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*H0 ommernai lawfcwss’ fedtf, (tomewat limes, Railway Penitor, and |nsueawee journal. NEWSPAPER, representing the industrial and commercial, interests of the A WEEKLY united states. NO. 100. SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1867. YOL. 4. Bankers and & Gans, Frank L. P. Morton in u. s. bankers and dealers 80 BROAD WALL STREET. No. 14 Travellers’ Credits. Co., & BANKERS, government securities. ' Bankers and Brokers. Bankers and Brokers. Brokers. LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR THE ELLERS IN EUROPE STREET, NEW TORS. USE OF TRAV¬ AND THE EAST. t . ISSUED FOR STERLING EXCHANGE & Howard, Dibblee Messrs. J. S. At BANKERS Ac BROKERS, i No. 10 WALL STREET. Government Bonds Sight or Sixty Days; also, Circular Notes Letters of Credit for Travelers* of all Finds, State and City Railroad and other Stocks and n Petty, & Co., P. D. Roddey Wall Street, N.Y., No. 2)4 (PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.) BANKERS AND BROKERS. Gold. Bonds and StoekB Bought and sold on Com¬ mission. _ Particular attention given to the Purchase and Sale of all southern and Misce laneous Securities. Collections made on all accessible points. Interest allowed on AND BROKERS, 12 NEW & 14 BROAD STREETS, Members of the Stock, Gold and Government Boards, Dealers In Governments and other Securities. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency cabject to check at sight. C. & G- j Woodman, STREET, BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, LAND WARRANTS, COL¬ LEGE LAND SCRIP, &C. Advances made on approved Securities allowed on deposits. Bank NASSAU STREET. the principal towns of Canada, Brunswick and British Columbia. on “ on .Nova Scotia, New Drafts for £2 and principal towns and cities of - Bankers and Commission Merchants NO. 44 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold bought and sold on the most liberal terms. Mer¬ chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on deposits. The most liberal advances ma ie on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco, &c., consigned to ourselves o to our correspondents, Messrs. Liverpool. K. GILLIAT & CO., Cohen & Hagen, BANKERS, AND DEALERS IN BULLION, SPECIE, AND VSV UNITED STATES SECURITIES. NO. 1 Wall Street. 56 WALL Lxvi P. Mobtoh, Chabus E. Waxtkb H. H. Carols Oixunr. Bdbxs, liHJfOB, Ward, FOB RARING BROTHERS Ac COMPANY, STREET, NEW YORK, 28 STATE STREET, BOSTON. Duncan, Sherman & Co., B A N K. E R S CORNER OF PINK AND NASSAU STS., BANKING HOUSE OF White, Morris & Co., 29 WALL STREE r, (Established 1854.) Members of the New Tork Stock Exchange, Gold Ex¬ change, and Mining Board. allowed on Special atten¬ cent interest Balances, subject to check at. sight. WHITE, MORRIS & CO. CIRCULAR NOTE8 AND CIRCULAR OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in States, available in all the world; also, A. M. Foute, Late Pres. Gajoso Bank, W. W. Loiung. COMMERCIAL CREDITS, Drake Kleinwort&Cohen The subscriber, on & Loring, RANKERS AND BROKERS, 38 BROAD STREET AND 36 NEW STREET. Securities of all kinds, Gold, State, Bank, and Bonds Bought and their representative ana Attorneys is prepared to make advances shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen Liverpool, and to grant mercantile credits upon them for use in China, the East and West Indies, South America, &c Marginal credits of the London House issued for the same purposes. SIMON DE VISSER, 26 Exchange Place, New York. Interest allowed on Deposits subject to check at sight. Collections made in all the States and Canadas. Garth, Fisher & Hardy, BANKERS, j LIVERPOOL. London and Railroad Stocks and Sold. the United principal cities of the in the United States, Memphis, Tenn. Foute LETTERS For use in Enrope, east, of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, South America, and the United States. LONDON AND No. 18 NEW STREET, Successors to Harrison, Garth dt Co. and Henry C. John Munroe & Co., BANKERS, AMERICAN NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS AND No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers parts of Europe, etc., etc. In all Also Commercial Credits. Hardy). Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Gold, etc., bought and sold at the “regular” Board of Brokers and at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis¬ sion only. Foreign and Domestic Exchange bought, sold and collected. E. S. Munroe & Co., 80 BROADWAY & 5 NEW ST., Dealers in Government and other , s,A- AGENT8 Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and Sale of Stocks and Bonds in London and New York. Scotland and Ireland. — Wilson, Callaway & Co., ' S. G. & G. C. Government Bills of Exchange on London bought and sold. JDrdftsissued and bills collected on SahErancisco^ind upwards granted LONDON, Europe and the Bast. of British North America. 17 BANK OF Available in ell the and Intere-t THE AGENCY OF THE Y- JJTDTHX UNION Dealers in Government Securities. tion given to Collections. Four per 30 PINE NO. 53 Exchange Place. Balances. Bell, Faris & Co., BANKERS Dabney, Morgan & Co., (58 Oid Broad Street, London,) R. P. Sawyers. N. P. Boulett. RODDEY, BY Use, on MORTON, BURNS A CO., I*. P. Bonds, Gold Inteiana Silver boughtapd sold on commission. est Coupons and Dividends collected. Bonds, Morgan Ac Co., London, sad Securities. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Currency, subject to check at sight. Members of New York Stock Exchange, Government Exchange and Long Room of nitto, and also of Gold Room—where all orders will be promptly attended to. Pott, Davidson & Jones, BANKERS AND BROKERS, (Messrs. Brown Bros & Cods new buildings 69 & 61 WAUL STREET, NEW YOkIC Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Accounts of Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬ ed on favorable terms. Interest allowed on depos¬ Government Securities. its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬ tions furnished to correspondents. Rktxbkxom : James Brown, Ea*., of Men*. Brown Brothers & Co.: John Q. Jones, Esq., Pr^ident of the Chemical National Bank; Jamee H. Banker, Esq., York NT ILA- Vice-President of the Bunk * •< ; c* New Prest. Lbwis Worthington, J.W. Kli.ts, Southern Bankers. Western Theodore Stanwood, Cashier. SOUTH! and promptly remitted for. Capital stock, 11,000,000. Surplus Fund, $250,000. Directors.—John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L. William Glenn, B. Harrison, R. M. Bishop, William its Oilers & Co., Benjamin Rowland, Jr., Samuel A. Bispham, William H. William H. BANK Rhawn, Late Cashier <*• SILVER, UNCURRENT of nd remitted for on day Checks on UNION H. D. CHICAGO. President. Manager. General Banking and Collections promptly attended to. at all times rank of Geo. C. Smith & Bro., phia, and Bank of Montreal, Canada. t N. Y. Correspondent, Vermilyb & LOUIS, Charles D. Carr & Co., Gold and Ex¬ accessible points promptly remitted for at current rates ol ex¬ change. L. ' Co., Benoist & BANKERS, LOUIS, MISSOURI, ST. Sell Exchange on all the principal cities of the United States and Canadas. Also, drafts on London and Paris for sale. Buy and Second National ST. Bank. LOUIS, MO. Surplus..$150,560 Prompt attention given to the business of corres¬ pondents. E. D. JONES, Cashier. Capital..$200,000 | & Co., Scott Late Scott, Kerr & Co., ol exchange. J B. Chaffee, H. J. Rooers, FIRST Pres. Geo. T. Clark, Cashier. NATIONAL RANK V. Pres. of Denver, DEPOSITORY OF THE U. 8. Authorized Capitol* - - - $500,000 Faid in Capital - * - $200,000 Transact a General Banking business comer of Blake andF. Sts. DENVER COLORADO. DESIGNATED Citizens’ SECURITIES. deposits of Gold and Cur¬ subject to Check at Sight. Merchants Gold loaned to and Bankers upon favcrable terms. Vermilye Co., No. 44 Co., & FOR. G Per Cent Bonds of 18S1, G Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1S62, 44 1864, G “ 44 G 44 1805 5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st, 0 Per Cent Currency Certificates. Exchange, Gov¬ Silver. Prompt & Co., Bankers, New York. Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York. E. H. Bulkly & Co., Brokers, New York. Babcock Bros 2d, & Sdfcrieti State 7 per cent. Bounty Loan. LIBERAL'ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN¬ MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS. Compound Interest Notes of 1 1865 Bought aud Sold. Mobile. Southern Bank of Ala. T. H. McMahan & Co. COMMISSION MERCHANTS Mid Dealers in Domestic and Foreign Exchange. GALVESTON, TEXAS. Special attention given to Collections of all kindd, having prompt and reliable correspondents at all ac¬ cessible points in the State, and REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES. REFER to A National Park Bant Howes & Macy, and SpoffortL Tileston & Co., New York. Second National Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel A Co. and D. 8. Stetson & Co., Philadelphia. T. F. Thirkield & Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank & Co., RANKERS, No. 4 WALL ST., NEVV YORK. Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly ex§cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLO WED on deposits, subject to check at sight. Haslett McKim. Rgbt. McKra. Jno. A. McKim. McKiifi, Bros. & Co., BANKERS, 62 WALL Interest allowed on other STREET. places. Gelston & BANKERS & Bussing, BROKERS WALL STREET receive our Personal 27 All orders draft at orders from deposits subject to special attention given to sight, and Fowler, and Jps. E. Elder & Goodwin, St Louis. Stanard A Co, Mobile. Pike, Uapeyre A Bro., New Orleans. Drake, KleinworthA Cohen, Lonand Liverpool. 864 A VERMILYE & CO. Warren, Kidder Hartford. Underwriters Agency New York, Charles Walsh. President Bank of Henry A Schroeder, Pres. New York 0 Home Insurance Company ot New York. New York Life Insurance Company. Company of STOCKS INCLUDING Franeis Aetna Insurance hand for immediate delivery til issues of STATES UNITED GA. Byrd & Hall, New York. Martin, Bates & Co., Merchants, New York. Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolff & Gillespie. Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & Hurlbert. Wall Street. New York, Keep .constantly on Dealers in Foreign and Domestic ernment Securities. Bonds, Gold and attention given to Collections. References: Attention. John S. Bussing Wm. J. Gelsto ' Burke & Union Bank, (Chartered by the State of Tennessee.) MEMPHIS, TENN. Buy and Sell Foreign and Domestic Exchange United States Securities, State of Tenne-ree, Shelby County, and Memphis Bonds, an 1 past due Coupons. Particular attention paid to Collections. rency, Jas. M. Muldon & Sons, St., Mobile, Ala. BANKERS, LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS. Collections made on all accessible points and re¬ mitted for on the day of payment, less current rates GOVERNMENT AND Interest allowed upon Co. PROMPTLY REMITTED COLLECTIONS No. 52 St. A. OTHER BROKERS, AUGUSTA, MO Dealers in Government Securities, change. Collections made on all and IN DEALERS BANKERS. BANKERS AND ;Haskell & BANKERS, FROM NO. 30 TO Broad Street, Office No. 16. No. 36 Philadel¬ Established 1848. Edey & Co., HAVE REMOVED 1014 MAIN Special attention given to collections. Draw on—Drexel, Winthrop & Co., and Winslow, Bickers. BANKERS & BROKERS, ROB’T T. BROOKS ST., RICHMOND, VA. Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &C., bought and sold on commission. Deposits received and Collections made on all accessible points in the United States. No. HENRY BAYLl® JAMES BECK, DUPEE, Barstow, BROKERS BANKERS AND ST., CHICAGO, York; Drexel & Co., MAURY. STATE STREET, BOSTON. Bankers and of the Maury & Co., R. H. (Lake Bank of Montreal.) ST. JAMES A. cheerfully furnished. JA3. L. the purchase of Merchaa Continent. Traveller* Beck & Sayles, No. 22 ! BOB1! H. MAURY. ALSO ISSUE STOCK BROKERS, Government. • Fall information with regard to Government loans NORTH-WESTERN STATES Lanier & Co., New several departments MUNROE & CO., PARIS. Dupee, HUNTINGTON, Cashier. Government Depository and Financial Agent of the United States. We buy and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, and give especial attention to business connected with the . Travellers abroad. WM. S. The Marine Company J. Young Scammon Robert Reid NATIONAL RANK WASHINGTON, COOKE (of Jay Cooke <fc Co.), Pres’t. STREET, BOSTON, ON LONDON EXCHANGE AND Commercial Credits for dise in England and the Credits for the use of OF BANK OF LONDON 48 LASALLE Philadelphia National Bank. FIRST of payment. FOR SALE. OF Cashier, Washington. accessible points JOHN Bank. GOVERNMENT BONDS, COLLECTIONS MADE at all i 114 STATE BILLS OF President, P. Mumford, Joseph Richardson & Co, Page, Rhawn. of the Central National Late of the NOTES, and all kinds Eastern Bankers. Edward B. Ome, William Ervien, Osgood Welsh, Frederic A. Hoyt, Joseph T. Bailey, CINCINNATI, OHIO. Dealers in GOLD, Especial attention paid to Collections. Refer to Duncan, Sherman & Co., New York • Drexel & Co., Philadelphia; The Franklin Bank! and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R. H. Maury & Co Richmond, Ya., Charles D. Carr A Co. Augusta, G«! directors : Street, Wcbt FourlJi 110 4: and services to Ranks liberal terms* Nathan Hilles, 108 ^ * $500,000 Capital Bankers on Gilmore, Dunlap Broad Street, Charleston, S. c, BANKERS & DEALERS IN FOREIGN& DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,SPECIE. BANK NOTES, STOCKS, AND BONDS. No. 5 PHILADELPHIA, Mitchell, A. S Frazer, Robert Woods, James A. Winslow. CHESTNUT STREET, 809 & 811 all points WEST and Collections made on Wilson, - Conner & Republic, Bank of the Cincinnati. of Bankers. Southern Bankers. National V.-Prest. NATIONAL BANK THE FIRST [May 26, 186?. CHROMuLE. THE 642 Co., John Bloodgood & Co., 22 BANKERS, ORLEANS, on Merchants National Bank, New York, and Bank of Liverpool, England. 54 CAMP Draw STREET, NEW. WILLIAM STREET, dealers in OTHER «nn Collections and remittances promptly attended fco* government and SECURITIES. deposits of Gold and Curren to check at sight, and particular attea subject rri tr. Qommitunf rnnnt.rv banks and bankers Interest allowed on cy, NEW YORK. May 25,1867.] THE CHRONICLE. v Financial, W. H. JAY COOKE, Street, AND ALL OTHER STOCKS, BONDS AND GOLD Bonofat and Sold on Commission. ^dotations and sales lists furnished daily on appli cation. Orders promptly executed. George Farnham, COMMERCIAL -< EDWARD ( Taussig, Fisher & Co., DODGE, FITT COOKE. BANKERS AND BROKERS, STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, No. 114 South 3d Fifteenth &c., BOUGHT AND Street, New York, Hedden,Winchester&Co BROADWAY, NEW YORK, Brokers. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold bought and sob' at market rates, on commission Interest allowed on balances. -Advances only. made on approved securities. Particular attention given to orders for the pur¬ chase or sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells, Fargo & Co., and Merchants’ Union Express Stocks. All orders faithfully executed. JOSIAII HEDDEN. ISAIAH C. BABCOCK, LOCKE W.WINCHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN. SECURITIES. MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight Draft. Solicit accounts from Street, Make Collections our houses in Nassau, road Securities an office at No. Fourth of Wall Street, in this city. Mr. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washing¬ ton corner All the Government Loans for sale. sale, and exchange of government securities of to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, Collections made for Dealers Banks. JAY COOKE & CO. . March 1,1866. Central >■ ■ ■■ 318 BROADWAY. Satterlee & Co., Capital. GOVERNMENT Buy and Sell at Market Rates ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS and others, and allow interest on daily balances, Bubject to Sight draft. Ittake collections on favorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. IOIITHERN BANK Edwin ^ NOTES. Q. Bell, BANKER AND BROKER, In Southern Securities and Bank Bills. It BROADWAY A 5 NEW STREET, ^ New York. *> WILLIAM A. WIIEELOCK, President. WILLIAM H. SANFORD, Cashier. SECURITIES, The Tradesmens ALL TJJUXTIX0. BANKERS Sc BROKERS, Bond*, Government Securities, Stocks, and Gold, bought and sold on Commission. COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLD AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED. NOS. 12 NEW 4c 14 BROAD STREETS. NATIONAL 291 DEALERS IN STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, A GOVERN MENT . SECURITIES. No. 19 Broad Street, New. York. 400,000 RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier. No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET. DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SECURITIES. AND Tenth National Bank. Ca nital Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon favorable terms. $1,000*0C O. No. 29 BROAD STREET. Designated Depository of the Government. L. S. Watkins, STREET, NEW YORK, BANKER, And Dealer in all Classes ment Securities of Govern¬ and-Gold. Collections made in all parts of the and British America. United States J. L. Brownell & Bro., BANKERS Sc BROKERS, STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities, and Gold Bought and Sold exclusively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals 28 BROAD received n on favorable terms* Referbvcb 9: 5' jjfbNDA^Pres. Nat. C.B, Rodman, Fisk & Co., J. ri. Bank Chicago. D. L. ROSS, President. Stout, Cashier. BANKERS, Josei^i A. Jameson, Amos Cottino, AND Dealers in 13 Government NASS A U Securities Of S T R E E T, Gold and silver Coin. Registered Interest Collected and Coupons cashed without charge. 7-30 Notes, all series, takm in exchange for the Consolidated 5-20 Bonds, on terms advantageous to holders of 7-30s. Merchants and Importers supplied with coin for custom-duties at lowest market rates. Orders for purchase and sale of all miscellaneous securities promptly executed. orders will receive our personal Mail and telegraph attention. Deposits received, and interest allowed on balances. Collec¬ tions made on all points wi h quick returns. RODMAN, FiSlI & CO. Jameson,Cotting&Co. St. Louis. Buy and sell at market rates: Six per Cent. Bonds of IS 1: T< n-Fortics ; Five-Twenty Bonds, all issues; Sevcn-Tlvrty Notes, all scie?; Compound Intere t Notes, and BANKERS, No. 14 Wall Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government Securi¬ ties, of all issues, and execute orders for the pur¬ chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD. Interest allowed rency, on deposits of Gold and Cur¬ subject to check at sight. James D. Smith, of the late firm of James Low & Co., New York & LcMiisviile, Ky. Jameson, Smith & Cotting BANKERS, - NOS. 14 & 16 WALL Receive STREET, NEW YORK. Deposit* ill Currency and Gold, and allow Interest at the rate of Four Per Cent per annum on for at daily balances which may be checked sight. "Will purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks strictly and only on Commission. Hatch, Foote & Co., BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURI¬ TIES, GOLD, &c. All issues of SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES for the new FIVE-T -VENTY l.beral BONDS, terms, anl without delay. IMrORTER-* and others Tyler, Wrenn & Co., NO. IS BANKERS, WALL STREET, Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, GOLD, &c. Orders for purchase and sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed TVLEK, ULLMANNA CO. T. A. Chicago. Hoyt, GOLD AND EXCHANGE Mech. Banking Ass. N.Y. Bunn, Pres’t. Merchants’Nat. Bank¬ ers’ and Dealers’ Accounts solicited. ADAMS, KIMBALL Sc MOORE, NO, 11 BROAD BANK. BROADWAY, NEW YORK. $1,000,000 BANKERS. new Jackson Brothers, CAPITAL URPLUS Lockwood & Co., N O. Jones & Westervelt, Correspondents. and Canadas. BANKERS, BROAD STREET. our Collections made in all parts of the United States STOCKS AND BONDS BROADWAY. $3,000,000. Has for sale all descriptions of Government Bonds— City and Country accounts received on terms mot t BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, NO. 24 National Bank, — favorable to Gilliss, FIarney & Co., best terms. on and gold, and to all business of National bonds Co., SO $5,000,000 NASSAU STREET, N. E. COR. PINE STREET. will be resident partners. We shall give particular attention to the purchase, BROKERS IN MINING STOCKS, and National Bank. Capital House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, all issues; ihvorable terms, promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State. Federal, and Rail Philadelphia and Washington we have this day opened 1 on And Opposite Treas. Department, Washington. 70 BROADWAY & IB NEW STREET. Riker & 5 NEW STREET iLL UNITED STATES Street, In connection with Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates, Sts., Philadelphia. paper, COMMISSION. Bankers and No. 32 Broad New York. ALSO, NO. (H.C. FAnNESTOCK. V ) Corner Wall and Nassau (Late of G. S. Robbins & Son.) NO. 69 Bankers and Brokers. BANKERS. RAILROAD, 4 8 Pine 643 - Jay Cooke & Co., TELEGRAPH, - | WM. G. MOORHEAD, H. D COOKE, , mi»ess, SOLD ON t Bankers and Brokers. Whittingham, No. 8 Broad * . BROKER, 36 NEW AND 38 BROAD STREETS. Orders executed for Bankers, Brokers and Merchants market rates, end Coin on exchanged on the most supplied with GOLD 1V r}’ No. 12 WALL STREET. A. C. BANKER 3 BROAD at hand for immediate dc- Graham, AND BROKER, STREET, NEW YORK, DEALER IN Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Southern Bills on London and Paris, unis on Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile. tMay 25,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 644 Financial. Fisk & Hatch , BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNM ENT AND DESIRABLE SECURITIES, No. 5 Nassau Street, New RECOMMEND TO OTHER Financial. Bankers and Brokers. THE Jacquelin & De Coppet, DeLery Gold Mining Co. GENERAL York:, INVESTORS THE Bonds, Gold, and OFFICES: Mreet, New No. 74 Cedar STREET, N.Y. NO. 26 NEW •Railroad Stocks, York, AND Government Securities, Quebec. BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION. This Company has purchased all the Mineral The Central Hxnbt Da Oomr. Rights on the Seigniory of Rigaud-Vaudreui, in the Johm H. Jaoqukum. Prov ince of Qnebec; and about the firpt of June, will commence practical operations by making minemlogical surveys, by shafting and tunnelling the Heath & quartz Jedg* s, aud b/ testing ihe quality of tue rock This Company is constructing, under the patron in their Stamp Mill, just completed. The area of the BANKERS ^COMMISSION BROKERS Seigniory is 108 square miles, and the quartz veins age of the UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, are of, unusual width and extent, famishing a basis THE WESTEIIN END OF THE for the profitable employment of large amounts of AND GREAT NATIONAL RAHWAY capital in separate orgai izations; and as fast as the ACROSS THE CONTINENT. Company’s surveys and tests shall show the best GOLD, RAILROAD AND MINING STOCKS, Their line will extend from Sacramento, Califor locations for new mills, they will furnish Maps and 13 Broad Street, New York. nia, across the Sierra Nevadas to ttie California propose liberal terms to parties desiring to develop mines on their own account. Contracts are now State line, travel sing the richest and most topu Deposits received, subject to Check, and Interest allowed. Lous pEction of California, and thence through being made for the w iking of Placer Mines, which have already been abundantly proven to be of great the great mining regions < f the Territories A. HAWLEY HEATH. T. W. B. HUGHES. to the vicinity of Salt Lake City. richness. r^ Member of N.Y. Stock Ex It forms ihe sole It esteru link of the only Full information can be obtained at either office route to the Pacific which is adopted by Congress of the Company, or of the local agent, Mr. Truman and aided by the issue of limited States Conran, on the property FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF THE No. 46 St. Peter Street, Pacific Railroad Co., Hughes, . Gibson,Beadleston & Co., Ronds. Their road is already completed, equipped, and running for 94 miles trom Sacramento to within 12 miles of tho summit of the Sierras, and a large amount ot the work of Grading, Tunnelling, Ac. beyond that point has been accomplished. The First Mortgage Ronds of ihis Com pany afford unubual inducements of Safety and Proflit to Investors, for the following among other of Interest is Six: per Cent, Gold, payaole York. CITY OF semi-annually in t he City oi New Second.—The Principal is matur.ty. payable in Gold at Third.—The cost of the Bonds, Ninety-five Per Cent, and accrued interest, is Ten Per Cent, lesp than that of the cheapest Six Per Cent. Gold Bearing Bonds of the Government. Fourth.—The United States Government provides nearly half the amount ueceaoary to bu Id the entire road, and look* mainly to a small per-ceutage ou the future traffic for re-payment. Fifth.—Owing to this liberal provision, accompa nied with Extensive tyrant* of Public Lauds,| by which the Government fosters this national enterprise, its success is ren¬ dered certain, and its financial sta¬ bility is altogether independent of the contingencies which attend ordi¬ great nary Stock, are members. National Trust Company in Seventh.—The net earnings of portion are already largely tbe luteiest obligations the completed in excess of which ihe twice the dis¬ Company will incur on tance. and are steadily increasing, rendering the uninterrupted payment of the Inte¬ absolutely certain. Eighth.—At the present rate of Gold they pay near¬ amount in¬ NEW YORK. Opening of Books of Sub¬ scription to the Capital Stock. Trustees ot the National City of New York, held at No. 363 Broadway, on the Eighth day of May inst., the undersigned were appoTute a lommiitee to open » ooksfor subscription to tue Capital 8tock of suid Company. Notice iB hereby given, pursuant to the Charter, that the books for subscription lo the Capital Stock of s .id National l rust Company wi'l bo opened at ihe Ninth National Ba .k. 363 Broadway, corner of Franklin Street, in the City of New York, on the V2d day of May, 1867, and will remain open until the whole amount of Capital Stock of oce mi,lion dol¬ lars shall CARTER, New York, May 9, 1867. HENRY C. Dated The Mercantile United States and Agency. P. Hayden, the conntry. ^“Miscellaneous Stocks and Bonds bought and the Stoc& Exchange on commission for and sold at cash. Special attention giver, to the Exchange of SEVEN - THIRTY NOTES of ull the series f r the new FIVE 1 WENTY BONDS qf 18(55, on the most favorable $rm* http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ ’V' •.)?*' 'if.!#)" Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis ' Letters of Credit for Travellers, DEALER IN BULLION Drake Brothers, BROKERS AND BANKERS, NO. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securi¬ ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and STOCK Bonds, Steamship, leum and Mining Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petro¬ Stock s. Currency and Gold Dratt. ments received on deposit subject to Dividends and Interest collected and invest¬ made. Orders Promptly Executed. avail¬ parts of Europe. Allowed on Deposits. Co., Van Schaick & No. 10 Wall Street, NEW YORK. BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOV¬ ERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCKS AND GOLD. €. POWELL, GREEN Sc CO. & Commission Bankers MERCHANTS, STREET, NEW YORK. 8S BROAD Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought exclusively on Commission. and told Insurance. BuffaloCity InsuranceCo. BUFFALO. OF ORGANIZED APRIL, Cask WM. G. FARGO, President. « President. HENRY T. SMITH, REYNOLDS, Vi. A. 1 867. $200,000 Capital Paid In Secretary Directors. RANKER, AND AND PARIS, MOBILE AND able in all Wm. G. Fargo, Rufus L. Howard, Dexter P. Rumsey, Joh . ARen, Jr., Peter J. Ferris, St phen G. Austin, Wm. H. Glenuy, 8. G Cornell, John C. Clifford, A. Liberal Terms check at sight. Collections made throughout Issue Circular Business Directory. announce a ready for delivery. Street, New York. NEW ORLEANS. lishers beg to bought, sold, Deposits received on subject to DRAW ON LONDON J edition of the above wTork having been exhausted withm a few days of its issue, the pub¬ is now BANKERS, 27 Ac 29 Pine Commissioners. exchanged. collected. v Interest The first DEALERS IN Ai^Gold Coin and U. S. Coupons J^ Messrs. LOCKWOOD & Co., >t DaBmEY,Morqan&CoI Winslow, Lanier & Co., be subscribed. ELISHA A PACKER, 1 THOMAS W. SHANNON, | THOMAs B. RE \D, JOSEPH U. ORVIS, 1 AND SPECIE, 24 Nassau Street, New York. N B.—All kinds of Government Securities ie Tbe Specie Department will be in charge ceived at the full market price in exchange for the of J. S. Cronise, (late of J. S. Cronise & Co.), who above Bonds. Also, has my authority to sign the Firm name by procu¬ All descriptions of Government Securation. rltics kept constantly on hand, and Bought Sold or Secu¬ Information cheerfully given to Professional men, Executors, etc., desiring to invest. At a meeting of the Trust Company of the the temporary office, Fisk & Hatch, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, NO. 6 NASSAU STREET, N.Y. Deposits. on Notice of / BANKERS AND allowed rities. Second Edition, which This work is the largest vested. Directory ever issued in the States, and:orms United The Bonds are issued in denominations of $1,000 a complete classified list ot nearly all the traders, with semi-annual Gold Coupons attached, payable in NewT York, and are offered lor the present at SJ.S dealers, and manufacturers, not only in all the large per cent, aud accrued interest (in currency) from cities of the Union, but in almost every town, village, January 1st Orders may be lorwarded to us director through the and hamlet iu the Union. It is an invaluable work principal Banks and Bankers in all parts of the for all persons having business relations throughout \couutry. ^Remittances ary be made in draffs on New York, the country. Copies for sale at the office of the pub¬ or m Legal Tender Notes, National Bank Notes or lishers, other thuds current in this city, and the bonds will R. G. DUN & CO., No. 203 Broadway, be forwarded to any address by express, free ol or JOHN F. TROW. No. 52 Greene St. charge. Inquiries for furiher particulars, by mail or otherwise, wid receive punctual attention. Per Cent, per annum, on the ly Interest Dividends, Coui ons and mteiest collected. Liberal advances on Government and other Re»er Ke.er hv Dy nermismnn to permission tr» Railroad enterprises. Sixth.-The Security of its First Mortgage Ronds is therefore ample, and their character for safety and reliaodity is equalled only by that of the obligat one of the Government itseli. Gold, ONLY on Conamiision, at the Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we OF THE First —The rate RANKERS, 50 EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK. Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and bought and arid, Qnebec, April 26,1867. viz : reasons, rest J. M. WINCHELr', General Manager. Reynolds, James N. Matthews, Pascal P Pratt, Jam s M. Smith, Adrian R. Root, This Company Richard Bullymore, L. K. Plympton, James H. Metcalfe, John Greiner, lames Braylev, O. P. Ramsdell, La ren Enos, He' ry Martin, George W. Tift, S. S. Guthrie, C. J. lJamlm, O. L. N ms, John H. Vought, James Adams. has j stbe n organized with paid abov, and have established in this city, and are prepared to write up Cash Capital, as a Agency phSe and inland RINKS AT Office In New navigation CURRENT RATES. York, No. 6 Pine Street. Agent CHARLES W. STANDART, "THE ammfrrjaj & fcctte, (Stommwmt $imcs, §aitwag Pmtttw, and gttjmratttt fnurnal. A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, v REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1867- VOL. 4. STATES,' NO. 100 the opposite extreme of low pressure,” as is shown by the recent low aggregate of THE CHRONICLE. manufacturing and other productive industries. There are Latest Monetary and Commercial Business Enterprises and the We have a pros¬ Money Market.. English News 648 lowever, some symptoms of a reaction. 645 The Fate of Mexico 646 Commercial and Miscellaneous pect of ample crops. News 650 Trade of Great Britain and the The earnings of the railroads show an United States 6*47 improvement. Many other circumstances contribute to THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. that the foretoken depression of several months past with its Cotton 657 Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. S. Securities, Gold Market, Tobacco 658 enforced quietude will give place to a more gratifying ac¬ Breadstuff’s 659 Foreign Exchange, New York Groceries 660 City Banks. Philadelphia Banks The Luxemburg question being settled in a pacific National Banks, etc 651 Dry Goods 661 tivity. sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange 654 Imports 662 manner, almost the only cloud of uncertainty which hangs National, State, etc., Securities. 655 Prices Current and Tone of the Commercial Epitome Market.,... 669-70 over the favorable vaticinations comes from the direction of 656 THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. the money market. If we have stringency there, the other Railway News. 603 | Railway, Canal, etc., Stock List.' 666 Railroad, Canal, and MiscellaneInsurance and Mining Journal 667 conditions of resuscitated business will he present in vain. Bond List 664-05 | Advertisements 641-44, 668, 671-72 What then is the prospect1? Will money be easy for the 5 or 6 months which must elapse before the usual activity sets in in the fall, or will there be during that interval a series ot Thb Commercial and Financial Chronicle is issued every Sitiur- interrupting embarrassing spasms of temporary stringency 1 day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, To answer this inquiry we may look first, at the supply ot with the latest news by mail and telegraph up to midnight of Friday. A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all floating capital seeking employment in the loan market. the Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to And no one can doubt who is conversant with the facts that the hour of publication. , the accumulation is unusually large. It is true that a good TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. deal of this capital is investing itself in Government securi¬ For The Commercial Financial Chronicle, with The Dailt ties, and that frem this movement the proportion between Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage) $12 00 the floating and fixed capital of this country has undergone For Ihe Commercial Financial Chronicle, without. The Daily Bulletin, (exclusive of postage) 10 00 some changes since the addition of 2,000 millions of United For The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage) 5 00 States bonds to the mass of pre-existing investments for the Postage is paid by subscribers at their (non post-office. It is, on the Chroni¬ cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. savings of the people. But, by a singular and beneficent WILLIAM B. DANA & CO, Publisber«, law, the multiplication of safe investments in any rich, 60 William Street, New York. thriving country increases the rapidity with which thecapital Files for holding the Chronicle or Bulletin can be had at this Office. of that country augments. Thus the reservoirs of floating to excess, seem CONTENTS. to have rushed into . ors ®I)c CfyronicU. and . and * Price $1 50. capital are now fuller than formerly, besides being more capacious and more rapidly supplied. Hence it happens that notwithstanding the prodigious aggregate of fixed BUSINESS ENTERPRISE AND THE MONEY MARIET. Among the topics for discussion the condition of the money capital which has gone into Government bonds, the floating And market claims just now an unusuallyprominent place. The long capital of the country is as large or larger than ever. not only our banks, trust companies, and other lending in¬ continued lull in commercial enterprise, the general dullness o stitutions have abundant means to meet large demands for business, and the fact that in 1837, 1847, and 1857 this coun¬ accommodation ; but in consequence of the obstruction of try was ravaged by financial panics, have led a few per¬ the outlets for employing capital in business, many of our sons to anticipate that the current year will not close without a serious revulsion. And though it would be easy to show large merchants and importers are large lenders of surplus So far then as the supply of idle capital is concerned, that the existing state of our monetary machinery is unfavo funds. we may expect an easy money market. rable to the fulfilment of these predictions of disaster, stil Secondly, as to the abundance of currency, there is never as the laws of funds are imperfectly understood, and by most at this time of the year any difficulty, for the flow of green¬ people are much misunderstood, it is no wonder that dis backs sets strongly towards this city, and the tendency is trust is generated, and that an anxiety pervades all classes o for bank notes to accumulate to an extent even beyond wh*t our people, not to venture out of their depth, or risk mone is salutary or convenient. It is true that the movements of the tary engagements beyond their assured means. during this Summer, suffer a little disturbance When, a few months ago, the credit machinery of the currency may, from the heavy business of the Treasury. Next month the in¬ country was working at “ high pressure,” we warned our come taxis payable, and, with the-o her internal taxes, will readers against the dangerous results to he apprehended from withdraw some 40 millions out of the channels of the (Hfcula** over expansion. Now the people, with the usual tendency But these payments will be widely distribtued, and the disbursements will be rapid on account of the heavy amounts ofSeven-thirties that are being purchased by the Treasury for tion. „ . [May 25, 1867. THE CHRONICLE 646 political parties of the country co-operating harmoniously under a free form of government; and, after five years of fierce warfare, the possibility of har¬ mony is more than ever remote. Few of those who have been drawn into the armies will return to the pursuits of in¬ dustry, and the country will be harrassed by a large acces¬ sion to the ranks of the lawdess and plundering population. It will scarcely be questioned that this is a fair represen¬ tation of what will be, in the event of the final success of the liberals. Is it improper to ask what would have been in the event of France continuing her support of the imperial cause? Without entering upon the abstract question of forms of government, it may be safely affirmed that the con¬ tinuance of the French troops in Mexico would have given ized sentiment to admit of the cash, and of the compound notes, of which 8 millions mature in June, and 12 millions in July, all of which the Secretary has announced his willingness to pay off on demand. From these and other causes the disbursements from the Treasury will probably equal the receipts, and no serious hindrance to business or perturbation of the markets is to be appre¬ hended from the locking up of currency in the Treasury. Exempt, as we shall thus be, in all probability, from two of the chief causes of financial stringency—deficiency of avail¬ able capital seeking investment, and derangement of the cur¬ rency by the movements of the Treasury—we may fairly anticipate an easy money market except, indeed, the general the country a government capable of controlling the lawless confidence should be impaired by further failures in the habits of the people. If political rights had been subjected to the dictation of the So far, however, these failures have government, the rights of property South or elsewhere. would have been secured ; the safety of the person wrould only served to show on how firm a basis the credit machin¬ ery of the country reposes. Outside of a narrow circuit the have been secured; capital would have found employment suspension of Watts, Crane & Co. for six millions, and that in developing the splendid resources of the country, and of Fraser, Trenholm & Co. for four millions, scarcely pro¬ society would have been arrested in its rapid reaction to¬ It would be a poor objection against these duced a perceptible tremor, although these failures were so ward barbarism. suddenly announced, so wide in their influence'and so vast vital advantages to say that they wTould have been conferred in the amounts involved. The fact appears to be that our by the strong hand of power. Surely civilization under a commercial classes generally have prepared for financial re¬ despotism is to be preferred to a semi-barbarism under a de¬ moralized republic. verses, and have strengthened themselves in all possible It is not very gratifying to reflect that wre are chiefly respon¬ ways. But it must be remembered that, though a ship un¬ der bare poles may scud through a storm, yet in fairer sible for the unfortunate course into w’hich affairs are drifting. weather, for purposes of navigation and commerce, risks The departure of France from Mexico is due to the energy must be taken, and as much sail carried as wise seamanship of our protest; and if the Mexicans relapse into a condition will justify. To err from timidity or ignorance in the one of anarchy it will be for no other reason than that we refused to allow them to be coerced into order. It was doubtless case is almost as fatal as to err from rashness and incapacity in the other. undesirable that we should have the representative of European dynasty enthroned upon our borders ; but were we justified in objecting to France establishing order in Mex¬ ico without being prepared to contribute that result our¬ selves ? Our policy has been wholly selfish. We have cared nothing for neighbors so long as we could keep a foreign prince from our door. It is futile to urge that we have protected Mexico against having her freedom trodden down by an invader, so long as the Mexicans are incapable of governing themselves. To say that we saved their liber ties means that we have perpetuated their anarchy. To liberate them from restraint is to enable them to commit suicide. Mexicans may thank us for this questionable boon, but history will hold us responsible for a grievous political wrong. It may be said with much truth, that the mode and time of the French intervention was so offensive to us that any other course than that taken by the government was scarcely admissible ; and we think that if it be granted that the end we sought was desirable or necessary, the Secretary of State is entitled to great gredit for the course he pursued to accomplish it. Still the result is that so far as Mexico is concerned, anarchy is about to be substituted for what was fast becoming a stable government, and wre must, in a great measure, be held responsible for the event. very a THE FATE OF MEXICO. It is rarely that war results in any real amelioration of the condition of a people. The cases are few indeed in which its costs do not largely exceed its compensations. Civiliza¬ much of its interruptions than of its progress to this cause. Indeed, being the carnival of passion and the revelry of ambition, its results could scarcely be otherwise than detrimental to humanity and progress. The struggle in Mexico affords poor promise of an issue exceptional to this rule. The contest was started for the os¬ tensible purpose of substituting chronic anarchy by stable and effective government; it appears likely to end in the perpetuation of social confusion. Accounts from the seat of war are so contradictory that little can be definitely affirmed as to the situation of affairs; it may, however, be safely con¬ cluded, from the general tenor of accounts, that the final overthrow" of the imperial government is but a question of Weeks. The disregard for the laws of ciyilizcd warfare which characterises the operations of the liberals shows how far passion is gaining the ascendancy in the contest, and fore¬ shadows the lawdess condition of affairs which may be expect¬ ed to succeed. The fictions and the bloodthirsty propensities of the Mexican people have been thoroughly aroused, and the circumstances admit of little hope that social order will fol¬ low the extinction of imperialism. Maximilian represents a faction which, though in a minority, will never long cease to oppose a liberal form of government. His adherents are now fighting less for their Emperor than for the ascendancy of the church party and the upper classes ; and though their cause under its present leadership may fail, their submission tion owes more . There appears to conscience upon this be a partial awakening of the public question. Indications are apparent of a disposition to ask whether we are not bound to do something toward mitigating the; misfortunes which our policy has brought upon Mexico. Whether this epuestion is likely to be raised by the Government or in Congress we are not pre¬ pared to say ; we presume, however, that it will be ulti- mately decided rather upon grounds of ability and of will be made with a sullen resolution to seize the first occa¬ expediency that upon considerations of moral obliga¬ sion for recovering their ascendancy. Besides the hatred tion. Clearly it would be only adding folly to wrong to between the factions of even the liberal party are too bitter attempt to identify ourselves with Mexican interests. and fundamental, and are too little under the check of civil¬ present, it takes all our resources of statesmanship to At take May 25, 1867.] 647 THE CHRONICLE. augmentation in the shipments of railroad iron, the in¬ in the export of this article being nearly £233,000. In the annexed statement will be found all the leading articles of schemes of our legislators render an increase of our burthens export to the United States, together with the aggregate value inevitable. We cannot afford to undertake a protectorate, of these shipments hence during the first three months of each however informal, over Mexico; for the result would be to of the lust three years : AND PRODUCE AND MANUFACTURES TO THE EXTORTS OF BRITISH IRISH entangle us in the affairs of our neighbors without any com¬ UNITED STATES FROM JANUARY 1 TO MARCH 31. 1865. 1866. 1867. pensating advantage. The Mexicans are sadly impoverish¬ Alkali £10,860 £281,971 £220,893 and ale 6,405 20.841 25,524 ed, and are not likely to reimburse us for any expenditures Beer Coals 15,989 19,361 16,136 we might incur on their account. Manufactures— As yet, we have kept our¬ Cotton Piece goods 400,945 1,511,419 1,135,687 selves clear of foreign incumbrances, and it will be fatal to Thread...., 29,013 99,047 98,617 Earthenware and porcelain 207,052 88,975 190,204 our tranquility when we depart from that wise policy ; for 514,866 Haberdashery and millinery ? 217,363 576,423 Hardwares and Cutlery— 76,180 any interference in behalf of government and order in Mex¬ Knives, forks, &e 28,029 93,707 26,442 Anvils, vices, &c 18,379 44,209 ico must be undertaken with a distinct understanding that Manufactures of German silver, &c 145,914 3S,3S7 2.0,222 Linen Manufactures— the end of our intervention would probably be the annexa¬ Piece goods 944,521 595,725 1,418,111 Thread 46,047 38,322 67,906 tion of the country to the United States. The incessant out¬ Metals— 91,212 Iron—Pi r, &c 8,071 88,108 breaks incident to Mexican politics would ultimately throw 105,504 Bar, &c 44,013 172,537 326,005 Bail road 21,139 93,509 the whole onus of government upon ourselves, and we should 1,959 Castings. 720 4,426 50,651 Hoops, sheets and boiler plates 13,218 82,973 find no other way out of our complications than by taking 46,688 48,415 Wrought 77,282 190,426 Steel 153,898 76,793 absolute possession of the country, with all the cost and an¬ 10,972 6,164 20,929 Copper, wrought. of ourselves. We have nothing to spare for Mexico, either in the shape of money or men. Our taxation has reached the limit of endurance, and yet the extravagant care ant crease . of keeping eight millions of half civilized lawless population in order, and with the dangerous necessity of governing them by the sword, to say nothing of the liability for foreign claims. Intervention, therefore, by the United noyance thought of, nor are we prepared to indicate what course should be pursued. Tor the present, however, we must await further developments, and event ually it is possible that, if anarchy continues to reign, and no better remedy be suggested, a joint intervention on the part of the United States and other powers interested for the simple purpose of enforcing order, may be thought States alone is not to be desirable. TRADE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND TIIE UNITED STATES. COTTON, BREADSTUFFS, PROVISIONS, ETC. The British Board of Trade returns for the first quarter of Lead, pig, Ac «. 42,555 37,237 27,814 290,852 46,495 25,132 14,8S7 70,947 38,971 8,584 23,505 7,110 21,068 44,028 25,553 12,566 180 1,657 997 715 142,023 391,640 21,740 7,329 237,171 14,918 319,615 274,173 24,414 472,166 1,461,189 727,969 3,022,916 8,056,586 6,113,609 39 6,142 908 Ribbons Other articles of silk Other art icles mixed with other materials . Spirits, British Wool Woolen and Worsted Manufactures— Cloths of all kinds..; Carpets and druggets Shawls, rugs, &e Worsted stuffs of wool only, mixed with other material 51,8*9 5.477 Total 575 18,063 24,704 242 .... and of wool In the first two months of the present year, the total com¬ puted real value of the principal imports into the United Kingdom was £24,281,048 against £26,457,'723 last year, ancl £19,253,701 in 1865. .Of these the value of the cotton imported was as under: 1867. 1866. 1S65. slackness which has existed in Great Britain for the last few months, the export trade of the country is still quite satisfac¬ Turkey Egypt tory. In comparing these figures, 18G6, it should be remembered that British Iudia China Other countries present year indicate that notwithstanding the apparent 423,924 5,077 Handkerchiefs, &c From United States Bahamas aud Mexico Brazil the 152,351 ... Tin plates Oilseed Salt Silk Manufactures— Broad piece goods however, with those for the trade of the United £56,040 „ 705,471 Bermudas 520,950 691,693 147,276 3,040,485 • . £3,309,885 22,767 12,924 872,092 10 ,077 • • • • .... 529,786 1.261,103 1,4-5,690 2,152,530 79,443 1,706,511 465,165 269,858 58,454 162,682 173,098 7,0:7,244 10,055,15 1 6,264,889 . Total £5,246,388 10,001 Kingdom last year was more than usually animated. Very COTTON. large purchases were then being made by ourselves, the de¬ The import of cotton in March was 883,840 cwt, of which clared value of the exports to United States ports, in the first three months being as much as £8,000,000, against only 512,988 cwt., were from this country, 228,871 from Egypt, £3,000,000 in 1865. This year, in the same period, the ship¬ and only 50,521 cwt. from the East Indies. The total supply ments have reached a total value of £0,113,600, so that, as received last year was 872,827 cwts., and in 1865,621,073 compared with 1806, there is a dimunition of nearly £2,000,- cwt. For the first three months of the present year the im¬ 000, but as compared with 1865, an increase of rather more ports were 1,815,219 cwts., against 2,026,409 cwt. in 1866, than £3,000,000. Neither of these comparisons, however, and 1,433,274 cwt. in 1865. Annexed are the particulars of these imports: can be considered fair, for during 1865 our purchases were 18t7. 1866. 1865. cwts. cwts. i CWtS. much below the average, while last year our merchants were 999,403 1,018,955 19,989 From United States— 42 2,602 99,733 Bahamas and Bermudas. taking more than an average supply. If therefore, we extend 2,850 75,675 Mexico 114,778 the comparison to the year of 1864, we shall find that the 149,701 119,818 Brazil 33,215 41,374 57,226 Turkey declared value of the exports of British and Irish produce and 454,005 246,897 477,363 Egypt 147,030 457,450 404,610 British India.. 2,041 manufactures to the United States was £6,500,000, showing 106,146 China. 64,705 46,580 72,714 Other countries a dinumition this year of £100,000 only. This country still 1,815,219 2,0*6,409 1,433,274 ranks as the best customer that England possesses for her The exports of cotton during the three months have fallen manufactures, nearly one-fifth of the total shipments being on off to the extent of 188,000 cwts., while as regards cotton United States • • • • • - ~ - ' account. , goods there is a decline of about 40,000,000 yards. The fol¬ in the exports to this country in the first three months of the present year is in cotton piece goods, lowing statement shows the extent of the exports of cotton and cotton gools to all quarters, from Jan. 1 to March 31: which show a falling off to the value of £410,000, in linen COTTON. 1867. 1866. 1865. piece goods £463,0 0, and in woolen and worsted manufac¬ 3,864 To Russia cwts 50,319 tures £789,000. 19,' 72 Prussia...1 Haberdashery aud millinery, cutlery, linen 2,953 4,167 10,951 Hanover 197,118 322,119 63,150 thread, bar iron, wrought iron, iron hoops and boiler plates, Hanse Towns 93,687 106,367 38,170 Holland tin plates, silk 198,317 275,5:35 175,192 Other Countries manufactures, and alkali, also exhibit a consid¬ 542,399 erable reduction ; but, on the other hand, there is an import¬ 731,124 287,463 Total The principal decline ..., THE 648 (May 25,1867. CHRONICLE. CONSUMPTION, GOODS. COTTON lbs’ Cotton yarns, Cotton piece goods, Cotton thread, lba yards Unstemmed Manufactured and snuff Stemmed wheat trade in Eng land was very quiet, but very firm. This arose out of the circumstance that a considerable inroad had been made into latest advices, the and foreign countries were on seems to he no UNITED trade weeks Entered in March, 1865. 1866. 1867. “ may 3 months, 3865. 1866 1867.. Entered in March, 1865. be expected the wheat for severa 1S6*5. 1867.. 3 months, “ I860.-. 1867.. position with regard to our shipments of cereals. In months of the present year, out of a total im American shipping, so far . . 60 123 91 . . . . 47,516 No. 33 168 Ton’ge 37,175 153 121 411 352 145,011 . . . . OF *l 3 months, • “ 130.992 384,349 1 3 months, 1865.. 146 States. OF 1867: BREAD3TUFFS THE UNITED KINGDOM FROM INTO MARCH JANUARY 1 31. WHEAT. 1866. 1865. cwts 1,071,117 68,699 139,189 From Russia Denmark Prussia Schleswig, Holstein, & 17.621 149,504 Hanse Towns France Turkey, Wallachia, Egypt... 148,363 and Moldavia.. 35,612 1,282,140 174,835 290,980 8,789 605,098 1 912.614 5,671,948 3,338,874 6,061,852 1,312,790 1866. 1867. . ....... days. 44 44 44; 44 4$. Ad. 4s. Ad. % p. c. 44 30 — - days. 47,837 1,589,482 66,671 538,219 71,441 149.570 4,343 64,278 9,959 8,203 129,052 315,182 59,560 6,582 374,807 die. lslld 1.9 1 let l5lld 1 p. c. dis. 402,147 RATE. 11.82% 25.12% @25.15 13. 6%@18.t)% 25.20 — — — — — May 10. 3 mo’s. 31% — — — May 4. 30 days. — 53 — — — — — — — May April April April 9. 12. 18. 8. March 21. April 15. March 30. May 4. May 2. April 30. March 27. (50 days. 90 days. 60 days. — 109% par. 9@10 prem. 23% @24 44 49%@ 44 47 @47% 24%@ 6 mos. 4,9. 3%rf.@ — 4,9. Ad. @ — 2%@3 p. c. prem. 44 l,s.ll % d. If.1 \%d. 44 Is 11% d. 30 days. 1% p. c. prem. 44 44 [From our own Correspondent.] London, Saturday, May 11,1867. favorable con¬ months failed, and al¬ have wholly re¬ recently closing days of the present week exhibit a very trast with those of the corresponding week last year. Twelve have now elapsed since Overend, Gurney C*., limited, though it cannot, even at this date, be said that we covered from the crisis, still a perceptible improvement has The 1865. United States British North America Other Countiics • — 60 163,305 174,87*5 393,657 25.12% S mo’s. * April 11. April 16. — Pernambuco.. Sydney 44 44 March 27. — Madras Calcutta 750,053 cwts — — Hong Kong... Ceylon.. Bombay FLOUR. From Hanse Towns France — — Valparaiso.... Singapore 9,980 139,044 1,173,942 maize — — — — 901.11' short. May 10. S%@13. 9% 13. — 33.904 124,426 2.294 United States British North America Other Countries Total Indian corn or 203,961 TIME. DATE. — Ayres. 121, Oi EXCHANGE ON LONDON. 44 Naples Buenos 42,524 27,529 24,828 Lauenburg • Mecklenburg 1867. 2,839,170 73,241 1866.. 131 1867.. 141 LONDON, AND ON LONDON 25.32%@25.37% Paris short. 25.12% @25.20 Paris 3 months. 13.30 @13.35 Vienna 44 6.24%@ 6.24% Berlin 44 3C%@ 30% St. Petersburg 44 49 @49% Cadiz 52%@ 52% 90 days. Lisbon 3 mouths. 27.30 @27.40 Milan 44 27.30" @27.40 Genoa 44 27.30 @27.40 New York.... Jamaica Havana Rio de Janeiro Ton’ge (ttomniercial (Snglisl) News. RATE. u T8. I860.. 392 1867.. 372 355,931 ii i6%@n.n% short. 3 months. 25.35 • @25.40 Hamburg 61,(89 139,994 118,535 LATEST DATES. TIME. Antwerp 46,115 61 LATEST . 25.^3 42,015 1865.. Cleared in March. 153,888 EXCHANGE AX AT . Ton'ge 43 45 1865.. «7 1866.. 137 1867.. 114 1866.. 38(57 No. MAY 10. Amsterdam. No. 26 UNITED STATE8 PO CLEARED TO AND 1865.. . J4,674 (57,082 122,965 99,529 FROM . Cleared in March, 17,790 iTlouetara unit ON— IMPORTS 137,48S 4,463,160 608,919 STATES VESSELS. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— the first three 1866 and 235,825 179,S04 4,407,324 502,800 ’ 2,899,801 282,561 Ton’ge unfavorable between now and .harvest, there seems to Cutest be room for a considerable rise in prices. In the Board of Trade returns, this country still continues to exhibit a very KATES weather intervene, inferior 1865.. No. 16 49 32 . VESSELS ENTERED continue to pursue therefore of tine weather, in England will assume a position quite devoid of interest , but if It present cautious policy. that, with the prevalence their 5,792,823 of the year. a doubt hut that they will 4,272,476 6,7S8,557 223,648 Kingdom, during the first three months regards the United as good, while the imports such 77,402 lbs. particulars relate to The annexed scale that supply and demand were pretty equally balanced, millers exhibited great caution in making purchases, and hence the quietness of the trade. So long as the stale of the weather justifies millers in believing that a good crop of wheat may be anticipated, there from 3,358,113 shipping. which had been held over from the of 1S63 and 1804, but as the weather was fine the harvest prospects were as . Unstemmed Manufactured and snuff the stocks of old wheat, fine harvests • 2,973,496 6,651,410 203,562 PORTS. BREADSTUFFS. At the date of our .lbs. Stemmed 33,801,600 621.076,700 1,503,263 34,670,087 581,818,356 1,337,215 15.815,337 438,340,012 1,001,163 Exchange markets being characterised by important rise in the quotations. That cautiou, however, which has been so prominent a characteristic iu com A decline has taken place in the value of these articles dur¬ mercial circles for a long period is still an existing fact, and although ing the present year, and although prices are still high, a business shows a disposition to extend itself iuto legitimate channels, gradual downward movement in the quotations is perceptible. the transactions in produce and manufactures continue to be chiefly of The imports in the three months had been : hand-to mouth character. Still without doubt confidence is beiog gradually restored though very slowly, as would naturally be the case 1807. 1R66. 1865. ’ after great a collapse as took place in so many quarters of the globe 111,366 67,768 121,745 cwts. Bacon and hams At certain periods, many of our markets suddenly become, in 1866. 30,733 39,325 53.307 Beef, salt 20,331 52,161 26,669 Pork, salt 202,712 quite animated, and without making due consideration, we are led away 200,931 209,056 Butter 141,239 with the idea that all difficulties have been overcome, and that we are 102,945 127,184 Cheese 83,489,282 88,717,200 67,855,200 Eggs the way to a speedy return to active and remunerative trade. Number. 36,060 41,560 19,004 Lard cwts. Such, however, is the sensitiveness prevailing here, that this recovery 8TOCK. 33,184 receives a check as rapidly as it was obtained, and then the respective * Number. Oxen, hulls and cows 29,343 29,707 3,839 markets subside into a state of comparative gloom, to be, in their turn, Calves 4,061 5,170 111,685 Sheep and lambs 55,012 134,049 7,335 changed into buoyancy and activity on the return of favorable rumors, Swine and hogs 14,256 11,976 however slight. Such has been the case this week in regard to the TOBACCO. Liverpool and Manchester markets. In the early part of the week, The imports, exports and consumption in the three months these markets, and more especially the former, were characterised by considerable animation, snd rather an important amount of business ending March 31, were as under: transacted. The suspension of Messrs. Given, Watts A Co., of New 1867. 1866. 1865. 1,208,080 Orleans, Messrs. Watts, Crane & Co., of New York, and Messrs. W. 0, 2,864,640 660,181 Stemmed lbs. 5,608,507 7,838,232 9,685,443 Unstemmed 910,476 Wfttte $ Co., of Liverpool, caused these markets to assume * lew 502,777 567,85$ 1,855,510 694,493 Total PROVISIONS AND LIVE STOCK. 885,183 taken place, the various Stock considerable activity, with an a PROVISIONS. so now on LIVE v*- — IMPORT. Murntfactared and snuff. was ; May 25,1867.] 649 THE CHRONICLE. however, owing to the great dimunition in our receipts from France and effect has been more apparent at Manchester than America, there is a decline of 1,200,000 cwte. The statement is as at Liverpool. At the latter the dalness of tone, and slight depreciation follows: fn prices were merely temporary, and only lasted during the earlier Imports of grain, Ac., into the United Kingdom in April: 1867. boors of business: but at Manchester, the announcement has led to 1866. 1865. 1S64. 2,919,073 1,611,460 659,907 much more caution and circumspection being observed. So that the Wheat 627,226 862,874 516,525 451,379 629,336 543,669 actual amount of business transacted during the present week is only Barley 530,591 Oats 68,468 94,712 29,879 moderate. Several weeks since I observed that the great depression Peas 88,113 62,391 110,908 48,240 Beans 829.266 735,702 142,075 150,562 which then existed in the cotton trade could not last much longer. I Indian Corn 224,172 488,898 290,883 Flour inferred this from the fact that the stocks of goods abroad were getting Imports of grain, Ac., into the United Kingdom in four mouths:— low, and, therefore, that a larger export trade might be anticipated 8,980,925 7.183.408 2,572,521 Wheat 7,041,307 2,663,882 2,608,425 2,294,174 with the natural recovery of the fall in prices which had taken place. Barley 1,837,973 2,259,550 1,757,571 1,292,492 1,129,001 381,470 Those antiepations have required a longer period to be realised than an. Oats 209,867 70,491 Peas 202,014 619,262 119,635 246,319 Beans 340,058 ticipated. It would seem, however, that such a result would have been Indian Corn 2,162,056 4,074,676 1,316,017 578,276 1,109,065 2.344.408 985,376 obtained before this had it not been for the Luxemburg difficulty, which Flour.... 2,213,886 had so disastrous an effect upon many of our markets. The efforts of It was thought by many in London that not only had the lowest the Members of the Conference having proved successful, and the hope price of money been reached, but that there was a tendency to higher somewhat generally entertained that an enduring peace in Continental quotations. This opinion had been formed in consequence of an active Europe will be secured, have produced a most salutary effect, the re¬ demand having existed for a period of about two weeks. It was sup¬ sult being that there are manifest signs, not only of increasing confi¬ posed that the supply had been diminished, and that a steady upward dence, but of more extensive trade. At the same time, it may be ob¬ movement was about to take place. Three circumstances contributed served, that our colonial advices are, on the whole, much more encour- to this increased demand, viz., revenue payments, the “ fourth” of the aging. In Australia, indeed, business is still very sluggish, and it will month, and the arrival at maturity of a large amount of Indian paper probably be a long period before we witness a renewal of confidence These demands upon the market, therefore, were but temporary, and at Sydney, Melbourne, and Adelaide ; but, as regards the East Iudies, that they have been all met, there is less animation, and a return the future is not only looked forward to with the greatest hope, but the to continued ease. With regard to the supply, it would seem that in present condition of affairs there is calculated to have an important in¬ consequence of the war rumors, and of several unfavorable reports re¬ fluence in tending to restore animation here. Our latest advices from specting Liverpool houses, the banks and discount houses were exhibit¬ Bombay state that the commercial aspect at that point is most favor¬ ing more caution, and greater difficulty was therefore being experienced able ; confidence has very materially increased, and the profits in com¬ in obtaining advances on second-rate paper. The failing off in the sup¬ mercial transactions are larger and more certain than for many months ply was apparent and not real, for the market is still well supplied. past. The supplies of East Indian cotton afloat are considerable, but Many are disposed to look upon an increasing demand for accommoda¬ much below last year. Nevertheless, cotton is arriving at Bombay tion as indicating a less favorable state of affairs, and Consols generally somewhat freely from the interior, and shipments are progressing at a become weaker when such is the case. Annexed are the quctUiona for factory position, bat the now somewhat rapid rate. v discount, so far as the best descriptions of paper are concerned : Respecting the crop of cotton in the East Indies, a report has recently Per Cent. 1 Per Centbeen published relating to the Northern division of the Bombay Presi 3 Bank minitnuin | 4 months’ bank bills 8 '{§$34 Open market rates : | 6 months’ bank bills 8 .<§$34 dency, written by Mr. W. Walton, the acting cotton commissioner 30 to 60 days’ bills 2)4@2)4 i 4 A 6 months’ trade bills.... 3 @4 months’ | 3 bills 2>4@3 ji From this report, we learn that in the Northern Division the increase in area for 1866-7 is, for exotic cotton 98^ per cent., subject to a decrease On the Continent, the principal changes in the rate during the week in native growth of eight per cent. Then as to out-turn : the increase have been at Madrid and Hamburg, at both of which cities there has in the Southern Division was, for indigenous cotton 21£ per cent., and been a decline in the quotations. The supply of bullion in the Bank of for exotic 27£; but in the northern portion of the presidency the in¬ France is now £31,640,000 ; and as the requirements of the commercial creased yield this year in 1865-6 is, in exotic cotton 370 per cent., sub¬ body in France are likely to be comparatively small for some time to ject to a decrease in the native variety of 12 per cent. This enormous come, there is no immediate prospect of permanent stringency in the increase in the better variety is due nearly as much to improved yield money market. Annexed are the quotations at the leading at a9 to increased breadth under cultivation. In the Southern Division the this date and at the corresponding period last year: r-B’k rate—. ,-Op. m’kt—* r-B’k rate—, r-Op. m’kt—. increase of land under cotton cultivation in 1866-7 is, in exotic cotton 1866. 1867. 1866. 1867. 1806. 1867. , cities cent, and in native 7 per cent. There are now under cotton cultivation in Bombay, 1,978,128 acres of land, of which 751,814 acres are planted with exotic cotton. These figures show an increase of 54 per cent as compared with last year. Our agricultural prospects this year appear, so far, very favorable> and an abundant harvest is anticipated. There can be no doubt that 17 per 4 5 Berlin 7 Frankfort. 6 Amst’rd’m 6)4 ... -5 5-6 7 3 4 4 3 2)4 3 < 6 6)4 2)4 4 2)4 1)4-2 2 -2)4 Tnrin 6 Brussels ..4 Madrid ... Hamburg. St. - Petlrg. 534 5 3 5 — Nom’l 4 -5 .... 2)4-234 — 7-9 7 634-7 _ 234 7-834 bullion market. Gold Very little of importance has transpired in the demand for export, and further supplies have been withdrawn from the Bank of England. Several gold ships are now due from Aus¬ is in fair quantity of land under wheat cultivation has increased. This naturally be the result of the high prices current at the comple. tralia, and at present it seems probable the supplies they convey will tion of last harvest, and the large inroad made into the farmers stocks be seut to the Continent. Exchange from Bombay comes low, and there of old wheat. But besides this the appearance of the country shows is no heavy demand for remittance to the East. As regards silver, the that the cultivation has actually increased. During the last few days, principal purchases are on Continental account. The Conference having arrived at a peaceful solution of the Luxem¬ owing to the brilliant weather, there has been much less activity in the trade, and millers have operated with extreme caution. This is, indeed^ burg difficulty, the rates of foreign exchange are more favorable to this the policy they have pursued during the whole of the year, and one country. The tone of the consol market has been firm. The public continue which they are likely to follow so long as our harvest prospects con¬ tinue good. Under a fair importation, there can be no doubt that the to make investments, which, coupled with the more favorable political tendency of prices will be downwards. But the stock of wheat in this aspect with regard to the Continent, and the approaching settlement o country is below the average, and with a fair importation, which is all the question of reform have tended strongly to enhance the quotation s A fair amount of business has been transacted. Yesterday the marke t that we can expect, supply and demand seem pretty equally balanced was very firm ; but to-day there is a slight reaction. Annexed are the There appears, therefore, to be no room for any material fall in prices On the other hand, should our crop prospects be of such a nature highest and lowest prices each day daring the week : Sat. Thur. Friday. that rather less than an average crop can only be looked forward to, a Week ending May 4. Monday. Tuesday. Wed’y. 91 @91)4 91|@9H 91*@92* 91{@92± higher range of prices is not unlikely to be established. Consols for money... 91)4@9134 91 @9134 We are now enabled to ascertain the extent of our importation of At the commencement of the week the market fbr American securi¬ Wheat into the United Kingdom in April, and during the four months ties was very quiet; but with the more favorable ’political aspect, a ending April 30. I may observe that the return for the month em¬ better tone has been apparent during the last two days, and the quota¬ braces a period of four weeks, and not of thirty days, so that the figures tions have experienced a considerable rise. United States Five-twenty given are somewhat approximate, and are not likely to correspond ex. bonds are much less freely pressed for sale on German account, and actly with those of the Board of Trade returns, which will not be pub¬ lished for about three weeks. They show, however, that our imports prices have improved to the extent of about one per cent. United States Five-twenty bonds close this evening at 72 to 72£; Erie Railway of wheat in April were large, and considerably in excess of last year* The import for the four months is about 9,000,000 cwt., being nearly shares, 42 to 48 ; Illinois Centrals, 76 to 76|, and Atlantic and Great Western consolidated mortgage bonds, %l to 22. The highest and 2,000,000 cwts, in excess of the corresponding period of 1866, Of flour* the would , 1S66. 1807. At Paris Vienna * joined the days enumerated are prices of American securities on lowest [May 25,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 650 : HIGHEST AND L0WE8T PRICES OF PRINCIPAL AMERICAN SECURITIES. 72#-72# 72#-72# 21#-.... 21#-21# 42 -42# 42#-.... 76 -.... 76 -76# also been firmer. At Frankfort* done at 76$; at Amsterdam On the Continent the market has AT NEW YORK FOR FOREIGN IMPORTS - Sat’rday. Week ending May 4. (Monday. Tuesday. Wed’day Thu’day. Friday. U. 8. 5-20’s.. 11#-71# 71#-71# 71 -71# 71#-71# Atlantic & G’t West¬ 21 #-21# -22 ern consol’d bonds 21#-.... 21#-21# 21 41#-.... 40#-41 41#-42 Erie Shares ($100).. 42#Illinois shares ($100) T5#-76# 74#-75# T5 -.... 74#-..... 17, and for the week ending (for general ending (for dry goods) May merchandise) May 18 : sub¬ United States Five-twenties have been 75$, and at Berlin, 76. 1864. 1865. Drygoods General merchandise... $1,674,444 2,935,618 $736,639 1,579,749 Total for the week $4,610,062 $2,816,388 our report of the 3,017,495 $6,130,382 ‘$3^933^ 115,622,873 95,430,382 $93,488,769 $54,789,181 $121,763,255 $99,363^697 dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry goods for one week later. The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending May 21: YORK FOR THE WEEK. EXPORTS FROM NEW Cable. English Market Reports—Per $915,820 4,238,164 176—St. 14567—Stc.haow’ner Since Jan. 1 1867 $1,892,218 52,472,793 88,878,707 Previously reported.... In THE WEEN. 1868. 1865. 1866. $2,229,028 65,192,465 $3,117,494 1864. $3,326,892 For the week 1867. $3,982,664 75,155,956 Money Market.—Consols continue to advaace, and closed on Previously reported.... 58,985,018 91,141,509 Thursday firm at 98$, being a gain of one point during the week Since Jan. 1 $62,311,910 $67,421,483 $94,259,003 $79^620 American securities have gradually declined, and at the close United The value of exports from this port to different countries (exclusive States 6’s and Illinois Central shares were each a half lower, and Erie of specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the fol¬ shares one and a-half lower than at the commencement of the week. lowing table: This Since Since This week. Jan. 1. The closing quotations have been as follows To week. Jan.1,1867 To London Fri. 17. 1' 92# 72# 76# 42# shares.. 76# Slinois rie Railway Centralshares.... The Mon. 20. Tues. 21. Wed. 22. Thu. 23 93 93# 93 93 72 72# 72# 72# Bat. 18. 92# 72# 72# 76# 42# Consols for money U. S. 6’8 (1862) 76# 42# 76# 42# 76# 42# daily closing quotations at Frankfort for U. S. 75# Holland & Belg. Germany 41 Other N.Europe Spain .. 6’s of 1862, was ollows: as 77# 76# 77# 77# 77# 77# Liverpool Cotton Market.—Cotton has declined fd. during the week^ closing quiet at lid. for middling Uplands. The daily reports give the closing quotations as follows : Fri., 17. 12,000 Rales sold ll#d. Closing quotations. Mon., 20. Tues., 21. Wed., 22. Sat., 18. 12,000 ll#d. 10,000 lid. 10,000 ll#d. 12,000 li#d. on the week. Peas are shown in (Mil. red No. 1) p. ctl (Califor. white) “ Corn (West. mx’d) p. 480 lbs Barley(American) per 60 lbs Oats (Am & Can.) per 45 lbs Peas.. .(Canadian) per qtr. “ 13 14 41 4 3 42 9 13 9 6 14 6 9 6 6 41 4 6 0 9 6 6 3 42 13 14 40 4 3 42 0 9 13 14 39 4 6 6 3 42 9 6 9 6 9 9 6 6 9 13 14 6 4 6 9 3 41 6 39 7 13 14 39 4 3 41 6 6 Fri. 17. Sat. 18. Mon 20. Tues. 21. Wed 22. Thu 23 8. ( I. 8. d. 8. d. s. d. s. d. 8. d. 127 6 127 6 127 6 127 6 127 6 125 0 80 0 80 0 80 0 79 0 79 0 77 6 39 0 39 0 39 0 39 0 39 0 39 0 61 60 6 6 51 6 6 61 51 9 51 9 67 0 67 0 67 0 67 0 68 0 67 0 Liverpool Produce Markets.—Ashes and Rosin are the only articles reported list that have changed prices. Ashes are Is. lower. Rosin, common, has advanced 6d., while fine has declined 6d. The fol¬ lowing are the closing quotations : Wilm). (fine). Sp turpentine 112 lbs “ “ “ (std white).p. 8 lbs spirits....per8 lbs Tallow (American)..p 112 lbs. Clover seed (Am. red) “ Petroleum “ 910,000 433,508 :. Eagle, Havana— American silver... 16,775 Spanish doubloons 6.050 old 6,185 Bremen- Fri. 17. Sat. 18. Mon 20. Tu. 21. Wed. 22. Th. 23 s. d. s. d. s. d. s. d. s. d. s. d. as o 32 6 as o 33 0 33 6 83 0 7 6 7 3 7 6 7 0 7 0 7 0 12 6 12 6 12 6 13 0 13 0 12 6 35 3 35 3 35 3 35 3 35 3 35 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 3 0 11 Oil Oil 011 0 11 011 43 9 43 9 43 9 43 9 43 9 43 9 57 0 57 0 57 0 57 0 57 0 57 0 Market.—Sugar is 3d. lower. Linseed oil has ad¬ vanced 10s. All other reported articles are without change. The fol¬ lowing are the closing prices for each day of the past week : London Produce 18—St. Erin, Liverp’l- 1864 1863 1862 1861 1860 1859 “ Asp’ll— 1852 during the week have been as 1,050 Navigator, 53 Java. Liv’pool ~ Gold Previously reported Total since January 1, 1867 of Registered for 93,000 Virginia, Vera CruzGold 15,000 Treasurer 230 Gold 100 ...... —The 20,000 Columbia, Hav— 2,506 Silver 14—Sch. Western Star, Nassau— * Total for the week by the 20,000 Grenada— Gold 940 13—Schoon’r St. James, Exchange 80,000 672,185 .......$11,333,491 11,423,045 9,477,159 11,457,549 10,583,446 4,t91,005 9 823,839 Silver $2,909 13—Brig Emma Dean, Tampico- “ Same time In1858.... 1857 1856 1865 1854 1853 of specie at this port Curacoa— Gold Silver “ « .... 5,000 9,658,117 21,700,980 18,529,471 16,289,254 2,904,791 11,314,821 20,431,929 Silver Gold Havre— American gold Mexican silver.... $16,964,006 May 13—St. Arizona, 912,500 ,... ... The imports follows: gold.... 18—St. Ville de Paris, Foreign silver Total since Jan. 1,1867 1865 1,000 Gold bars 160,000 American gold ... American silver.. Total tor the week the port of New Foreign silver ... City of New York, Liverp’l— American “ 55,000 gold.... Northern Light, Same time in 1866 15.726 10—St. remen— Previously reported 23,482 438,591 2,774,388 718,e9$ 1,203,694 305,842 492,781 1,055,293 1,329,632 677,735 Mexican silver...: 6,000 18—St. Hammonia, Ham— Mexican gold .... 278,885 Mexican silver.... 50,000 Gold bars 74,934 Silver bars 66,613 $55,000 American “ 48,626 65,223 2,430 12,261 22,335 211,990 the exports of specie from May 18, 1867 : gold.... Union, of the Rosin (com 14—St. $2,508,284 960,964 gold American . per 1,003,131 65,032 American Gold bars 9 6 6 7 : Ashes—pots 859,003 16,125 . Venezuela Br. Guiana Brazil...: Other S.A. ports All other ports. 15,000 Liverpool Provisions Market.—Beef and Pork have advanced, each 6d., and Cheese have lost Is. Bacon is without change. The re¬ ported quotations, at the close of each day of the last week are given Beef (ex. pr. mess)p. 304 lbs Pork(Etn. pr. mess) p 200 lbs Bacon (Cumb. cut) p. 112 lbs Lard (American) “ “ Cheese (fine Am.) “ “ 1,689,070 14—St. Persia, Liv’l— “ The daily closing prices are 28. below 257„866 American leap, and Fri. 17. Sat. 18. Mon. 20. Tus. 21. Wed. 22. Thu 23. 8. d. 8. d. s. d. s. d. s. d. s. d. Wheat 588,945 386,236 May 14—St. Tarifa, Liv’pool— Id. lower, and barley 2d lower* change in Wheat and Oats. the following list: no 8,776,073 The following will show York for the week ending “ Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—Corn has declined by the Japan .... 36,511 Australia Br.N A Colonies from Manchester are favorable. The last reports has lost 2s. 6d. Thu., 28 10,000 lid Europe Other W. I Mexico New Granada... 1,938,183 East Indies. China <fe Frankfort There is Other S. Hayti 6,415,941 408,388 133,062 548,542 60,449 $108,445 Cuba $1,955,971 $45,758,328 Great Britain... France 17,120 $182,907 892,614 $1,025,531 Coupon Bonds following is the explanation of the Secretary of the Treasury exchanges made of registered United States bonds: of the recent Office of Treasury Department, Comptroller of the Currency, r. Washington, May 20, 1867. ) to your verbal inquiry, I have to state that under act of February 25, 1863, natioual banking 24 0 Sugar (No.12 Dch std) p. 112 lbs. 24 8 24 0 24 0 24 0 24 0 associations were authorized to deposit with the Treasurer of the United Iron (8c. pig mxd num) p. ton; 53 6 53 6 53 6 53 6 53 6 53 6 States any certificates of the funded debt of the United States, Linseed (Calcutta). “ 65 0 65 0 65 0 65 0 65 0 65 0 cake (obl’g)... whether coupon or registered, as security for the redemption of circulat¬ “ £915 0 £915 0 £9 15 £9 15 £915 £915 Oil 3910 “ 89 00 3910 8910 8910 3910 ing notes. Under this act about $17,500,000 of coupon Five twenties Sperm oil 131 00 131 0 131 00 131 00 131 00 “ 131 00 of 1862 were so deposited. Whale oil (Icel’d).per 262 gal.89 00 39 00 39 0 39 00 39 00 39 00 The act of June 3d, 1864, provided that registered bonds only should be received and held as security for such notes. After the passage of this act, all banks having coupon bonds on deposit with the Treasurer COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. were notified that they would be expected to have such bonds convert¬ ed into registered bonds: and this was done to a very general extent. Imports and Exports for the Week.—The imports this week show Subsequently, those banks which had neglected to comply with these a considerable decline both in dry goods and in general merchandise, requirements, were notified that the Department objected to the total being only $3,933,315, against $5,162,677 last week, and the custody of coupon bonds as security for circulation : that it was the object and intention of the law that registered bonds only $4,292,967 the previous week. The exports are $3,982,664 this week, be held by the Treasury for that purpose, and they were to against $3,235,734 last week, and $4,198,819 the previous week. The take immediate steps for the conversion of their coupon bonds, under exports of cotton the past week were 9,637 bales, against 8,438 the penalty of having the payment of interest bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week done. Fri. 17. Sat. 18. Mon. 20. Tu 21. Wd. 22. Th. 23 Sir—In response the National Currency “ “ having the should requested suspended until it was few months past a number of these banks made application to have their Five-twenties of 1862 returned to them in coupons bonds. In consideration of the fact that they were converted into registered bonds under compulsion, and that the banks should not be compelled Witbio 651 THE CHRONICLE. Ifoy 25,1867.] a loss by the action of the department, I recommended, as ant act ot justice, that they should be permitted to withdraw their Five- wenties of 1862, and that clean coupon bonds should be issued to them in lieu of the registered bonds into which their c upons had been converte d. Upon the representation of the facts in the case, and also upon the statement of the Register of the Treasury that he had a lim¬ ited amount of coupon Five-twenties of 1862 on hand that had never been issued, you consented that the exchange should be made, upon condition that the bank should furnish Seven-thirties of the first series for conversion into consolidated Five twenties at the Treasury Departojc t, without the agency of brokers or the payment of any commissions e the government for such conversion, by The total amount of coupons of 1862 thus issued to the present date $2,872,600. I am informed by the Register of the Treasury thit he ieas but $2,447,1(0 remaining, and as you stated at the time the arhrangement was made that you would have no additional bonds printed for that purpose, I presume these exchanges will be limited to the amount now on hand. Very respectfully, H. R.HULBURD,Comptroller. to suffer pe cuniary $ 165,500 5,000 ... State 1,000 13,000 63,000 .... .... 17,200 15,000 9,600 Secretary of the Treasury. give the section of the National Currency Act under which this exchange is made : Sec. 7. And be it further enacted, That the Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to issue, upon such terms and under such regulations as he may from time to time prescribe, registered bonds in exchange for, and in lieu of, any coupon bonds which have been or may hereafter be lawfully issued ; such registered bonds to be similar in all respects to the registered bonds issued under the acts authorizing the issue of the coupon bonds olYered for ex¬ change. And for all mutilated, defaced, or indorsed coupon or other bonds pre¬ sented to the department, the Secretary of the Treasury is outhorized to issue, upon terms and under regulations as aforesaid, and in substitution thereof, other bonds of like or equivalent issues.—Act of June 30, 1864. Below .... .... .... .... .... Week. 3,000 5,000 29,000 . - . 6,000 27,700 5,000 93 700 14,300 85,100 1,000 1,000 23,000 Bonds, viz.: California 7’s Connecticut 6’s ... .. Georgia 6’s.... 5,000 .... Illinois 6’s Missouri 6’s New York 5's.. 41 6’s 44 7’s.. N. Carolina 6’s. Ohio 6’s Tennessee 6’s.. ... . . .... 19,000 4,060 Railroad 42,000 27,000 .... • .... .... • . . _ , .... 1,000 1,000 15,000 36,000 1,000 .... .... 36,000 7,000 21,000 40,000 .... .... 72,666 .... .... .... 16,500 2,000 . . 24,000 7,000 City Bonds, viz: Brooklyn 6’s... .... Company Bonds, viz : Telegraph . 85,000 30,000 ..... . Virginia 6’s.... .... .... 10,000 5,66b 4,6o6 .... .... .... • • • • 9,000 3,666 3.000 39,000 .... • • .... 5,000 ...» 8,000 3,000 181,000 5,666 5,000 .... .... 5,000 24,000 40,000 1,000 IS, 000 27,000 25,000 10,000 196,000 51,000 1,000 1,000 34,600 156,100 2,000 .... 41,00*) ... .... Friday, May 23,1867, P. M. , Hon. Hugh McCulloch, Fri. $1,000 105,000 $165,000 $47,000 338,500 1,699'00 717,000 317,500 880,000 2,867,500 $.... $12,000 . .. Thnr. Wed. Tues. Mon. Sat. U.S. 6’s, 1881 . U.S 6’a (5-20’s). U.S 6’8 (old) U.S. 5’8 (10-408) U.S 5’s (old) U. S 7-30 notes. the rate of interest the close oflast week, has proved to be but temporary. The Money Market.—The noted at we advance in strictly moderate, and since Monday stock collaterals, and 4 per cent, on Governments. The Sub Treasury, however, has again largely increased its balances, the balance this afternoon beiug 8132.700,000, against 8125,000,000 on Thursday of last week, and 8110,000,000 on the 6th of May. As yet this withdrawal of cur¬ rency from the banks has produced no perceptible effect upon the market; but unless the current be reversed, it is quite probable that the rate of interest may show more firmness ; especially as the re¬ ceipts of money from the interior exhibit a slight decline. This probability would be increased should the present downward move¬ DIVIDENDS. ment in the stock market be continued ; as the banks would be apt We give in our Bulletin from day to day lists of bonds, Ac., lost, and will be dividends declared. These tables continued daily, and on Saturday to call up margins upon stock loans, thereby increasing the demand morning such as have been published through the week in the Bulletin The demand for loans has been the rate on call loans has ruled at 5 per cent on ®l)c Banker©’ ©a?ette. — will be collected and published in tne Chronicle. published the last week in the Bulletin. Below will be found those PAYABLE. RATE MAMK OT COMPANY. p. o’t. Steamship €0. WHERE, WHIEN. 2)6 June 10. CompanysOffi e May 25 to June 12 Atlantic Mail Railroad. Northern K.R. of N. H $4 BOARDS. The following statement shows the description and number of shares sold at the Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending AT BUSINESS on Friday: Sat. 90 Bank Shares STOCK THE - Tues. 154 Mon. 330 Railroad shares, viz. Central of New Jersey... Chicago A Alton, pref.... Chic. Burl. & Quiacy Chicago A Northwestern. do do Pref. Chicago A Rock Island... Clev., Col. and C ncinuati Cleveland A Pittsburg.... Cleveland and Toledo Del., Lacka A Western .. Dubuq’e A Sionx City, pr Erie Railway do do Indianapolis A Cinn... Michigan Central Michigan Southern • • "l2 • 10 > 70 ioo 3,000 5,400 2,900 4,300 2,900 1,700 6,450 2,100 6,600 30 20 2,500 2,100 400 400 4,.r00 23 400 *"i 6 7*,600 • • • .... .... .... ... - ’266 9’l00 23,300 48.925 1,400 2,300 4,700 345 176 ion 200 400 13,400 1,715 5,200 4,000 150 50 27,90* 18,050 74,350 10 650 500 ‘466 3,300 1,200 100 450 300 100 100 186 .... .... .... 200 22,275 73 10,150 100 .... 420 17,175 4,025 l,li0 700 158 24 .... 3,450 9,000 3,350 5,400 100 .... ’ ..... 3 150 5,900 4,750 826 50 58 12 .... 150 pref Hudson River Illinois Central 60 100 • Fri’y. Week. Thnrs. Wed. 132 110 100 for money. The accumulations of active demand for the new Sixty-fives at the Treasury, and the large current sales are rapidly absorbing surplus funds. This movement cannot be much longer continued without causing a partial reaction from the pres¬ ent ease of the market. Shortly, however, the Treasury will have to disburse several millions in the way of interest upon Seven-Thir¬ ty idle money cause an Notes. Discounts are easier. There is a great scarcity of really prime conservative merchants being indisposed to put out present upon the market ranges at 6^@7^ per cent., for 3 to 6 months dates ; very choice names, however, would pass at rather lower figures. Dry goods auction and other single name notes are current at about 7^@9 per cent. The following are the quotations for loans of various classes : paper, notes. the more The best class of paper at Per cent. Call loans Loans on bonds A mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 2 months I Good endorsed bills, 3 A 4 months | do single names 6 @ 6)6 1 Lower grades 4 6 @5 @ 7 Per cent. 6)s@ 1% 7)6@ 9 10 @15 activity in Government Se¬ throughout the week. Some moderate United States Securities.—The curities has been maintained purchases have been made for shipment, and toward the close of the week there has beeu a very active speculative demand for Sixty 100 420 300 200 100 Milwaukee ASt.P 300 200 700 650 4,800 do do pref.... 1,400 1,550 twos, apparently based upon the scarcity of the bonds, and upon an 50 50 '.. Morris A Essex 5,900 19,849 3,200 anticipation of higher prices in Europe. Recent inquiries have 4,300 2,200 New York Central 2,099 2,150 849 155 233 251 200 New York and N. H.. elicited an official statement to the effect that the Treasury has ex¬ 3,680 2,300 14,830 5:0 3,050 Ohio A Mississippi ($100) 4,250 1,100 112 132 20 do do pref. changed Registered Sixty-twos deposited at Washington by the 20 20 Panama 850 400 900 100 1,800 4,850 bauks, as security for their circulation, coupon bonds of the same 800 Pitts., Ft. Wayne A Chic. 200 3,400 14,100 27,400 2,900 4,600 2,200 Reading character ; but as the amount of bonds remaining on hand avail¬ 4D0 100 300 St. L., Alton A T. H 200 200 pref. able for that purpose is quite limited, being below three millious, 21 21 Sixth Avenne 800 700 400 300 400 4,000 1,400 this fact cannot have aDy important bearing upon the value of cou¬ Tol., Wabash A West’n... 200 100 100 do pref. pon Sixty-twos. Miscellaneous shares, viz.: 100 400 400 1,200 The sales of new Sixty-fives at the Sub-Treasury are still on a Coal—Cumberland 300 260 25 150 ”85 Del. A Hudson 23 23 very large scale, and exceed its purchases of Seven-thirty notes Pennsylvania 500 100 ■400 Wilkesbarre 200 materially, the holders of the 1st series of Seven-thirties being ap 200 Mining— Consol. Gregory. 700 300 100 300 Mariposa parently disposed to hold out for the conversion of their notes into 700 100 3,400 200 1,200 do Pref.. 1,200 700 1.300 300 100 100 100 a bond bearing date from the maturity of the notes. Quicksilver * 900 700 950 5,350 1,000 Improvin'l—Bo st.W. Pow. 400 1,400 300 The Assistant Treasurer is prepared to receive Compound Inter¬ 300 600 1,600 200 200 Canton 100 851 7,870 1,494 ih—West’n Union 2,025 1,200 2,200 450 200 4,000 est notes of June and July dates either in the way of direct redemp¬ 200 700 650 lip—Atlantic Mail. 1,800 2,920 11,875 489 2,243 Pacific Mail 473 1,100 4,650 300 325 200 2,115 tion, or in payment for new Sixty fives, allowing for them par and 310 681) Express—Adams 300 182 38 17 84 22 20 American. 1 compound interest to the date of presentation. As yet, however, 860 100 200 300 60 100 Merchants' 100 100 125 600 1,025 no very considerable amount of the notes is being presented. 200 United States 300 200 100 1,825 500 325 Wells, Far. A Co 400 The foreign market appears to be moderately supplied with bonds ; The amount of Government, State and City and other bonds sold at the an opinion prevails in some quarters that, notwithstanding the Regular Board, daily and for the week, are given in the lowing statement: but • .... . 250 2,700 • .... 3,050 • • • • .... . . 200 50 SOD 4,800 4,500 24,250 1,120 .... • .. . • • • . . . “ 14 . .... • • • • .... .... _ .... . .... . . .... .... .... _ .... .... . _ _ .... .... • . .... . . • _ .... .... .... “ .... “ .... ... • . • .... .... ... • « . • • • • .... .... .... « .... “ .... « • “ 44 .... .... “ “ * “ .. “ ... 44 44 ..... “ • - THE ^652 low rate of money at London them. The closing quotation was CttftOlfICLE. will induce an increased demand for for Five-twenties at London to-day 72±. The following are the closing prices of leading securities, compared with preceding weeks : U. 8; 6’s, 1881 coup U. S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons U. 8. 5-20*0,1864 “ U. 8.5-20’s, 1865 “ U. 8. 5-20’s, 1865, N. iss.. U. 8 10-40’s, U* 8 7-30*8 1st series U. 8. 7-30’b2d Series U. 8 7-30’8 3rd series.... ... Railroad exhibited a and Apl. 19. Apr. 26. Mav 3. May 10. May 17. May 24. 111% 111% 109% 111% 110% 1€9% 110 108% 109% xc.107% 109% 109% 105% 108% xc.105% 105% 105% 108% 106 109 106% 106% 108% xc.105% 108 108 107% 107% 107% 107% 99% 99% 99% 99% 98% 98% 106 106% 106% 106% 106% 106% 105% 105% 105% 105% 105% 105% 105% 105% 106% 105% 105% 106% ' Miscellaneous Stocks.—The stock market has continuance of the weakness noted last week. Trans actions have been limited ; but toward the close of the week there was a marked disposition to sell, and to-day business closes with a [May 25,1867. Mon. Sat. tJ. S. Bonds tf.S. Notes Wed. Tnea. Thnr. Fri. Week. $183,500 $351,500$1,699,000 $827,000 326,500 967,700 $4,855,200 State * City h’ds 9,600 57,000 15,000 128,000 17,200 99,000 44,000 99.000 93,000 14,800 94,000 85,100 615,000 Company B’nds. 18,500 21,000 7,000 36,000 41,000 34,600 159,100 Total Cur. w’k... Previous week... $268,600 515,500 1,882,200 907,000 489,5001,110,600 5,113,400 931,000 672,900 615,000 741,000 948,300 388,700 4,291,960 The Gold Market.—Gold has the been, upon the whole firm, under export movement in specie ; but at the close of the week the dulness in the the exchange market and the tendency ©f rates among leading drawers to fall below the specie shipping figure, have caused holders to somewhat relax their firmness. The export movement this week has been much less than was is expected, and it that the thought possible shipments may at once fall off to moderate figures. The total shipments of specie and bullion this port from May 4th to 22d was a little over $7,000,000, now very from and the amount to be sent out by to-morrow’s steamer is expected unsettled feeling, and at a material decline from the opening to be somewhat over $1,000,000. figures of the day. The clique which for some time has been The fluctuations in the gold market during the week closing with manipulating Erie for higher prices is understood to have realized Friday are shown in the following table : upon a large portion of its stock. The advance in the price has OpenTone of HighClosdrawn from London a large amount of shares (stated at ] 0,000) ing. Lowest, est. Range, ing. Market. Saturday, May 18 1§7% 136% 137% 0% 136% Dull. within the present month ; and this unexpected supply has probably Monday, " 20 136% 136% 137% 0% 187% Dull. Tuesday, " 21 137% 137% 137% 0% 137% Firm. been one of the principal causes of the breaking up of the “ pool.’ Wedn’day, " 22.. 138 137% 138% 1 138% Strong. 138% 138% 138% 0% 138% Active. This evening, after regular hours, the stock sold down to 58A-. The Thursday, “ 23 Friday, “ 24 138% 137% 138% 1% 137% Weak. whole market is weak in sympathy with the fall in this controlling Current week 137% 136% 138% 2% 137% stock, especially North Western common and preferred, in both of Previous week 136% 135% 137% 2% 187% 132% 132% 141% 9% 137% which there is a considerable “ long ” interest. Compared with our Jan. 1 to date The movement and bullion at this port for the week of coin last quotations the fall in Erie is 4 ; Northwestern 2£, and preferred do. 3i ; on other shares the decline ranges from 1 to 2 per cent. ending Saturday May 18, was as shown in the following formula : The miscellaneous list is exceedingly weak. The outside public Specie in banks Saturday, May 11 $14,959,590 Treasure receipts from California $419,667 have become very distrustful of such stocks, and cannot be drawn Imports of coin and bullion from foreign ports 132,907 Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury 2,432,000— 2,984,574 into speculations connected with them. Cumberland is offered at Total reported supply for week $17,944,164 30, Quicksilver 25, and Canton 41 to Export of coin and bullion foreign ports ,.$3,832,635 The following were the closing quotations at the regular board, Paid into U. S. Treasury on account of customs 2,068,648— 5,901,283 compared with those of the six preceding weeks; Apparent excess of supply for week \ $12,042,881 very .... Apl. 12. Cumberland Coal Apr. 18. Apr. 26. May 3. May 10. May 17. !May 24. 29 29% Quicksilver Canton Co Mariposa pref.... 28% 43% 29 43 New York Central Erie.... Hudson River.... 99% 57% Reading 99% 68% Mich. Southern.. Q- s' “ preferred Rock Island Fort Wayne Illinois Central .. • 42% • - 97% 55% .... Michigan Central Clev. and Pittsb. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern.... • 69% 119 33% 60% 87% 91% 114% 30% 28% 99% 66% 107% 69% 112 20% 97% 58% 91% 102% 67% 70 112% 85% 33% 59% 88% 92% 113% 93% 113% 31% 57% ^ 31 - 29% 44 - 113 . .. 97% 62% 100% 63% 103 103% 67% 67% 109% 72% .... 113 34% 62 60% 89% 96% " 30 25 113 34% 59% 88%: 96% 114 114% 97 68% 100 102% 66% Deficit made up 31% 56% 87% 95 115 aggregated for the current week 338,679 shares, against 333,713 for the next previous week On Monday only 35,848 shares were reported, the least of any day since Jan. 1. Among the sales were : Chicago and Northwestern —common 23,300 and preferred 48,925, Chicago and Rock Island 22,275, Cleveland and Pittsburg 13,400, Erie 74,350, Michigan Southern 24,250, New York Central 19.849, Ohio and Mississippi ($100) 14,830, Fort Wayne 4,850, Reading 27,400, Pacific Mail 11,875 shares. 15,567,252 from unreported sources $8,524,371 The large deficiency in the reported supply for the past two weeks chiefly from interest paid from the U. S. Sub. Treasury office. The whole amount so paid on the May coupons to the 18th inst. was $13,945,000. has been made up 7i% The sale of stocks at the two boards The transactions for the last week at the Custom House and Sub-Treasury were as follows : Custom House. Receipts. $412,037 48 386,792 64 « May 13 " : 14. 15 16 17 18 “ " “ “ 318,978 36 371,240 86 284,429 05 295,169 82 Total $2J)68,648 21 Balance in Sub-Treasury morning of May 13 Sub-Treasury , Payments. Receipts. $3,119,119 75 $2,616,037 57 2,773,404 5,192,776 1,736,287 1,634,368 2,046,857 following statement show3 the volume of transactions in shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, on each day of the week, closing with thi3 day’s business : Sat. Bank shares Railroad “ Coal “ 90 30.133 300 1.400 400 “ Improv’t “ Telegraph" Steamship" Express “ 2,025 2,273 801 At Regular Board.. At Open Board... . 15,022 22,400 Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. 330 154 132 60 29,869 39,939 1,150 44,261 64,893 525 200 23 85 300 1,600 1,200 1,134 1,325 16,048 19,800 200 1,150 1,300 2,200 1,800 851 1,492 17,780 30,300 4,850 809 22,534 30,344 Fri. Week. 60 826 1,300 1,3C0 1,494 2,443 $145,205,811 39 16,507,814 64 $128,697,996 85 6,458,718 83 Custom House. 2,200 1,200 5,600 6,950 7,870 April 6.... 2,406,907 2,170,505 638 6,007 21,356 61,10J 33,625 58,320 126,415 72,456 39,538 91,945 338,679 60,097 333713 - 942 212^264 $128,000 in gold, and $1,940,648 following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury since April 6 : Weeks 1&;S75 were Included $1,343,000. The Ending 3,370 $22,966,533 87 122,239,278 02 in Gold Certificates. 2,163 100 ' receipts of customs 16 24 79 36 4,348,688 25 - Balance on Saturday evening, Increase during the week in the 4,256,370 4,396,851 4,677,156 2,776,529 * Deduct payments during the week.... ?10J 84,257 293,377 62 90 01 48 88 $16,507,814 54 Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, The Mining Specie in banks Saturday, May 18 41% 17% 97% 35% 89% 97% 113% 27 * 19% 97% 98% 63% 96% 68% 108% 72% ♦ 43 - .... 104 * " “ 13.... 20. 27.... .. " May 4.... , 9,342,691 19,351,508 2,092,583 1,964,680 “ 11.... " 2,190,166 1,116,949 18.... 2,068,648 Sub-Treasury Payments. Receipts. Balances. 14,801,590 10,480,082 37,933,020 28,272,343 16,507,815 13,889,356 22,719,558 10,329,844 18,268,424 28,401/54 40,177,571 22,966,533 Changes in » 106,150,790 108,548,840 112,077,074 119,788,342 110,334,049 122,239,278 128,697,997 Balances. Inc. 4,546,664 Inc. 8,868,049 Inc. 3,528,283 Inc. Dec. Inc. Inc. 7,788,342 9,531,366 11,905,228 6,458,719 Wednesday’s and Saturday’s quite limited, and rates have been with QThe transactions in shares weekly since April 5 are shown in difficulty maintained at the specie shipping point. The the following statement: late active demand was chiefly for the remittance of balances, and RailMin- Im- Tele- Steamhas been very much caused by the amounts due on May coupons. Week ending— Bank. ro’d. Coal. ing. pro’t. graph, ship. Other. Total. 857 895,956 1,820 5,350 3,600 8,655 26,302 1,535 443,975 The failure of of Fraser, Trenholm & Co., Liverpool, had a tempo¬ Apl. 5 M... 86* 537,600 8,028 14,750 6,600 16,730 25,501 6,511 610,581 19»(5 days) 430 403,804 1,350 5,950 5,900 11,098 14,007 2,293 424,832 rary effect upon rates. 2« 1.800 845,054 1,820 6,250 9,300 15,182 7.549 2,266 889,721 The following are the closing quotations for the several classes May 8 628 465,847 605 6,160 12,150 14,084 12,700 4,946 516,920 10 11,761 371,270 2,463 3,300 10,150 14,247 17,491 5,680 425,777 of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks: 17 827 294,415 1,151 3,620 7,600 7,925 8,916 9,358 333,713 Total current week. Total Previous w’k. . 87,422 58,883 35,848 61,616 48,050 68,709 52,928 44,920 Foreign Exchange.—For both mails the demand for bills has been „ •••• “ “ “ “ M 826 *4 The following is 293,377 2,163 5,600 6,950 7,870 15,875 6,007 338,679 a summary of the amount of Government bonds and notes, State and City securities, and railroad and other bonds sold at the Regular Board on each day of the past week; London Comm’l. do bkrs’/n? do do shrt Paris, long do short May 3. 108 @109 109%@ .... 110%@ 110% 5.18%@ B.ll%@ .... .... May 10. @109% 108 109%@109% 110%@ 110% B.12%@ £.10 @ ... [ay 17. £@109% May 24. 108%@ 109% 109%@ 109% K@—110%@ 110% £@ ... £@5.11% 5.1S%@5.11% . - 5.15 5.18%@5.16% 5.16%@5.15 Antwerp 8wise... Bremen Berlin @5.18% 5.15 @5.12% @5.13% 5.15 @5.12% S6%@ 36% 36%@ 36% 41%@ 41%@ 41% 41%@ 41%@ 41% 79%@ 79%@ 79% 72%@ 72%@ 72% 5.15 5.18%@5.16% 5,16%@5.15 86%@ .... 36%@ 36% 41%@ .... 41%@ 41% 41%@ .... I41%@ .... 79 @ 79% 79%@ .... 72% @ .... 72%@ . .. Hamburg Amsterdam Frankfort .... Loans. .... 22 29 May AMOUNT OF- -AVERAGE Legal Net Circula¬ Loans and tion. Deposits. Tenders. Capital. Discounts. Specie. in inn * ( icr $806,899 $9,536,724 $2,972,71" $4,187,260 $3,000,000 $7,471,150 1,446,245 12.257 4,182,058 351,808 5,336,469 2,050,000 Banks. «<* (mV) (Wi York Manhattan.... -. 1,000,000 1,000,000 Fulton 600,000 Chemical 300,000 Merchants’Exchange 1,235,000 National 1,500,000 Butchers’ 800,000 Mechanics and Traders’. 600,000 Greenwich 200,000 600,000 Leather Manuf. National Seventh Ward, National. 500,000 2,000.000 State of New York American Exchange 5,000,000 Commerce 10,000,000 Broadway 1,000,000 Ocean 1,000,000 Mercantile 4,000.000 Pacific 422,700 Republic 2,000,000 Chatham 450,000 People’s 412,500 North American 1,000,000 Hanover.. 1,000,000 Irving 500,000 Metropolitan 4,000,000 Citizens r'. 400,000 Nassau 1,000,000 Tradesmen’s 1,000,000 1,000,000 Market St. Nicholas Shoe and Leather Corn Exchange 1,500,000 1,000,000 2,000,000 750,000 300,000 400,000 Continental Commonwealth Oriental Marine.... Atlantic 300,000 Importers and Traders’.. 1,500,000 2,000,000 Park 500,000 Mechanics’Banking Ass. 300,000 400,000 350,000 500,000 5,000,000 3,000,000 300,000 1,000.000 500,000 Grocers’ North River East River Manufacturers & Mer.... Fourth National Central National Second National Ninth National First National Third National New York N. Exchange. Tenth National Bull’s Head Croton National National Currency 46,759 22,694 241,748 3S,683 675,031 576,138 1,838,831 158,534 30,000 49,335 16,873 452,316 452,604 493,110 255,063 195,720 4,647 258,564 178,860 185,000 985,676 5,875,480 900.000 788,851 481,997 141,384 858,750 131,475 6,850 332,753 16,911 97,247 76,970 58,421 36,921 31,691 118,770 44,761 11,090 72,768 14,114 81,169 653,8(59 28,100 6,146 19,729 5,422 18,427 12,458,216 1,255,794 27,348 6,271,077 2,924,214 91,851 49,264 3,143,752 76,120 23,555 11,300 6,984 3,125 9,336 1,276,165 457,623 270,666 742,136 482,320 1,117,789 1,076,364 1.505,965 645,561 188,934 835,138 767,216 477,889 1,164,991 495,176 248,446 470,236 418,316 435,000 1,904,618 1,710,173 1,537,000 131,723 4,324 552,400 757,649 945,648 9,382 570,176 243,729 10,397 353,000 98,859 503,424 993,500 308,452 80,683 11,699 283,500 1,000 2,967,192 1,665,210 270,000 910,294 446,830 792,658 268,962 908,300 11,049 180,000 90,000 225,000 5,9 4,106 1.399,210 400,196 361,222 610,437 559,554 1,010,830 212,000 618,000 728,978 195,379 v 566,200 301,925 1,231,843 5,159,316 614,270 176,590 229,322 243,766 155 ,‘247 4,156,584 1,272,008 912,703 1,083,951 633,877 968,994 13,513;304 12,144,822 1,005,216 758,740 2,035,000 1,455,311 319,679 437,038 540,583 Inc. Circulation following are Specie. 8,138,813 Apr. 6.. 254,470,027 8,856,229 Apr. 13.. 250,102,178 7,622,535 Apr. 20.. 247,561,731 7,404,304 Apr. 27.. 247,737,381 May 4. .. 250,877,558 9,902,177 May 11.. 253,682,829 14,959,590 May 18.. 257,931,874 15,567,252 . a series of weeks past: Legal not $15.98'4,450 Loans 53,474,388 Specie Legal Tenders 17,287,919 53,826,320 402,918 16,770,491 Deposits 38,172,169 Circulation 10,627,953 38,230,8433 406,762 10,630,831 Tenders. 340,371 1,638,005 1,025,366 913,805 280,664 723,600 series of weeks , . . Specie. 661,719 546,625 485,535 382,817 386,053 128,132 City City (Brooklyn) 210,182 Commerce $37,100 351,932 3,784 517,428 58,664 2,878 Philadelphia 406,762 402,978 Boston Banks —The Circulation. Deposits, 10,651,615 33,796,595 34,827,683 10,645,367 10,647,134 35,820,580 10,638,021 10,639,695 10,627,953 10,630,831 of footic 36,234,870 37,371,051 38,172,169 .38,230,833 *the last following are the Banks’ statement compared with those of the two previous r Capital May 20. $41,900,000 Loans 92,633,587 Specie 507,806 16,499,349 Legal tender notes Due from oth^r banks Due to other banks Deposits Circulation (National) Circulation (State)... May 13. $41,900,000 92,428.114 517,597 13,204,014 16,552,421 14,240,396 37,874,852 38,504,761 11,119,011 24,838,469 283,491 11,734,151 24,808,992 283,514 Friday Dividend. OO Bid. Ask Last Paid. Periods. Amount. A55-*3 50 Apr. ’67 4 May ’67 6 110 May 6. $41,900,000 92,671,149 689,878 16,571,736 13,952,223 11,749,910 38,721,76'J 24.784,332 283,806 Corn Exchange* Croton . *.. 100 Dry Dock 30 Jan. ’67 100,0001.. Quarterly, 200,000 350,000 250,000 150,000 50 East River 100 Eighth Fifth First First May ’67 100 10,000,000 Jan. and July. 750,000 Jan. and July.. 100 100 2,000,000 Jan. and July. 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug... 200,000 100 Currency 100 100 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. and July... and July... and July.. and July... May’67 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. ’67.... ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 Jan. and July. 100 5,000,0001Jan. and July... 600,000 May and Nov.. Fulton — 30 160,000 Jan. and July... Far. & Cit.(Win’bg). 20 200,000 May and Nov. Greenwich* 25 300,000 Jan. and July. Grocers’ 50 Hanover 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Fourth 220 ...6 5 118 118% 6 107 5 103 5 118 112 10 3% ’67 500,000) May and Nov... May Jan. ’67 (Brooklyn).... 100 111 6 Jan. ’67 Jan. ’67 100 1,000,000 May and Nov. 50 300,000 Jan. and July. Commonwealth Continental 113 5 Jan. ’67 . : Legal Tenders. Loans. 15,882,745 50,998,231 16,188,407 51,283,776 16,582,296 51,611,449 51,890,959 16,737,901 53,054,267 17,196,558 53,474.388 17,278,919 16,770,491 53,826,320 ceased to LIST. 200,0004 .Quarterly. 50 800,000 Jan. and July .. Butchers & Drovers 25 Central. 100 3,000,000 May and Nov 200,000 Tan. and July Central (Brooklyn).. 50 450,000 Jan. and July .. Chatham 25 300,000 .Quarterly, Chemical I 100 400,000 Jan. and July... Citizens’ 25 statement Increase. Decrease. Decrease. Increase.. Increase.. National.) Bull’s Head* 154,759 Increase. The annexed statement shows the condition of the STOCK Capital. Brooklyn Mav 18. May 11. $15,947,350 of the United States held on 140 America* — 100 3,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67—5&3x Jan. ’67 100,000 Jan. and July America (Jer. City) . 25 4 500,000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 American 100 5 112 American Exchange. 100 5,000,000 May and Nov... May’67 ’67 Jan. 6 300,000 Jan. and July... 75 Atlantic Jan. ’67 6 Atlantic (Brooklyn). 50 500,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’61 5 250,000 Jan. and July Bowery 100 Jan. ’67 12 235 Broadway 25 1,000,000 Jan. and July. JaD. ’67 5 300,000 Jan. and"July.. condition of the leading items of the Philadel phia banks for last and previous weeks : Capital 283,491 P-lC/2 Aggregate Clearings 531,835,184 525,933,462 447,814,375 446,484,422 559,860,118 524,319,769 503,675,793 59,021,775 60,202,515 64,096,916 67,920,351 70,587,407 67,996,639 63,828,501 following comparative 24,808,992 24,83S,469 National Bank of Chicago has voluntarily (Marked thus * are Inc. $1,094,022 Dec. 4,168,138 Deposits. 33,774,573 1843,861,269 33,702,047 182,861,236 33,648,571 184,090,256 33,601,285 1S7,674,341 33,571,747 195.729,072 33,595,869 200,342, m 33,632,301 201,436,854 24,784,332 a COMFANIES. shows the average 38.721.760 38.504.761 37,874,852 BANK 503,615,793 94 Circula¬ tion. Philadelphia Banks.— The ^ 16,552,421 16,499,319 depository of public moneys, and has applied to withdraw the deposited with the Treasurer of the United States. The $12,000 in fifty and one hundred dollar notes of the First National Bank of Jersey City, stolen from the office of the Comproller of the currency, were numbered, on the upper right hand cor¬ ner, No. 19,600 to 19,689, on the lower left hand corner Nos. 671 ,o 750. Numbers the same on both denominations. 36,432 the totals for Loans. Boston weeks: 16,571,736 517,597 507,806 securities $524,319,769 89 . April 20 April 27 May 4 May 11 May 18 589,878 287.206 286,701 284,982 283,806 283,514 $298,956,474. The Second be 3,538,341 6,077,873 3,141,417 2,415,881 The deviations from the returns lows: JLoans Inc., $4,279,045 Deposits Specie lac 607,662 Legal Tenders 296,625 296,011 securities for circulating notes, as i;hat date, 22,299’133 50 21,990’983 45 of the previous week are as fol Date. 37,026,388 87,258,775 1,955,333 1.970,904 2,053,510 1,020,185 3,192,300 2,622,081 2,961,094 2,766,168 1,028,992 1.596.631 905,907 4,691,662 18,092,535 Clearings for the week ending May 11, 1867 Clearings for the week ending May 18, 1867 Balances for the week ending May 11, 1267 Balances for the week ending May 18, 1867 April 6 April 13 92,671,149 92,428,114 92,633,587 17,212,423 16,860,418 16,815,355 $340,641,450 and as security for deposits of public moneys, $38,902,950 ; total, $379,544,400. The amount of National Bank currency issued during ast week was $11,250 ; total to May 18, $302,822,206. From this is to be deducted the currency returned, including worn-out notes amounting to $3,8G5,732 : leaving in actual circulation at ;he 18th 82,520,200 257,961,874 15,567,25233,632,301 201,436,S3i 63,828,501 Total a 92,353,922 .. .. 13 20 508,264 544,756 115,139 869,568 327,538 1,237,216 1,744,149 6,867.670 1,340,220 1.884.630 1,271,734 81.371 289,161 8,000 193,286 94,146 2,138,392 119,774 250,000 789,839 27,700 89,282 17.200,861 100,000 2,025 289,315 52,825 '.(66,134 2,864,400 1,000,000 200,000 200,000 Bowery National 183.191 1,327,689 1,000,000 SOO.OOO 488,506 150,652 633,712 94,767 1,397,366 889,029 384,184 3,209,414 501,968 4.878.925 3,916,202 8,031,627 8,210,613 2,640,789 2,432,857 2,330,442 2,076,698 5,232,156 2,361,574 9(30,387 1.889.925 1,741,076 876,529 2,445,859 790,599 3,511,312 6,373,658 9,167,626 4,837,005 2,532,231 2,882,360 1,669,064 3,749.615 834,277 5(56,000 476,398 321,929 112,459 1,8 73,?36 252,934 5S3,959 32,998 7.320.299 5.405.646 4,334,651 7,163,938 3,782,220 3,622,033 3,182,851 2,131,425 5,845,171 3,289,877 2,826,391 2,433,410 1,8S1,448 1.203,345 3,217,023 1,268,295 4,839,772 11,068,216 24,591,901 6,195,260 3,163,932 3,460,563 1,950,019 4,854,048 1,926,582 1,420,276 2,335,427 2,670,559 1,702,000 11,541,932 1,410,040 2,231,480 2,807,269 2.428.300 5,175,100 3,853,126 4,796,304 2,817,367 1,298,837 1.903.646 1,164,718 5,731,094 13,385,711 951,719 1,071,199 1,361,987 979,081 *,000,000 2,000,000 1,500,000 3.000,000 1,800,000 Merchants’ Mechanics’ Banks for 91,712,414 92,472,815 435,113 456,751 376,343 National Banks.—The Treasurer May 18, 1867 : The 91,679,549 6 Deposits. National. Tenders. 24,843,376 24,851,522 37,218,525 24,838,819 343,712 16,549,598 38,207,548 24,852.200 329,854 16,926,564 37,837,392 24,811,437 91,723,347 1 8 15 April Specie. of weeks Circulation.State. Legal ... .... condition of the Associated Banks of the City of New York for the week ending with the commencement of business on Saturday, Union America Phoenix City following are the comparative totals for a series The past: Banes.—The following statement shows the New York City New 653 THE CHRONICLE. May 25,1867.] Jan.’67 5’ 5 5 10 10 5 106% 107 May ’67 5 May ’66 10 Jan. ’67 5 Jan.’67 5 115 6 111 Jan. ’67 Importers & Trad... 100 1,500,000 Jan. and July... Jan.'67.4&2 3-102 106 5 172 Irving 50 500,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67 600,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. ’67 66 LeatherManufact’rs. 50 Feb. ’67 400,000 Feb. and Ang.. ’ Long Isl. (Brook.) .. 50 Feb. ’67 5 50 2,050,000' Feb. and Aug.. 5 252,000 Apr. and Oct.. Oct. ’66 Manufacturers’ 30 107 5 500,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’67 Manufac. & Merch.*. 100 Jan. ’67 6 400,000 Jan. and July.. Marine 100 117* Jan ’67 5 115 Market 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. 120 5 118 Mechanics’ 25 2,000,000 Jan. and July... !Jan. ’67 * 109 500,000 Jan. and J uly... ‘ J an. ’67 Mechanics’ (Brook.). 50 500,000 May and Nov,.. 'May ’67 Mech. Bank. Asso... 50 •May ’67 5 600,000 May and Nov Meehan. & Traders’. 25 5 ’67 Mercantile 100 1,000,000 May and Nov.. May Dec. ’66 6 116 Merchants’ 50 3,000,000 June and Dec.. 109 Jan. ’67 5 109 Merchants’ Exch.... 60 1,235,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67 6 128 Metropolitan " ... 100 4,000,000 Jan. and July... May 5 104% Nassau*... 100 1,000,000 May and Nov .. Jan. ’67 ’67 5 300,000 Jan. and July... Nassau (Brooklyn) . 100 Apr. 67 5 06 National (Gallatin) 50 1,500,000 April and Oct... Jan. ’67 5 123 100 3,000,000 Jan. and July... New York 200,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67..9&a:2% New York County.. 100 6 300,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67 NewYorkExchange. 100 5 Jan. ’67 Ninth 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67 5 106% 107 North America 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67 5 July... 400,000 Jan. and River* 50 North ioi% 102' Manhattan* ’67 5 Jan. and J uly... Jan. Feb. ’67 5 300,000 Feb. and Aug... 422,700 Feb. and Aug.. Feb. 5&May ’675 145 Jan. ’67 7 2,000,000 Jan. and July... Jan.’66 412,500 Jan. a»d July... 106% 1,800,000 Jan. and July... Jan. ’67.. 4 A-ex5 114 ’67 2,000,000 Feb. and Aug... Feb. C 1,000,000 Feb. and Ang... Feb.’67 lio” Ocean 50 1,000,000 Oriental* 50 50 100 Pacific Park Peoples’* 25 20 Phoenix 100 Republic St. Nicholas’ Seventh Ward Second, Shoe & Lea'.her Sixth State of New York.. .... ... Stuy vesant* Tenth. Third Tradesmens. Union . WUHamaburg Citj *. 100 100 600,000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67.... 100 300,000 May and Nov . Nov. ’66 100 1,600,000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 100 200,000 May and Nov.. Nov. ’65 100 2,000,000 May and Nov... May ’67 100 200 000 .5 .5 ,500 000'Jan. and July., Jan. ’67 .8* 108 110 5 108 Jan. ’67 Jan. ’67 Jan. ’67 May ’67 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. 100 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. 40 1,000,000 Jan. and July.. 50 1,500,000 May and Nov.. 60 5 5 6 145 142 [May 25, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. EXCHANGE. SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK (REPRESENTED BY THE LAST STOCKS AND - 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 Fri. Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. American Gold Coin (G »d Room) National: United States 6s, 1867 do do 6s, 1868 do do 6s, 1808 SALE REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK registered 1881 coupon. 1881 registered. 5-20s (1st issue) coupon. 5-20s registered. 5-20a (2d issue) coupon 6s, 5.20s do ....registered 6s, 5.20s (3d issue) coupon do 6s, 5.20s, ....registered 5.20s (new issue)... .coupon 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, 6s, do 5.20s register id 6s, Oregon War 1881 .• 6s, do. do. (\ yearly). coujnn. 5s, 1871 5s, 1871 registered. 5s, 1874 coupon. registered. 5s, 1874 5s, 10-40s coupon 5s, 10-408 registered. 6s, Union Pacific R. R.. .(cur.). 112 1113 -11% 108% 1H9% ’■09% 1>9% 109% 109% 106% -—106%' 106% 105% 1C5% 105% 105% 106 I106 105% 106% 106% «06% 106/8 j 106% 108% 108% 108% 10S% 107% 104% 103 99% 99% 99% 99% 100 do : 101% War Loan Kentucky 6s, 1868-72 Louisiana 6s Michigan 6s do 97% 47 do coupon 6s, new Brooklyn 6s 96% 97% 97% 103 63 63% 45% 62% 95% : 50 Schuylkill Spring Mountain Spruce Hill 50 50 10 New York Williamsburg Improvement.—Boston WaterPower Brunswick City Canton Cary Tdegraph.—Western Union Nicaragua Trust.—Farmers’ Loan and Trust New York Life and Trust Union Trust United States Trust Insurance.—Home Express.—Adams American Merchants’ Union United States 60 400 100 100 499 490 110 HO 110 67% 67% 67) 66% guaranteed.. .100 33% 54% 34% 100 53 ...100 M0 34% 54% 400 400 97% 400 117 100 100 98 98% 24% 24) 400 96% 103% 100 50 97% 110 [103% 25 97% 116 25% 25% 260 96% 95% 103% 103% ,95% ‘93% *37 t9 42% 43 42% 42 41 do 94 Income Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund.,.. do do do do do do dodo 93% Interest Extension 1st mortgage..,, 82% consolidated..... 102% Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage 88% Chicago. R. I. and Paciiic, 7 rercent do 30 152 30 88% 31 130 20 50 100 50 20 100 100 27% Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 43% 42% Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund 100 100 25 100 100 *.. 100 100 100 500 100 100 Quartz HUl Quicksilver Rutland Marble... 25 100 25 Smitbwd Parmelee..,............. 10 100 98 89 28% 100 100 50 15 10 % 102% ill McGregor Western, 1st mortgage 50 Minnesota Copper New Jersey Zinc 2d mort. do Consolidated and Sinking Fund..:.. do 3d mortgage, 1868 Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 do 2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885 do 3d mortgage, 1875 do convertible, 1867 Illinois Central 7s, 1875 50 100 100 do Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1569-72 32 100 25 20 do Galena and Chicago, extended do do 2d mortgage Great Western, 1st mortgage. do => do 2d mortgage. Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage 153% 155 100 Wells, Fargo & Co Mining.—Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred 60 190 Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 do 4th mortgage, 1880. do 5th mortgage, 1888. 42% 100 42% 43 Western Union, Russian Extension. 100 103 102% 102% Steamship.—Atlantic Mail .100 104% 102% 103 130% 132 129% 128% Pacific Mail 100 ‘28% 129 1 ransit.— Central American *07 80 Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort 100 50 Pennsylvania Manhattan Metropolitan 101% 102% 102% 115% Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage do do 3d mortgage, conv.. do do 4th mortgage Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund do do new 7s 10 50 100 100 ..100 30 100 - 60 60 499 115% Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago Reading do 65 New York 7s 6s do do 5s Wyoming Valley Goj.—Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) : Harlem Jersey City and Hoboken 61% 62% Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877... Central of N w Jersey. 1st mortgage Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund 100 do do 1st mortgage 46% 6s, Water Loan 6s, Public Park Loan 6s, Improvement Stock Jersey City 6s, Water Loan Wilkesbarre 73% 112% 112% „ do do do — 100 74 72 60 preferred do 58% 88% 00 •••400 do do preferred Morris and Essex New Jersey New York Central New York and New Haven New Haven and Hartford Norwich and Worcester Ohio and Mississippi Certificates Panama Municipal: Ashburton j Butler Cameron Central Consolidated Cumberland Delaware and Hudson 113 88% 122 <2 100 100 Stonington 400 Toledo, Wabash and Western 50 do do do preferred.... 50 Troy, Salem and Rutland 100 41 Miscellaneous Shares Voal.—American 74% l 31% Railroad Bonds: 46% 46% 64% 62% 73% 34% 190 J St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute do do do preferred. 97 108% 46% 64% 62% Virginia 6s, 96% 62% 97% Tennessee 5s 68 coupon 6s, (new) 96% 88% 490 ■••490 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chienjlst pref.. 100 do do do 2d pref...100 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 Registered, 1860 6s, coupon, ’79, after 1860-62-65-70. do 6s, (Hannibal and St. Joseph RR.)... do 6s, (Pacific RR.) New York 7s, 1870 do 68,1867-77 do 5s, 1868-76 do 7s, State Bounty Bonds (coupon)... do do do do (registered) North Carolina 6s ex-coupon do 6s, (new) Ohio 68,1870-75 do 6s, 1881—86.............................. Rhode Island 6s 2d Michigan Central Michigan So. and N. Indiana 86 7s (new) Canal Bonds, 1860 34) 34% 59% 88% 400 190 Indianapolis and Cincinnati Joliet and Chicago Long Island. McGregor Western Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred do 88% 100 1°6 pref Erie do preferred Hannibal and St. Joseph do do preferred Harlem do preferred Hudson River Illinois Central do 34 59 111% 111% 131% 130% 131 60 125 Delaware, Lackawanna and Western “• 130 60 Cleveland and Toledo - 73% Georgia 6s do do 100 Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific. .. Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati.... .100 Cleveland and Pittsburg 60 _ 105% 105% 105% 100% — preferred... ...400 do . 120 7s, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s Missouri 6s Iw 400 **00 400 Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago and Milwaukee Chicago and Northwestern.. 1 “ 7-30s Treas. Notes—1 stseries. 106% 106% 106% 105% K'5% do do do '2d series. do do do 'id series. do 1877 do do 1879 War Loan 10JJ Dubuque & feioux City .... do 40” do do 118% 118 }UU preferred Chicago, Burlington and Quincy.. do coupon. 134% 134 State: t>8, 5s Central of New Jersey Chicago and Alton registered. Wed. Thurs. Mon. SECURITIES Railroad Stock* ; 136% 137% 137% 138% 138% 137% California 7s... Connecticut 6s. do Illinois do do do do do Indiana do STOCKS AND ENDING FRIDAY, MAY 24.) do do 8s, new, 1882 97 97% do do 2d mortgage, 7s do do Goshen Line, 1868 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort.... 90 90 98% Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage do 2d mortgage. do Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage do do 2d mortgage New York Central 6s, 1883 do do 6s, 1887 do do 78,1876 do do 7s, convertible, 1876 New York and New Haven 94% 94% ' 64% Ohio and 68% 69 Peninsula, 1st mortgage 18 72 69% Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort.. 65% 65 do do 64% 94% 86% Mississippi, 1st mortgage - do do do do 2d mort... 3d mort... Louis, Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort .. do do do 2d, pref.... 'do do do 2d, income. Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mortgage Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended. 95% 89 St. 18 18 26% 26% 26% 25 17% 25 do do 80 75 Troy, Salem and Rutland, 1st mortgage 76 88 2d mortgage j | Western Union Telegraph, 7s. 95% SO 77 97% 1867.] 25, MaJ Subscribers NATIONAL, STATE AND MUNICIPAL SECURITIES LIST. will confer a greatINTEREST. ftvor by givingFRIDAY. us lmmedlat' notice of any errorjOnfiaading. OuUiandiu*. Coin ........ •••• Securities. National Bond* °f1841 registered. -w**- 1 registered. f coupon. ) registered, f do ao I860 do do do coupon.) registered, f do do 1861.. ......Mrnpon. i do do registered. I CegonWarBdn^Wj/^p. j 1858.... do Rate. Jan. 6 Jan. 7,022,000 5 Jan. 20,000,000 5 Jan. fe Jan. A i« July.I. 1864 ...coupon. do t \\ , &-,T£5S£:; I989’662’000 ($4,066,210): do (extended) 168,000 Alabama Bonds........... State do 1,941,000 Jan. A 1 ... Jnly 1 6 May A Nov. 1884 1 6 May A Nov. 11885 437,850 (funding) Arkansas (incl. int. $3,252,401): do do ♦State Bank Loan California ($5,322,000) : State Bonds of ’57 and 60 War Bonds State Jan. & July do 8,000,000 Bonds (war) 2,000,000 (war) do 2,000,000 exempt.. J. 870,093 ) ($5,706,500): etc.) . ... (*8,63-,252): do registered do Coupon I Bonds do do do do do do War Loan Bonds Indiana State Bonds do do War Bonds, coupon Iowa State Stock War Loan Bonds Kansas ($604,475;: State Bonds do do Kentucky State Bonds do do Louisiana ($13,357,999): Bank Loan Bonds State Bonds Levee Loan Bonds ; . ($7,009,091): 6 7 5,263,254 945,200 4,578,017 1,514,489 ($481,000): State do ’(>7-’72 1886 ’86-’87 10 yrs 798,000 “ New York 8,376,372 3,000,000 May & Nov. 1894 Jan. & July '71-’76 Mar. & Sep. ’71 ’86 1,966,000 100,000 1,100,000 453,000 250,000 . (various) (Pacific) act April 14, 1864... ($51,753,082): General Fund Loans do do do do do do do do do 2,275,000 622,000 1M32,000 7,000,000 3,000,000 1,19-1,100 600,000 609.5 >0 500,000 1,798,900 1,002,900 r 93,400 700,'’OO 2,489,780 442,961 2,609,607 Pounty Fund Loan, coupon..... 2,559,000 do do .registered.. 21,726,500 do Jan. A July do 1867 1883 Jan. A July do do do '62-’83 '74-’91 Jan. A Mar. A 5,466,000 do I • July ’68-’88 % • • • * -- .. . .. 622,000 893,840 850,0C0 1,217,000 Bonds..... do 103 589.000 ..... 6,188,000 615,000 . ... • 1,184,000 do w r-mm '67’87 ’67 ’78 74’76 ’70’79 ’75 ’76 Various. do do do do Jan. A July do do do do do do ’67 ’96 ’67 ’95 ’67 91 1894 91 ’15 ’16 ’81-’99 95* ’85 ’90 ’67 ’79 Various \pr. A Oct. ’67 ’82 Jan A July 1,464,000 do 1,083,000 Jan. A 1881 2876 ’95 ’00 Municipal Loan Bonds Water Loan Bonds 469,968 650,000 Various. Jan. A ’68 ’86 1871 ($1,953.596): City and War Bonds do do do Water Loan Bonds 561,254 689,900 650,000 ($4,118.000); Stock do Floating Debt. Fund Stock ... Central Park Fund Stack .... do do Impr. Fuud Stock do do do do Bonds do do Court House Aid Fund Bonds.. do do . [Philadelphia (*35.165,621): (old) (new) Loan Bonds Qiiarterly Bonds Water and Sewerare Bonds.... Harbor and Wharf Railroad Bonds Bonds . ,. ’67’84 ’67 ’90 May A Nov. 1887 Various. 76’93 1,975,000 82 ’93 851,000 Apr. A Oct. May ANov. 911.50 June ADec. 1894 96* 94 1870 1880 1890 1883 1875 1878 1887 1876 1887 1873 ’69 ’72 ’73 ’75 ’75 ’92 ’83 ’90 ’73 ’76 4,000,000 2.000,000 1,620,000 ’77’82 ’91 ’97 1,122,400 ’67 ’85 ’67 ’82 ’67 ’95 97 67’04 101* 94 ’95 Jan. 4,097,98.° 18.109,955 II,650,000 1,800,000 Various. Jan. A July 1,138,000 Jan. A do 90?. 000 982.000 > 1913 July ’67 ’85 do 1,062,000 1,104,0 (j 6 94 99* 1887 I,878,900 2,748,00* 3,066,071 2,500,000 2,083,20* 1,133.435 2,000,000 1,500.00 1,800 00 ): 104 Municipal Bonds 1870 Railroad Bonds Jan. A July ’68 ’78 100* 101 St. Louis ($5,644 000): May A Nov 1868 97 Municipal Bonds Jan. A July ’74-’78 91* 95 Real Estate and Improv. 1877 108* 10s* do Various, do 1,231,000 829,88* 478,397 Municipal Bonds (old) do do (new) do do do do War and Bounty Pittsruro ($ July 3,000,200 2,147,000 900,000 1,800,000 Stock Soldiers’ Bounty Fnnd Bonds do Substit. A Relief B’de Riot Da" ages Bonds Soldiers’ Bounty Fnnd Bonds 108* do Mar.ASept April A Oct. 97* e J.,A.,J.AO. 575,000 Sold. Family a 1870 1870 1873 1876 1886 1890 1890 1893 1895 ,A., J. AO 371,000 956,500 97* 82 . July ’72’90 May A Nov. ’70 ’97 Real Estate ’63-’74 44 .... 1,800,000 1,088,000 336,000 , do ’86-’95 45 ’S4-’96 ’6--’99 ’68-’99 896.000 Water Stock do do Croton Water do do Water Stock Jan. A Jnly ’67-’84 102 ’t6-’G6 102 do ’97-’02 do ’ ’71-’78 6,088,200 1,000.060 Municipal Loan Bonds Railroad Loan Bonds Water Loan Bonds Milwaukee ($911.5^0): Municipal (re-adjust.) Bonds.. New York City ($33,326,524): Apr. A Oct ’67-’71 July 1869 . Jun. A Dec J ($3,975,500). Louisville 1877 !l08 ’72-’77 01 65* 58* 845,^22 „ Jan. A do 63 Jan. A Jersey City July ’67-78 Sep ’84 ’89 Quarterly 64* 1888 406,100 do do Water Works Bonds Detroit ($1.109,968): -72-’ 89 97 ’73-’87 81* long. 2,192,168 225,000 Municipal Bonds 97 60 723,966 Water Bonds Cincinnati ($3,203,000): Jan. A July '73-’83 1879 100 do 1886 do May & Nov 1890 12,700,000 Canal Loans do ’68-’77 ’67-’93 ’67-’71 Jan. & July 77-'93 do do (H. & St. Jo) . New Hampshire ($2,903,600): State Bonds (war) 1861 do do (war) 1864 do do (war) 1866 do do (war) 1866 New Jersey ($3,395,200): War Bonds, act May 10, ’61 (free) 14 : act Mar. 24, ’63 (free) „ 68-’74 do do do .... .... 58 May A.Nov. Jan. A Jnly Municipal Bonds (old issue) ... do do (new issue).. Sewerage Bonds Var. 1870 1890 1890 j- 6,826,196 2,113,000 Chicago 1889 Various. 541,000 1,688,000 do do do Water Loan Bonds 1871 1883 1880 do do do 102* 1868 1868 250,000 do do do Mar.ASept. ’67-’78 Quarterly do do do do do do do (currency) Water Loan Bonds do ' do do (currency) Brooklyn ($10,023,419): 1868 1881 Mar.& Sept Feb. & Aug. June & Dec, 102* do Jan. A i do 4,335,084 1,000,000 5,000.000 Municipal Bonds Various. 475,000 2.832.500 do do Jan. A Jnly ($12,845,376): Feb. & Aug do 525,000 July do do 4,1?5,399 Floating Debt Stock Boston Feb. & Aug. ’68-’86 Bounty Loan Bonds do 101* 101* 101* 101* 569,000 1,000,000 409,800 Michigan ($3,970,921): State Loan Bonds . 100 1866 1868 Various. Jan. A 494,000 Baltimore ($21,928,656): Internal Improvement Stock... do ... do do Jail Stock . Water Stock Pittsb. A Connellsv. RR.Loan. Baltimore A Ohio RR. Loan ... Park and Park Improve. Stock. Detense Loan 4,838,933 345,000 800,000 Quarterly. 1870 ’75-’79 ’71-’8i ’77-’90 1887 97 .... Soldiers’ Aid Fund Bonds ($25,555,747): ♦Railroad Loans pleas. 91 Various. *71-’94 1,450,949 , Prospect Park Loan 1,992,000 Various. 11,108,000 21,896,298 Jan, & July ’67-’ 73 ’68-’72 101 do Bonds Minnesota ($2,525,000): State Loan Bonds ♦Railro »d Loan Bonds Missouri ($35,404,515): ♦State Loans (old) 100 184,006 271,000 3,346,000 (war) of ’61 Canal War Loan Jan. A July 1870 1870 do 60’65 do 69 ’70 do 76 ’77 do 1879 do 1879 do Jan. & July do Var. Var. 1871 Municipal Securities 74 73 1886 do Jan. & July do 500,0)0 do , Railroad Loans do do War Loans do do do do do do (currency) var. July ’ 72-*86 Jan. A do Feb. A Aug. 1 Various 13,911,900 — .... ... 1,667,500 Municipal Bonds (various) Improvement Loan Bonds do (war) of’63 do do do (bounty) of ’63 .... do (war) of ’61 do Maryland ($ ): State Bonds do do do do do , inscribed do Massachusetts var. Vermont ($1,650,000): War Loan Bonds Virginia ($43,166,286): State Bonds (coupon) do do (registered) do (Funding) coupon do ( do ) registered West Virginia ($ ): State Bonds WiscoNsiN ($2,248,191): War Bonds Jan, A July 1875 ’76-'81 do Maine ($5,127,500): State Bonds (civil) * do May & Nov 98,975 Funded Coupon Bonds Railroad Loans of ’53- 66 do 74-’84 100 1885 848,000 300,000 ($5,324,632): do Jan. A July do 3,030,000 I July ’ 72-’84 100 \ 7 1,167,222 1,229,661 Canal Bonds S3-’84 April AOct 1875 2,347,340 2,175,400 ... .... f Funding Bonds (new) ’ 77-’80 119* 120* Jan. A 1.269.500 do do do 1868 1861 Apr. A Oct. 6 6 6 \8 ($22,000,000): Internal Improvement Bonds... Railroad Loan Bonds 3,774,000 7 1,548,000 7 ($10,0^0,000): do (war) tax Florida ($370,617): State Bonds State Bonds —Georgia State Bonds— • do do (funding, Illinois do Jan. A July ♦Retl Estate Connecticut do 6 6 610,000 899,000 Bank Loan 2,400,000 679,218 Tennessee 47* Jan. A July 1860 do 1868 18’0 too do 1875 100 do 188C do 1881 :o2 do ’68-’71 do 444,022 379,866 2.183.532 1,6* 0,000 4,C 95,309 ($109* 09* 218,574 Bounty and Relief Bonds 106* 106* State Bonds 105* 05* Pennsylvania ($38,377,000): 105* 106 6,168,(90 State Bonds, coupon 16* 06* do do transmissable .... 29,209,000 106* 06* 3,COO,00" Military Loan Bonds 108 108* 108* Rhode Isi^and ($3,626,000): 3,626,500 War Loan Bonds 99* 99* 99* 99* South Carolina ($5,205,227): 318,159 State Stock (Fire Loan) 196* 06* 1,000,000 do Bonds (Bine Ridge RR.).. 105* 105* 500,000 do do (State House) 105* 105* 1,775,000 do Stock (do do )..... 1,210,803 do Bonds (Funding) 1872 1883 1887 May A Nov ’67-’76 46* ’77-’86 ’87’96 46 Jan. A Jnly 1900 do do 874,000 5,514,500 1,426,000 -): Oregon FRIDAY. Bid Payable. Various. 477,000 (domestic) Priuet-i INTEREST. Gate 3 111* 11* HI* 112 July 18811 May A Nov. 1882 1 5 5 5 Asked Bid 1 do do .registered. | do Jan. A Jnly 1 do do 1865 (new).coupon j i6 do do do do registered. J 1904 1864 ...coupon ) 171,069,350 5 Mar.ASept. 1 do (10-408) A Aug. 1 7.30 Feb. do do do .registered. ) Treasury Notes (1st series) 682,330,150 7.30 Jun. ADec. 1 do do (2d senes) 7.30 Jan. A J uly 1 V do do (3d series) ) State Securities.. do DENOMINATION*. Marked thu» * are in dofault for ln«ere 138* 138* North Carolina ($11,299,800): State Loan Bonds do do do 137 A July 1 do do do 130* A July 1 Funded Coupons 13* Ohio ($11,814,768): 110* A July 18711 State Bonds no* do (Ur>ion Loan) ... do 104* 1874A July 1 103 6 283,745,600 A Payable. 6,574,300 8,908,342 do do discovered In our Tables. A Amount Pnuot xvutouul DENOMINATIONS Martel tho» * *r*,n default for Intereet. American Gop 655 THE CHRONICLE do do ’71 ’06 ’70 ’88 ’67 ’87 ■71 ’77 80* ftfjc Commercial limes. COMMERCIAL EPITOME. Friday Night. May 24. generally good the past week, and there is less complaint that the returns of business are unsatisfactory. Many of the leading staples are relatively quite low, and dealers are enabled to realize moderate profits. Cotton has declined, closing steady. Breadstuff's declined early in the ^eek, but prices have recovered in most cases during the past day or two. Tobacco has been less active. Groceries have been variable. Coffee is rather lower in gold for common qualities. Sugar has advanced but closes with The volume of trade has been free sellers. Molasses has been fairly active. Provisions have been in good demand, and most cases rather better. prices are in The trade and shipping demand for The following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of New York since January 1, 1867. The export of each article to the several port* for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount *n the last number of the Chronicle from that here given : Exporta of Leading Articles from New Vork, .t--'J<-TJ«05COt"-"^'S©40 40 ©4 05 d •2 © O *-T co o CO ea • ty, :SSS8SS5Isg?-gSSgp :I1I1 : • og" t-rf **5 ^co~ ■ St-« CO CO 4Q c*co 04 GO V> X £4(* 5 f _ • £ •£ —i • Cf W V ri C3 ri <74 • ©4 04 Ttf rl m 23 l- in«co w t- < -G O Q ■ o co 5* - StH > CO • -CO CO rH • -Tj. • ^ 5 io ©4th *5 t-© CCt-T< .0®H i CO CO O T-l ® rl n© 5 T> w J a g 2 t-7 O :8 O v< • C5 04 . —> • a t— g to . t— :5s • C4 oo ©» ®C1 Wt)' O cfco 5? «2 o ©4 G O r 40 ’CO • * 'rltoVcf • * • so ri^io io • r> • • f o5 © d : > 4 T3 a CS » a Leather is also somewhat lower. , g rl • • The June and July de¬ closed active. • • • 05 CO • a • a -o* •40 ' ■ ^ CO CO £ livery at 10c. in bulk, and standard white refined closes at ^ TH f^3 ® s 25fc., in bond. 'C' o Naval Stores have been firmer but close quiet. Spirits Turpentine 64c., free, per gallon, and common Bosin $4 per W os" bbl. Oils have been quiet and unchanged. In Metals, there has been but little demand except for Ingot S Copper, of which sales foot up a million pounds at 234@23fc. o East India Goods show a good demand for Calcutta Lin¬ seed, with sales at $2 62^@2 66, gold, duty paid, per bush.; B < Gunny Cloth 11 cents gold, to arrive, in bond, and Gunny 2 * Bags 20§c., currency. S»“ Tallow has been active and firm. Fish have advanced, and g i .s : ; & 3 *3 : : Fruits are rather firmer. Whiskey firm at 35c. in bond. h <j n Wool continues quiet, but prices rule very firm, with an J8 d upward tendency. ©IS ^ Freights have become very dull. The shipments of Grain o and Cotton to Great Britain have nearly ceased, and the little a5 done has been at nearly nominal rates. S & : The shipments of Petroleum have also been less liberal. Considerable quanti¬ g S ■' o w ties of Naval Stores and Provisions have been shipped at low rates. Several deal charters have been made mostly from St. Johns, N. B., to Liverpool at 61s.@62s. 6d. ‘O »o Ct rl *40 C4 • : -O .;® • L. • • lOH • •£wco®cocogo rM rtHH 40^50 , rl o ^ • •COSTCO ‘ OS • *0 * 4-1 • Oi G OO OO 00 o T-I *92°? .COOt • 0.1-1 CO *400 $ »o io o • . -'T11- • ■ lOGCiOt- :§ :S I © O IO o ’ t- r-t CO C© CO 'S : : :$g%coco ; r-t • * • T-i t ■< cs J5 . co r-T * coo*-52 co 40 22 G TT T-i OS co os oo O t—I 8 t* O 05 ■ • — ■ ‘CO • • GO? Gt00 - o? t- t-ao ‘too* • (M »-< CO i-i 40 40 *r-ICO©* 40 0* • t— i-< G O • O CO 00 of * CO a tGGTti rl 50 CO g cs f— t* o . Sg«D . CO o Oocoow-iQomuiHoa oi a .050 ; . 04 ■ O* . Q G lO .C0xi40 • • -T* TJIOOVO • ' r- 40-^ .. , s aa '9lrl ...... cQ --SP T*I .,-<■»£ • T-I • • CO 04 <GO .....„• 40 O* • . •• . . • * •TfCS •jgdi C4 • ■ 'coVT ' • • CO •... . -os • . IO •... • -r-i . .40 , •£: .60.• 04 CS 40 o3 a . ’ —i , GOt* ■IOM • co'^ cs O • % : :ss : : o i-i . S: •o GOO :Sg • Io ^ ;o6 il •>0«400S r-Ztr ef • .COO -CO-CJ1 rii-aiavjoo • s a IO in »H Tf .cSrtit-"3 , :s :• • - . . 40 G : : t-Tt* * r-T ’ S £ n : CO ® : : : .COOOt--5»< GO ° x O • * O t- N © i o Oo 8 oo • * 1—1 * W* * . :r5® • * , * :S •(Hco * ©4 gf O ^ ® > ®r-«t~<74aO'Tj''VG<74aor~< ■ *cs cf ® cfefxao O eo OO CO •d qxrqtr(N®wr( fc-C*ri©5T-«C040t© P-i of ■ CO 00 ■ t- Tji - 'BOOltCat-'NtJOOirL lOOM ticoco a 8coh -in i 'OaSSSS 55iocjo *40 0 lOrt 0_ cooocoogo _ fc- O l-H GO »-l CO TT o P— markets. Cheese has been taken to some extent on English orders. Hides have remained dull, and the only business in Dry Hides has been at ^c., gold, decline. Montevideo selling at Petroleum has further declined, but business includes 20,000 bbls. Crude for ^ . 00^ ci quantities from England, as happened last summer, they are very firm. Lard has been in better demand for export, but closes rather tame; the fluctuations for the week have been unimportant. Beef is more active and firm, and we notice a movement to-day to the extent of 800 tcs. for the' British gold. lOCOrHWSI 4OC0 CO rH t-G oo GG Mess have 19c., © ©4 CO • O Pork is not large, but some speculative demand in new has been developed the past day or two, and prices re¬ covered most of the decline that took place early in the week. Cut Meats and Bacon are in but moderate supply, and as holders are under no apprehension of the return of large ' [May 25,1807. THE CHRONICLE. 656 >oo—< ■iQtH05 • • looeco 40 • • 03 CO 04 .GO* .r}<40 -0504 -CD00 .04 05 • • . •WHf- - >000 0 40 40 G t— t— >0050 *^<4040 "COO I : rl ■ . o ” i-l ■ ■s 1 -t-COO-iTjl — CO G CO -04 • • CO • • 04 • .w. • • 40 • tH • ••■(*• 04 O tH ) 04 co £— 5 ‘OSCit-C .T^* 38 • * a! Pi VI Receipts of Domestic Produce for tlie Week, end since January 1* The receipts of domestic produce for the week ending May 24, since Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1866, liave t een aa This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’fif) Ashes, pkgs... Breads tuffs— 85 2,339 Flour, bbls.. 25,432 505,299 Wheat, bush. 150 436,625 2,284 Rosin Tar 681,697 Pitch 112,101 Oil cake, pkgs follows M a> «> Pi * o : £ s O H • : ►» a This Since Same week. Jan. 1. time’66. 7,395 112.510 163,770 9 9,560 85,549 2,803 1,155 23,192 37,063 1,756 2,642 362,004 358,473 11,748 6,562 • i2 H ** * • ill G CO ! j ^3 >0540 • GO 05 - G i-l COCO-* -04 • G o . t- • o • T}I O • 2? o • * r-t oboo • • • • • 8DiritBturp.. 376 10,901 5,959 2.604 2,733 17,576 20,831 13,160 79.873 No Rice, bush 40'^' -t- •COG • CO! • tH * fslwHHO O OioOf . • . • . . • * * * ’ * • • • • 04 04 • GG *Q22 > o ‘oo VVWCW t-i i—in t-o 05 Ctionl*® r-<_G_G r-T .104040 40 rl O * • 00 . • • • " * 40 (74 00 O G ) (N ( • H H iH Cl • <NCO<WWOO< • . . * • 'is ' ’ .naoo4t-aooooi»*g5cp r-coo5©4i-i4o«2nX*5 Gt*i 4— i-l 40 ©4 ©405 •tJICOGS' 10—1 • i-l <74 ri C4 Ci a C4H stf 00fl« ^ g 40 • . • O J rt B •MV- 0ca‘ :«PQOQ^ a ° © 81,769 2 oS O O O ° fa.d O,d ooooflfiwcaiz; © 0040 t- <74 « T-I a t«©4©5COc>:oc©C4 T-r^jocTocs TJ4 OOrl'CrH rough, 3,964 15,704 54(74520 ceot—IGtJIt*eo .... and bbls.... Naval Stores— Crude trp,bbl . r-i55ce-rfit-r* .. gemp, bales... .cscog*os .OTGGr4 cT i-i • J; • rHrl • ;g_«o • Tj <7* JS n i : ... •« CO r-l d <0»gc040C0ep *ri : : •CO rl t— i—i • 2 o> • 3 •C^O d at • 40 •8 8 -»5» • 40 ■ • 'S ei 1 CO ■ •ftHOOO G CO 40 04 5. ’8 S , C4 ■CO 3,679 115 150,1511031,031 1,063,578 Oil, lard 86,658 301,941 677,501 Oil, Petroleum. 26,329 104 Rye 43,342 Peanuts, bags. 1,640 5,574 Malt 2,620 222,035 227,373 Provisions— Barley 46,130 121,435 Butter, pkgs.. 13,615 200,788 141,634 Grass seed... 38 42,568 12,337 115,751 47,!36 99,878 Cheese Cut meats.... Flaxseed 7,114 4,043 1,780 73,693 85,231 Beans 156 14,888 32,921 Eggs 8,833 108,797 82,395 Peas 35,060 58,041 1,264 110,881 84,855 101 24,577 43,358 C. meal,bbls. 3,007 26,557 45,426 Beef, pkgs. ... 999 81,226 74,892 C. meal,bags. 2,802 198,752 197,273 Lard, pkgs.... 115 Buckwheat & 6,601 3,984 Lard, kegs.... B.W. flour,bg 7 1,460 7,974 6,045 Rice, pkgs 6,085 Cotton, bales 321,690 Starch 13,913 65,797 45,504 8,038 339,908 108 4,©09 4,382 2,7201 Stearine Copper, bbls... 150 2,604 547 2,801 Copper, plates. Cl, slabs... Dial 430 1,849 l,628|Spelter, 243 19,523 Driedfruit,pkgs 5,294 Sugar, hhds 485 674 1,703 1,408 8,118 Grease, pkgs... 1,698 bDls 345 Tallow, pkgs... 525 69 2,633 4,239 7,728 147.661 213,030 Tobacco, pkgs.. 3,972 43,655 64,768 ides, No 15 2,758 3,356 Tobacco, hhds.. 2,991 24,313 14,258 Hops, bales. .. 845,408 Whiskey, bbls.. 2,728 64,147 34,480 Leather, sides . 49,416 935,020 720 549 18,133 33,012 Lead, pigs 3,167 Wool, bales Dressed Hogs, Molasses, hhds Com Oats ft © d © OQ . . ®t> 657 THE CHRONICLE. May 25,1867.] Receipts and Exports of ' Articles. Imports of Leading following table, compiled from Custom House returns, bIiow foreign imports of certain leading articles of commerce at this for the week ending May 17, since Jan. 1, 1867, and for the correspond, ing period in 1866 : The EXPORTED SINCE por* the [The quantity is given For the week. r in packages when not otherwise specified.] Since Jan. 1, 1867. 80 2,201 3,022 Coal, tons.... 1,874 172 Cocoa, bags... Coffee, bags .. 18,858 21,861 39,309 6,4S5 324,241 1,566 Buttons Cotton, bales. Drugs, &c. Bark, Peruv Blea p’wd’rs » Brimst, tns. Cochineal... Cr Tartar ... Gambier.... Gums, crude Gum, Arabic Indigo Madder 6,529 321,522 167 3,981 12,104 7,450 165 156 608 182 70 630 19 37 111 193 117 649 637 7,960 6,778 2,370 1,276 2,296 1,679 Oils, ess.... Oil, Olive... 1,299 6 Opium 250 Soda, hi-carb 280 Soda, sal.... 74 Soda, ash... cloth . Hemp, bales.. Hides, &c. Bristles. 329 57,926 6,187 14,063 719 963 17 77 662 132 891 Flax Furs Gunny Hair 12,638 .... Hides,dres’d India rubber.. 629 181,566 682,828 96,543 Same time 1866. bs. Spelter, lb 4,303 Steel Sugar,bxs&bg 6,313 117,912 292 72 12,965 4,184 22,016 SEPT. Mobile, May 17 Charleston, May 17.. Savannah, May 17.. Texas, May 10 New York, May 24*. Florida, May 17t ... N. Carolina, May 24. Virginia, May 24 . . Other 20,952 151,162 430,114 10,684 6,248 Great p’ts, May 24*. France Other 555 3,524 70,614 97,S74 6,512 50,196 315,091 23,410 48,365 • • • .... • .... 492 12,451 25,458 • .... .... .... .... ... • . . . 200,01? 115,547 55,837 33,245 67,729 6,821 91,083 13,929 69,172 15,391 128,000 36,063 2,780 35,996 86,128 .... • 492 • 12,451 25,778 . 320 .... • • ••• $40,000 .... 642,016 355,213 1,712,851 1,049,573 146,558 101,853! 1,297,484 The market this week has been the week, the closing quotations STOCK. PORTS. 511,887 130,735 74,693 97,874 56,708 £86,866 354,060 115,262 42,565 4,362 3,036 123,837 ; NORTH. Total. for’gn. Britain. 36,488 98,595 25,440 Total 95,151 1. 671,081 222,380 137,698 208,061 152,108 107,480 53,520 N. Orleans, May 17. 3,663,723 490,516 8HIP- m’ntsto SINCE PORTS. 6,139 72,445 193,365 4,971,887 71,887 814,741 230,595 1 TO— SEPT. rec’d dull, declining steadily all being 2c. lower than last Friday, Liverpool having also declined from Ilf to lid. for 18,145 35,105 Middling Uplands. The suspension of Messrs. Fraser, Tren36,607 Wool, bales... 1,230 holm & Co. has unfavorably affected the market, disturbing 365 Articles reported by value. 60,440 Cigars $8,133 $156,692 $584,379 confidence, and materially adding to the difficulty of negotia¬ 8,134 48,557 101,092 12,228 Corks 17,970 Fancy goods.. 48,2S4 1,617,0961,757,383 ting cotton bills, and thus checking shipments. At 1,324 313,261 576,062 7,087 Fish the same time spinners buy very sparingly, although the de¬ 1,694 Fruits, &c. 6,937 2,165 9,119 2,489 60,147 984 883 41,594 51,084 159,760 32.245 Oranges.... 87,931 Nuts 24,303 Raisins 420 179,134 198,864 518,441 148,194 Wines 58,596 51 1,651 2,509 1,297 Lemons goods may be said to be, for the moment at least, checked, and speculators appear also to have withdrawn, leaving the market in a very stagnant condition. The sales for the week are only about 7,500 bales, and the following are the closing quotations: N. Orleans cline in 515,880 435,589 357.155 376,511 Hides,ondrsd.205,659 4,194,325 2,761,835 3,569 Cassia Ginger 313 Pepper 492 Saltpetre 139,453 Woods. 65,362 52,718 595 Champ, bkts 4,373 Rice 11,622 Spices, &c. 183,796 Cutlery...... 6,578 Lead, pigs Tobacco 1,964 Waste 1,642 Wines <Sbc 7,270 4,204 Metals, &c. 129,301 5,762 263 377 3,52 L 9,789 Tea.... 623 3,486 19,369 1,257 Iron.RRb’rs Tin, boxes.. 11,963 3,014 Tin slabs,lbe271,674 1,577,070 1,193 30,643 8,411 Rags hhds, 8,155 Sugar, tcs&bbls.. 9,380 227 112,023 13 19 Watches Molasses..... 1,708 59,966 45 121 536 Ivory Jewelry, &c. Jewelry Linseed 17.103 Hardware... Since Jan. 1, week. 1867. 150 4,640 For the Same time 1866 Sept. 1, an Cotton (bales) since Mentioned. Stocks at Dates 5,933 .... 459 Fustic 6,239 Logwood.. Mahogany. S8,470 176,800 64,106 18,098 121,466 16,966 116,609 28,891 67,385 79,960 Low 98,223 71,783 Good Middling Middling Middling COTTON. exports of Cotton Mobile. "" 29 29 small increase, the against 8,438 Friday, P. M., May, 24 18G7. 23 24 25 27 : 15,090 a 23 24 25 27 i 72,071 The Florida. $ Ordinary Good Ordinary 24,786 54,25' Upland. 24 25 26 28 30 & Texas 24 25 26 28 31 show this week from New York total shipments amounting to 9,637 bales The particulars of these bales last week. follows : shipments are as Chicago, 2,157 ship—Columbia, 6,955 To Havre, per steamer.—Ville de Paris, 432—ter ship Mercury, 1,018. Total bales 1,450 Bremen, per steamer— N orthem Light, 550 Union, 49—Per ship (against 18,650 bales last week, 19,661 bales the previous ToCynosure, 322 951 Per bark—Kosmos, 30. Total bales week, and 18,008 bales three weeks since), making the aggre- To Hamburg, per steamer—Hammonia, 129. Total bales 129 gate receipts S1UCQ September 1, this year, 1,712,851 bales, To Genoa, per ship—Alexander, 152. Total against 1,857,686 bales for the same period in 1865-6. The we our details of the week’s receipts are as follows: weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September To receipts of Cotton this week from all the ports show a further material falling off, the total reaching only 14,854 bales The Liverpool, per steamers—Persia, 917....Tarifa, 713 City of Manchester, 200 Per ..Erin, 3,868 .. 1,100. Total hales . 152 bales Weekat~ baieseCeiP242 Receipts. this bales 4,800 Florida*1 1,557 North Carolina :.*!!!!*!!! 1,582 Virginia 1.835 Total receipts for week 1,736 Kentucky, &c 1,587 Received this week at*— New Orleans Mobile Charleston Savannah Texas... Tennessee, Below give table showing the exports of Cotton from New York, and their direction for each of the last four 1866; and in the last column the total for the same period of the previous y ear : 290 1,228 Export* of Cotton (bales) from New York since Sept. 1,1866 14,854 EXPORTED TO exports this week there is a considerable increase, total reaching 38,800 bales, against 27,264 bales last week., Liverpool From the Southern ports the shipments for the week have other British Ports been 29,163 bales, against 18,399 bales in our last report. Total to Gt. give the rparticulars of the week’s shipments Below we & from | Other Havre-French ports. r April 30. In the I a 11 Exported this week to LiverFrom— pool. New York..: 6,955 New Orleans.12,873 Havre Brem. burg. Genoa. 1,450 1,140 3,332 Charleston... 3,711 Galveston 5,867 Norfolk, Va. 566 Savannah 129 951 s 152 Prusia. Iona. N. B. 983 *.*. ... .... 524 .... .... 142 ”25 Total. 9,637 15,520 3,332 8,878 5,867 566 ... T’l this 2,590 w’k.33,304 Britain.. 129 951 152 666 983 25 Total to N. Europe Spain, Oporto and All others foreign exports from the 2,197 7. .. etc .... 12,245 392 .... May I 14. 7,335 .... 7,335 567 .... May 1 21 * Total to date. prev. year. 6,955 309,034 363,916 6,057 17,937 .... 6,955 315,091 380,853 1,450 .... 23,404 33,149 6 8 2,197 392 567 1,450 23,410 33,157 522 152 49 1,517 150 127 301 160 75 951 129 29,412 11,992 5,149 17,745 15,097 5,656 723 1,794 536 1,08# 46,553 38,498 152 860 952 152 1,812 2,118 9,637 1386,866 454,626 Gibraltar Total Spain, 3',800 9,805 .... Hamburg Other ports..... Grand Total The total .... Bremen and Hanover Narva Barce-St.J’ns, Ham- May 9,805 ! 12,245 Total French. the ports : Same time WEEK ENDING .... .... .... .... 12,725 14,431 .... .... 8,438 .... 1,364 . United States since 754 Receipts of cotton at the port of New York for the week Sept. 1 now amount to 1,297,484 bales, against 1,380,066 and since Sept. 1: This Since This Since bales for the same period last year, and the present stocks week. Sept. 1. week. Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. From are 355,213 bales, against 403,208 bales at the same time 1,387 49,464 From i Bales. Bales. South Carolina 188 30,326 746 115,340 North Carolina in 1866. Below we give our usual table of the movement New Orleans Baltimore, &c.. 509 71,281 I Texas , 1 . , 2,333 50,812 Norfolk, 1,286 111,679 of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing at a glance Savannah 1,010 86,545 Per Railroad Florida 30,381 the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: Total for the week 8,038 Total since Sept. 1 570,704 The following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, PhilaIn this table, as well as in our general table of receipts, &c., we deduct from the receipts at each port lor the week all received at such port from other The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee Southern ports. For instance, each week there is a certain amount shipped Kentucky, &c., not otherwise enumerated. from Florida to Savannah, which in estimating the total receipts must be de¬ + These *are the receint* at all th« ports of Florida to May 17, except ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We are thus par¬ Apalachicola, which are only to May 10. t Estimated. The stock at New York is also estimated. ticular in the statement of this fact, as some of oar readers foil to understand it. . i ,, , . i r ~ * * the last delphia and Baltimore for The market this week has been week, and since Sep Receipts from— New Orleans Last week. 101 .... Texas Savannah Mobile Florida South Carolina North Carolina • 140 .... .... 1,020 .... .... 951 207 2.358 exports of 223 29,434 wreek from +19,606 this Shipping News.—We have given above the vessels in which the foreign shipments for the week were made from the Northern ports; we now add the same information with regard to the Southern ports Exported thlB week from— Liverpool New Orleans—To Antarctic, 3.584 : Total bales , steamship Gladiator, 1,428 Per ship Devonshire, 2.475 Mutt.h, 2,903... Per per Upland 9%@10 18 12 11 Mobile New Orleans. Texas 9% @10 11% 9%@10 9%@10 11% 11% Sea Island.... Stained 12,373 1,140 983 524 Annexed is of cotton : 14 13 . . 14 Sea Island.... 40 Upland 28 Mobile Orleans 28% 28% d. d. d. 34 28 18 14 12% 11 14% 14% 13 13% The stocks of cotton at 5,867 have received one week’s later dates the week ending May 17 were* 1,657 bales, against 1,927 bales last week, and the shipments were 1,487 bales, all of which were to New Orleans, leaving the stock on hand and on ship¬ board, not cleared, of 33,246 bales. The following are the weekly re¬ ceipts, sales and exports for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week: Mobile, May 18.—By mail we The receipts for from Mobile. -Freight • 11% 11% Price of Total . 1,160 New York closes at^@fc, West Indian East Indian “ May 18.—The receipts for the week ending May 17 were 1,872 bales (of which 37 were from Florida), against 3,112 bales last The shipments this week were 5,046 bales, of which 8,322 week. bales were to Liverpool, 827 to Philadelphia, 61 to Baltimore, 211 to Charleston, and 1,115 bales were to New York. Below we give the receipts, shipments, prices, Ac., for a series of weeks : Savannah, Stock. Receipts. Shipm’s. “ . . 17 . 19,423 7,598 1,180 22,051 23,386 6,924 19,967 17,787 17,10S 584 7,071 3,791 5,046 2,264 3,112 1,872 13,934 Price Mid. New Orleans, May 18.—The mail returns for the week ending May 17, show a small increase in the receipts, the total for the week being 4,800 bales, against 4,692 bales last week, aud 6,127 bales the previous week. The shipments for the last week were 19,109 bales, of which 12,873 bales were to Liverpool, 1.140 to Havre, 983 to Narva Prussia, 524 to Barcelona, 2,269 to Boston, 291 to Philadelphia 717 to Providence, and 312 to New York. Stock on hand May 17, was 116,647 bales. The receipts, sales and exports for a series of weeks and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool anc New York, and price of gold at the close of each week since April -Freights Date. 100 Rec’ps. Sales. Exp. Stock. 9, .51 16,500 18,710 177,864 8,405 14,550 2t,78u 167,241 9,141 9,450 21,071 156,777 6,021 18,800 24,908 139,844 6,127 10,400 11,891 134,513 4,592 19,600 12,364 128,099 4,800 20,150 19,109 1*5,547 *By steam. To Liver 29 @— nominal. nominal. 26 ®—r 26 @27 25 @26 27 @28 pool To New York.* %@%@%@— %@— 17-32@9-15 %@17-3*2@9-16 %@— 9-16@% 9-16@% 9-16@% 9-16@% gold. 133%@134 137%@137% 13s%@139 138% @— 136%@136% 187 @137% 17-32@9.16-%@-’135%@ . .... 11% 12 13% 12 7% 7% 6% 6% 7% 7% 1866. Bales. 1867. Bales. 869,930 58,492 110,000 711,660 813,050 45,011 115,000 550,100 1,750,082 1,523,161 Average weekly sales. period 1867. 18,980 1866. year. 1866. 17,710 5.040 4,280 107,800 142,290 4,090 3,850 91,770 82,410 33,030 1,400 30,230 1,310 398,170 370,060 11,730 12,950 30 20 1,760 2,720 1,440 24,050 To this To this This date date 1866. week. 1867. Egyptian Total 1866. 707,781 652,024 1,156,130 404,865 198,310 217,4:38 200,083 129,376 122,444 90,274 41,804 47,376 173,228 495,362 1,544,675 37, "39 7,757 American Brazilian 1,025 297 6,445 40 894 China and Japan 40,980 12,993 Same date 1866. 1 This Dec. 31, 1866. day. 459,450 368,200 142,800 116,690 65,230 71,320 29,240 24,970 112,140 288,130 2,440 2,370 167,270 41,760 23,180 11,620 270,100 2,840 - 616,770 63,3631,251,5931,534,684 3,409,020 813,050 869,930 Total London, May 11.—Very little change has taken place in the value of cotton this week. More disposition is shown to buy, and considerable business has been transacted. The subjoined particulars relate to East India. China and Japan cotton : Deliveries 1865. Bales. 1866. Bales. 95, 64 95,662 109,268 135,608 111,987 58,492 1867. Bales. 42,170 60,919 45,011 trade is firm; on higher terms, DholThe week’s shipments have been 43,700 Bombay, May 4.—The cotton lerah, 235 rupees per caudy. bales. TOBACCO. Friday, P. M., May 24, 1867. Tobacco are considerably in though in the item of hhds. less than the two previous weeks. A very large movement, however, will be noticed in cases, New Yroik having sent to Bremen alone 2,'760 cases during the week. The receipts of tobacco are quite lib¬ eral at all the ports, and stocks are increasing. Below we give the shipments from all the ports for the week : The excess exports this week of crude of last week, ,—Stems Exported this week from Hhds. Case. Bals. Tcs,&c. hhds. 2,070 711 1 Boston Price 13 481,870 517,480 50 follows; Price Mid. a. 13% ,, Stocks, May 9 ports. 1^67. d. 51,600 19,250 2,300 73,150 1,103,2001,156,390 40,440 Stocks -lmports- Total Imports, Jan. 1 to May 9 active this week, but quotations have materially advanced under the improved Liverpool advices, but closes unsettled and dull, with middling at 26c. Freights have continued ex tremely dull. « We quote to Liverpool 7-16d. for square, and £d. for round bales ; steam to New York and Philadelphia |c, and Baltimore $2 60 per bale. In sailing vessels the rates are dull at to Northern as 1,340 East Indian 23 25 The market has not been very were West Indian 27%@— 26 @— 24 @ — @@23% @26 @- .. d. Same Total this Sales this week. , Ex- SpeculaTrade. port. tion. Total. American....bales. 27,8*20 7,620 860 36,300 8,900 “ . . SALES, ETC., OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. , 13,990 China and Japan.. 50 “ 9 d. “ 7,480 “ . Liverpool and London, including the supplies 3,830 10 13% 13% London American cotton afloat. Indian “ » To New To 15 16 16 27% 140 “ . 14% 13 17% 17% 140 May . 1 % Broacb Dhollerah 390 . . Egyptian 2,240 3,808 2,712 2,462 . Pernambuco.. 28% 3,300 April . 19 1864. 1865. 1866. 5,100 Sterling Exchange 144@146. . Middling— Egyptian discount. . . Brazilian...., on . .. gold. Receipts. Sales. Exp’s. Stock* mid. L’pool. York. % — @ % 135 @135* Apr. 5 2,741 3,300 10,049 44,704 26*@— 12 1,925 3,150 3.558 43,071 24*@25 9-16—®% 137@1S8 19 2,470 4.400 3,766 41,775 22 @— 9-16 1 @ % 137*@13<% 26 1,285 5,050 2.601 40,459 23 @— 9-16 1 @ % 138 @139 May 3 1,818 5,2(10 7,236 35,071 24 @— 9-16 1 @ % 136 @137 10 1.927 3,250 3,823 33.175 23*@9-16 —@ % 13G*@137* “ 17 1,557 3,750 1,487 33,245 25 @— 9-16 —@ % ' 136 @137 The market has been rather quiet this week but prices are better. Factors have shown ltttle inclination to sell, but prices are rather in favoi of the buyer. We quote good ordiuary at ‘23c., low middling 24c.. and middling at 26c. at the close. Freights show no change. Livei- Exchange • Stock at Liverpool Date. pool 9-l6d., and coastwise gc. • N Fair. Good 34 56 21 24 Mid. 28 bales. 29,163 Total eTDorts this week from Southern ports... Price of d. 566 steam Melita, 566 13 14 24 16 1864. 1865. 1866. 1867. 3,332 barks Navasota, 830 F. B. Fale, 2,452 per schooner A. C. Campbell, 964... per good fair. 20 Good and fine. 33 64 17 IS comparison of the present prices of middling qualities a Middling— , 272 Sea Island 17 11 -1866.— -1867.Fair and Ordinary and middling. brig Albert, 9 Sea Island and 762 Upland Per ship Mary Ogden, 595 Sea Island. 2,315 Upland 3,711 To Barcelpnia, per brig Tibidabo, 142 Upland 1*2 25 To St. Johns, N.B 25 Upland Savannah—To Liverpool, per ship Mount Washington, 3,090 Upland, and per correspondent in London writing under the date of May ll> * /— Charleston—To Liverpool per Zephyrine, 626 brig Florence, 989 Norfolk, Va —To Liverpool : London, May 11.—The demand for cotton has ruled active during nearly the whole of the week, yet a steady fall in prices has taken place. The amount of business done is considerable, viz., 73,160 bales ot which speculators have taken 2,300 bales, exporters 19,250 bales, and the trade 61,600 bales. To day, as compared with Saturday last, the following changes are indicated: American a decline of £d. to fd.; Brazilian, £d.; and East Indian £d. per lb.; but in other descriptions, there is no material change to notice. The following are the prices current, so far as regards American cotton : .. barks Peter D ckson, 977 Asphodel, 1,440 To Havre per bark Annie M. Goodwin, 1,140 To Narva, Prussia, per bark Carl Georg. 983 To Barcelona, per Drig Amable Tert-sa, 524 Galveston—To Liverpool, per our Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to these mar¬ and — .... .... cotton kets states 2 no European .... include the railroad receipts at Philadelphia. There have been these ports. 27@28c., and ordinary at 21@22c. Domestic Exchange has ruled more decidedly in favor of buyers, bankers checking on New York at par. The rate for commercial has been selling at discount for New York sight. Sterling Exchange closed at 149$ tor bankers. 6,272 2,246 13,262 2 221 .... 640 200 in financial circles, which checked transactions somewhat on account of the increased difficulty of negotiating exchange. Middling closes at .... ... 851 .... 6,296 < .... .... Reshipment8. t This does not Sep. 1. ... 6,096 .... 204,864 3,088 bales receipts Since .... 161 50 45,04'» 25,4'(0 44 7 week. 9,281 .... 660 8.1503 1,997 Sep. 1. 326 5,963 «... Last .... 86 - .—Baltimore.—, Since .... 28,342 .... Virginia : New York, &c* Tennessee, Kentucky, &c... * r-Philad’phia.—, ,—Boston.-—, List Since week. Sep. 1. 60,711 644 16,235 13.779 quite active and prices better. The a feverish excited feeling suspension of the First National Bank caused tember 1: Total [May 25,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 658 Philadelphia. Norfolk, Va. Total previous week. 94 , 59 3,185 • • • • 21 11 — 2,876 3,217 616 1,125 3,255 1,677 • • • • 128 42 • • • • 229 505 423 99 .... .... • • • • • • • • .... . • • • • • • • .... .... 21 21 10 10 .... .... .... .... 99 63 76 Man’f, . bales. Pkgs. 153 236 160 lbs. 68,278 33 .... 1 187 62 759 58,278 116,448 166,1*9 * For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph des patches at the close of our London letter in a previous part oi this paper.— Commercial A Financial Chronicle. 25,1867J May Below we usual table showing the total exports give our the United States, and their Tobacco from all the ports of since November 1, 1866: direction, 0f Export* Tobacco ° Oases. Bales, tcs. 316 33 1,850 6 17,S87 4,614 326 69 16 great Britain.jJjgg Ge.n?a^y 3,662 • Belgium 6.271 5.5*4 Holland Iplin Gibralt.'&c Mediterranean Aostria.. .. &c•. India, &c Africa, China, ’ * 1,565 • Indies. 358 69 596 600 •••• Honolulu, &c ' All others.. T’l since The above 46,411 18,215 15 30 li 466 50 573,006 436 3 870 10Sjl75 1,829,2S6 130,775 417 3:12,533 388,711 297 3,111 3,678 92 5 8,906 50 609 5,224 4,793,533 24,155 9,659 368 2,930 Nov. 1,186650,289 72,605 1,306 110 ••• following table indicates the ports from which the exports have been shipped : Tcs.&^-Stems-^Bxs. & Lbs Bales, crus. hhds. bis. pkgs. manfd 609 l,5i'8 4,554.45 206 1,393 20,946 8,074 12 177,07 1,53S 25 45 2,738 2,779 1,597 Hhds. Cases. From New 15,000 17,276 4 1,129 [I 1 Mexico--.- 542 97 247 fftpm.:::::: m East 609 2, 556 1,044,836 204,120 660 664 481 61 4,7CT 1,066 lbs. hhds. bales. & bxs. 35 3,854 Manfd, Pk"s. - ■ *,*» York Baltimore ^ Portland New Orleans y* ... ... Philadelphia Francisco Virginia •• San 14 3,«55 21 •• ^ ... 25 47 48 3S7 117 ... 368 23,992 9,788 E,223 4,793,533 609 2,930 generally less active this week. The large business of last week seems to have supplied for the present the wants of buyers. In leaf tobacco, Kentucky, Virginia, &c., the sales thus far for May foot up 5,200 hhds., but for the last few days the de mand has beeu less active. Nothing further has been done on account of the French contract, and it is reported that the party bolding the contract has already secured nearly or quite sufficient to till it. There has been a steady demand for ex¬ port to the Mediterranean and the north of Europe, at full market has been prices. Leaf the business In Seed brisk, prices has been much less before. Sales embrace 19 cases Connec¬ ticut, crop of 1866, 14c.; 35 cases Connecticut, crop of 1864, 20@35c.; 28 cases Connecticut, 7@8c.; 61 cases Connecti¬ cut, crop of 1865, ll£c.; 250 cases Connecticut, various lots, ll@l4c.; 47 cases Ohio, private terms; 65 cases Connecti¬ cut, crop of 1865, and 130 do., crops of 1865-’66, on private terras. Manufactured Tobacco has been quiet, and we hear of remaining about as transactions of moment. no Foreign Tobacco has been more active. 100 bales Havaua at 87^c., and 180 bales KENTUCKY Light. Common Lugs.. 4 @ 4^c. Good Luge 42£@ Common Leaf... 6 @ 7 Medium do 7>tf@ 9# .. LEAF Heavy. @ .. 5)£@ 6# 7 @ 8)4 9 @11^ “ (BOXES). 6 5 5 4 3 “ Fillers. @14 @16 Old Crop. 25 9 New York Running Lots Ohio % “ New York Fillers. Ohio and Pennsylvania 13 55 Selections..'. Fillers Pennsylvania “ Light. .10 @12c. Selections...... .15 Running “ “ (HHDS.). Good Leaf.... Fine do ED LEAF Connecticut Wrappers, The sales embrace do. at 102c. CURRENCY. QUOTATIONS IN Heavy. 12 @15 16 @18 19 @20 Crop of 1805 @70c. @55 @11 @ 8# @ 8# @10 @ 6 @30c 40 @‘)5c 5 @22 @ 6 6)£@11 5 @10 8 .. @ 5 .. _ . good “ fine “ Fine, tax paid. 80 * Black @15 @.. @ @1 25 work,medium, in bond 12Jtf@18c & fine ** 60 @70c Bright work,good medium,.. “ 25 @40c good & fiiie “ 45 @75c Bright work—common “ good “ 20 @30c 15 @40c 50 @S5c FOREIGN. Havana.—Fillers—Common. “ Good “ Fine...., RECEIPTS AT From in. Balt Hhds. Cases. Bales. NEW lore New Orleans. Ohio, &c Other.... Total . hhds. 220 199 69 2,503 62 .... 793 .... 2,991 55@1 05 60 70 NOVEMBER 1. 1866. /—Previously—, /—T’l sin. Nov.l—, hhds. hhds. pkgs. pkgs. 4,505 46,862 43,745 4,285 2,356 2,813 2,751 2,167 390 390 1,588 1,519 17,705 20,673 16,912 18,170 YORK BINGE pkgs. 3,117 3,972 Mannf. lbs. 27 113 Liverpool. Glasgow Hhds. Pkgs. • . . . .... 72 IS Havre Bordeaux Hamburg.. • • .... .... . . . . ... . 69 374 687 59 347 20 . . • . , . . . .* . , , • • . . . . 9,397 .. "20 6 .... .... . 99 • . 121 .. 2,760 751 ......’.*! . . . • .... .... Bremen Genoa " Lisbon Cadiz British N. Am. Colonies. British Guiana Cana Mexico Central America Venezuela • .... 11,8)0 • .... . .. tTf f f . • 526 exports for the 153 58,278 are made up cargo. from mani¬ 99 59 * The exports in this table to European ports fests, verified and corrected by an inspection of the ports, have been as • • 1,035 35,430 3,185 2,070 2,070 The direction of the • .... .... for the week .... 15 7 9 3 Argentine Republic Total export t week, from the other follows : 5 hhds To St. From Boston—To Valparaizo, 10 cases To Turks Island, 4 box*1?....To Hayti, 128 bales To British Provinces, 1 hhd., 11 cases, and ..9 boxes. From PhiJadelph a—To Port Spain, 11 case* To Havana, 42 bales. From To Demerara, Baltimore—To)Bremen, 700 hhds Lucia, 6 hhds. From Norfolk—To Liverpool, 94 hhds., 21 tierces, and 1 box. the market has been rather weak for in¬ supply has been large; but other grades generally active. Sales for the week 1,200 hhds. We quote per lb : Common lugs, $2 60@3 ; fair to good 8 50@5 ;. common leaf, 5(5)7 ; medium, £@10; fair to good, 11@16 ; good Ao liue, 16@20 ; faucy cutting, 25@40; fancy wrapping, 20@50. ferior grades, of which the have been firm, and the close TOBACCO band April 27. .hhds Receipts si’ce, to Mfty llco'try Stock on Receipte since, “ Tolal STATEMENT. 3,741 1,971 local 153 .hhds. 5,865 1,847 Deliveries since S tock on hand May 11.. Virginia.—At Richmond, yesterday, the breaks firm, and prices unchanged. Below we give the hhds., tierces and boxes were offered and sold as 4,018 .hhds full, market transactions. 200 were follows; working, blight $10@ Manufacturing Tobacco.—Lugs, common to medium dark $4@7 ; good dark working, $6@8 ; euu-cured, common, $£@10; suncured, good, $10@16 ; coal-cured, con men, $fc@lU; coal cued, £12@18 ; coal-cured, fancy, $20@45. Leaf—Common dark working, $6@9 ; medium dark working, 12; good dark work mg, $11@14 ; tiue and wrapping, $16@20: suncured, $15, $26@39 ; yellow wrappers, common, $20(5)25; yellow wrappers, medium to extra, $35, $100@128. Shipping Tobacco—Lugs, very common and heavy weights, 50@ 60; medium, $4 50@5 60; g-md, $6@S. $3 Leaf—English shipping, medium to continental good, $12@15; fine good, $16, $18@22; shippiog, $12,$1S@20. Stemming Tobacco—Leaf, common, $10@13; $10(5)20. advance no de¬ good lea£ $50@$86. which are o 179 hhds. * New Orleans.—With more liberal supplies a better demand has sprung up, but the bids have not been fully up to the views of holders. Jowever the sales of the week foot up about 570 hhds., embracing the following lots : 11 hhds. leaf at 8fc, 9 Clarksville leaf at 9c, 26 do at 10c, 4 light old leaf at 9^, 12 light leaf at 114c, 6 choice leaf at 18c, 24 low leaf and lugs at 7c, 13 old low leaf at 7c, 1 Western dis¬ trict at 14c, 1 Clarksville at 15c, 31 ard .88 lugs and leaf and 30 fine leaf at 30 low leaf at 7c, 1 do at 7c, 19 lugs and leaf at 7c, 1 lugs 54c, 1 admitted at 9c, 2 old admitted at 9c, 2 lugs and 3 leaf Clarks¬ ville at 10^o, 16 Western district and Clarksville at 10^c per lb; the balance private terms—quotations ranging from 3-£ to 20c for light, and 4 to 21c for heavy. Receipts for the week 626 hhds. Exports for the week, 35 hhds to New York and 3 to Galveston. Stock in Petersburg the market has been unusually active, at an grades. For soft and inferior tobacco there is mand, and sell very low. We quote good lugs from $4@$9 ; ; il 1@$15 ; very good, $16@$27 ; fine, $85@$44 ; faucy, he receipts continue to increase, Ihe larger portions of inferior grades. Receipts this week, 364. hhds; last week, total since October 1,3212 hhds. At on all desirable at on warehouses and on shipboard 2,80S hhds. Maryland.—At Baltimore receipts are larger both The market opened very brisk for Maryland, two days there was much competition among buyers. and Thursday there was some abatement, though Ohio. of Maryland and and for the first On Wednesday the market closed very strong and active. Of Ohio, we notice sales of 220 hhds., mostly receipts, within our raDge. Kentucky is 6till inactive. Inepec tions this week 1,662 hhds. Maryland, (10 re-inspected) 677 Ohio, 37 Kentucky, and 16 Virginia—total 2,291 hhds.. Cleared same time 700 hhds. to Bremen and 11 to West Indies. Stock on hand 18,272 hhds. new 1 25@2 50 70 Havana.—Wrappers 75@ 85 Yara .: 90@1 00 Yara, average lots 60@ /—This week—% YORK.* —, 10 manufactured. Black work—com., tax paid. 25 FROM NEW OF TOBACCO EXPORTS Kentucky.—At Louisville 62,007 45 168 29 Nov. 1.... 52,647 Total since 530 ... 31 from New York the exports of tobacco are past week: ... Boston The following for the States since No vein- from the United her 1, 1866. Hhds. The Stems, Cer’s &,—Stems—> To 659 THE CHRONICLE 124 26,255 853 124 853 We quote: Maryland frosted to com’n $1.50@ 3.00 Maryland grou’dleav. new $3.00@ 5.00 u eonnd common. 3 50@ 4.00 Ohio inferior to good com. 3.00@ 6.00 brown and greenish. 6.00@ 8.00 .. good “ 5.00@ 5.50 medium & fine red.. 8.00@15.00 middling 6.00@ 8.00 com. to med. spang. “ 8.C0@15.00 good tonne b’wn 10.00@15.00 fine spangled 15.00@20.00 fancy 17.00@25.00 “ “ “ ‘k “ “ “ 64,651 29,246 68,623 Per 100 lbs. Per 100 lbs. “ upper country... 3.00@30.00 “ yellow do, fancy . 20.00@30,QQ [May 25,1867. THE CHRONICLE 660 Flour► BREADSTUFFS. bbls. Chicago Friday, May 24,1867, P. M. depressed all the week, but closes with steadiness, owing to tho fact that expected supplies have The market has been more not 8,420 5,219 7,868 1,250 Oats. bush. 58,020 152,936 5,099 1,300 55,000 563,818 28,448 179,199 21,730 63,960 85,271 21,339 10,098 18,182 31,460 17,302 1,983 - , 272,355 256,300 846,655 186,i06 170,592 1,059,110 Corresponding week,’66 91,670 964,139 985,696 139,682 Since Jan. 1, 1867 1,054,270 3,077,740 7,760,435 1,888,840 Same time, 1866 1,108,185 5.323,510 6,021,258 2,607,329 Totals Previous week forward. come 33,998 Milwaukee Toledo Detroit 1 Cleveland Com. bush. Barley. bush. Wheat. Flour has further declined 50c. per bbl. on the average. But receipts continue light, and yesterday and to-day the 56,755 48,273 STOCK OF FLOUR AND GRAIN IN STORE Rye. bush. bush. 9,882 1,274 357 l‘,002 4,765 25.052 11,513 26,536 16,395 10,918 45,140 486,320 372,206 258,539 846,406 AT CHICAGO. trade have The arrivals at the West¬ May 19, May 18 May 19, May 18, 1866. 1867. 1867. 1866. but the shipments East¬ Flour, bbls... 330,132 760,677 Oats, hush 41,406 67,550 46,863 157,770 876,138 110,782 Rye, bush ward are still on a very small scale, and prices in Chicago, Wheat, bush.. 95,612 124.670 Cora, bush 1,607,130 1,478,523 Barley, bush.. Buffalo and Milwaukee, Oswego are on a par with this market, Liverpool, 10th May.—We have hud a week of glorious growing with no account for transportation, but for some days have weather and are rapidly making up for lost time. Turnip sowing too has had a better chance than at one time appeared likely. The mar¬ ruled extremely dull. kets, however, maintain their firm appearance; in France they have Wheat has been in very limited demand. The unfavorable slightly retrograded. Tuesday—There were again New York orders in the market for Californian Wheat, which consequently advanced Id course of the flour market has caused millers to withdraw ; but @2d per cental. No change in Flour. Indian Corn dull and 3d@6d holders have been very firm, and the prices show very little lower. To-day we had a very poor attendance and little animation. White Wheats, especially Chilian, were quite 2d cheaper. Flour too change from last wreek, except that for Prime No. 2 Club, which dull and 6d@ls per sack lower. Indian Corn was offered at 42« then sold at $2 75 only $2 70 is now paid. The receipts at 9d for mixed American, with a small demand only. farmers’ deliveries of wheat. Milwaukee and Chicago continue liberal, and we learn that at Week ending May 4, 1867 63,791 “ 45s. 9(1. Same time 1866 Richmond, Baltimore and Philadelphia the receipts for some IMPORTS. I. Coro, Flour heat, days have been larger than was expected, so much so that bbls. sacks. qrs. qrs. 1 20,209 Richmond has a surplus of flour that she sends to New York. United States and Canada 166 8,071 France, Spain and Portugal This market is still waiting supplies of California Wheat, North Europe 2^539 Mediterranean and Black Sea.. 1200 1,100 5,S55 ern purchased more freely. markets have been more liberal, .... ... .. was .. . * , • . . ••• . . ... which overdue now are the to extent of about 120,000 Other bushels. places .... 201 Total for week 14,157 58,284 Total since 1st January Same time 1866 Corn declined 9,171 132,718 226,992 22,914 281,888 320,568 early in the wreek to $1 15 for prime new IMPORT OF GRAIN INTO THE UNITED KINGDOM. mixed, $1 25 for prime old do. The break in the canal at I. corn, Wheat, Oth. grn., FI. & Ml. Qrs. Qrs. Qrs. Cwt. Schenectady has been repaired, but we have as yet no arrivals Sept. 1,1866, to April 30,1S67... 3,885,067 1,630,221 3,169,081 2,488,244 from it. The local trade has been compelled to enter the mar¬ Same time last year 3,518,645 1,620,096 2,179,915 3,608,953 ket, and prices have advanced 7@10c. per bushel from the lowest point. A material decline in freights to Great Britain GROCERIES. has favored shipments, but supplies have been so deficient that Friday, May 24, 1867—P. M. the shipments of the week do not exceed 65,000 to all Great The grocery trade has been quite active and encouraging Britain. The receipts of corn at the lake ports have, for the current week, been less than half as large as the corresponding during the week, especially to holders of goods. The leading articles are firmer, while some are decidedly higher. Stocks period of last year. But the Ohio Valley is sending forward are in first hands not liberal supplies to Baltimore and other markets, from which large in any article, but in nearly all are Unfavorable much reduced. advices from some crops and a our supplies are partially derived. Oats have been firm with an active speculation. Rye has firmer gold market tends to higher prices. The trade demand been steady. Barley has been more active, part for export; has been fair for consumption, although in most instances a prime Canada being taken at $1 05 in bond. Canada Peas rigid economy is practiced, purchases being made only for the have been held at $1 30 in bond, but are now held firm at supply of immediate wants. The imports of all the leading articles continue to be about on an average scale, and are $1 35. The following are closing quotations : generally above rather than below the imports of last year for Flour, Superfine$ bbl $10 35®11 40 Milwaukee Club $2 40® 2 85 the period from Jan. 1st to date. The fact that stocks in first Extra State 11 50®13 50 Red Winter 3 10® hands are steadily decreasing, while jobbers are not accumulat¬ ShippingR. hoop Ohio. 12 75®14 00 3 30® 3 35 Amber do .... Extra Western, mon to comvv good 11 65® 15 00 Double Extra Western and St. Louis 15 50®18 50 Southern supers 13 00@14 40 Southern, fancy and ex. 14 60®17 75 Rye Flour, fine and super¬ fine 8 40® 9 25 Corn meal, Jersey and 6 00® 6 40 Brandywine Wheat, per Chicago bushel Spring 2 35® 2 80 White Com, Western Mixed.... Western Yellow Western White Southern White .... 1 Rye Oats, Western cargoes... Jersey and State Barley AT Peas, Canada 1 White beans 1 26,345 5,250 Wheat, bush.... Rye, bush. Barley, &c. FOREIGN EXPORTS FROM . bbls. Ot. Ur it week. since Jan. 1 bbls. 312,820 25 N. A. Col. week.. since Jan. 1 3,320 41,551 950 13,461 We*t Ind. week. since Jan. 1 2,252 302 87,692 46,145 Total exp’t, week 9,672 since Jan. 1, 1867 172,409 1,352 63,511 . Since Jan. l,from Boston Philadelphia Baltimore.. bush. bush. 400,405 51,979 63,940 5,986 12,715 11,145 43,900 ^19,644 . 14,086 JAN.l. Barley. Oats, bush. Corn, bush. bush. 116,406 3,47^570 .*.*.*! 24’,022 1,045 675 3,829 600 .... 8,302 .... Tea has been less active than last week, no large lots having changed hands; but the market is steady for home use, especially for fine green and black teas. The demand at the close is fairly active. The sales for the week include 1,710 half chests green, 1,760 do Japans, and 1,714 Oolongs from first hands. import includes only the cargo of the “ Lord Clyde ” from Amoy consisting of 9,138 lbs. Congou, 548,917 lbs. Oolongs and 3,754 43,782 .... 2,758 257,808 1,581 4,454 450,695 1,201 623,085 shows the receipts 18: lbs. Pekoe. SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN. * >—IMP’TS AT N. To Atlantic ports. Direct . To San at New Mar. 1 to Junelto Same FranYork. in ’65, cisco, Mar. 15. Mar. 1. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. pkgs. , , 1,869,236 1,136,6061 472,033 468,163 10,857,437 9,935,319 Congou & Sou. Pouchong Oolong&Ning Hyson 39,365 1,533 118,072 .Young Hyson.. 333,487 Imperial Gunpowder.... 57,982 62,385 Japans ' Total 642,477 62,108 35,944 745,004 132,084 1,244,511 6,833,758 1,600,348 1,645,653 6,623,794 1,219,924 1,527,124 5,862,191 12,078 Pekoe Twankay...... Hyson skin... 618,824 1,093,330 5,458,983 17b,493 8,591,940 8,754 388,690 24,588 48,716 Y. A BOSTON.-* Indir’ct At N. York. » At Boston. pfcg. all sorts From G’t Bri 13,<21U 86 ' From Europe 112 j’ofu’mfi 4,954,016 From E’tlnd. 255 1,110,181 1,160,546 From otb.p rts 4,044,094 56 10,415 31,143,657 28,955,584 J 48,746 22,730,364 13,378 10,760 COFFEE. 100 253,315 837,695 121,8603,558,653 683,5842,357,342 .... Weekly Receipts at Lake Ports.—The following at the following lake ports for the week ending May 28,520 374,795 594,680 SINCE 6,515 813,016 37,019 128,620 328,494 183,387 TEA. 927,275 AND FOR THE WEEK Rye, five months. do ..." 252 170 2,076 time, 1866 3 25 667,325 138,580 98,715 3,715 199,170 Flour, C. meal, Wheat, To same 28,745 264,370 14,530 34,060 128,855 4,2>5 YORK 1 30 1 35 1 45 1866For week. S’e Jan.l. 420.305 400 NEW . would show that thedemand for consumption has been fully equal to the imports for the past ing any excessive quantities, The weeks 68,715 1,058,680 7,550 23,170 .. 1 30 1 80 88 93 follows: 498,215 123,205 2,000 238,255 busn. as ® 28® 60® 86® 92® lo@ 25® 30® 75® NEW YORK. v Corn meal, bbls. 1 1 -1867 For week. b’e Jan. 1. Flour, bbl s 1 Malt...... The movement in breadstuff's at this market has been RECEIPTS 3 45® 3 60 1 25® 1 33 ® Coffee is fairly active and with light stocks of all kinds in first hands, prices continue firm. The advices from Rio,, however, indicate liberal shipments, probably quite sufficient for the wants of trade at this port. The sales for the week include 15,250 bags Rio, 650 do Laguayra, anl 800 do Maracaibo. The market closes quiet but steady at ou quotations. Coffee. Imports of the week include 4,600 bags Rio per w Uller," 8,600 do per - Elise,” 4,000 do per “West Indian,” 8,864 do per “Merrimac,” total, 20,364 bags. There were also 2,851 bags received from Laguayra, and 468 of sundries. At Baltimore, imports amount to 11,856 bags Rio, and at New Orleans, 3,0.57 bags of Rio. The imports since January 1, and stock in first hands May 21, are follows: as York, bags Philadelphia ^ Baltimore 13,069 8G,0»6 52,882 3,200 6,000 2,500 3,000 366,090 19,969 Orleans “ New “ “ Galveston Mobile 44 Savannah 3.900 7,730 Total .. Sugar. import. Stock. Import, 781 19,454 bags 21,773 Java, 5,000 Ceylon 945i 17,582 4,596 Singapore, Maracaibo, “ 10,694 44 16,067 7,756 Lagnayra 520 6,220 St. Domingo,14 16,238 531 Other, “ 8,193 2,405 214,712 44 85,356 99,526 16,058 Total SUGAR. been quite active for speculation and home trade during the week. The advices from Cuba are of a lighter crop, while gold is firmer and the demand for refined sugars more liberal, causing an ad¬ vance of *@* cent on all grades during the week. The sales are 8,500 hhds. Cuba and Porto Rico, and 3,200 boxes Havana. The imports for the week at the several ports have not been very large, with the exception of Cuba sugar at this port, the details are as HDuty : on raw or brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 3; on white or clayed, above No. 12 and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 81 above 15 and not over 20,4; on refined,5; and on Melado, 21 cents $ lb. do do de 18 to 15 12 © 12} Porto Rico $ lb iCi© 12| do do do 16 to 18 131© 18} Cuba, inf. to com. refining 91© 10} do do 19 to 20 14}© 14} do do fair to good ... It do 10}© 14 © 15 do do white do fair to good grocery... 10i@ Ilf Loaf © 161 do pr. to choice do ... Ill© 121 © 1?} do centrifugal 91© 111 Granulated Crushed and powdered ©151 do Melado 6j© 8 © 141 Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7to 9 10 © 101 White coffee, A © 14 do 10 to 12 101© Ilf Yellow coffee do do .... Sugar has follows: Other sorts, hhds. Cuba , boxes, hhds. . , At— Ne* York.... 534 Portland Boston 114 189 830 11,529 .* 2,997 4,894 . Stocks May 21, AtBaltimore New Orleans.; Cuba. , 2,182 1,178 856 • • • Imports since Jan. 1 Portland do Boston do Philadelphia do Baltimore do • New Orleans do Total import ♦hhds. 44,441 1,078 2,414 15,579 18,471 10,392 29,307 6,327 7,278 12,207 5,798 3,828 5,173 11,439 1,118 118,534 3,365 22,299 34,480 18,717 6,916 112,381 162,941 41,370 204,311 18,861 66,798 99,673 Includes barrels and tierces 951 pimento, 15; and ginger root, 5 cents $ lb. Cassia, in mats... gold $ lb . I Pepper, 42© Ginger,race and Af(gold) 18© l*} I Pimento, 8'}© 82i© • 220 272 • 54,540 10,051 14,107 54,699 159 4,056 8,860 1867 1866 1865 ...... 81,482 Stocks —Total export- week. 37,794 Since Jan. 1. boxes. 631,367 489,186 124,186 193,895 37,710 587,460 491,458 133,304 54,007 616,536 408,519 cent ad val. Raisins, Seedless. .$ Icask 8 50 © do Layer $ box 3 65 @3 70 do Bunch 3 60 ©.... Currants $ B> 111© 11} 28 © 30 Citron, Leghorn 201© 2i} Prunes, Turkish © 18 Dates Moiasses has been only moderately active, with no teresting feature of change particularly in¬ from our last report. The sales are chiefly 47 © 42 Almonds,Languedoc...... Porto At— Sew York... Cuba. Rico. Other. .hhds. 8,538 .. 166 Portland 1,363 Boston 5,133 Stocks, May 21, 25 271 220 -Porto Rico-t-Other Foreign.♦hhds. ♦hhds. Cuba. *hhds. 2,575 11,066 stock 6,150 r.Y.,imp’ts since Jan. 1.43,038 44 »ortland 4 4 26,36S !7ew York, 44 44 44 laltimore 44 44 few Orleai s 44 44 ‘hiladelphia “ “ 35,410 44 35,533 44 445 2,899 127 175 7,586 Includes barrels and tierces 14,012 488 649 16,169 67 • Sicily, Soft Shell Shelled $ box $ ht. box do 21 © 211 4 86 © 3a © .. .. 29 © 80 THE DRY 1*1© 18} Brazil Nuts 10 © 12 # qr. box Figs, Smyrna.... go d $ lb in steadily held. Dried Fruit— Blackberries 8,937 immediate uses, but prices are Domestic dried are in fair request at Tea. Duty: 25 cents per lb. r-Dnty pa?d —< Hyson, Common to fair... do do 80 @1 05 Superior to fine.... 1 15 @1 5 Ex fine to finest... 1 40 @1 65 85 @1 10 8uper.toflne..l 15 @1 40 Y’gHyson, Com. to fair... do Ex line to finest/! 45 @1 75 do ' unp. & Imp., Com. to fairl 00 @1 15 *’'■ do Sup. to flne.l 25 ©1 60 do do Ex. r.toflnest.1 65 90 H.8k.fcTw’kay,0, to fair. 65© 70 do do Sup. to lino 75 © 80 _ .—Duty 1 aid—* do do Ex f. to fln’st 85 © 90 Uncol. Japan, Com. to fair. 80© 90 do Sup’r to flne.l 00 ©1 05 Ex f. to finestl 10 ©1 20 do Oolong, Common to fair.... do Superior to fine.. . do Ex fine to finest ..l Bono. & Cong., Com. to fair do Snp'rtoflne. do Ex t to finestl 50 40 © 44 Unpeeled do 10 © 14 46 © 50 Cherries, pitted, new.... unsettled and de¬ clining during the entire week. Prices of domestic goods are The dry goods trade has continued dull, decidedly lower, but without stability or demand to tone give to the market. This applies especially to domestic cotton goods, the demand for which seems to be light, and not so a These are steady been kept supply has down to the actual wants market has diminish pro¬ few special and prime brands. in price, as the of the country. In lower grades of goods the been over supplied, and until the manufacturers duction to actual wants the market will remain depressed are not and quiet, the present produc¬ low grades and old styles yet Exports to Liverpool pkgs. D, Goods, 75 © 85 90 ©l n0 £0 ©1 6 > 65 © 75 85 ©l 15 25 ©1 50 Val. packages. 18 *2.666 200 31,747 Glasgow in light demand, chiefly for small parcels* Prices show but little variation. The offerings of foreign green fruits quality. essentially unchanged rates. We annex quotations: 6}© 1”} © 13 16 Pared Peaches FROM -FROM NEW YORK.~ FRUITS. less and of poorer $ 15 Apples GOODS TRADE. Domestics. Foreign Dried Fruits are are 13 © 14 Walnuts, Friday, P. M., May 24, 1867. Brazil only light demand for 11 © 111 Filberts, Sicily * SPICES. are © 26 24 • • • reduced to hogsheads. - Spices 29 501 174,493 1,030 11,688 2,114 “ 26,558 Total ♦ 2,343 21} 191 407 67 Philadelphia.. hhds. 4,313 Baltimore New Orleans © and worked off. Foreign goods are dull, the sales generally having been at or below actual cost. The imports are comparatively light, but yet not as light as they should be, since there is the greatest economy practiced in all depart¬ ments of the trade and consumption, and considerable anxiety N. O. bbls. among jobbers to reduce stocks to as small proportions as The exports 6,831 possible in the present declining state of prices. of domestics and dry goods are again liberal this week, as the 1*,122 following details will show : 984 BOSTON Cuba. Rico. Other. and imports since January 1 are as follows: At toston, At- " Sardines grades, and foot up about 2,800 hhds. of all kinds, at prices unsettled. Woolen goods are still within the range of our quotations. tion is not large, but the stocks of Imports of the week have been as follows, viz.: Porto for the better (gold) 21}© 1° © Raspberries 29 © 80 Provence do do do confined to MOLASSES. -(gold) Jamaica.(gold) 1 85 20; pepper Raisins, Currants, Figs, Plums and Prunes, 5; Shelled Almonds, Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 11, Filberts and Walnuts, 3 cents $ lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25 reduced to hogsheads. -Expts to U. S. week. Since Jan. 1. week. 47 © 50 571© 60 Fruit* Sardines and Matanzas: . Duty : “ 18.—In the latter part of the week the market has been quite active and closes firm at 7* rs. for No. 12. The following will show the receipts, exports and stocks at Havana Rec’d this 8B I Cloves.'. hhds. . . • Spices. cents; nutmegs, 50; eassia and cloves, (gold) • do Clayed..., Barbadoes .. 48 © 10 Duty: mace, 40 Havana, May Year. @ Nutmegs, No.l....(gold) 54,566 108,727 57,153 . 55 © 70 Mace.. For’gn, Orleans, Total bags. bags,&c * $ gallon. $ gall. Rorts, Brazil, Manila. New boxes. ♦hhds. *hlids. *hhds. 36,876 66,941 ^ N. York stock Same date 1866 * 465 923 Molasses* Doty : 8 cents New Orleans Porto Rico Cuba Muscovado Other and imports since January 1, are as follows : Other At— Cuba v boxes. hhds. , Philadelphia... vessels from the place also, the growth of countries this side the Cape indirectly in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents ^ lb; all other 10 $ cent ad valorem In addition. Java, mats and bags .». • gold 24}© 25} Rio, prime, duty paid ...gold 18}© 19 do good © .. gold 18 © 181 Native Ceylon 171© 181 do fair gold 161© 17} Maracaibo..... do ordinary IT*© 181 gold I5i© 16| Laguayra^ St. Domingo... .... do fair to g. cargoes ~ 151© 16 .gold 16 © 17 of its growth or produotlon; of Good Hope when imported York, At Boat, At New Stock. Import. New Duty: When imported direct In American or equalized OTHSR 80RTS. COPPER. OP RIO 661 THE CHRONICLE. £5,1867.] May ••• Havre •••* Cuba Mexico Cent. America British Provinces.. •••• Total this week. Since Jan Same “ 1 time 1866... 44 7 }0 1S6 1 Val. pkgs. 1,074 7,900 1,280 34,575 202 I860.... 39,273 63 ••• 218 $34,413 674,963 1,430 207,162 213 2,825 1,684 cases. $.... ...; 4,134 » Domestics. Dry Goods $45,031 605,691 539,318 Brown Sheetings and Shirtings are still clining tendency, although there is but little week. Agents quote at last week’s prices 63 3,215 1,569 21,318 inactive, and show a de¬ decided change from last but jobbers are offering in small quantities at the following prices, two per cent off for cash. At¬ lantic N 3*4 11, Indian Union do 11, Boott H Orchard L do 13, Commonwealth O do 9f Indian Head do 15£, Atlantic V 7-8 14f, Atlantic E do 15b Pacific E do 15*, Tremont E do 12, Bedford R do 11}, Boott O do 14, Indian Orchard W do 14, Lawrence G do 14, Pepperell Odo 14, Indian Head 4*4 18, Princeton A do 171, Pacific extra do 17*. doHdo 17*, do L do 16, Atlantic H do 17*, do L do 16*, Lawrence E do 15*. do 0 do 17, do F do 15, Stark A do 17J, Amoskeag A do 17*, do B do 17, Medford do 16*, Pittsfield A do 14*, Kenebeck do 10b Roxbury A do 16, Indian Orchard ,£ B do 15, Nashua |D do 14*, Pepperell E do 19, Great Falls M do do 13, Pepperell N dc 14, W. 5-4 [May 25,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 662 IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK, Albion do 14, Dwight W do 14J, Pepperell R do 17, Exeter A do 14$, Macon do 17, Shannon do 15, Laconia O 9-8 The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Ma 17, Pequot do 22, Indian Orchard A 40 inch do 18, do O 16, Nashua 23, 1867, and the corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866, have been as 28, Naumkeag W do 23£, Utica do 40, Pepperell 7-4 35, Utica follows: do 46, Pepperell 9-4 47Pepperell 10-4 57^, Utica 11-4 80. entered fob consumption for the week ending may 23, Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are lower for medium and 1867 1865. 1866. low grades while prime makes are steady. Jobbers are making small ST-1867* Value. Value. Pkgs. Pkgs. Pkgs. Vain sales at the following prices. Globe 3-4 91, Kingston do 9, Boott R Manufactures of wool... 494 $152,548 599 $243,410 547 $168,313 do 11£, do H do 12|, Waltham X 7-8 154, Pntnam B do 12, Great 303 do cotton.. 265 75,088 105,046 356 118,790 107 do silk.... 253 202,585 96,911 151 Falls M do 16, do S do 14, do A do 16, do J do 14, Lawrence A 139,450 777 do flax.... 254 65,690 139,776 374 do 14, Hill’s Semp. Idem, do 20, Boot C do 15, Bartlett 31 inch 154, 157 Miscellaneous dry gooas. 103 32,971 48,417 87 64,010 Bartlett 33 do 164, Lewiston G 4-4 14, Pocumtuck do 15, Putnam A Total 1,369 $528,882 1,943 do 12L Newmarket A do 16, do C do 17£, Great’Falls K do 15^, Bart$633,560 1,515 $589,308 letts do 184, James Steam do 19, Indian River XX do 18$, AttawauWITHDRAWN FROM WAREHOUSE AND THROWN INTO THE market DUBm* gan XX do 16$, Lawrence B do 16, Hope do 18, Tip Top do 214, THE SAME PERIOD. Blackstone A A 16, Amoskeag A do 22£, Boot B do 19, Forestdale Manufactures of wool... 727 $322,029 528 $212,284 317 1126,722 do 21, Masonville do 22^, do XX do 24, Androscoggin L do 224, Lons¬ 357 do cotton.. 111,030 283 92,632 422 139,922 dale do 22 L Wauregan do 23, Bates XX do 26, Arkwright do 24, do silk S3 94,129 116 136,972 96 93,544 do flax.... 564 477 144,443 178 106,046 Lyman J do 22 J, Wamsutta H do 324, do O do 824, Atlantic Cambric Miscellaneous 47,254 441 dry goods. 289 24,236 94 18,385 12,766 do 29, New York Mills do 40, Hill do 22, Amoskeag 42 inch 244, Wal¬ tham do 214, Wamsutta 9-8 374, Naumkeag W 6-4 21, Boot W do 21, Total '2,925 $695,867 498 $566,319 1,454 $420,208 528,882 1,943 633,560 Bates do 274, Wamsutta do 424, Amoskeag 46 inch 27, Waltham Add ent’d forconsmnpt’nl,369 1,515 689,308 30. Pepperell do 324, Allendale do 324, Utica do 45, Waltham TotalthrowmiDoninak’t3,394 $1,224,749 1,342 $1,199,879 2,969 $1^009516 8-4 424, Pepperell do 424, Alleudale do 374, Pepperell 9-4 62$, Utica FOR WAREHOUSING DURING SAME ENTERED THE do 75, Allendale do 474. Bates 10-4 do 66, Waltham do 60, Allen¬ PERIOD. dale do 574, Pepperell do 624, Utica do 774, Pepperell 11-4 do 724269 Manufactures of wool... 522 $198,096 $126,367 407 $157,364 Ticks continue inactive, and prices are declining slowly. 110 63,969 do cotton.. 210 39,187 207 Amoskeag 62,942 107 34,139 138,813 33 do silk 38 A C A 46, iio A 86, do B 81, do D 21, do C 26, Brunswick 174. Black34,515 216 64,960 do 67,475 flax » 266 241 68,769 stone River 174, Hamilton 314, Thorndike 1^, Pearl River 424, Pitts¬ 4 24 7,349 Miscellaneous dry goods. 2,435 27 12,831 field 104, York 32 inch 424, do SO do 814, Cordis A A A 314, Everett 706 912 $368,503 Total 863 $374,277 21, Boston A A 274 Swift River 174 Albany I04. $336,421 528,882 1,W3 633,560 1,515 589,308 Stripes are lower for prime brands. Amoskeag 254 an(l 264, Uncas- Add ent’d for consumpt’n 1,369 ville 18 and 19, Whitteuton A A 26 and 264, do A 3-3 224 do B B Total entered at the port 2,232 $897,385 1,659 $907,717 2,427 $925,729 18, do C 16, Pittsfield 3-3 104, Pemberton Awn 424, Haymaker 16 and 17, Everett 27 inch 18, Massabesic 6-8 264, Boston 14 4 and 154, IMPORTS American 14 and 15, Eagle 124 an<i 1^4, Hamilton 25, Jewett City 144 and 164, Sheridan Q 14. (OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND SPECIE) AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR TH* Checks are quite nominal. A few makes are lower. Park Mills Red WEEK ENDING MAY 17, 1867. 20, Lanark 4x2 29 iuch 18, Lanark fur I84, Union 50, 4x2 30, do 50 2x2 30, do 20 4-2 274, do 20 2-2 274, Caledonia 16 inch 28, do 11 inch [The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] Pkgs. Value. 22, Kennebeck 274, Wamsutta 25, Star No. 600 154, do No. 800 Pkgs. Value. pkgs. Value, 19 2x2 204, do No 900 4-2 24, Cameron No. 90 24, do No. 80 24. Musical 5,127 L< ood, M. China, Glass & E. 6S0 ware— Optical 3 Denims show but little change from last week. The demand is 203 Rank:::--.653 H» 180 1 China 9,072 Surgical light. Amoskeag 36, Haymaker 28 inch 16, do brown 15, York 28 inch Rosewood.... gbkj Earth’nw’e .1075 43,943 Jewelry, *fcc.— 30, Warren browu 27 inch 15, Boston Mfg. Co. 29 inch 134, Pearl River 12 15,931 Palm leaf Glass 15,597 32,804 Jewelry 12409 19 41,2881 Glassware.... 38 2,787 Watches 80, Monitor 16, Manchester Co. 20, Arlington 18> Blue Hill 124, Mount 15, do S do 14, 6-4 , , . , .... .... . , Glass Vernon 25, Pawnee 114. Brown Drills are in light export demand, and prices are hut slightly changed. Winthrop 15, Amoskeag 19, Laconia 21, Pep¬ perell 19, do fine jean 214, Stark A 19, Massabeaic 16, Bennington 204, Woodward duck bag 28, National bags 31, Stark A do 574, Liberty do 31. Print Cloths are ville O. K. 124. Lawns and Ginghams are in only moderate request. Lancaster Ginghams sell at 28 cents, Hartford 17, Hampden 19, Caledonia 164, Glasgow 21, Clyde 124, Berkshire 18, Roanoke 124, Bates 21, Man¬ chester 15. Canton Flannels are inactive and quite nominal at this time. La conia Bro.28, Rockland do 16, Naumkeag do 25, Nashua A 20, Extra Plush 224. Corset Jeans are in light demand .at steady prices. Andros¬ coggin 124, Bates colored I24, do bleached 124, Naumkeag 20, Pepperel 21, Naumkeag satteen 224, Laconia 20, Indian Orchard 16, Rockport 20, Ward 18. Cambrics and Silesias are also steady in prices. Washington cambrics sell at 13 cents, Victory 11, do A 18, do high colors 14, Fox Hill 104, Superior 10, Pequot 124, Waverly 124, S. 8. tfc Sons cambrics at 16$, do high colors I84, White Rock 164, Masonville I64, and Indian Orchard Silesias 19, Ward do at 19. Muslin Delaines are less changed iu price but the business is very paper Lowell 20, Hamilton Co. 20, Manchester dark 20, Pacific dark 20, Armures dark 23, High colors 28, Pacific Merinos 40, Mourning 23,. small. Shepherd checks 20, Spragues 19, Skirtings 80. Linseys are inactive at this time. Westerly, 324, Park 45 inch 324, do 60 do 374, do 65 do 424, Miners’ Flannel 86' and 40, Rob Roy 24, White Rock 314, Black Rock 324- small demand, but without change in price. Farmer’s and Mechanics’ Cassimeres 45, Pemberton d&t 424 Rodman’s Kentucky Jean 474, Plow, L <fe Anvil ^38, York 25 to 324, are also in very New York Mills 574, Whitteuden d<fct 274. Ladies Sackings are in fair demand, and prices are unchanged. Leicester 1 55, Middlesex 1 55, Garibaldi rep 1 o7$, Excelsior 1 50, Raritan rep 1 374, Glenham 1 50. Carpets are inactive at previous prices. Velvets, J. Crossley’s best $3 60, do A1 qual. 8 35, do patent 2 85; body Brussels, Roxbury 2 76, do Bigelow 2 60 ; Tapestry. Brussels, G. Croseley 1 80, Lowell, ex. 3 p 2 00, do super 1 65, do med sup 1 40, Hartford Carp. Co, ex. 3-ply 2 05, do Imp. 3-ply 1 95, do superfine 1 55, Med. and low pri. Ingrain 1(5)1 80. American Linen is in fair demand at steady rates.J Alum Anoline ; . Bark Peruv. .165 quiet at 9 cents for 64x64 square cloth. Prints are less irregular than last week. A fair demand prevails for the desirable styles but generally trade is inactive. American 15, Amoskeag dark 14, do purple 16$, do shirting 144, do palm leaf 16, Merrimac D dark 15 & 154, do purple 18, do W dark 18 & 19, do purple 19, do piuk 19, Sprague’s 154 do purple 16, do shirting I64. do pink 16, do turk’y red 16$, do blue check 16, do solid 144, do indigo blue 164, London Mourning 14 4, Simpson Mourning 144, Amoskeag Mourning 14. Dunnell’s 15, Arnolds 124, Gloucester 15, Wamsutta 114, Pacific 154, Cocheco 17, Lowell 12$, Naumkeag 12, Hamilton 16, Victory 124, Home 11, Empire State 9, Wauregan light 164, Belle¬ Cottonades 19,190 Leather, Hides, »fcc.— plate.. 122 Drugs, &c.— Alkali.........12 Ammonia ....20 / Barytes.. .. .240 Blea powd.. .156 386 1,051 1,038 1,712 tartar.70 .159 Chickory 13,678 ... Puhehs . . 3,236 860 ... Gambier.... .630 Glycerine 7,362 Gums.crude ..19 1,914 26,863 4,624 Jalap 6,836 41,659 Madder .... Wines 193 Magnesia 16 Oils 6 do ess 117 do linseed..283 do olive... 1299 baskets 1,974 175 237 514 Soda, hi crb..250 1,026 do sal ....280 do ash ......74 1,435] 31 Sulph copper.22 Sponges Sumac Vermillion .. Verdigris 30 .31 9 Other 1,290 480 91 17,933 .595 5,650 .. 2,501 2,2101 290 182 868 2,237 6,531 Bronzes Chains & anchors .74 .... ..77 Hatters’ goods. 3 Fruits, «fcc. . Citron Figs 73,387 491 5 226 420 8,084 Instruments— Mathematical. .1 2,7*6 «1?3 . Corks c 104 704 398 4.341 894 Fancy goods.... Dlour, snlph.... 48,284 %q ejg 4.OI8 Feathers Fire crakers.... .. P!a* Pl8h*.; Furniture 17 1 grain Gunny cloth.662 Hemp 891 Honey...... 102 Hops 20 .96 4,271 Ind. rubber..636 1656 25,074| 3521 20,421 tons .......141 8,099 Iron, hoop, tons Iron, Pig, tons ... Iron, RR. tons Iron, sheet, Iron, other, 334 tons 13.098 Lead, pigs. .6578 Metal goods Needles.. Nickel Old metal Platina Per. caps . 39,178 8,091 .9 3,985 5 3,365 5,221 4 10,273 .43 8,280 20 1,802 Saddlery 7 Steel 4,303 62,066| Tin, bxs..ll,963 79,386 do slabs, 3275, 271,674 Wire 524 42,32s| 4,836 Cassia Mustard 3,569 539 10,740 6,993 132 8 1,069 3,528 7,152 Potatoes Provisions 3,826 1,076 1193 34,488 6,114 Salt 9,464 Statuary 2 029 Sago 3,386 Seeds 4,216 Sago flour 2,048 Linseed.. t 7270 25,442 Soap 950 2,371 Sugar, bb s & 9380 458,254 hhds, Sugar, bxs. & 6313 119,248 bgs Rags Rope Trees & plants.. 3,175 18,302 Twine Brazil wood .... Cam Cedar Cork Fustic 14,589 1,178 1,849 1,845) 459, 8,790 3,975 Paper hang...vl Perfumery... .22 PlPe8., 10,713 133 5,211 Marble & man. do 2,468 Pumice stone... 360 Plaster ’ 397 Maccoroni.. .345 738 Molasses ...4204 113,612 Oakum, bis...49 650 Oil paintings. 10 4,799 78 '. 19.066 1,296 23,541 Machinery... .13 2,459 Engravings... 13 Paper 617 Books S;655 1,324 ifiq 5,043 14,452 2,050 Guano, tons.200 8,744 22,417 87,931 Other 1,725 Woods— serves 4,95? Cigars Coal, tons.. 1374 .69 Guns Hardware... .150 Oranges Prunes Raisins Sauces and pre¬ 111 805 i$j 3,052 16,186 32,245 Pineapples 575 Cutlery Lemons Nuts 24,303] 20,307 Bair.. Haircloth Nutmeg ; 4,608 Pepper 7,225 Stationery, <fec.— 1,420 80 403 | ICocoa, bgs.. 172 660 Coffee,bgs.13,858 103 Clocks 6 Spices, &c.— Furs, &c— Furs \. Bananas 3,011 .1 1797 Metals, <&c.— Brass goods ...1 6,398 27,512 7,411 Opium 5 2,669 Paints 9,593 Potass Iodid..12 1,505 1,668 Phosphorus ..40 1,768| Reg antimony .5 190 Shellac 6,322 Safflower , . 260 Champagne, 2,128 do arabic..37 111 Indiio Lac Dye.... ..81 Lie paste... ..55 ..7 .55 ..1 145 ... 951 .. 275 Brandy Bay water.. Whiskey 2,989 ..38 Ale Beer Gin Porter 1,226 2l’240 .... Clay — " 5,423 Building stones. Cheese 329 60 Cochineal... .132 Cudbear Divi divi 53,546 Hides, undress 2,931 10,483 Bags Buttons Patent leather. 1 5,899 3,551 Liquors, Wines, <fcc. .608 Carmine.... ...1 Chalk Cream 225 121 ed ’ Miscellaneous— Baskets 129 Hides, dress¬ Brimstone, tons 17,750| Bristles....... 45 Boots & shoes. 1 217 Tea.,./...22,016 306,014 5 178 Toys... .55 2,875 Tobacco 292 72 Waste 11,204 2,185 Wool, bales. 1230 114,389 Other l,lil Total $3,017,495 161 Our General Prices Current will be found on pages 669 and 670. running on federal currency May 15,1865. The earnings for the seven and a half remaining months of that year amounted to §1,418,976 30. The earnings for the same months in 1866 amounted to $1,496,517 86. The increase of total The road commenced ®1)C ftailroajj ittonitor. Great Western (Can.) Railway.—The total receipts of this while leaving company for the last five years have amounted to £3,134,190, the expenditures, including renewals, reached to £2,330.620, a 663 TfiE CHRONICLE. May 25,1867.] earnings has thus been fell from $894,541 38 very small, while the receipts from of £803,570, indicating an average of £100,714 per The following table shows the gross earnings and operat¬ crop along the road having net revenue annum. ing expenses freight the cotton in 1865 to $833,494 29 in 1866, signally failed, and disappointed the anticipations of a largely increased business, expressed by President in his report for 1865. The cotton transported on road in 1866 was only about one half the quantity reported natural half yearly and yearly during this period : the Nett income. the £117,187 Gross earnings. , , Operating expenses.—> Feb.-July. Aue.-Jan. Year. Feb.-July. Aug.-Jan. Year. 1862-3. £246,238 £309,304 £566,542 £129,051 £309,304 £438,355 437,904 301,634 301.634 136,270 594,701 1863-4. 293,067 452,917 312,729 140,188 637,668 312,729 1864-5. 314,939 619,525 387,039 671,604 132,486 387,039 1865-6. 284,565 481,919 331,513 150,406 674,675 331,513 1866-7. 343,162 , 156,797 for 1860. 184,751 152,079 192,756 materially previous report; on Dec. 31,1865, the amount The amount of loss on American currency has been very heavy. changed since the of indebtedness, except bonds, was $1,492,757.53, and on Dec. 31, In the last half year it was £61,828, aud for the five years £290.384, 1866, $1,621,611.13. The changes in the bonded debt are as fol¬ a larger sum than the nett income of any of the years in which it lows : The financial condition of the company has not been made. was percentage of working expenses, not including cost of re¬ newals, has been as follows : In the first half of the year : 77.23 ; 63.59 ; 59.62 ; 64 57, aud 63.29 , and—in the last half of the year: 69.68 ; 57.11 ; 59.68 ; 55.25, and 57.49. The Reciprocity Treaty with the United States ended in March, 1866. The full result of its repeal has, however, been more appar¬ ent in the last half year, and while the local traffic has kept up in a The “ ,-Am't outstanding—, Dec. 31, Dec. 31, 1«65 1800. 1 Income bonds of If 61 do do 1802 do do i:~65 do do 1867 (lo do (Ten years) First mortsage sterling $85,000 91,000 305,800 228,900 75.343 46,000 96,000 228,900 81,685 4,187,000 4,503,000 1,275X00 388,800 ....- 1,099,000 Tenn. State bonds do do do Interest bonds $140,200 (interest funded) Difference—» , Increase. $61,200 45,000 209,800 $ 526,300 »e- crease. 6,342 316,000 116,000 388,800 526,300 Total $6,133,243 $7,230,685 $1,097,442 $ satisfactory manner, the interchange of traffic between Canada This shows that some progress has been made in funding ; but and the United States has suffered. Much of the traffic of Canada which used to pass into the United States, is now turned to the owing to the unfavorable course of business during the past year maritime provinces, and this diversion will largely increase now the resumption of the payment of interest has been put off to May that confederation makes all the provinces one country. In the 1, 1868, the foreign creditors having acceded to this arrangement, process of transition a less profit on the work done has, however, with the condition that simple interest at 6 per cent, be allowed on been earned : the traffic obtained having for the time been of less the coupons matured, and that will mature up to Nov. 1, 1867, the valuable character. So vast a change must necessarily bring tem¬ company to issue for the amount, coupon bonds the same in form as the original bonds , the coupons in the meanwhile to remain iu porary loss and disturbance, which time only cau remedy and repay.’’ Mobile and Ohio Railroad.—The 19th auuual report of this trust as collateral security. Regarding the home bonds, the Pres¬ company gives the following results of operating their road for the ident says—“ As the assurauce has always been given that bond¬ of I860: holders on both sides of the Atlantic should fare as nearly alike a3 year 1866, which we compare with those very 1866. I860. $510,471 81 475,460 24 10,654 50 42,794 00 70,281 90 59,627 40 $1,402,858 30 707,488 17 $2,449,286 09 1,390,398 46 $1,046,427 79 682,910 29 $695,370 13 $1,058,887 63 5,037 00 2,861 00 $363,517 50 1,658 00 1,157 00 $392,247 23 958,030 91 Earnings from passengers “ freight “ mails “ Total gross Cost oi 41,925 75 express earnings repairs and operating.— Earning less cost Earnings per mile of road Expenses per mile.... Earnings per mile ran by trains... Increase. (486 ra.) $902,719 04 1,433,491 15 (415 m.) 3,379 00 1,704 00 1 71 868 25 ' 0 64 2 35 497,250 368,581 Oct.... Nov Dec.... 6,518,359 5,476,276 3,050,340..Year .. 3,840,091 3,695,152 (507 tn.) $289,400 $504,992 327,269 899,870 343,408 399,364 429,669 472,483 408,864 388,480 894,533 451,477 596 583 640,537 587,121 614,849 475,723 Erie 1866. (507 m.) 377,852. Feb.... 438,046 March April.. 443,029 May... 474,441 J une.. 402,674 July... 528,618 Aug... 526,959 541,491 Sept... Railway. 1866. (798 m.) $1,070,890 $1,185,746 (798 tn.) 987,9:36 1,011,735 1,331,124 1,070,917 1,538,313 1,153,441 1,425,120 1,101,632 1,252,370 1,243,636 1,274,558 1,208,244 1,418,742 1,295,400 1,435,285 1,416,101 .. (775 m.) Jan 917,639. ..Feb... 1,139,528. ..Mar... $906,759. (524 m.) $363,996 366,361 413,974 365,180 351,489 387,095 301,613 418,575 486,808 524,760 495,072 851,799 4»826,722 1866. (524 m.) $314,598 283,179 412,393 409,427 426,493 392,641 338,499 880,452 429,t91 500,404 416,690 839,447 4,652,793 616,608 460,573 617,682 .June... — ..Year.. 747,942 .July ..Aug.. ...Sep.. 702,692 77 922,892 ,990 ..July. 767,508 946,707 923,886 840,354 778,281 989,053 ..Aug.. ...Sep.. 546,609 1,210,654 1,005,680 698,679 ...Oct.. .Nov.. ..Dec.. 7,960,981 9,088,994 ..Year.. 3,313,514 3,478,325 .. . 499,296 468,358 685,623 283,951. .April. ..May.. . .Oct... .Nov.. .Dec.. . . . .Year.. 7,181,208 6,546,741 .. — — — — — — — 641,589 1865. (624 tn.) f302,714^.«. fan. 302,437. .Feb.. 379,761 Mar... 391,163^. April. ...May.. — «- ..June. ...July.. ...Aug*. ....Sep... ....Oct.... ...Nov... ...Dec... (234 m.) $98,183 74,283 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,838 217,159 170,555 228,020 310,594 226,840 110,664 ..Year.. 1,985,712 1866. (234 m.) $121,776 84,897 72,135 108,082 267,488 262,172 1865. ..Jan.. .Feb.. ..Mar., . .April. 735,0,^2 ..May.. ...Oct... .Nov.. .Dec.. ..Year 1,222,017 .. .June. ..J uly. ..Aug.. ..Sep.. . . .June.. . — 1867. ..Jan... 85,000. ..Feb... 72,000. ..Mar 87,510. .April.. ..May... ... June . .July... ..Aug... ...Sep... 150,9S9 245,701 244,854 98,787 ...Oct.... ,.Not..^ .Dec.^ — 1,186,808 1865. (251 m.) $94,136. ..Jan.. 78.976., .Feb.. 84,652. .Mar.. . 72,768. .April. ..May.. 365,663 329,105 .. . . ..Year.. (370 m.) $131,707 123,404 123,957 121,533 245,622 244,376 $146,800. *395,579 §.171,125 ♦.Year.. 2,535,001 2,538,800 . .Jan.. 131,900. ..Mar.. 192,548. .April. ..May.. .June. ..July. ..Aug.. ...Sep.. . — 328,869 1866. (285 m.) $282,438 265,796 X f,158 3 ,5,736 184,497 258,507 280,28? - 1867. % (286 m.) $304,095 ‘ 283,661 375,210 362,783 3u5,196 335,063 324,986 359,665 429,166 493.649 414,604 308.649 4,504,546 4,260,125 1866. (340 tn.) OMO tn.) 130,000. ..Feb. 416,359 328,539 129,287 413,501 4b0,661 490,693 447,669 1865. 1867. 1866. (275 tn.) £346,717 $267,626 — —Ohio & Mississippi - 1865. ^300,841 ..Oct.. .Nov. .Dec.. . 208,785 188,815 276,416 279,18 344,228 337,240 401,456 ..July. (234 m.) $98,181 86,528 95,905 106,269 203,018 237,562 251,9< 6 241,370 (285 m.) .June. ..Aug.. Sep.. — 1867. (423 tn.) -Michigan Central. 1867. -Milwaukee & St. Paul (234 tn.) $143,000. 116,224 1866. (251m.) (251 m.) $06,672 $00,125 84,264 87,791 82,910 93,763 82,722 78,607 95,664 76,248 106,315 107,525 96,023 104,608 106,410 115,184 108.338 125,252 150,148 116,495 116,146 110,032 111,665 105,767 (70S tn.) $660,438, ..Jan.. 554,201, Feb. 417,352. ..Mar.. 420,007. .April. ..May 170,795 1,943,900 (228 m.) (930 m.)(l,032 m.) $523,566 $690 832 405,634 586,743 523,744 747,392 518,736 720,651 -Marietta and Cincinnati.— 1867. Mil. and Prairie dn Chien. 1867. — 505,266 505,465 411,605 569,250 567,679 643,887 518,088 ..Aug .. ..sep— ..Oct— ..Nov... ..Dec— (708 m.) $603,053 480,626 578,253 571,348 661,971 588,219 504,066 678,403 747,469 739,736 .July... Mich. 8o. & N. Indiana.1865. (708 in.) $571,536 528,972 616,665 1,217,143. .April.. ..May .. ,416,001 1,524,9L7£l 1,041,115 6,601,063 14,596,413 .. . 1866. 1866. .June. Jan.. Feb.. 238,362. ..Mar.. 142,947 1865. 1867. (238 m.) $305,554 $241,395 183,385 246,331 257,230 289,403 197,886 196,580 264,605 234,612 290.642 321,818 224, l i2 244,121 810,443 306,231 389,489 7396,050 * 422,124 307,523 270,073 ” 831,006 201,779 ^339,417 (860 tn.) $541,005 482; 164 Illinois Central.1S65. 1867. 476,244 ' Jan.... $361,137. (2S0 m.) $240,238. I860. 1865. 1866. (280 tn.) (280 m.) $280,503 $226,152 222,241 275,282 290,111 299,063 269,249 258,480 329,S51 322,277 871,543 355,270 821,597 335,985 387,269 409,250 322,638 401,280 360,323 357,l>56 323,030 307,919 271,246 236,824 (466 m.) - 1865. 1867. .—Chic., Rock Is. and Pacific. - Chicago & Northwestern- -Chicago and Alton.1867. r-Atlantic;& Great Western 1866. the 517th milestone. EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. COMPARATIVE MONTHLY 1865. possible, it only remains for those on this side to enter into a similar agreement in order to close this arrangement.” A lull abstract of the report for 1865 will oe found in this volume of the Chronicle, p. 105. Union Pacific Railroad.—Track-laying on this road was re¬ sumed after the winter suspension on the 29th ult. About 200 miles of rail will be laid daring the sepson, bringing the road up to ...Oct.. .Nov.. .Dec..,, $259,223 $267,541 239,139 313,914 271,527 290,916 246,109 304,463 849,285 844,700 860,348 872,618 412,553 284,319 253,924 326,236 277,423 283,130 1867. (340 tn.) $242,793 219,065 279,647 284,729 247,262 305,454 278,701 310,762 302,425 281,613 ..Year.. 3,793,006 3,880,583 — [May 25,1807. THE CHRONICLE. 664 Sdbacrlbers will RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST. in otir confer a great favor by giving ns immediate notice of any error discovered INTEREST. DESCRIPTION. Amount If. B.—Where the total Funded Debt outstand¬ is not given in detail in the ing. nmn it is expressed by the dgnres in brackets after the Co’s name. DESCRIPTION. FRIDA V • INTEREST. If .B.—Where the total Funded Debt is not given in detail in the 2d col¬ umn it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co’s name. T3 2d col n Payable. i 3* OB PQ Tables. & o •a a s Payable. ing. FRIDAY. Si Amount outstand¬ 'O M •H « Railroad : Railroad: Atlantic A Ot. Western ($30,000,000) : $2,500,000 1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) do sinking fund, (N. Y.) do sinking fund, (Ohio) do ) 1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex do 2d 1st Mortgage, 2d do 1st Mortgage, td do Consolidated Bonds Atlantic ASl Law. 1st Mort.(Portland) 2d Mortgage Sterling Bonds 800,000 4,000,000 4,000,000 2,000,000 13,058,000 1,500,000 268,900 484,000 619,036 915,280 Mort (S F) 1834 1,024,750 of 1855 Baltimore and Ohio. Mortgage (S. F.) do do do do 1850 1853 628.500 1,852,000 . Bdlefontalne ($1,745,000): 1,225,000 1st Mortgage 2d do 433,000 Bdvidere Delaware : 1st Mort. (guar. C. and do ; 2d Mort. 3d Mort. do 1,000,000 4. Bonds Boston, Cone. A Montreal ($1,050,000): 1st Mortgage I 1st do f 500,000 589.500 150,000 Blossburg and Coming Bufalo and state Line Mortgage....' Burlington A Missouri 1st ($2,395,000): ($1,902,110): Mortgage 7,336,000 1,500,000 673,200 1st mortgage Convertible Bonds Cheshire Bonds Chicago and Alton: Mortgage (Skg Fund), income do 2d pref Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): Trust Mortgage (S. F.) Chicago and Ot. Eastern 1st Mort.. Preferred Sinking Fund 1st Mortgage Interest Bonds.. Consol. S. F. Bonds, conv. Extension Bonds Chicago, Rock Island A Pacific: 1st Mortgage (C. A R. I.) (new) do 1st Cine., Ham. A Dayton 1st Mortgage ;. ($1,629,000): do 2d Cincinnati Richmond A Chicago Cincinnati A Zanesville. Mortgage Cleveland, Cot. and Cine. ($450,000): 1st 1st Mort.(payable $25,000 per year) ($1,752,400): Cleveland A Mahoning 1st Mortgage 8d dev., Pain. A Ashtabula: 1st Mort. Bonds 2d Mort. Bonds Cleveland A Pittsburg ($3,872,860): 2d Mortgage 8d ao convertible do 4th Cleveland and Toledo ($2,746,280): Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1886 Connecticut River: lit Mort Conn, and Passumpstc R. ($800,000): 1st Mortgage Cumberland Valley: 1st Mort do 6 per cent bonds Dayton and Michigan 1st Mortgage 2d do 8d do Toledo Depot ($3,782,430): Bonds Delaware: 1st Mortgage, guaranteed Deui., Lacka. A Western ($3,491,500): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Laekn. and West. 1st Mort Des Moines Valley ($2,038,000): -Mortgage Bonds 6,000,000 July Ap’l & Oct 1883 1895 Jan. & July Aug May A Nov July 101 100# 101 90 88 July Jan. & July 1874 1880 do Sep do Jan. & July 600,000 161,000 109.500 108,100 J’ne A Dec. 1876 Ap’l A Oct. 1904 1904 do do 1,740,000 824,00017 100 88# 103 88# July . 1,907,000 _ 90 97 88 6.668.500 2,523,000 2,563,000 358,000 1887 May & Nov. 1875 1864 1875 1878 : n ($1,000,000): April A Oct 485,000 800,000 900,000 Jan. A July Jan. A July Jan. A July MarchA Sep 200,000 903,000 1,000,000 886,000 500,000 175,000 150,000 68,000 ($9,135,840) Mortgage, sinking fund Milwaukee and St. Paul: 1st Mortgage do do (Mil. & Western)... Income Bonds..... M«t .... .... ... . .... •> * r ICO • • • • • •••» May A Nov. 1872 Jan. A July 1869 May A Nov. 1873 July ’69-’74 Jan. A May A No\ 91 .... 1883 April A Oci 1877 Jan. A Julj 1875 Feb. A Ang 1890 May A Nov 1893 Jan. A July 1883 July var. May A Nov. var. Cf> • • • • • • • • • • • ... 77 Feb. A Ang. ’90-’91 June A Dec. ’70-’71 Apr. A Oct. 1874 Feb. A Aug. 1870 May A Nov. 1880 .... 103 108 863,000 2,698,000 651,000 May A Nov. 1885 95 90 99 4 1877 do Feb. A Ang 1868 402,000 Jan. A 4,269,000 Jan. & 135,000 600,00C 297.500 Jan. A July 1876 1870 do 881,900 May A Nov, 1867 1,500,000 4487,0(0 T&3« - July 1891 July 1893 April A Oct 1893 April A Oct 1884 Jan. A July 1875 324,000 ($6,133,243): 81 .... April A Oci 1882 1st Mortgage.... Income «•••• 110 MarchASep 1869 Mississippi A Tennessee ($1,069,600) Sterl eg bonds. . bonds,.. .... 4.504.500 2,297,000 Real Estate Mobile and Ohio Income bonds . 1885 Feb. A Ang 1892 May A Nov 1888 Jan. A July 1885 1,000,000 • 99 April A Oci I860 May A Nov. 1890 2,362,800 300,000 • 102# 104# 1882 1874 1875 Jan. A 280,000 • • ... 1873 1881 1906 1,650,000 ($2,733,800) Mortgage, sinking fund April A Oci May A Nov 2,000,000 1,300,000 do ; Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee A Prairie du Chien : 2d • July 1866 May A Nov. 1881 79,0C0 Convertible do 75 1875 1875 1890 1875 640,000 397,000 612.500 1,465,000 Michigan Central, ($7,463,489). 96 96 95 ... Jan. A 400, . . .... 1869 1885 1875 1867 - « tat . 500,000 500, 1st Mortgage 1st Memphis Branch Mortgage Marietta A Cincinnati ($3,688,38 ) •* 1st Mortgage, . Scioto and Hocking Valley mort... 1st 2d do do do • .... April A Oct 1881 Jan. A July 1883 April A Oct • 70 600,000 7 Jan. A July 1866 1870 do 364,000 10 1,095,600 $1,190,000 Loan Bonds .... 315,200 $400,000 Loan Bonds 660,000 1st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds. 300,000 2d do (P.& K.RR.) Bonds. Memphis A Charleston : 1,294,000 : Mortgage bonds various, various. Feb. A Ang 1888 Eeb, A Aug 1876 7 6 6 6 • • • • • ceased)... Mich. S. A N. Indiana : • • • 300,000 7 Feb. A Aug 1882 300,000 7 May A Nov 1684 ($1,500,000): Sinking Fund do July 1870 .. McGregor Western 1st Mortgage.... 102 • 500,000 6 May A Nov 1870 600,000 6 Feb. A Aug 1875 Mortgage Maine Central: 192,000 523,000 • • 98 97 May A Nov. 1875 7 Feb. A Aug 7 J’ne A Dec. 7 May A Nov. do 7 • .... 6 Jan. A July 1883 6 Jan. A July 1873 1876 do 7 3,890,000 1st Ap’l A Oct o 2,955.000 do do State Loan ....... Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000): 1875 April A Oct 1875 MV.h A Sep 1881 Jan. & July 1871 - Mort.. Mortgage, sinking fund Long Island : 1st Mortgage Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point) do do (Glen Cove Br.) Jan. A July 1667 1881 do M’chAApril 1834 8l-’94 do Jan. A 927,000 • • •• • 7 7 Lehigh Valley ($1,477,000): 1st Mortgage Lexington A Frankfort Little Schuylkill • July 70-75 3,437,750 do Extension La Crosse A Milwaukee: 1st Mortgage, Eastern Division.... do r■ 2d do .... Little Miami July 1870 1868 Mortgage, sinking fund Extensi • • 1868 7 Feb. A Aug 1888 rt i May A Nov. 1893 1868 7 July. 633,600 89 88# 89 do Joliet andN. Indiana: 1st Mortgage Lackawanna A Bloomsburg 1st Mort do 1873 1875 1892 250,000 1,122,500 1,66S 000 572,000 77* 90 79 1st 88 7 Mortgage 1st Jan. A July 1885 1886 do M’ch & Sep 1878 500,000 92# 94 82# 82# ioo# 96# 98 COO,000 Indianap. A Madison RR., 1st M.. Jeff., Mad. A Indianap., lBt Mort Joliet and Chicago: 1890 500,000 1,000,000 283,000 2,606,000 642,000 169,500 86# . 100# 100# 99 1868 Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort 1st 121,000 300,000 1st ... Feb. A Aug 1882 Jan. A » # 96# do JeffersonvillefMadisonAIndianapolis. 112 42 Jan. A Jan. A • .... 7 Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284) 1893 Feb. A Aug 1873 M’ch A Sep 1876 Jan. & Juiy 1875 2,081,000 98 1880 1885 1896 795,000 1,107,546 1,350,000 2,500,000 326,000 700,000 2d Mortgage Jan. & M’ch A 927,000 700,000 Mortgage 2d do Indiana Central: 1st Mortgage, (interest 2d do 1888 • 1,000,000 10 April A Oct Illinois Central: Construction bonds, 1875... do do do 6 per cent 91 1863 1915 1885 475,000 1,129,000 1,619,500 7 7 6 Redemption bonds Sterling Redemption bonds Illinois and Southern Iowa : Jan. & J uly 1870 1896 do May & Nov 1,963,000 1,086,000 1st Mortgage do 2d 100 100 1898 Quarterly. 1,300,000 7 1st Mortgage May A Nov. Feb. A 388,000 Huntingdon A Bivad 7bp($l,462,142): 73 Feb. & Aug 1885 1885 do Jan. & Detroit and Milwaukee ($5,206,680): $2,500,000 1st Mortgage, convertible 1,000,000 2d do 1,005,640 1st A 2d Funded Coupon Bonds.. 250,000 Detroit and Pontiac R.R.... 250,000 do do & Toledo ($784,000): 94 • •M* 7 May A Nov. 1867 7 M’ch A Sep 1879 1883 do 7 7 April A Oct 1880 7 June A Dec 1888 6 M’ch A Sep 1875 149,000 7 do sinking fund do Convertible 83# 89# ’75-%) 1883 3,816,582 (£800,000) Mortgage 1st 2d 3d 1st Ap’l A Oct. 4,000,000 6,000, 4,441, 926.500 ($400,000): 81 7 Jan. A July 1880 5 April A Oct 1862 3,000,000 Hartford A New Haven : 1st Hartf., Prov. A Fishkill : Hudson River ($7,762,840): May A Nov. 1889 July 570,000 Dollar Bonds... New Feb. A Aug 1883 Jan. & Ap’l A Oct. Convertible Bonds Hart'isburg A Lancaster : 1870 Jan. A July 1870 1,250,000 500,000 56,000 5:34,900 ao Hubbard Branch 2d 1,397,000 93# 94 April A Oct J’ne A Dec. 1893 Jan. & July 1873 Ap’l A Oct. 1879 Feb. A Aug 1882 Mar. & Sep 1875 Feb. A Aug 1870 May A Nov 1875 M’ch A Sep 1890 598,000 1,000,000 Gal. A Chic. TJ. (incl. in C. A N. IF.): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund. 2d do do , Grand Junction : Mortgage Great West., 111.: 1st Mort., W, Div. 1st Mortgage Whole Line 2nd do * do Greenville A Columbia: 1st Mort.... Bonds guaranteed by State Bonds unsecured Hannibal A St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Land Grant Mortgage 1866 Jan. & 484,000 do Mortgage.. Georgia July '873 Ap’l A Oct. 1879 3,525,000 5,600,000 till 1870 2,000,000 do 160,000 Jan. & July 1872 Feb. A Aug 1874 1885 do 894,000 750,000 Pennsylvania: Sterling convertible Jan. A May & Nov. 1877 Jan. & July 1893 1,250,000 3,600,000 756,000 do Erie and Northeast Feb. & Ang 1865 1865 do 1889 do 483,000 2,400,000 1,100,000 861,000 Chicago do 1st Mortgage 5 per cent. Bonds Erie Railway ($22,370,982): 1st Mortgage 2d do convertible 3d do . 4th do convertible 5th do do Ap’l & Oct. 490,000 493,000 141,000 786,000 900,000 600,000 ($1,848,400): convertible... Sinking Fund Bonds Elmira A Williamsport : 500,000 2,500,000 Central Pacific of Cal.: , East 330,000 4,269,400 Central Ohio : 1st Mort Mortgage, Jan. & July 1883 1894 do 800,000 660,000 Eastern, Mass. J’ne & Dec. 1877 May A Nov 1S72 867,000 : 1st 1st J’ne A Dec. 1867 M’ch A Sep 1885 Feb. A Aug 1877 May A Nov. 1871 1,700,000 Atlantic: 1st Mortgage 50 1877 1882 1879 1881 1876 1883 1884 1895 i8«'0 1866 1878 1834 1867 1875 1880 1885 Jan. & July ’70-’79 1870 do 1,180,950 1st Mortgage Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage.... Central gf New Jersey : 1st Mortgage 1st Ap’l & Oct. 2,000,000 Mortgage 2d Jan. A July do 600,000 Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan.... 2d May & Nov. Ap’l & Oct. Ja Ap Ju Oc 200,000 ($1,200,000): Mortgage Catawissa do do do 444,00 Bonds conv. into pref. stock Camden and Amboy ($10,264,463): Dollar Loans Dollar Loan Camden and Ap’l A Oct. ‘.OlVJt t Buffalo. N. Y. and Erie -1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage do do do do Jan. A July 364,0001 8inking Fund Bonds Boston and Lowell: Bonds or'Ju y 1851 do of Oct. 1864. . General Ap’l A Oct. 1,000,000 1,014,000 of 1854 do City : Mortgage, 1st section do 2d section and Sioux te I? do do 1882 1882 do 18T8 • • • 97 93 1 ICO • ••* • • •• • , •- • ••• #••• MM Off 25,1867.] May BOND LIST (continued). immediate notice of any error discovered in our Tables. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS will confer a great favor by giving us Description. Subscribers interest. Description. « total Funded Debt outstand¬ in the 2d col ing. umn it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co’s name. FRIDAY. . <3 j Rate. M T3 Payable. is not aa w do Naugatuck: 1st Mortgage (convert. New Bedford <t Taun ton..... ... N. Haven db Northampton : Bonds.. "Hampshire A Hamden R.lt. do . New Jersey ($855,000): Bonds of 1853 New London Northern: 1st Mortgage New Orleans, Jackson d Gt. Aorth.: 1st Mortgage Sinking Fund 5.000,000 576,000 224,000 180,000 450,000 200,000 485,000! 140,000; 2,741,000 423,000 2d Mortgage •••••••.•■." ~ v* * New Orleans, Ope Ion. & Gt. west.. Construction Bonds. New York Central: Premium Sinking Fund Bonds ... 1,730,000 1st Mortgage 6,450,438 2,925,000 (renewal). Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts) Bonds of August, 1859, convert.. j. Bonds of 1865 f New York and Harlem ($0,093,045) : Bonds of October, 1863 Real Estate Bonds 165.000 606,000 1,898,000 460,000 3,TXX),00( General Mortgage 1,000,00(1 1,000,000 Consolidated Mortgage. .-. 3d Mortgage N 1 ork and New Haven: Mortgage Bonds N. Y.. Prov. and Boston : 1st Mortgage 1st 2d '••• 3d — do do Northern New North Ohio and L. Champlain. E.R.: . . e. . 2d Extension & Rome ($657,000). lst'Mortgage (guar, by R. Oswego do 2d Pacific, ($311,500): sterling do 1st Mortgage •• ($18,209,040); Erie ($13,000,000) 1st Mortgage (Snnbury & Erie)... do (general) 1st 2d do (general)’. Philadel., Germant. & Notnstoion: Philadelphia & Reading ($6,900,663) Bonds of 1836 do do do Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1st Mort. Connellsville ($1,500,000): (Turtle Cr. Div.) P'b'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: 1st Mortgage 2d 3d ($12,573,500) do do Bridge O. & P. RR Akron Branch: 1st mortgage. Pittsburg and Steubenville : 1st Mortgage 2d do Quincy and Toledo: 1st Mortgage Portland & Kennebec ($1,394,661): 1st mortgage bonds, ext. Consolidated bonds Raritan and let 2d Delaware Bay: Mortgage, do sinking fund Convertible Bonds Reading and Columbia: 1st Mortgage Rensselaer tfe Saratoga consolidated: do 1874 180,000 April & Oct ’67-’69 ’7o-’7ti 'Third Avenue 350,000 moot May & Nov. 1916 Feb. & Aug 1^91 S6#| 9 6 408,000 182,400 Jan. A 1867 1880 1870 1871 1880 April A Oct Jan. & July do do do May & Nov Jan. & 5,250,000 5,160,000 2,000,000 ($1,452,000) : 200,000 1,000,000 500,000 500,000 230,000 300,000 1,000,000 250,000 208,000 April & Oct May & Nov Jan. & July .. do . 92 | .. 9 ik 1st do , Jan. A jan. Cumberland (North. 1870 1886 68-74 July 1871 & July i886 April & Oct 1876 1870 1894 Feb. A Aug do do due 1890 1890 1878 1878 1883 1871 Tan. A July J une A Dec May & Nov. do Apr. A Oct. do 88 76 6o Jnly 18S’* Apr. A Oct. 1885 May & Nov. 1875 1882 Mar. A Sep Jan. & Tan. & July 68-’74 Tune A Dec Jan. A July 1861 1867 Jan. & July 1883 Feb. & Aug 1875 511,400 400,000 Jan. & July April A Oct 1873 1878 4,319,520 689,000 Jau. A April A Oct July 68-’71 70-’76 1875 662,800 I| 696,000 200,000 guaranteed 76 Jan. A July *70 ’75 0 ’72 do ’65 ’68 do 936,500 Union: 1st Mortgage Cent.): 1st Mortgage Delaware Division : 1st Mortgage.. Delaware and Hudson ; Plain bonds (coupou) Erie of Pennsylvania: 1st J o*n Mortgage Navigation : April A Oct Jan. & >uly do Feb. & Aug May & Nov Jan. & July do 60 25 80 1890 1890 1896 1870 1871 1877 Bonds Morris. Mortgage Yoik: 1st Mortgage (North Branch) Schuylkill Navigation : Pennsylvania d New mn 94>4| 84- 97 Jnly 586,000 752,000 Mch A •Jan. & July 1866 J48,uoo | Mortgage 2d do 1 st Improvement: Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) Covington and Cincinnati Bridge ; Bonds (guar. Mortgage Bonds Consolid. Coal Co. (Md.) : 1st Cumberland Coal: let Mort.( conv.) Mortgage.... Mariposa Mining: 1st Mortgage 2d j do do UlMorigSKQconvertible, JM Western •ml do Jan. A July Union Telegraph: 1870 1870 188*4 1887 1876 April A Oct 690,000 1,764,830 3 980,670 May A Nov 1876 Mch & Sep Jan. A July 1872 1882 1870 May & Nov Jan. A Jnly do do 1865 1878 1864 91# 77 64^ 65# May A Nov 1883 July 1878 Jan. A Jan & 2,000,000j Jnly 1878 Jan, A Jnly 1886 Jan. A July 74-’84 Jan. A July 1885 Jan. & July 1879 429.000 629,000 417,000 1,500,000 2,000,00f Pennsylvania Coal: Mortgage Bonds. 600 00C Quicksilver Mining : 1st Mort.,prin.&int.payable in gold 609,OOt Feb. & Aug 73 ’75 69 ’76 do Quarterly. Tide-Water: American Dock <& Sept 768,250 586,500 1,183,701 Maryland Loan Coupon Bonds 1,093,000 T. W. Canal Priority Bonds 9",015 227,569 Susquehanna Canal pref. int. bonds Union (V&.): 1st Mortgage 3,000,000 6 750,000 6 West Branch and Susq. :1st Mortgage Wyoming Valley : 1st Mortgage 600,000 6 miscellaneons: Improvement Susquehanna and 1886 1870 1890 1885 1878 Jan. A 5,434,251 Mortgage Jan. A Jnly Ja Ap Jn Oc do 1,699,500 800,000 414,158 of 1884 Monongahela Navigation: 1890 1880 & Sop* 1st Mortgage Loan of 1870 1883 1895 Dec 1875 870 Various I 1,500,000 | 550,000 (Mass.) (6,269,520) r Lehigh Coal and May & Nov. 1890 June & 1872 I 2,000,000 Preferred Bonds 94*i 95 1879 800,000 7 Mch & Sept 7 179*000. 8 Feb. A Aug Mar. & Sept Jan. A July 90 80 75 .... 1888 1876 du do 1875 1875 1867 175,000 do 92>(|| 2d 25,000 Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds 500,000j Canal Chesapeake and Delaware : 1st, Mort. 2,356,509 Chesapeake and Ohio : Maryl’d Loan 2,000,000 Sterling Bonds, guaranteed 4,375,000 Mch A Sept 18S8 do do Tan. A July Jan. & July -June & Dec 616,000 Mort. Bonds. Western Maryland : Western York d Feb. & Aug 1881 1881 do 1890 April & Oct 1900 650,000 200,000 Dollar Bonds 93^ )1 1886 1868 1912 1912 1876 1884 Feb. & Aug 300,000 300,000 Sterling (£899,900) Bonds Albany City Bonds I 75 July 1884 do D92 1892 j. 9,000,000 j ’ ’ St. L. ext. 2,500,000 Mortgage Western 1880 Semi an’ally 1912 Jan. & July June & Dec 1,600,00() Mortgage (guaranteed) Westchester & Philadelphia : 1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon ... 2d , registered do July 1876 Jan. & July do Mortgage 1st * 1882 1S94 1,400,000 1,180,000 Warren: 1875 July April & Oct 300,,v,0| 175,000 do 1st 99 Jan. & May & Nov -200,000 Vermont, Central: 1st Mortgage (consolidated) 2d do Vermont and Massachusetts / 1889 400,000 6 Feb. & Aug Interest Bonds Richmond <fc Petersburg ($319,000): Bonds, coupon A registered ...... : £130,500 Lake E. Wab. Convertible Troy Union ($680,000): July 1880 1877 18811901 1894 1894 1894 do 300,000 ($1,595,191): (old) extended do do 3d 74 April A Oct April & Oct April & Oct Semi an’ally R.R.. 2,000,000 • Land Grant B’d (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage do 2d 1884 April & Oct 1,20 ,000 1st Jan.;& July Jan. & . 1875 1881 g2d Mortgage.. Jan. A July ’70-’8( do. 1885 Mch & Sept 2,200,001 2,800,000 1,700,000 J»u -fc July Feb. & Aug 2,500,000 do 2d (Wabash and Western).. 1,500,000 Equipment bonds (Tol. & Wab.).. 600,000 Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. & W.; 1,000,000 99# 9S April & Oct ’7iV75 Feb & Aug. 1872 329,(XX> Peteisbtirg) Mortgage 1st 1st 1st 1873 May & Nov. I Toledo,Peoria and Warsaw :1st Mort Toledo IT abash & Western: May & Nov 1866 Jan. & July 1875 570,000 826,000 140,547 67-’84 var. 400,000 Railroad: & Pacific by At. Troy and Boston var. I Special Mortgage 88>, :i4 113 1869 750,000 4th Mortgage Sterner*! Mortgage, South Side ($1,631,900): 1 st Mortgage (guar, by 3d Mortgage July 1S74 Feb. & Aug 1870 July 1872 400,000 340,000 600,000 ($1,717(500); • • 86 July 1885 Jan. A 1st Mort. Rensselaer A Saratoga 1st Mort. Saratoga A Whitehall.... 1st Mort. Troy, 3. & Rut. (guar.) . Richmond & Danville • Jan. A 158,500 . . 1880 1887 450,000 6 Mortgage Loan • • Tan. &Jnly 360,000 10 April & Oct 976,800 228,500 200,000 convertible Philadelphia & Trenton : 1st. Mort Philadel., VUminq. & Baltimore: • Syra. Bing. andJN. Y. 1st Mortgage 1,521,000 of 1843 Dollar Bonds, Pittsburg & 1881 1896 106,000 1843-4-8-9 do Sterling Bonds 96 94 July 2,661,600 1861 do ... Aug ’73-’7<* July Jan. & 143,800 6 Sterling < Feb. & Ang 1863 132 1863 do 1.290.000 Funded Bonds 800,000 600,000 Second Avenue: 1st Mortgage Shamokin Valley d Pottsville: 1st Mortgage > 700,000 Shore Line Railway: 1st Mort. bonds 65,000 South Carolina: Sterling Loan 2,2S6,111 Domestic Bonds 1,070,000 Southern Minnesota: Staten Island: 1st Mortgage 1,000,000 5,000,000 4,000,000 Convertible Loan .... 1875 1,800,000 946,000] ; 1st Mortgage 1867 575,000 7 1st Mortgage Philadelphia and • • .. Mar. & Sep. 4,980,000 4,904,840 Balt. Central ($800,000): S Jan. & July 1880 Jun. &■ Dec ’69-’72 J un. & Dec 1891 | 9S1,000 . 1868 709,500 521,500 530,000 1st Land Grant Mortgage (tax free)j Sandusky and Cincinnati: . Mortgage bonds Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark. 90 S. W. Pacific, Bonds guar, 1,150,000 1,072,000 1st Mortgage 2d do 89 89 >03 106 1900 1874 762,000 t,, & | 1,372,000 Minn : {1st Div). 1st Mortgage (tax free) 700,000 April A Oct April A Oct 198,500 189,000 :•••' VSh & Chicago: Louis, Jacksonville irred. guaranteed by Missouri.... Phila. and ing. TJ Payable. 1st Mortgage Sc. Paul d Pacific oj Quarterly. 400.000 .. Panama: 1st Mortgage, 2d do Pennsylvania 1S76 Jan. A 1,110,500 W. A O •••••••••: Peninsula: do Feb. & 'an. & 1,458,000 Alexandria ($2,923,004) •••••••;. 1st EJxtencion . Income 1876 do 223,000 Oswego and Syracuse 1st Mortgage do l,494,00(i 7 April & Oct •••• & Newport 1887 1883 1883 1876 94# 93 100 May & Nov. 1872 Feb. A Aug 1893 2,900,000 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage Bonds do do Oranoe & 1st Mortgage or od do 3d do or do B’eb. & Aug 100,000 300,000 Mississippi : Old Colony June & Dec- 2,500,000 6 1st Mortgage..... « do *t. Louis, Alton d Terre Haute: 1st Mortgage 2<1 Mortgage preferred 2d do income.-. St. May «fc Nov. 50,000 7 ($580,000) .... .... May & Nov 18S3 339,000) North Pennsylvania ($3,124,737): Mortgage Bonds Chattel Mortgage.........-••--• Norwich and Worcester ; General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage ............. .... .... 1SS9 Apr. & Oct 149.400 ^lstViSraTMortgage ($6,000,000). Ogdensbvrg and pril & Oc 724,000 Carolina: Loan -• ... Sacramento Valley : 1st Mortgage .... 2,500,0001 Hampshire : Bonds... Rome., Watert. d Ogdens. Sinking Fund (Wat. & Rome) Potsdam & Watertown, guar R. W. & O., sinking fund Rutland and Burlington: 1st Mortgage do .... 1SS6 1890 Jan. A Juh 1,500,001' (Md.) Loan.... .... ... 1869 1874 1873 1885 Feb. A Au^. Tan, & Jul} PM,00' Central ($5,211,244) .* • 1881 Oci April A • • 1876 Jau. & .Tub do Tan. A Juh 250,000 - Mortgage* State May &Nov. 1915 1,000,000 6 April & Oct Improvement Bonds Northern Debt ontstand-l :($1,S48,000) Essex: 1 At. Mortgage, sinking fond 2Harris and © Railroad: Railroad: 1st given in detail 5 Amount in the 2d col¬ umn it is expressed by the figures in brackets after the Co’s name. H3 i-riday. INTEREST. N.O.—Where the total Funded 0,0 Amount N. B.—Where the is not given in detail 2d 665 THE CHRONICLE. Jan. A Jnly April A Oo Feb. A Ang 1,000,000, 7/ 2j000,0p9 18— 18 - 1881 June A Dec 1878 Jau. A July 1879 m » 4 m' [May 25,1887. THE CHRONICLE. 666 RAILROAD, CANAL, AN» MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Subscribers will confer a jfreat favor by N. B. The figures after the refer to the vol. anti — name, Eage ist report. of Chronicle aining “ leased." * meanscon FRIDAY. out¬ standing. Periods. 153,000 Quarterly. 2,494,900'Feb. & Aug 16,151,962! April .fc Oct & Oct 100 1,650.000! April & Aug ~ * 100 4,420,000 Feb. 996,647 100 600.000 Quarterly. 100 50 250,000 June & Dec Bellefontaine Line Belvidere, Delaware Berkshire* Blossburg and Corning* Boston, Hartford and Erie... .100 11,877,000 Last Date, Catawissa* do preferred Central Georgia & Bank’g Central of New Jersey Central Ohio do preferred Cheshire (preferred) 50 rate name Bid. i Ask. Dec. ’66 13# 123 13#j Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.100 i , —! 140 ... 50 Columbus and Xenia* 50 Concord 50 Concord aud Portsmouth 100 Conn.& Passump.3,p.210prer.’00 Connecticut River 100 Cumberland Valley 50 Davton aud Michigan 100 Delaware* 50 Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50 Des Moines Valley Detroit and Milwaukee do do pref. 100 100 Jan. ’67 Feb. ’67 Feb. ’67 130 . | 119 1,600,250 July| Jan. 4,841,600 April & Oct Apr. Quarterly. Apr. 1.736,.300 Jan. & July •Jau. 1,500,000 May & Nov May 350,000 Jan. & July Jau. 1.514.300 Jan. & July Jan. 1,650,000 Jan. & July Jan.. I,316,900 Apr.'& Oct Apr 2,384,940 406,132 Jan. & July Jan. II,238,550 Jan. & July Jan. 1,550,050 452,350 , Dong Island Louisville and Frankfort Louisvilleand Nashville ’67 '67 184 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’07 121 ’67 111 ]G6 58 ’67 ’63 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 125 i Canal. Chesapeake and Delaware..., 25 1,575.963 ! ! Chesapeake and Ohio ns# j Delaware and Hudson j Delaware & Raritan, 4, ’671 3 '67| 4 ’67| 4 ’67j ’67 ’67! ’661 ’67 p. 599.100 Lehigh Coal and Navigation 50 MonongaheJa Navigation Co. 50 Morris (consolidated),!, p.G31. 10 176 do 97# preferred 100 101 101#! j Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 •"•-•i do prefer.. 50 Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50 116 Union, preferred 50 West Branch & Susquehanna. 50 . . 1. Wyoming Valley — 1,109,594 Jan. & July! Jan. '67 5,500,000 Feb. & Aug, Feb. ’67 Miscellaneous. 11 117 | p. 489.100 100 Montgomery aud West Point.100 Morris and Essex Nashua and Lowell Nashville & Chattanooga 50 100 ... Naugatuck New Bedford and Taunton New Haven & ... 100 100 100 Northampton.. 100 100 New Jersey, 4, p. 183 New London Northern.. do preferred ’!l00 5,000,000 50 50 lo 100 Spruce Hill Wilkesbarrc Jau. ’67 Feb. ’65 Feb. ’67 February... Feb. ’67 Manhattan 120 i Metropolit ... Jan. Jan. 1.224.100 5,000,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. 895.00C Mar & Sep. Mar. 50 1,500,00) Jan..& July.Jan, 100 .100 Union, Russ. ExlOO | Express.— Adams 100 500 .100 100 Merchants’ Union United States ’67 ’67 ’67 '67 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 Ask H6# 109 66 90 59# 25# 26# 65 ’67 '67 68 96 4 6 3c 5s 3 5 5 6 2# 3 258 102 260 110 lio# 102# 55# 56# 103# 103# 106 95# 95# 102# 4 36 68 40 70 41 65 42 54 94 55 144 97# 95 97# Wells, Fargo & Co Steamship — Atlantic Mail Aug Aug Aug Feb. ’67 Feb. ’67 Feb. ’67 & July & Aug & Aug & Aug & Aug (an. ’67 Feb. & Feb. & Feb. <fc 3 5 3# 4 4 1# 141# 5# ’G6 113 153 Feb. Feb. Feb. Ft;b. Quartz Hill Gold July Jan. ’65 Irregular. Sept.’GG ... .. 33# Jan. & 108 45 Juiy Jon. ’67 Quarterly. Feb. ’67 Jan. & J lily Jan. ’67 Jan. & July 30 152 32 Apr. & Oct Feb. & Aug Aug. ’66 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’66 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 644,000 386,000 Jan. & July 4,000,000 Jan. & July 2,800,000 1,000,000 May & Nov 750.000 Jan. & July 4,500,000 4,000,000 1,000,000 28,450,000 Jan. & Jnly 10,000,000 Quarterly. 10,000,000 Quarterly. Quarterly. Jan. & July Feb. &> Aug Jan. & July Ian. & July 55 45 32 38 Jan. Jan. May ’67 Jan. ’67 July ’66 20 42# 42# 27# 27# Jan. ’67 42# 2 Nov*’66 20,000,000 Quarterly. June ’67 25 2,500,000 65' 62 119 40 60 31 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 3,200,000 1,250,000 1,000,000 3,400,000 4,000,000 1,000, (XX 1,000,0(X, 1,000,000 1,500,000 5,097,600 114 155 105’ May & Nov May ’67 Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Jan. & Mining.—Mariposa Gold 1(X Mariposa Gold Preferred.100 5,774,400 §nicksilver utlund Marble... June & Dec Dec 2# 2# 9,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66 20,000,(XX 6,000,000 Quarterly. Dec. ’66 ’3' 100 10,000,000 100 4,000,000 Quarterly. June’67 Pacific Mail ..100 S. American Navigation. .100 Union Navigation 100 Th'ust.—Farmers’ L. & Trust.. 25 New York Life & Trust..100 Union Trust 100 United States Trnst 100 ’67 ’67 ’67 50 American 68# 50 100 50 Telegraph.— vVestern Union. ’ 100 Weston. 34” sr 55 n Boston Water Power Brunswick City ... 51 ,... New Yor.c William burg 109# 109# 67# 67# 825,399 3.553.300 1,644,104 3,500,000 Mar. & Sep Mar. '67 600,009 May & Nov May ’67 2,056,544 1.408.600 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67 July 50 Jersey City & H: >boken! *. 20 Mar. ’62 500.000 Jan. & 5s. 5 3 4 ’67 2,000,000 Wyoming Valley .100 1,250.000 25 2,000,000 Gas.—Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn).... ]! 20 1,200,000 Harlem 100 ’67 N. Orleans, Opel. & Gt. WestlOO 4,093,425 N. O., Jackson & Gt.N.,4,p.l34lOO 4,697,457 New York Central, 3, p. 769 ..100 26,530 000 Feb. & Aug Feb. 50 5,286,05. Jan. & July Jan. New York and Hariem . Cumberland Pennsylvania.., Spring Mountain. Sep Sep. ’66 Sep. Sep. ’66 do 2d pref. 100 February... Feb. ’67 Milwaukee and St. Paul 100r 3,6*27,000 Jan. & July „. do preferred 100 7,371,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 Mine Hill & Sdiuylkill Haven 50 3.775.600 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 Mobile and Ohio Central Consolidation ijioo‘860 May&Nov:May ’07 8,228,595 1,633,350 10,000,000 2,987,412 6,137.000 728,100 1,025.000 1,175,000 1,908,207 2,888,805 2,052,083 2,907.850 1,100,000 S00,000 50 2*> !. 100 ioo Butler Louisville, New Alb. & Chic. .100 2,800,000 l()0 1,500,000 May & Nov May ’67 McGregor Western* 100 Jan. & July Feb. & Aug Feb. & Aug 87# ’67 25 1,500,000 Mar. & Sep. Mar. ’67 2,500,00(' 500,000 Jun. &Dec. Dec. ’66 5,000,000 Ashburton Macon and Western Mississippi & Teun.4, 50 || Goal.—American ’67 50 100 do .100 i 54 do. do guar. 100 Milwaukee & Prairie Du Ch... 100 25 50 Delaware Division i 2.646.100 50 3,000,000 Quarterly. iFeb. ’67 Michigan Central, 3. p. 152.. .100 Michigau Southern & N. Ind..l00 ’67 Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50 50 Pittsburg ynd Connells ville. ’67 Pittsb.,Ft.W. & Chic.,4,p.471.100 Portland & Kennebec (uew). .100 Portland, Saco, & Portsm’th. 100 1,500,000 June & Dec!Dec. ’66 j Providence and Worcester... .100 1,800,000 Jan. & July! Jan. ’67: ; Raritan and Delaware Bay... .100 2,530,700 Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO 800,000 April & Oct | Apr. ’671 500,000 April & Oct Apr. ’671 Saratoga and Whitehall’. 100 800,000 April & Oct Apr. ’67! Troy, Salem & Rutland .100 i Richmond and Dan., 4, p.454.100 2,000,000 1,008,600 : Richmond & Petersb.,4,p.4S8.100 j Rome, Watert. <& Ogdensb’g..l00 2,385,500 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 i Rutland and Burlington 100 2,233,376 j St. Louis, Alton, & Terrell.. .100 2.300,000 I do do pref. 100 1,700,000 Annually. May ’60 i St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Chic.*100 1,469,429 50 2,989,090 | Sandusky, and Cincinnati do do 393,073 May & Nov May ’67 pref. 50 ! Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark.100 900,000 j Saratoga and Hudson River.. 100 1,020,000 Savannah & Charleston 10<> 1,^00,000 i Schuylkill Valley*.. 576,050 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 50 869,450 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67 j ShamokinVal. <fc Pottsville*. 50 Shore Line Railway 635.200 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 100 750,000 Quarterly. May ’67 j Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) 100 I South Carolina 100 5,819,275 | South Side (P. & L.) 4, p. 521. .100 1,365,000 ! South West.Georgia, 3, p. 616.100 8.203,400 Feb. & Aug Feb* ’96 j Syracuse, Bingh'ton & N. Y..100 1,200,130 I Terre Haute & Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,150 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 j Third Avenue (N. Y.) 100 1,170,000 Quarterly. 776.200 I Toledo, Peoria, & Warsaw... 100 do do lstpret.100 1,651,314 908,424 do do 2d pref. 100 ! i Toledo, Wabash & Western.. 50 5,400,000 i do do preferred. 50 1,000,000 May & Nov May ’67 Utica and Black River 100 834,400 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 j Vermont and Canada* 100 2,250,000 June & Dec June’67 I Vermont and Massachusetts. .100 2,860,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 ! Virginia Central, 3, p. 678 ..100 3,353,679 I Western (Mass), 4, p. 247 100 6,710,800 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 | Western (N. Carolina) 100 1,S60,000 Jau. <fc July •Jan. ’64 Western Union (Wis. & Ill.) 2,687,237 j Worcester and Nashua 75 1,141,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 ■ 50 Mar. & Mar. & 116 ’67 ’67 ■ June & Dec: Dec. ’66 Jan. «fc July; July ’66J Memphis & Chariest., 3p. 4S7.100 89. .*50 6,000,000! Jan. & July Jan. 1,755,281 Jan. & July Jan. 795,360! 3,068,400 June & Dec June 4,518,900 Quarterly. Feb. 4,000,000 2,469,307 Feb. 3,150,150 2,363,600 Jan. & July Jan. 3,077,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. 356.400 Apr. & Oct Apr. 20,222,647 3,607,197 January. |Jan. 4,848,300 Jan. &Jilly Jau. 2,063,655 482.400 Feb. & Aug Feb. 7,000.000 Quarterly. (Apr. 20,000.000 May & Nov!May 5,083,700 Jan. & July Jau. 22,742,867 Jan. & July Jan. 1,507,850 Apr. & Oct Apr. 9,019,300 Jan. & July:Jau. 1,776,129 9,910,987 Quarterly. :Apr. i ’07 ’67 116 2,029,778 6,586,135 4,051,744 1,000,000 5,312,725 7,502,866 9,813,500 787,700 3,082,000 1,014,000 p. Periods. Last paid Date. rate Bid. . '67 ’66 Maine Central 100 Marietta and Cincinnati 50 do do 1st pref. 50 do do 2d pref.. 50 Manchester and Lawreuce... .100 FRIDAY Stock 1 2,044,600 May & Nov May ’67 5,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 3,572,400 Reading, 4, Tables. Dividena. ... 6.000.000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67 .. 50 Phila. and ! Jau. .. Little Miami liittle Schuylkill* 50 50 Pennsylvania Philadelphia and Erie* ;; Phila., Germant. & Norrist’n* 50 ..100 1,500,000 Dubuque and Sioux City 100 1,673,952 Mar. do do March. pref. ..100 1,9S3,170 Eastern, (Mass) 100 3.578.300 •Tan. 4& July Jan. East Tennessee & Georgia.. .100 2,141,970 East Tennessee & Virginia .100 1,902,000 Elmira and Williamsport*.... 50 500.000 May & Nov Nov. do do 500,000 Jan. & July Jan. pref. 50 Erie, 4, p. 599 100 16.570.100 Feb. & Aug Feb. do preferred 100 8,535.700 January. !<Jan. Erie and Northeast*... 50 600,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. Fitchburg 100 3,540,000 Jan. &, July Jan. Georgia 100 4,156,000 Apr. & Oct. Apr. Hannibal and St. Joseph 100 1,900,000 do do pief.100 5,253,S3f Hartford and New Haven. .100 3,000,00(1 Quarterly. jApr. Honsatonicpreferred 100 1,180,000 May ay & Nov May Hudson River 100 13.937.100 April & Oct Apr. 494,330 Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50 do do 190,750 Jan. & July Jan. pref. 50 Illinois Central, 4, p. 311 100 23,386,450 Feb. & Aug Feb. Indianapolis and Cincinnati.. 50 1,(589,900 Mar. & SepjMar. Jeffersonv., Mad. & [ndianap.100 2,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. Joliet and Chicago*.... 100 300,000 Quarterly. Apr. Joliet and N. Indiana 300,000 Jan. & July Jan. Lackawanna and Bloomsburg 50 1,335,000 Lehigh Valley 50 10.734.100 Quarterly. Apr. 514,646 May & Nov:Nov. Lexington aud Frankfort 100 .. 100 Panama 2,600.000 Apr.' '67 400,000 April. Apr. ’67 124,550 8,836,500 Mar & Sep. Mar. '67 2,425,(100 Mar Sep. Mar. ’67 10,193,010 May & Nov May ’67 4,390,000 1,000,000 Jan. & July July ’66 Jan. & 50 Oswego and SjYacuse 1,150.000 5,391,575 do preferred.. 100 | Old Colony and Newport..... 100 Orange and Alexandria 100 Chicago and Alton, 4, r. 32!). .IOC do preferred. .100 Chic.Bur. and Quincy, 3, p 201.100 Chicago and Great Eastern.. .100 Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska*.. .100 Chicago and Milwaukee* ....100 2,227,000 Jan. & July Chicago and Northwestern .. .100 13,160,927 do do pref. .100 12,994,719 Annually. Dec. ’66 Chicago, Rock Isl. & Pacific..100 9,100.000 April <fe Oct Apr. ’67 Cincinnati, Ham. & Dayton...100 3,129,200 April & Oct Apr. '67 350,000 Cincin.,Richm’d & Chicago...100 Cleveland, Columbus, *fcCin..l0u Cleveland & Mahoning* 50 Cleveland, Painesr. & Ashta.100 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 Cleveland aud Toledo,3, p. 164 50 Columbus & Indianap. Oent.,100 preferred. 100 Ohio and Miss.certif., 4,p. 631.100 do . 136# Co. 100 4,606,800 June &Dec Dec. ’66 100 13,000,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’67 Cincinnati and Zanesville and the vol. ... 50 2,200.009 April & Oct Apr. ’67 100 to New York and New Haven. ..100 New York Prov. & Boston 100 Ninth Avenue .100 Northern of New Hampshire.100 Northern Central, 4, p. 568.. 50 100 North Carolina North Missouri 100 North Pennsylvania 7.. 50 100 Norwich and Worcester Apr. '61 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 ’67 refer the out- Feb. ’67 ‘'67 IS.—The figures after "page of Chronicle containing last report. * means “ leased." standing. Apr. '67 Apr. ’67 Feb. ’67 Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. & Aug Feb. Broadway & 7th Avenue Brooklyn City 10 1,000,000 366,000 Brooklyn City and Newtown.100 850,000 Jan. & July Buffalo, New York, <fc Erie*. .100 Buffalo and State Line 100 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug Camden and Amboy. 4, p. 599.100 5,000,000 Feb. &Aug 522,350 Camden and Atlantic 50 do do 600,000 preferred 50 721,926 Jan. & July 60 Cape Cod paid Apr. ’67 1,830,000 Jan. & July 4,076,974 Jan. & July 3,360,000 Jan. & July 4,500,000 Jan. &July 1 0 2,100,000 •Jan. & July Lowell 500 Maine, 3, p. 355.. .100 Providence 100 100 Worcester Boston and Boston and Boston ana Boston and N. Stock llallroad. tar Alton and St. Louis* 100 Atlantic & St. Lawrence* —100 Baltimore and Ohio 100 Washington Branch* giving- ns Immediate notice of any error discovered In onr Dividend. Dec ‘ ’66 Jan. ’67 Feb. ’67 Jan. ’67 Jan. ’67 48 63) 16# 64* 102# 128# 128 6# 17# Feb .r’65 10,000,000 100 25 1000,000 May & Nov Noy.’M 25”, se# INSURANCE STOCK LIST. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Heights 10 45J N.Y,Ph. &Balt.Cons 10 5 10 0 ..10 Brooklyn Buchanan Farm Central Cherry Run Petrol’m Cherry Run special 100 3 5 National Germania Great Republic G’t Western Consol paid 3 Albany & Boston 25% 3 Algoinah. American 5 6 13 . Boston Caledonia Calumet..^ — Canada Charter Oak — National Native j New Jersey New York North Cliff Evergreen Bluff Hanover Hilton Ridge Hecla Halbert Humboldt 25 300,00C 25 200 OOl 200,00C Brooklyn 25 25 25 17 Central P Citizens’. 00 20 City 70 00 92,682 Jan. and July 150,000 do 384,26( 300,000 333,872 Feb. ami Aug. 210,000 250,000 275,591 Jan. and July. do 309,622 500,000 do 214,147 200,000 424,1S9 Feb. and Aug. 4 00,000 228,696 Jan. and July. 200, IKK) 250,000 234,872 April and Oct. 5(M),000 1,289,037 Jan. and July. 400,000 4(34,178 March and Sep 36,51S Jan. and Jnly. 200,000 800,000 424,295 April ancl Oct. 200,000 203,990 Jan. and July. do 229,276 200,000 1 i GO J • • • • • • • • • e 5 8 GOLD AND SILVER .... 10 Mining, 60 2 25 — .. Senton .. 9 00 80 2 30 ... 10 — .. . 50 5 . • • • 2 CC 90 3 00 . Gj 2 0J Bob Tail Boscobel Silver Bullion Consolidated... Burroughs Central Church Union Columbia G. . — Bates & Baxter . . . i . 50 10 f 30 • • . * ,0 0 K) A 7 00 • • • • • • • m a a a • • # ^ • « ^ • 0 0 • . . , • • • Greenwich Grocers’ Guardian.. .... 75 10 6 85 2 25 50 ^ . 6 80 2 05 . ... Hope • • — .... . ie 1 7 Eagle 15 — . — Import.’ & Traders. International Irving .... — Knickerbocker.... .— . 6% . . , , . . , , Lafayette (B’klyn).. ... . Lenox 8 00 4 00 6 25 2 25 12 3 1 .... 5% % . „ 21 00 23 00 10 . • • . . • . . . / .... • . Meehan’ & Trade’ . % „ • . • • 8 50 1 25 .21 25 11% 75 1 75 New Amsterdam.. N. Y. Equitable 3 1% 1% 6 North American1'-. North 1 West Minnesota Winona 3 Winthrop 4% 2% . . 4 CO .... Bid. Askd par Lake Superior Iron ..... 100 Bucks County Lead ...». 5 Denbo Lead — Manhan Lead — Phenix Lead; — Iron Tank Storage...... — • . . . «... • • • • • • • • • • • • * * * . ’ .... .... 1 nn ruvi 5 0 0 0 0 0 K3 0 0 5 50 200,000 200,000 500,000 200,000 200,000 1,000,000 200,000 150,000 280,000 150,000 300,000 150,000 200,000 1,(300,000 5nn non 0 5 2(30,000 200,000 1 50,000 200,000 200,0(30 300,000 13 200,000 300,000 210,000 20(3,0(30 ) 1,000,000 5 5 500,000 3 par 1 non nno 200,000 2 25 25 17 40 2 — 15 2 25 .... 1 — 2 60 45 Liberty Manhattan Nye Ohio & Colorado G.& 75 5 50 400,000 Washington *t... .100 Williamsburg City.50 393,700 150,0(30 500,000 Yonkers & N. Y.. 100 ~50 5 10 150,000 Tradesmen's United States Washington GO 8 ... 25 26 Stuyvesant. Knickerbocker Kipp & Buell 25 200,000 200 000 200J300 Star. 2 95 250,000 • • • 121 Dec. ’66..5 Feb. ’67...C Feb. ’67..5 July’64 ..4 • • • • • • • • • » • . • Jan. ’67.10 Feb. ’67.7% Jan. ’67. 5 July’64.3% Jan. ’67 ..5 Aug. h)6 ..5 July ’66 ..5 Oct. ’G5...5 Jan.’67 .7 Mar. ’64. .5 .... 158 . .... July’64 .5 Apr. ’67..6 . July’66 .... .7 . Tan.'67... 5 .... ........ Jan. '67 .5 . • » • • • • • , July’66.3% July'65 ..5 July ’66 .5 ... . .... . 152.229 ... ... 546,522 195,926 167,883 do do do do do Feb. ’67 ..5 do do do do do 146% Aug ’66..5 Apr. ’65. .5 . Jan. ’67 3% Jan '67 ..5 Jan.’67 ..5 ... July’66 .5 • • . . .5 • • • • Jan. 67 . do do and Ano- 141 203 PVh Jan. and July. do 190,107 do 458.233 do 185,952 216,879 Feb. and Aug. do 140,679 156,220 Tan. and July. 962 181 226.756] Jan. and July. do 195,780 . . ... . 121 July’65 ..5 Jan. '67 . .5 ..... July ’65 .5 July ’65 .6 .... . .... •. . .... . . • • • • - - . • • • • • • « • • • • • • . 86 . • • • • • . .... • • • . • • . .... . Jan ’67..5 July ’66. .5 • . • • . • • . • • • . • . . . . . • • • . • • • • • • • • • . • . » . • « « Tnly’66.3% . • • • Ang. ’66. .5 Feb ’66 3% • • 119 1 * . Jan.’67.3% .'.5 90 . ..... Jan.’67 ..5 Jan.’67 ..5 Tan.’67 • . • • July ’65 ..5 Feb. ’67..5 Feb. ’67..6 . ..... Jan. ’67 ..5 Jan. ’67..8 Jan. ’67 ..6 Jan. ’67 ..4 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 ..6 247.895 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67..5 1,053,825 Jan. and July. Jan.’67 ..5 do July’66 ..5 511,631 161,743 259,270 228,628 819,870 264,703 • • .... Jan. ’67.3% do . 800,604 Feb. and Aug. Aug.’G6.3% ! Feb. ’67..5 do 206,179 238,808 March and Sep Mar.’67 ..4 176,678 Jan. and July. Jan.’67 5 Jan. ’67 ..6 do 302,741 Jan.’67 ..5 do 141,431 Jan, ’67 ..5 do 863,(306 do Jul}’’ ’65 .. 4 121,607 Jan. ’6T..5 do 284,605 Jan. ’67 ..5 do 1,118,664 Jnn ’67 .5 610 980 Jan. ’67 3% do 288,917 Jan.’67 ..5 do 222,921 Jan. ’67 ..6 do 146,692 do July *66 4 195,546 Jan.’67 .10 do 245,169 516,930 • • July’66 ..5 July’65 ..5 185,365 150,000 150,000 • Aug. ’65..4 150,000 200,000 . Mar. ’67..5 212,521 2(30 000 ..... Aug. ’66...5 200.000 200,000 300,000 St. Nicholast ’67..i Jan. J. ’67.3ia^ Jan. ’67 Jan. 65. ..6 1-pi 1,000,000 1,077)288 Republic* — 10 Hope Keystone Silver Bid. Last Sale. paid. 379,509 April and Oct. Apr. ’67..5 244,293! Jan and July. Jan. ’67 ..6 150 0(K3 Security t Grass Valley Gunnell Gunnell Union Holman Last 200,000 350,000| 5 Peter shares. shares do 134,065 Feb. and Ang. 241,840 Jan. and July. do 121,468 do 165,933 do 250,766 2.000,000 2,271,387 n Cooper People’s Phcenix tBr’klyn. 238.501 227,954 Feb. and Aug. 525,762 Jan. and July. 200,015 Jan. and July. 200,000 1,000,000 2,385,657 Jan. and July. 255,657 Feb. and Aug. 200.000 170,225 April and Oct. 200,000 177,178 Jan. and July. 200,000 do 152,571 150,000 do 419,952 400,000 0 0 0 0 5 0 5 325,232 Jan. and Jnly 515,891 Jan. and July 222,07c Jan. and July 282.12r Jan. and July 257,75c Feb. and Aug 336,47( March and Sej. 20-1 79( May anti IVny 170)171 Feb. and Aug 345,741 June and Dec 266,362 Feb. and Aug 200,000 500,000 ) Bid. Askd Companies. 84% . • . • • • . • • • . . • • • Tuly ’66 ..5 206,731 ins) 182 Feb. and Ang. Aug. ’66 5 358,733 Fan. and July. Tan.'67.. 5 Ian.’67 .5 do 336,691 630,314 1 T’cb. and .Aug. Feb.’67...5 100,206 i ^b. and Aug. 1Feb. ’G7...5 179,008 < ran. and July. *Ian. ’67 ..5 do l,Tuly'66...51 501,244 . .... • • • • .... • • 83 • . • . • • l: Department.—The new Fire Commissioners installed into office on the 1st inst. are making a thorough New -York Fire 90 7 who S. 45 30 50 People’s G. & S. of Cal. 5 25 2 25 2 30 Quartz Hill 5 i 4 Reynolds 75 1 00 j 10 Rocky Mountain 6 00 Seave’r were investigation into the condition and working of the institution with That a view to its modification or reform as necessity may call for. — Sensenderfer Smith & Parmelee — 20 — 10 15 10 20 4 75 4 SO 80 30 10 __ Yellow Jacket — . . . . Bid. Askd Companies. Tndor Lead 5 — 150,(X30 200,000 .... MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Companies. 150,000 MINING STOCK LIST. Texas.... - 204,000 0 0 0 150,000 O' 150,000 • o Star 150,000 0 0 1 Symonds Forks ' . ... Howard. • 1 50 10 50 11 00 — .... ... 0 - Hanover Ho Oman . » - :n 4 5% 30 00 36 00 • Montana New York - S — .Consolidated Colorado. Consolidated Gregory. ..100 25 Corydon 10 )0 50 30 17 L0 L0 >5 f .... . 153,000 30 50 30 4 • LaCrosse .. 3 .... QS/ South Side Bid. Askd Companies. .. , . Firemen’s Fund... Firemens Trust.. . • Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares. t Capital $500,000, in 100,000 Capital $200,000, fn 20,000 shares. Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 . . 1 00 Washington 33 .. Empire City. Excelsior .... 11% Victoria Vulcan 4 00 19 10 par . .... 4 00 .50 27 0C 35*66 Superior Toltec i3 Tremont 5 Exchange., Coni .11 . 300,00C 20O,00C (N. Y.).. [)0 00,, Sheldon & Columfcian.21 1 South Pewabic | % Huron Indiana Isle Royale*.. Keweenaw Knowlton • • • 4 ■ Rockland St. Clair St. Louis St. Mary’s Salem 4 — Hungarian 50 (Br’klyn)., 200,00c — . Seneca Sharon 1% Hope Foster Iron 25 500,00C 250,00C ... Princeton. Providence 5 2 2 .17% 1% 2% Hancock Copakelron 50 .> .... 1 . Portage Lake 5% — Fall River First National GilDin Gold Hill Arctic 200,00c 00 Pontiac Resolute French Creek • Consol.. .10 Pittsburg & Boston.. 9% 8% 12 00 Girard Great Western Hamilton . Quincy $ — Downieville American *. .... 1 Excelsior Flint Steel River Franklin • , Phoenix 10 Empire - • • 1% 18% 5% Pewabic J 1% Everett • j Ogima 3% Edwards • r: Petherick 1% Dudley • Nanmkeag 20% 1 1% Eagle River • ... 00) Norwich 63 95 — • 6% • | Pennsylvania* 2% 3% Davidson Delaware Dev*n Dorchester Crozier Des Moines 1*1 on? 300,00C .... 5 . j North western 66)21 20 21% 1 Dana •• •• ) 3 . 50 — Dacotah .. I Mesuard J Milton 2S 00 25 5 4 Copper Creek Copper Falls Copper Harbor. Ayres Mill & &ann one VV7V 50 >0 00 Commerce .... . — : i ... 4% 5% 4% 1% • • | Minnesota — Central— Concord 5^ 20 2 00 4 0C 2 6 .. . 2 25 17% 2% Bohemian Albin Alameda Silver American Flag Atlantic & Pacific Adriatic. 30 50 30 . .1 Mendotat 1 Merrimac 13%; Bay State ! ... paid 1 Medora . 4% Aztec .... Bid. Askd jMandan j Manhattan j Mass . 2 Atlas 20 1 ... 101 ... j Madison . 17 Amygdaloid Lafayette Lake Superior . 1% 1 Allouez 1 no 6, ' Companies. . 11 1 Capital. 9^ Bowery (N. Y.) • • 51 > .... Periods. Netas’ts MG STOCK LIST. d Bid. I Askd Companies. * 11 Beekman.... • ... COPPER JStna 1 Second National.... Shade River ....1C Union 5> United Pe’tPmF’ms. ....10 United States Venango (N. Y.) dividend. Jan. 1,1867. re s. Atlantic Rynd Farm S 5 5 5 10 10 Excelsior 4 00 Pit. Hole Creek 10; Oil Empire City 20 J 2 6; Clinton — Ivanhoe 2 2 Manhattan Mountain Oil — Natural 5 N. Y. & Alleghany 5 New York & Newark.... 5 5 N. Y. & Philadel 3 10 75 65 —; Brevoort Adventure (*). 20 par HamiltonMcClintock 5 10 Bennehoff Run... Bennehoff Mutual... Bergen Coal and Oil Bradley Oil First participating, write Marin< Hammond par 10 Allen Wright Bemis Marked thus Bid. Askd Companies. Bid. Askd Companies. 667 CHRONICLE. THE May 25, 1867.] Saginaw, L. S. & M. Wallkill Lead Wallace Nickel Rutland Marble... Long Island Peat.... RusseM Fie Savon de Terre .par . .. ... — 25 , 50 — 52 — • .... 25 • • • • • • • « .... 1 00 • • • 15 00 • • . • 2 00 \ Discipline among the men was found to be loose nor was the apparatus in the most tidy order. The old commis¬ sioners, however, are credited with many improvements over the system formerly in vogue. The present co mmissioners intend to separate the duties of fireman and politician effectually which is a good symptom in their doctorial intentions. But it is not their intention to make any radical changes until they have completed their inspections ; except in this, that what is good] in the present regulations will be strictly enforced. The rules are to be strictly enforced, and hereafter men will be punished for visiting bar-rooms or becoming intoxicated while in uniform. since its establishment. Co., S. H. Pearce & CHINA SILKS* EUROPEAN AND and Manufacturers SILK AND ol and Lawn HAN Oiled Silk, Imitation costs Oiled Silk. ..Offers appearance and durability. sale of the the LEONARD STREET, IMPORTER AND Pongee li’dkfs, MANUFACTURER COMMISSION Machine Edgings, Real Brussels Imitation Offer to Goods, Laces, 70 & 72 73 Mile 18 LEONARD STREET, NEW YORK. UNSURPASSED FOR HAND AND MACHINE SEWING. THOS. FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK, REMOVAL. CO’S. CLARK, Jr. A Eud, Glasgow. JOHN Corsets, Ac. Co., Jobbers only. Spool Cotton. Laces, ' Tram Silk. George Pearce & for 'Also, Agents MACHINE & SEWING SILK. BUTTON-HOLE TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C., Swiss Sc Freuch White Il’dkfs, Oiled Silk, Oilea Cotton, Organzinc Silk, Cotton Thread Company’s COTTON. SPOOL Lace Curtains. OF Co., MERCHANTS, Agents for the Glasgow Draperies, New York CHAMBERS STREET. 119 French Dress Goods, Muslin Church Street, 185 C. Holt & OF IMPORTERS John N. Stearns, 58 No. & Co., Delisle Oscar Reversible Paper Collars. most economical collar ever invented. Patent HANDK’FS, AC. LINEN CAMB’C CORNER FRANKLIN STREET. 364 BROADWAY Agents for the Importers of LINENS, IRISH Stock of the above at a new Thompson & Co., and FURNISHING GOODS, MEN’S superior finish, and but half as much as real silk, which it equals in WARREN ST., NEW YORK. Nos, 12 & 14 Wm. DKERCHIEFS, HOSIERY '•'■Imitation" has a very UMBRELLAS AND PARASOLS, Cambric, Madder, Turkey Red Linen HANDKERCHIEFS, COTTON Manufacturers of (late of Becar, Napier & Co.) Agent for S. Courtanld A Co.’s ENGLISH CRAPES, And importer of ' Importers ol Byrd & Hall, Napier, D. Alexander BROADWAY, No. 353 Commercial Cards. Commercial Cards. Commercial Cards. Our [May 25,1867. THE CHRONICLE. 668 88 „ RUSSELL, Sole Agent, N.Y. CHAMBERS STREET, Importers of White JamesOF Smieton, DUNDEE LINENS, Goods,' Laces and Has removed from 125 & 127 Read Street. Linen Haudk’tfe, New British and Continental. Organzine, and Tram. CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK. MILLS AT PATERSON, N. J. Woolen Co., 198 & 200 CHURCH ST., NEW YORK. SKIRT MATERI¬ No. 108 Wm. G. Watson & MANUFACTURERS 15 OF change Reavers. PATERSON, N. J. provided for United States or Consignment* terms Langley & Co., Removed from 139 Duane St. Brand & Importers A Gihon, CHURCH STREET, NEW YORK. AGENTS M. K. LINENS, WHITE FLAX SAIL AC. 3 CO., MILTON Nos. 43 A 4 5 CO., MILLS, WHITE STREET. Lindsay, Chittick &Co., AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, George Hughes & Co., Importers A CHURCH STREET, LINEN GOODS, SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS, LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS, SCOTCH AND IRISH PATENT LINEN Sole Agents Goods, White Goods, 160 & 152 DUANE —- —.— Linens, Ac., Ac-, STREET, NEW YORK, —— for LINEN Irish and Scotch — ... .... Lane, Lamson & Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS, IfflSH AND nsw Yos*’ Steel Rails, Locomotives, Railways. Railroad Iron, AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, FOR Steam and Street Roads, FOR SALE BY S. W. HOPKINS A Co., 69 <fe 71 Broadway, GOODS. MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS FOR 40 for Railroad Cos., Cars, etc., and undertake all business connected with Strachan & Malcomson, Thomas IMPORTERS AND fi vwmm Contract for Iron or THREAD. DICKSON, FERGUSON A CO., Belfast And F. W. HAYES A CO., Banbrldge. Dress Negotiate MERCHANTS, STREET. Commission Merchants, 198 A 200 IMPORTERS British Staple, And Fancy 12 PINE Bonds and Loans DUCK, AC. BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO., VICTORY MANUF. York. J esup & Company, BANKERS AND WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’ BURLAPS, BAGGING, CHICOPEE MANUF. New Broadway, In full assortment for the Jobbing and Clothing Trade. FOR WASHINGTON MILLS, AGENTS. AMERICAN 164 GOODS, Agents for the sale of E.R.Mudge,Sawyer8cCo. Sts pies. TYNG A COMPANY, STREET. IRISH A SCOTCH LINEN STREET, WEST OF of any of the Spacious Counting and Reception Rooms availa¬ Americans in London, with the facilities usu¬ ally found at the Continental Bankers. TO 17 A 19 WHITE Continent. solicited on the usual ble for Commission Merchants, 55 MURRAY BESSEMER IRON, RAILS, STEEL TYUES A METALS. Railroad Bonds and “United States and other American Securities negotiated, and Credit aDd Ex¬ BROADWAY, NEW YORK. WORKS Smith, LANGHAM PLACE, LONDON, W. RAILROAD MACHINE TWIST AND SEWING SILKS, No. 335 Have Duane Street. A. Son, Gilead SUPERIOR Silk Mixtures, Cassimeres, Wm. C. i NEW YORK, Railroad Material. STREET, NEW YORK. 234 CUUltCII W. D. Simon ton. WT. W. Coffin, Treas. Fancy AUCHINCLOSS, HUGH SOLE AGENTS IN BINDINGS, BED LACE, COTTON YARNS, Ac., Embroider)', Globe A JOHN ALS, WEBBINGS, Machine Twist 84 Thread. Manufacturer of WOVEN CORSETS, CABLED SIX-CORD BEST Yoke;, May let, 1 G7. MANUFACTURERS OF Sewing Silks, Duane St., to No. 94 John Graham, John O’Neill & Sons, J J. & P. Coats’ IMPORTER Emb’s, J. Pope & Bro. METALS. SCOTCH LINEfyS, m PEARIj STREET, near BEEKMAN SltaT, 1 1 ^EWYQRE. 1,k' Murray Street, Wew Vorlt, 25,1867.] May PRICES Bark, 80 $ cent ad val.; Bi Carb. Soda 1*; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ ft Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100ft 7 Refined Borax, 10 cents $ lb ; Crude CURRENT. addition to the duties noted discriminating duty of 10 per is levied on all imports that have no reciprocal treaties with the United States. per 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 side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied itt ad¬ dition to the duties imposed on any such articles when imported directly from, the place or places of their growth or produc¬ tion ; Raw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted. The tor in all eases to be 2,240 lb. Anchors—Duty: accents $ ft. 01209ft and upward^ft y*© 1C Ashes—Duty: 15 $ cent ail val. pot, 1st sort... $ 100 lb 8 62 © 8 7'. Pearl, 1st sort.../...., 18 to @ 3 25 Brimstone, $6; |y In ton ... Gum @45 00 Alum Aunato, $ ft bond)(gold) Maracaibo do St Domingo.. ..(gold) ...(gold) 26 21 @ © i m 14 94© 10 ..(gold) Coffee.—See special long and 14 Inches wide, $ square foot, 3 cents $ ft. Sheathing, new.. $ ft) 3 *»@ Sheathing, yellow 28 © .. weighing 14 @ 34 oz. 81 © © 2 f© 28j© Bolts Braziers’ Baltimore Detroit Portage Lake 8> 24 24 24 2 Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; um^rred Manila, 24 other uniarred,34 cents 1 $ ft. 22 $ ft Manila, Tarred Russia Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia..... .. .. .. Corks—Duty, 50 $ cent Regular, quarts$ gross Cariaway 95 © 1 6u © 8 2 aced (gold) (gold) Cochineal,Mexic’n(g’d) Copperas, American Cream Tarar, 29 © .. .. © w 17 @ 80© 6f(/a Gambier Gamboge Senegal ...(gold) Gum Tragacanth, Sorts Gum Gum 80 © Fisher, 15 I 95 I 29$ 36 39 41 18 60 7 60 Tragacanth, w. (g.fid) 60 © 1 00 Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng (gold) 8 75 @ 8 90 Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 © I 00 © flakey Ipecacuanha, Brazil... Jalap 70 70 40 Licorice Paste, Solid Greek. Madder,Dutch..(gold) do, French, EXF.F.do Manna, large flake Manna, small flake.... Mustard Seed, Cal.... Mustard Seed, Trieste. . 80 © 25 © 36 @ 1 75 55 © 25 84 @ 30 © 7 @ 42 24 <*© Wild do House 1_75 @ 2 00 Ginseng, South&West. b5 © 1 00 80 Gum Arabic, Picked.. .. © 8S Gum Arabic, Sorts... 85 © 55 Gum Benzoin ..(gold) © 36 Gum Kowrie 80 @ 27 Gpiq Gedda 25 © 4: G am Damar 40 @ Gum Myrrh,East India © 6*> Gum,Myrrh, Turkey. 55 © 23 © Paste,Calabria Lloorlce, Paste, Sicily. Licorice Paste Spanish and Regains, cent ad val.; © © i6j© Extract Logwood Fennell Se d.... Licorice 55 @ Badger Cat, 9tl © pr.(gold) brown uo © 80 © 82 © 8|© .. Ayres,mixed © 1 20 Ax cs—Cast brand steel, best [ er d> z 12 17 15 2* 25 15 © — ^ 13 @ ordinaty Carpe >tor’s Adzes,.... do ordinary... do ^ 82 31 f0 @ 10 © . Hog, Western, unwash. Hardware— val. 80 16 @ 23 , Bear, Black 17 Cubebs, East 1 ndia.... Cutch Epsom Salts 22 ad val. 1 70 00 @ 72 Buenos Fruits—See 18 © 00 © Cochineal, Hon RioGrande,mlxed$ 1b special report. 4 Furs— Du-y, 10 $ cent. Beaver, Dark.. $ skin, 1 00 © 4 00 do Pale..., 50 © 2 00 281 14 © ton. $ ft Jersey 20 © .- 7S © Flax—Duty: $15 $ © yy, . Coriander Seed Lac Dye BalaamOopaivi, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 50 cents $ ft; Calisaya Chlorate Potash Caustic Soda 191 Dyes—Duty,Alcohol, 2 50 p«,r gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft; Alotn, 60 cents $ 100 1b; Argols, 6 rents $ 1b; Arsenic and Aaaafoedatl, Antimony, Crude 10; Arrowroot, 80 $ Carbonate Ammonia, in bulk Cardamoms, Malabar.. Castor Oil Cases $ gal © © and w; Canthariilos 23 50 © 12© Cotton—See special report. Mineral Phial (gOld) Camphor, Refined bOml) @ © 191 5* ..© (in Flowers,Benzoin.$ oz. report. Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 21; old copper 2 cents $ lb; manu¬ factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets4ST inches phur Camphor, »’ i:de, Chamomile Fiow’s$ft © .... © ... Anthracite 7 t0 © 7 f0 Cardiff steam @11 00 Liverpool Gas Carmel @12 i d Newcastle Gas .aSteamlO 00 @10 60 Cocoa—Duty, 3 c*mts $ lb. 40 ..© Sul¬ 40 . Hair—Duty free. © (gold) lb canis¬ Sporting, in 1 ters $ ft • 50 © 7 Rifle @20 50 Mackerel, No.l,Halifaxl9 00 @1 1 25 Mackerel, No. I, Bay..Is 75 ©;9 00 .. ©Is 00 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay.. Mackerel, No. 2, Ha uxl7 60 ©IS e0 Mac’el,No.3,Mass. l’gel • 50 @i4 0d Mackerel, No. 3, Il’faxl3 (XI © 4 to Mackerel,No.8, Mass. .... © Salmon, Pickled, No.1.37 00 © Sa mou, l i kleil, p. tc @ Herring, Scaled$ box. © 40 18 © 21 Herring, No. 1... Herring, pickled$bbl. 5 00 © 6 00 $ (gold).38 60 ©40 00 Am. Roll 1 lor Brimstone. @ — v - • 45 shore £ Crude ' Mackerel, No. 1, Mass 25 4,© 34 © Briinston.*, 21 bo 4() Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined v less K ft, 6 cents $ ft, an $ cent ad val.: over 20 cents $ ft, 10 cents $ ft and 20 $ cent ad5 00 © Blasting(A) $ 25ft keg © 5 50 Shipping and Mining.. 20 00 © Uu © 23 © y’d cents or Fislv— Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 $ bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.tlian bar¬ rels, 50 cents $ 100 lb. Dry Cod $ cwt. 6 2 ■ © 6 50 Pickled Scale. ..$ bbl. @ 5 v5 Pickled Cod $ bbl. 6 50 © 7 On 19 ton 28* Gunpowder—Duty, valued at 20 66© Tennessee 5 @ 18 © .. Sff 24 © 21 © Shingling Hatchets, C’t steel, best br d8, Nos. 1 to 3 S 00 © 9 50 ordinary 6 17 @ 7 Broad » ateb’s 8to8 bst. 15 60 @25 do 60 liO do oidi ary '2 0@ .... Coffee Mil s. List!0 % dis. ,r do ::ri Hopper © do Wood Back © ... Cotton Gins, per saw... $5©* less 20 % Narri.w Wrought Butts List 5 % Cast Butt'—Fast Joint. List IU £aiv. w Loose Joint.. List. . 35 @3 61) ■ 38 © 10,4 cents $ ft. Calcutta, standard, Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centail Prime Western...$ ft tfb @ 2o L5 25 © 7 © 1 25 @ I 4 1 .... castle gold BI Chromate Potash... Brimstou lb $ bushel. Guayaquil do Rt^gulus of © © 81 00 © 28 (X) Fustic, Maracaibo 27 60 © ... Logwood, lion. 30 IX) © .... LogWi-od, Laguna (gold)80 (0 © .... Logwood, St. D<*min..21 l‘0 ©12 O0 Logwood, Cam ,(gold).2' f<) © Log wood, Jamaica *.0 .4 0» @16 00 Eimav/ooil ;... ©lit> 00 4 © © 83J© 2 © Berries, Persian Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ Liverpool Orrel. $ ton of2,240 lb... Liverp’l House Cannel $ ft 55'© 25 1/ 18 cents 80 Fustic, Cuba Fustic, Savanilla 85 34© Balsam Copaivi Balsam Tolu Balsam Peru Bark Pelayo Cement-Rosendale$bll 65© 1 75 Chains—Duty, 2* cents $ lb. One inch & upward$lb 9© Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 $ ton of 28 bushels 80 lb to the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents $ 28 (in 21 Arsenic, Powdered... Assafustida 14 © © 2«> © 75 © * 33 Woods—Duty free. .(gold)$ t nlBU 00© Barwood % 20J© 21 Clotli—Duty, valued at 1C or less $ square yard, 3; ovei Gunny # Camwood. 60 f0 4 Argols, Crui’.e Argols, Refined 17 © 19 16 Farm Dairies 10 @ is do Common 10 © 15 Candles—Duty, tallow, 21; sperma ceti and wax e>; stearine and ada mantine, 5 cents $ lb. Sperm, patent,. .. $ lb 48 @ 50 Refined sperm, city... 38 © 40 Stearic 30 @ 81 Caracas Scotch, G’ek, No.l $y Cotton,No. 1... .$ y. ft m 50 10, 4 cents $ ft Calcutta, light &h’y 22 ad val. 1 cent Ravens, Light. J pee 16 Ravens, Heavy.” 18 Dye »* 15 16 18 20 © © 2i© 27 © ~. vsv (80$c.)(gld) Duck—Duty, 30 d good to prime. Antimony, Cheese—1 bushels of 80 i 27 27 18 18 18 , Yel¬ 571© (gold) it b Aloes, Cape $ Aloes, Souotrine 80 @ S3 2 @ 2s vO © 2S Welsh, tub* $ lb. ‘ .. © Fine to rxtra Sta e,old G<M»d oflefitat-, “ V0@ We sh tubs, IS© 20 “ ComnrioD Stit', 1‘© Is “ We tern B .iter, “ li © 15 Grease bu ter, urk. $ 1b 10 © 12 19 © .... Alcohol . 2 20 © Sulphate Morphine.... 6 75 © Tart’c Acid. .(g’ld)$ft 61 © 13© Tapioca Vordigrie, d*T^ ax. dry .. @ Vitriol, Blue 10© $ 1b; Sal Ammoniac, 20; Blue Vit¬ riol, 25 $ cent ad val.; Ertherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $1 $ tt>; all others quoted below- frxe. Acid, Citric 80 50 8 48© Sugar L'd, W’e(goid).. Sulp Quinine, Am$ oz Verdigris, 0 cents Tartaric Acid, 20; $ lb, new. ~ tubs $ lb “ Adamantine SbeH Lac Soda Ash Ipecac and Jalap, val.; Pruss. Potash, . Senna, Alexandria.... Senna, Eastindia Rhubarb, oUceuts $ tt>: Quicksilver, 15 $ cent ad val.; Sal Bratus. II cents $ lb; Sal Soda, I ceut $ lb; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 20 $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; soda Ash, I; Sugar Lead, 20cents $ Bt>; Sulph. Quinine, 45 $ cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.; cents. Dairies 35© © © 48 © Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Tragacanth, 20 $ ail val.; Hyd. Potash and Rasub- $ cent ad &wh. $ft 65 @2 50 and Cheese.—Duty: 4 Common Sarsaparilla, Hond Sarsaparilla, Mex 10 $ cent.; low, 5; Red do, 10; Butter— Fresh pfiil, do 20 © JO© 2*© Seneca Root. 50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $1 $ lb; Oil Peppermint, 50 $ cent ad val.; Opium, $250; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents $ ft; Phosphorus, 20 $ lb. Amer’n,gray Factory Salaratus SalAm'n ac, Ref (gold) Sal Soda. Newcastle... Logwood, Flowers limed Iodine, 15; 7© Sago, Pe*. loil 9 75 © 7 00 10 50 © 7 50 ©12 00 50 ©13 00 00 ©15 00 50 ©16 00 80x45 to 32x48. 32x50 to 32x^6 24 00 @18 00 Groceries— See special report. Gunny Base*—Duty, valued at 1C cents or less, $ square yard, 3; ove „ 85 © '8 @ Rhubarb,China.(gold) 2 75 @ Quicksilver Geeila aud Gum cent 90 © ;. Phosphorus Prussiate Potash Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic,20 $cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per lb; Common Dr-fl.kin 55 @ Epsom Salts, 1 cent Benzola and Gamboge, £ Navy © 61 9* © >4 Crackers Breadstuff's—See special report. Bricks. hard..per M.13 00 (cb<3 50 Croton 18 < 0 ©1* 00 Philadelphia Fronts @65 00 Bristles—Duty, 15 cents ; bogs hair Butter Oxalic Acid 8 25 @ 6 50 8x11 to 10x15 11x14 to 12x18. 12x19 to 16x24 20x31 to 24x80 24x31 to 24x86 24x36 to 30x44. £5 00 © ... Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 75 © 7 25 it} Roll Brimstono, $10 $ cent ad val.; $ lb; Extract Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val. Pilot $ ft .. © 1 00 @ 4 Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents $ lb; Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 Beeswax—Duty,20 $ cent ail val. American yellow. $ lb 41 @ 41 Bones—Duty : on invoice 10 $ ct. Grande shin $ Oil Lemon., u 4 Oil Peppermint,pure. 6 $ ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and 15.$ cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40cents $ lb.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents $ lb ; Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon ; Chlo¬ rate Potash, 6; Caustic Soda, II; Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, |; Cream below, a tent, ad Val. under fiags Eio 669 THE CHRONICLE Fox, Silver do Cross do Red do Grey Lynx Marten, Dark do pah* Mink, dark Alusk. rat, Otter Opossum Raccoon Skut k, Biack 5 00 @i2 00 2 00 © 8 u» 50 © 1 (»0 50 © 75 10 © 20 4 00 © 8 00 5 OH ©50 00 3 00 © 5 00 1 00 © i 60 50 © 75 25 t.O © 4 •0 00 ©20 00 2 i0 © 5 00 3 008 © bU © 6 00 5 00 © 8 00 15 © 80 10 © 50 30 @ 75 or Window square foot; larger and and not over 24 $ square foot; 6 cents and not exceeding 24x6o inches, 20 cents $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents $ square foot; x39 inches above that, unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding lOx J5 inches square, IJ; over that, ami ou 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 24x30 .2£ ; all over that, 8 cents $ ft. not over American Window—1st,2d, 8d, and 4lh qualities. Subject to a discount of 35 ' nd 5$ cent. 50 ft 7 25 @ 5 50 7 75 © 6 00 i lx to 12x18 9 25 © 6 50 12x19 to 16x24 9 50 © 7 00 18x22 to 20x30 11 75 © 7 50 20x31 to 24x30 14 50 © 9 00 24x31 to 24x36 16 00 @10 00 26x36 to 30x44 17 00 ©11 00 80x46 to 32x48 18 00 ©12 00 20 00 ©13 00 32x50 to 32x56. Above ....24 00 ©15 00 6x 8 to 8x10. .$ 8x tol0x!5 1 6u @ . 16 1 uO © 1 12 8© 14© . 31 NntgaUs Blue Aleppo 85 © 0J Oil Anis 4 50 ©5 4 00 © Oil Cassia..Oil Bergamot 6 50 © 9 00 2d, (81 BgleThick)—Disoottiit3f and5 fteex.t 6x 8 to8x10. $50 feet 7 7d © 6 u0 English and French Window—1st, :kl, and 4th quallt es. List5£adv. Hinge«,Wrcuaht, Its, Cast Bbl . L st 20 % dis Carriage and Tire do List 40© 6 > % dis. Door C .c^s and Latches List 71 ip dis. Door Knobs—Mineral, list 7^ % «bs. “ Pore lain List 7| % dis. Padlocks New List 26&7I % dis. Door B- . Locks—Cabinet, Eagle Tiunx Stocks and Dies Screw Wrenciits—Coe’s “ List 15 % "is. List 10 % dis. List 80% dis. Liat 20 % dis. List 55@6n % dis. $ ft *0 @ 22 Framing Chisels.Nowldst87I > 11 %di s , Patent. do ‘I aft’s Sin ths’ Vis^s I inner List40%adv insets. no . handled, do no List40%adv. in sets. List 20«fe 10 % dis , Short Autrurs,per dz.NewList i0% di*. Ring List 20 % dis t do CutTacks List 7£&5 % di s Cut Brails List no % di s, fcivet-, Iron List s5&40 % dis. Screws American... List i0iV5%(iis. ilo English.. List 25@3U % dis. Shovels and Spades... List 5 % dia. Hoi*se Shoes 6l@7i$ft List 3U@35 %adv Planes Huy—North River, in bales$ 100 fta for shipping 1 00 © .... Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila , $-5; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn and Sisal, $15 $ ton; and Tampico , Augur Bitts .. 1 cent $ ft. Amer. Dressed.$ ton do Cndressed.. Russia, Clean Jute 870 f‘0@885 00 00 275 (H@z80 8 6 00@:t6u t0 (£°ld) '.C5 00@1<5 00 111© 12 13 @ 14 Hidei*—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬ ed and Skins 10 $ cent ad val. ft..(gold) Manila..$ Sisal Drv Hides— Buenos Ayr9s$ Glass—Duty, Cylinder Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches., 21 cents $ square foot; larger not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents - 7* dis. ftg’d do Montevideo Rio Grande do ^Hnoco do California gold California, Mex. do ..do Porto Cabello , do do VeraCruz x’amplco do Texas Dry Salted Hides— te‘dd) th li * llfornia... do . Tamp co . do South & Wes . do Wet Salted Hides— Ayres.$ ftg’d. do do Bue Rio Grande California Western .... Coutrysl’ter trim. »fc cured. City . do do Upper Leather Stock— B.A. & Rio Gr. Kip $ ft cash. Sierra Leone do Gambia & Bissau do Honey—Duty,2 3ent .... 20 © £5? 19 19* © 1*3© :r»t© 13 © © 14 © 16i© 17* U* 14 © 15 13 © © I'i© lo © .. BI© K'l© «i© li © 11 in© in© 12* in 28 @ 29 © 23 © 80 1 Foreign 11 li 11* f9 U4 ?aKon. bond) (gr * $ gall. (2 Hops—Duty: 5 cue - s $ ft. Crop of 1866 $ ft 45 of 1865 15 1.1© Cuba (in do iy is 20 55 © 63 © 70 40 TO ordinary logs do Port-au-Platt, $ ft 85 ® @ @ logs 00 70 55 @ Easr In 11a Cartiiagam, &c Indigo—Duty raKK. @ 0" @ 75 @ 60 ® Bengal...-k.^old) $ft Oude (gold) Madras (gold) , 1SJ® Sheet, Russia Sheet, Single, Double 5J@ and Treble luj 19 S Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton 5’- 0( @ M 0 do American...... 82 50@ to 00 Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime $ft East Ind , Billiard Ball 8 C0@ 3 00@ 3 2') 3 50 3 00@ 3 ^7 2 50 African, Prime.. African, Scrivel.,W.C. 1 C0@ Jjead.—Duty, Pig, $2 ^ 100 ft ; Old Lead, 14 cental 1b; Pipe and Sheet, 24 cents $ lb. Galena @ $ 100 ft Spanish (gold) 6 45 @ 6 62i German (g«»l l) 6 4*> @ 6 024 English (gel!) 6 56 @ 6 874 .. _ net Bar .. ... ^ do middle 1bellies 47 19 3 1 Si do' middle. do heavy . Califor., liffht. £9i® 104 .... Hornl’k, B. A.,&c..l’t. do do do do do do do do do middle. do heavy. Orino., etc. l’t middle do do heavy. do & B. A, do do do 3i 29 304 @ 29 ® 80 29j@ @ 8f'4 29 ® @ @ @ @ •284 21 39 41 40 45 @ heavy jirne—Duty: 10 $ cent ad val. Rockland, com. $ bbl. .. @ 1 '0 do heavy @ 2 2o j umber* Woods, Sfaves,etc. —Duty : Lumber, 20 cent ad val.; Staves, 10 $ cent ad val.; Rosewood and Cedar, fees:. Bpruce, East. $ Southern Pine 40 00 @ 4 * 00 White Pine Box BVU 30 00 @ 32 00 White Pine Merch. 33 00 @ 3S 00 80 00 @100 00 Laths, Eastern.$ M 0 0j @ Poplar and Whi 0 wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 @ 65 0J Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 00 @ 90 00 60 00 @ 65 00 Oak and Ash Maple and Birch ... iTAVES— White oak, 35 00 @ 10 00 100 (JO @120 00 Black Walnut pipe, ezLa. do pipa, heavy do pipe, light. do pipe, culls .120 do bhd., extra. do do do hhd., heavy do do do do bbl., extra. bbl.,heavy. @900 00 @250 00 .. @200 OG 00 BEADING — Wfeite @150 00 — [aliogaityi Cedar* wood—Duty free. Ufitaft&jr St. Domln- $ ft.. 250 00 200 00 @140 no @110 00 @ 60 00 @130 or @ 90 oe light.. ........ §130 00 @12 • 00 @100 0 0 @175 00 bbl., light.. bbl.,culls.. Red Oftk, lihd., h’vy. oak, lihd. 2i @ 18 @ ... 23 @ 4 25 (2S0 lbs.) Spirits turp., Am. $ 6 50 @ 8 95 6a @ 65 g. Rose* 81 (p 50 @ Cadiz Solar coarse Fine screened d<> $ I>kg. F. F 240 ft bgs. 52 52 0) 00 50 @ 50 @ .. @ 2 75 @ Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2f cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; nitrate soda, 1 cent ft. Refined, pure $ ft @ 15 .. Crude H@ Nitrate soda gold 4@ 44 ad val. Clover ^9 ft 11 @ 14 Timothy,reaped $ bus 3 f0 @ 3 i5 ^ bus O'tDary 4 50 @ 5 50 Linseed,Am.cleau^ltce @ do Am. rough ^9 bus 3 00 @ 3 do Calcutta ...gold i .5 @ Sf*ot.—Duty: 2| cents $ ft. Drop ^ ft 10i@ ... 10 .... Oakum—Duty fr.,“jl ft, 8@ Oil Cake—Duty: 20 ^ centad val. City thin obl’g, in bbls. $ ton.55 00 @55 50 do in bags. @51 00 West, thin obl’g, do 50 00 @ .... Oils - Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $i : bwrning fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.; sperm and whale or other ilsh (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 $1 cent ad val. Olive, qs(gold;per case 6 25 @ do in casks.$ gall.. 1 60 @ Talm 11 @ $ ft Hi Linseed, city...^ gall. 1 37 @ 1 40 Buck do refinod winter.. 35 do Lard oil Red oil, city cent. No. I @ 10 25 @11 CO do medium,No3@4. 9 50 @10 00 Canton,re-reel.Nol@2. 8 50 @ 9 0) .10 50 @13 00 Japan, superior . Medium China thrown do 10 00 @11 i0 1» 00 @ 8 00 Skins—Duty: 10 ^ cent ad val. 6oat,Curacoa$ ft geld do Buenos A...go’d 31 @ 374 4 24 Tampico. ..gold 41 @ 41 @ fO 2 40 @ 2 45 unbleach. 2 SO @ 1 10 @ 1 15 .... distilled . 60 @ - Bank 75 @ 75 @ Straits Paraffine, 28 Kerosene — 30 gr.. .. ....- 42 Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents ft; Parit white and whiting, 1 cent |9 1b; dry ochres, 56 centf $ 100 ft : oxidesofzibc, 1| cents $ lb ; ochre, ground in oil, $ 50 $ 100 lb ; Spanish brown 25 $ ceLtad val,; China clay, $5 ton; Venetian red and vermilion 25 $ cent ad val.; white chalk, $10 $ ton. Litharge, City....^ft H4® 12 Load, red,City 1 ~;@ 12 do white, American, pure, in oil @ 144 do white, American, pure, dry 13 @ 134 Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1 9<@ 10 do white, American, No. 1,in oil do whi 0, French, 10 @ ■ 14 @ Venot.red(N.C.)$cwt 2 75 @ 3 00 Carmine,ctty made^ftlG 00 @20 00 $ ton34 00 @95 00 Refined, free do in bond Naptha, rpfined Residuum Plaster 68 64 1S| 6} 10 11 cents, 34 cents $ ft $ cent ad val. (Store prices.) English, cast, ft 18 @ 23 American, spring Araer c n cast English, spring English bdster Lnglisa machinery.... @ 12 @ 19 @ 16 15 10j@ 114® I8{@ 12| 20 16 Sumac—Duty: 10 <j$ cent ad val. Sicily $ ton.. 150 00 @225 00 . Tallow—Duty :1 11^® 113 $ ft (gold) (gold) .. @ 2 4 23 @ English (gold) @ 224 Plates,char. I.C.^i box P 25 @13 25 .. 41 @ .$ bbl. 8 75 @ 4 00 Paris—Duty: lump,free; @ 4 50 White Nova Scotia.... 4 75 @ 4 874 Calcined, eastern $ bbl @ 2 40 Calcined city mills @ 2 50 Provisions—Duty: beef arul pork, 1 ct: laras, bacon, and lard, 2 ts ^ ft. 3.e.of,plain mesial bbl.. 14 50 @21 00 do extra mess. .li) 69 @23 75 22 87 @21 0> Porkymeesjnew do mow Old ^....22 00 @22 25 do do do I. C. Coke .J. .in 57 @12 25 Terne Charcoalll 75 @12 25 Torno Coke.,.. 9 50 @ 9 75 Tobacco.—S00 special report. ... .... Wines and liquors—Liquors —Duty: Brandy, first proof, $3 per gallon* other liquors, $2.50. Winks— Duty: value net over50 cents $ gal¬ lon 20 cents gallop an4 23 ^ cent ad valorem; oyer 5: and riot over 100, 50 cents $ gallon and 25 $ bent ad valorem; over $1 $ gallon, fl ^ gal¬ lon and 25 V cent ad val. 8 60@ 70® 83 8 50 1 40 9 00 7 00 85 @ • 90® i*io 1 15® do 85 00® 60*00 do 2 8C@ » 00 do 11 00® 25 00 cases. Champagne.... Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered $2 to $3 5i $ 100 ft, and 15 $ cent ad val. No. 0 to 18 No. 19 to 26 No.27 to 36 20 £0 85 .... $ cL off list. $ ct. off list. $ ct off list- ,...$ft 20 per cent) do 8® 47 @ 57 @ . Wool—Duty lo Imported in the “ or¬ dinary condition as now and hereto fore practiced.” Class 1 — Clothing : Wools—1The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less $ 1b, 10 cents $ ft aud 11 $ cent, ad val • over 32 cents $ lb, 12 cents $ ft and 10 $ cent, ad val. ; when iinported washed, double these rates. Class 2 — Combing Wools-The value where¬ of at the last place whence exported to the United States is 32 cents or less $ ft, 10 cents $ ft and ll $ cent, ad val. ; over 32 cents $ ft, 12 cents $ 1b and 10 ^ cent, ad val Class 3.—Carpet Wools and other similar Wools—The value whereof at the last place whence exported to the United States is 12 cents or less » lb, 3 cents $ ft ; over 12 cents $ ft 6 cents $ ft. Wool of all classes imported scoured, three times the duty as if imported unwashed. Amer., Sax. fleece $ ft 024® 75 do full bl’d Mcriuo. 58 ® 4 and J Merino.. do Texas Peruvian, unwashed... do common, w... Entre Rios, washed S. American Cordova .... washed Mexican, unwashed.... Smyrna, unwashed do 55 80® 40 40 27 33 88 80 84 22 18 80 28 82 80 85 36 20 8) 20 26 85 Valparaiso, unwashed.. S. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. do 50 ® 40 ® SO common.... African, unwashed 64 63® 57 washed £0 ~ ® ® @ ® ® ® @ 85 ® ® 40 40 80 40 29 80 ® ® ® ® ® 58 Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 100 lbs.; sheets 24 cents $ 1b. Sheet $ ft 11 ® « Hj Freights— To LiVKBrooi; - 8< Cotton,.,,, ,....$ ft Flour $Dbl. s. { . Petroleum Heavy goods... $ ton 1( , Beef Pork To Lonpon . tee. $ bbl. . : Heavy goods... $ ton 12 cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cont. arJ va>. Banca Straits 4 75 **@ ., Corn, Vk&bag6$ bus. Wheat, bulk and bags cont $1 ft. American,prime, coun¬ try amlcity $ ft... in 4 50 ...@ ... Oil Sugar*—See sp cial report. 75® 5C@ 50@ 00@ 3 8 3 .. over 14 4 .... and 10 75@ 4 75@ 4 75@ California,unwashed..;. at 7 cents $ ft or under, 24 cents; over-7 cents and not above 11, 3 cts German 4 do . <’o dry.... do Claret, in hhds. do 7 00 , do do Sherry d> Malaga, sweet Superfine No. 1, pulled Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, valued ft; 4 75® @ 4 '5@ Whisky (in bond).... 3C@ Wines—Port (gold) 2 2.*@ 93@ Burgundy Port, do Sherry do 1 9C@ .. 18 @ ...@ 90@ :o 00 90@ 9 (0 5 00@ 10 00 do Madeira do Marseilles 00 4 4 P Romieux.... do Rum—Jamaica ..do d) St. Croix Gin-Differ. brands do D'»m c—N.E.Rum.cur. Bourbon Whisky.cur. Extra, pulled Tin—Duty: pig,bars, and block,15 $ 00 ArzacSeignette 00 00 00 00 . Pellevolsin freres do A. Soignette . do Hlv. Pellevoisin do Alex. Seignette. do do Or 85 26 @ oaloined, 'iO ^ cent ad val. Blue Nova Scotia^ toe 574 Teas*—See special report. gallon. 16 @ @ 57* 57 Petroleum—Duty: crude,20 cents; Crude,40@47grav.$gal. ^ ft. do do do do L’gerfreres do Other br’ds Cog. do .. 6J@ do domestic 9f@ Spices.—See special report. 15 Trieste .1 05 @ 1 10 Cal. & Eng.. 1 26 @ 1 30 American.... *-;5 @ 80 refined, 40 ;ents 31 .,. gr’dinoil.^8 1b 8 @ 9 Paris wh„ No.l^lOOft 2 75 @ 2 8'4 Whiti ig, Amer 2@ Vermilion,Chinose^ ft 1 25 @ 1 &-> $ bbl. 4 00 @ 4 Chalk, block....$ ton?) O'. @23 Chrome yellow. ft 15 @ Bari tea 39 00 @42 Cliagres ...gold Puerto Cab.gold 85 45 .. " I 12 @ 1 £5 clay do do 4-’4 "2s .. plates, $1 50 $ 100 lbs. Plates.foreign $ lb gold 11 do China Chalk Vera Cruz .gold 41 @ 83 @ 42; @ 28 @ 52J@ @ 65 @ 66 @ 61 @ @ @ @ Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and dry $ h)0 ft 2 01 @ 2 50 gr’ ; in oil.ft 8@ V Spanish brown, dry $ do do do do Castile do 100 ft Mataraoras.gold Payta gold Madras,....gol l 87 cent ad val. Ochre, yellow, French, , do do 35 @ Soap—Duty: 1 cent $ ft, an<125 in oil VeraCruz .gold Cape gol l Deer,SanJuan^ ftgold do Bolivar ...gold do Honduras..gold do Sisal gold do Para gold .. ... @ do do do do 45 @ (free). ..... J. Vassal A Co., Jules Robin.... Marrotte & Co. Vine Grow. Co. Copper All thrown silk. Tsatlees, No.l@3.^ftil 50 @12 00 Taysaams, superior, Sperin,crude do (gold) 4 S0@ 9 Hennossy (gold) 4 9>@ 1 Otard, Dup. &Co.do 4 81® 13 Pinet,Castll.&Co.do 4 75@ 17 Renault & Co.. do 5 00@ 16 Plain Brass (less .... 75 @ 85 @ J. & F. Martell Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 lli@ Silk—Duty: froe. ... Whale Brandy— do Seeds—Duty; linseod, 16 cts; hemp, 4 cent $ ft ; canary, $1 ^ bushel of 60 ft ; and grass seeds, 30 cent 4 <0 @ 4 12 common . hhd., light. hhd., culls. do 22 do strainedandNo 2...4 i5 @ 4 6) 4 75 @ 6 00 do No. 1 do Pale and Extra M ft 20 03 @ 2) 00 Box Boards Clear Pine 20 @ 42 @ .. 19 37 89 33 3S mid. 32 HI 25 dam’gdall w’g’s do poor do Slaugh.inrough Oak, Slaugh.in rou., Ft 21 3 1 ® 2i do do do and 5 I ® @ @ 81 @ 31 ® .... do ; .... 32 4 00 Rosin, Pipe and Sheet net .. @10 25 teatlier—Duty: solo 35, upper 30 $ cent ad val. ■cash. 73 lb.—, 3 40 ® Oak, Slaughter, light . 46 do middle 3a @ do 4 ’ @ 4 > do do heavy. 44 @ 47 do light Cropped.... do do . Pi ch @10 00 .. 6 28 @ @ 9 75 Liverpool,gr’nd1^ sack 1 !)0 @ 1 95 do fine,Ashton’s(g’d) 2 60 @ do fine, Vorthingt’s @ 2 90 Onondaga,com.fine bis. 2 50 @ 2 60 do 210 ft bgs. 1 SO @ 1' 90 do do do ^ bush. 42 @ 8 Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 31) cents gallon; crude Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 33 cent ad val. Turpent’e, <f ..$2S9ft 5 .r0 @ 5 75. Tar, Am rici bbl 2 7> @ 3 25 Bods, 5-8@3-16 inch.. 1 :C 00@47A 50 9 @ - f0 Naval @169 00 145 00®205 00 7 5» @ @12 50 Salt-^Duty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 ft ; bulk, 18 cents 100 ft. Turks Islands $ bush. 424@ 45 12 12 4 @ fd(6d)$ ft Yollow metal Zinc ■!') O'.) STOEE PllIOKS—, ft $ ft. Carolina ...» $ 100 ftll 50 East India,dressed.... 9 2) 20 12 25 @ 5@ ft. Horsethoe, pressed... Copper : ' 95 00@I00 00 I 14 14 15 14 @ 8 @ Bahia Clinch Horse shoe, do do do CommonlOO 00@:05 00 Scroll 1‘0 50®'.90 00 Ovals and Half Round 1 5 i0@145 (j0 Band >.. @140 0 HorseShoe 135 00® Hoop 13*@ 14* S|@ 104 Rice—Duty: cleaned 24 cents $ ft.; paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents horso shoe 2 centsft. Bar,English and Amer¬ ican, Refined 110 t 0@115 00 Nail Rod 14 $ft Elams, Shoulders, Cut,4d.@60d.$ 100 ft 6 CO @ assorted Bar Swedes, sizes 10 @ special report. Nails—Duty: cut 14; wrought 2-J $ ton 41 t0@ 4' 00 I— 40 8@ 3 @ Mansanilla Mexican Florida. $ c. <lo 1b. Pig, Scotch,No 1. (in gold) 30 @ ...19 03 @19 25 1?4@ Ui prime, Lard, Itlolasses.—See cents $ Bar, Retihl Kng&Amer 80 U @ 90 00 Bar, Swedes, assorted • Rosewood, R. Jan. ^ ft _ riji, Auicrioan,No. 1. ,4< OO (Q> .. do do do 10 lo @ 10 @ 11 @ (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas 70 35 85 65 @ 1 CO (gold) (gold) 1 00 @ 1 2 i (gold) 75 @ i 0) Iron—Duty,Bars, 1 to 1-J- cents $ ft. Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 ft ; Boiler and Plate, 1£ cents $ ft; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 11 to If cents $ ft; Pig, $0 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 Manila Guatemala Caracca3 .. Nuevitas.... Mansanilla Mexican Honduras do do do do 7 @ . crotches do Port-au-Platt, ad val. -Para, Fine Para, Medium Para, Coarse do St. Domingo, do Horns—Duty, 10 $ cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande... §1 C 10 (0® 10 25 Ox, American.-. 8 00® 10 00 India. Rubber—Duty, 10 $ cent, sizes [May 25, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 670 Oil Flour $ bbl. Petroleum . 4 Beef $ toe. Pork*,,*.,,**.# bbl. Wheat Corn $ bush. To Glasgow Flour (By Steam) i bbl. Wheat $.fcnsh. Corn, bulk and bags.. Petroleum (sa 1)^bbl. Heavy goods..$ ton. 20 Oil Beef # tee. Pork ....^jibbl, To Have*; Cotto^.......... $ ib Beef and pqf k.. $ bbl. Measprem. g'da.^ $ f@ 1 00 @ top i0 to @ 6 6 @ Pettoleura Lard, tallow, oat m t ** IaHt, pot and pearl U 8 .. i ., .. 0 0 - 8 QJ @lo QQ Safes. Commercial Cards, Commercial Cards. WILSON, SON Sc CO. Sawyer, Wallace 8c Co., PETER WISE, Late of Richmond, I | Formerly oi Alexandria,Va and Merchandise, Produce, Stock, JOS. H. wii SON, ROBT. N. WILSON, Late of Lynchburg Va IMPORTANT TO & Merchants. Bankers | Note Brokers. Warehouse and ofiice corner of Lombard erick streets, No. 39 East End, Exchange Baltimore, Md. offer for the consideration of Bank Merchants and those desiring the best burglar proof security the following certificates: Office of the Novelty Iron Works, ) This Company erB, New York. ISth December, 1£06. J Lewis Lillie & Son, Gentlemen,—We have subjected the sample of double-chilled iron you furnished us to the most se¬ could penetrated by expen¬ and we think it impossible foi a burglar with his time and power to penetrate it at all. Yours truly, tests (as regards drilling through it) wc bring to bear upon it, and w thont success. It is our opinion that it can only be the use of a large number of drills, and the diture of much power with days of time, Supt. LYMAN G. HALL, Foreman. ISAAC V. HOLMES, Hinkley and ) 22,1S67. f having made an attempt double chilled iron furnished ns We to drill a cample o by Messrs. Lillie & GRAIN, FLOUR, SEEDS AND PROVISIONS. DISTILLERS COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 58 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE WHISKIES, from their own and other first-clasB Distilleries, Kentucky. All Widths and STREET. WASHINGTON 188 Chicago, Ills. Co., 156 N. SECOND 14S, 150, 152,1:4, & THEODORE POLHEMUS Sc CO MANUFACTURERS AND DEALER0 * Broad by a long continued operation of the most nn^kanics and the best tools. V cry truly, skillful W. H. BECniELL, W. H. STRAHAN, Merrick & Son’s Southworth Foundry, Philadelphia, Pa. Foremen in Messrs. Office Union Foundry Works, \ Chicago, Ill., March 13, 1867. <fc Winne, f Messrs. Murray Agents Lillie Safe and Iron Co., Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample of new combination of metals for safes sent us by you to thorough tests of the drill as we could, and fail¬ ed to penetrate the metal at all. We think it wou'd he impossible for bmglars to enter the safes made of this metal by means of the drill during the longest time in ordinary business they could have access to them—in fact, that the metal is proof against the as Truly yours, drill. MILLERS & Agents for Co., KIRK Sc SON, WILLIAM Linen Manufacturers. JAMES GLASS Sc CO., PROPRIETORS OF Chicago, Ill. Lockport, Ill. Lockport Hydraulic Mills, West Lockport. Ill. Sweepstakes Mills, A full supply ofour well known brands of Flour always on hand. Eastern orders will have prompt attention at low est market price. Our Chicago mills being st on the railroad track cars are loaded with Flour, mated Middlings, Bran, <fcc., to all points East, saving ex¬ pense and damage from cartage. Orders for pur¬ chase of Grain, Flour, or provisions in this market will be faithfully a1 tended to. E. W. Blatchford 8c Co., Manufacturers of Northwestern ManVo Co., j r Chicago, March 11, 1867. ) a Messrs. Murray & Winne, Agents Lillie Safe and Iron Co., Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample you fur¬ nished us (of a new combination of metals to be used in the manufacture of Lillie’s Safes) to the se¬ verest tests of our Power Drill, and with the best tempered drills our skill and experience could pro¬ Gas Fixtures, Kerosene Oil Lamps, Chandeliers of every Description. John Horton 8cROOMS, Co., MANUFACTORY AND SHOW 233 Sc 235 CANAL STREET, Corner of Centre duce. After operating upon it with different drills seve¬ than half an ral hours without penetrating it more inch and at that point unable to make gress, we became satisfied that further pro¬ if not utterly im- {jenetrable, atand leastmachine require power days oftotime, it would of drills number pene¬a arge through it; and that it was entirely out of the 1 ower of even the most skilful burglar to penetrate a safe made of this material. R. T. CRANE, President. trate CHICAGO, ILL. I. S. Bush 8c Files of this Paper A. Cummins, BROKER, COTTON M EM ENGRAVING, PRINTING,. &C., &C. Wm. G. England 8c Co., C 9ITON DOUBLE CHILLED AND FIRE AND WROUGHT IRON BURGLAR PROOF Safes. AND GENERAL of these unequalled Burglarproof Safes constant y ou hand at our Warerooms. designed fur both Fre and Buraia r-proof security. Ti e public are in¬ vited to call and examine lor themselves as to the Also, safes of every description, merits of our Safes. Lillie Safe 8c Iron Co., LEWIS LILLIE, President. FACTORS 65 Commerce BROADWAY, NEW YORK. YOUR CUSTOM SOLICITED Francis 8c MANUFACTURERS OF Umbrellas 8c Parasols, 49 MURRAY ST., NEW Bros., four drawers). Also, Rosewood, Black Walnut ami Oak Library, Dining and Bedroom Furniture. No. 722 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Factory, 3d Ave., cor. of 76th St. Ould 8c Carrington, ATTORNEYS 11 3 MAIN AT LAW. STREET, VA, THREADS, SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC. BARBOUR BROTHERS, CHAMBERS STREET, NEW YORK. BELTER Sc CO. (one lock controlling YORK. Threads, Linen SHOE Fine Rosewood Parlor Furniture, Patent Rosewood Bedsteads, Patent Rosewood Bureaus, Loutrel, DOUBLEDAY Sc DWIGHT, Street, Mobile, Ala. Springmeyer BY STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK MANUFACTURERS. 45 Maiden Lane, New York. We supply everything in onr line for Business, Professional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders receive prompt attention. ESTABLISHED 1844. RICHMOND, 198 26 EXCHANGE PLACE, Corner of William St COMMISSION MERCHANTS, LATE J. H. A full assortment Cooper 8c Sheridan, TENNESSEE. PHIS, *♦* Lillie’s Co., BROKERS, careful and prompt attention L. Bound to Ordor. BLANK BOOKS, 155 Kinzie Street, Chicago. Orders will receive Street, opposite Earle’s Hotel. STATIONERY, LEAD PIPE AND SHEET LEAD, HIDE LURGAN, Cambric Handkerchief Manufacturers LINSEED OIL AND OIL CAKE, Office of BELFAST, CHICAGO, ILL., Oriental Mills, N. S. BOUTON & CO. NEW YORK. PLACE, NEW YORK. 33 PARK (Established 1818.) COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 138 LASALLE ST., , DOMESTIC USE* 192 FRONT STREET, MO. Norton 8c of Doavmi*. MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE Meisrs. Lewis LOUIS, corner Anderson 8c Smith, AND GREEN STREET. ST. Street, Henry Lawrence 8c So i STREET AVENUE Weights. Large Stock always on hand. FOR EXPORT AND RECEIVERS OF FLOUR, ob. A 59 Yaeger 8c Duck, Cotton COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 25,1867. LilHe & Son, Gentlemen,—We have tried a sample of d' uhlechilled iron similar to that sent to the Novelty Works, New York, and our experience with it is about the same, viz : that it can only be penetrated J. M. Cummings 8c Co., Offer for Blair, Densmore & Co., BETWEEN WASHINGTON Philadelphia, Pa., February NEW YORK. Jr., cashier, AND five-eighths feel that Son, and failed to penetrate it more than (%) of an inch, after hours of labor, we can endorse the above Novelty Iron Works’ certificate in all particulars. •JARVIS WILLIAMS, Treasurer. NO. 47 BROAD STREET, Place, Williams Works, Boston, Mess-, January COMMISSION MERCHANTS, and Fred¬ Refer to D. Sprigg, cashier; J. Sloan, Baltimore, Md. And by permission to Jacob Heald & Co., Lord & Robinson, Balt.; Tannahill, Mclllvaine & Co., N. Y.; Ambrose Rucker, Pres¬ ident 1st National Bank, Lynchburg, Va. Messrs. vere 671 THE CHRONICLE. May 25,1867.] Mills at TO Patterson, N. J. SHIPPERS, GRAIN MILLERS, AND DISTILLERS. We are Manufacturing Corn Shellers, capacity, ranging from 50 to 1,000 Richards’ Power Of all sizes and bushels per hour; built of Iron, and warranted to shell clean in any condition of grain, and clean the corn in superior condition for the Mill or Market. Over 500 in Daily Use. Portable Engines, Small Burr Mills, Farm Mills, &c. RICHARDS’ 190 & m IRON WORKS, WASHINGTON STREET. Chicago, I1A, ’ * [May 25, 1867. THE CHRONICLE. 672 iETNA HARTFORD. OF Charter Perpetual. $3,000,000. Incorporated 1819 CAPITAL JT. GOOD NOW, Assets January Liabilities UN»UKAHCia having reduced its Capital accord¬ ing to law, uuder the sanction of the Superintendent of the insurance Department to the sum of AND AGAINST 1.033 BY FIRE. (2,000 tons each,) Sailing TUESDAYS, $300,000, intends hereafter to DAMAGE city of New York Marine Risks on ASHLAND,MIAMI andM. business to the confine its fire and vicinity, and will also write Cargo only, at the office in the Sailing on INTERMEDIATE DAYS, from Pier 11, North River, at 4 P.M., connecting at Boston with Fitchburg, Boston & Lowell, Boston & Maine and Eastern Railroads, and in New York with the Building. Metropolitan Bank Erie Railway. Freights taken and rates given to and from all on the above roads and their connections. ' ' JAMES LORIMER JAS. A. STREET. WALL 62 ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM Security Insurance Co., BROADWAY, One Million Dollars, ($1,000,000.) Capital, Cash FIRE AND INLAND A. F. Frank W. Ballard, INSURANCE. HASTINGS, President. Franklin II. Delano, Gilbert L. Beeckmau, Jostph B Varnuoi, Lorrain Freeman, Edward A. S*a> stmry, T. Boorman Johnston Sarnue; D. Bradford, U . NO. 175 SAMUEL THOMPSON & NEPHEWS Black Star Line op Liverpool Packets, ami Na¬ tional Lire ofLiverpool and Queens¬ town Steamers, sailing ev« ry week. Passage office 7t Broadway, corner of Rector (formerly 275 Street Royal Bankof Ire¬ C. GrimBranches, and of Eng¬ Pearl Street). Sight Drafts on the land, paya le in all its on sliaw &> Co., Liverpool, payable in any pari land and Wal'S. Bankers supplied with Sterling drafts and any part of the United States. . through tickets from the Old Couutry to 240,482 43 $740,482 43 TOTAL ASSETS RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President. added to its pre¬ of $5 0,000, and subscription notes in advance of premiums ot $300OnO, coutinues to issue policies ol insurance agaiu^t Marine and Inland Navigation Bisks No Fire Risk disconnected from Marine taken by He Company. Dealers are entitled to participate in the Pr.-lits. MOSES H. Ulil NN ELL, Pre&'t. PAULISON, Vice-Pres't. Isaac H. Walker, Sec'y. JOHN P. The Mercantile Mutual COMPANY. NEW YORK. Niagara Fire Insurance COMPANY. NO. 12 WALL CASH CAPITAL, Losses ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. IN CASH, rebatement on premiums lent in value to an average « TWENTY in lieu of porip. equiva¬ scrip dividend of PER Instead of issuing a scrip based on the principle that are equally profitable, CENT. the stockholders. This Company continues to make Insurance on Marine and Inland Navigation and Transportation on the most favorable terms, including Risks and Freight. Policies issue* making loss payable in Gold or Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬ on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, pool TRUSTEES. James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Watt, D. Colden Mnrrny, E. Havdock White, N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Henry R. Kunhardt. Henry Eyre, •Cornelius Grinnell, John S. Williams, Joseph Slagg, Jas. D. Fish, Geo. W. Hennings, Francis Hathaway, •Aaron L. Reid, William Nelson, Jr., Charles Dimon, A. William Heye, Harold Dollner, Paul N. Spofford. Ellwood Walter, ELLWOOD WALTER, President CTLAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Preat. J. Jamfabd, Secretary. Sydney or Melbourne, States gold coin. $400,000 00 156,303 98 capital .- $556,303 98 24,550 00 Total Liabilities BENJ. S. WALCOTT, President. J. Rkmskn Lane, veyed under through bill Company, PACIFIC MAIL Cash Capital- ----- $200,000 Assets, March 9, 1866 - - 252,550 Total Liabilities - - - 26,850 Losses Paid i t 1865 - - - 201,588 California, And Carrying tlie United Slates Mail. LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬ ER, FOOT’ of Canal street, at Departures of 1st and 21st connect at Panama with for South Pacific ports; 1st and llth lor Central American Ports. Those of 1st touch at Man¬ steamers Baggage 00 22 00 14 checked through. One hundred allowed each adult. An experienced Surgeon on board. attendance free. 3. K. pounds Medicines and HOLMAN, Agent. other responsible Insurance. RISKS SOLICITED. Hoard of Directors: THOS. P. CUMMINGS, HENRY M. TABER, ROBERT SCHELL, JOSRPH FOULKE, STEP. CAMBRELENG, WILLIAM n. TEKRY, THEODORE w. RILEY, FRED. SCHUCHAPDT. JOSEPH GRAFTON, JACOB REESE, JNO. W. MERSEREAU, L. B WARD, JOSEPH BRITTON, AMOS ROBBINS, WILLIAM REMSEN, HENRY S. LEVERICH. The Mutual RANCE Life Insu- COMPANY OF NEW YORK. Sept. 1st, 1866, OVER $16,000,000 00 CASH ASSETS, FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President. McCURDY, Vice-President. \ ISAAC ABBATT, Secretaries, j JOHN M. STUART. .. R. A. a President. HARTSHORNS, Secretary. JACOB BEESE, GHAS. D. 12 the 1st, 11th, and 21st of every month (except, wnen those dates fall on Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPIT^WALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, with one of the Company’s steamships from Pauama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. o’clock noon, on against Loss or Damage try This Company Insures Fire on as favorable terms as any SUV DAM, STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S THROUGH LINE zanillo. OFFICE, NO: 92 BROADWAY. D. LYDIG of lading. For lurther information, application to be made to the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall-st., Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William-st.. New-York. 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City. llth—Henry Chauncky, connecting with St. Louis 21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento. Hope Company. ONLY FIRST CLASS gold Children under three years, free; under eight years, quarter fare; under twelve years, male servants, one-half fare : female do., three-quar¬ ters fare ; men servants berthed forward, women do. in ladies’ cabin. A limited quantity of merchandise will be con¬ JUNE: Secretary. Fire Insurance . Special steamers rnn to the newly-discovered region of Hokitika, New Zealand. STREET. Gross Assets - $340 to $364 for first class, forward cabins of the Australian steamer; after cabin, latter $25 additional. Fares payable in United January 1st 1866. Surplus of each will be conveyed under through ticket at the following rates : From New-York to ports in New-Zealand, or To COMPANY, this Company makes such maining at the close of the year, will be divided to promptly paid. equitably adjusted and dividend to dealers, all classes of risks cash abatement or discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general experience of underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬ Risks, month. Hanover Fire Insurance Cash paid to its 270,353 Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, Chartered 1850. 253 per cent. JONATHAN D. STEELE, President. P. NOTMAN, Secretary. $1,261,349 During the past year this Company has Policy-holders, $1,000,096 ... No. 45 WALL Asphnvall (colon) on the 11th First ana second class passengers New-York for half-fare; STREET. SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 No. 35 WALL STREET, Assets, Jan. 1st, 1367 Mail each mouth from Panama to Wellington, N. Z., and t he Australian Colo ies, connecting w ith the steamer of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving and $218 to $243 for second class. The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus of Panama, aud the first class tares are for Incorporated 1841. This Company having recently vious assets a paid up c isb capital SI A via PANAMA. New-Zealand and Australian Royal Company dispatch a steamer on the 21thuf The Panama, to JOHN E. KAIIL, Secretary. $1,614,540 78 BETWEEN TION f STREET. INSURANCE COMMUNICA¬ NEIVYORK AND AUSTRAL A- Co., $500,000 00 CAPITAL, (INSURANCE BUILDINGS,) Capital and Assets, Gen’l Sup’t, and Pier 11, N orth River. WHITNEY, Agent, End of Central Wharf, Boston. BROADWAY, N. Y. SURPLUS* Jan. 1st, 1867 COMPANY. 49 WALL points STEAM Secretary. Sun Mutual Insurance H. M. DSHOHTH, Secretary. R. WA Germania Fire Ins. CASH * 104 Wall St., P w. Turney. William T. Blodgett. Charles P. Kirkland, Watson E. Case, John A. Graham, dohn C. Henderson, Janies L. Graham, Clinton B. bisk. Dudley B Fuller, 119 GRAHAM, Directors : F. H. Wolcott, Martin Bates, No. No charge for wharfage in Boston. WM. P. CLYDE, Agent aud Vice-President. ALEXANDER, Agent. SANFORD, (1,000 tons each,) President.' NO. THURSDAYS and SATURDAYS, AND AGENCY, NEW YORK and GLAUCUS, NEPTUNE, NEREUS Th!s Company Secretary. 1,1867.~$4,478,100 74 394,976 96 Steamers. Neptune COMPRISING President. DEE, L. J. HEN Ol April 16, 1867. NEW YORK, Line Outside RROADWAY. 108 NO. METROPOLITAN STEAMSHIP CO’S Company, Insurance Daily. For Boston Metropolitan Company, Insurance Steamship Companies. Insurance. Insurance. . . Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS.