TORREY, €asl»ier.

First

National

Bank,

RICHMOND, VA.,

Designated Depository and Financial Agent of the
Government.
Collections made in this city

points in the South.
STS.,

H. G.
S. A.

FANT, President.

Glover, Cashier.

CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS
use

of Travelers abroad and in the United

States, available in all the principal cities of the
world; also,

CREDITS,

RANKERS Sc
No. 30 BROAD

BROKERS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

locks,Ronds,Gold, Foreign Excliange
and Government

OUGHT

and

SOLD

Securities,

on

108

Ac

110

Fonrth

Street,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.
Dealers in

GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK

NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS,
COLLECTIONS MADE at all

This

and remitted for

EDWIN D. FOSTER,
Member of the New York Stoc k Exchange.

Company’s WH1TE LE A D is t he whitest

and most durable Lead known.

the

BEST

PAINT

known

The Colors
for

are

HOUSES,

BRIDGES, RAILROAD CARS, IRON
FRONTS, TIN ROOFS, and DAMP
WALLS.
and

wears

J- that of Lead

Pecora Dark costs

longer than Lead.

Company’s ZINC is equal to

at A

COST

‘‘FRENCH,”

25 PER CENT. LESS.

OF

The ENAMEL CHINA GLOSS made by this
Company produces a surface similar to French China,
requiring only a damp cloth to remove soil, and will
for years.

Best No.

Furniture &

i

accessible

points

White Lead.
Tube and Artists Paints.
Proprietors of the

American

Checks

on

on

day of payment.

UNION BANK OF LONDON.
FOR SALE.

tiller,

A SUBSTITUTE FOR

PECORA

ADOLPHUS M. CORN




West

COMMISSION.

DAVJD TWEEDIE,
Members of the New York Gold Exchange.

CAUTION,

BROWN, INDIAN I All persons are forbidden
| to trade in Pjscora Paint
RED,
Y E L L O W | unless the name of the
j agent is on the package.
UMBER and BLACK. |
S. Bowen, Agent,
150 N. 4th St., Phil.

Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Metallic Paints.

For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope,
West Indies, South America, and the United States.

Corn, Tweedie & Co.,

COLORS,

BOWEN, Sec’y.

Carriage Varnishes.
Varnish Drying Japan.

Western Bankers.

CREDIT,

COMMERCIAL

SMITH

wear

and all accessible

ISSUE

For the

Philadelphia.

$500,000

j

Exchange

NATIONAL

Street,

j Capital,

WHILLDIN, V. Pres’t. f

The Corn

Company.

R.

HENRY SAYI.KS

|

Lead, Zinc

150 North 4th

PECORA

STREET, BOSTON.

Southern Bankers.

OF

Duncan, Sherman Sc Co.,

OF

and Color

issmc

This

to the
tion of Dividends, Drafts, &c

CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU

Pecora White

CO., PARIS.

sum3

*ssue

JAY, COOKE & CO.

Dupee, Beck & Sayles,
STOCK

prepared to draw Sterling Bills of
Exchange, at sight, or 6ixty days, on the
n

ON

AND

Are

Union Bank of

office.

,.

STREET, BOSTON,

ALSO

35

tne nrst applicants we are prepared to sell
£500,000 at the low rate of 80 cents, desiring to ob¬
tain a better price for the remainder. This will yield
about 9 per cent, income, and adds 20 per cent, to
principal at maturity.
Any further inquiries will he answered at our

Commercial Credits for +he purchase of Merchan¬
dise in England and the Continent.
Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers
abroad.
*

Bankers,

and Iowa and the great Pacific Railroads.

To

Compound Interest Notes off 1864 &
1865 Bought and Sold.
.

portions of Missouri, but with the States of Kan¬

sas

GOLD, STOCK, AND BOND EROKERS.
Personal attention given to the purchase and sale of

LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN¬
MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS.

accepting the

we

ing up the Missouri River, so that the mortgage of
$5,000,000 will cover a complete and well-stocked
road of 889 miles in length, costing at least $10,000,000, with a net annual revenue after the first year
of over $1,500,000, or a sum nearly four times be¬
yond the amount needed to pay the interest on these
bonds, the income of the road of course increasing

Eastern Bankers.

2d, <fc 3d series,

July 1, in each

The proceeds of these bonds ($6,000,000 in all) will
be used in extending a road, already completed 170
miles into North Missouri, to the Iowa State line,
where it is to connect with the railroads of Iowa,
and also westward to the junction with the Pacific
Railroad (at Leavenworth) and other railroads lead¬

IT. S. Os of 1881.'
U. S. 5-20 Bonds.
U. S. 10-40 Bonds.

INCLUDING

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
6 PerCeut 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
6
“
“
1861,
6 ’ “
“
1865
5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,
7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
6 Per Cent Currency Certificates.

Coupons paya¬

agency for sale of these
made careful inquiry into the condition
and prospects of the road, which was examined
by
Mr. Win. Milnor Roberts and others, on our behalf,
and their highly satisfactory report enables us to re¬
commend the bonds as first-class securities, and a
safe and judicious investment.

bonds,

SECURITIES,

Market

Bonds of the North Missouri Railroad Com¬

gage

year.
^
Before

Fisk,

UNDER THE FOUTH NATIONAL

BANKERS.

Keep constantly

IN

NO. 16 NASSAU

Co.,

Company.

pany, having thirty years to run.
ble in New York on January 1 and

Commission.

D. C. & R. H.

JAY COOKE & CO.

No. 44 Wall

Rail¬

We offer for sale the Seven Per Cent. First Mort¬

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES

March 1, 1866.

&

Missouri

road

orders for purchase and ale of stocks,

Vermilye

MORT-

OF THE

GOLD,-AND

and EXCHANGE of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES oi

Banks.

FIRST

PAPER

BONDS,

Bought and Sold

National

CENT.

GAGE RONDS

Bought, Sold and Collected.

partners.

and gold, and to all business of

PER

;

give particular attention to the purchase,

all issues; to
bonds

SEVEN

STOCKS,

and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio,

..will be resident
We shall

Whittingham,

COMMERCIAL

York, Mr. II. C. Fahnestock, of our Washing¬

ton House,

Miscellaneous.

No. 8 Broad Street.

.

Washington we have this day opened an office at No.
Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city.
Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.,
New

125

WHITE

LEAD

VARNISHES.

ZINC,

ND COLOR

COMPANY.
SMITH

BOWEN, Secretary,

150 North ;th

St:,

PHILADELPHIA*

IMPORTANT TO CAPITALISTS.

COMPANY’S

THROUGH LINE

To

SPLENDID

the United

Stat'-s Mail,
LEAVE PIER NO. 4* NORTH

ER, FOOT 3f Canal street, at 12
1st, 11th, and
21st of every month (except when those dates fall oh
Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO.
o’clock noon, on the

AUGUST:

1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden

City.

11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis
21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento.

Panama with
1st and 11th for

Departures of 1st and 21st connect at

steamers for South Pacific ports;
Central American Ports. Those of 1st

touch at Man¬

zanillo.

One hundred pounds

Baggage thecked through.

allowed each adult.
An

Medicines and

experienced Surgeon on board.

attendance free.

information, apply
wharf, foot of

For passage tickets or further
at the Company’s ticket ottice, on the
Canal street, North River, New York.
F. W. G. BELLOWS,

the: united

states & brazil

contract

Under

CASH

Planting & Loan Co.
$2,500,000

with the govern¬

SHARES, $25.
BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
Hon. SIMON CAMERON, Ex-Secretary of
Hon. JOS. A GILMORE, Ex Governor

Hampshire.

Hon. CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW, late Secretary
State, New York.
Hon. JAS. 11. WALTON, late Treasurer U. S;

THOS. COREY, Esq.,

of passage,

New-York
New-York
New-York
New-York
New-York

to

to
to

“

Pernambuco
Bahia
Rio de Janeiro

kt
“

OFFICE, NO. 92
Cash

York.
Send for Circular.

$150

sidewheel steamship “ North America”
commander, will sail Saturday,
July 21.punctually at 3 o’clock P.M. from Pier 43N.R.
GARRISON & ALLEN,

Bowling Green

OXL Y

JOSEPH GRAFTON,
JACOB REESE,
JNO. W. MERSEREAU, L. B VARD,
JOSEPH BRITTON,
D. LYDIG SUV DAM,
AMO- ROBBINS,.
WILLIAM REM SEN,
HENRY S LEVERICTI.

Co.,

Ins.

New York,

July IS, 180(5.

An Interest Dividend of FIVE PER
of tax, has been declared, payable

-

CENT., free

JACOB REE^E, President.
HARTS1IORNE, Secretary.

CUAS. D.

Niagara Fire Insurance
COMPANY,

August 1.

f

f
DIVIDEND .—A CASH DIVIDEND OF
Four per cent, to stockholders has this day been de¬
clared payable on demand. Also a scrip dividend of

To Capitalists.

FORTY PER CENT.

Attention is called to the

entitled to participate in the profits
for which certificates will be issued
of September, 1800.
WM. W. HENSIIAW, Secretary.

on

the 1st

,

THIRTEENTH
OP THE

AND ROME

RAILROAD

guaranteed and payable by the

WATERTOWN & OGDENSBURG
ROAD

in the
:

City of New

First Days

COMPANY",

RAIL¬

has this day been

demand.

HOPKINS A CO.,

M ANHATTAN SAVINGS

Institution,
Broadway, corner Bleecker

St.

of this Institution

deposit of that date.

BROWN, President.
EDWARD SCHELL, Treasurer.
C. F. ALVORD, Secretary,




E. J.

Secretary.

buildings,)

49 WALL

STREET.

LUCIUS J. HENDEE, President.
J.

ASSETS, Dee. 31, 1865

GOODNOW, Secretary.

*

COMPANY.

$3,000,000

-

-

$2,716,424 82

DIRECTORS.
Drayton Hillyer,

Thus. A. Alexander,
Walter Kenky,
Eliphalet A. Bulkeley,
Coas. H. Hrainard,
Roland Mather,
William F. Tuttle,
Samuel 8. Ward,
- George Roberts,
Austin Dunham,
Thomas K. Brace,
Gustavu^ F. Davis,
Erastus Collins,
Edwin D. Morgan, of New York.
Robert Buele,
Ebknkzkr Flower,

Asskt8, Jan.

The dividend will be credited under date of July 1,
ind, if not withdrawn, will receive interest the same

DORAS L. STONE,

(insurance

DIVIDEND THIRTY

PER CENT.

•

e

.

$556,303 98
24,550 00

Mutual Insurance

1819,

Capital

Joseph Church

have declared the
Thirty first semi-annual Dividend on all deposits by
the rules entitled thereto, at the rate of SIX PER
DENT, per annum on sums of $500 and less, and

is a

.'

President.

Hartford, Conn.
INCORPORATED

69 A: 71 Broadway.

.—

156.303 98

Co.,

Insurance

JEtna

DESIRABLE INVESTMENT.
Further information on application to

laying

$400,000 00

Gross Assets1.
Total Liabilities

Sun

cheap and

S. W.

January 1st 1806.

capital.
Surplus

Ben.t. -S. Walcott,

that render them a very

STREET.

Cash

Insurance.

strictly

and will be sold on terms

45 WALL

WILLIAM M. St. JOHN, Secretary.

November.

FIRST-CLASS SECURITY,

The Trustees

declared, payable on

York, on the

of May and

These Bonds are a

No. 644

t

Standard Fire Ins. Co.,
free of tax,

President.

COMPANY,

DIVIDEND.

OFFICE NO. 11 WALL STREET.
New York, Ju>v 10, 1886.
A Semi-annual Dividend of FIVE PER CENT.,

in 15 years,

Fire Insurance

Hanover
No.

COMPANY.

ROME,

equitably

Losses

:

Cash Dividends paid
Chartered 1850.
253 per cent.
JONATHAN D. STEELE,
P. NOTMAN, Secretary.

mortgage: bonds

ttrst

270,353
adjusted and promptly paid.

SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865

to policy holders,
of the Company,

SEVEN PER CENT.

Interest

$1,000,000

CASH CAPITAL,
Long Island Insurance Company,
No. 48 Wall street, July 6, 1806.

STREET.

NO. 12 WALL

'WM. K. LOTHROP, Secretary.

Miscellaneous.

SOLICITED.

FIRST CLASS RISKS

Board ok’ Directors:
THOS. P. CUMMINGS,
HENRY M. TABER,
ROBERT SCHELL.
*
JOSEPH FOULKE,
STEP. CAMBRELENG, WILLIAM H. TERRY,
THEODORE W. RILEY, FRED. SCHUC1IAEDT.

NO. 172 BROADWAY.

The elegant

Damage by
responsible

Company.

DIVIDEND.

L. F. Timmerman,

$200,000 00
252.55 22
20,850 00
201.588 14

-----

Thi* Company Insures against Loss or
Fire on as favorable terms as any other

Dividends.

Washington

Capital-

BROADWAY.

Assets, March 9, 1866 - Total Liabilities - - - Losses Paid !>• 1865
- - -

sale of the Stock at the
also at the office of WAL¬
TON, BRYANT *fc CO., No. 17 Broad street, New

$200

Company,

Fire Insurance

Books opened for flie
office of the Company ;

$170
$180

SHEPPARD HOMANS.

Hope

furnished, will restore that portion of our unfortu¬
nate country to its former prosperity, and make the
South all that nature designed n,
THE GARDEN OF THE WORLD.

,

OSWEGO

l ISAAC ABBATT,
fTHEu w. MORRIS.
Actuary,

the universal requirements of the largest por¬
tion of
THE SOUTHERN STATES,
and when judiciously applied, no matter by whom

$80

Vice-President.

R. A. MeCUKDY,
Secretaries
secretaries,

are

Steerage at half these rates, meals included.
An experienced Surgeon is attached to each vessel.
For further information, freight or passage,
Apply to
GARRISON & ALLEN, Agents,
No. 5 Bowling Green.

No. 5

OF NEW YORK,

Sept. 1st, 1805, over $13,500,000 00
FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President.

CASH ASSETS,

soil.

following rates

First Cabin,

,

RANCE COMPANY"

& Co.,

afford facilities to
Planters of the
market, always
taking good and satisfactory security, by mortgage
on their plantation and crops, for money advanced
in procuring supplies, paying lftbor, and other neces¬
sary expenses incidental to the development of the

payable in coin :

to St. Thomas
to Para.

Life Insu-

ence.

commencing in July,
FROM THE PORT OF NEW YORK,
following named ports, at the

firm of Corey, Wilson

ELIJAH F. DEWING. Esq., New Orleans.
Major H. O. BRIGHAM, late Paymaster, U. S. A.,
Washington, D. C.
This Company ollem-greater inducements for in¬
vestments than any Stock Company now in exist

First-Class Steamships,
each over 2,000 tons burden,
THE 2'nd OF EACH
MONTH,

For the

Secretary.

The Mutual

& Trask,

Boston.

New

ON

JOHN E. KAHL,

-

Philadelphia.
Hon. N. B. BRYANT, Boston, Mass.
GEO. L. TRASK, Esq., tlrm ot Bigelow
N. Y.

despatch one of

their

RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President.

of

Mint,

AND BRAZIL

of the Mails, will

$705,989 83

TOTAL, ASSETS

War.
of New

CAPITAL AND LABOR

iUNITED STATES

205,989 83

SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866

CAPITAL STOCK

ments of the

For the carriage

$500,000 O

CAPITAL,

The object of the Company is to
the impoverished Cotton and Sugar
South to gro.v and get their crop to

Agent.

Steamship Comp’y,

Mail

4

RIV¬

N.

Cotton

The^1 American

Co.,

Germania Fire Ins.

INVESTMENT.

NO. 175 BROADWAY,

California,
And Carrying

Insurance.

Miscellaneous.

Steamship and Express Co’s.
PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP

[July 28f 1866.

CHRONICLE.

THE

126

1,1860,

Liabilities,
NEW YORK

AGENCY,

No. 62 WaH

$4,067,455 80
244,391 43

Navigation Risks.
Premiums

paid in gold will be

entitled to a return

premium in gold.
MOSES H. GRINNELL,

EDWARD P. ANTHONY,

Street.

JAMES A. ALEXANDER,

This Company insures against Marine Risks on
Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland

Agent.

Isaac H. Walker,

Sec?y.

Pres't.

Vice-Prest

4
i

THE CHRONICLE.

July 28,1866.]
Insurance.

Banks and Bankers.

Marine 6c Fire Insurance.
METROPOLITAN INSURANCE

Capital

Assets Nov.

pOURXH National Bank. Drake
$5,000,000

shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & "Cohen
Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
credits upon them for use in China, the East and
•West Indies, South America, &c.
Marginal credits

NASSAU STREET, N. E. COR. PINE STRE

1,600,000

'

on

London and

All the Government Loans for

Cargo or Freight; also against loss or damage by

sjjje.

Fire.

If' Premiums

are

of the London House issued for the

paid in Gold, Losses will be paid

Collections made for Dealers

in Gold.
The Assured receive twenty-live percent of the net
profits, without incurring any liability, or, in lien
thereof, at their option, a liberal discount upon the

«

JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, President,
ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice President,
JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, Jr., 2d V. P.
Henry II. Porter, Secretary.

A

D. L.

J.

Central

318

Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866

over

NATIONAL
291

the stockholders.

year,

T

or

7 RUE

'

SCRIBE, PARIS

$1,164,380

insures against MARINE and IN
and freight.
ar

The profits of the
Company ascertained
from January 10, 1855, to
amount to

$1,707,310

Additional profits from January
1, 1865,

January 1, 1866

Total profit for eleven
years...
The certificates previous to 1S63 have
been redeemed in cash




NO. 11 BROAD

189,024

$1,896,334

STREET, NEW YORK,

Allow7 interest at the rate of
FOUR PER CENT PER ANNUM ON
which may be checked for at

York, Feb. 20, 1866.
ALFRED EDWARDS, President.
WM. LEOONEY, Vice-President.

DEPOSITS,

sight.

Special attention given

$1,107,24

Co.,

Depew 6c Potter,
RANKERS,

issued

to the purchase and sale

of

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.
Miscellaneous stocks and bonds bought and sold

on

of the

Illinois Central
New

commission.

Collections made promptly on all points.
HENRY W. POTTER.
CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW.

(Late Secretary of State.)

RR. Co., 1
York, July 17, 1866. j

AT A MEETING OF

THti

BOARD

Company, held this day, it

and that the transfer books be closed

NO. 16 WAIT STREET, N. Y.
? GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES,
AND OTHER STOCKS,
BONDS, &c.,
bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only.
Deposits received subject to check at
sight, as
with Banks.
DEWITT C. LAWRENCE,
Memoer New York Stock Exchange.
CYRUS J. LAWRENCE,
JOHN R. CECIL.
late Butler, Cecil, Rawson & Co.
WM. A. HALSTED.

January 1,

THOMAS HALE, Secretary,

Office

Resolved, That a Dividend of Five Per
cash, free of Government tax, be paid on
day of August next, to the holders of the
shares registered on the 20th
day of July,

&

taken.

New

Miscellaneous.

20th

DIVIDEND TWENTY PER CENT.

to

New York.

was

Brothers

risks upon hulls of vessels

Co., Wm. & John O. Brien, Weston
Gray, Mcllvaine Bro’s, Washington Murray, Esq
—■———>

RANKERS,

were

&

of- Directors of this

111 BROADWAY.

1865, for which certificates

references and securities.

Messrs. Ward &

Receive Deposits from
Ranks, Bank
;*lld others. Orders for the Purchase aid
Sale of Go vernment Securities receive
partic¬
ular attention. Special attention is
given to the trans¬
action of all business connected with the
Treasury

(trinity building,)

or

Exchange on Loudon and Paris bought and sold on
Commission—also Gold Stocks, Bonds, and Gold.

ers

COMPANY,

No time risks

Dana,

AND EXCHANGE DROKER,
No. 30 PINE STREET, ROOM 4.

STREET, NEW YORK,

Pacific Mutual Insurance
Lawrence

on cargo

W.

RANKERS,

19 & 21 NASSAU

Harold Dollner,

Risks,

be had daily upon application, or

STOCK

,

Department.

LAND NAVIGATION

can

S.

Co.,

Culver, Penn 6c Co.,

Hathaway, Paul N. Spoilbrd.
ELLWOOD WALTER, President,
CHAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest.
J.'Despard, Secretary.

This company

Quotations

will be furnished if desired.

curities.
Interest allowed upon deposits of gold and
currency
subject to check at sight. <;old loaned to merchants
and bankers upon favorable terms.

A. William Heye,

on

option.**

No. 94 BROADWAY AND No. 6 WALT. ST
Dealers in Government and oilier Se¬

D. Coldeu Murray,
E. Haydock White,
N. L. McCready,
Daniel T. Willets,
L. Edgerton,
Henry R. Kunhardt.
John S. Williams,
William Nelson, Jr.,
Charles Diinon,

sold

or

Out-of-town order? solicited, and those
complying
w th above
req lirements will receive special ana
prompt attention.

RANKERS,

RANKERS,

leaving order. Receipts lor
are delivered.

deposits given until stocks

No Stocks purchased

s~>

Lockwood 6c

Aaron L. Reid,
Ellwood Walter,

Assets, Jan. 1st, 1S66

such

No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW
YORK,
Issue Circular Letters of Cred l lor Travelers in a
partsot Europe, etc., etc.
Als Ff mir ercial Credits

Sterling,

Checks;

or

m<*re

ble amount at time of

AND

TRUSTEES.

C.

r>

given

received unless certified.
fully enable us to carry out this principle,
although starting with a sufficient capital, all parties
giving^orders for stocks, of ’whatever description or
amount, will be required to cover same with proba¬

RANK.

f

NO.

liathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬

Joseph Walker,
Freeland,
Samuel Willets,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. Frost,
William Watt,
Henry Eyre,
Cornelius Grinnell,
E. E. Morgan,
Her. A. Schleicher,
Joseph Slagg,
Jas. D. Fish,
Geo. W. Hennings,

none

JOHN MUNROE & Co*,

to

This Company continues to make Insurance on
Marine and Inland Navigation and Transportation
Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks
on Merchandise of all
kinds, Hulls, and Freight.
Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or

in

For the more thorough protection of nil—both
Broker and “Principalour business will be con¬
ducted entirely on the basis of Certified

$1,000,000

AMERICAN

James

Collections made in ail tlie States and
Canadas.

BROADWAY', NEW YORK.

such

will be divided

Currency, at the Oilice in New York,

di fie rent Stock Boards.

RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

cash abatement or discount from the current
rates,
when premiums are paid, as the general
experience
of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬

maining at the close of the

Son,

HOUSE,

Government Securities, Railways, Petroleum,
Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrip Miscellaneous
shares of a 1 descriptions, bought and sold at the

To

CAPITAL

Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based
the principle that all classes of risks are equally

Francis

STOCK COMMISSION

The Tradesmens

net

on

profitable, this Company will hereafter make

Powell, I. F. Green, Chs. M. McGhee

B. C. Morris &
S3,OOO,OOO.

WILLIAM H. SANFORD, Cashier.

Hundred and Twenty-one and a
half per cent.

pool.

Columbus

WILLIAM A. WHEELOCK, President.

nine years the cash dividends paid to

the Otfice of

Bank,

and Canadas.

EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS.

at

Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought and sold
exclusively on Commission.

NO. 17 WILLIAM STREET.

The Company has paid to its Customers, up to the

One

& Commission

MERCHANTS,
STREET, NEW YORK.

descriptions of Government Bonds—
City and Country accounts received on terms mos
favorable to our Correspondents.
«
Collections made in all parts of the United State

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844.

Stockholders, made from ONE-THLRD of the
profits, have amounted hi the aggregate toj

Place, New York.

e

38 BROAD

Has for sale all

$1,366,699

present time, Losses amounting to

purposes.

BROADWAY.

Capital

COMPANY.

OFFICE No. 35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

For the past

National

same

YISSER,

POWELL, GREEN Sc CO.

Bankers

%

—

.

C.

ROSS, Presiden t

H. STOUT, Cashier.

The Mercantile Mutual
INSURANCE

Bank,

Designated Depository of the Government.

FIFTY PER CENT.

A

SIMON DE
52 Exchan

No. 240 BROADWAY.

equitably adjusted and prqinptly paid.

Scrip Dividend declared Jan. 10, 1855,

;7

--J-i

best terms.

on

Tenth National

premium.
All losses

LIVERPOOL.

The subscriber, their representative and Attorne ,
in the United States, is prepared to make advances

$1,000,000
1, 1865, over

Kleinwort6cCohen

LONDON AND

Capital

This Company insures at customary rates of pre¬
mium against all Marine and Inland Navigation Risks
on

Banks and Bankers.

CO.,

NO. 108 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
Cash

127

day of July and opened

August.

on

THOMAS E.

on

Cent., in
the first

full-paid
instSfit:
the

said

the 3d day of

WALKER,

Treasurer.

UP-TOWN ACCOMMODATION
FOR THE

Storage and Safe-keeping; of Valuables

The Studio
No. .11

Vault,

WEST TENTH STREET,
BETWEEN FIFTH AND SIXTH
AVENUES,

Offers unsurpassed

security to parties leaving town
for the country or Europe, in its fire and
burglarproof accommodations for the reception of
FAMILY

SILVER,

Jewels, government and coupon bonds, bullion, cash
boxes, artists studies, and valuables of all descrip¬

tions.
To families and

capitalists residing in the

upper

part of the city the “ Studio Vault” affords a muchneeded convenience, aud the aim of the institution

is to meet this
at

a

reasonable

expanding requirement, by insuring

premium, and providing a security
which is not equalled by any other
company.
Private safes, with combination and other
locks, to
rent by the year.
Private otfice for the use of customers.
RICHARD P.
B.

RUNDLE, Manager.

Nilsen, Superintendent of vaults.
Down-town office, No. 53 Wall street.

No. 353

BROADWAY,

and Manufacturers

Imitation Oiled
Onr “

Silk.

ppearance

and durability.

Agents for the sale
Patent
the most

of the

Reversible Paper Collars,

economical collar ever

Messrs.

invented.

Henry Lawrence & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

H. B. Plant, E-q., Augusta, Ga.
Hon. Milton Brown, Mobile.
W. Mead Addison, Esq., Baltimore.
A. P. MERRILL, Jk„
30 New Street, New York City.

CASSIMERES, new and desirable Fall
Styles, heavy weights.
HARDING’S 3-4 and 6-4 Black DOESKINS,
extra

Bostwick,

J. A.

COMMISSION MERCHANT

Cadet

NOS. 38

Oxford, Cadet,

Tracy, Irwin & Co.,
BROADWAY,

New York,

GOODS,

AND

All

AGENTS

PLACE, N. Y.,

FOR

WASHINGTON MILLS,
Chicopee

OF THE OLD

Manufacturing Co.,

SARATOGA

Manufacturing Co., and
BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO.

NEW SERIES,
700 io No. 761.

No.

With

JOSEPH

Designating
Numbers.

by

For sale

JOSEPH GILLOTT Sc SONS,
No. 91 John-st., New-York.
HENRY OWEN,

Sole Agent.

if required.

Best of references given

Railroad Iron,

& Co.,

MERCHANTS,
WHITEHALL ST., NEW YORK.

COMMISSION
NO. 24

GOOD AND CHEAP, from

TRADEMARK: GILLOTT,
BIRMINGHAM.

Consignments of Cotton, Wool, Hides, &c.t

Hoffman

STANDARD QUALITY.

JOSEPH " Or Descriptive
TRADEMARK: GILLOTT, Name and DesigWAlt RANTED. Dating Number

Merchant,
45 CLIFF STREET, NEW YORK.
orders entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬

solicited.

WHITE GOODS.

& 37 PARK

J.

Importer
and Commission

E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co.
No. 35

U. S., Washington;

PENS,

CILLOTT’S STEEL

JOSEPH

& Co.)
and Dealer in Hardware,

tention.

HOSIERY and

Cincinnati, Ohio; Hon. James

(of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell

Domestic Dry Goods,
of

DRESS

NEW YORK.

Jeremiah M. Ward well,

including a superb stock

SLIP, cor. WATER ST.

Feb. 1,1866.

Speed, Attorney General
Smith Speed, Louisville.

or

Foreign and

No. 12 OLD

carleton, foute & co.

Thos. H. Yeatman,

JOBBERS

and Exchange Broker.

Tobacco, Note

References—Duncan, Sherman & Co., Bankers,
New York; I. B. Kirtlaml, Hill & Co., Bankers, New
York; Third National Bank, St. Louis, Mo.; Hon.

NO. 400

IMPORTERS AND

Bankers, N. Y.

S. Thackston,

E.

York.
New Orleans.
Memphis.
Mobile.
and orders solicited.

G. N. CARLETON, A. M. FOUTE, New
R. B. SPEED, A. M. SUMMERS,
J. H. SPEED, W. B. DONOHO,
W. M. COZART, J. J. STOCKARD,

White

KENTUCKY JEANS.
Extra Heavy 27 and 32 inch Blue and Brown JEANS1
manufactured expressly for Western trade.
Also, Black and White Heavy Double and Twist
UNION CASSIMERES.
and Blue Mixed

Tilford & Bodley,

Commercial Agents.
BROAD AND 36 NEW STREETS.

Consignments

CLAIRMONT MILLS, Fine

N. Y,

Reference,

AND

SIMERES.

Extra Fine all Wool

and Provisions,

BROADWAY and 53 NEW ST.,

General

LAWN,'all Wool Heavy Oxford and
Mixed DOESKINS and UNION CAS¬

FAIR VIEW CO.,
FLANNELS.

Cotton, Produce
40 and 42

MERCHANTS

COMMISSION

POWHATAN MILLS* COTTON WARP
CLOTHS, superior color and finish.
ROCKINGHAM WOOLEN Co., Black CA«3IMERES, all grades.
ROCK

Co.,

Carleton, Foute &

nnequaled finish.

heavy and of

STREET.

FRONT

192

USE,

AND DOMESTIC

FOR EXPORT

Ogden, Fleetwood & C ., Chicago.
D. B. Molloy, Esq., Memphis.
Messr*. Porter, Fairfax & Co., Louisville, Ky.
Francis Surget, Esq.. Nutchez, Miss.

IN

Manufacturing Co.’s

FANCY

William A. Gellatly.
AVilliam N. Clakk, Jr.

Ins. Co., N. Y.

OFFER FOR SALE

RIVER Woolen

NIILL

m

ETC,

GOODS, PERFUMERY, ETC.,.
170 & 172 WILLIAM ST.

Joseph H Westerfied.
William II. Schieffelin,

Co , New York.

SPONGES,

New York.

George S. Mandeville, Esq., New Orleans.
Messrs. Crane, Breed & Co . Cincinnati.
a. E. Addison, Esq., Virginia.
Geo S. Cameron, Esq., South Carolina.
Hon. W. B. Ogden, Chicago.

STREET,

LEONARD

Duncan, Sherman &

FANCY

Com¬

Bought and Sold on

U. A. Murdock, Esq., New York.
W. R. Dixon, Esq , Pres. Holf an
Dr. W. N. Mercer, New Orleans.

Harding Bros. & Co.,
59

supplied.

INDIGO, CORKS,

of Cotton, To¬

REFERENCES:

superior finish, and
half as much as real silk, which it equals in

OF

DRUGS,

Agricultural Implements of every

Southern Real Estate
mission.

Imitation" has a very

costs but

Advances made on consignments
bacco, and other produce.

description

STREET,

STREET & 38 BROAD
NEW YORK CITY.

3G NEW

Machinery and

Oiled Silk,

IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS

CO.,

GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANT

of

HANDKERCHIEFS,

COTTON

SCHIEFFELIN BROTHERS Sc

Merrill,

Goodman &

CIIIIVA SILKS,

EUROFE4N AND

SUCCESSORS TO

SUCCESSOR TO'

Importers of

SILK AND

Formerly

Schieffelin & Co.

W. H.

Jr.,
of Mississippi.

Merrill,

P.

A.

Co.,

H. Pearce &

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards,

Commercial Cards.

S.

[July 28,1866.

CHRONICLE

THE

128

AMERICAN AND

FOKEIGN,

FOR
Cash advances

Wool, Hides and
Orleans, Mobile

of Cotton,

made on consignments

Naval Stores, by our.friends in New
and Galveston,
REFER TO

Mechanics’ National Bank, N. Y.
Messrs. Gilman, Son & Co., Bankers, N. Y.
Messrs. Brown & Ives, Providence, R. i.

Steam

and Street Roads,
FOR SALE BY

Victory

R.

DOVBLEDAY Sc DWIGHT,
MANUFACTURERS OF

Umbrellas & Parasols,

Davis,

M.

S.

ORLEANS.)
AND STOCK BROKER,

69 & 71

(FORMERLY OF NEW
EXCHANGE

and

MERCHANTS.
38 BROAD STREET AND 36 NEW STREET

COMMISSION
NOS.

Files of this Paper

ST., NEW YORK.

Orders

NEW

J

,

1866.
Bradley’s

STATIONERY,
ENGRAVING,

Cooper & Sheridan,
26 EXCHANGE

SKIRT,

W.

DUPLEX

ELLIPTIC.

Manufactured solely bv

WESTS,

to.

Tobacco, and other pro¬

solicited.

BRADLEY 3c CARY, 97 Chambers Street.
79 & 81 Reade Street, N. Y.

ATTORNEY AND

ns

they have unsurpassed
forwarding of

afe

facilities for the rapid and

JEWELRY, & MERCHANDISE
of every description. Alsofbr the collection of notes
drafts and bills, bills accompanying goods, etc.
GOLD .SILVER,




St

Storage,

COUNSELLOR AT

LAW.

.Strand Street, Galveston,

Texas,

collect promptly, all
to his charge in

Is prepared to attend to, and
Claims or other business committed
or

Southern Texas.

No Cotton
IN

FIRST-CLASS

REFERENCES:

And others should send by the
PABNDEN EXPRESS, 65 Broadway,

PLACE,

Corner of William

Marsh Glenn,

Middle

Bankers, Merchants,

Bo..ml to Order.

PRINTING,. &C., &C.

promptly and carefully attended

Consignments of Cotton,

duce

Broadway.

BOOKS,

BLANK

Office, No. 29.
49 MURRAY

HOPKINS Sc Co.,

W.

J. M.

Wardwell,

1

Bnrtis, French & Woodward, >New York
J. H. Brower & Co.,
>
)
H. B. Cllftord,
t New Orleans Ta

Campbell & Strong,

Nos.

J;I-S^Tct.?ilbert’ [ Galveston, Texan.
& T. P. Gillian, Houston, Texas.
J. W.

117,

WAREHOUSES,

119, 121, A: 123,

City.

j-JNew Orleans, ua.

Hon. J. H. Reagan, Palestine, Texas.
Judge G. F. More, Austin, Texas.

115,

Taken,

Greenwich Street.
V P. GETTY A SON,
115 GREENWICH

STREET.