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1 ante’ (itewwMt SSnba lattwiwj A WEEKLY Ptottitor, and jttmigtt gumml. NEWSPAPER, REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1868. YOL. 6. Bankers and Brokers. John Bailey, F. F. Hill, J. A. Buckingham. Late Bound & Bailey. Member N.Y. St. Ex, BANKERS, NO* 59 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, BROWN, BROTHERS & CO.’S BUILDING. Receive money on Deposit and allow interest at the rate of 4 per cent per annum on daily balances, subj ect to check at sight. Issue Certilcates of Deposit bearing four per cent Interest, payable on demand. Negotiate Loans. Execute promptly orders for the purchase and sale - Bailey, Buckingham& Co BANKERS AND BROKERS, good securities, execute orders for the purchase and sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold for the usual commis¬ on Deposits* Winslow, Lanier 6c Co., BANKERS, 27 PINE Soutter & Co., Albert F. Day. ALEX. S. PETRIE & BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES GOLD, &c. YORK. Dealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable Securities. Interest allowed ©n Deposits subject to Sight Drai or Check. Advances made on approved securities. Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper. Collect* wieboth ini ma and foreign promptly made. Foreign and Dome 3 tic Loans Negotiated. Hoyt & 71 Wall BANKERS AND BROKERS, NO. 5 NEW STREET, NEAR WALL, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold exclusively on Commission. Gold a Money received upon upon current balances. T. A. Hoyt, Specialty. deposit and interest allowea - Vice-Pres’t. Gold Exchange, 8 WALL Government Frank & NO. 44 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Merchants Bankers and others allowed 4 per ceni on deposits. The most liberal advances made on Cotton, Tobacco, LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR THAVELLERS. EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS. SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH & GLASGOW STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD. Gans, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN U. S GOVERNMENT SECURITIES* No. 14 WALL STREET Philadelphia Bankers. Austin 313 KENNEDY, HUTCHINSON f H. O. FAHNESTOCK < EDWARD DODGE, (PITT COOKE. & CO., STREET, NEW YORK. Gold, Silver, Government Securities, &c Collections Made, Gibson,Beadleston & Co., BANKERS, 50 EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought andsold, ONLY on Commission, at the Stock MinTng Stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem bers. Interest allowed on Deposits. Dividends,Coupons and Interest collected. Liberal advances on Governmetft and other Securltie K2SE£fiE!!E3gg&iS& profe8Blo“1 "» Btferbypermlsslon to j Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., 108 ft Fifteenth Street, Opposite Treas* Department, Washington* In connection with our houses in Philadelphia and Washington we have this day opened an office at No, 1 Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edwabd Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge ft CoJ New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will > We shall give particular attention to the purchase O all issues; to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, bonds and gold, and to all business of National Banks March l, 130G5 Street, Dealers in GOLD, SILVER and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS. MADE at all accessible points and remitted for on day of payment. CHECKS ON LONDON AND PARIS FOR SALE. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Cincinnati, Ohio. _ BALE, and EXCHANGE Of GOVERNMENT SECURITIES M West Fonrth COLLECTIONS Street, be resident partners. 110 CINCINNATI, OHIO. Philadelphia* NO. 40 WALL Oberge, STREET, PHILADELPHIA. BANKERS* Corner Wall and Nassau Sts*, No* 114 South 3d & WALNUT Cincinnati Bankers. Jay Cooke & Co., OP deposits, subject to check at sight. J. BELL AUSTIN. New York* Specie and Banking Office*; Dealers in BANKERS. No. 4 WALL ST., YORK. Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬ cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLOWED formerly of Georgia ) Exchange. WILLIAM S. FANSHAWE. Warren, Kidder & Co., 54 William Street. > YORK Commission Stock Brokers* CHAS. H. OBERGE. James G. King’s Sons, ) NEW Securities, RICHARD P. LOUNSBERY. AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. JAY COOKE, WM. G. MOORHEAD, H. D. COOKE, BROKERS, STREET, Gold and Foreign WILSON, CALLAWAY & CO., Bankers and Commission merchants, James Gardner, Street, New York, RANKERS AND Co., Guion, Lounsbery & Fanshawe, •a Gardner, CO., London, Williams & NO. &c„ consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents, Messrs. K. GILLIAT & CO., Liverpool. No. 12 WALL STREET* TRAV¬ Orders for Stocks, Bonds, and Merchandise, executed in London by cable or mail. LATE Hatch, Foote & Co., Horace J. Morse. Sterling Exchange at Sight and Sixty Days upon BANKERS, R. T. Wilson & STREET, NEW YORK. deposits of Gold and Currency subject to draft. LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR ELLERS* No. 53 WILLIAM STREET, NEW Interest Allowed Commission. Interest allowed on sion. Special Agenfs for the sale of the First Mortgage Bonds of the Union Pacific Railroad Company. Commission. BROKERS, Stocks, Ronds, Gold and Government on Buy and sell Commercial Paper, make advances on parts of the United States Bought and sold at the Stock Exchange on usual AND NO. 16 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. Securities, Bought and Sold on LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬ ELLERS. Government and other Securities Day & Morse, BANKERS 44 WALL STREET. of Gold. Buy and Sell Government and other Securities „ Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. John J. Cisco & Son, commission. Make Collections on all and Canada. NO. 154. JAY COOKE ft CO. John W. Ellis, Pres. Lewis Worthington,V.Pres. Theodore Stan wood. Cashier. CAPITAL $1,000,000 Collections made on SURPLUS all $314,852 89 and accessible points promptly remitted for at best rates. Dibbctobs l John W. Ellis, Jas. A. Frazer, Lewis Worthington, R. M. Bishop, William Woods A S. Winslow, L. B. Harrison Robt. Mitchell, Jos.Rawton, THE CHRONICLE 706 Co., j Mansfield, L. P. Morton & Bankers and Commission NEW YORK. NO. 50 BROAD EXCHANGE, At Sight or Sixty Day*; also, Clrcnlar Note* and ters of Credit for Travellers’ Use, on Lit¬ BURNS Sc CO.t L. P. MORTON, Freese The New York Mutual Merchants, STREET, NEW YORK, U. S. Bonds, Coin, Stocks, Grain, Flour, and Pro visions Bought and Sold on Commission only. Liberal advances on consignments. Particular at tention given to collections, .tour per cen*, interest allowed on deposits. J. L MANSFIELD, Vice-Pros. 1st Nat. Bank Decatur, Ill. J. L. BROWNELL, Pres, of the Open Board Stock Brokers, N.Y Commission Bankers, Bement, Ill. LONDON. Available In all the principal town* Europe and the East. and cities of Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and Sale of Stock* and Bonds in London and New York. Lnn P. Morton. Charles E. Milvor. Walter H. Burn*. H. Cbugkr Oaklet. Central National Has for sale all 28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received favorable terms. descriptions of Government Bonds-. City and County accounts received on terms most fa vorable to our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts of the United States aul Ciinudiis WILLIAM A. WHEE CK, President J. H. Fonda, Pres. National Mesh. Banking Ass., N.T, C. k Blaia, Prea't Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. First National OF Bank, D. L. I Isaao Freese, Pres. J. L. Mansfield, Vice-Pres. T. W. Freese, Cashier. Prompt attention given to collections on all accessi¬ ble points in the Northwest. Bankei Freese & Company, M. I. Freese & COMMISSION Re-insurance, Accrued on the be TWENTY PER CENT. outstanding Certificates of Profits of the issue paid to the holders there¬ of, or their legal representatives, on and after Tues¬ day, the 11th day of February next, from which date all interest thereon will cease. The Certificates to be presented at the time of payment and cancelled to of the of 1859 will be redeemed and By order of the Board, W. P. HANSFORD, John Munroe & Co., RANKERS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS, AJTD Also Commercial Credit*, S. G. & G. C. AGENTS Darius R. M a no am, Pres, Receives deposits INTEREST on daily and allows FOUR PER CENT. James Merrkll, Sec. Sun Mutual Insurance COMPANY. balam es, Subject to Check at (INSURANCE' BUILDINGS) SPECIAL DEPOSITS for six months, or more, may The Capital of ONE M1LLTON DOLLARS Is divid¬ among over 500 shareholders, comprising many gentlemen of large wealth and financial experience, 49 WALL STREET. Incorporated 1841. ed who are also personally liable t« depositors for all ob¬ ligations of the Company to double the amount of their capital stock. As the NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY receives .deposits in large or small amounts, ami permits them to be drawn as a whole or part by CHECK AT SJGHT and WITHOUT NO¬ TICE, allowing interest on all DA^L^ balances, parties can keep accounts in this Institution with special advantages of security, convenience and profit. in 56 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, 28 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Drake Klein wort&Cohen LONDON AND LIVERPOOL. The subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys is prepared to make advances Oh shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwoit &. Cohen gtandon and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile credits upon them for use in China, the East and West Indies. Sonth America, &c, Marginal credits the United States, the London House issued for the same purposes. SIMON DE YISSER, ... ii;.. Hedden,Winchester&Co Ward, COMPANY, 26 Exchange Place, New York, $1,614,540 78 Capital and Assets, This Company having recently added to its previous assets a paid up cash capital ol $500,000, and subscrip¬ tion notes in advance of premiums of $300,000, continues to issue policies of insurance against Marine and Inand Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected rom Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are en* tied to participate in the profits. MOSES H. GRINNELL, President. JOHN P. PAULISON Vice-President NO. 69 Banker* and ^TNA Brokers. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sold at market rates, on commission oul r. Interest allowed Isaac H. Walker, Secretary. BROADWAY, NEW YORK, FOR BARING BROTHERS Sc Francis Skiddy, JOHN H. LYELL, President. THEO. B. BLEECKER, Jr., Vice-Fres. NO. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letter* of Credit for Traveller* In all Gustave.II. Ivissell, Gerhard Janssen, William Paxson, John H. Earle, E. P. Fabbri. YORK, CHARTERED BY THE STATE be made at five per cent. Good Hop James R. Smith, George Mosle, CapitaljOne million Dollars. States, available in all the principal cities of the South America, and the United State Company George Moke, Thebaud, Francis Hathaway, Lloyd Aspinwall, E. V. NO. 336. BROADWAY. Sight. part* of Europe, etc., etc. Henry Oelricus, Edward H. R. Lyman, OF THE CITY OF NEW CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United AMERICAN Edward Kaune, Arthur Leary, National Trust Secretary. T R USTEE S : Stephen Johnson, BANKERS, COMMERCIAL CREDITS. in Europe, east of the Cape oi DIVIDEND Tax, is declared on the net earned premiums entitled thereto, for ti e year ending 31st December, 1867, lor which Certificates may be issued on and after the 1st day of May next. ful attention given. HALSEY, Caahler. world; also, 23.803 20 outstanding Certificates of Profit will paid on and after Tuesday, the 11th day of Febru¬ ary, 1808. Interest MERCHANTS, THE 188 UK 31,037 69 $767,549 73 Henry Meyer, CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU ST8., Interest Sundry Notes at esti- Insurance Scrip and mated value Stewart Brown, Duncan, Sherman & Co., For use West. Indies, Salvage, Advances made on Consignments. Eastern orders for all Western products solicited. Prompt aud eare- BROADWAY, NEW YORK. ANTHONY ^ ^ 83,399 12 Premium Notes and Bills Receivable. Chicago, 111., $1,000,000 450,000 RICHARD BERRY, President. 40»*8o 92,000 00 that extent. NATIONAL BANK. SURPLUS and Cash due FIFTY PER CE*T« A Regular Banking and Exchange business transac¬ ted. U. S. Bonds aiid Coin bought and sold. Capi¬ talists can make desirable Real Estate Investments through our House. Correspondence solicited. OSS, Preside The Tradesmen’s 291 Loans on Stocks, the Company and the United States T. IT. Stout, Cashier. CAPITAL the following assets: $29,809 57 272;92a 00 Bank, City aud other Stocks 19-1, »90 00 SIX PER CENT. $100,000 No. 29 BROAD STREET, Designated Depository of the Government. and Dealers’ Accounts solicited. 14,418 30 The Company have Cash in Banks United States Stocks BANKERS, $1,000,000. $307,390 93 $207,661 23 Losses and Expenses Return Premiums DECATUR, ILL. Bement, 111., Ca pital $'-82,972 63 Total and other Claims due the Company William H. Sanford, Cashier. Tenth National Bank. 213,116 87 Premiums received Real Estate,Bonds and Mortgages References: Capital $3,000,000 Capital.. BANKERS & Bank, 318 BROADWAY. BE $89,855 49 Outstanding Premiums to Dec. 31,1866 ^ & Bro., J. L. Brownell BROKERS, on The Trustees submit the following Statement of the affairs of the Company in conformity with the require¬ ments of the Charter: No Policies have been issued upon Life Risks, nor upon Fire Risks, disconnected with Maiine Risks. Earned Premiums to Jan. 1,1868 Merchants, Chicago, Ill. FREESE & COMPANY, ▲vo ran UNION BANK OF INSURANCE COMPANY, WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. January 23, 1868. NO. 61 I. M. FREESE & COu London.) (58 Old Broad Street, INCORPORATED 1798. & Brownell, bankers, STERLING Financial. Financial Financial. 10 BROAD STREET, [June 6, 1868. on balances. Advances made on Insurance Company, OF HARTFORD. ap¬ proved securities. Particular attention sale of the Adams, given to orders for the purchase American, United States, Wells Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks. All orders faithfully executed. JOSIAH HEDDEN, ISAIAH C. BABCOCK, LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, ROBT M. HEDDEN. or Washington M. Smith. John E. W. McGinnis. McGinnis, Jr McGinipss,Bros.&Smith, BANKERS AND BROKERS, NO. 4 BROAD STREET, NEW Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Commercial Paper and Gold, Purchased YORK. Incorporated 1819 Sold L. JT. HEN DEE, President. JT. GOOD NOW, Assets July Secretary. 1,1867 Liabilities $4,650,938 27 377,668 46 NSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DA4AGE BY FIRE. , NEW YORK AGENCY on Deposits received and interest allowed same as with Incorporated Bank. Bonds and Loans negotiated $3,000,000. CAPITAL Exchange, or Commission. vCharter Perpetual. NO. ea STREET. an for Railroad Compaale a as. A# ALEXANDER* Agent. THE CHRONICLE. 6,1868*] June Boston Bankers. BANKERS Sc DEALERS v MERCHANTS, Boise City, I. T. BONDS, Street, Boston. TRAVELLERS* CREDITS issued on London and available in all parts of Europe. LOANS OF STERLING made to Merchants upon favorable terms. DEPOSITS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY received, subject to draft at sight aud interest allowed. ADVANCES made on consignments to Liverpool and London. Dupee, Beck & Sayles, tory promptly the Washington, Thomas Denny & NO. 39 * FIRST national bank WASHINGTON. H. D. COOKE (of Jay Cooks & Co.), Fees'*. 1 WM. B. HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Government Depository and Financial Agent of tn« United States. We bay and tell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and srive especial attention to business connected with the several departments of the Government, Full information with regard to Government at all times cheerfully furnished. BOB’T H. MAURY. R. H. Maury & Co., issued, Deposits received and Also, General Agents for Railroad gage First Mort¬ Bonds, Co., Vermilye-, & Co., BA N K F H S. No. 44 Wall Street. New York, Keep constantly on hand lor immediate delivery issues of WALL STREET. Our Annual Financial 1868 Is now ready, and will be forwarded free of charge t Circular for parties desiring to make investments through us. Franklin M. Kktohum. George Phipps. Thos. Belknap, Jr. KETCHUM, PHIPPS & BELKNAP, BANKERS AND BROKERS, loans BOB’T T. BROOKE. JAS. L. MAURY. NEW FIVE TWENTY BONDS OF 1865 AND 1867. Certificates of Deposit Collections maue. Central Pacific BANKERS AND BROKERS, OF Into the Bankers and Brokers. Southern Bankers. and give especial attention SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES attended to. HENRY SAYLES JAMKS BECK, IAMBS A. DUPHH, of Buy and sell, at market rates, all descriptions United States Securities, to the conversion of principal places in Idaho Terri¬ “ Telegraph Transfers,” Sight and Time Exchange, for Gold or Currency, can be purchased on this Bank, of National Bank North merica, New York City ; National Bank of Com¬ merce, Boston, Mass. BOSTON. , NO. 5 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK America. on tc h SECURITIES, GOVERNMENT Organized March 11, 1867, (with circulation!, under Act of Congress approved dune 3,18rM. Capital, $100,000. Authorized Capital, $500,000 B. M. DU RELL, Pres. C. W. MOORE, Cashier. New York Correspondent,—National Bank of North Collections Ha BANKERS AND DEALERS IN STOCK BROKERS, Mow tt STATE STREET, Fisk & FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF IDAHO IN-FOREIGN EXCHANGE, GOLD AND 114 State Paris Bankers and Brokers. Western Bankers. Richardson & Co., Page, 707 STOCKS STATES UNITED all INCLUDING 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1SS1, 6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, “ 6 6 “ 1864, ‘* “ 1865 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 8-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, tPer Cent Currency Certificates. 2d, & 3d serice* .lew York State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan. LIBERAL MADE ADVANCES GOVERN ON MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS. No, 24 Broad Street, New York. Government securities, railroad and other bonds, railroad, mining and miscellaneous stocks, gold and exchange bought and sold on commission. Mercantile paper and loans in currency or gold negotiated. Inte¬ rest allowed on deposits. Compound Interest Notes of 1864 Sc 1865 Bouglit and Sold. VERMILYE Sc CO. BANKERS AND BROKERS. No. 1014 MAIN ST, RICHMOND, VA., Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State. City, and bought and sold Railroad Bonds commission. on Taussig, Fisher & Co., M. K. Tesup & Company, aud Stocks, &c., BANKERS AND BROKERS, Deposits recived and Collections made on all accessible points in the United States. N. Y. Correspondent, Vermilye & Co. Jas. M. Muldon & Sons, St., Mobile, Ala. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Gov¬ No. 52 St. Francis Dealers in Securities, Bonds, Gold and Silver. Prompt ernment attention given to Collections. No. 32 Broad Street, References: Co., Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Dnrand, Bankers, New York. E. fl. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. ew York Life Insurance Company. Aetna Insurance Company ot Hartford. Underwriters Agency New York, Charles Walsh. President Bank of Mobile. Henry A Schroeder, Pres. Southern Bank of Ala. Western Bankers. The Marine Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and ethers, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight Draft. Make Collections on favorable terms, and promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Gold, State, Federal, and OF CHICAGO. P. Hayden. Jos. Hutcheson. W. B Hayden BANKING HOUSE OF Hayden,Hutcheson & Co Brothers, STOCK BROKERS AND BANKERS. No. 16 BROAD Company STREET, PA. %100,000 Particular attention given to collections, and pro •eeds . promptly remitted. A. Benoist & r Co., BANKERS, ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI, Bny and Sell Exchange on all the principal cities of the United States and Canadas, Also, drafts on London and Paris for sale. Co., Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Currency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. STREET, NEW YORK. Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum and Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Orders* Promptly Executed Hodgskin, Randall & Hobson, NO 39 Robt. McKim. Haslett McKim. Jno. A. McKim. McKim, Bros. & Co., BANKERS, 62 WALL STREET. ocher places. Everett EXCHANGE PLACE, BROKERS IN Foreign Exchange, Gold, Government, and Securities. GeNKKAL Partners; James B. Hodgskin, Chas K. Randall, J. Lowry Hobson - &. Co., 28 State Street, Boston. AGENTS FOR other AUGUSTINE Special Partners. John Randall, J. Nelson Tappan, HEARD Sc CO. OF CHINA AND JAPAN. Geo. G. Hobsun. S. Thompson’s Nephew, EUROPEAN PASSAGE AND EXCHANGE OFFICE, 73 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Drafts on England, Ireland Sc Scotland Business. PITTSBURGH, Capital Lockwood & No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND OTHER SECUHIT!ES. COLUMBUS, OHIO, General Banking, Collection, and Exchange 423 PENN and undertake all business connected with Railways- sale Railroad NO. 13 S. HIGH STREET, National Trust Ralls, Locomotives, RANKERS. Drake Manager. Ranking and Collections promptly attended to. a Railroad Cos., Cars, etc., Securities. * .President. General Do Contract for Iron or Steel Interest allowed on deposits subject to draft i\ sight, and special attention given to orders from Company J. Young Scammon Robert Reid Bonds and Loans for SECURITIES. ALL UNITED STATES Byrd & Hall, New York. Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York. Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolft & Gillespie. Henry A Hnrlburt, late Swift & Hurlbert. Home Insurance Company ot New York. 12 PINE STREET. Negotiate Bay and Sell at Market Rate*. of Babcock Bros. & BANKERS AND MERCHANTS, New York. Bankers famished with Sterling Exchange and through tickets from Europe to all parts of the united States, 7b c. Sa SzfL, ^\vy\a\Au . j $ J'fcLAAcitL Jft., ^ CAYvX ovY^. Germania Fire Ins. ZDHeaLetA in flL. cPf. tJfeciLtitieA and. J3fra.te.ig-n 7p: acfLange, rn.em.LelA. af J/tarh and and aLd fpxchangeA in Lath eitieA. jfLeeauntA gJl SJJJajrh-A ajiA. /iJJanLcLA teaeiaed an LLLetaL No. 175 ASH >5. CAPITAL, TOTAL ASSETS RUDOLPH Y>ov\As a $500,000 OO 376,815 50 $876,815 50 GARRIGUE, President. KAHL, Vice President. Schumann, Secretary. JOHN E. ugo Co., BROADWAY, N. Y SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1868 teJjnA, \3. r' THE CHRONICLE. 708 THE OF STATEMENT [June 6,1868. Insurance. Homoeopathic PHCENIX Mutual Life InsuranceCo Of tke City of BANG’S Mutual Life Insurance Company NO. New MARBLE 231 York, BUILDING BROADWAY, Two doors above the Astor House, opposite the Park. This Company offers to insurers all the advantages hitherto afforded by any responsible company in re¬ OF spect to terms and plans of insurance, and, in addition ordinary lives, it makes a still further reduction to those using the Homoeophatic practice. HARTFORD, CONN., to low rates on Persons about to insure ' FOR THE YEAR ENDING JANUARY I, 1868. invited are to give our proposals a careful examination. DIRECTORS. EDSON FESSENDEN, President. JAMES F. BURNS, Secretary. D. D. T. Marshall. 157 East S4th Street. Hon. Stewart L. Woodford, Lieut. Gov. State N. Y. Jas. Cushing, Jr„ of Leroy W. Fairchild & Co. Edward E. Fames, of H. B. Claflin & Co. Elisha Brooks, of Brooks Bros., 468 Broadway. Hon Rich’d B. Connolly, Comptroller of N. Y. City. Robert T. Sewall, of Sewall & Pierce, 62 Broadway. George G. Lake, of Lake & McCreery, 471 Broadway. $2,218,344 29 ASSETS $166 54 RATIO OF ASSETS TO LIABILITIES per $100 1,058,245 15 120,799 13 Add Premiums in hands of Agents Add Accrued Interest and Cash Balances D. D. T. MARSHALL, President. JAMES CUSHING, Jr., Vice President. ELIZUR WRIGHT, Consulting Actuary. E. A. STANSBURY, Secretary. A. HALSEY PLUMMER, Assistant .$1,198,256 96 Net Assets January 1, 1867 Premiums received during year Interest received during year Hon. Richard Kelly, Pres’t of oth National Bank. John Simpkins, 29 Wall Street. Wm. C. Dunton, of Bulkley, Dunton & Co., 4 John St. Peter Lang, of Lang & Clarkson, 4 Front Street. Wm B. Kendall, of Bigelow Carpet Co., 65 Duane St. Hiram W. Warner, late Warner & Loop, 332 5th Aye. oharles L. Stickney, 209 Bowery. William Radde, Publisher, 55u Pearl Street. Thomas B. Asten, 124 East 29th Street. G. B. Hammond, Tarrytown, N. Y. EDWARD M. KELLOGG, M. D., JOHN W. MITCHELL, M. D.. Medical Examiners. A. COOKE HULL, M. D., Medical Director. $2,377,301 24 199,643 00 28,576 02 228,219 02 1,605,520 26 DISBURSEMENTS: “ The Central Salt and Coal $107,700 Paid claims by death on 52 policies “ Commissions and Salaries to Agents “ Sec’y. STEWART L. W^OODFORD, Counsel. OF WEST VIRGINIA. 163,135 41,583 Dividends, and for Policies surrendered Physicians’ Fees, Salaries, Taxes, Printing, Postages and all other expenses 74,576 Company CAPITAL STOCK $200,000 With the privilege of Increasing the same to..$300,000 71 Shares of Stock Eack $100. 388,175 97 WM. H. " $2,218,344 29 MARTIN, Esq., President! Hon. JOHN HALL, Treasurer. * * ASSETS: Loans on Real Estate Bank Stocks and Railroad Bonds United States Coupon Bouds...., Hartford City Gas Light Company Stock Loans on Collateral Security Bills Receivable, amply secured Furniture in offices Cash in Bank Accrued Interest and Cash Balances Amount in the hands of Agents, and in course transmission $455,100 205,275 113,000 6,201 14,900 OBJECTS 00 00 The objects of this of Salt and the 00 00 The 00 the manufacture large extent of territory owned by the Com¬ purposes, thereby securing a large consumption of the Coal upon their own premises at a royaltv of one cent per bushel, thus producing a handsome revenue without actual expenditure. 3,459 25 102,792 62 28,576 02 of 199,643 00 % are. pany will allow them to dispose of a portion thereof, either upon lease or in fee, for other manufacturing 1,089,397 40 — Company Mining of Coal. s $2,218,344 29 To those familiar with the profits resulting from the manufacturing of Salt nothing need be said, while to those unacquainted we will say, that the Salt interests in the Ohio Valley during the past few years, have averaged FORTY PER CENT CLEAR PROFIT on the Investment. Number of Policies issued during Amount insured during the year Total amount of losses paid the year 5,811 ., $15,250,910 530,500 The money realized from the Stock now sought to be disposed of, will be used for the enlargement of works and the construction cf additional transportation purposes. barges for The present improvements in the mines will admit of the mining and delivery of Two and one-half Millions of bushels of coal yearly. The property is located on the Ohio River, West Columbia, in Mason County, West DIVIDENDS PAID IN 1865 50 PER CENT. DIVIDENDS PAID IN 1866 50 PER CENT. DIVIDENDS PAID IN 1867 50 PER CENT. DIVIDENDS BEING PAID IN 1868 50 PER CENT. above Virginia. A Limited number of the shares of this Company and any any further information, applying immediately to E. E. TIFFANY A may be had toy CO., Financial Agents and Brokers, 15 Wall NEW YORK OFFICE. JOHN E. DE T L. FRALEIGH, General WITT, Resident Director. Agent. Street, New York. Temple & Marsh, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Dealers In Government Securities,&c. on Commission. No, 9 Wall Street, cor. New. » 1 V-^ m WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, A REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL <j» INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES. NO. 154. SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1868 YOL. 6. THE CHRONICLE. Latest Monetary and Commercial 3S5 116 English News 712 News 715 Commercial and Miscellaneous Ill THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Foreign Exchange, New York City Banks. Philadelphia Banks National Banks, etc sale Prices N.Y. Stock Commercial Epitome Exchange COMMERCIAL TIMES. Breadstuffs Groceries } Drv Goods j, Prices Car rent and Tone of — the Market THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE 729 730 and 7-4 724 be benefited ? or 726 few speculators JOURNAL. Bond List..•; • _••••••• • • Insnrance and Mining Journal. Advertisements 705-8, 72 t , ous Financial Chronicle is issued every day morning by the 'publishers of Hunt’s Merchants’ with the latest news up to midnight of Friday. who had clubbed their means together to Mr. Sherman suggests a reply to these queries. He says that “ the banks of Ohio have loaned every dollar at their command to New York, while they refused to the merchant, farmer and produce dealer any accommodation.” And what does this alleged fact prove but that the hot-bed system of forcing banks to grow where form these new banks?- — <&l)e CfyrotticU. The Commercial Sherman believe that these twenty would avail? Would the people at large would the whole profits be absorbed by a emolument does Mr. 723 millions of notes Tobacco 720 1 Railway News Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List. Railroad, Canal and Miscellane- 721 Cotton 716 719 . things by a breed loan—a forced loan of the worst sort, that of an issue of paper money. Who, moreover, would gain the profits of this new doling out of the national bounty ? For whose inhabitant.” It is no honest remedy for this state of to endow and subsidize certain new government banks CONTENTS. The Defeat of the Bank Inflation Bill The China Trade—No. 1 Review of the ai onth gmmml Him*#, ftaitwag PrroitM, and jtwnMe •ante’ fedk, ZiL <•« Satur¬ Magazine, the them spontaneous movements of business do not produce This is but one argument out of many is fruitful in abuses. by which Mr. Sherman’s own admissions helped to defeat project, and the people are well satisfied to see it die. For One Year $10 00 It is undoubtedly a defect of the National banking system For Six Months 6 00 Postage is 20 cents per year, and is paid by the subscriber at his own post-office that its currency is unequally distributed. A recent report DANA, ) WILLIAM B. DANA Sc GO., Publishers. showed that of the 300 millions outstanding 104 millions FLOYD, jr. f 79 and 81 William Street, cor. of Liberty. were issued by New England, almost 70 millions by New I®* Remittances should invariably be made by drafts or Post York, 40 millions by Pennsylvania, and 40 millions by Office Money Orders. . Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, so that over three-fourths of the Complete files of the Chronicle from July 1, 1866, to date can are For TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,) The Commercial WM.LTAM his b. John o. , National bank notes be had at this office. York and issued from New England, New Pennsylvania. the seaboard originated Mr. in his report for 1866. He describes it How this concentration on THE DEFEAT OF THE BANK INFLATION BILL. Hulburd tells us, by the passage of the coin con¬ as follows: tract law yesterday, he has little reason to complain of the “The original act of March 25, 186 provided for an apportionment previous action ot the Senate defeating his bill for inflating the of the national currency to the several States and Territories as follows: one hundred and fifty millions according to representative population, currency by the issue of twenty millions of new bank notes. and one hundred and fifty millions according to banking capital, What is surprising is that this untimely and mischievous pro¬ resources, and business. “This requirement was repealed by the act of June 3, 1834, which ject could have appeared to the mind of so experienced a polit¬ left the distribution to the discretion of the Comptroller of the Currency, ical leader to stand the smallest? chance of adoption. It would By the amendment of March 3. 1865, the clause requiring an apportion¬ involve the giving up of the established policy on one of the ment to be made was re-enacted, but at the same date an amendment to section 7 of the internal revenue act provided that all existing State most important prerogatives of the Government, that o banks should have the right to become nation J banks, and should have the preference over new organizations up to the 1st of July, 1865. guarding the currency, and exempting it from dilution and These two amendments were not in harmony ; for, if the apportion¬ derangement by new issues. The national cry for a sound ment was made as required by the amendment to section 21, the State currency will certainly be heeded so far by Congress that banka then in existence could not have been converted without exceed¬ ing in mauy instances the amount of circulation apportioned to the dif¬ no further depreciation is to be attempted, nor any new ferent States. But, as it seemed to be the intention and policy of the emissions of any sort of paper money, especially of bank act to absorb all existing banking institutions rather than to create new banking interests in addition thereto, the Comptro ler of the Currency notes. so construed the amendments as to permit the conversion of State banks Waiving the general question of policy, however, the without limitation. The effect of this action was to make a very un¬ equal distribution of the currency, some of the States more special objections to the bill are, first, that it does not touch than they were entitled to by the apportionment, and leaving but a very the most important defects of the banking system; and limited amount to be awarded to the Southern and some of the Western States.” secondly, that it does not offer a fit remedy for the evils with Iu this official report we have the clear admission that the which it proposes to deal. In illustration of the last named bank notes have been allotted as was intended. Who is to point we may cite Mr.Sherman’s statement that “sundry states blame for the evil we do not care in this place to enquire. in the Union have not a national bank, while Massachusetts If Mr. Sherman isf gratified “ receiving Rhode Island and Connecticut have from $50 to $75 per It is to the proper remedy that we prefer to confine 710 our THE CHRONICLE. search. And this remedy obviously involves the calling currency where it has been issue! in excess of the [June 6,1868. the capacity, always increasing, of Europe and America to consume the teas, silks and other products of China; on the equitable allotment. Several measures have been intro¬ other, to the disposition and ability of the population embraced duced into Congress for this purpose. The most important within a narrow area near the “ open ports” to use the fabrics was that of Mr. Hooper, which proposed to call in the of the Western looms, and to poison itself with the opium, to circulation of banks on certain established rules. First, no supply which, in defiance of the Chinese government, has been bank was to be allowed to issue more than one million of one of the most cherished rights of European civilization. dollars of its own notes. Secondly, the smaller institutions Lucrative as this commerce has been to the individuals con¬ in of the were to be regulated as follows: bank whose capital did cerned in it, and important so far as regards the wealth and $300,000 was to issue notes to the amount of 90 power of Europe, and now of America as well, it has only per cent of its capital; a bank whose capital was from touched the shell of China. $300,000 to $500,000 was allowed 80 per cent of circulation; A few wealthy merchants, branches of flourishing firms in and if the capital was $500,000 or upwards 70 per cent was England or America, have,established their houses in China, the limit. Much objection was made to this with scheme, and a ramifications at each of the lesser ports, including of late modification of it was proposed by the Comptroller of (he those of Japan ; in the conduct of this traffic have amassed Currency allowing banks with two millions of capital to princely fortunes in a few years, and, when still young per¬ receive $1,125,000 of notes. Three millions of capital was haps, have returned to their native country to enjoy them and to entitle an association to $1,400,000 of notes; four millions to give place to the army of to $1,500,000; five millions to $1,600,000, while ten mill¬ sion has been maintained. young men by whom the succes¬ These great houses have been ions of capital was to secure $3,000,000 of notes. princely in their hospitality and display, nq less than in their The discussion of these plans evoked opposition from the fortunes and the number of their retainers. With the banks whose privileges it was proposed to cut off, so that the convulsion of commerce which followed the close of general the a not exceed attempt was given war, and to this moment no practicable and the subsequent prolonged depression, this state of things solution of the difficulty has presented itself. The only appears to be passing away, or at least undergoing a decided points which have been established so far, seem to be that change. Some of the oldest and most honored names have the people will not allow the currency of the country to be disappeared entirely. Operations are no longer conducted on tampered with to accommodate those who wish to start new the same grand scale. Economy in expenses is thought of. banks; and, secondly, that the existing banks, which The enjoy necessity and practicability of monopolizing trade by currency privileges will not, if they can help it, suffer those means of expensive branch establishments at all the ports is privileges to be taken from them or curtailed. beginning to be doubted. Since the establishment of steam We have discussed thus exclusively the currency aspects communication between California and of Mr. Sherman’s China, the Chinese bill, because it was by these chiefly that merchants of Hongkong and San Francisco have been, collect¬ its defeat was rendered inevitable. We trust that if it should ively, shippers of by far the greater portion of the large car¬ be revived hereafter in a new form, that it will be care¬ goes carried by the mail steamers of the Pacific Company. fully revised, and that its provisions will be extended so These native merchants, some of them of considerable as to enforce the wealth, redemption of all bank notes in New York, were able, by reason of their the establishment of some greater frugality in all respects, needed safeguards against defal¬ to ship at a profit which would not have enabled their cations among bank European officers, the keeping up of more adequate neighbors to live. The steamers, as common carriers available legal tender reserves, and the increase of the to all alike, gave them an efficiency of the opportunity, never before realized, for Cuirency Bureau, by making its examiners and other adventures large or small and of quick issue: they were not officials responsible where bad banking, which leads to fail¬ slow to avail of it, and thus new branches of business have ure or defalcation, has been concealed ; and through negli¬ sprung into existence. gence, incompetence or collusion has failed to be reported. In all this there is room for progress, and promise of it. Between the oldest nation and the youngest: China, frugally THE CHINA TRADE. supporting her population of four hundred millions on an area NUMBER I. of 1,300,000 square miles; America, prodigally scattering thirty This mission,” said Mr. Burlingame, in rat Iter oracula millions over 3,000,000 square miles; the former elaborately explanation to his San Francisco entertainers of the purposes organized, reposing under a civilization which came out of the of his Embassy, “ means progress.” Without giving way to furnace centuries ago ; the latter with no organization whatever, unreasonable hopes, we may well be inclined to accept the more than a town sign in this sense, and to en quire in what manner and to what tion whose chief meeting, boasting of a bran new civiliza¬ characteristic is a fierce unrest; the one pro¬ extent this progress is to reach and affect the commercial part foundly conservative, the other eagerly between of the world, of America radical: the especially, which has heretofore people who before the birth of Christ discovered divided with the diplomatists and the gunpowder, missionaries, (taking printing, and the compass, and that other the lion’s people, who, within share) the intercourse, limited as it has been, that a single life time, have wrested from each untold uses, and has taken place between the Western nations and the Chinese. given to each its highest practical application, surely there The diplomatists have until recently been engaged in a long is room for the interchange of more than a few boxes and and weary struggle, by chicane and force alternately, to fasten bales of merchandise. upon a powerful and elaborately civilized nation, a foreign In California there are now sixty thousand Chinamen, of policy of which it recognized the injustice. Resistance to that whom it is said ten thousand are engaged on the Central policy was baptized “Oriental duplicity.” Pacific Railroad, the others being The missionaries have in mining, agri¬ labored, for the most part with zeal culture and various industries. It occupied is difficult to foresee to and fidelity, in a fruitless field. To people who not what extent only may be carried this transfer of believed but practiced a morality which was old when Chris¬ land where it exists in inconvenient excess ofpopulation from a numbers to one tianity was born, it was naturally not easy to appeal in favor where the demand for labor is of a religion the mass of whose apparently insatiable, and the professors, so far as the Chinese means of providing for its wants saw them, did not practically unlimited. practice but only believed its precepts. Unjust laws and unequal application of them, united to the Commerce has been practically limited, on the one hand, to violence, unrestrained by law, with which the Chinese labor* “ up, June 681 THE CHRONICLE. 6, 1868 ] '• •IW' . 711 FROM/JAPAN. - partly because of their frugal habits and patience under If 55 7,411 1,488,577 1,982,916 ending March 30,1864... None. 6,525 1,696,170 1865... 2,265,783 abuse, were treated by the laborers of o^ther foreign nations, 55 5,740 887.140 6,224,694 1S66... 78 7,616 had the effect, for several years before the establishment of 5,546,466 354,145 1867... 518 4,559 1 6,710,207 1868... 772,332 the steamship line, of checking and, indeed, of reversing the The importation of raw silk into this country has received current of this migration; but it has again revived, and with vigor, since the last named event, and under the influ¬ a marked impulse from steam communication, and is, in our grow to important dimensions, with ence of a healthier sentiment among the people of California judgment, destined to and an administration of the laws which recognizes in a China- momentous consequences to the national wealth. This article is worth, on an average, about $600 in coin per bale, or about man some rights that an Irishman is bound to respect. The annual movement of population for the past five years com¬ $5 a pound. The silk of Japan is the finest known, and is used in the production of the most highly esteemed fabrics of British pares as follows: Arrived at Departed from and French looms. The eggs of the Japanese silk worm are San Francisco. San Fruncisco1861 6,467 2,65!) also imported into Fiance to an enormous amount, and at great 1861 3,681 2,166 ers, car . “ “ “ “ “ “ . 5681 681 “ “ “ “ “ “ For the sake of to supply the ravages of the disease which has for some years past affected the native worms. With our greater proximity to Japan, aud the great saving of freight and of interest on the cost of a material of so much value, there seems no reason why the infant manufacture of silk in this country should not grow to a sturdy manhood. In all except the more elaborate and costly fabrics, this advantage in the first price of the raw material should enable the American manufacturer to the compete * . 1866 1867 .... Total. 3,066 2.284 2,108 2,993 4,137 4,311 18,120 16,145 expense, began to be an important article of export from Cali¬ fornia to China about the year 1854, when the annual shipments reached a million dollars. Since then this trade has gradually Bullion follows. comparison we have placed in parallel columns shipments from California to Japan for two pears, previous increased, the shipments since 1803 having been as to which were wholly unimportant, and also the ship¬ ments from Great Britain to all China and Japan, reduced to they dollars: Gt. Britain to all China ,—From San Franc;sco.—. To China. To Japan. and Japan. $9,979,545 4,456,645 2,800,130 1863 7,888/973 1864 extensive home market. question brings us to This of the Pacific Railroad, now consider the probable influence approaching completion, upon the population and wealth of this country, and especially Pacific States, in relation to the commerce with Asia. of the REVIEW OF THE MONTH. 1,515,980 1,328,830 $U)5,890 6i8,049 1867 supply of our successfully with foreign looms tor the stringency of money in March and April lias been followed in May by a very decided reaction towards the other extreme coast is in remarkable contrast to the decline in the flow of The contraction of business necessitated by the pressure of the silver from England, and at first sight there would appear to former period has naturally been attended by a limited demand for be some intimate connection between the two; but the causes accommodation from merchants throughout the country, and at are, on examination, seen to be, for the most part, quite dis¬ most of the commercial centre there has prevailed an abundance of tinct. The heavy shipments from England to India and Asia idle funds, which have gravitated hither, and are now seeking The steady and rapid growth of the export from the Pacific The usual . during the war in this country were part of the overgrown employment at very low rates of interest. At the same time the loanable resources of the banks have been increased by the payment speculation to which the mercantile community of England of about four millions of iuterest in tbe redemption of Compound abandoned itself at that time : the course of the bullion flow Interest Notes dated May 15, 1865, both principal and interest of accurately marks the progress and subsidence of the fever. which have been paid in 3 Per Cent Certificates, absorbing the The reaction has been the more severe because the excitement whole of the latter. The change in the condition of the banks of disease was accepted by the patient as a sign of health. resulting from these causes is shown by the following comparison: May 30. May 2. Changes. On the other hand, the trade between California and Asia $268, 17,490 $257,628,672 Inc $10,498,818 Loans and Discounts 16.106.873 17,861,088 Inc. 1,694,215 has been growing in bulk and value, and the sudden increase Specie 34,114,843 34,145,1.06 Inc. 30,763 Circulation 191,206 135 11,0. 13.549,829 204,746,964 of about twenty-five per cent in the treasure movement of Deposits 65,633,964 57 836,599 Inc. 7,797,365 r 1867 results from a combinaiion of this cause with the estab¬ lishment of the steamship line on the 1st of January of that year, and an anomalous state of the India exchange market^ coincident with the plethora and low rate of money in London, in consequence of which heavy operations were carried on resulting in losses that will probably prevent their repetition Legal tenders of money being now per cent on demand loans, while choice commercial paper is negotiable at 5 per cem, is an indication of a stagnant condition of general trade. In most branches of business the Spring trade has proved unsatisfactory, The fact the only really healthy demand having come from the West, which exceptionally prosperous through its abundant crops. in 1868. Retail dealers complain of the contracted purchases of their custom* The values of domestic merchandise exported from San ers and that their business is so overdone by the multiplicity of Francisco to China and Japan during the last three years traders that they cannot make an average profit; and jobbers, under compare been these thus: To China. To Japan. $107,814 It,7,275 811,063 $1,376,166 1,534,700 1,325,336 38f7 exports consist mainly of breadstuffs, sundries,’’ the production of the Pacific States. These “ has lumber anc circumstances, are naturally cautious about the standing of parties to whom they sell. geueral unprofitableness of trading enterprises and the plethora of money have induced an extension of speculative transactions in securities, and esp cially so on Governments. A variety of considerations have conduced to diverting opera¬ the The tions in that direction, prominent among which may be men¬ principal articles of import from China and Japan tioned the near completion of the funding process, and the conse¬ and raw silk. The following table shows the exporta¬ quent filling up of the outstanding authorizations for loaDS. The each from either country to Great Britain and America high prices of real estate have had «d influence in causing investors to shun that mode of employing their funds, while the high prices years : FROM CHINA. of railroad stocks have tended to deter speculators from touching r-Silk, peculs of t' em. Under the influence of this and other circumstacces, which Tea, pounds 133J4 pounds—. ToEugland. To America. ToEngl’a. To Am. were more fully explained in our last issue, there has been during The two are tea tion of for five *>• , , Year ending May 31,1864 “ “ “ “ “ >• “ “ “ 1865 1866 1867 113,159,800 118,040,700 111,166,200 118,061,100 23,889,100 14,725,200 24,896,500 26,193,900 46.603 • 32,313 62,890 50,052 883 248 894 715 half of May an unprecedented demand, which toward the close had carried up prices bevond all precedent. Transactions in the latter 712 THE CHRONICLE. consequently been large, as may be seen in following statement of the amount of Government bonds and notes, State and city and company bonds, sold the York Stock New at Exchange in the month of May, 1867 and 1868 BONDS SOLD AT THE N. Y. Classes. U. S. bonds U.S. notes St’e & city $16,226,S00 1,130,100 b’ds Total—May" 895,800 $9,778,450 52,138,870 daily closing prices of the principal Government securities New York Stock Exchange Board in the month of May, as represented by the latest sale officially reported, are shown in the following statement: AT NEW YORK. /—6’s, 1881.(5-20 yr8.)Coupon 5’s,10-40 7-30. Day of month. Coup. Reg. 1862. >’s,1864. 1865. new. 1867.yrs.C’pn.2d sr. Friday 1.. 113% 107 108% 109 109% 103% 107% 2.. Saturday 108 _ , Sunday Monday.... Tuesday.... 3.. 4.. 5.. 6.. 7.. 8.. Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 113% U3% 113% 113% 113% 9.. 10.. 11.. 12.. Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday 13.. 14.. Thursday 15.. Friday 16.. Saturday Sunday 113 113% 113% 113% 113% 113% 113% 113% 114’ * 113% 113% 114 114 17.. Monday Tuesday 18.. 19.. Wednesday 20.. Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday 1*07% 106% 106% 108% 106% 708% 106% 108% 106% 108 114% 21.. 22.. 23.. 24.. 25.. 26.. 115 115% 114% 114% 114% 115 115% 115% 115% Highest . Range Last 113% 113 115% 113% 2% 115% 115% 113 2% 115% 103% 106% 106% 108% 1<*»9% 103 109' 709% 107% 107% 709% 109*’ 107” 107% 107% 109% i09% 109 108% 108% 107% 109 109 109 107% 107% 107% 107 107% • • • iio% 110% 108% The 109% 109% 103% 109% 103% 103% 107% 107% i07% 107% 170% 110% 105% 108% 109% 711% •111% 105% 108% 109% 109% 111% 111% 105% 108% 1C9% 109% 111% 111% 105% 1C9 109% 109% 111% 112 105% 109% 109% 109% 111% 112 105% 109% 108% 111% 106% 107% 106% 4% 111% 107 109% 109 May 14. 103% 105% 111% 112 108% 109% 109% 109% 2% 103 3% 111% 112 105% 3 2% 107% 109% 107% 2% 109%' Frankfort in each week Mav 21. 70% 75% 109% 109% 106% 3% closing prices of Five-Twenties at ending with Thursday, were as follows : 75%©75% 109% 109% 107% 107% 108% 109 May 28. Month. 77 75%©77 closing prices of Consols for money and certain American securities (viz. U. S. 6’s 5-20’s 1862, Illinois Central and Erie shares) at London, on each day of the month of May, are shown in the following statement: Cons Am. eecur ities. for U. S. Ill.C. Erie mon. 5-20s sh’s. shs. Friday Sat’day Sunday.... Monday Toes Wedne Thurs Cons Am. secu rities. for U.S. Ill.C. 1 Erie Date. mon. 1 5-20s sh’s. 93% 7(1% 95% 46% Thursday... ..21 94% 71% 70% 95% 46% Friday ..22 94% 71% Saturday... 4 93% 70% 95% 46% Sunday... ..24 94% 71% 5 94% 70% 95% 46% Mondiy 95 7i% 6 94 70% 95% 46 Tuesday... ..26 95% 71% 7 94% 70% 95% 46 Wednesday. ..27 95% 71% 8 94 70% 95% 46 Thursday... ..28 96% 72% 2 3 93% .... .... .. do & Toledo .... 1,278,271 9,517,129 9,134,495 jsh’s. 95% 45% 95% 45% 95% 45% 95% 95% 45 68 15 45% 45% [Dec. 1,798 «••• • 528,696 2,200 - 30,735 70,325 63,755 ■ . .... .... .... 96 46 May, 1867 and 1868, comparatively : * • • • • • • • do do scrip Erie 73% do pref 71 Hannibal & St. Joseph. 76% ' do do pref. 84% Hudson River 140 Illinois Central 137 Ind. & Cincinnati 54 Mar. & Cincin., 1st pref. 25 do ■ 2d pref.. Saratoga.. 85 92 Miscellaneous— American Coal ... 48 Ashburton do Central do 40 Cumberland Coal 32% Del. & Hud. Canal Coal. 157 Pacific Mail 103% Atlantic do 87% Citizen’s Gas' West. Union Telegraph. Bankers & Brokers Ass. Union Tfust 60 63% 76% 97 106% 68 75% 85 . x80 106% 83 97% 114 115% 105% 114% 109 93% 104 108% 102 73 140 147% 54 25 147% 54 25 113 85 99 72% 77 83 87 84% 136% 144 146% 148% 54 25 27 115% 10 116 991/ 100 90 90% 64 77 91% 64% 68% 75% 76 78% 65 65 142 114% 110% 115% 128% 137 94 94 142 94 32% 28% 130 78 316 295% 105 99 76 91% 31% '46’ 29 160 104 86 U8 36% 69% 69% 49 75% 61% 76% 71% 52 45% 62 61 25 26 31% 26% 119% 127% 133% 160 151 • - • 29% 78 315 104 90 • • • 80 330% *49* 69 69 43 43 43 2 43 3 3 3% 33* *35% *33* 158 51 8% 5 .10 27% 144 37% 113 120 86% 165 97 35 . 156% 90% 31% 26 20 21% 20% 52 49 8% 8% 6 5 11% 9% 27% 32% 144 144 38% 113 120 60 61 61 63 60% 31% 26% 61% 31% Wells, Fargo & Co 35% 35% 27 The gold movement presents some unusual features. for the month reached the very 95 89% 51% *35% 164 95 34 24% 20% 51% 8% 5 9% 29 144 36% 38% 109% 112% 120 120 53 53 56% 55% 56% 56 28 22 28% 25% The exports .... Total reported supply Exports of coin and bullion Customs duties Total withdrawn $24,951,432 $36,223,656 $11,272,224 $8,307,000 $16,925,980 $8,618,980 8,582,000 10,009,176 1,427,176 $16,889,000 $26,935,166 $10,046,156 ..*- $. Excess of reported supply Specie in banks at end $8,062,432 14,083,667 $9,288,500 $1,226,068 17,861,088 3,777,421 Derived from unreported $6,021,235 $8,572,588 $2,551,353 $. sources • 30% 69 21% 34% 77% 65 133 52* 21% 49% . 74% 65 133 116 69 20% 23 97 67 62 51% 19 45 11% 27% 91% 96% 91% ”6 88% 104 89% 35 20 6 9 82% 86% 35 30 , 28% 10 120 90 92% *6% 38% 82% 155% 30 12% 28% *40 80 142 100 31% 31% 116 48 148% 118 .... 104 48 33 159 103% 48 *40’ 129% 150 330% 70% 92 133 120 134 78 315 52 72 84 92 46 „ 136 145% 67% 78 307 90 86 92 61 71 86% 133 116 70 76 80% 87 91% 93X 68% 74 78 27 10 104 97 64% 109% 83% 29% 10 121 93 56 118% 35 125 73 84 137 S8 117 71% 81 122% 137 83% 117 74 80 77% 89 117 71% 21% 49% 71 35 75 117 74 Express— American Adams United States Merchant’s Union 80% 98% 75 68% 79% 97% 107 108 , 105% 118% 69 19% 35% 63 110% 125 65% 26% .. 70 150 106% 118% 75 28 6 9 23 149 75 82% 75 85% » 150 75 64 75% 94% 93% 104% 104% §104 99 102% 102% 87% 46% * 149 64 86 Stonington Toledo, Wab. & Western 50% do do dopief. 72 May. < 150 .... Pittsb., Ft. W. & Chica. 10^% Reading. .' 89% Cary Improvement Mariposa do pref 125 150 99 93 117% 122% ... 129 150 92 74 do & N. Haven. 139 Norwich & Worcester.. 94 31 do do pref. 76 316 Union Navigation Boston Water Power Canton 14% 120 102% 99 93 59 Central Rensselaer & 128% 115% 89% 91% .. do 40 68 113 do S. &N. Ind. Mil. & F. duCh’n, lstpr do do 2d pr. Milwaukee &St. Paul., do do pref. Morris & Essex New Jersey * Clos. Open. High. Low. Clos’g. 45 145 49% 43 48% 68 73 73% 66 70 14% .15 15 15% 15% 128 128 128 127% 127% 129 129 129% 128 128% ... able effort has been made to draw out speculative transactions, yet the result has been disappointing, and the volume of business has been less than during the same month of 1867, as may be seen in the following table showing the volume of shares sold at the New York Stock Exchange Board and the Open Board of Brokers in ». 382,634 ... .... • 400,428 high figure of $16,925,000, while the 96% 46% 9 94 payments for customs duties were $10,009,000, making an aggre¬ 70% 95% 46 ..29 96% 72% 97 Friday 47% 10 ..30 96% 72% 97 of $26,934,000 withdrawn from the market, or $10,046,000 in Saturday 47% gate 11 94% 70% 95 45% Sunday excess of the withdrawals for the Tnesd y 12 94% 70% 94% 45% corresponding month of 1867. The withdrawals exceeded the Wedn’y 13 94% 70% 94% 46 Lowest from all reported sources by supply 93% 70% 94% 45% Thursday ...14 94% 70% 94% 45% Highest $9,288,000, and yet there was $1,695,000 more specie in the banks 96% 72% 97 47% Friday 15 94% 70% 95 45% Range 2% 2% 2% 2% at the close of the month than at the Sat’day 16 94% 70% 94% 45% beginning, which is to be Sunday 17 Low) 91% 70% 84% 41% accounted for by the fact that $8,572,000 of gold was derived from Monday ....18 94% 7i% 94% 45% Hig V ag^... «... 96% 73% 97 50% unreported sources, chiefly from sales by the Sub-Treasury. The Tus’day 19 94% 71% 94% 45% HngJ 3 4% 12% 8% Wednesday..20 94% 71% 95% 45% Last. payments of coin interestjat the Sub-Treasury are $999,000 above 96% 72% 97 47% those of May, 1867, and the receipts, from California $1,342,000 The course of the stock market has been somewhat larger. The exports are more than double those for the same period disappointing to the larger holders of railroad shares. A very large proportion of last year. of the The following formula furnishes the details of the leading shares had been bought up by combinations, in general move¬ ment of coin and bullion at this port for the month of May, 1867 anticipation that the current liberal earnings of the roads would and 1868, comparatively: induce an active speculative demand during the usual Spring and GENERAL MOVEMENT OF COIN AND BULLION AT NEW YORK. Summer ease in money. The event, i 1868. 1.867. Increase. Decrease however, has proved that there In banks, near first $7,404,304 $16,166,873 $3,762,569 $ are few casual operators in the street, and that the regular habitues Receipts from California 1,181,128 2,523,385 1,342,257 Imports of coin and bullion 480 022 of Wall street are 312,000 168,022 unusually cautious ; so that although consider¬ Com interest paid 16,054,000 17,053,376 999,376 Friday Sat’day Sunday Monday « • • 25,885 6,714 76 103% Quicksilver... COURSE OP CONSOLS AND AMERICAN SECURITIES AT LONDON. Date. 1,678,699 April. High. Low. / Railroad Stocks— Open. Alton & Terre Haut.... 40 do do pref. 68 Boston, Hartford & Erie 15 Chicago & Alton 120 do do pref.... 125 Chicago, Bnrl. & Quincy 150 do & Milwaukee do & Northwest’n 63 do do pref. 74% do & Rock Island. 92% Cleve., Col. & Cincinnati 105 do Painesv. & Ashta. 100 do & Pittsburg 92 • The May 7. 107% Increase. following table will show the opening, highest, lowest and closing prices of all the railway and miscellaneous securities quoted at the New York Stock Exchange during the months of April and May, 1868 : * Del., Lack. & Western.. 114 103% 103% 103% 109% 109% 109% 107% 109% 107% 107% 109% 110 103% 107% 109% 107% 107% 110% 110% 104 107% 109% 108% 108% 110% 110% 104% 107% 109% 108% 108% 110% 110% 104% 110% 108% 108% 110% 110% 104% 108% 110% 108% 108% 110% 110% 104% 108% 31.. First Lowest...- 109% 106% 107% 107% Wednesday 27.. 115% 115% 111% Thursday 28.. 115% 115% 111% Friday^ 29.. 115% 115% 111% Saturday ~ 30.. Sunday 108% 109% 109% 103 109% 103% 109% 103% 109% 103% • 114% 106% 109 1G9 34,411 The 212,300 The GOVERNMENT SECURITIES “ Dec. at the PRICES OP 7,515 18,930 41,900 42,671 61,180 ' ......... $^30,928,950 121,923,550 69,784,680 Mining 1868. 2,253 939,345 5,315 49,715 16,015 35,957 131,605 98,166 1,468,041 44 w $5,394,250 3,700,750 4,*30,800 3,759,100 ' 718,000 $21,150,500 —since Jan. 1 Coal 1867. 4.051 44 Steamship44 Inc. $21,621,050 2,863,300 930,300 Company b’ds “ 1S6S. 186S. Railroad : STOCK EXCHANGE BOAR 1867. Classes. Bank shares . all kinds of bonds have the [June 6,1808. June 6,1868.] THE CHRONICLE. 7131 The price of gold has been remarkably steady, considering the importance of the political events (especially impeachment) calcu¬ lated to affect the premium, the quotation having ranged '’between 139$ and 140J against 135@138$ in May, 1867, and 125$@141$ in 1866, and 128£@145$ in 1865. The following statement exhibits the fluctuations of the|New York gold market in the month of May, 1868 : COURSE OF GOLD AT NEW YORK. 60 Date. j iH tH Saturday,. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Openi’g Lowest High’st. .Closing. * a> P. o O 1^ ** <x> a Date. .22 139% 139% .23 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 1 139% 139% 139% .24 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 189% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% . ■rH .25 .26 .27 .28 .29 .30 .31 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 189% 139% 140% 140% 139% 140% 140% 139% 139% 139% fFrom our own Correspondent.] London, Saturday. May 23, 1868. The present week has, in nearly all departments devoid of features calculated to strengthen the hope of business,'been expressed of late that commercial affairs are improving, or that there is any prospect that we may expect a better trade in the immediate future. Rather than having a favorable tendency, it mu?tbe admitted that since I last wrote there have been not only signs of increased caution, bat merchants have In .2 33 contracted their operations, and trade has presented a much quieter o 5 5 appearance. In my last letter I compiled some statistics showing those 140 139% countries to which there had, during the first three months of the pres¬ 139% 139% ent year been an increase, and those countries to which there had been i40 ‘ i40“ a diminution in our exports of cotton piece goods. I either mentioned, 140% 140% or it wa 140% 139% self-evident, that the g. eat support to the cotton trade was 139% 139% our augmented shipments of piece goods to India, Chiua derived from 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% 139% .* and Australia. But, from what has been mentioned to me this week with the Eastern trade, it appears that the Eastern 139% 139% 140% 139% 139% 139% 1867.... 135% 135 over-supplied, and that in consequence of the large 138% 136% 139% 139% 1866.... 125% 125% 141% (140% 140% 139% quantities of goods shipped to the East the markets in that quarter 1865.... 145% 128% 145% 137 139% 139% 168 1864.... 177 190 190 i&ve by no means responded to the movement which has taken place 139% 139% 7 1863 151 143% 154% 145 lere. The advices received this week are of a somewhat discouraging 3 139% 139% i39% i89% 1862.... 102% 102% 104% 103% 9 139% 139% 139% 139% nature, and consequently there is every probability that our exports of 91139% 139% 139% 139% S’ce.Janl, 18681133% 133% 144 139% l|l89% 189% 139% 139% goods to the East will steadily, if not rapidly, decline. It seems, in ¬ Foreign exchange has been firm throughout the month, at rates deed, very clear that the returns for the second quarter of the year will admitting of the export of the precious metab. There has been show a considerable diminution as compared with the first quarter.. It comparatively little cotton going forward, while the maturing obli¬ is, however, but natural that, with cotton at its present price, with gations were heavy, and a large amount had to be remitted against wheat dear, and with a crisis not only fresh in the recollection of all coupons due May 1st. The following exhibits the quotations at New York for bankers’ business men, but with its effects still in operation, in consequence of 60 days bills on the principal European markets daily in the month the liquidation of many defunct companies being still in progress, that of May, 1868 : a cautious policy should be pursued. Doubtless, a good harvest wfll have eonsiderable iufiuence in giving an impetus to renewed activity, COURSE OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE (60 DAYS) AT NEW YORK. Loudon. Amsterdam. Bremen. Hamburg. Paris. but the harvest is still distant, is necessarily uncertain as to its result Berlin, cents for cents for cetimes cents for cents for cents for 54 pence. while, even with a good harvest, we do not expect that bread will be Days for dollar. florin. rix daler. M. banco. thaler. 1.. 110 ©110% 513%®512% 41%©41% 79%@80 36%®36% 71%©72 cheap. A considerable fall in price may, indeed, be anticipated, but 2.. 110 ©110% 513%@512% 41%©41% 79%©30 36%©36% 71%©72 3.. yet a sudden transition from dearness to cheapness can scarcely be 4.. 110 ©110% 513%©512% 41%©41% 79%@80 86%©36% 7J%@72 looked forward to. Our supplies of wheat, and especially «of good 5.. 110 ©110% 513% ©512% 41%©41% 79%@80 36%©36% 71% @72 6.. 110 ©110% 513%©512% 41%@41% 79%©80 36%©36% 71% @72 wheat, are so greatly reduced that it would seem impossible for our 7.. 110%©U0% 512%© 41% @41% 79%©S0 36%@36% 71%®72 8.. 110%@110% 612%© 41%@41% 79%@80 36%@36% 71%@72 reserve of cereal produce to be such as to warrant the belief that our 9.. 36%@36% 71%®72 110%©110% 612%© 41%@41% 79%®80 10.. position in that respect is comparatively secure. 11.. 110 @110% 513%@511% 41% @41% 79%®80 3*'%@36% 71%@72 After a period ot unusual dryness (scarcely any rain having fallen 12 36^ ©36% 71%@72 110 @110% 513%@511% 41%@41% 79%@80 13.. 110 @110% 512%® 41% @41% 79%@80 36%@36% 71%@72 during the last four Weeks), the weather has just become unsettled, and 14.. 110 140% 1139% 1139% 1139% 5139% 139% 189% 139% 139% 139% 5139% 139% )y firms connected markets have been 140% 139% ... .... .... .... ~ .... 15 16 . ©110% 110 ©110% 110 @110% 512%© 512%® 109%@110% 109%@110% 109%@110% 109%@110% 109%@110% 513%©512% 613%©512% 513%©512% 513%©512% 513%©512% 512%® 79% @80 79% @80 79%@80 36%@36% 36%®36% 36%@36% 71%®72 41%@41% 79%@S0 41% ©41% 79%@80 41%@41% 79% @80 41%©41% 79%©80 41%@41% 79%@80 41%@41% 79% ©80 36%@36% 36%©36% 36% @36% 86%©36% 36%@86% 36% ©36% 7i%@72 41%@41% 41%©41% 41%@41% .... .... 71%@72 71%®72 much benefit is certain to be derived from the change. The wheat plant, however, looks extremely strong and healthy, but Spring corn suffering to some extent, and is rather backward. The pas 71%@72 tures also require moisture, and *it is very probable that if we do not 71% @72 71%@72 have a fair quantity of rain the hay harvest will be deficient. Potatoes 71%®72 71%@72 and the other root crops also require moisture. 109%@110% 513%©512% The favorable weather, the promising appearance in regard to the ii6%@iio% 513%@512% 41%®41% 79%@80 86%@36% 7i%@72 3G%®36% 71% @72 110%@110% 513%©512% 41%©41% 79%®*) wheat crop, and an adequate supply of foreign wheat afloat to this 36% ©36% 71%@72 no%®uo% 513%@512% 41%@41% 79%@80 110% aiio% 513%@512% 41%@41% 79%@80. 36%@36% 71%@72 country, have produced much heaviness in the trade for wheat, and 36% ©36% 71% @72 110%@110% 513%®512% 41%@41% 79%®80 prices have given way to the extent of ld.@2d. per quarter. Millers 86%®36% 71%®72 110%@110% 613%©512% 41%@41% 79%@80 have operated with unusual caution, and have restricted their purchases as much as possible. The supply of wheat ascertained to be afloat is ^lSS 109%@110% 513%@511% 41 %@41 % 79%©80 36%@36% 71%@72 about 800,000 quarters, but as, according to the latest mail dates from 86 ©36% 71%@72% 1867 109%@110 620 ©510 40%@41% 78%©80 New York, the exports from that port are increasing, it is probable that the quantity of produce afloat will be shortly increased. It may, Cutest jMotietura urtir Commercial Cnglioi) however, be observed that the above is a very moderate estimate of the KATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND ON LONDON quantity on passage to this country. To arrive at a correct estimate AT LATEST OATES. is extremely difficult, but to ascertain the minimum quantity of wheat EXCHANGE AT LONDON— EXCHANGE ON LONDON. on passage is an easy task. MAY 22. The above quantity is contained in vessels known to be afloat from the Mediterranean, the Black Sea, the Danube LATEST BATE. TIME. TIME. DATE. BATE. ON— New York, California, and, to some extent, from jChili and Australia. The statements of our imports and exports of wheat and flour, since 11.90 short. short. Amsterdam... © 11.17%@11.18 May 22. 3 months. 25.37% @25 42% 25.22%© — Antwerp the commencement of the season, are subjoined: 18. 8 © — 13. 9%@18.1(i% Hamburg . .... 17.. 18.. 19.. 20.. 21.. 22.. 23.. 24.. 25 26.. 27.. '28.. ..92 30.. 81.. has been . • " * — it tt 44 tt tt 46 tt tt tt 3mos. Paris 25.32%@25.37% short 25.15 @25.22% Paris 3 months. 11.85 @11.90 Vienna tt Berlin 6.26%@ 6.27% 44 82 @82% St. Petersburg Cadiz 44 •••••••• • Milan Genoa Naples........ New York.... Jamaica Havana Rio de Janeiro Bahia Pernambuco.. Singapore Hong Kong... 60 — — — — — — — — — — days. it tt tt ... 80 days. Less 8 per cent. 4s. Ad. 48. Ad. 2 p. c. dis.' 18. Hid. la. lid. Is. lid. 1 p. c. 3mos. r die. - May 21. 80 days. — WHEAT. 32% 5!%@51% — — 1866-67. — — — — Prom— Sept. 1 to April 25 Week ending “ “ “ — — - May 2 “ “ 9 16 Export* , —% 1866-67. 1867-68. cwt. 1867-68. cwt. cwt. cwt. 16,720,119 837,491 24,746,056 668,044 297,127 27,134 557,897 8,813 770,687 657,738 $1,461 1,560 6U»2 26,842,525 347,283 677,641 2,463,778 89,717 2,289,978 36,142 1*884 353 18,986 3,108 68,854 65,809 619 1,270 2,703,039 2,485,569 777,113 746,814 19,081,537 Total no% 1 p. c. 6.545 FLOUE, 10 19 © April 23. tt April 14. 49%@ — tt April 22. 86% © — 44 April 17. 20%@ As. Ad. @ — April 21. 6mos. 44 As. Ad. © — April 22. it April 22. 1%@I% per ct» 44 is. 0%d. May 17. 44 18. ll%d. May 12. tt ,1s. 11 ll*16d. May 15. % p c. prem. April 28. 80 days imports i — — — May 22. 60 days. April 24- 90 days. May 21. 60 days. tt — — it Bombay Madras * 27.70 @27.80 @27.80 — t* Ceylon Sydney 27.70 «• — Valparaiso.... Calcutta 44 .... May 22. — — — — — 48%@ 49 90 days. 5l%@ 51% 3 months. 27.70 @27.80 Lisbon — 25.17%© © *25.19 Sept. 1 to April 25 Week ending “ “ “ “ 2 May “ 9 “ 16 Total 80,690 858 53,640 * 15,214 654 „ 23,018 quietness has prevailed this week, and prices are decidedly lower. Yarns show a fall in value of $@$c per lb., and and doth has had a drooping tendency. In the wool trade, although » prudent caution seems to be observed, there is a fair degree ofactivity At Manchester much t!4 THE CHRONICLE. [June 6,1868. and foreign buyers, at the public sales of colonial wool now in progress resolve upon an appeal to the country, there has been less firmness operating with freedom. Prices, however, show no important apparent. Italian stock has considerably improved in value, in conse¬ change. Other departments of business are very quiet. quence of the more satisfactory condition of Italian financial affairs. The supply of money in the discount market has increased, and the Nearly all descriptions oT foreign government securities have improved rates of discount have declined to the extent of about one quarter per in value, but British railway shares are less in favor, and have given cent. Trade is decidedly quieter, and, in some instances, prices have way in price. The highest and lowest price of Conscls on each day of given way since Saturday last. At the present moment there does not the week is subjoined: appear to be even one argument in favor of a higher rate for money. Week ending May 23 Belief io a higher quotation has Monday. Tuesday Wed’y. Thnr. Sat. Friday. entirely died away, and although there Consols for money was, about a fortnight since, a possibility of 94%-94% 94%-94% 94%-94% 94%-94% 94%-94% 94%-94% a rise in the Bank rate, are there is likelihood of such now no It is fo rtunate that an occurrence. The following statement shows the present position of the Bank of England refused to advance their minimum to a higher England, compared with the state of its resources at this date since point. Had they done so when the open market were not discounting 1865. It also exhibits the minimum rate of discount, the price of bills at a lower rate that 2 per cent, and were, it is said, charging, or Consols, wheat, middling Upland cotton, and No. 40 mule yarn at this more probably, demanding, 2£ per cent, their present position would date since 1865: have been one of difficulty, and it seems almost certain that they would 1865. 1866. 1868. 1867. have been compelled to admit the error £ £ £ £ they had committed by return- Circulation 21,330,480 26,020.693 23,201,021 23,925,150 ing to 2 per cent. It is very evident that the actual commercial Public deposits '..... 7,997,105 5,994,761 8,584,S64 6,041,006 demand for money is very deposits 13,551,860 18,790,917 17,1^6,452 20,320,946 moderate. There is etill a want of enter¬ Private Government securities 10,984,441 10,837,056 12,886,314 13,217,696 prise in many departments of business, and as our trade with India Other securities.... 19,739,276 31,050,406 19,364,724 19,122.322 Reserve 9,087,353 China and Australia, which 1,388,216 11,892,618 10,542,710 during the first three months of the year Coin and bullion 15,299,268 11,857,786 20,788,963 19,664,068 the Bank of - r afforded so material support to commercial affairs, has of late so per¬ ceptibly declined, it is probable that business will remain quiet until, at the least, a Bank rate Price of Consols 4 p. c. 9u% Average price of wheat 41s 8d. Mid. Upland cotton 15%d. 10 p. c. 86% 3 p. c. 93% 2 p. c. 93% xd 46s. Id. 12d. 64s. lid. lid. 74s 3d. ll%d. degree of certainty the nature 40 mule yarn, fair 2d quality. Is. 8%d. Is. 8d. Is. 5d. Is. 3%d. of the harvest. Not only is there little or no prospect of an augmented With regard to the above table, it may be mentioned that in 1866 commercial demand, but while the applications for discount accommo the Bank of England had just passed through its severest trial after dation on the part of our merchants are limited, the supplies of money the failure of Overends. It will be noticed that the reserve of notes are rapidly augmenting. At the present moment about £1,100,000 and coin was only £1,388,216, while the ‘‘other securities” or advances in gold is known to be on passage from Australia to this country; quite, were as high as £31,050,406. if not more than that amount is on passage from New York; while the The changes in the value of American securities during the week next few steamers from Mexico are expected to bring very large sup¬ have been unimportant. As regards the Five-Twenty bonds there has plies of silver and dollars. The demand for gold and silver for export been more firmness apparent; but Atlantic and Great Western Railway is very trifling, and it is expected that the greater part of our anticipa¬ securities are and have given way in price. Illinois Central weaker, ted supplies will be retained here. As, however, money is so low in Railway shares are somewhat firmer. Erie Railway shares have been price in this country, it is not improbable that some important sums dealt in to a very moderate extent. United States Five-Twenty bonds will be soon transmitted to other quarters in which they can be more close at 78-J- to 78£; Atlantic and Great Western Railway Consolidated profitably employed. The rates of discount, so far as the best descrip¬ Mortgage bonds 32 to 83 ; Erie Railway shares 45£ to 46, and Illinois tions of paper are concerned, compared with those of last year are sub¬ Central 95£ to 96£. The highest and lowest prices of the principal joined : American securities during the week are as follows: we can ascertain with fl867. some 1868. Per cent. Per cent. 30 and 60 days' bills 2%@2% Smonths, b.lis 2%@2% months, ba’k bills 2%(ft3 l%(ftl% l%(ftl% 1%@2 1867. 1868. Per cent. Per cent. 6 months’ ba’k bills 2%@3 2 @2% 4 and 6 trade bills.. 3 @3% 2%@3 On the Continent W eek ending May 23 Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. Sat’rday. U. S. 5-20’s.. 71 Atlantic & G’t West¬ ern consol’d bonds 32 -71% 71%-.... 71%-71% 71%-71% 71%-.... 71%-.... -32% 31%-32% 31%-32 31%-32 31%-.... 32 -32% during the present week there have been no changes Erie Shares ($100).. 45%-46 45 -46 45*-.... 45%-.... 45%-46 45%-46 Illinois shares ($100) 95 -95% 95%-.... 95%-95% 95%-95% 95%-.... 96 of importance in the rates. At the leading cities much quietness has prevailed, and the tendency has been downwards. At Paris the supply English market Reports—Per Cable. of money is still large, and the stock of bullion in the Bank of France The is as much as £47,100,000. daily closing quotations in the markets of London and Liver¬ The rates of interest, compared with those pool for the past week, have been reported by submarine telegraph as of last year, are as follows: -.... At Paris Vienna ' -B’k rate— <-Op. 1867. 1868. 1867. 3 2% 2-2% 4 Berlin;.... 4 Frankfort. 2% Amst’rd’m 3 ... 4 4 2% 2% 4 m’kt- -B’k rate1867. 1868. 1868. l%-2 4 3% 2%-3 l%-2 l%-2 2 2% Turin Brussels Madrid 5 .. ... Hamburg St. 5 3 5 3 Petb’g. 7 shown in the following summary 1867 — 2% 2%-% 5 . 6* Vi-HX ; London Money and Stock Market.—Consols opened firm at 96£@96£ and 94£@94£ for account, and advanced the same day to 96f, at which price they remained during the week and closed. United 2%-3 for money, l%-2 6-6% States bonds and Illinois Central shares have been — 2%-2% - 1868. No material alterations have taken steady during the place in the rates of Continental exchange. Bills on Paris are quoted somewhat favorably for this country. The Italian exchange, owing to the improving condition of Italian financial affairs, is more favorable to Italy. The imports of bullion iuto the United Kingdom during the week ending Thursday evening last were large, and amounted to £799,400. week, bonds opening at 72$@72£, and closing at 72£, and Illinois shares at 97, and closed at 97$. Erie shares have shown a weakening ten¬ dency, and have lost If per ceot on the week, closing at45£. Atlantic and Great Western consolidated shares are quoted at the close at 31* Five-Twenty bon is at Frankfort continue steady, opening at 77f and closing at 77£ for the old issue. Monday being observed as a holiday, Of that amount £190,000 was from Australia, and the remainder from and there being no regular meeting of the Stock Exchange, we omit the United States. There is scarcely any demand for gold for export, quotations for that day. In the commercial markets Tuesday was also and the impression prevails that some very large supplies of bar gold observed as a holiday, and in the tables below we have likewise omitted will be transmitted to the Bank during the next fortnight or three quotations on that day. weeks. Silver is very dull, and as large supplies of bars, and Fri. Sat. Mon. especially Tues. Wed. Thu. Consols for money of Mexican dollars, will ba shortly received, prices are 96% 96% 96% 96% 9i% expected to >> for account... 94%-% 94% 94%-% 94%-% 94% give way. There is no demand for silver for India, and only a moderate U. S. 6’s (5 20’s) 1862.. 72%-% 72%-% 'a 72% 72% 72%-% ■ _ “ inquiry for the Continent. The prices of bullion are Illinois Central shares. Erie Railway shares .. Atl. & G. W. (consols) subjoined: GOLD. s. Bar Gold per oz. standard. do last price. Spanish Doubloons peroz. South American Doubloons... do last price United States Gold Coin do do do Refinable 77 77 76 73 76 d. 8. 9 11 0 9 (ft— (ft— <ft(ft2% (ft- The d. — o m 97% 46% 97% 45% 97% 45% 32 31 ' 77% 77%-% .... 77% 76%-% were— 77% — Liverpool Cotton Market.—This market opened firm, and has con¬ throughout the business days of the week, # SILVER. although at the close a more quiet feeling was apparent, prices however s. d. S. d, 5 Bar Silver per oz. standard. 0% (ftremaining steady. Circulars issued on Tuesday give the total ship¬ do 5 containing 6 grs. gold * do 0% (ft— ments from Pine Cake Silver 5 Bombay to the 30th ult., since the last report, at 90,000 6% (ftperoz.last price. ; 4 10% Mexican Dollars per oz do bales. Quotations are £d. better at the close than at the opening. In the early part of the week the Consol market was very firm, and Sales of the current week as reported by cable foot up 48,000 hales. prices improved rapidly ; but, during the last few days, in consequence The following were the current prices at the close: Middling Uplands of the position of the Ministry, and of the fear that Mr. Disraeli would ll$d., middling Orleans llfd. ' — tinued active and firm — — — — — - 97 47% daily closing quotations for U. S. 6’s (1862) at Frankfort Franktoit — 97 47% ( THE CHRONICLE. Fri. Bales fold 10,000 Prist Midd. Uplds. 11% “ Orleans Mid.Uplds.to arriv Sat. Mon. - 10,000 11% 11% 11% .... Tues. Holidavs Mondays. Wed. Thu. 15,000 11% 11% 8,000 11% 11% - .... ending (for dry goods) May 29, and for the week ending (for general merchandise) May 80 : FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK. •••• ---• Liverpool Breadstuff's Market,—The articles comprising this head have been generally dull and heavy, all the list showing a further de¬ cline on the week. At the close wheat showed a more firmer feeling’ and Western reacted 2d. from quotation of the previous day. Flour has lost Is. 6d.; Western wheat 8d.; California wheat 9d.; oats Id. and peas General merchandise... s. Flour, (Western)....p. bbl 33 Wheat (No.2 Mil. Redjip. ctl 12 *• (California white) u 14 Corn (West. nix’d) p. 480lbs 37 “ “ old d. 33 12 d. 0 3 14 3 87 3 8. 6 6 8 6 Mon. s. 3 44 d. s. d. Wed. Holidays. 0 82 0 11 10 13 6 86 0 86 3* 3 44 $2,852,265 $7,769,323 58,294,034 126,138,639 $5,950,715 103,655,187 $6,820,770 94,923,025 $61,146,299 $133,907,962 $109,605,902 $101,743,795 the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending June 2: 43 s. Pork(Etn. pr. mess]) d 200 lbs 110 0 0 0 0 0 84 48 68 Bacon (Cumb.cut) p. 112 lbs Lard (American) 44 44 Cheese (fine) 44 44 Sat. s. d 110 0 d 62 84 68 0 0 0 51 6 48 Mon. s. d. Tues. s. d. Holidays. Liverpool Produce Market.—We have again to report market for the articles enumerated below. Wed # d # s. 8. 0 0 0 51 0 a 110 83 47 67 51 0 Rosin (com Wilm ).per 112 lbs middling.... 44 6 44 fine 12 44 pale Sp turpentine “ I etroleum (std white) .p. 8 lbs 44 spirits.... per 8 lbs Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs. Clover seed (Am. red) 6 0 29 1 44 44 6 12 6 3 8 6 Tu. 8. d. d. 0 6 0 6 0 steady, quiet 6 0 Wed. 8. 6 12 29 1 Holidays. 44 d. 6 0 29 1 44 Th b. d. 6 6 12 0 28 1 9 Linseed (Calcutta) 'oil £ “ Sperm oil 44 Whale oil.... p. 252 gals. Sugar (No. 12 Dch std) per Great Britain. 10 10 0 35 00 0 96 00 0 $71,100,381 $98,154,413 $83,391,741 $75,498,590 190,812 63,268 143,182 350,869 24,900 50,757 251,586 Germany Other Northern 27 6 Since Jan. 1. $1,129,896 Holland and Belgium Spain -1867.- $41,201,036 63,192 3,824,932 2,284,376 238,894 5,898,304 16,450 628,847 738,375 Europe Other Southern Europe... East In dies China and Japan ' Australia British N A Colonies.... Cuba 2,117,891 87,063 30,820 1,192,658 1,130,347 31,536 Hayti 250,948 42,749 Other West Indies Mexico New Granada 59,082 3,734,631 870,829 1,003,131 1,046,050 2,610,886 4«8,497 87,189 39,675 3,031,202 763,473 1,365,782. 316,691 90,871 1,470,150 286,392 644,896 10,849 47,298 1,318,069 1,073,130 21,163 540.082 1,212,515 1,423,710 652,458 45,813 39,566 540,224 15,663 588,945 613,84" 1,940,666 *8,501 3,128,941 1,066,941 856,930 31,439 71,629 7,686 Venezuela British Guiana ...; Brazil DtherS. American ports All other ports ... $47,672,842 5,675,541 2,090,319 9,316,128 5,310 1,873,994 111,726 134,972 following will show the exports of specie from the port of New ending May 30, 1868 : \ May 26—St. Saxonia, Hamburg— A merican gold.... $419,900 Manhattan, Liv¬ erpool— 10 10 0 35 00 0 96 00 0 Mon. Tu. Holidays. 35 00 0 96 00 0 35 00 0 96 00 0 27 6 27 6 27 Latest: Friday Evening, June 6. Consols closed to-night at 94|{g>95 for both money and account. American securities closed as follows: U. S. Five-Twenties, *721, an advance of fully £ per cent on yesterday’s price ; Erie shares, 45£, and Illinois Central shares 971; U. S. Bonds at Frankfort closed at 77f. Cotton closed at 11|d. for 1,538 Cienfuegos— American gold.... 30—St. Europe, HavreGold bars American gold... 11,200 Foreign silver.... 250,000 5,040 American gold.... Prussian silver... 960,000 503,645 1,025,000 18,200 1,000 Mexican dollars... $4,211,723 82,947,998 Total for the week Previously reported $37,159,712 Total since Jan. 1,1868 | Same time In Same timeir 1867 1866 1865 1st* 1,000 Liverpool— 1,010,000 American silver.. Cienfaegos, Doubloons 30—St City of London, ana— 6 American coin.... Para— 3,000 Russia, Liver¬ pool— American gold. .. Columbia, Hav¬ Wd. Th. £0 60 0 £0 60 0 10 10 0 10 10 0 1,200 28—Bark Spanish doubloons Sat. £ Foreign silver...-. unchantress, 28—Sch. 1,000 Silver coin. 28—St. Hansa, Bremen- 112 lbs 72,805,766 Week. $1,397,1)94 France “ Linseed cake (obrg).p ton 44 $2,692,824 York for the week quotations of the articles during the week, but remain as Calcutta Linseed has been added, and the quotation is Fri. $2,437,899 80,953,842 -1868. This week. Since Jan. 1. To The 44 .... London Produce and Oil Markets.—The under this head have not been changed quoted before. reported at 60s. 1866. exports from this port to different countries (exclusive specie) for the past week, and since January 1, compared with the corresponding time of last year, is shown in the following table; of Petroleum showed a firmer Mon 8. d. 1868. $1,634,555 96,519,853 The value of tions. Sat. 8. d. .... Since Jan 1 feeling at the close, and spirits gained Id., closing at 9d. Spirits Tur¬ pentine has declined Is., closing at 28s. 6d., and Tallow shows an ad¬ vance of 3d., closing at 44s. 9d. Rosins remain quiet at former quota¬ Fri. 8. d. 1867. $1,725,342 69,375,039 1865. Previously reported Thu 110 84 47 68 EXPORTS PROM NEW YORK POR THE WEEK. For the week..* Liverpool Provisions Market,—Beef has been steady all the week at 110s. Pork, Bacon and Lard were steady during the week, but show a weakening feeling at the close ; closing at 88s. 6d., 478. and 67s. 6d. respectively. Cheese lost Is. on the week, closing at fils. Fri, our 3 43 $1,185,203 5,635,567 report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry goods for one week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive ofspecie) from Thu. 8. d. d. e. 32 11 13 44 Oats (Am. & Can.)per451bs Peas.. (Canadian) pr 504 lbs Tues. 1863. ‘$1,232,567 4,718,148 ~. In Sat. 1867. 1866. $2,278,930 5,490,393 Previously reported.... Since Jan. 1 Is. Fri. 2687—St. Total for the week.. Is. 6d.; corn 1865. $897,385 1,954,880 Dry goods $17,255,7S8 11859 $27,884,544 11,786,217 1858 33,256,779 j 13,436,982 j 1857 - 14,626,715 28,707,158- 1856 10,968,082 Middling Uplands, and ll£d. for middling 18,662,686 1863 19,264,193 1855 Orleans. The sales of the day foot up 10,000 bales. The trade report 1862. 12,844,928 18,108,737 1854 from Manchester 3,005,196 1863 6,737,724 quotes the market for yams and fabrics as steady- I860."!.*.'.‘14,300,832 1852 10,188,824 The usual cotton circulars, published this morning by authority of the The imports of specie at this port during the week have been as Cotton Brokers’ Association, contain the following statistics: “ The follows: total sales of the week have been Goia 265 64,000 bales, including 6,500 foj May 25—St. Arizona, Aspiniqri export, and 4,000 speculation. The total stock of cotton in port, including cargoes yet unladen, is estimated at 648,000 bales, of which 371,000 were imported from the United States.” The total stock of cotton afloat bound to this port is estimated at 507.000 bales, of which 94,000 on from the United States. Breadstuff’s, Com has declined 6d., and is now qnoted at 35s. 6d. Wheat is a shade firmer at 12s. for California. Oats have declined are In to 3s. 6d. In 44 26—St. 27—St. has declined to 82s. 6d., and in Produce, Tallow All other articles in the reported lists are quoted at the prices previously given. Morro . COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. and Exports Week.—The imports this week are about the same in dry goods, but show a considerable increase in gene' ral merchandise, the total beiDg$6,820,770, against $3,469,371 last week and $6,778,261 the previous week. The exports are $6,692,824 this for the week, against $3,657,521 last week, and $4,035,781 the previous week. The exports of cotton the past week were 2,818 bales, against 5,809 bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week Star, Aspinwall— 24,€99 22,157 „ Gold Castle, 250 HavanaTotal for week $48,268 3,214,105 Previously reported Total since January 1,1863 .$3,262,878 * The following 18 the official statement of the business of the office of the Assistant Treasurer of the United States, in New York, for the month of May, 1&68: receipts and Imports Aspinwall— Gold 30—St. Rising Nevada, Vera CruzGold 44 28—St. Henry Chaancey, $897 Assistant Treasurer’s Statement for May. Provisions, Pork to 448. 6d. . •- - wall— Gold Balance, April 30,1863 Receipts during the month: disbursements. $102,495,873 74 , $10,009,176 16 On account of customs do Gold notes Internal revenue do Three per cent. Certificates do do do do do do do do 8,173,750 00 251,125 99 21,670,000 00 Post-office Department Transfers 91,071 14,886,900 4,057 56,822,142 17,964,200 Patent fees Miscellaneous Disbursing accounts Assay office Interest accounts Total •— * 67 00 90 88 62 136,894 15 17,736,387 00-147,695,206 87 $250,190,679 61 receipts and expenditures for the fiscal year, end¬ ing Juue SO, 1869, Mr. Schenck stated that the appropriation bills for As to the national Payments during the month: Treasury drafts $121,891,234 35 189,021 88 Post-office drafts 16,220,214 80 68,315 17 Disbursing accounts Assay-Office Interest accounts, viz.: In coin In currency 17,053,376 54 , 90,431 00—155,512,593 24 Balance'... Or. Treasurer U. S Cr. disbursing accounts Cr. Assay office Cr. interest accounts $94,677,986 37 ... $79,168,635 07 Balance to Balance to Balance to Balance to 12,345,282 75 2,614,554 88 549,513 67 — $10,009,176 16 9,634,697 06 Receipts for Customs in the month of May, 1868Receipts for Customs iu the month of May, 1867. $474,479 10 United States Assay Office for May.—Below we give the statement of business at the United States Assay Office at New York for the month ending May 80, 1868 : Increase in * May, 1868 the next year, which have passed or are now pending, are Deficiency bill, Senate, No. 32 passed Deficiency bill, Senate, contingent, No. 462, passed Deficiency bill, Reconstrcction, No. 1,045 passed Relief bill, Dist.net ot Columbia, March 10, passed Military Academy, passed Consular and Diplomatic, passed Post Office, passed Pensions, pending ;... .. Army, pending Navy, pending Legislative, Executive and Judiciary, pending Sundry civil expenditures, pending Indian—pending River and barb r—pending 355,000 00— $374,000 00 ' DEPOSITS OF United States bullion (contained in gold) United States bullion (old coins) Lake Superior Nevada Colarado Total deposits, payable in bars Total deposits, payable-iu coins Gold bars stamped Transmitted to U. 3. Mint, Philadelphia, Revenue Expenditures and receipts of the national revenue follows:, $371,000 00 65,000 00— for coinage $65,000 00 439,000 00 450,281 16 120,783 24 United States.—We extract Monday last. He stated the for the fiscal year ending June 80,186*7 on $314,109,136 61 aggregate there should also be added outstanding ap¬ propriation « heretofore made that will not be extended till next year, $490,526,917 49 expenditures for the fiscal year ending Juue 80, 1867, were as year, A FOR CIVIL recapitulation of the estimates of receipts given by Mr. Schenck following as the total anticipated revenue for the next fiscal year: 20,93<i,551 71 4,642,531 77 31,0:34,011 04 83,841,555 80 Navy War—exclusive of bounties $191,564,677 59 expenditures...., 143,781,591 91 11,382,850 83 $846,729,129 33 expenditures expenditures for the fiscal year $143,797,818 16 By the acts of July 13, 1866, and of March 2, 1867, internal revenue taxes were repealed or abated to an extent sufficient to occasion an annual loss of revenue from internal sources, taking the returns of the ending June 30, 1867, was preceding _ precedent, of at least $90,000,000, of which amount year as a sixty or seventy millions were made applicable for the reduction of taxes during the fiscal years ending June 30, 1866, an ! 1867 ; the balance taking effect during the succeeding or present fiscal year. some NATIONAL RECEIPTS ENDING * For the three AND EXPENDITURES FOR THE CURRENT FISCAL YEAR, 80, 1868, ACTUAL AND ESTIMATED. JUNK quarters, from July 1, 1867, to March 1,1868, actual: EXPENDITURES. RECEIPTS. $121,208,874 866,337 140,686,426 1,413,960 85,019,360 Customs Lands Internal revenue Direct tax M scellaneous Fourth quarter, Supposing over $138,554,175 32 public debt. 109,418,383 87 on Total $280,678,066 83 300,000 50.000,000 300,000 12,000,000 00 00 00 00 00 $106,600,000 00 Total Civil, legislative, ...... The Manual of the . public debt. on 6,500,000 00 40,000,000 00 $98,500,000 00 Total Interest $405,794,459 29 on ... public debt. 149;418,383 87 Total... RECAPITULATION. Receipts and expenditures for the Estimated balance of receipts over year ending June 80,1868 ...» revenue, $379,178,066 83 $28,239,371. Esq., is the title of an excellent volume just publiehel, which contains account of all the railroad lines of the United States, giving the length of road, names of officers and directors, financial condition, traffic and all valuable information relating to the Companies. The volume an handsomely bound, and is in every respect a valuable book for all parties interested in railroad statistics. The cost of the volume is $5. The publishers are H. V. & H. W. Poor, No. 67 Broadway. The Central Salt and Coal Company of West Virginia, with a capital stock of $200,000 and the privilege of increasing to $300,000, publishes a prospectus on * p ge 708. Parties interested in the purchase or manufacture of economic, safe and durable Steam Boilers will be interested in the advertisement of is E. Tiffany & Co., in another column. Day and H. J. Morse, formerly of Harlfort, Ot., have estab¬ Banking and Commission Brokerage House at .No. 16 Wall street, under the firm of Day <fc Morse. Messrs. Jameson, Smith & Cotting, Bankers, at No. 16 Wall street, offer for sale the fiist mortgage 80-year bonds of the North Missouri Railroad Company. An advertisement of the bonds, with full particu¬ lars of their value and price, will appear in the next number of the A. F. lished a Chronicle. <£I)c Hunkers* ©alette. DIVIDENDS, The following Dividends have been declared during the past NAME OF COMPANY. PKR WHEN CENT. pay’ble Coal. EXPENDITURES. legislative, &c. $165,208,374 37 Civil, intercourse $51,554,175 32 ‘ 1,166,337 31 190,686,426 4 4 Interior, pensions, &c.. 28,773,337 29 123,858,496 82 1,713,960 46 War 25,633,673 53 47,019,360 71 Navy ... surplus Railroads of the United States,” by H. Y. Poor, 35,000,000 00 Navy . Total “ Ac. War RECEIPTS. Total receipts Total expenditures Balance to account at $13,000,000 00 Interior, pensions, &c.. 4,000,000 00 and estimated: ... reduced to $360,560,000. expenditures for the fiscal year, ending June 80 Total revenue and tobacco 186Y, the above expenditures for next fiscal year, before submitted, Estimate of intercourse Interest $406,560,000 Total increase of receipts from distilled spirits and estimate would be EXPENDITURES. ^ ‘$44,000,000 Customs Lauds Internal revenue Direct tax Miscellaneous Customs Lands Internal revenue Direct tax.Miscellaneous <&c. 44 Interior, pensions, &c.. 21,733,337 29 88,858,496 82 46 War 19,113.673 53 71 Navy Interest no 30,000,000 Miscel’aneous receipts for the fiscal year ending June 80, the from March 1, 1868, to June 30, 1868, estimated: T? 17’PUIYPT 1868, actual 37 Civil, legislative, intercourse 31 $299,194,459 29 Total $165,000,000 210,560,000 1,000,000 .. Internal revenue Public lands $51,110,027 27 Legislative, judiciary, executive and diplomatic The balance of receipts over $352,320,629 03 $862,820,629. SERVICE. Pensions L dians Total ordinary Interest Bounties. during the next fiscal of for which revenue must be provided 24,669,184 00 shows the follows: Total viz Making a total probable expenditure EXPENDITURES. The $327,651,445 03 Total 176,410,810 88 Total—coin and currency 7,200,000 00 To this Customs RECEIPTS. • $40,500,000 00 Alaska 15,000 00 1,000 00— Currency $279,951,445 03 Bounties—estimated 1,500 00 Ways and Means, made 129,678,078 53 public debt. EXTRAORDINARY EXPENDITURES. to have been as Coin $150,000,000 00 Total following tables from the speech of Mr. Schenck, Chairman of the Committee of $10,000,000 00 9,969,000 00 Total 16,000 00 4,500 (K) 1,000 00 of the Court claims— ./ Interest on the $26,000 00 Foreign bullion 16,880,672 00 6,020,376 32 2,500,000 00 6,000,000 00 New York City appropriations for collecting the revenue, &c SILVER, INCLUDING PURCHASES. Foreign coins. 82,000 <* 87,710 50 15,000 00 284,004 50 1,206,434 00 1,545,000 00 311,350,000 00 32,081,013 CO 17,1.00,000 00 $130,304,366 56 Total Miscellaneous, including appropriations for Post Office, private bills and judgments ol Permanent $13,000 00 6,000 00 as follows: $12,839,196 21 1,912,960 00 * estimated Foreign coin Foreign bullion United States bullion ' Deficiency bill—pending DEPOSITS OF GOLD. the [June 6,1868. THE CHRONICLE. 716 July 1 Central.. WHERE PAYABLE week: BOOKS CLOSED. Company’sOffice Friday, June 5,1368, P. M. week commenced with an easier The last statement showed ah increase of The Money Market.—The condition of the banks. $3,400,000 in legal tenders and of $2,239,000 in deposits, which con¬ sidering that the specie line was down $2,615,000 amounts to a gain of $4,854,000 in currency deposits; while the loans bad $405,794,469 29 increased only $796,000. The statement indicates an increase of 319,178,066 83 currency balances ; and the fact of the fight increase in loans and fiscal year ending June 80, 1868: ..... expenditures for the fiscal $96,610,892 46 discounts as compared with the large gain in deposits implies that 717 THE CHRONICLE. 6,1868.] June derbilt shares. The Northwestern discounted paper maturing largely exceeds that being discounted. . This movement leaves a much larger amount of funds for use on call loans, and the rate has consequently declined to 3@4 per cent to brokers. To-day, there has been rather more demand for money and some transactions, on miscellaneous collaterals are reported at 5 per cent. The banks have employed some of their balances in the the amount of Company’s stocks have been quite firm, under a very large late increase in the earnings, the common selling up to 71£ and the preferred to 82£. Rock Island has to-day advanced from 97£ to 102,in sympathy with reports that the parties ia the contest for the direction of the company have effected a com¬ Border State stocks have been promise. of the advance in higher, as a natural result Governments, and of the prospect of the States purchase of governments; this, however, has no effect in diminish¬ being early admitted to national representation. The market closes ing the extreme ease of the market, as the funds again return into steady. The following were the closing quotations at the regular board the banks. Reports from all parts of the country iudicate a marked ease in money at the minor centres, and the interior banks June5. Apr. 24. May 1. May 8. May. 15 May 22. May 29. 34# 36 31 32 36 are consequently allowing their balances to accumulate here. This Cumberland Coal 26# 27 26# 29# 30# 29# 32# • .... an extreme ease at New York, and encourages specu¬ lative transactions in securities; upon any new demand for produces Quicksilver Mariposa pref.... New xork Central purchase of grain these balances are liable to be drawn upon, causing a change from the present easy state of affairs. A iter the middle of the month, the banks will begin to regulate their affairs with a view to the quarterly statement to be made up on the first Monday of July. Discounts are quiet; prime commercial paper is in demand at moving the wool crop, or for the 5@6 per cent, but is scarce. The following are the quotations for loans of various Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 2 months Per cent. 3 @ 5 classes : Percent. .- @ 7 Good endorsed bills, 3 & 4 months do single names 5 @ 6 Lower .. 11# 122# 71# 135 Reading 89# 89# 91# Mich, southern.. Michigan Central Clev. and Pitteh. x.d.80# 104 Clev. and Toledo. 60 Northwestern.... Rock Island Fort Wayne Illinois Central Ohio & Miss The Gold .. 9i 86# 117" .... 106# 66# 84# 105# 67# 77 76 95# 95 84# 76# 94# 74# preferred 90# 90# 114 83 106 65 102# 104# 107# 143# 30# 147 146 107# .... 29# 3t# 31# , 69 136 137 136# 90# . 128# 128# 68# 129# . . • 51 51# 59 9 129 • 68# 138 93 , • • - 72# 143# 04# 69# 141# 94 89# 88 85# 107# 66# 77# 95# 109# 147# 30# •• 132# 87# .... • 133# 119# 119# 83# 109# 86# 108# 68# 68# 81# 79# 97# 115# 148# 31# Market.—Gold has been rather more 102 111 150 .... active, the specie exports at higher figures than was expected having stimulated speculation. The price, however, ha3 fluctuated continuance of the 5#® 7 6 <& 8 grades 11 68# Erie Hudson River.... 50# 51# 51 48# Canton Co • • <&.. speculation in government I but little, the range being from 139f@l40£. At the close of the securities has retained the activity noted in our last report. The week Five-Twenties have advanced at London from 72-fc to upward movement in prices had attracted a large specu’ative while the price of Sixty-Twos here is lower; and this fact? interest; brokers who were indisposed to manage stock operations with the prospect of the large coin interest payments to in the present condition of railroad securities have entered freely July 1, and the export of specie to-morrow into the movement; and private individuals have also been active below expectations, causes the market to close heavy and operators. During the earlier part of the week prices advanced price being 139|. This afternoon the Senate passed f @2 per ceut upon our last quotations; at this point an assault j iog contracts in gold coin ; but the news came too was made upon the market, supposed to be in the interest of on the premium to be appreciated. The closing rate stock cliques who found their interests threatened by the diversion ! i9 1@2 per cent “ for borrowing./’ of speculation in the 'new direction, and the market yielde x The fluctuations in the gold market, and the business at p°r cent in one day. This check appears to have brought out Board during the week closing with Friday, are shown sellers both local and country, and the market has since been ir.egu- lowing table : -Quotations. » Total Balances Open- Low- High- Clos¬ Jar and comparatively weak. It would seem that the speculative clearings. Gold. Currency. est. ing. ing. est, eat. excitement has now reached its climax, and although there is no Saturday, May 30.... 139# 139# 139# 139# 45,539,000 $2,081,954 $3,899,154 June 1.... 139# 139# 139# 139# 26,825,000 1,323,840 1,845,944 special uneasiness among holders arising from fears of a material Monday, Tuesday, “ 2.... 139# 139# 140# 140# 25,976,000 1,668,683 2,304,154 63,251,000 3,369,027 4,849,433 3 140 139# 140# 140# decline, yet there is less expectation of higher prices ; and, for the Wedn’day, “ 37,855,000 2,083,434 2,927,815 Thursday, “ 4 149 140 140# 140 28,281,000 1,809,160 2,534,626 139# momeut, the predominant disposition is to realise. The demand Friday, “ 5.... 140 139# 140 for Sixfy-Se.ens and new Sixty-Fives has been especially active, 139# 139# 140# 139# 217,727,000 12,335,598 17,861,126 Current week... 139# 139# 140# 139# 164,9j2,000 8,199,346 11,682,971 aud the rise on those issues is most marked. At the close of May, Previous week. 139#. Jan. 1 ’68, to date.... 133# 133# 144 there was a great pressure, at the Sub-Treasury, for the conversion The movement ot coin aud bullion at this port for the week of Seven-Thirties into Sixty-Sevens; as after that date the bonds ending on Saturday, May 30. was as shown in the following formula s receipts from California . • -- • $618,040 were to be issued without the July coupon. The amount of Seven- Treasure Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports 48,268 1,651,000 Thirties outstanding at the close of May is estimated at about Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury in New Yoikv $80,000,000, for which holders will have the option of receiving a I Rcported new supply thrown on market $2,317,308 Five-Twenty bond dated either 1867 at 1868. As the issue of the ^ customs'‘11 .1!.:: 1!' 0,623,223 1868 bonds must necessarily be limited, and that of 1867 is so 4,206,415 Withdrawals in excess of reported new supply. large as to make it a leading bond, it is presumable that the Reported new supply in excess of withdrawals $20,476,947 Specie in hanks on Saturday, May 23 ho ders of Seven-Thirties will generally prefer the latter issue. Specie in banks on Saturday, May 30 17,861,088 $2,615,859 The following are the closing prices of leading securities, com Decrease of specie in banks pared with preceding weeks : Actual excess of reported supply * . V-v • • • May 1. May 8. May 15. May 22 May 29. June 5. Supply received from unreporfed sources $1,590,556 115 115# 116# U. 8.6’S, 1881 coup 113# 113# 114 112# 110# 111# The transactions for the week at the Custom House a ad SubU. S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons.x.c.108# J08# 109 Umited States Securities.—The 72|, together be made being likely to fall weak, the the billlegalizlate for its effect for gold loans the Gold in the fol- * , ... ... ^l&ooo- | .— U. S. 5-20’s, 1864 “ ..x.c.106# U. 8.5-20’s, 1865 ..x.c.107 “ U. 8. 5 20’s, 1865, N. iss... 109 U. 8.5-20’s, 1867,c ... U. 8 10-40’s, “ .. U. 8. 7-30’s 2d Series U. 8 7-30’s 3rd scries..... Railro4d and 109# 103# 107# 107# 106# 107# 109# 109# 107 107# 107# 107# 107# 107# 103# Miscellaneous 109# 109# 103# 108# 108# 113# 109# 109# 110# 104# 112 195# 309# 1<>9# 108# 108# 106 109# Stocks.—The active specula¬ government securities has diverted attention securities, and the consequence has been a partial general stock list. The ease in money, however, has tion in 111# 110# 110# 113# 113# from railroad duluess ou the facilitated the carrying of stocks, and prices have not yielded materially. The cliques have but a limited period that can be regarded as favorable to their realizing, as money usually becomes more active about the time of the July quarterly bank statement, and they consequently show some anxiety to sell out. It is generally concluded that the combination holding New York Central, Cleveland and Toledo and Erie have about cleared out of the two former stocks, and the opin¬ partly general that they are also selling on Erie. This movement a certain effect upon other stocks, which owe their late steadi¬ ness at high prices very much to the strength exhibited by the Yan- ion is has had Treasury have been as follows : Custom House. Receipts. May 25 “ “ “ “ 26 27 28 29 . .. ] ... 30‘.’.’.1 Total Balance in Sub-Treasury Sub-Treasury Payments. Receipts. $9,726,490 88 1,280,889 78 7,878,577 33 4,081,529 25 887,844 29 26,365,390 87 $2,240,980 94 $50,170,721 90 $488,604 29 436,867 71 495,358 12 356,483 28 250,830 71 212,836 83 morning of May 25 $8,03\495 47 1^5,669 45 7,272,727 83 3,803,531 9# 1.996,233 07 10,469,296 11 $42,162,953 42 102,685,754 85 $144,848,708 27 Deduct payments during the week.... .^ Balance on Saturday evening Increase during the week Total amount of Gold 50,170,721 90 ?2 8,UU7,7o» 48 $*793,000. Included $115,000 in gold, and $2,125,981 Certificates issued, receipts of customs were Certificates. Foreign Exchange.—There has been an average business in bills. The now limited supply of cotton bills necessitates drawers to demand rates admitting of shipments of specie, and perhaps all of the current business is dope against specie bills. The demand from in the in Gold 718 THE CHRONICLE. importers is limited, a large proportion of current transactions being between bankers in the settlement of credits. The following are the of closing quotations for the several classes foreign bills,compared with those of the three last weeks Mav 15. London Comm’l.. do do — bkrs’ Inq do 8hrt. 110 May 22. @ June 6. May 29. 109% @ 110 @ © 110% do short Antwerp Swiss..... Hamburg Amsterdam Frankfort Bremen Berlin New York City Banks.- The following statement shows the condition of the Associated Banks of New York Sixih Seventh . Eighth Bank of Republic on May 30, 1868 Total, June 1 Banks. New York...' Manhattan Merchants’ Circula- tion. $3,000,000 $8,093,080 $3,240,192 $798,747 2,050,000 5,050,038 347,803 11.458 3.000,000 7,520,452 720,075 888,154 Mechanics’ 2,000,000 5,421,009 285,357 572,115 Union.... 1,500,000 3,992,232 228,771 470,801 America 3,000,000 8,315,874 2,390,353 1,785 Phoenix 4.926.918 1,800,.>00 284,198 490,152 City 1,000,000 4,810,291 571,048 Tradesmen’s 1,000,000 2,995,113 44,437 751,697 Fulton 000,000 2,072,508 160,796 Chemical 300,000 0,509,402 504,557 Merchants’ Exchange.... 1,235,000 3,439,141 31,321 449,493 National.: 1,500,000 2,075,029 210,878 485,138 Butchers’ 800,000 2,4?2,G00 41,700 264,000 Mechanics and Traders’. 1,921,481 000,000 27,275 195,720 Greenwich 200.000 1,122,248 3,449 Leather Manuf. National 000,000 2,985,859 548,269 267,757 Seventh Ward, National. 500,000 1,389,039 81,331 177,881 State of New York 4,820,728 2,000,000 200,713 330,000 American Exchange 5,000,000 10,329,325 094,342 989,917 Commerce...* 10,000,000 23,474,502 1,332,543 5,908,655 Broadway 1,000,000 5,143,983 97,281 900,000 Ocean 127.233 1,000,000 3,168,082 797,045 Mercantile 1,000,000 3,398,082 48,790 481,988 Pacitic 422,700 1,92-2,159 39,507 133,925 Republic 2,000,000 4,249,293 872,773 858,750 Chatham 2,012,470 450,000 77,422 130,300 People’s 412,500 1,372,068 43,621 6,331 North American 1,000,000 2,434,843 134,255 333,000 llanover 1,000,000 2,514,415 85,757 291,334 Irving 500,000 1,524,000 14,000 180,415 Metropolitan 4,000,000 11.785.400 641,696 2,205,458 Citizens 400,000 1.074,326 25,809 132,719 Nassau 1,000,000 38.539 2,223,901 4,071 Market 1,000,000 2,810,810 178,789 593,498 St. Nicholas 2,561,080 1,000.000 65,862 753,838 Shoe and Leather 4,720,300 1,500,000 31,064 943,856 Corn Exchange 1,000,000 4,292,324 34,318 6,879 Continental 4,054,874 2,000,(XX) 100,289 570,526 Commonwealth 750.000 2,732,3311 44,796 240,127 Oriental 1,3 ,'6,240 300,000 8,725 6,488 Marine 400,000 1,838,069 126,370 360 000 Atlantic 1,343,714 300,000 45,094 99,510 Importers and Traders’.# 1,500,000 8.428.918 122,573 498,589 Park 2,000.000 15,111,054 1,109,729 1,028,500 Mechanics’ Banking Ass. 988,987 5,180 500,000 308,736 Grocers’ 300,000 810,044 9,169 72,583 North River 1,284,027 400,000 20,886 11,329 East River 919,860 1,190 350,000 283,500 Manufacturers & Mer 500.000 786 1,280,284 29,592 Fourtli National 5,000,000 16.913.400 276,071 2,958,898 Central National 3,000,000 13,590,278 73,114 1,711,550 Second National 1,283,341 300,000 270,000 Ninth National 5,808,888 20,608 1,000,000 915,561 First National 4,094,521 500,000 21,535 438,723 Third National 3,003,103 1,000,000 320,235 793,973 New York N. Exchange. 7.063 300,000 9-10,.181 268,116 Tenth National 1,000,000 2,772,9(4) 44,700 907,200 New York Gold Exch’ge Bull’s Head National Currency Bowery National Stuyvesant ....... 200,000 700,(H)0 250,000 917,591 1,5,7,152 218,474 874,073 6,785 3,576 3,120 705,015 Eighth National 1,193,565 Total 9,000 82,520,200 268,117,190 Loans......,.../..... Specie Circulation.— following Inc. $796,311 Dec. 2,015,359 „ Dec. are 7 269,156,030 14. 206,816,034 21. 261.416,900 28. 257,378,247 . April 4 254,287,891 April 11. 252,936,725 April 19. 254,817*936 . April May May May May May 25 252,314,617 2. 257,028,672 . 9 265,755,883 16 267,724,783 23. 207,381,279 30 268,117,490 . . . $7,258,352 $2,036,696 2,055,694 932,726 4,508,816 5,633,953 6,910,128 3,887,159 2,251,438 2,839,081 1,660,705 3,764,990 1,981,765 1,109,476 2,184,7748 1,511,995 1,303,000 6,515,757 1,351,236 1,835,929 1,894,166 1,081,601 3,0U1,S00 3,238,886 2.645.988 2,371,199 1,107.067 1,560,373 1,101,271 7,040,901 17,805,277 1,116,907 762,963 1,009,841 622,269 1,019,083 14,541,436 12,938.775 1,056.803 5,381,824 4,363,121 3.122.989 636,876 1,740,6J0 1,074,013 1,657,555 328.218 500,674 397,714 380.218 1,102,279 250,000 previous week the totals for 1,579,572 1,938,060 1,072,689 773,317 1,607,106 925,613 968,333 639,662 782,118 1,652,858 854,761 290,314 504,900 474,641 111,057 1,059,701 338,170 2,057,001 1,516,499 7,076,011 1,486,564 736,697 810,212 477,337 1,451,096 488,425 108,879 549,666 408,922 449,000 1,780,667 375,958 Deposits Legal Tenders 261,463 214,001 242,194 232,191 5,404,102 3,755,35 355,935 1,647,588 1,249,470 1,007,308 258,106 631,700 50,000 i25*864 179,687 46,230 346,266 follows: Inc. $2,239,412 3,400,751 Inc. Circula- Legal Deposits. 207,737,080 201,188,470 191,191,520 180,525,128 Tenders. Date. 57,017,044 54,738,800 52,261.086 52,123.078 ISO,950,840 51,709,700 179,851,880 51,982,609 181,832,523 50,833,660 180,307,489 53,800,757 191,206,135 57,803,599 199,270,508 57,541,837 201,313,305 57,013,095 202,597,550 62,233,002 201,740,964 05,033,904 Aor. 20 Apr. 27 May 4 May 11 National " Bank N. Liberties Southwark Loans. Specie. L. Tend. Deposits. Circulat’n $5,080,000 $05,000 $1,446,000 $3,025,000 $1,000,000 4,531,127 50,001 5,098,905 30,703 2,236,000 5,000 2,303,000 8,750 2,239,000 1,428,100 10*632 2,140,071 15,151 1,354,501 1,4:35,351 1,419 1,027,500 1,019,030 3,221,000 37,000 1,209,522 3,365 1,089,438 1,358,590 1,115,927 500,000 250,090 Kensington ' 250,000 Penn Township... 500,000 Western 400,000 Manufacturers’ 570,150 B’k of Commerce.. 260,000 Girard 1,000,000 Tradesmen's 200,000 Consolidation 300,000 City 400,000 Commonwealth 237,000 Corn Exchange,... 500,000 1,736,000 .. ... . 1,075,830 2,402,832 1,0:35,195 3,893,835 708,000 1,264,000 898,000 1,236,000 763,000 1,833,000 510,610 1,345,000 386,000 1,125,317 3:0,847 983,493 520,629 1,375,144 374,000 1,094,840 832,901 343,707 959,000 2,225,000 780,000 710,585 024,000 479,707 401,000 219,812 220,230 177,074 0,730 448,414 219,875 589,00) 178,108 270,000 359,247 339,732 852,248 277,506 551,524 289,309 786,755 1,001,088 1,016,917 213,180 639,000 1,393,000- 450, m 175,000 Deposits Increase Circulation, Increase Increase j Balances Specie. Legal Tend. 232.180 397,778 17,157,954 16,062,299 15,664,946 14,348,391 13.208,625 14,194,385 14,493,287 14,951,106 14,990,&32 15,166,017 383,525 280/302 15,381,545 15,823,099 returned to the as . 345,62^ 336,868 . . 674,160 Decrease. 54,339 Philadelphia Circula. Deposits. 34,826,861 10,633,713 10,031,399 10,643,613 10,643.606 10,642,670 10,640,923 10,640,479 10,640,312 10,681,044 10,629,055 10,632,605 10,661,276 34,523,550 33,836,996 32,428,390 31.278,119 32,255.671 33,950,952 34,767,290 35,109,937 36,017,596 36,030,063 36,000,297 Clearing House, Monday, June . Capital. Boylston Columbian...... Continental Eliot.- Maverick Merchants’ Mount Vernon.. New England... North Old Boston Loans. 2,193,357 1,000,000 900,000 Shawmut....... 750,000 SOoe & Leather. 1,000,000 State 2,000,000 Suffolk 1,500,000 Traders’ 600,000 Tremont 2,000,000 2.241.473 1.863.473 1,740,386 2,114,955 Washington .... First Second Third 750,000 1.000,000 (Granite) 1,000,000 300,000 3,434,992 3,145,540 1,103.292 3,299,252 1.837,941 3,757,026 3,458,812 Specie. $122,850 400,393 280,833 230,800 204,554 521,300 161,310 177,900 373,694 102,207 489,000 124,485 149.550 101,272 279,754 108,250 1,278,415 155,400 380 969 1*220 140,350 564,428 215,937 218,752 55,490 1,674 505,435 1,728,635 827,671 356.344 467,580 437,703 353,766 573.378 379,916 245,560 247,077 3,617,552 359,359 602,459 888,616 593,797 359.400 990,822 750,445 165,000 40^,552 179.250 626,405 143,000 482.550 1,182,884 €61473 1.468,604 1,661,723 572,558 1,624,792 452,520 696,752 591,046 587,500 870.019 2.163 B’k of Redemp’n B’k of theKepuh. 1,000,000 1,000,000 "4,403,023 10,402 1,361 85,607 1,000.000 Eagle Exchange 2,435,400 1,722,304 1,000,000 2,193 1.000,000 Hide & Leather. 1,000,000 Revere 1,000.000 Union 1,000.000 Webster 1,500,000 Everett 200,000 Security 200,000 1,859,361 3,201,795 2,164,826 2,884,415 2,295,007 2,633,849 498,482 430,660 17050 Total May 18..42,300,000 97,458,997 584,826 106,686 1,083.542 387,789 603,173 262,8:33 47,000 5.7^248 295,600 311,150 287,275 356,211 4,739 25,877 16,158 13,838 1,057 1,500 795 673 363.300 569,904 391,926 4,485,059 1,748,175 177.400 799,558 556.764 20,718 40^723 1,829,700 1,063,418 39,020 15,608 138,234 13,979 356,640 242,515 449,746 920,869 1,183,136 B’kofCommerce 2,000,000 B’k of N. Amer. 1,000,000 City Deposits, Circula. $553,865 $448,186 799,786 628,911 793,565 1,414,776 594,819 783,194 444,944 671,7:34 898.852 792,615 441,309 663,941 795,030 797,675 9'J9,073 597,854 L. T. Notes. $750,000 $1,503,399 $42,548 1,000,000 2,081,961 2,173 1,000,000 2,722,396 4,110 750,0(0 1,801,702 500,000 *ioi 1,406,063 1,000,000 2,264,625 4,290 500,000 1,330,072 1,000,000 2,386,908 19, hi 8 1,000,000 2,166,488 1,856 400,000 1,197,060 1,947 1.000,000 2,494,450 1,306 750,000 1,480,512 8,754 750,000 1,536,990 3,466 800,000 1,469,928 8,230 800,000 1,512,754 1,080 400,009 832,542 99*144 3,000,000 6,807,536 200,000 578,917 2,001 1,000,000 797,125 795.500 174.618 971,841 597,563 799,000 796.300 457,995 343.619 796.500 795.430 395.430 1,347,268 809,434 594,844 837,221 942,522 829,768 2,420,554 293,700 270,772 1,001,686 546,253 1,0:38,902 52,543 57,522 262,680 222,834 492,495 99,930 130,000 766,553 14,1S8,806 40,311,569♦25,204,939 This total does not include $159,560 State circulation. The deviations from last weeks returns Capital Inc. $417,277 Dec. 252,256 following are March 2. “ April May “ June 9.... 16 23 30 6 13 20 27 4 11 18 25 1 are as ..100,243,692 ..101,559,361 101,499,611 100,109,595 99,123,268 97,020,925 97,850,230 98,906,805 98,002,343 97,624,197 Specie. 633.832 867,174 918,485 798,606 685,084 731,540 873,487 805,486 577,063 815,469 97,332,2^3 1,133,668 follows : Legal tender notes Deposits Inc Circulation Inc. comparative totals for Los.ns. “ Capital. Philadelphia^ $1,500,000 North America.... 1,000,000 Farmers’ & Mech.. 2,000,000 Commercial 810,000 Mechanics’ 800,000 Banks, Banks. Atlantic Atlas Blackstone Boston Specie The 1,1868 595,000 1,1868. Loans 557,843,908 507,783,138 493,371,451 023,713,923 002,784,154 588,717,892 507,028.507 480,180,908 488,7:J5,142 602,118,248 417.500 254,000 63,062,449 239,371 16,184,865 36,574,457 10,626,937 Boston Banks.—Below we give a statement of the Boston 019,219,598 following is the average condition Philadelphia Banks for the week preceding Monday, June : Banks. 53,333,740 53,771,794 53,494,583 53,463,225 dune 1 091,277,041 049.482,341 I 251,051 229,518 192,858 215,835 250,240 222,229 204,099 314,306 52,812,023 May 18.. May 25 Philadelphia Banks.—The of the Loans. 53,081,605 53,367,611 53,077,337 53,450,878 52,209,234 52,256,°49 52 989,780 Apr. 4 Apr. 11 Aggregate Clearines. 593,000 795,000 The annexed statement shows the condition of the Banks for a series of weeks. series of weeks past: Specie. tion. 20,714,233 34,153,957 19,744,701 34,218,381 17,944,308 34,212,571 17,323,307 3% 390,808 17,097,299 34,227,108 36.343,150 34,194,272 10,770,042 34,218,581 14,943.547 34,227,624 10,100 873 34,114,843 21,280,910 34,205,409 20.939,142 34,193,249 20,476,947 34,183,038 17,861,088 34,145,000 227,000 798,000 262,055 133,920 135,000. 219,000 241.500 344.000 40,931 ! Clearings 361,766 . ♦ a I $99,224 . Massachusetts.. 2,090.223 2,483,000 1,743,000 945,000 Increase Specie Decrease. Legal Tenders... .Increase 591.253 4,162,504 540,886 780,000 810,000 Capital 1,835,929 474,528 1,166,600 419,000 961,000 574,085 211,101 488,735 307,542 614,000 1,336,000 1,391,000 1,723,000 188,926 725,187 707,300 227,000 300,000 123,000 191,000 508,000 604,000 186,000 642,000 1,634,000 16,017,150 53,562,449 239,371 16,184,865 36,574,457 10,626,937 are as follows: Loans Faneuil Hall.... Freeman’s Globe Hamilton Howard Market1 are as 37,432 . Loans. Legal Deposits. Tenders. 17,861,08834,145,606 204,746,964 65,633,964 The deviations from the returns of Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. 225,000 4.50,917 477,900 Eleventh Ward The 7,565 90,000 Net 4,151,170 5,594,328 3,908,457 2,594,040 8,292,692 3,881,107 3,282,528 1,098,597 1,730,081 5,708,715 2,690,505 964,710 1,767,900 1,576,193 880,316 ... 250,000 275,000 750,000 1,000,000 300,000 350 The deviations from last weeks returns Mar. 7 Mar. 14 Mar. 21 Mar. 28 : AVERAGE AMOUNT OF Loans and Canital. Discounts. Specie. . Exchange City tor the week ending at the commencement of business 30\00i) 1,559,000 1,000,000 3,919,000 300,000 1,035 201 225,000 660,000 150,000 393,000 Central 110%® 110% 110%® 110% 109%© 110 109%® 110% 110%® 110% 110%® 110% 110%® 110% 110%© 110% 5.12%®.... 5.13% ©5.12% 5.13%@6.12% 5 13%@5.12% 5.10 © 5.11%@5.10 5.11%@5.10 6.11%@5.10 5.15 @515% 5.15 @5.13% 5.13%@ 5.13%® 5.15 @5.12% 5J5 @5.13% 5.13%@ 6.13%® 30 %@ 30% 36%@ 30% 30% © 30% 80%@ 30% 41%@ 41% 41%@ 41% 41%® 41% 41% ® 41% 41 © 41% 41 41 %@ 41% 4I%@ 41% %@ 41% 79%@ 80 71%® 72 79%© 80 79%@ 80 72 79 %@ 80 71% @ 71%© 72 71%@ 72 Paris, long Union First.. Third Fourth [June 6,1868. Legal Tenders. 16,304,846 15,556,696 14,582,342 13,712.560 13,736,032 13,004,924 12,522,035 11,905 603 12,298,545 12,656,190 11.962,368 96,938,524 1,186,881 12,199,422 97,041,720 1,018,809 12,848,141 97,458,997 766,553 14,188,806 a Tnc. . 1,340,665 1,913,428 5,721 series of weeks past: -Circulation. » State. Deposits. National. 40,954,936 39,770,418 39,276,514 37,022,546 36,184,640 36,008,157 36,422,929 3-),417,890 36,259,946 37,635,406 37,358,776 37,844,742 38,898,141 40,311,569 24,876,089 24,987,700 25,062,418 215,214 210,162 197,720 25,094,253 24,983,417 197 289 25,175,194 168,023 167,019 166,962 24,213,014 24,231,058 25,231,978 25,203,234 25,225,173 25,234,465 25,210,660 25,204,939 197,073 164,331 160,385 145,248 160,241 160,151 159,560 BANKING AND FINANCIAL. New York, June 4, 3 868. Central Pacific Railroad First Mortgage Bonds—Special notice. —The receipts from sales of these securities for some time time past, having largely exceeded the current requirements of the Company, they have this day advanced the price to 103 and accrued interest, in cur¬ Fisk & Hatch, Bankers and dealers in Government Securities, and Financial Agents of the C. P. R. R. Co., No, 5 Nassau st, N. Y. rency. June 719 THE CHRONICLE. 6,1868.] SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OP THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JUNE 5, WITH THE AMOUNT OP BONDS AND NUMBER OP SHARES SOLD AT BOTH BOARDS IN THE SAME WEEK. Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. STOCKS AND Tues. eu Week’s Sales Fri. nurs ■ 140 American Gold Coin (Gold Boom).. 139% 189% 140% 140% National: United States 6s, 1868 coupon. Railroad Stocks : Boston, Hartford and Erie 139% • \ do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do do * 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 1868. .registered. 116% 1881 coupon. *111* 1881. .registered. *12% 112% 5-20s (’62) coupon. 5-20s do regisVd 108% 109% 5-20s(’64)coupon. 109% 110% 110% 109% 5.20s do regist'd 119% 5.20s (’65) coupon 109% 110% 109 5.20s do regist'd U3 113% 5.20s (’65 n.) cmp. 111% — — 6s, .“>.208 do regist'd 6s, 5.20s (186?) coup. 112 ’.09% 109% 110% 110% 110% —— 5,0 t0 858,500 113% 113% 113% 1,964,500 20,OtX) 191.500 — 156,450 — State: <P _ 95 (new) •• Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 7s do do do do do 95 — 15,000 - - — — Registered, 1860 6s,cou., ’79,aft.’60-62-65-70 — — — — 5s — m — Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 — - — — — - do 68,1872 do 5s,1868-76 do — 1 1 93% 92% 93% — — 310,000 — — — — — (reg.) — Ut 168% *67% *69% *69% x69% — 68 69 68% 68% 68% 115,500 — — 1,C00 — 90 - 3,000 - ' Kings Country, 6s Jersey City 6s, Water Loan New York 7s 96 — — — 5,000 — — — do "r,n ■ — — — — No. : 119% mo .... 25 —— ion inn -|nn _ 42 m 104 in' 16 108% 110 py, inn :o< 132 10 10 150 50 '* **inr .. " - mu - - - - - 1(8 120 — 100 “'* 135 18 — mn inn .. 100 Tradesmen *mn _ Ashburton.. 105% Central mo Cumberland 100 Pennsylvania 35% 103% 35 35 — 34% 1,100 212 30 28,432 25,930 5,505 — SO *30 86 95 80 79% 42,000 8,500 95% 93% . 31,000 Manhattan •Metro uoli tan 95% — do 3d mort, conv. do 4th mortgage.. do Cons, mort bds Cleveland and Toledo, Sink’g Fund do do new 7sT 95% 2,000 — 13,000 2,000 SO 92 — — 2,000 5,000 98 Delaw’e, Lackawan. & West,1st m. 98 do do do 2dm.. Detroit M. and Toledo bonds Detroit & Milwaukee, let mort 50 — — *20 100 61% 'lelegrapn.—Western Union... ,100 38% Cary 100 34 Pacific Wail../... int Union Navigation ioo *ru8t.-—x&rmer&' L<oan & Trust 25 95 0 1 flt. mortcrflo-A 103 2d morfpfflcrp 1S7Q 102 do 3d mortgage, 1883.... 1,000 2,COO 102% 96% — do 5th mortgage. 1888 Galena and Chicago, 1st mort^a^e Great Fastern, 1st mortgage ’S8.. Great Western, 1st mortgage — — 20% 51% 20% — — — 95% 38% 96% 24% 30(1 51 51 38% 38 ^ 38% 96% 25% 97% 97% 24% *8,200 5,568 150 18,820 2,440 100 56% 500 63 28% 56 100 25% 56% 57 53 28 56 55% 25% 24% 52% 57% 53% 28 28 55% 24 ^ 57% 215 3,970 1,040 25% 26 100 29 lit** 3,549 100 800 100 29% 100 29 & Bro. Aj*b 113% 112 1,500 28% 26% 3,950 1,570 4,OCO .. 79% 79 79 79 ■ 2 . _ — convertible, 1867... . — 115 4,000 110 2.000 — — — Vo 1,00C 3,000 do 2d mort.,7s... do Goshen Line,’6t Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mort.. ,, r0 , 95 do 2d mort.. Essex, 1st mortgage... 95 6,000 — _ 100 K0 89% 89% do 2d mortgage New York Central 6s, 1883 do do 6s, 1887 do do 7s, 1876 New York & New Haven, bends 6f Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgag* _ 16,000 4,000 do Cons’lidated & Sink Fum. do 3d mortgage, 1868 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mort, (S. F.), ’85 do 3d mortgage, 1875..: 95 — — — 19,000 5,000 1,000 — — ■ v ' do do consol, bonds Pacific R.R 7s guar’dbyS. of Mie Peninsular RR., 1st mortgage OW 98% - 12,000 - SK) Pittsb’g, Ft. Wayne & Chic., lstm. 106 do do 100 .160 100 Sioux City, 1st mort.. do TCrif*. _do mo Improvement.—Bost. Wat. Pow — do do do Moms and 50 50 Gas. '^Citizens Farg0 *Co 10,400 — — d° do 50 Delaware and Hudson... 100 164 ^/uw^^Manposa Gold Mariposa preferred i.Qnieksilver Mwcetiarwm—Bankers 35 — — Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72. dp do 8s, new, 1882.... Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund. pn American Merchants’ Union United States 38,063 Income Illinois Central Bonds Lackawanna & Wesrern, 1st mort Marietta and Cincinnati, 2d mort. ' * Miscellaneous Stocks : Goal.—American mu Union Trust....; J&xpress.—Adams 1,145 2,532 10O — do do consolid’ted Chicago and Rock Island, 1st in&rt Chicago, R. I. and Pac, 7 percent.^ Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mort.. T„. — ■1J Steamsfnp.—Atlantic Mail 19,415 100 do 10 p. equipment do 1st mort 20 47% inn Cun ton 50% Joseph, conv. bds Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1S69-72 .50 108 Seventh Ward... 8hoe and Leather fetate ol New York.. 51 51% 51% Hannibal and St. i(K 101 Republic. 200 250 2d mort.... do do do 30 — _ ’ 'pyi Metropolitan Nassau Ninth North River.. 2,100 1,288 400 68% Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund, do do 1st mortgage... — v:.:;kx. Merchants’Exchange.. 47,875 .. m _ Leather Manufacturers Marine do Dubuque — Importers and Traders nr do 15,582 12,800 1,500 48 — 69 preflOO 163 200 _ 97% 6s, Public Park Loan.... M rchants 01% 21,210 " Railroad Bonds: Atlantic & Great Western, 1st mor Central of New Jersey, 1st mort... 231,000 77,500 * do Registered... Municipal : Brooklyn 6s, Water Loan . do Chicago, Burl’ton & Quincy, 8 p. c. Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mort 132,000 Chicago & Northwest., Sink. Fund 870,000 do do interest *71% *71% *73% k73% 74% 73 71 70 72!* 72% 72% 72% 69 *58% x59% x59% X)8% s58 58!* 58 58 68% —— do do do do Rensselaer & Saratoga 70,000 68% — — Virginia6s, (old) do 6s, (new) Commerce .Continental Corn Exchange Fourth Irv ng Louis, Alton & Terre Hau’e.100 48% St. do 6s 1876 Bank Stocks American hxchange Butchers and Drovers.. Central Commonwealth 1 preflOO Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 10o — do 50 do do bs (old) do 6s, (new) Ohio 6s,1870-75 do 6s, 1881-86 Tennessee 6s *68 do 6s (old) do 6s, (new) _ 90% 100 Sixth Avenue ** 93 North Carolina, 6s • 120 89% 89% 67 66% 66% 100 78% 78% 77% 78 do do pref... 109 77% ’78% Morris & Essex 100 New Jersey 100 New York Central 100 133% 134% 134% 133% 133% 132% 151 New Vo'k and New Haven 100 90 Norwich and Worcester.. 100 30 30% 30% 30% 30% 30% Ohio and Mississippi 10> t do do pref 100 336 329% 100 330% Panama 111% 111 106 116% 114% 113 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic. 100 95 96 94% 94 95% Reading — Missouri os, do 6s, (Ilan. & St. Jos. RR.) do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s; 1870 Tenth -* — 120 — — do — — 27,740 — — — — Louisiana 6s Michigan 6s, 1883 do 7s, War Loan, 1878 do 151% - _ — do 143 150% Milwaukee and St. Paul - 36,270 525 205 200 700 14:% 143% 149 100 Michigan Central Michigan So. and N. Indiana .. .100 &8% 39% Milwaukee & P. du Ch. 1st preflOO do do 2d preflOO Indiana bs, War Loan do 69% 86 120 — — 69% 69% 400 831 790 420 26 100 200 80% — do — 69% 69% — — do 1877 do do 1879 War Loan..* 70 76 Harlem 10) Hudson River 100 142 Illinois Central 100 Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st prellOO do do 2d pref 100 10 . $ Connecticut War Loan Delaware, Lackawana and West — do do do scrip 50 100 Dubuque & Sioux Citypref Erie 100 do preferred 100 Hannibal and St. Joseph, 100 do do pref.. 50 — 108% — 2,620,500 California 7s do — 60 li 9% 109% 110% Cleveland and Toledo 6s, 5.20s do regie1 d 6s, Oregon War 1881 6s, do. (ky'rly) 5s, 1871 coupon. 6s, 1871. .registered. 5s, 1874 coupon. 5s, 1874. .registered. 196 106 106 5s, 10-40s ...coupon. 105% 106% 105% 5s, 10-40s. registered. 7-30sT.Notes.Vdse. 109% 109% 109% 109% 109% 110 109% 109% 109% do do 3d series —— — — 113% 113% 113% 113% 113% — — — 1,516,000 — — No. — 86,090 1,402,500 45,000 860,000 245,000 — — ion/ —— — 110% 110% 110% V\ eek’s Sala ri. Jersey 129 131% Chicago and Alton. 100 do do preferred... .100 128% 130 151 Chicago, Burlington and QuincylOO 150 35 Chicago and Grear Eastern 100 6 Chicago and Northwestern 100 68% 67% ♦% 70% 81% do do pref. 100 79% 81% 81% 82% 82% 102 Chicago, Rock Island and Pac.. 100 97% 97% 97% 96% 98% Cleveland, Columbus and Cin. ..100 106 Cleveland,Painesv.& Ashtabula 100 88 86% 87% 88 88% Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 108 109 $445,500 — — — _ 120% 120% 120 r 15% — — — * Central of New 116% 116% 116% '12% 116% 11*% 112% 112% — 100 100 119% Wed. Thurs# L'ues. Mon. Satur SECURITIES. STOCKS AND TOGETHER do do do do 2d mort. 3d mort. Quincy & Toledo, 1st mortgage... Louis, Alton & Terre H," 1st m do do do 2d, prei do do do 2d, inc. Toledo & Wabash, 1st mort., ext.. do do 2d mortgage, do do equipment.. Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw* l*t E.D Western Union Tel., 7s Bonds... St. . . 10,000 . .. - S6 81 91 — } — ! I 82% ‘5% im 13,f00 — — 80% — S2% 83 — 82% 83 4,000 2,000 7,000 10,000 14,000 6,C0j 720 THE CHRONICLE. Commercial ®imes. was heard a improving volume cantile circles—the be looked for. not seem to of business more be imparts a year ago o of May. 1. cm CM CM rioO'MWfW-S'MOl-OO GMCMCMCO r-t i-4 l-i r-tCM©t- OOOt CM At «DC® 7,silt) 20,141) 114.117 3,675 83,595 7,707 103,157 21.^25 20,703 43,410 08,377 23,457 21,191 30,785 51,808 40,030 27,000 3-, 810 27.092 21,904 2,310 89 7,151 6,743 150,500 164,000 32,737 23,319 68,312 54,010 21,703 Petroleum, reliued, barrels Cotton, bales Rosin, barrels 17,2»7 . . , , 54,547 Cmde turpentine, barrels. Spirits turpentine, barrels Tar, barrels Rice, E. I., bags 1.124 8,277 0,242 - 7,300 Rice, Carolina, tierces Gunny Cloth, bales Gunny Bags, bales Linseed, bags Saltpetre, bags Jute, bales 1,277 38,500 20,400 45,200 14,-00 1,400 28,000 32,250 Manila Hemp, bales Tin, slabs Spelter, tons Lead. tons. 500 4,400 4,000 Iron, tons ' 220 50 3 350 5,490 1,305 38,100 o r~. C“* 'rP © GO cm oocto— , * -p •s •jo «-c & r-~ ~ * * * • —4) rr) Tf •r-i.-OCOr^.x'T-tO* *0*0 © # / —J \ coooo 1—1 C~r% .*©> 1©* ^ *cccg ’ Gp-’^ ^ * 4 CM a O < •Ot- : rJjCW © i : if * * -© to *o f 'SI © JO f CO • • • : •© • CO O tp ' . O* GO las CO ft xO ft c°o ■ * w • ‘O o :g8: . I :?££! ^ • 'thoi1 H Of 22 © • S'* g ~ r*~\ M • o f« .Ct-o •??o: . ‘CM tH • TV .0 •tP ft© O CO ri t- Tt ft CM l- . iO TO © • ■ Oi 03 _ xi au 140,000 ‘-*3 •O* 0*0 CO CO . I o^£co © ft l— • • os’ GO * -- to . ai —i TO . 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S ® •S •h ^ (t J* i- GO Tf ■ © TO t-© ©C ©TO ©TO JO TO© — — TH.fr ft CO CO TO •©TOTP©t-©© • tO © © ‘cm rf © P3 • • rn io rH » CM CM CO ft" cd r-' l~ P ~ Co" to' io" t-OICII-^'-'Wl- in S3 S3 -S S3 P3 0^5 03 s *° -01° •■a A <D © O It d Ph Ck ,J ? >. • ® *HtJ • ©" —t CO CMtJt od 2’3 •°^p S ’o. 05 03 05 ^ * • • : :-® : • • fl 5 » In an X c3 c3 o P ^ oS . I** at • tH a. 2^.T3 O' r ft ft ft to ft 3 . ".ECiJa baqjbflqy°.de©ogg§ I'to ft • j g-g : d pa ©©"co'offT © © «M TO • : • . © • : : r !jt'« i a J <v m 4UV-.Oi^ ©X3 t_ O ej© © !h • 03 rt ■ a; is '.H ° tH pi r- .£"<*8 2*0 « jh <u *h pa ©CT o<*3 o .. - <r oJ © g s ® Ah^CC*^ 2 ‘ PC ^ - 05 p. t> o o pi.. QO OQ & • TO JO Hp’tf ■rP ft complete their • • r)t ao • t— . •( 2; 4C ICMT* r-t ft GO ‘CM X CO ;Csc*o*rru- • .in-tt . CO ®ton<50og rn ft ft 00 • -cot- .OO-'CCTOOTO'^'TjOtt/acorn at TO ft -OS ; C2.*c os ^OS a .(CSt-CCIflCOOOWO 2? • : _ t- ^ —3 co —5 refined,in bond. to ^ CM Butter having met doing better, but Cheese ow n accounts ♦ e* 10 co«« ss OQ TO 22 *22 co TO os y <v o • ~ <0 3,000 2,500 . 300 o O © —2 o JQ •co to © © co ®o 3cs 0(H) cargoes, and the Liverpool steamers have taken corn as low as three pence. A speculation in grain and an interruption of supplies by a break in canal, are the main causes of the decline. Next week promises better for the shipowners. Several Petroleum charters have been made, but the rates have been almost uniformly kept private, ^ as 3 29,500 15,962 12,000 30,500 doing slightly better. Metals have been dull on the spot, and prices weak. Ingot Copper is lower and unsettled. Oils have, show n an upwTard tendency for crude Whale and Linseed ; but Lard Oi1 is heavy. Freights have been dull, and rates to European ports have materially declined. The Glasgow and London steamers had * L- 7,340 quiet, but firm, and Calcutta Lin¬ to 00 ot . 10 • co • too CM©"JO 125.000 37,4 17 iioo* 5 ® CO CO pa ? TO co_ •go : ; \ •'.r *' St £ • 1 wT t- 955 * • • .^5*0 *©TP I— N 8,070 Petroleum has been in but moderate request, but the re¬ ceipts have been small; and, with firmer gold and easier ocean freights, there has been a slight improvement in prices. The close to-day was at 13ic. for crude, and 30@30Jc. for' CM P a 31,817 Spirits Turpentine has materially declined to 45c., under large receipts coming upon liberal stocks in yard. Rosins have been pretty steady, and closed more active in view of lower freights to European ports. Tar has been quite active for shipment. xo't-T in ^5 II ill i Jll ©I§ :l t—t 48.087 70 tending upward—prime drv Montevideo selling at 2lc., gold. The movement in Goat Skins was very large early in the week, and Leather has been doing better. © © TO CO CM n » 1,431 57,124 At to day’s market Pork closed at $27 SOj- for newT Mess and $24 for prime; Lard 17Jc. for prime steam, and 17.Jc. for the.same, buyer June. Hides have been CO Tf • . <1 quote. with a Southern demand has been has declined l@2c. per lb. . "5p_ Of-* ^1 O GO * 300 'NiO S aj 4,100 9,000 TO c— iO D r-t 142 20,400 D -*-> 34,400 exception, are lowrer ; in fact the market for las hog product quite broken down. There has been an absence of foreign or Southern demand, and speculators hav'e been disposed to reduce their burdens. 'The receipts of swine at this and other markets have been large, and have been sold at a marked decline in prices. At yesterday’s market, prime steam Lard declined fc. per lb., with very large sales at 17@17|-c. Pork shows a material decline for the week, and quotations for the better grades of Beef are reduced. Bacon, hams, and shoulders are lowrer, and .so dull as to be difficult to 0} 8,008 «... barrels. ol <—■ June 1. 30,458 .... purchase grain for their ft CO general, and an better tone to mer¬ 28,4(8 83,453 Mo’asses. barrels seed t-H TO ft l— given: i so Juno 1. mdes, No East India goods remain os to t- so tp hp r-t ft - Melado, hhds Molasses, hogsheads O jo notable because it had ceased to Beef, tierces and barrels Pork, barrels Tobacco, foreign, bales Tobacco, domestic, hogsheads.. Coffee, Rio, bags Coffee, other, bags Coffee, Java, mats \ Sugar, hogsheads Sugar, boxes Sugar, bags to ** to following is a statement of the stocks of leading articles foreign and domestic merchandise at dates given : Petroleum, crude, 1, 1868. The export of each article to the several ports can be obtained by deducting the amount *n the last the Chronicle from that here number of The of from New January returns from trade; but, on the whole, the adverse circumstances do Leading1 Articles ' unsatisfactory complaint that of for the past week Friday Night, June 5. same Export* York* following table, compiled from Custom House exports of leading articles of commerce from the returns, shows the por of New York since lhe COMMERCIAL EPITOME. There is the [June 6,1868. '§ :SSr.i iS'S'o'0! ■ June 721 THE CHRONICLE. 6,1868.] The exports for the week ending to-night, reach only 2,868 The.following table,compiled from Custom House returns, shows bales, of which 1,724 bales were to Liverpool, and 144 the foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this port for the week ending May 29, since Jan. 1,1868, and for the correspond¬ bales to the Continent, while the total stocks as made up this ing period in 186V: evening are now reduced to 144,834 bales. In a subsequent [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] For Since For Since part of this report will be found a statement of these exports, the Jan.1, the Jan. 1, Imports of Leading Articles* week. 1868. week, 1807. Molasses China, Glass & Earthenw’e. China Glass Glassware Glass plate Buttons 16.281 4,487 167 991 428 36,174 330 92 446 932 2,133 . Goal, tons Cocoa, bags... ..... Coffee, bags 63,252 .. 3,089 203 310 Earthenware Cotton, bales. 3.298 2,368 490,170 25,694 7,034 380,923 152 167 6 388 ‘ Bark. Peruv 802 5,573 Blea 220 160 69 42 10,878 1,008 11,397 18 115 10 320 8 351 1,912 2,563 4,359 3,050 20,389 Brimst, tns. Cochineal... Cr Tartar Gambler.... ... Gums, crude Gum, Arabic Indiiro...... Madder. . ... Oils, ess.... Oil, Olive... Opium Soda, bi-carb Soda, sal.... Soda, ash... Flax Furs Gunny cloth . Hair Hemp, bales.. Hides, &c. Bristles 470 '“8 76 14,130 dia rubber.. 665 2,097 7,349 2,775 62,438 388 31 17 Jewelry Watches.... Liaseed |4,000 1,720 2,692 4,979 139,173 193,626 789 10 301,007 559,752 16,476 516 1,849 Hides,nndrsd. 196,865 2,795,095 22,492 393,506 66,766 Rice Spices, &c. 735 66,991 Cassia 3,465 682,828 105,997 262,289 143,801 127,447 636,942 13,897 4,236 Ginger 16,154 20,929 Pepper 22,973 2,331 1,307 Saltpetre 988 478 296 418 225,309 192,121 Woods. Fustic....... 515 Logwood Mahogany 4,474,441 99,537 64,106 30,110 5,425 95,289 156,441 2,431 16,966 59,452 128,770 83,936 37,508 60,661 same time in 186V. have been as This Since Same week. Jan.l. time ’67 844 2,635 Rosin Ashes, pkgs.. 2,181 Tar Breadstufts— ind for the 51,815 387,395 Wheat, bush 282,8332.909,513 Corn 728,4326,987,736 Oats 153,3481,696,383 Rye j 5,9S1 180,514 Malt. y 1,500 280,621 382,085 Barley Flour bbls.. 58.974 Grass seed Flaxseed 4,252 22,019 17,585 121,243 , 2,308 Bans,. Peas... 5,798 C.meal, bbls. C.meal, bags. 67,005 2,403 208,903 Buckwheat & 111 Copper, bbls.. Copper, i dates ‘iii Dr’dfruit.pkg pkgs. Hemp, bales.. Hides, No.... Hops, bales.. Leather, sides Lead, pigs ... ”26 Crude 459 13,042 3,263 133 8,796 261,466 215 2,619 33,259 359,986 2,704 Molasses,hhds and bb!n Naval Stores 7,613 7,449 167,541 16,563 107 5,028 2,177 14,372 175 5,5bl 11 247 236,468 22,185 Peanuts, bags Provis;ons— Baiter, pkgs. Cheese Cut meats... Kggs Pork 382 675 739 350 79 150 10,278 trp.bbl 10,901 Dressed No..' Rice, 488 2,159 3,639 19,347 ■ 148 85,704 56,590 7,809 6,813 46,658 7,865 678 bbls 2,782 Tobacco,hhds 115,717 Whisky, bbls. 1,109 Wool, bales - Spirits tnrp. 2,701 1,113 535 Tallow, pkgs. 165,071 Tobacco, pkgs 21,843 8,669 166,873 9,900 150,872 328 59,457 5,712 118,547 1,479 94,945 Beef, pkgs... Lard, pkgs.. Lard, ke^s fi,0&5 h ice, pkgs. . 360,908 Starch 4,101 Stearin e 4,433 spelter, slabs. 20,214 Sugar, hhds.& 8,79 ^ Since 3,203 2,438 35 818 hogs, 26,816 19,270 11,972 18,551 14,420 rough, 10,385 2,875 28,243 158,716 75,524 4,397 2,801 1,703 4,802 45,658 31,903 70,428 20,254 79,873 previous week, and 17,377 bales three weeks since,) making the aggregate receipts since September 1, 1867, Up to this date, including the returns by telegraph to¬ night, 2,143,555 bales, against 1,782,781 bales for the same period in 1866 7, being an excess this season over last season of 360,774 bales. The details of these receipts for this week, (as per telegraph) and the corresponding week of 1867^ Received this week at— New Orleans bales. Mobile . Charleston HHpyaji put,.:.. : Tennessee, &c l-...• 1868. 1,036 1867. 2.‘K) 830* 865 900 8,358 i,:i7 1,753 3,139 2,430 367 1,530 r—Receipts.—, Received this week at- 1868. Florida* bales 758 North Carolina 66 Virginia Total receipts Decrease this year.... 332 5,384 600 2,813 10,929 . 914 819 72 .. .... 56 2,127 93 600 15,547 For the corresponding week of 1867, the shipments from ports amounted to 27,024 bales, showing a decrease for the week this year of 11,477 bales, and leaving the total all the increase in the the stocks at all the Stocks at Dates mentioned. EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 1 TO— rec’d PORTS. SINCE SEPT. 1. N.Orleans, May 29.. Mobile, May 29.... Charleston, May 29. bavanimb, May 29.. Texas, May 22 New York, June 5. * Florida, May29t... N. Carolina, June 5. Virginia. June 5.... Other port8,June 5* 578,161 352,183 236,966 483,090 101,508 106,861 31,2S9 37,098 Great Britain. France Other Total. l’or’gn. 319,879 139,227 106,481 565,687 208,156 10,432 14,679 233,267 86,596 2,936 13,226 238,406 9,904 9,195 1.625 15,195 38,790 25,970 55,002 284,617 257,505 55,610 • . • • • • • • 1867 1,393 261 896 15,877 10,41* 8HIP- m’ntsto .... . . . . .... 151,601 8,239 .... 59,408 17,256 .... 3,064 102,758 366,689 NORTH. PORTS. .... 14,998 • 37,098 * • • 8,239 20,320 STOCK. 84,121 21,095 43,322 12,91 J 129,791 10,463 219,346 6,243 30,829 6,992 .... Total this year.. 2,138,171 1,201,939 190,094 216,842 1,608,875 Same time last year 1,744 457 1,073,038 170,552 104,503 1,348,093 bales the Receipts.--, 93 56 2,076 12,671 85,169 By special telegrams received by us to-night from each of ports we are in possession of the returns show¬ ing the receipts, exports, &c., of cotton for the week ending this evening, June 5. From the figures thus obtained it appears that the total receipts for the last seven days have reached 5,384 bales (against 6,441 bales last week, 10,950 : . burg. Naples.Total. men. 51 914 819 72 Total 24,710 83,484 6,789 8,300 the Southern follows Norfolk Havre. 111,355 Friday, P. M., June 5, 1868. are as Savannah Gal vet? ton 122 962 COTTON. * pool. 2,013 8,853 , Ham- Receipt* and Export* of Cotton (bale*) since Sept* 19 and 128,S34 3,964 2,654 bush 21,427 Bre- 224,390 Same Jan.l. time ’67 1,384 .. 8,272 B.W.flour,pkg 4,582 310,802 Cotton, bales. Grease, week. 586,349 Pitch.. 616,843 Oil cake, pkgs 919,155 Oil, lard 668,707 Oil, petroleum 253,343 43,7:12 43,306 7,720 15,368 199,977 31,031 204,953 Jan. 1 follows : This Liver- From New York New Orleans 1,922 894,125 11,9:45 25,517 Jan* 1. receipts of domestic produce for the week and since Exported this week to , shipments of this season 260,782 bales, while ports of the United States are about 150,000 bales less than they were at this date of 1867. The total foreign exports from the United States since September 1, 1867, now 1,608,875 bales, against 1,348,093 bales last year, and the stocks at all the ports, as made up this evening from our telegraphic returns, are now reduced to 144,834 bales, against 301,281 bales at the same time in 1867. Below we give our usual table of the movement of cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, according to the latest mail returns* showing at a glance the total receipts, exports, stocks, (fee.: Receipt* of Domestic Produce for tlte Week and since The as at the various 1,661' 209,284 telegraphed to u8 by our own correspondents ports tonight. By mail we have received the full particulars of our weeks later receipts, shipments, stocks, (fee., than those given in our standing table last Friday. We shall continue to make this table correspond with our mail returns, as we cannot ensure perfect accuracy, or obtain suffi¬ cient detail by telegraph. The total exports from all the ports for the last mail week reach 15,547 bales, against 23,234 bales last week, and 37,772 bales the previous week. Below we give the particulars of the shipments for the last mail week: stocks, &c., 77,928 11,657 Wines &c 8,083 Champ, bkts 5,072 38,100 42,194 Wines 1,207 33,225 64,449 2,420 1,461 Wool, bales... 1,221 13,849 20,649 2,580 Articles reported by value $177,717 1,790 Cigars ...$15,530 $240,486 <*'c,/in 55142 83,002 118,576 13,740[Cdfks 339 Fancy goods 445,491 1,724,758 23,468 180,370 821,201 59,676 Fish 1,091 6,713 Fruits, &c. 15,204 Lemons 2,176 115,091 218,272 735 Oranges.... 6,216 453,385 679,750 1,209 Nuts 13,877 249,605 399,7&5 640,885 448,447 17,462 Raisins 3,837 ewelry, &c. 91,617 slabs,lbs318,014 2,7.95,628 1,847,697 247 17,475 33,992 3,548 820 vorv Tin Rags 1867. 1S68. Iron,RRb’rs 26,634 188,170 Lead, pigs.. 12,417 191,715 Spelter, lbs.298,223 1,841,•-98 Steel... 2,713 65,225 Tin, boxes.. 7,972 • 292,360 703 Tobacco 672 Waste 778 269 22 75 hhds, Sugar, 4,746 tcs & bbis.. 31,681 13,460 Sugar,bxs&bg 33,480 ? 8,413 8,301 Tea.... 1,311 37,059 20,381 30 174 823 Hides,dres’d 4,583 54 37 246 692 SI 86 Cutlery Hardware... 22,165 Drugs. &c. p’wd’rs Metals, &c. 10,661 ’ 143,362 66,432 170 • • • «- .... 127,000 702,867 151,306 667,934 301,281 *... The market this week has continued dull, though slightly move active than last week, with but little variation in prices. Confidence, however, in higher quotations has very percept¬ ibly diminished ; the unfavorable condition of the goods mar¬ ket both here and abroad, the continued liberal shipments of cotton at Bombay, and the favorable nature of our own crop reports being the chief causes. Our recent accounts from Liv¬ erpool and Manchester indicate very clearly the check which the late high prices have given to consumption in Europe, while the entire stagnation in the dry goods trade here has its natural result in a continued decreasing spinning demand* Thera has been, consequently, much more cotton on sale here this week than for many weeks past, holders being willing sellers at the quotations. Still our stocks are very small, and the receipts at the ports very limited, much less than last year, that there is real pressure to Sales of the week 8,441 bales, of which 4,173 bales were taken by spin¬ ners 3,324 bales on speculation, 594 bales for export, and 350 in transit. The following are the closing quotations: so no sell. foot up * The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments fron^Tennessee Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated. t These are the receipts at Apalachicola to March 14, and at the other ports of Florida to May 29. 4 Estimated* 722 THE CHRONICLE. Upland & Ordinary^ Good Ordinary Low Middling Middling Below each .# B> New Florida. Mobile. 27%®.... 27%©.... 28%@ 29%®.... 30%®.... 2S%@ 29%@ 30%®.... Orleers 28 29 30 Texas' , 2*% 29% 30% 31% @..., ® ® ©.... 31 give the price of middling cotton at this market day of the past week: By Telegraph.—The ceived by Florida. Saturday 31 31 Monday.. II Tuesday..., Wednesday Thursday.. Mobile. @... ®... -31%®.... 31%@.... 30% @31 31 31 Friday New Orleans. of cotton at June 5 and 30%@3l% @... ©..., 31%®.... 31%@.... 30%@.... 30%®.. 31%®.... 3t%@ ... ... ... 31 price ^@31% 31%®.... 31%®.... 31%®.... day. on t’iat Total -EXPORTS TO—» Receipts From— 1,03> 230 830 Ch-irleston Savannah Texas, 1,182 . None Nona None 29% 17,401 28% 13,098 29® % 9,233 29% @30 6.500 5,000 1,686 93,602 900 All other ports... Total In the exports Price foreign. Exports, Middling. Stock ' 865 est European Great Britain Continent. 1.182 None None None None None None None for week. New Orleans Mobile Texas. 31%@ 31%@ 31 @31% 31%®.... 31%®.... 31 ©.... following telegrams have been re¬ to-night showing the receipts, exports and stocks all the ports for the week ending this evening, us we Upland & [June 6,1868. 1,523 1,542 144 5,384 1,724 141 2,863 144,834 Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to these mar¬ and of Cotton this week from New York there kets, our correspondent in London, writing under tha date of May 23 decrease, the total shipments reaching only 2,813 states :* bales, against 5,304 bales last week. Below we give our Liverpool, May 23.—The demand for cotton has fallen off, and prices are lower. The sales of the week are confined to table showing the exports of Cotton from New 46,67o bales, of York, and which 4,070 bales are on speculation, 5,000 declared for export, leaving their direction for each of the last four weeks In American cotton there is a decline of ; also the total 37 600 bales to the trade. to |d.; in Brazilian of £d.; in Egyptian of ^d. to fd., and in East exports and direction since September 1, 1867; and in the d-d. Indian of ^d. to fd. per lb. American cotton, to arrive, basis of Mid¬ last column tho total for the same period of the previous year: dling, from New Orleans has sold at llfd.; Orleans, from New York, is ... a Exports of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept* 1,1867 Total Same time to prev. date. year. WEEK ENDING exported to Liverpool May May 12. 19. 8,486 Other British Ports 8,4S6 Havre Other French ports .... .... 3,192 .... Hamburg Other ports Europe.. Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar 488 327 173 815 .... Spain, etc .. . Receipts of cotton and since Sept. 1: 56 93 31,954 10,778 6,832 30 588 12,404 149 49,564 4S,141 600 2,172 8,266 860 952 600 .... 5,304 19,747 164,631 8,230 14,476 1,700 723 1,812 2,813 365,589 397,121 of New York for the week Since Total lor the week. From South Carolina North Carolina 42 232 27,413 99,290 155 114,404 Norfolk, Baltimore, &c.. Per Railroad 580,441 The following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬ tember 1, 1867: ,—Boston.—, Last Receipts from— 302 004 41.904 4,408 18,737 21,767 1,076 50 374 18 59 Virginia New York, &c* Tennessee, Kentucky, <fec... * Since week. Sep. 1. New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile Florida South Carolina North Carolina Total receipts bales. 14,277 370 443 20,740 55,921 27 31,552 2,503 211,726 11 Upland 10 • Philad’phia.—* .—Baltimore.-., Last week. Sep. 1. 180 4,902 , « • • Since • 387 • • • • • • • • .... 17,894 . . Texas The following figures at this date since 1865: 3,802 1,555 • 303 .... .... • •• 567 . . . . 13,811 • • • .... t28,659 .... 6 * 105 11,327 4,788 54,803 25,856 467 Stock in Shipping News.—The exports of cotton from the United States the past week, as per mail returns, have reached 15,547 bales. Below we give list of the vessels in which these shipments from all the ports, both North and South, have been made 12%-.. : Exported this week from— Total bales New York i o Liverpool, per steamers Penn¬ City of London, 493 sylvania, 877 Etna, 100....Russia, 250. ..Manhattan, 3 Malia, 194 per ship Universe, 90 ■ 2,013 To Havre, per steamer Europe, 51 51 -00 -19 .. -.. 13 13 -.. .. -.. .. -.. Fair. 18 32 Good. 33 20 14 13 11 11% 12%-.. 17 13 14 14 11% 11% show the price of middling qualities of cotton Mid. Pernamb . 1805. 1866. 1867. 3868 14d. 12%dll%d. 11% Egyptian.. 13% Broach.... Dhollerah. 13 8 8 12% 7% 7% 6 6 1867. Liverpool Bales Indian 10 8% 8% 1808. 590,570 35,100 90,000 773,840 44..'40 120,000 603,330 410,800 1,541,710 1,132,470 “ Total Since the commencement of the year been to the following extent: speculation and export have r-Actual export from Liverpool, Hull and r-'Taken on 1868, bales. American other outports to tliisdate—, 1867, 1866, spec, 183,870 bales. bales. 79,8t0 68,109 13,200 10,(170 21,688 640 1,710 34,730 30,980 Total.... 340,060 86,430 this to 1868. bales. 43,200 2,730 5,130 40,0;H) Egyptian. &c.. 36,34 > West India, &c 3,180 East Iudia, &c. 76,590 date-^ 1867. bales. Actual exp’tfrom K’gdom in 1867. bales. 79,906 24,534 5,165 5,155 146,153 227,900 87,740 12,590 22,660 664,150 4,765 5,040 148,327 135,820 246,270 262,662 1,015,040 The following statement shows the sales and imports of cotton for the week and year, and also the stocks on hand on the Thursday last, compared with last Trade, port. American....bales. 22,710 2,210 Brazilian 5,040 840 Egyptian 1,870 110 West Indian East Indian evening of year: SALES, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Sales this week. Total Same Ex- Speculathis period • tion. 3,510 450 00 480 40 7,400 1,800 50 Total 37,500 5,000 4,079 / Total, 2-1,430 0,330 2,040 520 . 9,250 To this American Brazilian Egyptian West Indian East Indian Total 21,144 16,772 date 1868. 897,339 277,K'8 117,975 1868. 1867. 508,620 27,740 19,670 270,1<>0 127,910 138.68J 90,570 40,540 36,790 517,300 457,240 4,5 0 9,480 4,390 4,020 1,480 1.380 10,160 12,080 46,570 1,799,2601,281,130 53,250 v Im- ports. Total. This 1867. 1867. day. 41,66o Stocks* Same date Dec. 31. * 759,0511,220,335 354,080 1867. 439,500 144,690 67,040 24,800 97,810 773,840 400 23,841 217,877 433,946 132,409 197,788 47,063 107,047 6,736 182,933 205,4531,264,160 124,950 60,190 5,850 45,500 48,609 1,499,1961,361,858 3,223,276 590,570 3,557 Average weekly sales. 1867. year. 832,580 Imports t This week. foregoing tables show that the 38 17 London American cotton afioat 90,920 receipts at Philadelphia. in 11% 11% 11% 11% .... 185 -32 -10 14 Same date 1867—. , fine.—, Mid. The stocks of cotton in Liverpool and London, including the sup¬ plies of American and Indian produce ascertained to be afloat to those ports are subjoined: 147 188 171 30 1865. I860. 1867. 1808. Mid. Sea Island 34d. 27d. 18d. 27d. Upland... 15% 12 11 10% Mobile.... 15% 12% 11% 10% Orleans... 15% 12% 11% 11 Sep. 1. .... . • • Since 203 . .... • Last week. 27 13 -10% 10 -10% 10%-11 10%-11 Mobile New Orleans Reshipments. t This total does not include the a 23 Stained Brazil 4,793 G’d & Ord. & Mid-^ g’d fair—> Sea island This Since week. Sept.l. Bales. Bales 042 95,824 Total since Sept. 1. [ 5,149 5,438 Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. 42,417 . .... 4,827 at the port This week. Florida 25,714 .... .... 8,659 . 25,970 481 160 .... 6 51 .... 641 25,708 203 Fair & Description. “ Grand Total From New Orleans Texas Savannah Mobile 25,767 .... .... .... All others . 51 820 116 52 5 277,258 315,197 7,359 6,057 2,013 284,617 321,454 4,663 .... .... Bremen and Hanover Total 2,013 4,663 . S20 Total Frencli Total to N. .. June 2. 26. 3,192 .... Total to Ot* Britain.. May ship named, 114d., and Mobile, nearly due, 11 fd. per lb. The prices cotton, compared with last years, are subjoined: current of American 1867. 103,420 66,030 138,990 13,640 225,380 447,46Q Of the present stock of cotton in Liverpool, 60 per cent is American* against 56f per cent last year. Of Indian cotton the proportion is 7 4-5 per cent, agaiust 12^ per cent. — — To Bremen, ner steamer Hauea, 56 To H >mb;irg, per steamer Hamraonia, 93 To Naples, per bark J. H. Jesser. 000 New Orleans —To Liverpool, per ships Mon oon, 1.838 3,031 Victoria, 2,512 Lammergier, 1,472 56 93 600 Wellington, To Havre, oer bark Istria, 2,076 Savannah.—To Liverpool, per bark Adelaide Norris, 911 Upland and 3 t ... . fcealsand Galveston—To Liverpool, per brig Nordly, 819 Norfolk, Va —To Liverpool, per steamer Worcester, 72 Total exports of cotton from the United States this week !.. London, May 23.—-The cotton traie is dull. On the spot the value fall of f d. to arrive, a decline of f d. to ^d. per lb. following are the particulars of imports, deliveries of produce shows a is indicated. The and stocks:' Imports, Jan. 1 to May 21., s 8,853 2,070 M4 819 72 ..bales. 15,547 Deliveries Stocks, May 21 Bales. . 1866. 1867. 1868. 145,804 48,355 121,146 67,531 59,529 44,534 55,851 124,798 35,100 Alexandria, May 9.—The market is weaker, but holders decline * to For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph dis" patches at the close of our London letter in a previous part Qi this paper.—[2W» UoatXBUciit. & Financial Chronicle, June 6, 1868.] sell except at THE CHRONICLE. full prices. There however, are, fillers and binders on private terms; 140 do. old Ohio, private terms; buyers at previous no 14 cases Connecticut, 17c; and previously, but acci¬ dentally omitted from our last, 500 cases State and Ohio fillers, 5@5fc.; also, 800 cases including common State at c., and Connecticut wrappers at 30@57c., the latter price for choice. Spanish Tobacco, as well as domestic manufactured, has been dull during the past week. We subjoin revised quo¬ tations, (per lb., in currency): rates, prices, consequently, are nominal. Fair quality is quoted at 13£d. to 13fd., white lS^d. to 14d.;good fair 14£d. to 15d. per lb., free on board. Since the commencement of the season the exports have been follows as From— Nov. 1,1867, to Same “ : G. May 8,1868 bales. period 1866-7 “ “ 1865-6 1864-5 “ Britain, Continen t. 150,423 146,800 124,145 180,882 Total 39.214 27,994 189,63? 174,791 25,818 34,205 215,083 723 149,967 Bombay, May 16.—The clearances of cotton during the week have bales. Prices are rather easier, and new Dhollerah produce ready is quoted at 8 15-16d. per ID., cost and freight. QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCY, PER LB. amounted to 64,000 Kentucky Leaf (hhds.) Light. 8 @ 9 Common Leaf.. 9><@10>£ Medium do. 11 @14 Friday, P. M„ June 5, 1863. The experts of crude tobacco have been considerably less week, the total from all the ports reaching only 1,318 hhds., 931 eases, 248 bales, 223 tierces, against 2,448 lihds.? 849 cases, 446 bales and 199 hhds. stems for the previous seven days. Of these exports 707 hhds., 872 cases, 248 bales, 70 tierces were from New York; 359 hhds., were from New Orleans; 59 hhds., 59 cases from Boston; 3 hhds. from Balti¬ more. The direction of the shipments of hhds. was as follows*. 055 hhds. to Great Britain, 212 hhds. to Bremen, 86 hhds. to Hamburg, and the balance to different ports. During the same period the exports of manufactured tobacco reached 117 pkgs. and 326,394 lbs.; of which 270,644 lbs. were shipped to Mel¬ 9>£@10)£ Good Leaf. Fine do 11 @13 Selections. 13)£@15 Seed Leaf (cases). Connecticut and Massachusetts fillers this bourne. all the The full particulars of the week’s shipments from as follows : ports were ,—Stems Export’d this week from Hhds. Case. Bales. Tcs. New York Baltimore Boston 707 3 59 ..i.. Philadelphia • New Orleans • • 872 • 59 • • 359 190 Norfolk • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • « • .... • • • • .... • • » . 70 248 .'. • • Man’f, , hhds. hales. Pkgs. .... .... .... . 315,378 ' . 117 *--• • 11,016 •••• .... .... Heavy. 15)$@16# 17 @20 21 @24 6 18 85 .. Average lots. .. .. Fine wrappers .. New York State fillers .. Wrappers... .. Pennsylvania and Ohio fillers ~ Average lots Wrappers @ 7c. @30 * @55 @ 5% @14 @35 5 8 12 5 9 .. Average lots .. @ 5% @16 @40 15 .. Foreign (bales). Yara. Havana. Common Good Fine . 80 95 105 @ 85 | 1 cut.... @100 I IIcut 82 @85 107^@112 92^@95 — (&110 | Average lot, Manufactured (bxs. in bond.) Black work—common and medium. “ 17#@22 23 @30 “ 25 @45 50 @85 good and fine Bright work—common and medium good and fine STATEMENT OF MONTHLY STOCKS OF SPANISH TOBACCO. Cuba, Havana, Stock May 1, 1868, bales Total Sales aud Yara, Sagua* 22 871 63 22 934 200 4;521 Received since reshipments to May 31.... Stock June Same time, Same time, 1, 1868, hales 1867 1866 7,715 8,457 *604 13,218 110 734 “i3 275 TOBACCO INSPECTION OF STOCKS IN THE NEW YORK MONTHLY STATEMENT 153 .... Jbs. Light. 14X@15 15X@17# 18 @20 Heavy. Lugs TOBACCO. .... WAREHOUSE. 981 849 289 Total this week Total last week 3,318 2,448 Total previous week.. 3,232 Below 223 248 446 265 117 199 .... .... Lin 2 401 326,394 118,189 420,803 give our usual table showing the total exports of Tobacco from all the ports of the United States, and their Ky. Stock May 1,186S, Received since we direction* since November 1, 1867: Bhds. 6,993 12,276 1,180 6,094 Germany Belgium Holland Italy 2,490 France Spain, Gibralt. &c Mediterranean Austria 3,425 8,292 228 621 ... Africa, &c China, India, &c. Australia, &c 606 .... Honolulu, &c.... 1,513 312 5,987 1,201 14,177 43,302 14,695 • 6 .... All others • , . . . 545 . . 146 6 .... . . ... .... . 187 364 23 1 2,543 6,588 37 .... 43 . .... i . . 6 . _ . M .... • • • . . • . .... . 1,004 ...» . .... . ... . . . 13,404 .... •• 60 314 175 40 903 59 Total Stock in The above 24,316 506 2,135 . • From Hhds. 1 Boston Philadelphia New Orleans 24,580 14,521 - 558 5 3,286 San Francisco Virginia 352 Portland I’otal since Novi. 43,302 j Cases. 10,927 47 3,325 70 269 30 24 283 ... 1,852 ... 94,189 188,777 525,088 6,370 125 11 10 .... 20 ... ... 183 9,700 24,316 506 .... 680 172 302 7 14,695 19,700 141,560 309 2,136 The market has been less active the past week to the extreme views insisted upon by holders. ... 200 5,394 4,305,582 owing, mainly, Kentucky Leaf has met with a fair demand, and prices have ruled firm, but at the close buyers are disposed to hold off, in the anticipation of a turn of some sort in their favor. The sales of the week amount to about 700 hhds., of which a liberal proportion for export. Seed Leaf likewise has been moderately active; buyers pro¬ testing against the extreme views of holders, and not suited with the indifferent assortments offered. Sales have been 100 State, 6f@12c.; 10 do. Florida, 23c. ; 156 do. Pennsyl¬ vania, lie.; 55 do# Connecticut, 10c.; 1Q0 do. Pennsylvania cases 21,208 6,894 953 5.941 27,149 20‘763 Rtr>r>k receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since The Nov. 1 have been follows:- as 1. 1867. #—T’l sin. Nov. 1—, RECEIPTS AT NEW YORK SINCE NOVEMBER .—This week—, hhds. pkgs. From 393 67 156 1,895 1,951 Virginia Baltimore Ohio, &c hhds. 6,071 . 206 1,186 pkers 43,623 3,486 661 770 703 15,754 10,335 17,705 11 066 150 731 411 117 1,757 267 2,168 1,2,717 3,285 23,282 56,761 25,999 60,046 Other Total ,—Previously—. hhds pkgs 5,678 40,728 1,119 3,280 614 New Orleans .... 1,606 4,134,422 2,383 80 26,646 5,394 4, 305,582 281 23,638 2,430 •• 4,752 hhds. 2,142 — 1 42 following are the exports of tobacco from New Yoik the past week The for • • t EXPORTS OF TOBACCO FROM YORK.* NEW , Tee. & ,—Stems—» Bxs & Lbs. Bales, cer’s. hhds. bales, pkgs. Manfd. 21,735 152 2,293 SO • following table indicates the ports from which the exports have been shipped: New York Baltimore 1,085 6,565 Brooklyn inspection warehouse, June 1, 1868 nl 0- Total since Novi. 17,073 1,014 20,114 .... 1868 Delivered since 107,656 3,091 4,400 55;5?0 44 36 71 Received since 524 33,018 61 8,890 264 2 ,154,655 .... .... Total 17,9i6 43 193 113 f 735 350 Delivered since 948 1 ,092,55S . 1,027 • 1,122 8 • . . 60 . 164 501 464 531 2 28 5 • • .... .... 73 1,204 • • • .... 57 4 205 007 .... • • 1,108 .... .... • . .... 1,039 . 441 4 36 565 218 21 167 .... B. N. Am. Prov.. South America... West Indies East Indies Mexico Cases. Cer’s & ,—Stems—, Pkgs. Manf’d Bales. tcs. .hhds. hales. & bxs. lbs. Ohio, & Md., Total, Ya.&N.C, . Stock June 1, 1868, hhds Brooklyn inspection—Stock May 1, Exports of Tobacco from the United States since Novem¬ ber 1, 1867. To Great Britain.. hhds Hhds. 231 65 72 212 86 6 London Glasgow Bremen ... Hamburg Antwerp Melbourne British North American Colonies , ,,, Cases. 25 • « • • 824 20 9 - • . .... • 49 707 • .... .... • . . , • • • • • • • • 7 10 6 V- 44 8 x •••• .... 248 The exports in this table to European ports are made up fests, verified and corrected by aD inspection of th6 cargo. other ports,‘has been 270,644 1,130 .... .... 872 .... .... •••• • 28,574 • •••* * The direction of the • •••• 6 Canary Islands Total for week.. 54 •••• • Lbs. manuf. 16 .... 42 British West Indies... British Guiana Venezuela , es. 105 Hayti .... Bales 70 15,030 • • . • .... 315,378 from mani¬ foreign exports for the week, from the as follows: From Baltimore—To Halifax, 3 hhds. From Boston—To Calcntta, 60 boxes... To Surinam, 41 hhds — To West Indies, 15 hhds To St. Pierre Miquelon, 7 cas.s, 29 boxes ..To British ■province* 3 hhds., 2 cases 28 boxes To South America, 50 cases. From New Orleans—To Liverpool, 287 hhds....To Havre, 71 hhds....To Taragona (Spain) 1. Philadelphia—To Matanzas, 11,016 lbs. manufactured. Frw3(wf9ik7 Va,—To Liverpool, 190 Wads, and 163 tierces. From 724 THE CHRONICLE. BREAOSTUFFS. excited and unsettled market an M. Wheat, bush throughout the week. Flour has been in better supply, holders were pressing sales. On mon been partly from California, and Tuesday 1,000 bbls. com¬ Extra State sold at $8 25, but since that date there has a partial recovery, and the close is firm, with a good gen¬ eral trade. 1867. 1868. Flour, bbls.., Friday, J une 5,1868, P. We have had [June 6,1868. 1866. 1,401,254 1,148,940 1,264,931 6,000,000 11,603,485 3,662,620 3,633,603 2,343,342 6,722,010 9,315,722 4,087,188 377 132 507,387 283 017 180,428 407,779 501.572 21,723,665 15,684,310 20,909,509 8,792,189 JT The Eastward Movement or the week ending May production of millers continues to be limited by the relatively higher price maintained by wheat. Wheat has fluctuated 15c per bushel for the leading Spring growths. ' On Tuesday, under the heavy decline reported from Liverpool, the market closed will sales of No. 2 at $2 05 . but on Wednesday morning a speculative demand sprung up; several loads were taken at $2 08@2 10. On Thursday, with a slight advance in Liverpool, No. 2 sold freely at $2 18@2 20The Chicago and Milwaukee markets, which declined to $L 77 @$1 80, recovered on the same movement to $1 96@$2 00— receipts having fallen off* a trifle. At this market to-day there was less excitement, but prices were rather firmer, $2 22 was paid for No. 2 for export, and 82 29@3 35 bid for No. 1— with holders generally askiug 82 25 for No. 2, and 82 35 for i 34,290 144,515 43,000 Oats, bush. bush. 419,659 302,720 43,044 2,762 1,048 7,969 By railroad Totals Previous week Cor. week 1867 1866 • 276 • • • • • » • • T .... 16,853 9,013 * • 700 5,150 5,325 * 280,064 512,208 103,631 690,851 836,755 317,334 564.593 653,017 1,439,185 198,676 315,396 seasons Wheat, bush Corn, bush Oats, bush to • 1,897 • 90 .... 90 133 1,897 7,653 31,505 56,046 408,181 — • • • May 24th: 1868. 1867. .1866. 223,600 120,800 327,800 2,595,600 5,580,500 645,700 3,117,600 1,870,800 391,100 2,720,100 6,099,500 1,615,300 113,000 19,100 300 10,107,900 4,173,5001 10,435,200 ... Total, bush The Stocks of Wheat in store at Chicago 1867 and 1868 were near upon the following Monday 81 05 for sound New Western - 20,003 Flour, bbls No. 1. White California sold at 82 85. Corn declined on • • 21,602 Shipments Eastward for three Barley, bush • Bye, bush. 28,900 65,319 57,070 18,267 81,9 i2 . bush. 38,941 25,762 Montreal Other ports Barley, ; 53,433 7,452 Kingston “ Corn, Lake Ports, 33,656 31,212 10,000 9,961 24^524 8,398 3,400 Erie Cleveland Port Huron and bush. olborne OgdenBburg Flour Wheat, bbls. Oswego Port from was : of FloHr, To Bufffi’O The Grain SO, 1868, and destination, and Milwaukee in 1866 figures at this date : mixed, when a great speculative movement set in, and the price 1866. 1867. 1868. steadily advanced to 81 13. A decline in freights fully equal Chicago, bush 835,300 498 500 103,500 to the advance in 590,000 258,000 627,000 price, has enabled shippers to purchase Milwaukee, bush Total 1,115,500 steadily. In the past two days supplies have been interrupted 11,425,300 366,500 by a break in the canal, but will again be free on Monday Shipped by Tows from Albany and Troy last week ; also from open¬ next. Oats and ing 01 navigation to May 81 : Rye shared partially the general depression 1867. 1868. For the week. early in the week, with a corresponding recovery towards the Wheat, bush 8,000 2,767,100 381,200 close. Barley, 801,300 bush Corn, 2,757,600 1,094,800 Barely Malt, and Canada Peas are entirely nom Oats, bush 339,000 1,541,600 '313,100 . .... inal. The , following closing quotations: are Flour— Corn Superfine $ bbl. *7 75® 8 40 8 05$ 0 25 Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 9 00$ 9 75 Extra State, Extra to com¬ good 8 60$ 9 10 fine The 111$ 1 17$ 1 15$ 2 05$ 85$ Rye Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State... r. Malt at new To NEW For the 48,5 0 583,475 130,070 55,390 582,880 since Jan. 1 YORK 2,470 581,365 175,455 1,750,275 FOR THE WEEK bush. 148,456 2,394,673 1,955 We*t Ind. week. 10,502 BinceJan. 1 157,988 4 015 48,929 Total exp’t, week 24,236 BinceJan. 1, 1868 350.835 88,691 2,433,391 152,993 bush.0 8INOE JAN. Oats, bush, .... Corn bush 48,414 660 21 6,570 1. 235,437 3,202,473 500 33,691 2,590 41,315 810 238,477 148,456 37,9943,352,259 37,519 12S,083 860,217 122,023 3,786,714 time, 1867. 183,110 68,976 162,000 3,700 55,100 162,900 163,400 GROCERIES. ' , Friday Evening, The week has been without been marked a 75,951 26,648 27,090 27,225 23,055 44,370 16,198 111,995 24,161 10,770 66 430 From . . 16,860 2,495 59,719 a week’s business. The imports have been considerable only in Rio Coffee, of 27,764 bags have been received in the country during the week. The receipts of Sugar and Molasses are much below those of last week. Of Tea only a small cargo of Japans have come to hand ; later advices from China report no further shipments to this country, and report the exports to date 1,707,038 lbs. below those of last year for the same time. Full details of the imports at the several ports for the week and since Jan. 1 are given below under the respective which heads. some The totals are as follows : This - r-From Jan 1 to date-> Tea 215,970 (indirect import). * the following Lake ports Wheat. Corn. bush. bush. 35,231 13,069 9,350 10,347 2,816 227,629 281,384 656,853 24,095 388,939 262 bush. 1,522 67,718 40,011 3,400 65,398 10,369 6,633 12,628 2,287 Oats. bush. Barley. bush. ♦ - 1868. 28,205,817 5,248 473,329 1867. 24,846,885 15,064 448,344 472 204,706 271,437 308,589 203,370 11,780 231,393 132,697 245,379 71,806 236,204 10,925 8,93t 16,929 Rye, 75 * 27,764 6,254 9,812 9,815 465,278 Flour* bblg. has fair business, and firm business in every branch of the trade. The activity in Tea has not been con¬ tinued, though prices are quite as firmly held as last week. Rio Oofiee has met with a good demand at steady prices; other kinds have been quite dull. Sugar has increased in firmness, advancing on some grades, and considerable transac¬ tions have taken place. Molasses steady without much doing. Our special reports upon each article will furnish details of the by Tea 2.882 June 5,1868. distinctive feature, but wreek. from Receipts at Lake Ports.—The receipts at for the week ending May 81: Toledo Barley. .... 33,424 Baltimore AND ... 62,129 Philadelphia 3,294,735 7,965 3.259 Since Jan. 1 Boston 274,450 10,665 249,160 Rye, 63 868,490 171,130 6,636,105 200,400 660,315 bush. 79,912 N# A.. Col. week.. BinceJan. 1 , 6,655 968,145 bbls. .. 8incc Jan. 1. wreek. 1,760,775 Flour, C. meal, Wheat, bbls. 3,610 Gt. Brit, week -1868.-- * {Since Jan. 1. 4,740 11,000 165,595 FROM follows: tore. -1867. FOREIGN EXPORTS 1 22 2 86^ $ $ 20$ 2 40 37$ 1 5. 2 1 For the week. 100.925 1 17 1 18 . Barley 25$10 00 Peas Canada in breadstuffs at this port has been as receipts 502,200 2 12$ 2 35 Yellow Southern White 75$13 25 .... .. Rye, bush Malt, bush 2 50$ 2 60 2 65$ 2 2 60$ 2 90 8 movement same bush. Coni, Western Mixed . Rye Flour, fine and super¬ per Red Winter Amber do White Double Extra Western and St. Louis 10 00$15 00 Southern supers $ Southern, extra and family 12 00$15 00 California 10 - $5 40$ 6 ?■ 5 Wheat, Spring, r: Western, mon Meal - Barley, bush .... • . • • • TEA. The excitement in this department noticed in our last may be said virtually to have closed with last week. During the present much less animation has been apparent, and the market closes very quiet. No I-otal». 70,813 570,955 663,348 480,080 3,884 3,673 72,908 628,264 651,8:49 316,021 3,419 3,696 concession in prices, however, from the advance already obtained is yet 42,824 314,021 607,275 337,241 6,493 20,604 80,906 754,244 1,902,358 807,999, 16,584 96,866 perceptible, nor is any anticipated, holders remaining firm at present The comparative receipts of flour and grain at the same ports, from rates. Sales include 8,000 half-chests Oolongs, 9,236 do Greens, and a small invoice of Souchocg, January 1st to May 80, for three years were; . Detroit... . Cleveland. . .. . . >. 11,110 10,821 4,108 6,687 11 • ■ • June THE CHRONICLE. 6,1868.] The imports of the week have been limited to the cargo of the “ Belle’ from Nagasaki of 215,970 lbs. Japans. Advices from China two weeks later than those previously published report no further shipments to the United States, and make the total shipments for the season 31,748,207 lbs. against 33,455,245 lbs. for the same time last year. The following table shows the shipments of Tea from China and Jan an to the United States from June 1,1867, to April 7,1868, the date of latest advices by mail; and importations into the United States, from Jan. 1 to date, in 1867 and 1868 : 1. 1867-68. 1866-67. June 1 to April 7. Congou & Sou,.... lbs. Oolong &Ning Fekoe Twankay Hyson skin... Hyson 1,777,073 1,906,417 5,496,842 Gunpowder Japans Total, lbs * All at New York during the week has been steady, and strictly for the supply of the legitimate wan's of the trade. Little has been taken for speculation, and the course of business has been undisturbed by excite¬ ment or weakness. We continue our former quotations. Sales include . 1,191 hhds. Cubas, 456 do St. Croix, and 356 do Barbadoes. The aggregate receipts of the week are much below those of last week. The receipts at all ports foot up 11,780 hhds., against 25,198 last yreek. The total receipts at the ports since Jan. 1 now reach 231,393 hhds. against 236,204 hhds. in 18.67. Details for the week are as 11,257,481 1,700 725,181 83,024 follows 1,700.726 4,536,926 1,356,554 5,466,583 1,203,861 1,277.817 4,644,094 *28,205,817 24,846,835 5,681,443 1,416,247 N. York Portland Boston Philadelphia Balti mr At Baltimore, “ Johann Heinrich,” 8,200 bags; “ Eunornia,” 2,700; “ Terpsichore,” 2,970. At New Orleans “ Linus,” 3,807 bags. The slock of Rio coffee June 4, and the imports from Jan. 1 to date “Hind” 2,837. in 1868 and 1867 Imports “ in 1867 299,042 271,003 . since Jan. I bags. Java • , Singapore. * ... Maracaibo.... Laguayra t . . .... . 8.957 .... .... 5,589 Other .... 3,75^ Total Same 167 .... Includes mats, &c., * 52,558 52,S82 • • • • 73,724 • 473,329 448,344 3,200 1,490 imports at the • • i , 355 144 11,154 355 144 204,706 .... .... . . .. .... .... 11,154 .... .... .... 36,384 36,950 116,515 • , 3,438 45,677 29,359 28,316 21,996 10,983 2,600 + Also reduced to bags. • . . . . . . . “ . Same time 1867 * 194,S67 15,451 16,796 change 49,785 grass mats. 396 .... ,—Cuba boxes, Philad'l... 307 Baltimore N. Orleans 4,470 Other , Cuba. » PRico.For’n, Tot’l, b’xs. *hhds. ♦hhds *hhds. N York stock...... 40,051 Same date 1867 35,188 Imp’ts since Jan 1.140,847 155,103 23,084 11,154 327 1,2*40 Portland do 3,683 4,353 3,673 3,721 do Boston 29,311 28,816 300 Philadelphia do . 42,759 42,520 2,572 8,523 4,921 Baltimore do 11,936 10,624 485 ‘ New Orleans do . 42,901 7,192 At— .... .... .... .... . . . .... Total import .... 271,437 Same time 1867. 132,697 * *hhds. 58,688 61,922 . P. Rico, Other hhds. hhds. hhds. our Annexed are the 967 13,895 13,331 * * » 14,100 6,975 .... 10,925 8,937 231,393 236,201 19,774 .... 2,281 2,068 We find quiet throughout the week, table of quotations. no light. There is a firm feeling ruling quotations in first hands. Tea, Duty: 25 cents per B). '—Duty paid—, do Ex f. to fln’st 90 ® Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair.. 90 @ i.: do Sup’r to fine.l 00 @1 Ex f. to flnestl 10 ®1 do do Hyson, Common to fair 90 @1 05 do Superior to fine.... 1 10 @1 35 Ex fine to finest ,..l 40+ol 65 do Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair ... 80 @1 10 Super, to fine. .1 In ®l 4‘» Exfinetoflnest.l 45 @.1 75 Cunp. & Imp., Com.to fairl 05 @1 20 do Sup. to fine .1 25 @1 55 do do Ex. f. to finest. 1 65 @1 90 H. Sk.&Tw’kay,C,,to fair. 65 ® 70 do do Sup.xofine 80 ® 85 do do Oolong, Common to fair. do Superior to fine... 70 ® 95,® 1 do Ex fine to finest ..1 35 ®1 Souc & Cong., Com. tofalr 70 ® do Sup’rtoflne. 95 @1 do Sx f. tofineetl 25 ®1 95 95 05 30 85 20 65 80 05 55 Coffee, 487 do do fair ordinary Java, mats and bags Ceylon gold 17*® 19 gold 16j@ Maracaibo.. gold 15 ® 15} gold 13}® '4 . — .gold 221$ 231 Laguayra St. Domingo... gold 15j@ 17 ... Jamaica. .-..gold 111® 15 gold 15 ® 16 fr to gd ref.$ lb. Ilf® 12 do grocery. 12}® 13 prime to ch. do 13 ® 14 . 10’® Ilf .. Ilf® 11} 12*® 12*® Ilf® 7*® ll}® 12f 13} 14* 9} Ilf do do do do do Loaf do do do do do do 10 to 12 121® 12f de 13 to 10 13*® 13f do 16 to 18 141® 15 do 19 to 20 15*® 26 white 14!® ® ® ® .... Granulated Crushed and Soft White .. powdered 16116! 16! 16 Iff® 10 14 ® 15 do Yellow Molasses, $gall... ® fO ® 49 ® .. 70 60 do Clayed. Barbadoes... 47 46 ® 49 ® 72 Spices, Duty: mace, 40 pimento, 15 ; cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia and cloves, 20; pepper and 23f® ® 26*® 24! 20 27 and ginger root, 5 cents # B>. Cassia, In mats..gold 52 @ Ginger, race and Af(gold) 11 *® 95 ® 88*® Mace (gold) 12 | Pepper,..L ....(gold) Pimento, Jamaica.(gold) Cloves (gold) .. 89 730 Fruit. Brazil, Manila bgs. &c bgs, NO 5^233 hhds 248,609 38,664 21,316 808,689 40,310 162,460 50,609 245,879 17,107 54,699 194,870 Duty: Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds, Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1*, Filberts and Walnuts, 3 cents $ lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Frnits, cent ad val. Ealstns,Seedless. 45,056 163 do Layer !cask $ box $ fi> Currants Citron, Leghorn 107 Prunes, Turkish Dates Almonds, Languedoc 7,677 .... Native Rio, Prime, duty paid ...gold 16J® 17 do good gold 15{® 16 Nutmegs, N o.l.... (gold) 1,396 189,342 87,510 107,738 6,900 2,800 54,722 36,210 45,392 24,068 Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads, 47,118 kinds, however, and the slight changes made in our quotations are in that way of advance. In green fruits the' sales of Sicily from first hands during the week have been of trifling amount. In West India of which this is the busy season, more [has been done, and this kind is in gre it abundauce. do and imports since Jan. 1, 1868, were as follows: Stocks June 4, 400 560 Business in these continue to be very Porto Rico, do : 715 9,450 • in all Cuba Muscovado 175 1,103 525 2,103 • FRUITS. imports of the week show a decided decrease both in hogsheads and boxes. At all the ports for the week the receipts foot up 9,812 boxes against 23,841—and 16,929 hhds. against 26,207 last week, mak¬ ing the total receipts to date 271,437 boxes and 808.589 hhds., against 132,697 boxes and 246,379 hhds. to same date last year. Details for the Portland Boston. • 6,576 35,412 33,383 - Sugar. The At— 10,807 88,253 The market has been very occasion to Orleans follows 55 8,365 SPICES. Porto Kico Cuba—. P.Ri. Other Java bx’s. hhds. hhds.hhds. bags. At— N. York 4,335 8,785 1,214 .... 472 » N.O bbls. Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads. Havana. are as 386 493 623 212 Total. Other foreign. foreign. rara. 267 3,436 .199,631 a , Deme- 183 24,661 .. , 27 180 ..... 6,'79 46,574 11,745 13,119 . “ re 1,860 10,001 gradual but steady improvement in the tone of the Cuba, Inf. to com. refining do fair to good do market commencing immediately after our last, and enhanced by the do fair to good grocery.. do fact that the stock by count made the first of the present month, fel pr. to choice do do oentrifugal below the amount at which it had been generally estimated. do Melado At the close prices are firm at our revised quotations, which on refining grades Hav’a,Box, D.S.Nos. 7 to 9. are advanced ^ over our last figures. Sales comprise 9,091 hhds. o; Duty : 8 cents $ gallon. Cuba; 265 do. of Porto Rico; 124 of St. Croix, and 4,576 boxes New week 145 N. Orle’s 8,892 63,805 34,962 . SUGAR. There has been 1,779 Balt im’re .... • .... 33 Philad’a: Duty naid- 181,924 • *2,800 6,711 7,500 .... - .... 159,669 19,615 20,591 .... 1 .'.148 45,644 18,205 17,133 18,897 bt.Tlomingo.. * were as • » .... .... Ceylon 3,211 • Porto Deme-1 Cuba. Rico. rara.Other at Porto Rico. ... Total. ,—New York—i Boston Philadel. Balt. N. Orle’s Total Stock. Import, import. import. import. import, import. 21,278 66,032 *44,754 +1,315 10.088 10,088 , In 11,500 York June 4, an i the follows : Of other sorts the stock at New several ports Gal¬ New Savau.& Orleans. Mobile. veston. 509 Cuba. “ NewOrlears good, and the business fair at steady unchanged prices. Upcta revising our table of .quotations we find no occasion to alter the figures given in our last. For all binds except Rio there has been little or no inquiry. The invoice of 3,800 bags of Rio ex B. Sternberg, advertised for sale at auction on Tuesday next, has been disposed of at private sale, and is included in our summary of sales for the week. Sales amount to 16,088 bags of Rio, 1,000 bags of Java, and 200 do of Laguayra. The imports of the week have included four cargoes of Rio at New York, three do at Baltimore, and one at New Orleans. At thi9 port a a cargo of Java of 12,389 mats, per “Arbutus,” 1,800 bags of St. Domingo have a so come to hand. Details of the imports of Rio are as follows : “Wanderer,” 2,900 bags; “ James Davids h,” 3,850 ; “Gipsey,” 6,000 ; 50,000 19,500 110,593 102,929 314.... Total import and 3,500 1,550 *Hhds at— New Y ork, si ock Imp’ts since Jan. 1 Portland “ Boston, “ COFFEE. The demand for Rio has been 6,350 5,836 10,730 .... ■ shipments to the United States, except 96,870 packages to San Francisco. The indirect importation since Jan. 1 has been 5,248 pkgs. .... .... 5,693 nhds. Stocks, June 4, and imports since Jan. 1, 1868, were as follows: The above table includes all In Bags. Stock.... 113,713 Same date 1867. 47,874 Porto Deme¬ Cuba. Rico. rara. Other. 60 1,340182 ' at— except three cargoes (1,103,400 lbs.) at Boston. were as follows : Balti PhilaNew more. del. York. : Hhds 12,078 449,319 44,800 1,217,304 31,748,207 1. 1,297,847 264,793 9,429,109 1,454,006 191,774 6,320,600 33,455,245 The demand 1867. 1868. 1,464,633 182,750 11,512.691 3,300 650,716 28,190 1,268,632 7,017,447 1,456,110 1,843,138 8,067,181 Young Hyson Imperial PAN INTO U. S. SINCE JAN June 1 to April 7. 1,H58.8:9 468,183 11,043,725 12,0.8 732,938 65,157 2,026,818 Pouchong MOLASSES IMPORTS PROM CHINA & JA. SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA & JAPAN SINCE JUNE 725 260 262 do do do Provence. Sicily, Soft Shell Shelled 8 50®9 00 3 95®4 00 11*® 11* 28® 12}® 12* 7® 9 35 ® 36' 24 ® 26 14 42 $ hi. box 28 ® 29 17!® 18 # B> 11 ® 18 8 ® 11 Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, Bordeaux 12® 14 Pearl 8® . 12*® 13 20 ® 21 12 ® 32! Sago Tapioca Macaroni, Italian Drikd Fruit— Apples 46 Sardines.qr. box Sardines..* Figs,8myrna Brazil Nuts $ fl> 8*® 8| Blackberries 14 ® 15 Peaches, part d Poaches, unpared....... 18 ® 2) 12 ® 18 , 726 THE CHRONICLE THE DRY G-OODS TRADE. purchases. The sales at Providence for the week ending June 1 were 88,000 pieces, and the closing price for 64x64 standard cloth was 8} .Friday, P. M., June 6, 1868. There is nothing of special interest to [June 6,1868. cents. Prints quiet but steady in price. The light work is moving slowly into consumption, and as most of the mills have turned their attention to medium patterns, and with one exception, supplies are short in agents hands, we may, if we have some fine Summer weather, see note in the Dry Goods market for the week under are review, business remaining same languid condition in almost every branch of the them become somewhat scarce on the market. Some agents are ask¬ trade. In some makes of domestics, especially brown and ing }@1 cent a yard for their new medium styles, but they are job¬ bleached shirtings, we note a further decline in prices, which bing at the same price as light work. .Aliens 12}, do pk & pu 14, has not, however, materially increased the volume of business, Amoskeag 12}, Arnolds 10}, Cocheco 14, Conestoga —, Dunnell’s 13}, Freeman 10}, Gloucester 12},Hamilton 13}, Home 7},Lancaster 12},Lon¬ as uo concession in rates can don mourning 12}, Mallory 13 14, Manchester 12}, Merrimac D 18}, do tempt dealers to purchase more than they need for their most urgent requirements. Never¬ p’k <fc purple 15, do W 15, do p’k Jrpur 15}, Oriental 18, Pacific 13}, Richmonds 13}, Simpson Mourning 12}, Sprague’s pur and pink theless, orders continue to arrive from the State and near-by 14}, do blue and wh. 16, do fancy 14, do shirtings 14}, Victory 10}, Wamsutta 10, Wauregan 11}. trade to replenish stocks, and Jobbers are thus gradually Ginghams are quiet, with a limited inquiry for the best makes; Alla- working off their Spring supplies. mance plaid 19, Caledonia 15, Glasgow 15-16}, Hampden 16, Lan¬ We perceive bj the latest advices from England that the caster 18, Manchester 18}. same depression exists in the Muslin Delaines are dull, and should the manufacturing districts there, present languid demand and that many mills are working on short time in order to continue, it is believed that a recourse will be had to lower prices to effect a clearance. Armures 20, do plain 20, Hamilton 16, Lowell 16, reduce production. Such a course lias been proposed here, Manchester 16, Pacific 16, Pekins 24, in the - but no concerted action has been arrived at in the matter, as it is generally believed that such stringent measures are unnecessary. Nevertheless, there is no doubt but that the usual stoppage of some mills at this season of the year, for cleaning and repairs, will be prolonged beyond the average period so as not to overstock the market at the commence¬ ment of the Fall campaign. The exports of dry goods for the week ending May 2G, and since January 1, 1868, and the total for the same time in 1867 and 1860 are shown in the following table : -PROM NEW YORK. .—Domestics. —» Exports to Val. pkgs. Caba Mexico Venezuela $2 120 12,364 26 84 3 Hamburg • Liverpool .... London British West Indies Havre Calcutta Fayal • • .... .... . . . .... . British Provinces.. . .... .... Total this week.. 113 $14,797 Since Jan. 1, 186S . 11,3211,071,985 dame time 1867..... 4,139 575,770 41 44 1860... 43,625 .... We annex a manufacture, jobbers: .... 8 45 2 4 41 .... • $9,612 .... .... .... --PROM BOSTON.- Val. Domestic Pkgs caees. . . . 2,897 12,080 1,678 21,684 «... ... 143 • • . . . . • • • • _. . . • • . • ] $48,525 787,151 617,495 .... ... 1 —, 76 in slightly improved demand. 227 Lewiston satteen 5,671 3 345 22,414 particulars of leading articles of domestic prices quoted being those of the leading Brown Sheetings and Shirtings have been inactive, and prices are Standard show no great change, but the fine grades, still unsettled. such as Lawrence A and Hampton A, have been selling at 124 cents, at which rate itwould be impossible to manufacture them. Should this droop¬ ing tendency continue, some speculative purchases for the Fall trade may be expected. Agawam 36 inches 18}, Amoskeag A 36 16;}, do B 36 16, Atlantic A 36 17}, do H 36 17, do P 36 14}. do L 36 15, do V 36 14}, Ap pleton A 33 17, Augusta 36 16, do 30 14, Bedford R 80 104, Boott H 27 11, do O 34 124, do S 40 15, do W 45 20, Commonwealth O 27 8}, Grafton A 27 9}, Great Falls M 36 124, doS 33 12 }, Indian Head 36 17, do 30 14}, Indian Orchard A' 40 16, do C 36 14}, do BB 36 13}, do W 34 12}, do NN 36 16, Laconia O 39 15, do B 87 14}, do £ 36 13}, Law¬ rence C 36 164, do E 36 144, do F 36 1*}, do G 34 13, do H 27 11, do LL 86 134, Lyman 0 36 14, do E 36 17, Massachusetts BB 36 14-}, do J 30 13}, Medford 86 16, Nashua fine O 33 15, do R 36 174, do E 89 19}, Newmarket 36 124, Pacific extra 36 17, do H 36 17, do L 16 15, Pepperell 6-4 —, do 7-4 27}, do 8-4 42, do 9-4 47}, do 52, do 11-4 57, Pepperell E fine 39 16, do R 36 15, do S3 13}, do N 30 124, do G 30 14, Pocasset F 30 10}, do K 36 15, do 17, Saranac fine 0~ 33 16, do R 36 17, do E 39 19, Sigourney 10, Stark A 36 16}, Swift River 36 12}, Tiger 27 94, Tremont 10-4 —, Thorndike 18, Tremont 20. —, New York Mills 31}, Plow. L. <fc Anv. 87}. O 40 36 E 16}. Cambrics have been in somewhat better has been but little done, except in the best request. In Silesias there grades, fjr which there is an improved inquiry. Pequot cambrics 10}, Superior 8}, Victory H 9, Washington 10, Wauregan 10}, Blackburn, si1 esias 16, Indian Orch¬ ard 15, Lonsdale twilled 14}, Victory J twilled 15, Ward 15. Cotton Bags are in slight demand. American 47}, Lewiston 55, Stark A 56, do C 3 bush 70. Cotton Yarns are held firm, but there is but little business doing. Forty for large and 4:’,} cents for small skeins are the asking rates. Foreign Dress Goods have been inactive during the past week, the demand being limited to a few styles of light Summer fabrics suited for immediate trade. The sales at auction have been of some few brands in small is also a tions of Shirtings but little inquired for, except quantities for immediate consumption. There and are slight demand for the lower grades at current rates. The quota¬ some medium grades are }@1 cent lower. Amoskeag 46 inch 2i},do42 20, do A 36 18, do Z 33 124, Androscoggin 86 18, Appleton 36 17, Attawaugan XX 36 15, Atlantic Cambric 36 28, Ballou <fe Son 36 16, Bartletts36 16}, do 33 14}, do 30 18-}, Bates 36 20, do BB 36 16, do B 33 14, Blackstone 36 16, do D 36 14, Boott B 36 15}, do C 83 14, do H 28 11, do O 30 13}, do R 27 10}, doS 36 14}, do W 45 20, Dwight 36 21-}, Ellerton E42 21, do 27 10, Forrest Mills 36 15},Forestdale 36 17}, Globe 27 84, Fruit of the Lnom 36 20, Gold Medal 36 16, Greene M’fg Co 86 12}, do 80 10}, Great Falls K 36 16, do M 33 14, do S 31 13, do A 83 16, Hill’s 8emp. Idem 86 17, do 33 15, Hope 36 15, James 36 16, do 38 14}, do 31 13, Lawrence B 36 15, Lonsdale 36 18, Masonville 36 18, Mattawamkeag 6-4 —, do 8 4 —, do 9-4 —, do 10-4 —, Newmarket C 36 16}, New York Mills 86 28, Pepperell 6-4 29, do 8-4 45, do 9-4 62}, do 10-4 57}, Rosebuds 36 18, Red Bank 36 12, do 32 10}, Slater J. & W. 86 16, Tuscarora 22, Utica 5-4 32}, do 6*4 85,do 9-4 62}, do 10-4 67}, Waltham X88 14, do 42 16}, do 6-4 27, do 8-4 45, do 9-4 62}, <lo 10-4 67}, Wainsutta 46 32}, do 40} 29, do 36 26, Washington 33 10. Brown Drills are dull, and the export demand quite limited. Androscoggin 11, Amoskeag 17, Boott 17, Graniteville D 16}, Laconia 17, Pepperell 17, Stark A 17, do H 16}. Print Cloths were reported a little more active under speculative - , unimportant an character, and except for really first class goods prices have been very low. Domestic Woolens are quiet, transactions in Spring styles of cassibeing at an end. Tue clothing trade are buying more freely for the Fall trade, but the purchases are as yet limited m:stly to cassimeres, beave s, Chinchillas, Ac., carried over from the previous season. meres In a week or two business in this branch will be more fully developed. IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK. The importations 01 ury goods at this port for the week ending May 28,1868, and the corresponding weeks of 1866 and 1867, have been follows: entered for consumption for Manufactures of wool.., do do do 308 364 , cotton.. silk WITHDRAWN FROM 1867. , Pkgs. Value. 373 240 284 292 111,677 108,271 93,362 42,718 2,354 1,167 $504,071 3,543 flax.... . Total $148,043 week ending may 117 273 105 .... Miscellaneous dry goods, the -1866.Value. Pkgs. 33 11. Bleached Sheetings Caledouia No. 70 27}, do Corset Jeans are inactive. Amoskeag 14, Bates 11, Everetts 15, La¬ conia 14, Naumkeag 14, do satteen 17}, Pepperell 15}, Washington few our are 25, do 10 25, do 8 19, do 11 22}, do 16 27}, Kennebeck 23^, Lanark No. 2 12}, Park No. 60 15, do 70 22}, do 90 27}, Pequa No. 1,200 12}, Star Mills 600 10}, do 800 16, Union No. 20 25, do 50 27}. CoTroNADEs have been generally quiet. A few styles were sold at reduced rates, but quotations are now fairly steady. Far. AMec. Cass. 15(1 .... Checks 60 , .... • 34, do 32 SO, do 30 26, Mecs. and W’km’s 80, Pearl River 35, Pemberton AA 27}, do X17, Swift River 17, Thorndike 18}, Whittenden A 22}, Willow Brook 28^-30, York 80 27}, do 82 35. Stripes are dull. Albany 9, American 14, Amoskeag 24}, Boston 15, Everett 13}, Hamilton 24, Haymakei 17, Sheridan A 13, do G 14, Uncasville dark 16, do light 15, Whittenton AA 28, do A 21, do BB 17, do C 15, do D 12, York 23}. 31, Pittsfield .... 572 . 2,173 2,977 • iston 36 Denims of the best makes have been in limited request; others are neglected. Amoskeag «3, Blue Hill 14}, Beaver cr. blue 19, do CC 22}, Columbian extra 30, ^laymaker 20, Manchester 22}, Lingard’s blue 16, do brown Otis AXA 29, do BB 27, do CC 23, Pearl River .... 313 .... . 43 .... • .... • D, Goods packages. Piques 22, Spragues 16. Albany 9, American 14, Amoskeag A C A 38, C 24, do D 21, Blackstone River 18, Conestoga 27}, do extra 32}, Cordis 30, do BB 17}, Hamilton 27}, do D 14}, Lew¬ Tickings are quiet. do A 32, do B 27, do WAREHOUSE AND THROWN -1868. 75,463 175,919 74,589 55,998 $340,551 INTO THE 2S, 186S. Pkgs. $158,582 • as 386 758 349 555 168 Value $136,695 190,440 265,269 134,216 68,034 2,216 $794,C54 MARKET DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manuiactures of wool... do do do cotton., silk.... flax.... Miscellaneous dry goods. Total Add ent’d 2S7 137 58 146 315 $104,903 45,727 64,266 1,003 forconsu’pt’n 1,167 Total th’wnYDon mak’t. 1,170 314 249 $130,758 299 180 39 163 137 7,933 284 528 57,308 11,633 $254,441 504,071 1,312 3,543 $415,717 540,551 2,222 2,219 $758,562 4,855 $956,268 4,438 $1,041,697 31,602 1,541 ROUSING DURING THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool,,. do do cotton.. silk do flax.... Miscellaneous dry goods. Total.... 144 $60,288 62 232 22,597 6,035 8,842 9,541 479 $107,303 8 33 Add ent d for consu’pt’n .1,167 Total entered at the port 1,646 $116,229 77,427 138,591 504,071 $611,374 530 221 34 233 8,001 9,019 3,543 $23S.099 $2-47,043 794,654 - $117,789 22,298 41,9yl 64,683 742 $252,565 2,216 794,654 32,171 61,528 58,650 $469,863 12,562 $1,010,414 47,085 38,156 32,057 13,516 304 86 32 299 21 78,815 540,551 - <rt I. 5,864 $1,047,219 - June 6,1868.] THE CHRONICLE. Commercial Dry Goods. DISSOLUTION OF JENKINS, VAILL & The partnership the firm of DRY GOO^S was STREET, between the subscribers, under STEAM COTTONS AND WOOLENS, Of Several Mills* PARTNERSHIP. The subscribers have this under the firm of J. F. Mitchell, 21 WALKER STREET NEW YORK, Sole Agents for JOSEPH day formed a partnership GREER’S CHECKS. Also, Agents for the Sale of Fine 6-4 Scotch Coatings ; Oxford, Cadet, and Fancy Jeans. B. & W. Checks and Fancy Tweeds; Shirting Flannels • Ginghams, Ticks, and Balmoral Skirts, of several makes. New York, June 1st, 1868. NO. 12 WALL Patents, May 7, 1867* and March The Best and most Economical, STREET. All former inventions of this nature have failed for want of in use, and first cost; these failings have been obviated COMMERCIAL STREET, Home Insurance SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS, SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, LINEN OFFICES DRILLS, $2,000,000 00 3,623,896 78 107,490 55 Assets, Jan. 1, 1868 Sole Agents for Liabilities HICKSONS’ FERGUSON & CO, Belfast. mium are FIRST.—Simplicity of construction and not liable to Risks In the City, equal to heretofore paid as Brokerage. on get out of order. SECOND.—Cheapne ss of first and freedom from Desiring to deal directly with its Customers, this Company will hereafter make a rebate from the Pre¬ CO., Ranbridge. will as : Capital.. PATENT LINEN THREAD by this invention by inspecting its advantages, seen which Co., O. 135 BROADWAY. NEW YORK, AND 151 MON TAGUE STREET, BROOKLYN. CHECKS, &C., WHITE GOODS, And F. W. HAYES & be PAPER. simplicity of construction, in efficiency, in economy, SPECIALTY Importers & Commission Merchants, 3, 1868. Safe and Durable. for the transaction of a general commission business and have such arrangements as to enable them to offer their friends and former correspondents liberal facilities upon consignments.;*; Strict attention will be given to such Interests as may be intrustad to our care. J. II. BROWER. B. B. BLYDENBURGH. Edward Lambert & Co., George Hughes & Co. Fenton’s J. H. Brower & Co., MERCHANTS. 198 & 200 CHURCH BOILER. dissolved by mutual consent, November 29th The liabilities of tlie late firm have all been liqui¬ dated and settled. J. H. BROWER. W. II. SELLERS. B. B. BLYDENBUIIGH. New York, June 1st, 1868. Sole Agents lor the sale of COMMISSION Excelsior PARTNERSHIP. 1867, COMMISSION MERCHANTS, C. B. & Cards. J. H. Brower & Co., PEABODY, 46 LEONARD 727 cost danger. the ..Commission THIRD.—Universality of application George -Pearce & 70 & 72 FRANKLIN STREET, NEW CIIAS. J. MARTIN, President. A. F. WILLMARTH, Vice-President. Co.,- J. H. WASHBURN, Secretary. GEO. M. LYON, Asst. Secretary. T. B. GREENE, 2d Asst. Secretary. YORK, Importers of White Goods, Steamship Companies. Laces and Enib’s, Linen in almost all STEAMSHIP Rritish and Continental. required. FOURTH.—Economy in internal Hall, New or PARASOLS, STREET, NEW YORK. CLARK, Mile IS Jr. & CO’S. End,'Glasgow. UNSURPASSED FOR HAND SEWING. AND MACHINE THOS. RUSSELL, Sole Agent. 88 CHAMBERS parts are so arranged with fuel, follow in its Sailing Arrangements use. The 5th & 20th of Spool Cotton. JOHN its combustion, and great saving in THROUGH LINE TO CALIFORNIA, VIA PANAMA RAILROAD. Manufacturers of Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN use, as respect to each other, that better COMPANY. OPPOSITION TO MONOPOLY. UMBRELLAS AND where steam is NORTH AMERICAN Handk’fg, Byrd & cases D. A. HEALD, 2d Vice-President. STREET, N.Y. the Every Month. day before when these dates fall on Sunday, from Pier No. 46 North River, foot King st., at noon. JUNE 5.—Steamer SANTIAGO DK CUBA, connect¬ ing with new Steamship OREGONIAN. JUNE 20.—Steamship GUIDING STAR, connecting with new steamship NEBRASKA. These Steamships are expressly fitted for this trade, and are unsurpassed for Saiety, Speed, Elegance, and Comfort, and th<*ir rates for Passage and Freight will always be as low as by any other Line. For further particulars address the undersigned at Pier No, 46, North River, New York. D. N. CARRINGTON, Agent. WM. H. WEBB, Fresident. CHARLES DANA Vice-President, *No. 54 Exchange Place, N.Y. FIFTH.—Good which from water circulation keeps the iron clean and free deposit and scale, and induces rapidity in the production of steam. SIXTH.—It produces dry steam. Its large water content and the steam PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S exit THROUGH LINE To being at a tubes tends to California. distance from the prevent priming. And CarryJngthe Unit States Mail, LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH ER, FOOT o : Canal street, at 1 The Inventor and owner o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, an 21st of every month (except when those dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. of the above Improvement being unable to manufac¬ ture them in sufficient quantities will JUNE: .Spring Shawls, KNITTING MILLS, IN GREAT VARIETY OF CHOICE DESIGNS, For Sale by SOLE A( NEW YORK Yale, ENTS, AND 'entral American Ports. zanHlo. BOSTON. AT A Those or 1st touch at Man- Baggage cnecKed through. allowed each adult. - Townsend & Dispose of the Improvement Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for From the KEYSTONE 1st—Ocean Queen, connecting with Golden City, 11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with Montana stutn—arijsona, connecting with Sacramento. One hundred pound An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and attendance free. For passage tickets or further information, ajW> at the Company’s ticket office, on the wharf, oat Canal street, Nor«a xviver, New Tor*. F. F BABY FAIR PRICE. Apply immediately to E. TIFFANY & CO* 15 Wall Street, New York* 728 fr- THE CHRONICLE. =============== ' ===== 6 0 0 [June 6,1868, ======== MILES Financial. OF THE Union St. Louis Pacific Railroad SIX PER finished and in operation. Sixty miles of track have been laid this Spring, and the work along the whole line between the Atlantic and the Pacific States is being pushed forward more rapidly than ever now before. More than twenty thousand men are employed, and it is not impossible that the entire track, from Omaha to Sacramento, will be finished in 1869 instead of 1870. The means provided are ample, and all tha energy, men and money can do to secure the completion of this The UNTON PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY NATIONAL interest payable May Is the The OF COMMERCE, New York. subscribers, the authorized agents for the sale of Bonds, offer a limited amount at 8 5 and Accrued Interest. Jameson,Smith&Cotting receive : right of way, and all necessary timber and other materials II.—A BANK In BANKERS, 14 AND 16 WALL I.—A GOVERNMENT GRANT Of the run, € WORK, at the earliest possible diy, will be.done. t to and November 1st, at these GREAT NATIONAL BONDS. CENT Bonds have 20 year*, Are City found GOVERNMENT along the line of its’operations. STREET, NEW YORK. A Desirable Investment. GRANT UOGANSPORT UNION AND Of 12,803 acres of land to the mile, taken in alternate sections on each side of its road. donation, and wTili be a source of large revenue iu the future. This is an absolute SEVEN the road between Union, Ohio, and Logansport, Indiana, being a link in the Columbus, Chicago and Indiana Central Railroad Company, the new route to Chicago, and are convertible at the option of the holder, into the First Mortgage Bonds of that Com¬ pauy. For further particulars apply to on Of United States Thirty-year Bonds, amounting to from $16,000 to $48,000 per mile, according to the difficulties to be surmounted on the various sections to be built. The Government takes a second mortgage as security, and it is expected that not only the interest but the principal amount may be paid iu services rendered by tne Company in transporting troops, mails, &c. The interest is now much more than paid in this way, besides seauriug a great saving in time and money to the Government. , DREXEL, WINTHROP & CO. No. 18 Wall Street, IV.—A GOVERNMENT GRANT respects a llrst-class heavy T rail, and completely supplied with depots, stations, turnouts, car shops, locomo¬ V.—A CAPITAL STOCK SUBSCRIPTION. From the stockholders, of which Over Eight MrLLrox Dollars have been paid in upon the work|already done, and which will be increased as the wants of the Compauy require. VI —NET CASH EARNINGS On its Way Business, that already amount to more than the interest on earnings are no indication of the vast through business that but they certainly prove that FIRST MORTGAGE upon SEVEN PER CENT FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, FEBRUARY AND AUGUST COUPONS. The title of the ST. LOUIS AND IRON MOUNTAIN RAILROAD having been confirmed by act of the Gen¬ eral Assembly of the State of Missouri, and the bonds declared valid, the work of extending the same to a connection with the Southern system of roads at Co¬ lumbus, Kentucky, is now going rapidly forward; 31 miles being in profitable operation, 45 miles of new work graded with rails enough on hand for 4T miles ; it is expected that the whole line from St. Louis to Belmont, 192 miles, will be Beyond any . Mortgage Bonds. These opening of the line to the Pacitic BONDS RTHOMAS ALLEN, President, St. Louis, April, 1868. undersigned, cordially recommend these 7 per cent, mortgage bonds of the St, Louis and Iron Mountain Railroad as a good security. The revenue of the road will be large and the administration ot tlie affairs of the company is in capable and experienced hands, and is entitled to the greatest confidence of the public. James S, Thomas, Mayor of St. Louis. John J. Roe, President Chamber of Commerce. K. W. Fox, President Board of Trade. Barton Bates, President North Missouri Railroad. J ,H Britton. President National Bank State of Mo. Wm. L. Ewing, Pres. Mer. Nat. Bank of St. Louis. Geo. H. Rea, Pres. 2d Nat. Bank of St. Louis. Jas. B. Eads, Chief Engineer St. L. & Ill, Bridge Co. G. R. Taylor, President Pacific Railroad. Wm. Taussig, President Traders’ Bank St. Louis. Jno. R. Lionberger, Pres. Sd Nat. Bank St. Louis. Adolphus Mieir, Vice-Pres. Union Pacific Railroad. Robert Barth, Pres, German Savings Institution, New York References : E D Morgamfc Co. John H. Swift. Isaac N. Phelps. We‘ the Contingency. The Company have abundant means in their treasury, and make no appeal to the public to purchase their Bonds, as the dally subscriptions are entirely satisfactory; but they submit that for entire security and liberal returns, there is certainly no better investment in the market. . , The Union Pacific Bonds are for $1,000 each, and have coupons attached. They Iiave t.hirtjr years to run, and bear annual interest, payable on the first days of January and July at the Company’s office in the City of New York, at the rate of Six Per Cent in Gold. The principal is payable in gold at maturity. At the present rate of gold, these bonds pay an annual income on their cost of NEARLY NINE PER.CENT. And it is believed that opened for business early that there will be a continuous line.from 3t. Louis to Mobile, New Orleans and other Southern cities. Avery large traffic is anticipated. The old part of tlie road (91 miles) already earns enough to se¬ cure all the interest on the whole mortgage debt, and the extension completed will vastly increase the earn¬ ings. The proceeds of these bonds going into the ex¬ tension of the road adds to tlie security, and a pro¬ jected branch s •uthwestwardly from Pilot Knob for which a cash subsidy of $15,000 r>er mile is granted by the State as a free gift to tlie company, will add very much to the value of their property. ; such a property, costing nearly three times their amount, Are Secure COMPANY. RAILROAD next year, so the First must follow the New York. St.Louis & IronMountain Of the right to issue its own FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, to aid in building the road, to tlie same amount as the United States Bonds, Issued for the same purpose, and xo mork. The Government Permits the Trustees for the First Mortgage Bondholders to deliver the Bouds i’o the Company only as the road, is completed, and after it has been examined by United States Commissioners and pronounced to be in all a . We offer for sale a limited amount of the above named bonds at the low rate of 85 and accrued inte¬ rest. These bonds are secured by a First Mortgage Ill —A GOVERNMENT GRANT railroad, laid with tives, cars, «fec. BONDS PER CENT FIRST MORTGAGE they mayj soon be at a Premium. The Company reserve the right to advance the price of their Bonds to a rate above par at any time, and will not fill any orders or receive any subscriptions on which the money has not been actually paid at the Company’s office before the time of such advance. _ _ . W. V. Brady. S. Gandy. W. T. Blodgett. Bonds for sale and pamphlets giving details can be bad at the New 1 ork agency of the Company, 43 Wall etreet. H. G. MARQUAND, Vice-President. ESTABLISHED IN 1826. Parties subscribing will remit the par value of the Bonds and the accrued interest in currency at the rate of Six Per Cent per annum, lrom the date on which the last coupon was paid. Subscriptions will be received in New York At the Company’s Office, No. A. B. Holabird & Co., CINCINNATI, O., 20 Nassau Street, AND BY ENGINE AND MILL MANUFACTURERS. Particular attention is called to our flYIl'ROVLD CIRCULAR SAW MILL. O' John J. Cisco And &Son, Bankers, No. 59 Wall Street. by the Company’s advertised Agents throughout the United States. Remittances should be made in drafts Charge by return express. superior to all others In strength, durability and simplicity, will cut from 15,000 to 20,000 feet of lumber jer day. REKD'S PATENT COLD PREMIUM WHEAT AND CORN IHILLS. It is or other funds par iu New York, and tlie bonds will be sent free of Parties subscribing through local agents will look to them for their safe delivery. A PAMPHLET AND MAP FOR 1868 has just been published by the Company, giving fuller Information than is possible in an advertisement, respecting the progress of the work, the resources of the country traversed by the road, the means for construction, and the value of the bonds, which will be sent free on application at the Company’s office, or to any of the advertised agents. Built of solid French Burr Rock. ven to Southern patronag ' Particular a* THE SingerManufacturingCo. BROADWAY, NEW 458 YORK. Proprietors and Manufacturers of the world nowned SINGER JOHN J, MAY 25, 1868. CISCO, Treasurer New York. SEWING rt- MACHINES, for family use and manufacturing purposes. Branches andAgenciestl^ugh^UlthO Civtiued world, SEND June 6,1868.] THE CHRONICLE. The Treasurer of the Hailioaij JHonitor. )t the railroads for several weeks iu 1867 and 1868 Week. Miles of road. Railroads. Atlantic & Gt. Western.3d, April 4th, f 1 “ Chic., R. I. and Pacific..3d, Apl. ) I , Michigan Central 44 44 44 44 44 44 3d, .... h51 *• ..2d, Apl. ] 3d, “ 1st,May. 2d, “ 3d, “ J - 44 44 44 .» tl 44 4 44 44 44 44 44 44 44 285 44 44 44 44 44 44 44 87,047 77,060 92,633 2S6 270 290 259 216 305 324 297 272 288 187 t 1st, Mar. ; 3d, “ 4th, “ 1st, May. 2d, 3d, “ 524 £2,077 84,833 77,753 82,203 70,263 $504,992 408,864 388,4S0 394,533 451,477 474,441 462,674 528,618 526,959 541,491 497,250 368,581 J (775 in.) 147 118,818 222 226 f 41,903 1 54,315 53,569 60,802 80,264 51,644 72,981 60947 SO 104 103 140 150 97 117 l 37,911 91,114 169 ;75 f 13,634 12,536 11,747 17,611 98 69 70 80 170 11 232 12,668 14,505 22,337 30,649 124 (280 in.) ..Oct.... ..Nov ..I>ec.... ..Year.. 3,695,152 ..June.. ..July... ..Aug... ..Sept... ... 1867. $312,846 277,204 311,0S8 379^761 39i;i63 412,715 413,970 418,024 358,601 384^684 304,282 312^879 338,858 384,401 429,177 496,655 429,548 428.7152 487,867 539,435 423,341 370,757 352,218 4,650,328 ’ 1S68. (775 m.) .April.. ..May ... .June... (468 77*.) $559,982 J ..Aug.. .July 408,999 426,752 359,103 330,169 . ...Sep.. .Oct... .Nov.., .Dec.. . . , 3,892,861 .. Year 1868. 505,465 411,605 569,250 567,679 417,071 .. 155,893 192,138 1867. 1S68. (692 m.) ...Jan... $ . Feb... Mar .. ..April.. 219,160 ^Dec,... 198,884 244,834 212,226 177,864 —Year— 2,251,525 -Ang.„. ..Oct.,.. ^Nov,,.. 555,222 784,801 690,598 573,726 7*467*218 7,242,126 «* 149,342 174,152 168,162 172,933 220,788 -.Sept**. 171,736 . 98,482 108,461 230,340 204,095 1867. (740 77*.) $131,707 123,404 123,957 $340,511 Aug... 188,815 ....Sep... 276,416 416,359 328,539 129,287 Oct.... Nov.h. Dec._ -Year.. (285 m.) $92,433 .Jan.. . 26"), 796 ..Mar.. 337,158 843,736 365,196 335,082 324,986 359,645 429,166 493,(549 414,604 308,649 .April. ..May.., .June., ..July., ..Aug.., .. . , Sep.., ..Oct... .Nov... .Dec... ..Year.. 4,260,125 2,538,800 ' / 1868. (740 in.) $368,484.. .Jan... 301,275 350.884...Feb. 262,031 316,389 333,281... Mar... 435,629.. April.. , • „ , . . . , . . 1866. . May... ..June.. July.. Aug... . # •• 325 691 304,917 396,248 349,117 436,065 354,830 264,741 .« ..Oct...,. *.Nov:... ..Dec.... ..Year*, 200,793 265,793 ...Feb... 270,630 317,052 329,078 304,810 263,259 ..Mar... April.. ..May... 309,591 364,723 382,996 . ..June.. „ .. .. -July.. ..Aug... ..Sept... 406,766 ..Oct 351,759 ..Nov.. Dec.. 307,948 3*694,975 ' 3,783,830 h* 4,371,071 ,. _ -Year.* .. Ohio & Mississippi. —U I860. 1867. 1868, (340 m.) (340 m.) (340 77*. 267,541 $242,793 $211,973 246,109 219,064 231,351 326,236 279,647 265,905 277,423 284,729 252,149 288,130 282,939 253,924 t 2-10,135 247,262 ff 234,633 322.521 305,454 • i. -• »- • • • v 336,066 - • » Western IJni on. 1866. 194,167 256,407 270,300 316,433 .June.. 330,373 3,459,319 133,392.. Feb... ■ 412,933 3,380,583 (521 77*.) (521 771.) ^.July.. ..Aug... ..Sept... 464,778 506,295 272,053 $237,674 $278,712 -...Jan... 213,097.. April. ..May... 313,021 398,993 379.367 $226,059 149,165.. Mar... 362,783 365,372 /— (285 m.) $313,319 304,315 326,880 415,758 333,952 284,977 310,762 302,425 281,613 1868. 1867. 1868. IStiT,„ (285 m.) $304,097 283,669 375,210 278,701 ..Year. .. 'S'517,702 Oct... ...Nov... Dec,... (521 77*.) 771. 274,80) f 404,600 Sep... $127,594.. Jan... .. $2S2,438 .Feb.. . /-Toledo, Wab. & Western.-* 1868. 171,499 2,207,990 I860. (275 771.) July... ..June.. (210 81,181 96,388 121,533 245,598 244,376 208,785 ...May... .. 156,065 669,037 84,357 1866. /—Milwaukee & St. Paul.-^ . 166,015 222,953 ..June.. 81.599 1,258,713 167,301 168,699 167,099 ^July-. 78,976 ..Year. 1,201,239 . /—St. L. Alton & T. Haute.-* ...Mar... ..April.. May.. 85,447 112,952 123,802 May.* . • ...Feb... $90,411 1868. (452 in. $283,600 231,900 362,800 28S,700 Michigan Central.— 1868.1 (251 m.) 142,S23 132,387 123,383 (210 771.) $149,658 . (251 m.) $94,136 (251 in.) 121,217 (210 771.) ^400.941 S 428,474 . L867. 113,504 1867. ..July.. ..Aug... 4,105,103 104,866 1866. . 3,466,922 ...Oct.... .Nov... .Dec... *. 1868. ... . Year.. 106,921 . 14,143,215 306,693 238,926 317,977 9,424,450 11,712,248 ..Aug... ...Sep... • _ ..Year.. 277,505 ..June... ®345,027 S260,268 98,043 • ...May.., £ 558,200 ^,415,460 (351,600 103,373 (692 771.) $901,571 . ....Oct... .Nov... .Dec... .June.. 1866. 183,385 257,230 209,099 .. ....Sep... ..July.. $371,041 . fan..-. $1,086,360 895,887 339,736. .Feb... 845, ms 381,497 Mar.-. 1,135,745 1,075,773 455,983April.. 1,190,491 1,227,286 May... 1,170,415 1,093,731 ..June.. 1,084,533 934,536 July... 1,135,461 1,101,693 1,2S5,911 3,388,915 Aug*.. 1,480,929 1,732,673 ....Sep... Oct.... 1,530,518 1,211,108 «,Nov... •♦.Dec... 935,857 586,484 507,451 537,381 606,217 h. •-New York Central.-* (692 771.) ...Jan.., .Feb.., S''0,787 S55.611 ...Mar.. 1,068,959 .April., 1867. (410 m.) $292,047 224,621 272,454 280,283 251,916 261,4S0 1,451,234 1,508,8S3 1,210,387 918,088 5)6,494 7,160,991 1866. (223 in.) $241,395 1,088,824 84,652 72,768 90,52(5 96,535 K6,594 114,716 6,546,741 1868. 574,664 757,134 774,280 895,712 898,357 S80,324 1866. 524,871 440,271 477,007 /—Chic., Rock Is. and Faeific.- 1868. -Marietta and Cincinnati.- $647,119 602,754 415,982 925,983 SOS,524 797,475 1,000,0S6 1,200,216 1,010,892 712,359 459,007 613,974 624,174 . 505,266 627,960 684,189 590,557 774,103 648,201 654,920 757,441 6579,935 .June. .. $603,053 $178,119 633,667 552,378 342,357 354,244 1867. The central office is RAILROADS. (1,032 m.)(l,152 m.)(l,152m.) $590,767 $696,147 $741,926 $519,855. ..Jan.^. 488,088. Feb. 409,684. ..Mar... 467,754.. April.. ...Jan... 599,806 682,511 1866 880,993 ..Year.. (524 m.) PRINCIPAL -Chicago & Northwestern^ 1868. (708 m.) 588,219 OF ..May.. 504,066 ..Sep.... The capital is $10,000,000. Steubenville, Ohio. 335,510 ..Oct.... ..Nov... ..Dec.... ..Aug Company, be at to EARNINGS 1867. 480,626 578,253 571,348 661,971 uly... (468 771.) (468 m.) 525,498 l roa (708 m.) $542,416 492,694 480,986 662,163 The Panhandle Road, (O.,) Holliday’s Cave, (Western Ya.) and the Steubenville and Indiana (Ohio) Railroads nave consolidated under the name of the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati & St. Louis Rul- 157,832 235,961 282,165 $243,787 525,242 709,326 738,530 823,901 727,809 613,330 . 4,613,743 1867. with usual cash dividend. (280 in.) $259,539. Jan.. 296,496 .Feb.. 261,599. ..Mar.. I 270,3S6. .April. 1866. (708 m.) -Pittsb.. Ft.W. i & Chicago.-* 1866. 110 paid at maturity in accordance with their tenor. The City of Portland lately voted to take $750,000 stock in the Portland and Ogdeusburg, Road. The vote was unexpectedly large. And also, to advance $100,000, in addition to the aid before voted to the Portland Rochester (old York and Cumberland) Railroad, in anticipation of its completion to Alfred, Me. The Lebannon Spriugs Railroad, connecting the Harlem with the Bennington and Rutland Railroad, it is expected, will be com¬ pleted and in running order in the month of August. This road will form a through connection from New York and Montreal, without change of cars. Of the 67 miles 50 miles are graded, ana the track is now laying. The St. Louis Dispatch says:—“ We learn that the purchase of all the iron necessary to complete the North Missouri Railroad to Kansas City and the Iowa State line has been made. The road will be finished to both points by the middle of October. A por¬ tion of the iron is of English manufacture, and is now at New Orleans. The other portion of it is at Brady’s Bend, The whole quantity will arrive at an early day.” At a meeting of the stockholders of the Illinois Central Railway recently held at Chicago, the contract with the Dubuque and Sioux City Company was confirmed. The stocknolders also gave the directors authority to make an 8 per cent distribution of shares in accordance with a plan submitted to them by the directors. The distribution will probably be made August I net, at the same time ■Illinois Central.- r-Mich.!Bo. & N. Indiana.-. (524 771.) $305,857 MONTHLY (280 m.) $226,152 222,241 290,111 269,249 329,851 871,543 321,597 387,269 322,638 360,823 323,030 271,246 . 14,596,413 14,139,264 1866. 158 76 70 65 62 1867. (507 in.) $394,771, Jan.... 395,286 .Feb.... 318,219 .March 421,098 .April.. ..May... 1,153,441 1,217,143 1,101,632 1,122,140 1,243,636 1,118,731 1.208.244 1,071,312 1,295,400 1,239,024 1,416,101 1,444,745 1.476.244 1,498,716 1,416,001 1,421,881 1,041,115 1,041,646 (524 m.) 155 12,341 1866. $906,759 $1,031,320, ..Jan... ..Feb... 917,639 ..Mar... 1,139,528 1,070,917 173 150 174 152 116,326 L Railway r 1867. 987,936 April 1,1868 States and State taxes, having 25 years to run. The bonds not surrendered on or before the 1st of October next will be Chicago and Alton.— 5,476,276 5,094,421 ■Erie 280 234 250 368 l -1 ISO 1868. (507 in.) $361,137 377,852 438,046 443,029 459,370 3S0,796 400,116 475,257 483,857 477,528 446,596 350,837 (507 m.) 173 168 77,324 -j -Atlantic & Great Western. 1867. 195 187 ITS 158 191 COMPARATIVE 1866. 306 156 97,S09 93,578 82,921 100,138 -j 521 [ “ 4th, 78.778 73,976 97,583 81,021 82,927 1 .4th, Apl. 44 81,628 - 4th, “ Western Union. 93 88 78,400 211 ' let, May. 1 2d, “ } 3d, “ J 4th, “ J 44 44 73 82 f | Tol. Wabash &Western3d, Feb. ] 44 23,263 22,091 - Michigan Southern.... .3d, Apl. ] 44 1S,3S0 20,682 180,286 1 452 Marietta & Cincinnati. .1st, May. 44 67,968 243,889 4th, “ | 1st, May. I (in ’67 3d, “ j 410.) 44 68,901) 58,826 L L 213 224 237 233 54,576 60,863 61,319 l ^ 236 219 210 243 191 133 133 148 65,911 1 , 221 191 162 177 196 67,900 117,668 f 3d, “ 4th, “ 280 2d, Mar. West’n.4th, Apt. ] 1st, Mav 2d, “ [ 1,152 3d, “ 4th, “ 232 229 205 230 232 78.370 64,802 116,818 » - ^ 2^ 198,558 193,522 323,244 103,828 “ .—Earn. p. m—, 1867. 1868. 96,807 82,137 S9,741 99,300 59,752 62,811 67,476 65,132 352,935 224,720 269,9.0 288,278 423,827 1st, May. I 507 2d, 3d, [■ Chicago and N. 117,467 115,965 44 $1,185,746 bonds due of United : .—Gross carn’jrs—* 1867. 1868. Chicago and Alton.... (798 m.) following notice to the holders of the Company will exchange any of these bouds of $1,000 each (weekly).—Iu the following table we com¬ at any time;betore the first day of October next at par for a new reported weekly earnings (gross and per mile) of the leading mortgage bond of eqaal amount, bearing 7 per cent interest, clear the 1866 Philadelphia and Reading Railroad give* The Railroad Earnings pare 729 « 1867. 1868 (157 771.) (180 7/*.) (180 45,102 36,006 $39,67y $46,415 27.666 39,299 43,333 86,913 102,686 36,392 40,710 57,852 60,558 58,262 73,525 126,496 119,667 40,703 39,198 49,231 85,508 60,698 84,462 100,303 75,248 54,478 814*081 79,431 • • i • i. It 54,718 974*957 77*. <W * • (June 6,1868. THE CHRONICLE. 730 RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Subscribers will confer a great favor by giving ns immediate notice of any error *" Marked thus * Stock leased roads out¬ dividend col. x = extra, c =**= standing. cash, s stock. In Last pa id. rate Bid. Date. Periods. Baltimore and 100 100 Ohio Washington Branch* Parkersburg Branch * Bellefontalne Line 2 Jan. & July Tan. ’68 Jan. * July Jan. ’68 fan & July Jan. ’(>8 April & Oct Apr. ’68 Ask. 4 420, (KH) Fnh * Aug Feb 14,884,000 1,976,000 l<jj 4,076,974 100 3,360,<MM> 100 Hartford and Erie Boston and liOwell Boston and Maine, Boston ana Providence Buffalo, New York, * Erie*. .100 Buffalo and Erie loo Burlington * Missouri R<ver.KX> 100 5,0iH ,°0() Feb. & Aug Camde.u and Amboy 378,455 Camden and Atlantic 50 723 500 preferred 50 do do 72 L 926 Jan. &July Cape Cod *?]{ 1,159.5(H) Catawissa* do preferred 50 2,200,00) May & N v Cedar Rapids * Missouri R>vl00 Central Georgia * Banii’g Co. 100 4,666,800 June & Dec Central or New Jersey 100 13,0(H),000 Quarterly. & July Central Ohio 5'0 2,600.000 Jan. do 400,000 do ;,0 preterred 100 2,017,82' Dcceinbei. Cheshire, preferred 3,886,5(H) Mar * Sep. Chicago and Alton, • .100 do preferred. .1‘M) 2,425,4(H) Mar & Sep. Chic. Bur. & Quincy, 100 12,500,000 Mar. & Sep. Chicago and Great Eastern.. .100 4 390 (MM) Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska*.. .100 4,000,(MX) Jan. & July Chicago and Milwaukee* ....100 2,227,000 Chicago & Nor’west 1°0 13,232,496 dc> do pref. .100 14,789,125 Chicago, Rock Isl. & Pacific..UK) 9,1(H).000 April &Oct April* Oct Cine., Ham. * Dayton 100 3,521,664 aa-> Jail. -fan. Jan. Dec. Feb. • • ?w ... 3% 1% 2% • • • • . ’68 "67 ’68 ... 150% .... .... 15% 15% 132 4 5 5 "68 ’6S • • !50 5 3 139% 139% 3% .... .... Jan. ’68 3% May ’6 3 Dec.- ’67 5 • •• . 129 - 54% 54% 60 50 75 80 67% 5 .... .. ... .... .... 151 5 5 68 • • .. 79 • .... 108 898,950 155,000 May So Nov 4,000,000 2.409,30? 3,150,000 109% 6,0(H), 000 2,044,600 May & Nov May ’68 8,750,000 Jan. & July Jan. "68 3% ;05% -*■06% ShamokinVal. & Pottsville*. 50 100 May ’68 10s 86% ^7% Shore Line Railway 5,(11,925 50 Cleveland and Toledo 50 6/250,000 Jan. & Julv Jan. "68 3% 10»% 1 108% 0 South Carolina. South Side(P. &L.) ... 100 Quarterly. Oct. ’67 2% ....| Columbus & lndiauap. Cent.. 100 South West. Georgia 100 Columbus and Xenia* 50 1,786,800 Dec & June Dec. 67 4s 444 Syracuse, Bingh'ton So N. Y..100 Concord 50 1,500,(KH) vlay * Nov May ’68 5 Terre Haute * Indianapolis.. 50 350,(HH) Jan. & July Jan. 68 3% Concord and Portsmouth 100 84 90 Toledo, Peoria, So Warsaw.. .100 Conn. &Passump. pref 100 1,822,10C Jail. & July Jan. ’68 3 123 124 do do lstprel.100 Connecticut River 100 1,700,000 Jan. & .July Jan. ’68 4 4 do do 2d pref. 100 Cumberland Valley 50 1,316,9(H) Apr. & Oct. Apr. ’68 Toledo, Wab & West 100 Dayton and Michigan 100 2,4(1),000 do do preferred.100 406,132 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 3 Delaware* 50 124 5 100 124% Utica and Black River Delaware, Laclca., & Western 50 11,288,600 Jan. & July Jan. "68 Vermont and Canada* 100 do do scrip. 100 2 812 000 Vermont and Massachusetts.. 100 L04L350 1 500 (HH) do Virginia Central, .. A. .100 do .... .... .... .... . • • • ... .... .... .... .... .... . .... .... .... .... • .... ioiu do do 1 Eastern, (Mass) East Tennessee East Tennessee Elmira and do & Georgia.. .1 So Virgiuia . 1 .. ' Georgia Hannibal and St. do 118% do Hartford &N.Ha 500’000 May & Nov May ’58 500,(HK) 28,465,3(H) 8,536.9(H) 3,5 40,0(H) 4,156,(HH) 1,900,000 5,253,836 3,000,000 1,180,(MM) Jan. * July Jan. 6‘3 Feb. * Aug F«b. ’66 January. Jan, ’68 Jan. * July Jan. 68 Jan. So July Jan. "68 • 69% 4 7 4 Quarterly. Apr. '68 • • .... • 81 86 3 4 4 . . Delaware Division* Delaware and Hudson Delaware & Raritan, .... 142% 143 Jan. "68 Feb. ’68 Sep. ’67 Jan. ’66 3% .... Apr. '68 Jai., ’68 .... 151% 151% 5 4 5 54 .... .... 1% 4 .... 93 .... 68 90 «7* 63 102% 30 3% 30% U% 92% 9 2k 3 4* 2Cx 331 3c5? •00% 52 106% 94>4 MX 5s 5 4 131 117 117% Jail. ’68 Feb. & Aug. Feb. ’68 79 45 3% 2.300,000 1,700,000 Annually. 1,469,429 2,989,090 393,073 May & Nov 901,341 676,050 869,450 635,200 50 70 May ’68 Nov. ’67 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 Feb. & Aug eb.’68 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 ' 2% 3 3 5,819,275 1,365, (5(H) 2,203,900 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68 1,314,130 1,983,150 Jan. & July Jan.’68 1,115,400 1,651,316 908,400 5,7(H),000 1,000,000 May So Nov M*y '68 3% 1,466,8(H) Jan. & July Jan. ’68 4 2,250,000 June & Dec Dec ’67 4 2,860,000 Jan. & July J«~ ’68 IX 3,253.679 50% 69% 99% 99% 57% Wff r ...\ Jan. & July Jan. ’64 4 Jan. & July Jan. '68 5% June So Dec Feb. * Aug Feb. & Aug Feb. & Aug Dec. ’67 51 70 :: ... ... 50 1,818,953 60 1,633,350 100 15,000,000 Aug. ’67 10c 131 128 Feb. ’68 Feb. ’68 40% 41 73% 21% 74% .. 615 950 190,750 .fan. * July 23,392,300 F< b.* Aug. 1,689,9(H) Mar. & Sep 2,(MM),000 Jan. & July 3(H),(HH) Quarterly. 300,0(H) Jan. & J uly 90 100 4,500,673 Lehigh Coal and Navigation . 50 S,739,800 May & Nov May ’67 Monongahela Navigation Co. 50 728,100 Jan. & July Jan. ’6S Morris (consolidated) 100 1,025,000 Feb. & Aug do preferred 100 1,175,000 Feb. & Aug Feb.’68 Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,207 Feb. & Aug Febr 67 do prefer.. 50 2,888,977 Feb. So Aug Fib. ’67 Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50 2,002,746 Union, preferred 60 2,907,850 West Branch & Susquehanna. 50 1,100,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’65 Wyoming Valley 60 800,000 Irregular. Oct. ’67 .... • July .100 2,94 ,791 Chesapeake and Del .... . 66 Oanal, .... #### .... ... & Jan. & pref .100 555,500 100 2,227,000 Ill.)..... 2,707,693 Wilmington and Manchester. 100 1,147,018 Wilmington * Weldon 1,463,775 Worcester and Nashua 75 1,522,*00 69% 131 3% • • . do do Western (N. Carolina) Western Union (Wis. & • .... 2% 65 3% 84 May ’67 9,981,500 April & Oct Apr. ’68 Huntingdon and Broni Top *. do do prel. Illinois Central, 1 Indianapolis, Cin.* Lafayette Jeffersonv., Mad. & tndianap.l Joliet and Chicago*.... ....1 • - 1 902 000 1 preferred 7 8. 4 2 141 970 Williamsport*.. . do pref. Erie, do Virginia and Tennessee 1 673 952 1,983.170 December. Dec. 67 3, $83,300 Jail. & July Jan. "68 56'. 4 3 4 Feb.’67 2,363,6001 Jan. preferred 100 Louis, Alton, & Terren... 100 do do pref. 100 St. Louis, Jacksonv. So Chic.*lC0 Sandusky, and Cincinnati 50 do do pref. 60 Sandusky, Mansf. So Newark.100 Schuylkill Valley* 50 101% 101* 4 4 Aug Feb. ’68 137.500 Jan. So July Jan. ’68 3% 115% 3,068,400 June & Dec Dec. ’67 4 91% 4,648,900 Quarterly. May ’68 2 St. 1 676 345 Feb. & 152% 300;500 do • 82 ... 150 100 Rutland .... 69% sJ % June "68 10s June’68 Ids Oct. ’67 5 Apr. ’63 8s 1.5AO.OOO Jan. & Jnlv Jan. ’68 6,000,000 Jan. So July Jan. ’68 I,755.281 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 100 2,000,000 847,100 100 Rome, Watert. &Ogdensb’g..lOO 2,4)0,000 50 . • 125 6,785,06. Jan. & July Jan. ’68 Richmond and Danville Richmond & Petersh., .... 38 100 Ask Pittsburg HndCouuellsville... 50 1,776,129 Pittsb., Ft.W. So Chicago 100 II,5(H),(KM) Quarterly. Apr. ’68 2% .09% 109% Portland & Kennebec (new)..100 579.500 Feb.* Aug. Feb. ’68 3 !06 Portland, Saco, & Portsm’th.100 1,500,000 J line * Dee Dec. ’67 3 Providence and Worcester... .100 1,800,000 Jan. * July Jan. '68 4 Raritan and Delaware Bay*.. .10C 2,530,7(H) Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO 2,500,000 April &Oct Apr. ’68 3 I2i% - 3 5 - 20 (i ’67 . 16 14% .... Mar. ’68 Mar. ’68 Mar. ’68 . .... 68 2% 121 Jan. ’68 Jan. ’68 • Periods. standing. York and HArlem Last paid. Date, rate Bid. out¬ — July Jan. ’68 Ogdensb. So L. Champlain —100 3,023,500 Annually. Feb. ’68 do preferred.100 1,000,000 Apr. & Oct Apr. ’68 Ohio and Mississippi, 100 20,226,604 do preferred. .100 3,500,000 June & Dec June ’68 Old Colony and Newport 100 4,848,320 Jan. So July Jan. ’68 Orange and Alexandria ... ..100 2,003,655 482,4(H) Feb. & Aug Feb.’ ’68 Oswego and Syracuse 50 Panama 100 7,000.000 Quarterly. Apr. '68 Pennsylvania 50 22,097,978 May & Nov May ’68 Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5,996,7iK> Jan. & July do do preferred .. 2,100,000 Jan. & July Phila. and Reading, 50 23,856,101 Jan.& July Jan. ’68 Pliila., Germant. * Norrist’n* 50 1,569,550 Apr. So Oct Apr. ’68 Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50 9,058,300 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 . # 5 Jan. , 56 Feb. ’68 Dec. . . 55 FRIDAY Stock New York, Prov. & Boston.. .100 Norfolk & Petersburg, pref. .100 do do guar.100 Northern of New Hampshire. 100 Northern Central, 60 North Eastern (S. Car.) 7 do Sp.c., pref North Carolina 100 North Missouri 100 North Pennsylvania 50 Norwich and Worcester 100 . 122% 123% 4 5 .... Apr. • • .... 5 ..... Cincin.,Riclim’d & Chieago...l00 Cincinnati and Zanesville.. .. 50 100 Cleveland, Col So Cin Cleveland & Mahoning* 50 Cleve, Pain. So Ashta 100 Cleveland and Pittsburg ... 50 • • • 3% 68 • fan. & July Jan. *July Tan. & .July 950 000 1 uno * Dec 6,000,000 Feb. & Aug • 3% ’ooo 000 Quarterly. nne & Dec L>< c. ’67 Blossburg and Corning* 50 250,000 JJan. & .Inly Tan. ’68 B *ston and Albany. .100 13,725,000 Nov. ’67 Boston, Con & Mo'itreal.pref.100 1,340,400 vlay * Nov. Boston, leased roads New York So Harlem pref. N. Y. and New Haven'. 18,151,962 1.650,000 April & Oct Apr. ’68 JJJ are Lin dividend col. x = extra, c cash, s = stock. v Railroad. par Albany and Susquehanna....100 1,774,824 Atlantic * St. Lawrence* 100 2,494,900 Atlantic & West Eo'iit too 1,232,100 733,700 Augusta & Savannah* 10- Dividend. COMPANIES Dividend. COMPANIES Marked thus * are • discovered In onr Tables. .... 41 30 32 80 1 335 0(H) 112 10,731,4(H) Quarterly. Apr. "68 2% 111% ) %Liittlo Schuylkill*.... Lxm£ ) ) ) ) ) ) ) Island Macon ant do Common do 2d pn do Manchester and Lawrence Memphis So Chariest Michigan Central, do do Milwaukee* P duC do -do ' do do Milwaukee and St. Pa r do preferred. Mine Hill* Soh’lkil Mississippi So Tennessee^ Morris and Essex. Nashville & Chattanooga New Bedford and Taunton New London Northern.. 514,646 8,572,400 2,616,1(H) 3,(MK),0;H) 1,109,59 4 ,J m. & July Jan. ’68 June & Dec June ’67 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 3 4 2 2 3 Aug. ’(Hi • .... irUmcellaneous. Coal.—American... • 79 79% Jan. & July Jan. ’68 5,492,638 Feb. So Aug Feb. ’68 4 * .. . ■ * * * * ... .... .... .... • • • • .... .... 0 8;i66;34$ 0 3, 775,60k Jan. & July 0 2,948 78c 0 825,40' 0 3,58S,3(H 0 i;044;i(M 0 3,616,350 ) H) 720,001 ) 0 2,056,544 K) i;430,6(X ) K) 500.00M ) 30 12 • Wilkesbarre .... 12) January/ 78% 5 4 Jan. ’6“ Jan. '6': • New Yon* William burg .... .0, • . • • Improvement. Canton • • • • • • • . Merchants’ Union United States Jnne So Dei j Dec. ’6" 4 • • • • Sei> Mar. ’6r 3%)s 134 May & Nov 7 May ’60 3 5 r . . 5 4 3 5 • 3 • • • ... 130 • . . . • . . • • • • • • • • 132 ’67 30 60 50 16% 165 200 1,000,000 May & Nov May ’68 750.000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 100 July ’66 Ju'y ’67 **pr. ’68 May ’68 225 60% 52 20 2 5 2 100 20,000,000 100 6,000,000 19 88 • • • • 38% 50 57 53 28 63% 28% 55% 55% Quarterly. Dec. ’66 26 26% Wells, Fargo & Co.. ...100 ’0,000,000 35 Steamship.—Atlantic MaL 100 4,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’67 2% 97% 97% Pacihc Mail l(X •20,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’67 3 Trust.—Farmers’ L.& Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’68 • ... .... 4 • • • • 70 Mar. So Feb. & An< ? Feb. ’60 Jan. & Julv Jan. ’60 3 1 1,334,00 ) Jan. So Juli/ K) 6,000,00() Feb. & Anj; y Feb. ’60 3 K) 895.000 Mar So Sep Sep. ’6r r )0 4,093,425 )0128,537,000 Fe j Feb. ’603 • 34% ’68 Feb.& Aug. Feb. ’68 Jan. So July Jan. ’68 Jan. So July Jan. '68 731,2 0 4,000,000 Telegraph■ W estem Union. 100 40,359,400 Jan. & July Express.— Adams 100 10,000,000 Quarterly. American 500 9,000,000 Quarterly. Boston Water Power 78% 1,000,000 386,00() 5( 4,000,000 100 2,800,000 Manhattan..... 105 97 100 65% 67 7 50 Metropolitan 100 8 50 ’68 100 1,250.000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’66 25 2,000,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’67 20 1,200,000 Jan. So July Jan. ’68 Jersey City & Hoboken.. 20 89% ’67 1,000,000 .1(H) 3,400,000 Apr. & Oct Gas— Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) Harlem . • .... 45 ’68 l(i .. Wyoming Valley 51 .. 3,214,250 February.. Feb.’67 0 1,014/00 February.. Feb. ’67 0 5,437,3*- Jan. * July 0 1,500,0(H) Mar. &Sep. Mar. 2,500,0(H) 2! 500,000 Jun. & Dec. Dec. 100 5,000.(K)0 1(H) 2,000,000 Jan. & July July .100 5,000,000 50 3,200,000 Quarterly. May 50 1,250,000 Jan. & July Jan. Pennsylvania Spring Mountain Spruce Hill 2 8(H) (HK) ....... 25 50 Ashburton Butler Consolidation Ceutral Cumberland .... L5(KUKX) Apr. "68 4 1,600 860 8,130,719 Mar. & Sep Sep.’66 3s. 28% 10% ) 4,460,30.8 Mar. & Sep Sep. ’66 3s. 2,029,778 130 l) 1,000,00(1 May & Nov May ’68 5 ) 5,312,725 Mar.’68 3 120 0 7,502.861 Jan. & July Jan. ’(>8 5 ) 11,065,340 Feb. & Aug vtay '68 lOe 89% 0 586,800 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68 5 8 • Jl32% ... National Trust 100 New York Life & Trust. .100 Union Trust ......100 United States Trust 100 MIning.—MariposaGold 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,000,000 1,500,000 *.., • • • 12% **". 100 5,097,609 Mariposa Gold Preferred.100 5,774,400 Quicksilver • Feb. & Aug Feb. ’68 10 Tan. * July Jan, ’6ft 4 Jan. & July Jar. 68 5 .100 10,000,000 Fob ’66 5g’d S6% >26% June 6, 1868J THE CHRONICLE. 731 RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST.—Page 1. Bond List Page 2 will appear In tills place next week. Interest. DESCRIPTION. pay b: outstand given in detail in the 2d col umn it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co’s name. ing. Payable. S Ph Ask’d Bid. Railroad: Atlantic & Gt. Western ($29,999,900) $2,151,500 Ap’1 A Oct 757.500 aS6,000 do .do 761, (KK) Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio) 3,681,900 do do ) 2,653,000 Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex 1,382,000 Consolidated Bonds 17,105,000 do do do do Jan. & July do Mortgage sinking fund, (N. Y.) .... A 'lanlic&St.. Law. 1st 2d Mort.(Portlaud) Mortgage Beliefontaine 1864 Mort (S. F.)1855 1850.... 1853... ; o do 2d mort.. Belvidere he taw are : 1st Mort. (guar. C. aDd A.) 2d Mort. do 3d Mort. -» Boston <fe Albany: Sterling Bonds... Albany Bonds Dollar Bonds boston, Cone. & JZo/^ratf($l,050,000): 1st Mortgage | Sinking Fund Bonds Boston, Hartford and Erie do do do Boston and Lowell: Bonds do of Oct. I8'5f. do do o' do do Ju y ’ do do Mortgage . „. General Mortgage Bonds conv. into pref. stock... 2d Mortgage Catawissa : ($202,500) 1st Mortgage Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage.. Central of Ne w Jersey : 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Central Ohio : 1st Mort... Central Pacific of Cal.: 1st mortgage Convertible Bonds Cheshire: Bonds Chicago and Alton pref Chic., Burl, and Quincu ($5,458,250) Trust Mortgage (S. F.)...... Chicago and Gt. Eastern 1st Mort Chicago and Milwaukee : 1st Mortgage (consolidated) Chicago & Northwest. ($10,251,000): Preferred Sinking Fund 1st Mortgage Interest Bonds ”’ Consol. S, F. Bonds, conv. till Extension Bonds E juipment Bonds • • Mortgage do Cincinnati Richmond db Chicago Cincinnati db Zanesville .1st .. . . Mort" Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($425,000) • st Mort.(payable $25,000 per year) Cleveland dk Mahoning 1st Mortgage... 3d do Cle>\, Pain. <h Ashtabula: 1st m! B’ds 2d Mort. Bonds 3d do Cleveland eft Pittsburg : 2d convertible 364,0001 200,000 5 5 378.50 00,"i t Ap’l A Oct. 400,000 J’ne A Dec. , , May & Nov July Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,2§0)1 Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1866 [‘ * Columbus eft Indianapolis Central: Mortgage do Connecticut River: l»t Mort Conn, an l Passumpsic R. : 1st mort Cumberland Valley: (356,100) 1st Mort 2d <do :. Dayton dnd Michigan: 1st Mortgage Bonds Delaware: 1st Mortgage, »eia., Lacka. <fc Western: guaranteed! 1st Mortgage, sinking fond do 2d Laeka. and West. 1st Mort Lee Moines Valley : Sole mort.Bonds, Detrott and Milwaukee ($7.151,198): f 1st Mortgage, convertible. •z? Sinking Fund, conv. bonds.... Eastern, Mass. ($1,77«»,4K)): Mortgage, convertible , do do J’ne A Dec. May A Nov 7 i 1,180,950 April & Oct ) Jan. & July ) 490,000 498,000 141,OIK) 786,000 .... ... • .. • 2nd . 1... 1,250,000 3,600,0(H) 756,000 3,040, OIK) 165,000 2,200,000 Feb.& Aug. May A Nov. i ) • • 1st 2d 3d .... .... 9i 97 J’ne A Dec. . Jan. & July Ap’l A Oct. Feb. A Aug Mar. & Sep. Feb. A Aug May A Nov. M’ch A Sep • .... . . . .. do . .. do do KK) 87 *0>4 113 .... and N. Indiana: 1st do 1885 May & Nov. 1863 F.M A.&N. 1915 Feb. A Aug 1885 A«>r. A Oct. '1874 May & Nov. do May A Nov 99 Extensi 94 90 W" .... 95^ 1896 1*80 Fan. A Julv 1885 do 1895 May A Nov 1893 .... 1890 1st 2d 795,000 Feb. A 1,603,000 1,096,000 135,000 M’ch & Sep 1876 Jan. A July 1874 do 1880 April A Oct 1892 M’ch A Sep 1873 May A Nov. 1875 Tau. & July 1892 79 May & Nov. BOO 2,021.0(H) 692,000 Jan. & July 1885 do 1886 Aug 1873 .. . .... Mortgage 92 93 Mi 103 1 CO .... .... m 109,000 2,837,000 642,000 169,500 500,000 1,111,000 1,663 000 664,000 2,810,000 ►••{1f $2,500,000 July 18— May & Nov. 18— M’ch & Sep 1878 J’ne & Dec. 1876 Ap’l & Oct. 1905 do Jan. & July M’ch<to oept do Jan. & July April & Oct WrchA ($3,688,385) do • May A Noy. • • ... . . .... (P.& K.RR.) Bonds art.: 1st Mort. bonds S. eft N. Indiana: ($9,135,8-40) 1875 ... .. 97k 9 8k 98 • • • • . • « • • .. I Mi • •• ..." ov ily 1882 • • • • • • • • ft do do Income Bonds. Real Estate.... 1st mort ct 1,300,000 >v v. is v • • • • • • . • • Mo • • S L ... • ... . • .. • • • « • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ... • • • • • • ft , 96 1873 1883 • • . . . • • • • • • • * • • • • • • • • .... 1890 1893 .... ... .... : var g 1891 v 1896 1885 • • ■ do ! \ 90-’91 70-’71 1?74 1870 TS* .... • • i • • • • 1887 • • . • • • • • # • • • • • • • 1869 110 112*’115 1885 99 95 4 . do 1877 ' 1868 Jan. A 5,377,000 1,500,000 July 1891 • • • • • ft • W ft ft ft ft .... ft 189.3 148.500 2,000,000 2,000,000 ft ft » ft • • • • • • 1876 1870 May A Nov. 1867 do do do 1882 1882 5876 • • •• 94* 95 1875 •/A. do 1 00 1884 90 » • • • » • • • • • • • • • Ml m m • • m • ft • • • • ft • • • ft • • • • • • ♦•ft. ♦ • • 1880 y 94 72^ 1882 75,343) \ • y var. Feb. o ♦ 100 2,297,000 831,200 4,187,000 • •- • 4,504,500 878,141 > • 'i- 1S97 . 1,095,(XX) 315,2(X) 660,000 300, (XX) 1,294,(XX) 1,000,000 600,000 ► • • • ... ct 1877 lv 1875 1,594,(XX) 267,(MX) 600,000 2 • «■ • • ... lly 1874 ily 1875 ep 1885 ly 1869 2,272,750 824,0<M ft 120 • ... 1881 1,000,(KH) 1,437.000 1 I • 612.500 485, (KH) 800, (KX) 390.500 1 K ’81-’94 1875 >ct 1873 7S4,000 2,693,000 637,000 Mi 1881 1875 1881 1871 . • • Mi 1 2 1884 )ct1906 897,000 4,000,000 i • 1,980,000 : 115 Julyily 1866 1,500,000 Mortgage (Main stem) Mortgage (Memphis Branch) Mortgage (l.eb. Br. Extreme). do •. • 1910 Sep July Ap’l & Oct. 1877 Jan. A * * Jan. & 847.500 5(X),(KX) 175,(XX) 150,000 ($5,105,000) • • lly 1866 1872 1 A 10 v. do ... 1882 903,000 Eastern Division... M 91 ... ng 900,000 Mortgage (guarrante d) do 6 • ... Jcl 1875 1875 1890 1875 »v. M J Mi do do do Extension .... 97* ‘ 7 6 6 «-• * ... 1880 1890 Mortgage, 108 100 1875 90) (HX) m.lle and Nashville 1st 1st 1st 534,900 161,000 . Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point) Jo do (Glen Cove Br.) L ville, Cincinnati ,ft Lexington L 105 Del 1870 900,000 900,000 M Marietta eft Cincinnati 250,000 573,800 . Tthigh Valley : 1st Mortgage.... Zittle Miami : 1st Mortgage L 1st Mortgage, sinking fund.... LfOng Island : 1st Mortgage 1st 1,00\000 500,000 . 95X 88 78k 79 1881 1883 1883 1873 1876 n 1st Mori gage, 2d do 90 9i% 1 1,250,000 500,IKK) 5*50,000 1,300,0(H) 3,290,090 364,000 Mortgage. do 97 93 do 300,000 7 Z Feb. & Aug 18.85 Tan 363.000 Mortgage...., L 90 1898 5,090,500 2,199,000 2,563,000 do 6 per cent llinois eft Southern Iowa : 1st Mort hdiana Central: 2d Mortgage ‘1 hdianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,28-4) 79k 80 1895 7 Jet .j bliet Jan. A July 1883 7 7 7 716,000 7 1 st Mortgage 94*’ 10 7 7 ng . 1893 1883 7 6 Aug May & Nov. Jan. & July 367,500 7 Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort.. Imlianap. Madison RR., 1st M.. j oliet eft Chicago : 1st Mort., sink, f 104 6 97 100 95 1882 1875 1884 878 do 70-75 do Jan. & July 1870 April A Oct 1868 Feb. A Aug 1888 May A Nov. 1893 1868 July, 1868 do 1868 do Feb. & 416,000 7 do do 9% 91k 1880 June & Dec 1888 M’ch A Sep 1875 Jan. & July 1882 April & Oct lo75 April & Oct 7 7 7 104 103 100 1877 May & Nov. M’ch & Sep 1879 18S3 do 2d . .... 96 3,890,000 7 Feb. & Aug ’69-’70 2,(KM),000 7 J’ne A Dec 1886 104 98 183,000 7 May & Nov. 1875 refferson rifle, Madison A Indianapolis. 103 Tan. & July 1870 5(H),IHH) 1,000,000 ',009,000 V55,000 Redemption bonds Sterling Redemption bonds 93 80 July July 1st Mort. sinking fund. do .... 96 1885 Ap’l & Oct. 1888 Jan. & July 1880 April & Oct 2862 do 3,437,750 7 April A Oct 633,600 7 Jan. A July 700,(HK) 6 Jan. A July 927,OIK) 6 Jan. A July Construction bonds, 1S75 io6*‘ Jan. & July 1872 Feb. & Aug 1874 1st Mortgage 1st Tan. A . Mortgage .... 1,397,000 6,663,000 425,000 ....... Consolidated mortgage. .... do do Hartf, Irov. & FishkiU ) July Bonds •• April A Oct Tan. A 1,173,(HH) 2(H),600 189,000 389,000 927,(H)() 1,000,000 1,455,(MX) 2.500,000 326,000 700,000 600,000 do 1 ... May & Nov. 1,919,000 sinking fund Bonds unsecured Hannibal eft St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds 91 .... 900,(KK) 370,000 . Greenville eft Columbia : 1st Mort... Bonds guaranteed by State .... ... .... Ap’l & Oct. > . Grand .Junction : Mortgage Great West., III.: 1st Mort., W, Div 1st Mortgage Whole Line ... 3 May &■ Nov. Jan. A July Ap’l A Oct. .... (inch in C. eft N. W.) Georgia 52 April & Oct 444,000 2.4(H),IKK) 1,100,000 do 1883 1894 1888 July do 894,000 750,000' 160,900 574,9(H) l,(HK!,tHH) 570,000 " Elgin and State lilt. 6S> . Jan. A 060,000 . Mississippi River Bridge Bonds. .... • Jan. & do 2d Mortgage Gal. eft Chic. U. 1st Mortgage, 2d do ... J 900,(KK) 600, OIK) 2,500,001) 7,336,000 1,5<K),0(M) 673,2IK) . ... 3 9 ) 3 2,000,000 380,000 • • .... 800,000 1,837,780 East Pennsylvania: Sink. Fund B’ds Elmira <ft Williamsport : 1st Mor(, 5 per cent. Bonds Erie Railway ($22,370,982): 1st Mortgage (extended) 3,000,000 2d do convertible 4,0(H),000 3d do 6,000,000 4th do convertible 4,441,600 5th do do 926,5(H) Sterling convertible (£800,0(H))... 3,875,520 Erie O' '0,000 Pitlburg: 1st Mortgage.... ... . y24,0C0 May & Nov 250,000 250,000 : 1st Mort. Bonds 1st Div Construction Bonds 2d Div .... 4 9 2 1,740,222 • ... 9 Jan. A * ’ \\ * Mortgage 1,130,000 !” Sinking Fund Mortmi»e -’79 Feb. & Aug do do Mar. A Sep. Jan. A July do ($1,752,400): * Ask’d <xi ‘C p. 1864” 1875 vari- ns. 1878 various. Feb. & Aug 1886 1886 Feb. A Aug 1816 1,000.000 Dubuque and Sioux City • 984* 9 % 98)4 100 97)a 9 8k 5 1) (5 -’71 ’<6 5 484.IHK) . • % 4 April & Oct Jan. & J uly April & Oct 861,000 i870 . 2d do Toledo Depot . 2d **’ Equipment Bonds ’ ** Chicago, Rock Island tfe Pacific: 1st Mortgage (C. & R. i.)... ’ 1st do (C., R. I., & Pac) i. line.. Ham. <& Dayton ($1,759,000): 1st 2d • 745,000 3,317,000 5,600,000 . ‘ Jan. A July do : 1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), 1st do 2d do income Consol. do Ap’l A Oct • 6 r8 4,319,510 041,000 804,000 867,000 4,661,700 Camden and Atlantic: 1st Mortgage 3d Mortgage 4th do 0 May A Nov Ap’l A Oct Jan. & July • ... 7 >5 7 824,460 675,000 1,700,000 Sterling £359,550 at $4 -<4 2d 3d • J’ne A Dec. M’ch & Sep Feb. & Aug 1,000,000 499.500 1,200,000 1,800,000 mortgage bonds Payabb 1,005,640 ....... Ap’l & Oct 600,000 do Cunden and Amboy ($10,204,463): Dollar Loans do do Dollar Loan Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan... • 73 1 12 '9 (1 re )3 <4 )5 0 0 200,000 Burlington <& Missouri: do 791,000 379,000 347,000 100,000 .. Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000) 1st Mortgage ; Land do do do 628.500 1,852,000 3,900,IKK) Buffalo & Erie: Common Bonds.. do 1,024,750 600,000 new... .S-S name. 2d Mortgage 1st 2d Funded Coupon Bonds Detroit and Pontiac R.R do do Bonds of June 30, 1866 Detroit. Movrofi doledo: 1st Mort. : Bellefontaine A Ind., 1st mortgage Iud. Pitts. A Cleveland, 1st mort. 2d Ap’l A Oct 1,5(K1,(HV 268,900 484,000 619,036 Sterling Bonds do of Baltimore ami Ohio: do do do do in brackets after the Co’s FRIDAY ■34S Railroad: Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) do INTEREST. f ! 1st 8d 1st Id 1st Id 1st DESCRIPTION. N.R*—Where the total Funded Debt Amount! is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ outstand¬ umn it is expressed by the figures ing. 1 • is not FRIDAY as V N• B.—Where the total Funded Debt Amount •t . y, < [June 6,1868. THE CHRONICLE. 732 INSURANCE STOCK LIST. Marked thus Companies. Allen Wright Bennehoff Run j Askd i i 10 par 03 10 Bergen Petroleum.. Bliven... Bid. Companies. HamiltonMcClintockpw Ivanhoe Manhattan Mountain Oil 1 30 •. .... .... . Bradley Oil 5 ...10 5 10 ...100 .... Brevoort Brooklyn .... 30 50 . . . 43 3j 48 GO Oceanic 5 Cherry Run special. .... 1 50 75 Clinton Oil Columbia Oil .... — .. • • 9 @ Empire City 5 5 Excelsior First National 5 Germania G’t Western Consol ....10 Hoffman . . . . . . 5 5 5 1 .10 . ... • .... .... .... .... .... • Adriatic ./Etna American * 50 50 write Marine Risks. 25 American Exch’o.100 50 25 Arctic Astor 25 25 25 25 17 21) 70 100 100 Beekman.... 40 70 io "is 50 ».... 40 5 00 4 1 95 .. (!) Ttnlt.ip. • Bowery (N. Y.) Broadway Brooklyn . —... Citizens’ City Clinton Columbia* 10 2 10 Commerce (N.Y.).IOO Commerce (Alb’y)lOO Commercial..... 50 Commonwealth 100 100 Continental * Corn Exchange.. 50 . COPPER MINING STOCK LIST Bld.'Askd ! Companies. paid 3 Adventure ./Etna .... .... .... .... 3 50 Albany & Boston... Algomah. . .» ...17 Lafayette Lake Superior 4 00 . . . . .... .... Medora Atlas .... ...» Mendotat Aztec .... Amygdaloid , . . . Boston 2% Caledonia f Calumet Ca n ad a Charter Oak r . — ...— Central .... Concord .... Copper Creek Copper Falls • 5 4 .. .2AX 1 .... 66 22 Dacotoh Dana .... .... Delaware DoY'*T1 ° Dorchester , T - - - . . Dudley Eagle River .... • . • . • • • • • • . . - • .... • . . 25 • • • • . • • 66 Empire . .... ... Evergreen Bluff".... Pontiac .... Portage Lake .... .... 4 50 • Princeton .... . • • . «... ~50 • • • . . . . 5X . • • 3 50 1 25 • • • • .... . , . . .... 2 • • • IX . . • . 66 • • • • .... ...» • x . . . j . • • Superior . ,« , 55 00 GO 00 Humboldt Hungarian .... 1 ....19 Huron Indiana Isle Royale* Keweenaw Kuowlton . . . . . . . . .... ....10 .... .. . .... 5 8 . . . * . .. 2 00 • Vulcan . . Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares. . + Capital $500,000, . a a . . .... .... 1 00 1 £0 6 1 . ... .... ... .... 3 . . AX 50 30 75 00 . 150,000 150,000 200,000 150,000 200,000 500,000 200, (MM) 144,613 233,253 9,480 in 100,000 shares tsr Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares King’s Co’ty(Bkln 20 150,000 Knickerbocker.. 40 Lafayette (B’klyn) 5ft 100 Lamar 280,000 Jan. and July. do do do do do do 1,214,015 do 648,755 do 351,173 do 260,750 do 151,991 do 215.453 do 269,836 do 303,462 do 179,766 do 275,861 do 233.405 365,325 do 291,309 Jan. and July. 273,680 Feb. and Aug. 1,060,509 Jan. and July. do 541,400 150,000 300,000 150,000 200,000 1,000,000 500,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 200,000 200,000 300,000 150,000 50 150,000 National rix New Amsterdam 35 N. Y. Equitable.3 35 N.Y.Fire and Marl-0'' 200.000 300.000 50 1,000,000 (B’klyn). Niagara . Bid. Askd' 210,000 200,000 500,000 350,000 393,829 200,000 281,546 229,250 200,000 20 Peter Cooper 150,000 199,287 164,44' 150,000 People’s .-. Phoenix + Br’klyn *50 1,000,000 1,099,8 ;2 Reliei 227,003 200,000 .100 300,000 480,549 Republic* .100 200 00ft Resolute* 127,448 25 200,000 256,< 87 Rutgers’ 25 150,000 95,099 St. Mark’s 25 St. Nicholas! 172,618 150,000 50 1,000,000 943,185 Security t 200,000 270,958 Standard .100 212,314 200,000 Star .100 224,012 200,000 Sterling * 25 222,577 200,000 Stuyveeant, Tradesmen’s.... 25 150,000 178,717 250,000 359,405 United States... 2G 50 642,353 Washington 400,000 393,700 Washington *+.. .100 190,200 WilliamshnrgCit.y 50 2^0,000 281,451 553,731 Yonkers & N. Y.100 500,000 , . . Ada Elmore par Alameda Silver American Flag Atlantic & Pacific Bates & Baxter Black Hawk Renton Bob Tail Boscobel Silver HamiltonG.& S.b’ds par — 2 Holman — — 66 GO — 10 54 80 50 1 5 75 7 00 35 i 66 1 30 — 5 .... Harmon G. & S Bullion Consolidated 40 10 — 10 Burroughs Central 4 8 35 00 40 O'' Consolidated Gregory... 700 4 15 4 20 29 25 35 Corydon Des Moines 1 Downieville 4 40 4 50 EdgehiJl Opliir Gold. • • Quartz llill Reynolds Rocky Mountain Seave'r .... • • • • — Empire Gold Sensendcrfer — .... Fall River .... Smith & Parmelee... — .... First National G ild Hill j Symonds Forks — .... — .... 10 Gunnell. Gunnell Union 40 GO . • • % 90 .... Vanderburg , , 30 f0 5 20 1 10 1 15 • .. • • • 15 10 • .. .. .. — • . . . i 4 23 . ...» . 3 00 20 — — . . . . . « • • • . . .... 10 00 3 10 1 00 40 00 70 12 Bid.] Askd Copake Iron - pa" • .... «... m * m m • • .... .... • • « .... %--• • « • • .... Bid. Askd Companies. i Tudor Lead 5 Foster Iron -Lake Superior Iron 100 Bucks County Lead,.... 5 Jlenbo Lead — Manhar Leaal — Phenix Lead — Iron Tank Storage — par — 20 22 Wallkill Lead Wallace Nickel Rutland Marble 25 15 25 16 50 Long Island Peat — — — . • . • 14 Jan.’6S.7 10 Tan. ’68.5 ... . • , • . 10 6 . 8 8 12 10 5 10 16 5 20 10 6 5 10 14 , # uo 10 % Feb. and Aug. Jan. and July. do do do do Feb. and Aug. do Jan. and July. Feb. and Aug. Jan. and July. do Feb. and Aug. Feb. avd Aug. Jan. and July. do Feb. and Ang. Fsb. and Ang. Jan. and July. do 36 10 . 5 . , 15 10 91 1“ 8 8 10 7 7 §1 7 5 10 5 5 . . 101 12 # . . . , , 10 10 14 8 5 5 34 10 10 . J’y ’67.34 Feb’68.10 Apr ’65.5 J’y’67.34 • . . • • • • • • Jan.’68 5 JaD. '68.5 Jan. ’66.5 Jan.’C8.5 Jan.’65.5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. 68’.5 July’65.6 Aug’G634 10 Feb.’G8 5 10 Mar.’68.5 10 Jan. ’68.5 10 Jan. ’G8.5 10 10 15 131 ; 811 10 10 10 5 8 20 20 15 10 10 14 15 16 14 5 8 8 10 12 8i 11 10 10 30 S 8 12 12 April and Oct. Jan. and July. Jan.’68.5 10 7 10 10 10 9 Feb. ’68.5 Jan ’68 5 •. , 12 5 18 10 15 May ’65.6 . 10 10 Jan.’68 5 •. 10 10 10 , July ’65.5 10 7 10 10 7 . . .. , . , Jan.’68.7 Jan’66.3* 10 12 10 7 12 10 10 10 7 10 5 10 10 7 14 5 • 10 10 . Apr/68.5 . 5 10 10 10 8 7 10 10 July’67.5 10 Jan. 6S6 10 Jan. ’68.5 14 Jan. ’68.7 10 Jan ’68 5 10 Jan.’ 68.5 7 Jan’6S.3£ 10 Jan. ’68.6 10 July "67.5 10 Jan. ’68.5 20 Jan’68.10 . July ’65.5 . 10 18 Jan. ’68.5 Jan’68.10 Jan. ’68.6 10 Jan. ’68 5 10 Jan.’68.6 0 Feb-’68.6 12 10 10 10 l'J 10 10 10 10 10 11 Jan. ’68.5 Jan* ’68.5 Apr.’68.5 Jan.’68.8 Jan. ’68.5 Feb. 68.5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68.5 Jan’6S.3* J'y ’66.34 11 Feb.’686 5 Feb.’67.5 10 Aug. "67.5 m . 10 10 5 F’b.’66.34 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68.5 Feb.'68.5 Feb.’68.6 11 Jan. '68.5 10 Jan. ’68.5 10 Feb.’68.5 5 Feb. ’685 10 10 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. '68.E CITY PASSENGER RAILROAD STOCKS & BONDS. Companies. Par. Capital paid in. « 5 ... — ••• . • .... ... Broadway (B’klyn) 100 200,000 B’dway & 7 Av.NY 100 2,100,000 Date. Price 1867 8 1867 SX 107,700 B’k’nC.&Rock.B. Cent. P’k,N.& E. R 100 1,031,500 B’klyn 100 .... Br., M. & Ford 100 Ninth Avenue 100 Second Av. (N. Y ). 100 Sixth Av. (N Y.).. 100 95.900 .... 75,000 5 12 5 '7 V ( r- 797,320 800,000 -67 750,000 ;Nov. 1 Third Av. (N.Y.).. 100 1,170,000 ... .... 500.000 D.D’k,E. B d’y.&c. 300 1,200.000| 1867 Eighth Avenue.... 190 1,000,000 1867 42d St. & G’d St* F. 100 750,000 May ’68 5* 136* 12 P 35*,000 ... O Bonded Debt. p.ct bid. 99,850 B’klyn, Bath &C. 1.100 B’klyn Cent,&Jam. 100 48S.100 Brooklyn City 50 1,500,000 Feb.’68 3 B’k’nC. &Rid’w’d. 100 164.000, V.BrantSt.&E.Bas ..... Dividend. Bleeck.St.&Fult.F. 100 $900,000 Har. .... Saginaw, L. S. & M.. ..25 Rasese.-FLe Savon do Terre . Coney Isl. & MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Companies- . . . — .. . .... 5 45 Texas — . . Twin River Silver.... ..100 1 00 GC — — People’s G. & S. of Cal. — • .. Owyhee 4u 41 75 1 75 .... . 10 14 10 . 150 .... .. — .... 5 .. ...» • 44 . — Combination Silver.... .... — . . . 2 . oo! 12, l — . .. ..100 Manhattan Silver... — Midas Silver 5 Montana 10 New York New York & Eldorado — ....1 . . Kipp & Buell LaCfrosse Liberty .... — 4 Hope ... 50 90 10 20 3 00 15 4G ... .. 40 . . Bid. Askd Companies. Jan. ’6S 7 J’ne’64.5 10 179,875 324,352 124,836 419,774 175,845 301,939 . Companies. 14 3< do 257,458 March and Sep ’ 14 • . 5 Aug. 200,010 ... GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. do do do do do do Feb. and A.ug.’*65 4 . 15 12 20 20 10 10 10 10 io 1,000.0.0 2,3S5,657 Jan. and July. 200,0001 272,173 Feb. and Aug. 200,0;“ • 187,065 April and Oct. 200,0 19S,456 Jan. and July. do 150,0; j 185,228 do 400,000 426,752 2,000,000 2,393,915 150,000 139,630 • m Mar’68.5 10 10 10 5 14 273,792 Jan. and July. do 123,101 do 160,963 do 204,720 147,066 May and Nov. 232,520 Feb. and Aug. 597,473 Jan. and July. 222,207 Jan. and July. 200,000 Market* Meehan’ & Trade 25 Mechanics (B’kly) 50 .105 Mercantile 50 Merchants’ Metropolitan * t. .100 Montank (B’klyn) 50 10 . 204,000 25 100 100 121 10 Jan.68.5 r eb.’68.5 • 10 10 Dec.’67.5 Feb.’68.6 Jan’68.10 Jan’08.10 143 Feb’68 7* 12 Jan. ’68.5 Jan. ’68 5 10 Jan. ’68.5 10 Keb.’68.4 10 Jan. ’68.5 10 Jan. "69.5 14 do Jefferson... 25 10i Jan.’68.5 174 Jan.6S.3i 10 Jan.’68.5 , , . 10 5' Lorillard* 10 12 20 20 . 134,011 Feb. and Aug. 530,000 25 9 lo 12 20 20 226,229 International.... 100 ... 2X . . May and Nov. Feb. and Aug. 10 10 7s , J’e’64.,5 m 10 5 14 16 5 5 10 10 121 217,103 204,664 Longlsland(B’kly) 50 # k 425,060 April and Oct. 246,090 Jan. and July. . . .... Jan. and July. Jan. and July. Jan. and July. Jan. and July. Jan. and July. Feh. and Aug. March and Sep 300,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 200,000 200,000 North American* 50 North River.... 25 Pacific .ion Park IX 40 00 1865 1866 1867 Last pa Periods. June and Dec. Feb. and Ang. 200,000 Jan. and July. 153,000 Jan. and July. 300,000 210,000 353,764 Feb. and Aug. 250,000 293,943 Jan. and July. do 300,000 i51,339 do 200,000 213,472 400,000 417,194 Feh. and Ang. 200,000 226,092 Jan. and July. 250,000 277,680 Jan. and July. 500,000 1,432,597 Jan. and July. 400,000 385,101 March and Sep 25 . 50 200,000 250,000 250,000 300,000 200,000 200,000 300,000 left Nassau . .... Winthrop * Capitol $200,000, In 20,000 shares. . .21 Toltec Tremont Victoria West Minnesota Winona ... a . .... 8 . Washington ....33 .... . .... • 5 . a .... ' . 5 .... 1 Seneca Sharon X Sheldon & Columfcian.21 1 South Pewabic South Side Star .... 200,000 595,322 Lenox X Huibert * • . • . 3 1 . • Hope Hec St. Clair St. Louis St. Mary’s 208,33t 350,OR. 581,430 225,585 289,191 279,261 312,08!) ISO, 285 192,5SS 399,< >C2 280,551 259,089 438,750 500,000 Manhattan 8 12 $200,000 300,000 50 Irving 8 75 DIVIDENDS Capital. Netas’ts 200,000 100 25 Import’&Traders 6X Rocl’land .... 14 50 10 CO 10 ! 15 1 00 .... 15 50 Humboldt • • 24 00 25 00 10 Quincy % • 5X • — Howard ss 3X 8 50 G 00 .15 5X 20 CO . • 50 50 Hope ... 5M . Excelsior Franklin French Creek Gardiner Hill (■Jjrard Great. Western Hamilton Hancock Hanover Hilton 10ft Hamilton Hanover Hoffman Home .... ■iox .... Everett .... 50 Guardian Fd wards . 25 ... • • Firemen’s Fund. Firemen s Trust Fulton Gallatin Globe Great Western*!. 100 25 Greenwich 50 Grocers’ 1 00 5 Firemen’s Gebliard Germania 4 50 30 5X • 70 • . • GO . .... 8 . .. Phoenix IX ... • .... 1 .... . Exchange . 87 IX Pethcrick ....20^ r „ . . ... 55 . . .... David«on 5 1 N;inmlcong. .., New Jersey Consol... .10 .— New York -4 North Cliff' North western .nx .11 Norwich 7 Ogima .50 Pennsylvania * 22 50 ... . 25 , Native •! • . • .... 5X • . National .... • Copper Harbor | .... • 50 AX • Milton Minnesota 10 00 27 00 30 00 50 1 00, 23 00 3 00 3 25 — . . . • 6 . Mesnard Bohemian ... • Merrimac . 1 25 Bay State .... 2 . 50 30 17 10 10 Excelsior paid 1 Madison Man dan Manhattan Mass .. .... Eagle “... 40 100 Empire City Bid. Askd Companies. i 3 75 3 50 Allouez American ... - Jan. 1 , Ib68. (*) are participating, & Atlantic (Br’klyn) 50 .... ‘ Sherman & Barnsdale. ...— ...10 Union United Pe’tl’mF’ms.. 2 ...1ft United States 25 .... • ...10 — 2 00 2 10 .... ... .. .... ... s .... ... .. Southern .... .... a 1 75 ... Rynd Farm .... 10 . .... Rat,Rhone-Oil Tract... .... • Oil <’reek Pit Hole Creek .. . 2 2 .. N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons.. 2 — .. National N. Y. & Alleghany ... New York & Newark. 77. Y. & Philadel .... .... Buchanan Farm.... Central ." Cherrv Run Pet.rol’m Bid. Askd ■ PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. R. E. Mor. 1st Mort. 1,500,000 1st Mort. 80,000 1st Mort. 498,S10 1st Mort. 300,000 1st Mort. 20,000 1st Mort. 1st Mort. 1st Mort. 1st Mort. 1st Mort. Real est. 1st Mort. 1st Mort. var. 1884 1883 1870 1872 1884 a ►H 7 7 7 7 7 7 °45,000 550,000 1874 7 148.000 1873 7 672,000 203,COO 7 7 7 7 7 127,15ft i873 134,500 124,000 1st Mort. 167,000 700,000 1867 1st Mort. 1,280^000 i890 180,000 12,000 June 6, Drug's and Dyes—Duty,Alcohol, 2 50 per gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ lb; Alum, 60 cents $ 100 ft; Argols, 6 PRICES CURRENT. $3§f" In addition to the duties noted below, a discriminating duty of 10 per ad val. is levied cent, all imports on reciprocal under flags that have no treaties with the United States. On all goods, wares, and mer¬ chandise, of the growth or produce of Countries East of the Cape of Good Hope, when imported from places this of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬ side imposed dition to the duties articles when such on any imported directly from the of their growth OT produc¬ tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The tor in all cases to be 2,240 lb. place or places Anchors—Duty: 2* cent? *# lb. 012U0ft and upward^# lb 8© Aslies—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... $ 100 It 8 25 © 8 37* 11 25 @11 37* Pearl, 1st sort... Beeswax—Duty,20 $ cent ad val. American yellow.$ 2) ... @ 51 Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ Rio Grande shin $ ton43 00 @ * ct. .... Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Pilot *# ft .. © 7* 5} © Navy 13* 8* © Crackers Breadstuff s—See special report. Bricks. bard..per M.12 00 ©13 50 Philadelphia Fronts...40 00 © .... Common hair Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs 1 $ lb. Amer’n,gray &wh. $ft Butter and 45 ©2 00 Cheese.—Duty: 4 cents. i Butter— Fresh pail —.. State firkins, prime . State firkins,ordinary State, bt-firk., prime.. State, hf-firi., ordin’y We’sh tubs, prime ... Welsh tubs, ordinary. Western, good Western, fair Penn,, dairy, good... Penn., dairy, fair Grease 30© 26 © 28 © 26 © 30© 25 © 28 © 25 © © .. lb Factory fair Fa m Dairies prime.. Farm Dairies fair Farm Dairies common Skimmed 35 33 30 34 30 32 ; 28 32 30 31 28 30 © 30 © 28© Canada CheeseFactory prime.. .*# © 15 14© 13 © 14 13© 12 @ 14 10® 3 © 12 10 13 ... Cement—Rosendale$bl... © 1 75 Chains—Duty, 2* cents $ lb. One inch & upward^ lb 7*® 71 bituminous, $1 25 *# ton Coal—Duty, of 28 bushels 80 lb to the bushel ;, other than bituminous, 40 cents bushels of80 ft *# bushel. Newcastle G is 2,2401b. 9 50 © $ 28 .. Cann-d. .11 00 @12 00 Liverp’l House CannellO 00 @17 00 Liverpool Orrel © .... Liverpo. 1 Gas $ ton of 2,000 ft 6 50 © 7 00 Cocoa—Duty, 3 cents $ ft. Caracas (in bond)(gold) $ ft Maracaibo do ..(gold) Guayaquil do ...(gold) St. Domingo.. ..(gold) 16 @ @ 11 @ 7*@ .. 16* .. 11* 8* Co>per—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2*; old copper 2 cents 38 lb; manu¬ factured, 35 *# cent ad val.; sheathing t' jpper and yellow metal, in sheets42 faches long and 14 inches wide, ireighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square foot, lb. Sheathing,new..$ lb Bolts Braziers’ i . Sheathing, &c., old.. Sheathing,yellow met«l Bolts, yellow metal,.. Pig Chile American Ingot .. *# Quicksilver, 15 $ ft: Soda, * cent $ ft ; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; Soda Ash, *; Sugar Lead, 20 cents ^ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 *# cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents $ ft; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬ riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $1 ^8 ft ; all others quoted below, trice. Alcohol, 95 per cent. Aloes, Cape $ ft Aloes, Socotrine ..©.... 21 ® 75© 85 8*@ 3 . Alum A mato, .. goodtoprime. GO @ 1 50 Antimony, Reg. of,g’d .. Argo’s, Crude Argols, Refined, gold. Assafoetida Balsam Copivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru © @ © @ @ 33 33 33 33 18 26 26 @ © 23i@ 23J@ .. 33 # m 20 , , , , 23* 18 @ *# lb. Manila, *# lb Tarred Russia... Bolt Rope, Russia. 21 @ @ @ Corks—Duty, 50 *# cent ad val. 1st Regular,qrts *# gro 55 © do Superfine let Re ular, Pints Mineral Phial Cott ©n—See 1 40 S5* 50 12 speoial report. 22 18* 22 © 1 70 @ 50 © 70 © 40 24} @ 3 25 @ 40 85 @ 95^ 1 30 © © 3 50 .... 45 27© Petayo Berries, Persian, gold. Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ castle, gold Bi Chromate Potash... ' Bleaching Powder.,.. Borax, Refined Brimstone. Crude $ 31 4*@ 4$ @ IS* 4}@ 31}@ 4| 33 .. ...(gold).37 00 @38 00 Roll .. © 3* Sul¬ @ £* ton Brimstone, Am. *# ft Brimstone, 1 lor phur Camphor, O’ude, (in bond) @ (gold) . 1 10 © Camphor, Refined ... Cantharides 1 65 © .... 17 © .. Carbonate in bulk @ 3 25 30* 15© 50 85 34 @ 5 @ 5* 29*@ Castor Oil Chamomile Flow’s^lft Chlorate Potash Caustic Soda (gold) “ 20 ® 21 Cochineal,Mexic’n(g’d) .. @ 73© 90 75 Copperas, American ... Cream Tartar, pr.(gold Cubebs, East India— 1*@ 28jj@ 30 © Carraway Seed Coriander Seed....... Cochineal, Hon (gold) 14 @ Cutch Flowers,Benzoin.$ oz. Gambier.- ......gold Gamboge Ginseng, West.. Ginseng, Southern. .. Gum Arabic, Picked.. Gum Arabic, Sorts... Gum Benzoin Gum Kowrie Gnm Gedda gold 4 1 00 © 45® 81 @ 60 © 84 © 14*@ Myrrh,East India Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. 55© Senegal Tragacanth, w. flakey,gold..... and (gold) 8 Iodine, Resublimed... 6 Ipecacuanha, Brazil... 3 Jalap, in bond gold.* Eng Licorice Paste,Calpbria Licorice, Paste, Sicily. Licorice Paste Spanish Solid.... Licorice Paste, Greek. Madder,Dutch., (gold) do,Fre*ob}J£XF.F,do . . 1 75 8 3 80 7 00 4 00 @ .. 60 2|@ (80*#c.)(g’ld) Sugar L’d,W,e... ** Sulp Quinine, Am^ oz ." Sulphate Morphine. “ .(g’ld)*#ft Tapioca Verdigris, dry A ex dry . Tart’c Acid. .. 2* 25 © @ 2 25 © 7 00 50 © 13 12*® @ 45* 11 9}@ ,.. , Vitriol, Blue.. . Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Ravens,Light. .*#pee 16 00 © Ravens, Heavy 18 00 © Scotch, G’ck, No. 1 *#y. @ Cotton,No. 1 58© $ y. 72 . @ © 35 @ ... 75 85 85 86 15* 55 33 70 © 8 85 50 © .... 00 @ 3 75 85 © 90 25 © 55 37 @ 40 24© 25 _ 12© 30 18 00 00 00 .. Logwood, L*muna Logwood, Cam. I ogwood, Hond Logwood,Tabasco Logwood,St. Dom. Logwood,Jamaica Limawood Barwood ... 28 00 © “ “ .... 19 00 “ .. © • © 20 00 “ — “ 19 00 © 21 00 “ 50 CO ® 21 00 on 75 0J © 85 00 @ 26 00 “ ... Sapanwood,Manila“ .... @ 60 00 Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val. Prime Western...$ ft 80 @ 95 85 © Tennessee 90 Pickled Scale.. .*# Pickled Cod....*# over 00 @22 50 00 @23 25 @18 50 00 @2i 50 00 ©12 50 50 @11 00 50 © .... (JO @27 00 © .... 30 @ ''5 23 @ 25 G CO @ 9 50 Herring, Scaled*# box. Herring, No. 1 Herring, pickled^bbl. that, 8 cents over Window—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. Subject to a discount of 50 $ cent 6x 8 to 8x10. $ 50 ft 6 25 © 4 75 American ' 00 50 00 00 00 00 to 26x40 00 to 30x48 00 to 32x56 ©16 00 ©13 00 to 84x60 to 40x60 @21 00 French Window—1st. 2d, 3d, and 4th qualities. (SingleThick) Nov Vis of Mar. 11 Discount 45@5li $ cent 6t 8 to8x10.^150 feet 8 59 © 6 25 8x11 to 10x15 9 00 © 6 75 11x14to 12x18 10 (0 © 7 50 13x18 to 16x24 11 00 © 8 00 18x22 to 18x30 13 50 © 9 00 20x30 to 24x3" 16 50 @10 00 24x31 to 24x86 18 00 @52 00 25x36 to 26x40 20 00 ©16 00 28x40 to 30x48.(3 qlte).22 00 @18 00 54x54 to 32x56.(3 q ts).24 00 @20 00 32x58 to 34x60 .(3 qlte).27 00 @23 00 English sells at 35©4U $ ct. oil above 8x11 llxll 13x16 18x22 20x30 24x31 25x36 2^40 24x54 82x55 34x62 6 7 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 24 26 tol0xl5 to 12x18 to 16x24 to 18x30 to 24x30 to 24x36 75 50 50 00 50 00 00 00 50 00 00 @ 5 © 5 © 6 © 7 © 8 © 9 ©10 ©14 rates. Groceries—See special report. Gunny cents or Bags—Duty, valued at less, $ square yard, 3; over 10, 4 cents $ ft Calcutta, light &h’y % 18 © 18* Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 10 cents or less $ square yard, 3; over 10,4 cents $ ft. 22J@ Calcutta, standard, y’d Gunpowder-Duty, valued at 20 ft, 6 cents $ ft, aiu val.; over 20 centi $ ft, 10 cents $ ft and 20 $ cent ad va. Blasting(B) $ 25ft keg .. @ 4 00 Shipping and Mining.. .. ©4 50 Kentucky Rifle 6 50 ® cents or less 20 ^ cent ad 6 00 © 6 50 @ Deer Sporting, in 1 ft canis, ters $ ft 86 @ 1 06 Hair—Duty tree. RioGrande,niix’d$ftgold26 @ Buenos Ayres, mixed “ 24 © Hog,Western, unwash.enr 9 @ . 27 25 10 Ilay—North River, in bales*# 100 fta for shipping 75 @ 85 Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila., $25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Suns and Sisal, $15 ton; and Tampi 1 cent $ ft. Arner.Dressed.$ ton 270 P0@29O 00 Undressed do 175 00@180 00 Russia, Clean..(gold) 24 * » 0@24o 00 Flax—Duty: $15 $ ton. North River *# ft 16© Fruits—See all Meal 22 25 @22 f0 shore Mackerel, No.l,Halifax22 Mackerel,No. 1, Bay..23 'Mackerel, No. 2, Bay Mackerel, No. 2, Ha axl9 Mac’el,No.3,Mass. Pgel2 Mackerel, No. 3, H’faxlO Mac,No.3, Mass,mod. 11 Salmon, Pickled, No.1.26 24x30 ,2* ; $ ft. 25 bbl @ bbl. 6 50 ® 7 00 Mackerel, No. 1, Mass all square Common Window, not exceeding lOx 15 inches square, 1*; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not Fisli—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 $ bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried, in smaller pkgs.than bar¬ rels, 50 cents $ 100 ft. Dry Cod $ cwt. 6 00 © 7 ^ foot unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and above that, 40 cents „ 24 special report. Italian Siaal Skins —Du«,y, 10$ cent Beaver,Dark..*# skin 1 00 ® 4 00 do 75 @ 2 50 Pale.... Bear, Black 5 00 ®i2 00 do brown 2 00 @ 8 00 (crold) 230 00@243 CC 11 lo*@ 10© 1-* .(gold) 5*@ 6* Manila..*# ft..(gold) Jute Furs and 25 © ...... ... Grey Lynx Marten, Dark do do 4 00 © 8 5 00 @50 3 00 © 5 75 © 1 40 © 30© 50 @ 2 5 00 @20 1 3 1 3 pale Mink,dark .. pale Otter Musquash, Fall Opossum Raccoon Skins—Duty: 10 $ cent Goat,Curacoa$ ft cur. 60 00 00 (10 12 5 50 .. @ do Cape do do Sisal Para Vera Cruz gold gold .gold Missouri,..gold 3 00 8 00 3 (0 .. ... Honduras..gold 00 00 © © @ .. Tampico...gold Central America 50 45 Vera Cruz,.gold Deer,SenJuan$ftgold 60 40 @ do do do do cur. 00 50 ad val. 87*@ 43 Buenos A...cur. Matamoras.gold Payta—. cur. @ ® © © 00 00 7 00 15 ® 12 3° ® 80 © \ 00 do do do do do do 50 10 © Fisher, Fox, Silver do 50 60 10 @ Badger Cat, Wild Skurk, Black... 40 00 10 . do Kltl 60 @ 1 00 29© 31 @ Dye Woods—Duty free. Camwood,gold, $ tun .... ©160 Fustic,Cuba “ ..32 00 © 33 © 24 Fustic, Tampico, gold Fustic, Jamaica “ 23 00 © 24 Fustic, Savanilla “ 22 50 © 24 Fustic,Maracaibo, “ 22 00 © Window inches, 20 cents $ square foot; .. 37i@ or square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents $ square foot above that, and not exceeding 24x60 6 50 8* Sal Soda. Newcastle “ © 1 62* 30 Sarsaparilla,H.g’d inb’d 25 © 14 © Sarsaparilla, Mex. “ 36 35 © Seneca Root 25 © 28 Senna, Alexandria.... 22 2' @ Senna, Eastlndia Shell Lac Soda Ash .. Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches. 2* cents $ square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents ^ 3 20 @ Salaratus SalAm’nmc, Ref (gold) ..’ @ @ Florida ....gold Glass—Duty, Cylinder .. do Cross do Red 60 Deer, Arkansas..gold } do Opium, Turkey.(gold) ...’. © 7 50 OxalicAcid ® 85 Phosphorus.. 95 @ 1 00 Prussiate Potash. 83*@ 35 78 @ Quicksilver 80 Rhubarb, China 2 25 © 3 25 8 (O @ . .. Sago, Pea.led do House 1 75 ® 2 00 9» © 95 Gum Hyd. Potash, Fr. 2S| 3|@ 60 © Gum 1* 16 Gum Damar Gum 35 15?@ 10*@ 77 @ 80 © 4*;c0 Extract Logwood Fennell Se d 0i Oil Anis Oil Cassia.. 3 70 @ Oil Bergamot 6 87* © Oil Lemon 3 87*@ Oil Peppermint,pure. 6 00 © Oil Vitriol 2*@ Salmon,Pickled,*#tce Ammonia, Cardamoms, Malabar Lae Dye 70 11* .. GumTragacanth,Sorts Cordage—Duty,tarred, 8; uni^rred Manila, 2* other untarred, 3* cents @ 21*@ Bark Manna,large flake.... 1 70 @ Manna, small flake.... 95 @ Mustard Seed, Cal.... 7}@ 14 © Mustard Seed, Trieste. Nutgalls Blue Aleppo 35 @ cent ad val.; Sal jEratus, 1* cents $ ft; Sal Epsom Salts Coffee,—See special report. 3 cents 13 $ ft ; Arsenic and Assafoedati, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regulua. 10; Arrowroot, 80 38 cent ad val Balsam Copaivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 50 rents # ft : Cal is aya Bark, 80 $ cent ad val.; Bi Carb. Soda, 1*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ ft; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100ft ; Refined BoraT, 10 cents $ ft ; Crude Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10 ^ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 ^ ton, and 15 $ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40 cents ft.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents $ lb; Caster Oil,$1 ^# gallon; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6 ; Caustic Soda, 1*; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas,*; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ ft ; Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 *# cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 *# 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 Resub¬ limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap, 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $1 $ 1b ; Oil Peppermint, 50 $ cent ad val,; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents ^ ft; Phosphorus, 20 $ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50cents rents Arsenic, Powdered “ Candles—Duty,tallow, 2*; sperma¬ ceti and wax d; u oarine and ada¬ mantine, 5 cents $ lb. 'Refined sperm,city... 45© ♦♦ Sperm, patent,. . .^# ft 55 ® Stearic.. 30® 81 Adamantine 21 © 23 Anthracite. 733 THE CHRONICLE 1868.] 45 @ 40 @ .. © .. @ 45 © .. © .. .. © @ Texas.© 50 42* 47i .. 45 42* .. 43 42* .. Hides—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salted and Skins 10 ^9 centad val. Dry Hides— Buenos Ayres*#ftg’d do Montevideo do Rio Grande do GriuoCO do California do San Juan do Matauioras .... .... * 201© © © .. .. 19 © 19 © 17 © 151© VeraCruz do 16 © Tampico Bogota do do do 16 © PortoCabello Maracaibo do Truxilio do Bahia do Rio Hache do Curacoa do 8. Domingo & au Piatt.. Pt. Texas Western Dry Salted HidesChili 17 © 14 @ 14 © 17 © 14 © 34 © 18 © 11 @ do do do 14 @ gold 14 © 13 @ Payta do 14 © do Maranham Pernambuco.... do do Bahia do Matamoras... 11 © 11 © 10 © Maracaibo do 11 © 12 © do Savanilla Wet Salted Hides- 13j@ Bu9 Ayres.ft g’d. do RioGtvade n © 11 © do Calif©; *ia do Para. New Crleana.. .cur 10® .... City erhter trim.* cured, .. © 1J*@ I2 © m 734 THE CHRONICLE. Upper Leather Stock— ^B. A. So Rio Gr. White , Kip ext, 22*® 21 27 @ 23 24 # ft gold Sierra Leone., cash Gambia & Bissau. Zantba** 22(21 . @ 15J@ Calcutta, de id green 16 12*0 12 @ do buffalo,$ lb Manilla & Batavia, buffalo $ ft) 13 121 .. @ (in bond) (gr ’ 78 gall, 57 @ Hopa-^uiy: 5 cue .a ^ ft>. 78 ft) 35 @ Crop of 1867 do of 1866 Bavarian 5S BEADING iftk 50 Ox, Rio Grande... $ C 7 O't® 5 03® 6 00 India Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent, $ ft S2J@ @ East. India ...... -- 85 @ @ @ free. Prices— . @150 00 Bar,English and Amer¬ ican, Refined 95 00@100 Or) flo do do Common 85 00@ 90 00 Scroll 126 0 @1,0 (Mi Ovals and Half Round 120 U0@150 30 125 00® 125 00® .. ... Rods,5-S@3-10inch..loo 00® 100 00 Hoop 133 00@;85 00 $ tb 9 @ lo Sheet, Russia Sheet, Single, Double 17 @ 18 Rod 5 ® and Treble 7 Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 52 0d® 52 50 d« 78 d0@ 80 00 American Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime $tb 3 00® 3 15 East Ind ,Billiard Ball 3 0 @ 3 2> 2 62*® 2 871 African, Prime.. African,Scrivel.,W.C. 1 25® 2 25 Lead—Duty, Pig, *2 # 100 lb ; Old Load, II cents $ lb; Pipe and Sheet, 21 cents 78 lb. Galena $ 100 ft) @ 00@ tii«o?auf, Cedar, Rose* K oo I—Duty iree. ia&hoganv St. I*omint “ 19 ft.. do do do do do English .... PipeandSheot not .. @10 00 @12 00 Leather—Duty; sole 35, upper 30 78 cent ad val. .—cash.78 lb.—, Oak,srhter,heavy$ lb 38 @ 4G do do ‘ middle 38 @ light.. 80 @ 88 @ dncrop,heavy middle light.. 42 @ 42 @ Oak, rough slaughter. 38 @ 44 40 42 46 44 46 28 do do do do do do do do do do do do do middle. 26* @ 26* @ light. Califor., heavy 25 do middle. do light. 26 24 middle light. rough good damaged poor @ 26 @ Orlno.,heavy. do do 10 @ 1*> @ 14 14 10 ( A merican wood).. 15 14 @ 12 @ Cedar, N uevitas Mansanilla Mexican 20 13 13 12 @ *s Florida. 78 c. ft. Rosewood, R. Jan. $ lb @ JO 7> 8 6 25 ® 5@ Bahia 4 @ Molasses,—See special report. Nails—Duty: cut 14; wrought 2}; horse shoo 2 cents 78 ft*. Cut, 4d.@60d. 78 100 lb 4 87i@ 5 00 Clinch Horse shoe, Copper f’d(6d)$tt> 6 50 @ 6 r,5 27 @ 30 40® 26® Yellow metal Zinc... .. 26 26 85 23 19 do @ @ @ @ @ @ @ 28 27* 27 27 27 25 27 27 34 25 21* Lime--Duty: 10 78 cent ad val. Rockland, com. ^ bbl. @ 1 10 de heavy @ 2 00 .. .. Staves, 10 78 cent ad vul.; Rosewood and Cedar, free. Spruce, East. 78 M ft 21 00 @ 23 i)0 Southern Pine @ White Pine Box B’ds 23 00 @ White Pine Merch. 27 00 @ Box Boards Clear Pine ;... 55 00 @ . ...@ 33 00 27 00 30 00 65 00 3 00 an<. White wood B'ds & Pl’k. 45 00 @ 55 03 Cherry B <ls & Plank 00 @ 80 00 Oak and Ash * 4 * 00 @ 60 00 Maple and B'roh ...81 V0 @ 45 00 76 0 @125 00 Black Walnat Poplar TAVE8— White Oak, hhd., WestIndia..M Barytes , Foreign @ Tin—Duty: pig,bars,and block, 15 78 cent @ in bulk @ refined. 29*® @ @ 30 31 .. 70 78bbl. 3 50 @ 13* .... @ Pro vis ion*—Duty: beef and pork, 1 ct; lams, bacon, and lard,2 ts $ ft> Pork,new mess,78 bbl^7 50 @27 60 Pork, old in ss 27 12 @27 31 Pork, prime mess 23 75 @24 00 do prime, 22 15 @23 d0 Beef, plain mess 15 00 @2G 50 do extra mess 2 ) 50 @:4 75 do hams ...25 00 @32 <0 Hams, 78 lb 16$@ 17 Shoulders 124 @ 13) Lard 10*® cents bulk, 18 aents 78 100 tt>. § 78 100 ft); 45 @ 37 @ 38 Liverpool,gr’nd^ sack 1 6‘> @ 1 65 do fine,Ashton’s(g’d) 2 50 @ do flno, Worthingt’s 2 60 @ .. ... do West, thin $ ton. in bags. obl’g, do Oils 8@ 11 cent ad val. @56 mi @53 00 50 25® ... .. @136 00 Clover ’gnb 10*@ 10$ Timothy,reaped 78 bus 2 5» @ 2 60 bus 5 50 @ 6 25 Hemp 2 90 @ 3 0<i Lin-’d Am.rougbTQbus 2 65 @ 2 75 do do .... - rape por case @ 4 121 do in casks.f) gall.. 2 4 1 @ Palm ft lb ll*@ Linseed,city...78 gall. 1 13 @ 1 :5 Whale, crude 80 @ do bleached winter 90 @ Sporm,crude 2 00 @ "i-2i .. . winfc. unbleaeh. 2 20 ® Lard oil, prime winter 1 45 @ Red oil,city dist Rlaia 75® do saponified, west’11 90 @ Bank @ Btraits 75 @ Paralflne, 28 & 30 gr. Lubricating £0 @ ^1 C.iDary Calc’i»,Bosi’n,g’d @ do New Yk,g’d 2 36 @ . Kerosene . 50 80 95 72 Buck Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk. 78 cent. Tsatlees, No. l@3.$ft>10 50 @12 50 Taysaams, superior, No. 12 9 25 @ 9 75 do medium,No3@4. 8 DO @ 9 00 Canton,re-reel.Nol@2 8 50 @ 8 75 Canton. Extra Fine... 9 25 @ 9 50 Japan, superior 10 70 @12 50 do Medium 8 75 @ 9 00 35 China thrown nomi al. 40 .(free). white, American, in oil do white, American, puio, dry Zinc, while, American, dry, No. 1 do white, American, pure, No. 1,in oil do White,French,dry do white, French, in do around, in oil.. Spanish brown, dry ^ @ • Vermilion,Ohina, 14 ® • do domestto. 6|@ 10 @ 6* luj Spirits -Duty: Brandy, for first proof $3 78 gallon ; Gin, rum and whiskey, lor first proof, $2 50 78 gallon. Brandy, Otard, Dupuy A *. o..(gold) 78 gal. 5 20 @13 00 Brandy, Pinet, Caetitlou & Co(gold) 5 00 @17 00 do Hennessy(gold) 5 50 @18 00 do Marett So Co(g’d) 5 50 @10 00 do Leger Freres do 5 04 ®10 • 0 do oth for. b’ds(g’d) 4 40 @ 9 00 Rum, Jam., 4th p.(g’d) 4 50 @ 4 75 do St. Croix, 3d ,.„Proof* • 3 50 @ 3 75 Gin, diff. brands.(gold) 3 00 @ 4 75 Domestic Liquors—Cash Brandy,gin&p.spi’ts in b Rum, pure, in bond... Whiskey, in bond .... 9 @ 9* 9 @ 12 12|®' 13 ® 17 2*@ 8 _ ® 2| 10 r 100 ft) 1 00 @ do gr’d in oil. 78 ft 8 @ Paris wh., No. 1 2m Chrome, yellow, dry.. 15 ® Whiting, Amer plates, $1 50 78 100 lbs. Platos,foreign $ lb gold . . oil Ochre,yellow, French, dry Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and 25 9 3 35 2 ..® 78 ft 1 15 @ l 80 25 @ 25 @ 30 @ 30 a5 35 Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued at 7 cents 78 lb or under, 2* cents; 3 cts 78 ft) (Store prices.) 18 @ 23 10 @ 12* 7 cents and not above 11, 78 lb; over 11 cents, 34 cents and 10 78 cent ad val. over English, cast, $1 fl> English, spring English Kilo* bdster . . - ... Knglish machinery .English German American blister Amer cm cast Tool American spring do American ma:!ry do American Germas.do H*@ 1?*@ i-fim 14 @ lli@ 21 @ 30 @ 10 20 16 16 17 22 13 14 13 85 60 25 . 25 00 GO - $2 to $3 5* 100 ft), and 15 $ cent ad val. Iron No. 0 to 18 20@ 25 78 ct. off list. No. 19 to 26.... 30 78 ct. off list No.27 to 36.... 35 78 ct. off list Telegraph, No. 7 to il 78 ft Brass 10*@ 43 @ 53 @ (less 20 p ‘r cent ) Copper do . .. Wool—Duty: Imported in the “ or¬ dinary condition as now and hereto¬ fore practiced.” Ci.Ass 1 —Clothing Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less 78 ft, 10 78 tt> and 11 78 cent, ad val.: over 32 cents 78 lb, 12 cents 78 lb and 10 TP cent, ad val ; when imported washed, double these rates Class 2.— Combing Wools--T\ie value where¬ cents of at the last place whence exported to the Unitea States is 32 cents or less 78 ft, 10 cents 78 ft and 11 78 cent ad val. ; over 32 cents $ ib, 12 cents 78 ft an(l 10 ^ cent, ad val. Carpet Wools and other Class 3 . — similar Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 12 cents or less 78 tt>, 3 cents $ ft); over 12 cents 78 lb, 6 cents 78 ftWool of all classes Imported scoured, three times the duty as if imported nnwashed. Am., Sax’y tleec<‘.78 ft li‘i@ Spices.—Se*e special report. 39® l*aints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, ami litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents $ lb; Parif white and whiting, i cent 78 lb; dry ochres,56 cev.ti 100 lb: oxidesof/.ini , 1^ cents $ lb ; ochre, ground in oil,| 50 78 loo ft>; Spanish brown 25 78 cettad val • China clay, $5 $ ton ; Venetian red and vermilion 25 78 cent, ad val • white chalk, $10 78 ton. Litharge, City... .$tb 11 lft*@ Lead, red, City 11 Li® ..... .... Shot—Duty: 2J cents $ lb. Drop $ lb 11/.@ do i 2 25 00 50 25 50 25 00 Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18, uncovered Plain bush. . Oakum—Duty fr.,$ ft Oil Cake—Duty: 20 78 City thin obl’g, in bbls. 1 25 @ 9 2 00 @ 8 Burgundy port..(gold) 75 @ 1 Lisbon (gold) 2 25 @ 3 Sicily Madeira..(ijolfi) 1 00 @ 1 Red, Span. & Sicilyfg) 90 @ 1 Marseilles Mad’ra(g’d) 70 @ Marseilles Port.(goH) 80 @ 1 Malaga dry (gold) 1 00 @ 1 Miilaga, sweet...(gold) 1.10 @ 1 (’hirer.....gold.78 cask35 00 @60 Claret. gold. 78 doz 2 65 @ 9 6 75 @ 7 25 Turks Islands Cadiz 1. C. Coke 9 50 @10 50 Terne Oharcoalll 00 @11 50 Terne Coke.... 9 00 @ 9 25 Sherry Rangoon Dress d, gold Salt—.Duty: sack, 24 27* 24*@ 24* 24*@ 24* 75 @12 10 Port 17* paddy 10 cents, and uucleaned 2 cents 78 ftCarolina ....*.78 100 Tb10 75 @11 62* 27s@ ad val.; over $1 $ gallon, $1 $ galIon and 25 78 cent ad val Madeira 78 gaH- 3 50 @ 7 00 - Rice—Duty: cleaned 2* conts 78 lb.; duty pai<l Plate and sheets and ad va>. Tobacco.—See special report. Wines—Duty : Value not over 50 cts 78 gallon, 20 cents gallon, and 25 $ cent, ad val.; over 50 and not over 100, 50 cents 78 gallon and 25 78 cent, .. 13 @ grav., Residuum Gasoline do do do L. S. to W. (lie® 115 test.) do Standard white do d *, prime white Naptha, 171 13> 36* 13 @ Refined,free, S.W do in bond,piime val. plates, 25 per oent. Banca 78 ft (gold) Straits (gold) English ....(gold) Plates,char. I.C.78 boxll refined, 40 ;ents 78 gallon. do ad terne Petroleum—Duty rcrude,20 cents; Crude,40@47grnv.78gal 12* Teas.—See special report. .. ... do Lumber; Woods, Staves,etc. —Duty: Lumber,20 $ cent ad val.; Laths, Eastern.78 M Sugar.—See special report. Tallow—Duty :1 cent 78 ft). American,prime, coun¬ try and city 78 ft... 12® ... 18 @ Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of. turpentine 30cents 78 gallon; crude Turpentine, rosin,pitch, and tar, 20 78 cent ad val. Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2* cents; Turpent’e, a .ft.78-SOtb relined and partially refined, 3 cents; @ 4 00 Tar, N County 78 bbl. 3 00 @ 3 25 nitrate soda, I cent 78 tb. Tar, Wilmington @ 4 00 Refined, pure 78 ft @ 14 Pi eh City.. ~ Crude @ 3 5010 @ 10* Bplrits turpentine 78g. 45 @ Nitrate soda 45^ gold 3£@ Rosin, com’n. 78 280 lb 2 87* @ 3 00 do strainedan«iNo.2.. 3 12*@ 3 62* Seed*—Duty ; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, do No. 1 4 00 @ 5 00 * cent 78 ft; canary, $1 78 bushel of do 60 tb ; and grass Pile 5 00 @ 6 00 seeds, 30 78 cen* do extra pale. ad val. 6 00 @ 7 50 (gold) 6 371® 6 87 .. do do do 40 8 @ 11 @ .. do @ Olive, Mar’s, qs (gold* net do do 30 10 (gold) 6 371® 6 6i* Bar do do 7 @ Nuevitas Mansanilla Mexican Honduras do do do 50 Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1; burning fluid, 50 cents 78 gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, lu $ cent ad val.* sperm and whale or other fish (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val. (sold) 6 37*® 6 50 German Sumac—Duty: 10 # cent ad val. Sicily $ ton.. 100 00 @210 0 ... . .. 25 @ St. .. Spanish 1 00 ® 1 10 Cal. & Eng . 1 15 ® 1 23 Amer. coal.. -2 @ 27 2 85 @ 2 87* V©net.red(N.O.)78cwt Car mine,city made 78 lb 16 00 @20 00 Plumbago @ 6 China clay, 78 ton. ...30 00 @31 00 Chalk 78 lb. ® !* Chalk, block.. ..78 ton23 00 @24 00 1* Baryf.ee,American^lb .... @ do do .... Swedes,ordinary sizes Nall 210 logs .(.old) 78 ft 1 10 @ 2 05 Oudo (gold) 75 @ 1 40 Madras (gold) *5 @ 1 00 Manila 70 @ ....(gold) 05 Guatemala (gold) 1 10 @ 1 45 Caraccus (gold) 80 @ i 05 I ron—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1* cents $ lb. Railroad, 70 conts $ 100 lb ; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents $ lb; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to If cents $ tb; Pig, 19 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents $ ft). Pig, Sootch,No 1. $ ton 30 <P@42 00 Pig, American,No. 1.. 30 00® id 30 Pig, American, No. 2 . 35 0 @37 00 Bar, Heft’d t'.ng&Amer t-5 i0@9.» 03 Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (in gold) 87 50® 00 00 be @140 00 _ do Port-au-Platt, crotches do Port-au-Platt, Bengal <—Sic hhd Domingo, ordinary logs ad val. Para, Medium Para, Coarse White double bbl 35 Ox, imarieau — HEADING-White Oak nominal. Horse Shoe .. _ 2r» @ Band .. _ Ho run,—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val. Bar .. Vermillion, Trieste ... Cuba Indigo—Duty .. .. .. Honey—Duty,2 sent 78 gallon. Cartuageuo, &c .. . 78 p. gold ‘ $ M. @275 00 pipe, heavy @225 00 pipe,light. @175 00 pipe, culls. @170 00 pipe,culls,It @110 00 do hhd.,extra. @235 on do hhd., heavy .. @175 00 do hhd.,light. @lli‘ 00 do hhd.,culls. @100 00 do bbl., extra. @150 00 do bbl.,heavy. @115 00 do bbl.,light @ Du 06 do bbl.,culls.. @ 60 00 Rod oak, hhd., h’vy. @120 or do hhd., light.. @ 80 00 .. Calcutta,city sl’hter Para, Fine pipe, do do do do Bait India Stock— - oak, a [June 6,1868. 55 @ 48 @ 48 @ do full blood Merino do % & % Merino.. do Native & X Mer. do Combing 45 @ Extra, pulled.. Superfine pulled No* 1, pulled. Califor, fine.unwash’d dodo medium do common, do Valpraiso, 60 53 52 47 do South Am.Merino do do Mestizado do Creole do do Cordova, washed 50 @ 43 ® 42 @ 80 @ 28 @ 26 @ 22 @ 28 @ 55 49 34 @ 28 @ 20 @ 37 48 36 33 30 25 30 32 24 34 32 35 20 14 19 30 @ @ @ @ @ @ w @ 30 ® 27 @ 22 @ Montevideo,com. washd Cape G.Hope,unwash’d East India, washed.... African, unwashed Mexican, unwashed... A'rican, washed 37 35 42 41) 18 21 40 83 30 25 _ Texas, Fine Texas, Medium Tex ts, Coarse Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 60 $ 100 fi>8.; sheets 2* cents 78 ft). Sheet 78 ft 12 @ 12* I’reiglitsiTo Liverpool Cottoj Flour (steam):s. d. # ft TP bbl. Aods...TP ton s. *@ 5-32 @ l c9 Heavy 17 6 @25 0 Oil @35 0 Corn,b'k&bagsTPbus. @ 6* Wheat, bulk and bags 4@ 6* Beef $ tee. @ 3 6 Pork # bbl. @ 2 6 To London (sail) Heavy goods. ..78 toB 17 6 @20 0 Oil @25 0 Flour TP bbl. 1 6 @ 1 9 Petroleum @50 Beef 7p tee. @3 6 Pork TP bbl. @ 2 6 Wheat $ bush. 5*@ Corn ‘ @ 5* To Havb* : $ c $ Cotton V ft 1 @ Beef and pork.. TP bbl. @ Measarem.gMs.78 ton 10 00 @12 00 Petroleum.... ® .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .... Lard, tallow, cut m t eto.^ TP ft *® .. A»ie&,pot&p’l,7Pton 10 00 $13 00 . June 6, Insurance. Insurance. OFFICE OF THE THE Insurance. Sun Mutual Insurance Co NO. 52 WALL Mutual IN 1841. Assets of tlie Company, U. S. 7-30 Bonds May 7, 1868. $400,550 00 $1G,180 00 City Bond and other Stocks 29,153 80 .. $471,883 86 hills receivable not 208,525 45 matured Subscription notes in advance ol' pre¬ 201,970 52 miums Loans, accrued Interest, uncollected pre¬ miums, salvage, reinsurance and other claims due the Company Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the Company, submit the following Statement ot its affairs on the 31st December, 1867: Premiums received on Marine Risks, from 1st January, 1867, to 31st De¬ $7,322,015 75 1st Policies not marked oft on January. 1807 2,838,109 71 —'. Total amount of Marine Pre riiums. .$10,160,125 46 Life Fire Risks discon¬ No Polices have been issued upon Risks; nor upon nected with Marine Risks. ary, Losses paid during the period same 1809. BRANCH, STREET, NEW YORK. CAPITAL AND ASSETS Subscribed (IN GOLD) Capital Income Policies issued in Gold or plicant. : $10,000,000 12,695 000 4,260,635 Accumulated Funds Annual Currency at option of Ap Losses promptly adjusted and paid in this Country. New York Board oe Management: CHAS. H. DABNEY, Esq., Chairman. of Dabney, Morgan & Co SOLON HUMPHREYS, Esq of E. D. Morgan & Co. AYMAR CARTER, Esq of Aymar & Co DAVID DOWS, Esq of David Dows & Co EG1STO P. FABBRI, Esq of Fabbri & Cfiauncey SIMEON B. CHITTENDEN, Esq.. of S. B. Chittenden & Co SHEPPARD GANDY, Esq. .of Sheppard Gaudy, & C# TZ CHAS. E. Retnrns of Premiums and $1,305,865 93 Expenses EDINBURGH. UNITED STATES 50 WILLIAM $4,224,364 61 IF” This Company continues to issue policies of In¬ against marine and inland navigation risks. risks, disconnected from marine, taken by $7,597,123 16 1867 to 31st December, 1867 AND ESTABLISHED IN Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬ 180,31138 $1,062,691 12 the OF The Premiums 71,333 86 — Mercantile Insurance Co JANUARY 25th, 1868, cember, 1867 20,000 00 Bonds and Mortgages Cash Co., LONDON $104,831 25 155,093 75 80,623 00 U. S. 10-40 Bonds u. s. 5-20 Bonds No tire AND Insurance NEW YORK, surance North British Atlantic STREET. INCORPORATED Premium notes and 735 THE CHRONICLE. 1868.J } As80oiate Managers WHITE, Assistant Manager. LORD, DAY & LORD, Solicitors. DABNEY. MORGAN & Co., Bankers. , Company. Dealers have the option of participating in the pro¬ fits, or receiving an abatement in lieu of scrip divi¬ dends. The Company also issue policies payable in sterling at their hankers’ in London. «• The Hartford Company has the following As¬ sets, viz.: FIRE United States and State of New York Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks. $6,864,485 secured by Stocks, and other¬ wise 2,175,450 Real Estate and Bonds and Mortgages, 210,000 Interest and sundry notes and claims due the Company, estimated at 252,414 00 Moses H. Grienell, John P. Paulison, John E. Devlin, John Chadwick, William H. Macy. Samuel L. Mitchill, Fred. G Foster, Richardson T. wilson, John H, Macy, Frederic Sturges, Win. Toel. Thomas J. Slaughter, Joseph Gailiard, Jr., Alex. M. Lawrence, Isaac Bell, Elliot C. (Jowdin, Percy R. Pyne, Samuel M, Fox, Joseph V. Onattvia, Edward S. Jaffray, William Oothout, Ernest Caylus, Frederick Cliauncey, George L. Kingsland James M. Campbell, Anson G. P. Stokes. Henry Foster Hitch, Eiias Ponvert, Simon D. Visser, Isaac A. Crane, A. Yznaga del Valle, John S. Wright. Wm. Von Sachs, Wm. R. Preston, MOSES II. GRINNEL, President. JOHN P. PAIJLISON. V-President. ISAAC H. Premium Notes and Bills Receivable.. Total Amount of Assets 00 00 PIIOENIX 82 $13,108,177 11 Six per cent interest on the outstand¬ ing certificates ot profits will be pat to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives on and after Tuesday the Fourth o February next. W. B. Clark, Sec’y. OFFICE 12 WALL_STREET. CASH CAPITAL $1,000,000 363,000 SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1868 The Directors have declared PER CENT, 13th inst. Dividend of FIVE ed and paid to the holders thereof, or their lega representatives, on and after Tuesday the Fourth of February next, from which date interest on the amount P. NOTMAN, Vice-Prest. Kip, Secretary. Queen Fire Insurance Co OF LIVERPOOL AND LONDON. Authorized Capital Subscribed Capital Paid-up Capital and Surplus £2,000,000 Stg. 1,893,220 $1,482,340 so Capital and Surplus $700,000. produced at the time of pay ment, and cancelled to the extent paid. declared of the on of Thirty Capital $37 5,000. M. Bennett, Jr„ Sec’y. Losse in current money. WHITE, ALLYN A CO., Agents, NO. 50 WILLIAM STREET. FIRE North Company, for the year ending 31st December. 1867. for which certificates will be issued on and after Tuesday the Seventh of April Insurance OFFICE Cash Capital. Cash 255 057 77 Capital and Surplus, January 1, 1867, *755,057 77. CHAPMAN, William E. Dodge Robt. C. Fergusson, Sturgis, Henry K. Bogert, Joshua J. Henry, Dennis Perkins, Joseph Gailiard, Jr. J. Henry Burgy, Cornelius Grinnell, C. A. Hand, B. J. Howland, Benj. Babcock, Fletcher Westray, Robt. B. Mintum, Jr., Gordon W, Burnham Frederick Chauncey, David, Lane, James Low Dennis, Wm. C. Pickersgill, Lewis Curtis, Russell, Lowell Holbrook, R. Warren Weston, Royal Phelps, Caleb Barstow A. P. Pillbt ®HSSfflIGBCSFCHimflSS James Bryce, Skiddy, Francis Daniel S. Miller. JSeoffawU Offices To Let, BROADWAY, BROAD and NEW Streets ne WALL. Apply to EDWARD MATTHEWS. On No, 0 Broad Stree Robert L. Taylor, cities in the Urited States. JAMES W. OTIS, President. R. W. BLEECKER, Vice Pres LIFE President, DENNIS, Vice-President, MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres, J. D* HEWLETT, M Yitt-Pni't States INSURANCE In the COMPANY, City oi New York. NO. 40 WALL STREET. ASSETS $2,300,000 t3^“New and important plans of Life Insurance have been adopted by this Company. See new Prospectus. Profits available after policies have run one year and annually thereafter. JOHN EADIE, President. Nicholas De Groot, Secretary. Hanover Fire Insurance George S. Stephenson JOHN D. JONES, W. H. H. United COMPANY, WiJiam H. Webb. Paul Spofford, Charles P. Burdett, Shephard Gandy. CHARLES Damage by Fire at Wm. John D. Jones, Henry Coit, 9WARRANTS!) or F H. Carter, Secretary. J Griswold, General Agent. TRUSTEES : Charles H. against Loss paid at the office of the Company, or at its various Agencies in the principal Secretary W. H. H. Moore, M $500,000 OO Surplus the usual rates. Policies issued and Losses J. II. Charles Co., BROADWAY, INCORPORATED 1823. Insures Property By order of the Board, 114 Fire BRANCH OFFICE 9 COOPER INSTITUTE, THIRD AVENUE. next. United States Bbangh, No. 117 Broadway, N. Y. f.Q INSURANCE. American Deposited in the Insurance Department at Albany Secretary. J. B. Eldredge, Pres’t promptly adjusted by the Agents here, and paid Per Cent. Is the net earned premiums Special Fund of $300,000 William H. Ross, E. Frerman, Pres CONNECTICUT FIRE INSURANCE CO OF HARTFORD, CONN. redeemable will cease • GEORGE ADLAKD, Manager. 9 H. Kellogg, Pres t J, N. Dunham, Sec’y. The certificates to be A dividend J, D, STEELE. President. $1^00 OOO. cates of the issue ot 1865 will be redeem¬ free of tax, payable on and after Monday January 8,1868. Henry a CO., SPRINGFIELD FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY, SPRINGFIELD, MASS. Fifty per cent, of the outstanding certifi¬ COMPANY. FIRE INSURANCE HARTFORD, CONN. OF WALKER, Secretary. Niagara Fire Insurance Geo. L. Chase, Pres’t Capital and surplus 3,232,453 27 373,374 02 Cash in Bank Capital and Surplus $2,000,600. Geo. M. Coit, Sec’y. Loans Trustees. INSURANCE COMPANY HARTFORD, CONN. OF No. 45 WALL STREET. July 1st, 1867. capital Surplus Cash Gross Assets Tota iLiabilities $400,000 30 206,634 79 ’ .“ $606,634 50,144 BENJ. S. WALCOTT Pres! BsxiiK Lull' Secretary J 736 THE CHRONICLE Commercial Cards. Brand & Iron and Railroad Gihon, NEW YORK, GOODS, 80 State street. CAST STEEL Cast Steel Agents for the sale of Frogs, and all other Railway Use. WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’ WHITE , BURLAPS, BAGGING, NAYLOR, Co., as well DAVIS, Jr’s., DIAMOND BRAND Sugar Cured Hams CINCINNATI. READ A ROIINDEY, W. H. Schieffelin Importers and Jobbers Manufacturers T. PARRY Works, Philadelphia. Wrought Iron Tubes, Lap Welded o YORK ARCHITECTURAL DEPARTMENT Novelty Iron Works, STREET, BROADWAY, N Y , Plain and Ornamental Iron Work for Buildings Complete Fire-proof Structures—Columns, Lintels, Floors, Roofs, Castings, Shutters, Vaults, Safes, etc., of Cast or Wrought Iron, Also. Iron Bridges, Iron Piers, etc. HY. J. DAVISON,) WM. W. AYRES, } Agents, J. HEUVELMAN,) SWEDISH DANNE- MORA IRON. ILEUFSTA, W. JESSOP And to which I request the & SONS. special attention of the Leufsta, in Sweden, 29th April, 18G7. Slip, New York, MANUFACTURERS OF SALAERATUS, WM. JESSOP & AGENTS FOR IIORSFORD’S CREAM TARTAR. Street, Boston. Scovill 192 FRONT USE, STREET, NEW YORK. 292 PEARL J. Pope & Bro. METALS. * STREET, NEAR BEEKMAN STREET And Duck, All Widths and Weights. A Large Stock always on hand. THEODORE POLHEMUS &, , ' 59 CO MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS Broad Street, Icorner of Beaver Rails, of American and Foreign marufacture, rolled to any desired pattern and weight for linial yard and o‘f approved lengths. Contracts for both IRON AND STEEL RAILS will he made payable in United States currency for America, and in either currency or gold (at the option of the buyer) for Foreign ; when desir¬ ed, we will contract to supply roads with their monthly or yearly requirements of STEEL OR IRON the New Rails. Orders for Foreign Rails, both Steel and Iron, will he taken for transmission by Mail or through the cable LONDON HOUSE, 58 OLD BROAD STREET, Sterling a fixed price in mission at the current market price or on com¬ abroad when the order is received in London; shipments to he made at stated periods to ports in America and at the low¬ est possible rates of freights. Address S. W. Hopkins & Co., 69&71 Broadway, New York. in every Description of Photographic Goods. No. 4 Beckman street & 3G Park Row, New York, Manufactory, Waterbury, Ct. F. & F. A. Dana, FOREIGN & AMERICAN RAILROAD IRON, OLD AND NEW, Pig, Scrap Iron and oilier Metals. Lo comotives, Railroad Ckairs Old Rails Re-rolled 67 WALL i We beg to announce to the proprietors and mana¬ gers of Rolling Mills and Iron Manufacturers through¬ out the United States and Canada, that we are con¬ stantly receiving from both American and Foreign Railroad Companies heavy shipments of Old or Rails. We are, therefore, always in a position to furnish to consumers any quantity desired lor immediate ok remote delivery at all points in the United States and Canada, and when required will contract to supply mills with their monthly or yearly consumption at the lowest current market prices. We are also prepared to transmit by mail or through the cable to our Orders for Exchanged A Spikes for new. STREET, NEW YORK, HOUSE, 58 OLD BROAD old rails oft' ol 1 STREET, Foreign Railroads for shipments at stated periods to any ports in America at a fixed price in sterling or for execution on com¬ mission at the current market prices abroad when the order is received in London. of our business our facilities are In this department unsurpassed and our experience unequalled by any house in America. Our yearly transactions in Old Rails being very much greater than all other houses combined. Address S. W. 69 & 71 Hopkins & Co., Broadway, New York. Gilead A. 15 LANGHAM Smith, W.’ PLACE, LONDON, RAILROAD IRON, BESSEMER RAILS, STEEL TYRES. AND METALS. Lamp Trimmings, Importers and Dealers NEWT YORK Cotton METAL, HINGES, Kerosene Oil Burners And Thomas BRASS, GERMAN SILVER PLATED BRASS BUTT Gilt, Lasting, Brocade, and Fancy Dress Buttons, MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC Mnfg. Company, Manufacturers of SHEET Henry Lawrence & Sons, GEER, Proprietor. SONS, in referring to the above notice, beg to inform dealers in, and consumers ot, Iron and Steel, that they are prepared to receive orders for this Iron, and for Blister and Extra Cast Steel made from the Iron, at their establishments, Nos. 91 & 93 John Street, New York, and Nos. 133 & 135 Fed¬ eral SUP CARB. SODA, AND SAL SODA. Bessemer Steel LONDON CARL EMANUEL DE John Dwight & Co., ply To Iron Manufacturers. WHISKIES, Distilleries, Ken¬ always in a position to furnish ail sizes, pat¬ and weight of rail for both steam and horse roads, and in any quantities desired either for IMME¬ DIATE OR REMOTE aelivery, at anv port in the United States or Canada and always at the very lowest current market prices. We are also prepared to sup¬ are for execution at 1 beg to announce that I have this day entered into a contract with Messrs. W. Jessop & Sons, of Sheffield for the whole Annual Make of the above Iron, which in future,.will be stamped tucky. both AMERICAN and FOREIGN to our MERCHANTS, FINE BOURBON Companies. OLD JRAILS IN TRADE FOR NEW furnished, receiving the difference in cash, and allow¬ ing the highest market price for their Old Rails, and, if necessary, receiving ilie latter after the delivery of OF GENUINE Offer for sale, IN BOND, HOUSE, 58 OLD BROAD ST, KAILS, taking their OFFICE AND 'WAREHOUSES: 15 GOLD STREET, NEW YORK. NOTICE TO THE CONSUMERS OF THE STREET, NEW YORK, LONDON ' Manufacture AND No. ll Old Railroad Iron, We Mains, Artesian Well Pipes and Tools, Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools, &c. DISTILLERS from their own and other first-class CIIAS purchase and sale of terns Morris, Tasker & Co., CORNER OF STREET, NE vV AND RYE Co., GEO. BURXII AM. J. M. Cummings & Co., 58 BROAD In connection with the and Railroad Iron. A’l work accurately fitted to gauges and thorough ly interchangeable. Plan, Material, Workmanship, Finish, and Efficiency fully guaranteed. NOS. 77 & 83 LIBERTY of Indigo, Corks, Sponges, FANCY GOODS, PERFUMERY, AC. COMMISSION & WORKS. PHILADELPHIA. &Co., The DRUGS, WILLIAM Railroad, Town, County, City STATE BONDS, We beg to call the attention of Managers of Rail¬ ways and Contractors threughout the United States ana Canada to our superior facilities for executing orders at manufacturers prices, for all descriptions of Boiler Flues, Gas Works Castings and Street COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 172 LOCOMOTIVE MATTHEW BAIRD. Broadway, New York, To Railroad Rails, Scrap Iron and Metals. M. Baird STREETS, NEW YORK. Cotton, Flour, Grain and Provisions NO. 27 MAIN ST., CINCINNATI, O. AND Old Pascal Iron principal* cities. Apply to Gano, Wright & Co., 170 as BALDWIN in 18 4 1. CORNER BEAVER & NEW CO., Street, give special attention to orders for SUGARS, SYRUPS MOLASSES, COF¬ FEES, RICE, AC., AC. Sold by leading Grocers In A Railroad Iron, Alfred Savidge & S, TYRES, DUCK, &€ PHILADELPHIA PA*. Brokers . Steel Material for RENZON 34 Old Broad who Hopkins & Co., 69 & 71 HOUSE IN LONDON: LINENS, & C FLAX SAIL W. Negotiations of euery description of CAST STEEL Jobbing and Clothing Trade* S. PHILA., 208 So.4tli stree RAILS, In full assortment for the Iron and Railroad Materials. ESTABLISHED 1856. CO., BOSTON, 99 John street. 110 DUANE STREET. IRISH & SCOTCH LINEN Materials. NAYLOR & Importers & Commission Merchants. [June 6, 1868. Railroad Ronds and U.S. and other Americrn Securi s negotiated, and Credit and Exchange provided for U. S. or Continent. Consignments solicited the staples. on the usual terms of any of Special Counting and Reception Rooms available for Amiericans in London, with the facilities usually found at the Continental Bankers. Street Cars, Omnibuses. JOHN STEPHENSON & CO., MANUFACTURERS. New York.