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1 IsJl-fl11 I > o minimal ^ r uiaur^i v>£>* fr ianfepvis’ fecttf, (Ewnmmiat (times, §taUwmj prnutoL and insurance 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.