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• -:.v; ••"'i -• W iTHE ’ammerr|aj ^ wmanr^i: fcfltte, (Stommwial limas, faUwag Pimtarc, and Insurance iournal ianto’ A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, representing the industrial and commercial interests of the united states. VOL- 3. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 186(5. Bankers and Brokers. JAY COOKE I V WM. G. MOORHEAD IRKEAD, ( PITT PI' Cooke Tay J ROB’T Co., BANKERS. Corner Wall and Nassau Bank of the Sts., Washington we 1 houses in Philadelphia and have this day opened an office at No. Nassau, corner of Wall Street, in this city. Air. Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co., York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of New ton onr Washing¬ House, and Air. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will he resident partners. We shall give particular attention to the purchase, SALE, and EXCHANGE Of all issues; its Bankers Nathan services on BACKING MOUSE OF Given, Jones & Co., STREET, NEW YORK. Ray, Given & Co., 43 CARONDELET ST., NEW OR¬ LEANS. Orders for the purchase or sale of Government William H. Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold, at Deposits, subject to cheques sight. <> Special attention given to the Foreign Exchange Business. Given, Jones & Co. are prepared to draw Sterling Bills, at si^ht orsixtydays, on the Bank of Liverpool, in s>tms to suit purchasers. The New Orleans Mouse will make Collections in that City and at all accessible points South, and remit on the day of payment. We refer to Bank of America and National B»mk of State of New York, New York City, and to any of the Kentucky Banks. D Pott, Davidson & Tones, BROKERS, BANKERS AND (Messrs. Brown Bros. & Co.’s new building), 69 & 61 WALL Bay and sell STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Gold and Government Securities. Accounts of Banks, Bankers, and Merchants receiv¬ ed on favorable terms. Interest allowed on depos¬ its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬ tions burnished to correspondents. _-Rifbrbnces '*1 w>wn James Brown, Esq of Messrs. Brothers* Co.: John Q. Jones,'Esq., Pres¬ : , ent0* ihe Chemical yHcn’ National Bank; James H. Vice-President of the Bank of New VA. Sterling Exchange, Gold and Silver, Bank Notes, State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks, &c / on commission. Joseph P. > Page, Richardson & Co BOSTON, 114 STATE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ^ Mumford, Cashier, Late of the Philadelphia National Bank. JOHN MUNROE & AL80 FIRST NATIONAL Dupee, Beck & Sayles, JAMES A. DUPES, BANK Pres’t: Government Depository and Financial at all times cheerfully furnished. JAMES BECK, 108 <fc 110 West COMMISSION MERCHANTS and Dealers In Domestic and Foreign Exchange. Special attention given to Collections of all kinds, 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 National Park Bank, Howes & Macy, and Spofford, Tileston & Co., New York. Second National Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel & Co. and D. S. Stetson & Co., Philadelphia. T. F. Thirkield & Co., Cincinnati. Third National Bank and J os. E. Elder & Goodwin, St. Louis. Fowler, Stanard & Co, Mobile. Pike, Yapeyre & Bro., New Orleans. Drake, don and Liverpool. KleinwcrthAs Cohen, Lon¬ Street, CINCINNATI, OHIO. Dealers in GOLD, SILVER, UNCURRENT BANK NOTES, and all kinds of GOVERNMENT BONDS, :nd remitted for Checks on on accessible points day of payment. UNION BANK OF LONDON. * FOR SALE. J.W. GALVESTON, TEXAS. HENRY 8AYLE8 Fourth COLLECTIONS MADE at all T. H. McMahan & Co. . Gilmore, Dunlap & Co., Agent of the United States. We buy and sell all classes of Government securities on the most favorable terms, ami ^ive especial attention to business connected with the several departments of the Government. Full information with regard to Government loans BROKERS, STREET, BOSTON. Western Bankers. WASHINGTON, D. H. COOKE (of Jay, Cooke & Co.), WM. S. HUNT ?INGTON, Cashier. CO., PARIS. ISSUE Commercial Credits for the purchase of Merchan¬ dise in England and the Continent. Travellers’ Credits for the use of Travellers abroad. No. 22 STATE Washington. ON LONDO AND Osgood Welsh, Frederic A. Hoyt, Rhawn, President, , STREET, STOCK ■ on Eastern Bankers. and Late Cashier of the Central National Bank. promptly executed. on Banks William H. Rhawn. OF Interest allowed to Edward B. Orne, William Ervien, Hilles, March 1,1866. D. A. Given, of Watts, Given & Co., Paducah, Ky. D. W. Jones, of Boyle Co., Ky. J.. ML. Flournoy, Pres’t Commercial Bank of Ky. N. S. Rat, late Cash’r Com’l B’k of Ky., Lebanon, Ky Co., liberal terms. Benjamin Rowland, Jr., Samuel A. Bispham, and to all business of National JAY COOKE & CO. T. BROOKE BANKERS AND BROKERS No. 1014 MAIN ST., RICHMOND, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES Of Banks. 33 BROAD H.* Maury & bought and sold directors: to orders for purchase and sale of stocks, and gold, bonds ROB’T $500,000 Joseph T. Bailey, our JAS. L. MAURY. all accessible points in the United States. N. Y. Correspondent, Vermilyb & Co. Capital Offers Opposite Treas. Department* Washington. Bankers. Deposits received and Collections made Street, Street, In connection with STREET, PHILADELPHIA, Philadelphia. Fifteenth Republic, 809 & 811 CHESTNUT New York. No. 114 South 3d R. National COOKE. & H. MAURY. 3 w -< EDWARD DODGE, EE j H. D COOKE E, Southern Southern Bankers. j H* C. FAHNESTOCK, NO. Ellis, Prest. Lewis Worthington, V.-Prest. Theodore Stanwood, Cashier. * THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Of Cincinnati. Collections made on all points WEST and SOUTH, promptly remitted for. Capital Kiock, $1,t>00*000. Surplus Fund* $250,000, Directors.—John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L. B. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M. Bishop, William Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. S and Winslow. Edward P. Tesson. Edward M. Tesson. Tesson, Son & Co., RANKERS, George Butler, BANKER AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, GALVESTON, TEXAS. (Established in 1847.) attended to and remitted for by Sight Drafts on Messrs. Duncan, Sheimau & Co., Bankers, New York. References in New York .♦—Duncan Sherman & Co; I. H. Frothingham, Esq., Pres’t,. Union Trust Co.; Moses Taylor, Esq.; R. H. Lowry, Esq., Pres’t. Bank of Republic; Henry Swift & Co.; H. B. Collections promptly Claflin & Co. Office In New York No. 71 Broadway. (No. 45 Second Street, ST. comer of Pine), LOUIS, MO., Founded in 1847, under the Style of 'Tessen & Danfen. J B. Chaffee, Pres. H. J: Rogers, V. Pres. Geo. T. Clark, Cashier. FIRST NATIONAL BANK Of DESIGNATED Denver, DEPOSITORY OF THE U. 8. Authorized Capital - - - - $500,000 Paid in Capital ■ ’ $200,000 Transact a General Banking business comer of Blake and F. Sts. DENVER COLORADO. - “r*‘ : 610 THE CHRONICLE. Bankers and Brokers. Banks and Bankers. BANKER ' i C. A. 3 BROAD L. P. Morton & Co., Satterlee BROKER, & Co., RANKERS, STREET, NEW YORK, DEALER Bankers and Brokers. 5 Graham, AND [November 17, 1866. 30 BROAD IN 70 BROADWAY & 15 NEW STREET- STREET, NEW YORK. Foreign and Domestic Exchange, Southern Bills Billj on London and STERLING EXCHANGE Paris, At Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile. on Sight or Letters of Credit for Travelers’ Warren, Kidder & Co., on MORTON, BURNS A CO., BANKERS, GOVERNMENT (C8 Old Broad Street, London,) BANK Available in all the OF LONDON, principal towns and cities of Europe and the East. RANKERS, Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and Sale of Stocks and Bonds in Loudon and New Y’ork. ♦ Levi P. Southern Collections. Morton, Walter II. Charles E. Milnor, H. Cruder Oakley. Burns, Harrison, Garth & Co., Drake Kleinwort&Cohen BANKERS, No. 18 NEW STREET, NEW YORK. LONDON AND llarrlson, Godiliu A Ap person, Bankers and Brokers, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Collections made on a’l accessible Southern BROAD 28 shipments to Messrs. Drake, Kleinwort & Cohen London and Liverpool, and to grant mercantile credits upon them for use in China, the East and West Indies, South America, &c. Marginal credits on points. of the London House issned for the BROKERS, W. H. REFERENCE': J. H. C. B. Fonda, Pres. Nat. .viech. Banking Ass. N.Y. Blair, Pr.-s"t. Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. Lockwood Sc BANKERS. No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 0 WALL STREET. IN GOVERNMENT OTHER SEClalTltN. AND Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency. subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon riro’-nMo *pr»ii Barstow, Edey Sc Go., RANKER * & BROKERS, HAVE REMOVED FROM NO. 30 TO Whittingham, No. 8 Broad MINING, RAILROAD, AND ALL OTHER STOCKS, PONDS AND GOLD NO. 11 BROAD Watkins, STREET, on Commission. Quotations and sales li.-ts furnished daily on appH cation. Orders prompty executed. John Munroe Sc Co BANKERS, NO. 7 RUE SO Collections made in all parts of the United States an i British America. ~ — Jesup & Company, 84 O. Bell, AND BROADWAY MERCHANTS, BROADWAY. BROKER, & 5 NEW Jones & Westervelt, BANKERS UNITED STATES STOCKS INCLUDING 6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881, 6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862, 6 “ “ 1864, “ 6 “ 1S65, 5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds, 7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, lBt, 6 Per Cent Currency Certificates. New Y6rk State 7 per cent. 2d, & 3d series Bounty Loan. Compound Interest Notes of 1864 1865 Bought and Sold. Sc YERMILYE Sc CO. Taussig, Fisher Sc Co., BANKERS AND No. 32 Broad BROKERS, Street, New York. Buy and Sell at Market Rates, ALL UNITED STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, daily balances, and others, and allow interest on subject to Sight Draft. Make Collections on fhvorable terms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale of Gold, State. Federal, and Rail¬ road securities,. Government and Gold, bought and sold on Commission. COMMERCIAL PAPER AND LOANS OF GOLB AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED. NOS. 12 NEW Sc 14 BROAD STREETS. ADAMS, KIMBALL Sc MOORE, BANKERS, No. 14 Wall Street, New York. Railways. Buy and Sell at Market Rates Government IN UNDEII Buy John Cockle & Son, BROKERS In Foreign - 32 PINE Exchange, Ronds, Notes, &c., Scc. STREET, NEW YORK. Reference?.—Moses Taylor; John Munroe & Co; C, Savage, U.S. Appraiser; W. Cockle, Peoria, Ill.; Hon. F. E. Spinner, Treasurer U. S. Washington. S. U. U. U. U. U. U. Fisk, SECURITIES; STREET, THE FOURTH NATIONAL and Soil at Market BANK, Rates : S. 6s of 1881. S. 5-20 Bonus. 8. 10-40 Bonds. S. 7-30 Treasury Notes. S. Certificates of Indebtedness. S. Compound Interest Notes. And all classes of Government Securities. Lawrence ties, oi all issues, and execute orders chase and sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD. Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, subject to check at eight. BANKERS, U. NO. 16 NASSAU Securi¬ for »he pur¬ Gilliss, Harney Sc Co., Have Removed to No. 2 f Broad St. Bay and Sell at Market Kates. ALL UNITE4> STATES SECURITIES. Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, ANKERS and other.-, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to Sight draft. Make collections on favorable verms, And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Bale of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities. DEALERS Sc BROKERS, Securities, Stocks, Bonds, Locomotives, REMOVAL. a issues of D. C. & R. H. Bonds and Loans for Railroad Co’s. Contract for Iron or Steel Ralls. Cars, etc., York, hand for immediate delivery STREET, Negotiate and undertake xll business connected with on Co., New York. Classes of Govern¬ and Gold. BANKERS AND NOTES. In Southern Securities and Bank Bills. ment Se. ur ties M. K. BANK Edwin NEW YORK, ***• Keep constantly SCRIBE, PARIS No. 8 WALL STREET, NEW YORK, Issue Circular Letters of Cred I for Travelers In a parts of Europe, etc., etc. Also Or tnrrercial Credits SOUTHERN & BANKERS. No. 44 Wall Street. New , AMERICAN BANKER, And Dealer In all COMMERCIAL CREDITS, For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope, West Indies, South America, and the United States. Bought and Sold RANKER S. world; also, LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS - TELEGRAPH, Interest allowed upon deposits of Gold and Cur¬ rency, un ject to Cueek at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants and Bankers upon lavorable terms. • CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR LETTERS OF CREDIT, For the use of Travelers abroad and in the United States, available in- all the principal cities of the AND No. 36 Broad Str. et, • flic© No. 16.* DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT AND OTHER SECLTtl i IES. L. Street, EXPRESS, Co., DEALERS VISSER, Exchange Place, New York. 52 lavorable terms. on purposes. SIMON DE STREET, NEW YORK. Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities, aud Gold Bought and Sold exclueively on commission. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received same STS., ISSUE Vermilye LIVERPOOL. The subscriber, their representative ana Attorneys in the United States, is prepared to make advances J. L. Brownell '& Bro., RANKERS A Duncan, Sherman Sc Co., CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU Street, RANKER AND STOCK BROKER. r SECURITIES, ALL VARIETIES. AND THE UNION 28 Broad Use, BOUGHT AND SOLD ON COMMISSION, L. P. No. 4 WAI L ST., NEW YORK. Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬ cuted. FOUR PER CENT. IN 1ERE6T ALLO WED on deposits subject to cheek at sight. J. Van Schaick, STOCKS AND BONDS Sixty Days; also, Circular Notes and Brothers & BANKERS, Co., NO. 16 WALL STREET, N. Y GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, AND OTHER STOCKS, BONDS, &c., bought and sold on Commission for Cash Only. Deposits received subject to check at sight, as with Banks. DEWITT C. LAWRENCE, Member New York Stock Exchange. CYRUS J. LAWRENCE, ‘ JOHN R. CECIL. ", • late Butler, Cecil, Rawson Sc Co, WM. A. HAL8TUD. ■ ante’ feette, Cammewat §atturatj Panitar, and fntenc* fmmiat. A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, ,., , 8 REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE»UNITED STATES. VOL. 8. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1800 NO. 73. CONTENTS. upon us THE CHRONICLE. Safeguards against Panics 611 Congress aua Financial Legisla¬ tion.. The Alabama Claims and Amer¬ ~ ican Neutrality. > Adopted 613 Trade of Great Britain and the 612 613 United States Latest MonetaryjandCommercial 615 English News 616 News The Constitutional Convention— The New Fiscal Policy to be 613 Commercial and Miscellaneous THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES. Cotton 624 Tobacco 625 Breadstuffs Foreign Exchange, New York 626 City Banks, Philadelphia Banks Groceries 627 National Banks, etc 619 Dry Goods 628 Sale Prices N.Y. Stock Exchange 622 Imports 629 Commercial Epitome 623 Prices Current and Tone of the Market 630-31 Money Market, Railway Stocks, U. S. Securities, Gold Market, THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL. 632 I ous Bond List 634-35 633 Insurance and Mining Journal... 636 Railway News. Railway, Canal, etc.. Stock List. Railroad, Canal, and Miscellane- | Advertisements 609-10, 687-40 unexpectedly, and should strike prepared. But, secondly, ship when un¬ have a protection against a panic in our banking system, which, rifotwithstanding its defects has two very strong bulwarks, in its compelling the banks to hold a large reserve, and in its binding together all the banks in every part of the country and uniting them into one organic complex whole, so that in time of pressure they act like the stones of an arch, affording mutual support until the pressure has passed off. It should indeed inspire us with confidence to see that during the enormous pressure of the war on our finances, still we were exempt from all panics except one or two of a temporary and minor character, which resulted from mismanagement that should have been avoided. Another we source of financial strength and protection against financial revulsion is found in our crops, which, not¬ withstanding all that a few croakers may say, are likely to ®f)e <£f)ronitU. The Commercial our Financial Chronicle is issued every Satur¬ turn out well. In the South the tobacco and cotton day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, crops will be good, in the West our urith the latest news by mail and grain and provisions afford telegraph up to midnight of Friday, A Daily Bulletin is issued every morning with all us in profusion all the elements of national wealth. Had a the Commercial and Financial news of the previous day up to single one of our staple crops been a failure, so that any the hour of publication. large classes of our people should be impoverished and TERMS OF and SUBSCRIPTION-PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Commercial stinted in their Financial Chronicle, with The Daily Bulletin, delivered by carriers to city subscribers, and mailed to all others,(exclusive of postage). $12 00 The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, without The Daily and Bulletin, (exclusive of postage) 10 00 For The Daily Bulletin, without The Commercial and Chronicle, (exclusiveof postage) Financial 5 00 Canvassing Agents have no authority to collect money. Postage is paid by subscribers at their men post-office. cle, It is, on the Chroni¬ 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance. WILLIAM B. DANA & CO 60 William Files for holding the Chronicle Price 31 50. or Bulletin can FnbUshers, Street, New York. A expect a panic. tural section, with ferred. , be had at this Office. SAFEGUARDS AGAINST PANICS. of subsistence, then we might see cause But with teeming crops in our agricul¬ a manufacturing and commercial industry more energetic and more rapidly developing than ever, we have a powerful protection against the terrors of that finan¬ cial crash which has been often predicted but as often de¬ means to These three things, then, ought to reassure us in presence gloomy vaticinations of foreboding prophets of evil. Our people generally are forewarned and are providing against the danger. Our financial system has been proof former perils of the like kind, and will probably prove against so again, and finally, the productive energies of the country of the growing apprehension has prevailed, and still in some are more active than either before or during the war, and quarters continues, as to whether the existing torpor in busi¬ therefore we ought to be growing rich in all the elements of ness may be expected to become gradually more intense, and national wealth, with a force never known before. A nation whether the rampant speculation, with its subsequent recoil, that is growing with such rapidity in power and wealth need may not be the* precursor of a panic. We have hitherto fear no financial crash if its monetary affairs are only con enjoyed the protection of several safeguards against such a ducted with ordinary prudence and skill. But it is this exact point at which alarm enters some catastrophe, which have been very effectual in guarding us in more threatening and more imminent danger, and per¬ thoughtful minds. They fear lesc our financial management haps we may not find the protecting influence less effective will not prove equal to the crisis. First, and chiefly, they in the future. Not to mention the suspension of specie pay¬ point to the evils which might arise out of the existing cur¬ ments, which renders our currency less sensitive to panic, we rency derangement. The period of expansion is now over have a safeguard in the very fact that almost every body is with its excitement and inflation. We are just entering on a expecting and providing against the dreaded revulsion. A second and very critical stage, that of contraction. Now, monetary panic which is generally expected never comes, no country has ever passed through this second stage of cur¬ It is essential to the development of the most violent of the rency trouble without being visited with commercial revul¬ evils of a commereialjcrisis that the storm should burst sion. It is true these monetary panics which so occurred brought on by mismanagement; by a too rapid, or by an untimely withdrawal of currency from the channels of the circulation. It is also true that the best methods and the were true now [November 17, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 612 and change the value of the dollar, has the power to introduce power to an to enlarge or contract the volume of the currency, uncertainty and treacherous deception into all bargains that are making throughout the coun¬ This is one among the many reasons which show the and necessity of the provision laid down by Congress element of contracts and principles of currency contraction are better understood than they ever were before; but still the fact remains, try. navigate a course which none have ever value in the contraction law of last Spring, that the cancelling of traversed without meeting with much foul weather. This point, however, is more fully discussed on another currency shall be slow and gradual—not more than four mil¬ lions being withdrawn in any one month. page, and we proceed to a second indication of commercial But the publicity of Treasury movements is also a subject danger. We refer to the undue extension ofcredits. Among which will demand the attention of Congress. ■ It is generally our merchants the short credit system has prevailed since the war, and has had much to do with that commercial stab¬ complained that the people, who have a right to know what ility which has been so wonderfully.and persistently pre¬ negotiations are making by the National Treasury in gold, served. Lately, however, a certain laxity has been creeping in bonds, and in the withdrawing of currency, have no in. Either to attract business, or for some similar object, authentic information on the points they need to know, until long credits have been offered, and in some cases accepted, long after such information has ceased to be of much prac¬ and a very considerable amount of the last few months’ busi¬ tical value. The check of free, prompt publicity is one which, ness has been done on these unsound principles. Happily, in the present temper of the public mind, Congress will no however, the alarm was given in time; caution took the place doubt make proper provision to secure. The payment of the principal of the public debt is another of over-sanguine enterprise. The evil was checked before it had time to sap the foundations of commercial credit, except point for which some definite principles require to be laid to a very limited extent. We purposely refrain from the down. The existing laws on this subject are very vague, as discussion of those exciting political questions which will may be inferred from the discussions which have been car¬ of necessity affect credit. There are also other points of a ried on by the press, as to whether certain negotiations of financial character which obviously suggest themselves in Mr. McCulloch were lawful or not. The purchase, for in¬ connection with this wide question. But nearly all will be stance, of over 2 millions of bonds of 1867 and 1868, at found on examination to resolve themselves into motives for 90@93, in gold, which was equivalent at the time of the pur¬ caution, and in none shall we find ground for irrational terror chase to 135@140, has been severely criticised, as the same and alarm. Let our commercial, monetary and mercantile bonds were selling at 118 when the proposal first arose a men, like prudent mariners, watch and prepare beforehand few months ago, to induce Mr. McCulloch to buy them up f?r the threatening storm, so that whether it be less or more without public notice, and without any appropriation made violent, they may be forewarned, forearmed, and able to ride for the purpose by Congress. Whatever exceptions may be taken to isolated acts of the Secretary of the Treasury, there through it in safety. is no doubt that in the general course cf his negotiations he AND FINANCIAL LEGISLATION. CONGRESS has been guided by an enlightened policy. The magnitude that we have to operations being considered, the wonder is rather that opportunity to speculative persons, in Washington and else¬ he has made so few mistakes than so many. The Times of where, to circulate a variety of rumors as to the probable this city published yesterday an interesting statement of the financial changes of policy which will be adopted by our rep¬ efforts of Mr. McCulloch in paying off the debt, showing the resentatives at Washington during the coming Winter. vast proportions assumed by the negotiations he has carried Many of these rumors are mere guesses, and scarcely any on the past half year : “Since the 12th April,” says the Times, “and without disturling the of them have the slightest basis of actual information. trade or money markets of the country or obstructing the collection of Without pretending to be ourselves possessed of any offi the public revenues—so essential to the reduction of the Public Debt— cial private intelligence, we will lay down a few principles or impairing their resources, or adversely affecting the price of the Public Funds, he has paid off and funded, of the Temporary Loans and which should, without doubt, guide the deliberations and Greenback Circulation of the Government, the following sum3 : mould the legislation of the coming session. First, we may Of the reserved 50 millions of Greenbacks, the whole balance then outstanding $22,749,743 be well assured that no violent changes or rash experiments Of the regular 400 millions Greenbacks 14,000,000 Of interest-bearing Legal-tender 32,030,900 will be tried with the currency. Congress has adopted as The near approach of the meeting of Congress has given of his . its method of gradual contrac¬ April last this policy was elabo¬ permanent definite policy the tion. In the act of 12th Total Legal-tender withdrawn Of Deposits on Interest Of Certificates of Indebtedness Of 7-30 per cent. Treasury Notes . : ' $68,7S6,642 121,751,790 62,258,000 93;00 ,000 successfully working, and has proved Total paid or funded $345,796,432 1,604,322,872 to be so much in accordance with the highest teachings of —Out of total on 1st April of Leaving of Temporary Interest-bearing Debt and Gieenback Circu¬ financial science and general experience that we cannot for lation at present outstanding: a moment doubt it will be sustained. Hence the stories In 7-30 per cent. Notes, 1867-8 $724,014,300 Compound Legal-tender Notes, 1867-8 148,512,140 Circulation 386,000,000 put in circulation, that some fundamental changes will be Greenback made in the law regulating the return to specie payments, Together $1,258,520,440 It will be noted that three classes of temporary obligations, in the may be dismissed as unworthy of credit. course of seven months, have been entirely liquidated : ). The reserve Changes in the currency of any active commercial country 60,000,000 Gieenbacks, held for contingencies against Deposits on In¬ terest. 2. All Deposits on Interest have been paid off. 8. All twelve are too important in themselves, and too far reaching in their months* Certificates of Indebtedness have been anticipated and paid off. results, to be left unregulated and without the control of publi¬ And in addition, the $10,000,000 of the original $100,000,000 Greenbacks city. Whatever has to do with adjusting the value of our cur¬ authorized by Congress to be withdrawn in the first six months after the passage of the Act, and the $4,000,000 authorized to be withdrawn rent dollar regulates the money contracts of the whole Ameri¬ in the seventh month, have been paid off. “Meanwhile the market credit of the Public Funds has steadily ad can people, amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars a vanced, aud the Customs, Revenues and Internal Taxes—the one in¬ d^y. Let some change in the volume of the currency make the creasing and the other undiminished—have been steadily collected, and dollar worth less next week, or next month, than to-day, and $164,336,611 thereof applied to the reduction of the principal of the all time contracts will shrink in value. On the other hand, Public Debt ” The immense revenue derived from internal taxation, which whenever the dollar appreciates all such time contracts will rise in value. Hence it is easy to see that whoever has the is one cause of the large payments of the principal of the rated. Tt has since been . “ November 17,1866.] THE CHRONICLE. debt, cannot probably be continued without sacrificing some ourselves; and 613 true object in pressing these “ Alabama will be claims,” as they are called, is ,not to chastise England for the < public interests of great value. Congress, therefore, cajled on t£ revise the schedule of taxation, and already a clamor has arisen against the income tax. But the unpro¬ on production will stand a good chance of being taken off before the income tax is dis¬ • ductive and mischievous taxes our sympathy which certain classes of Englishmen may have shown with the South in the late rebellion ; nor even to secure the indemnification of their losses to those of om>people who have suffered in this way. broad and enduring basis It is to settle once and for all a pensed with. It is believed that the torpor and paralysis of of international police, and to fix business which are so much complained of, are due in part the great principles by which maritime States shall hence¬ to the excessive pressure of injudicious taxation, and to the forth interpret their duty, and regulate their conduct towards .dimunition thus caused in the productive powers of the each other as neutrals in seasons of war. This being the true state of the case, there would be mat¬ country. " ter of grave anxiety in recalling the action taken by Con¬ THE ALABAMA CLAIMS AND AMERICAN NEUTRALITY. gress at its last' session in regard to our own neutrality laws, The question of our claims upon England for compensa¬ could we believe that the boasts of the so-called Fenian tion to American citizens whose property suffered loss at leaders are at all well-founded, and that such prominent the hands of the Confederate privateers fitted out in Eng¬ members of the House of Representatives as General Banks lish ports, will undoubtedly occupy a prominent place in and Mr. Stevens have really pledged themselves to endeavor to do away the forthcoming Message of the President. entirely at the coming session with all Much has been said, too, of late in the newspapers on the restrictions upon the warlike activity of individuals „fthe subject; and symptoms are not lacking to show that within our own borders planning hostilities against powers tthe public opinion of Great Britain is gradually coming to with which the nation is at peace. Not from any fear of British reprisals, but from a just re¬ tthe conclusion that the [adjustment of these American claims is called for not less emphatically by the interests gard to our own national character, and in consistency with of England herself than by those of America. A recent the grand position which we ought to occupy on this question article in the London Times, setting forth this view of the of the Confederate privateers, it becomes us to see to it that case, has been extensively copied and read in this country, our demand upon England is not stultified by our own legis¬ and when taken in connection with the observations which lative action. Congress and the State Department must were made on the same subject, the other day, at a public reinforce and not contradict each other on this point. That they will do so we cannot yet permit ourselves to dinner in Liverpool, by the actual Foreign Secretary of Great Britain, Lord Stanley, it may be fairly held to fore¬ doubt; but it is useless to deny that there is a certain feeling shadow a much more friendly settlement of this unfortu¬ of uneasiness on the subject in circles which are commonly nate dispute than it was quite reasonable to expect, even well informed; and we sincerely hope that the tenor, both of , • • the President’s twelve months ago. During the late elections numerous statements were put circulation, as to positive and peremptory demands for tthe satisfaction of these claims, alleged to have been made by ;the Federal Government. We have heard little or nothing •of these statements since the closing of the polls; and there •can be but little doubt that they were manufactured wholly for home consumption and to produce an immediate politiiin - cal effect. vance It would neither conduce to the honor nor the interests of the United States to select for ad Message and of the earliest action of Con¬ gress upon this point, may be such as completely to reassure the public mind. Since we decline to consider British neutrality .as a historical question, and insist upon its being taken up and acted upon by the British Government as a practical matter demanding decision at the present moment, we must be prepared to bring to bear upon that decision not only the precedents but the actual practice also of American neutrality. a men¬ acing and imperative policy the very moment at which Great THE CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION—THE NEW FISCAL POLICY TO BE ADOPTED. Britain manifests a disposition to entertain reasonable de¬ The people of the State of New York, at the General mands, and to concede what is justly due not only to our in¬ jured citizens but to the offended majesty of civilization and Election held last week, decided that a Convention should be held next year for the revision of the Constitution. •of international law. It has The position taken on this question in these columns more been a grave question among thinking men whether, in the ithan a year ago (Oct. 28, 1865), and since reaffirmed by us, present condition of the public mind, this was a favorable :is evidently the one position from which it will be found period fo& this measure; but of its propriety, at some period, impossible for the most ingenious diplomacy to drive us. there can'hardly be said to be two opinions. The Constitu¬ 'We must ask compensation from the British Government for the damage done by the Alabama and other cruisers of her kind, not on the ground that those vessels got to sea from England in defiance of English law, or through the laches of English officials, but on the ground that whether the laws of England were or were not adequate to prevent the going to sea of such vessels, the obligations of a neutral power were violated by their escape. The wholesome feature in the present aspect of public opinion in England on the ques¬ tion is the nascent disposition of English statesmen and pub Heists to recognize these permanent obligations of a neutral power and not the casual and repealable enactments oflocal leg¬ islation under these obligations, as the real measure of inter¬ national duty. This disposition it is our interest ftpd ppr policy to foster by all means in our power; fpj? we really have no sort of reason for desiring to see apy bpt the jpost friendly relations possible existing between fifre$t Britain apd imperfectly in fulfilling the purposes for which it was formed; indeed, except in its re¬ strictions upon the debt-creating power and its provisions for maintaining the credit of the State, few of its innovations can be said to have operated beneficially. Perhaps no class of our citizens are more thoroughly convinced of this than the surviving delegates of the Convention by which it was framed. The loose relations of the various departments of the State Government with one another, the restricted dis cretion of the executive, the practical separation of the office of the Governor from the other public bureaus, have tended to produce confusion in the administration of public affairs, an<j resulted indirectly in flhe multiplying of departments and offices for the .purpose .of getting around the difficulties. These, however, are questions of state-craft that hardly come within our province to di$ev.ss; but there are subjects which must arise relating to nee apd internal commerce, vital tion of 1846 has succeeded but 614 to THE CHRONICLE. [November 17,1866. prosperity, and with their proper adjustment all then impose taxes on that transportation, to make it classes of our citizens cannot fail to take deep interest. A dear. It is not proper that the current expenditures of the mistaken policy will entail calamity which cannot be reme¬ State should be charged on the right of way, which is to be died in a century. held, not as property for revenue, but as a trust for the The financial system established by the constitution of 1846 entire people, to promote travel, transportation and com¬ was admirably adapted for a single purpose, the extinction of merce. It may be the right of the State, having incurred the public debt. This has been done so effectually that the expenses for making canals, to indemnify itself for their indebtedness of $38,299,072.88, which existed when that in¬ expense from the tolls; but the practicability has become strument was formed has been reduced to about one-third of doubtf.il. The competition of the railroads and of the canals of that amount; and a few years more would have effected its other States must operate, and has operated to prevent this. entire liquidation, except for the increase millions of The influence of high rates of tolls will be to drive trade of nine dollars made in 1854 fjr the enlargement of the canals, of into channels outside of the State, and thereby impoverish two and a half millions authorised in 1859 to redeem the the people. It is apparent that the Bourbon policy of brid¬ floating indebtedness,” and the bounty and State debt of ling commerce must be abandoned. The future policy wTiil thirty millions authorised last year. Nevertheless, under' have to be to impose an amount of toll sufficient for pay¬ the operation of the present system and laws, all these ment of running expenses, and leave the debt and perhaps amounts will be cancelled the interest to be liquidated by direct taxation. by the the year 1877. The revenues of the State are The salt duties can hardly be considered as a source of principally derived from the following sources: tolls on commodities transported on the revenue. The amount derived from them must be again « canals, duties on salt, fees on auction sales, and direct taxa¬ absorbed in compensation for superintendence, opening new tion. The amounts so obtained are about three and a half wells, etc, while soon the competition from salt manufactures million dollars from tolls, $60,000 from the salt duty, $95,- in other States will restrict the market. The auction fees 000 for the auction fees, and seven and a half millions from formerly were imposed by the municipal authorities of the the tax-levy. It will be the duty of the Convention to give city of New York, and were much heavier than at present. this matter a searching investigation, to ascertain what policy The Legislature in 1817 applied them to the purposes of the will best supply the Treasury, and at the same time be con canal fund, but afterward transferred them to. the general sistent with justice and sound fund for the current expenses of Government and reduced principle. It seems clear that the State cannot depend for revenue them in amount. For an equivalent a considerable part of much longer on the tolls imposed on property transportec the money derived has been appropriated year by year toon the canals. They appear to be steaddy declining, while the charities of the city. The Legislature of 1866 passed the expenses for repairs and superintendence are evidently an act including merchandise brokers in the provisions of the increasing. We called attention to this fact some month: law, but it has not been allowed to go into effect; and it since, and as we still think as we then stated, that the cana is very likely that the laws on this subject will eventually policy of the State should undergo a thorough examination be repealed, as constituting a tax against commerce. As an and, perhaps, a total revision. It is a question for publicists effect, the Legislature will probably abandon the practice of to determine, whether the business of transportation shoulc making appropriations from the State Treasury for hospitals, be under control of the State or of private individuals. In dispensaries, orphan asylums, and other eleemosynary in¬ spite of the apparent prosperity at intervals of the public stitutions; the expenditures of which more than absoib the works of New York, thoy have proved in the long run to be revenue derived from the auction duties. drains upon the Treasury, and must continue henceforth With the closing up of these sources of income, but one to be more so than ever, as stated above. The receipts are mode is left for the State to replenish its Treasury. The in' steadily diminishing, while the expenditures are rapidly in¬ terest and principal of its 50 millions of indebtedness, and creasing. Thus, in 1863, the year of greatest prosperity, the and the 6 millions required annually for current expen¬ income from tolls, etc., was $5,118,501.35, and the charges ditures, schools and militia, must be collected by direct tax¬ for collection 87 <0,8S2.o2. The outlay to meet the require* ation. Hence, it will be the duty of the Convention to pro¬ ments of the constitution in the way of paying interest, and vide a permanent fiscal policy for the State. There must be the fullest provision made for liquidating the replenishing sinking funds to redeem indebtedness, amouuted public*debt as; to $4,347,618.83, leaving “over” $981,376.17. In 1865, speedily as can be made consistent with the general welfare.. the receipts from tolls, for the year ending on the 30th of The power of counties and municipalities to contract liabili¬ September, amounted only to $3,547,405.45 ; while the pay¬ ties should be more carefully guarded if not restricted alto¬ ments for collection and ordinary repairs ran up to $1,927- gether. Already the local taxation is equivalent to half the 373.59. In a word, it cost almost twice as much.for the net income of property, and is virtual confiscation. It State last year to “ run the canals ” as it did two should also be carefully considered whether the power of the years pre¬ viously, while the income has fallen off three-tenths. The Legislature to make appropriations for other than public amount obtained to pay interest and supply the sinking purposes should not be curtailed. Severe taxation is prone funds in 1865 was $1,650,091.86, to be regarded as oppression, and thus to threaten public leaving a deficiency of $1,716,150.80 to be collected directly from the people by tax¬ security. • ation. The endeavor will be made, at the Convention about to be When the constitution of 1846 was adopted, the State icld, to authorize the incurring of an additional indebtedness derived a large revenue from tolls on property conveyed on of about $109,000,000 For the enlargement of the Erie Canal railroads. This was, as Michael Hoffman so forcibly termed to ship capacity. If this proposition shall happen to be fa¬ it, “making the Government a real highwayman, odious and vorably considered, we hope, by all means, that it will be an oppressor.” The Legislature of 1853 relieved the rail¬ submitted to the people as a separate article to be deter¬ roads from this tax, and We cannot believe that a vote, every effort since made to restore it mined on its own merits. have been defeated. The good sense of the people is opposed could have been obtained in favor of a Constitutional Con¬ to the pensioning of the Government upon trade or travel. vention at all if the people had apprehended that it would The policy is contradictory which would make internal have involved the risk of such an increase of their burdens. improvements for the cheapening of transportation, and] The State debt now exceeds 50 millions; the indebtedness. - “ m i our SR'lW^wyBi November of the 17,1866.J THE CHRONICLE City of New York cannot be far from that amount, and the other counties must owe as much 615 For the 1864. eight months, the exports were of the follow¬ Till those ing declared value: more. liabilities shall be defrayed, it is not wise to plunge deeper into the pool of indebtedness. There are other means of af¬ fording avenues for commerce. Our railways are sufficient, for many years, to transport the costlier commodities ; and it is better to use what water communication we have, so 1864. 1S66. £9,074,733 £18,553,884 75,188 780,762 351,163 558,799 £14,144,578 ** 1865. £13,404,761 78,380 661,487 To Atlantic ports, £9,483,084 £19,893,445 Northern Southern..... Pacitic ports Total COTTON. far The A railroad from Oswego to British principal imports into Great Britain are now from India, the supplies received from this country being the Hudson, or even to this city, will convey the products of In September the imports reached the West more cheaply than a ship canal from Buffalo to comparatively trifling. total of 980,713 cwts., of which 724,71*2 cwts. were from Albany with heavy tolls. We should be reluctant to enact the East Indies, and only 161,679 cwts. from the United anew the history of the canal enlargement, its peculations and States. The total from this country tor the year, however, unjustifiable profuseness. With a ship canal from Lake is nearly 4,000,000 cwts., out of 9,790,314 cwts. It is fully Erie to Lake Ontario, which private enterprise is ready to undertake as soon as legislative authority can be obtained, anticipated that, as the crop in Egypt is of more than aver¬ and with the completion of the railroads now in progress, age extent, increased supplies of cotton will shortly be re¬ ceived from that quarter. The particulars of imports of this and whatever new ones may be undertaken, we are not likely to want for avenues of transportation. It is no time to im¬ staple are subjoined: as practicable, for the residue. a the people of New York, when that likely to enrich contractors than to add to the prosperity of the entire commonwealth. The duties of the Convention, it will be seen, are arduous and responsible. Let our journalists and intelligent citizens do all in their power to enable the members of that body to see how to act wisely. A proper revision of our fiscal policy is vital to the general prosperity. pose a double burden on burden is so much more IMPORTS COTTON, BREADSTUFFS, PROVISIONS, ETC. COTTON INTO CHEAT BRITAIN IN NINE 1864. From United States Bahamas and Bermudas Mexico Brazil Turkey.: Egypt ... 6,413 3,145 519,944 84,300 1.106,271 239.659 836,880 772,553 4,163,799 83,887 211,094 5,323,211 Total 5,460,070 9,790,814 2,5S1,409 301,55 exports of cotton from Great Britain in September rather less than in the corresponding month last but for the nine months there is year; balance in favor of this a In September the shipments of about 680,000 cwts. year 1866. £3,995,679 290,433 827,721 175,227 150,705 1-84,433 2,680,140 571,332 China Other countries The MONTHS. 1865. £182,000 158,604 £116.343 253,549 170,827 255,723 .-. British India ivere TRADE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND THE UNITED STATES. OP 382,908 cwts., against 405,732 cwts. in 1865, and Notwithstanding the unsatisfactory position of affairs in Englaud, the Board of Trade returns for the month of Sep¬ 188j833 cwts. in 1864. For thd nine months the following tember, and the nine months ending September 30, show are the figures: EXPORTS OF COTTON FROM GREAT BRITAIN IN NINE MONTHS. very satisfactory results as compared with previous years. 1S61. 1865. 1866. Both in imports and exports a large business has been done, .cwts To Russia 211,673 222,551 306,845 11.445 Prussia 33,742 49,785 and as prices are higher, as regards many articles, than in 42,265 14.661 Hanover 5,618 were Hanse Towns Holland Other Countries former years, the value of the shows a considerable increase. articles imported or exported During the nine months end¬ ing September 30, the declared value of the total exports of British and Irish produce and manufactures was £141,930,898, against £119,717,377 last year, and £123,404,161 in 1864. For the month of September the declared value was £16,671,078, against £17,316,681 in 1865, and £14,687,942 in 1864. For each month, from January to September, in¬ clusive, in each ot the last three years, the figures stand The 1866. 1864. £ £ I860. £ 1865. £ Jan.. : Turkey Egypt £ 7,520,356 1866. £ I 1864. £ Apr,. 37,587,565 6,398,922 9,847,564 June. 21,498,185 12,891,252 16,610,169 July.. 20,458.258 13,005,394 19,891,204 Aug . 21,944,048 13,078,735 22,455,968 May.. 22,392,601 14,595,334 23,224,762 Total 141,012,477 Feb.. 13,214,541 Mar.. 16,396,928 With 1865. £ 15,407,688 1866. £ 23,243,701 18,964.190 19,597.929 20,997,691 20,940,303 f53 155,811,590 cwts ... Total £1,485,788 / 2,960,704 1865. 18G6. £889,114 1,370,306 2,315,909 2,852,072 888,5.6 ... - A?. S.. £29,319,669 46,816 28,591 - 3,973,456 ■ 515.714 „ . 10,892,399 21,161.406 4,683.283 2,499,883 8,094,171 6.626,740 10.244,094 1,449,586 16,18%, 879 £50,504,190 JpTT . Othcs countries • - 1864. 10,489,339 14,354,748 July. 14,394,364 14,113,410 14,957,834 11,370,214 15,116,063 Aug.. 16,274,269 14,158,648 17,450,156 13,770,154 17,520,354 Sept. 14,687,942 17,316,681 16,671,078 April. 13,225,039 12,071,111 15,366,414 May . 14,176,640 13,194,7 8 15,870,131 Total 123,404,161 119,717,377 141,936,898 June. 13,978,526 13,227,0*2 14,630,120 1864. 2,670,515 computed real value of the cotton imported into eight months endin g August 31 was as From United States. Bahamas and Bermudas Mexico Brazil Jan.. 10,413,586 Feb.. 12,698,121 •Mar.. 13.555,674 imports in August were larger than in the previous month, and within £60,000 of the corresponding month last year. The total value of the imports for the eight months is £50,000,000 greater than in the corresponding period in 1865. This large increase is chiefly to be accounted for by the greatly-augmented value of the cotton imported, viz.: £58,000,000, against nearly £30,000,000, and by the increase in the value of the wheat and flour imported, viz.: £11,600,000, against £6,400,000 last year. The computed real value of the imports into Great Britain from all quarters for the eight months was as follows 1,277,854 700,934 • follows 1868. £ The 412,478 Great Britain in the British India 1S65. £ 617,935 806,771 903,074 1,991,726 A 510,927 315,494 .... Total thus: 1S64. £ 403,942 ■*... £29,914,508 BREADSTUFFS. The wheat trade in England has now - - ££8,201,544 ... assumed 78,000 *>445,679 2,381,720- a ( £' position of great importance to ourselves. At the latest date, wheat was about 12s. per quarter dearer than in 1865, and as im¬ portations from France had almost ceased, whilst. Prussia was sending very moderate supplies of produce to the'Lon¬ don market, the trade, though quieter than in previous weeks, c wTas characterized by considerable firmness. The arrivals of* wheat, however, at ports on the east coast had been large,* chiefly from Russia, and rather considerable supplies of flour, of good quality, had been received from Moscow via St.*Petersburg and Cronstadt. It was expected that previously" to the closing of. navigation in the Baltic large supplies of Russian, and moderate supplies of Prussian, w*h*lat would be hurried forward. With regard to the French crop, there is certainly a deficiency from the lecent abundant years. * In some quarters it is said that France will require a very large, regard to the United States, it appears that the supply of wheat from abroad ; but from trt^twqrtby sources. Irish produce exported in August w as It appears that the deficiency is greatly overstated. The £2,554,506, against £1,636,223 last year, and £735,803 in French are certainly taking supplies, of wheat at English value of British and ' - ■•Z.^L r;'''‘.lt 616 THE CHK0N1CLE. [November 17, 1866. Railroad but it must be borne in mind that as the French crop 781,228 298.409 571,222 Castings 13,813 3,482 15,549 is deficient in quality, there is the Hoops, sheets and boiler plates 208,948 58,857 245,101 greater necessity to buy Wrought 103.409 215,735 163,446 fine foreign wheats for seeds ; hence, French 484.U33 414,015 220,104 buyers have Steel—Unwrought. Copper, wrought..' 23,639 13,017 34,952 made more important Lead, pig purchases for this purpose than cus¬ 206,562 71,984 123,314 Tin plates ! 580,102 671,993 1,139,253 : tomary. A few parcels of wheat and flour continue to be Oilseed 46,692 282,850 21,73S Salt J 29,600 86,974 35,542 received at English, from French Silk Manufactures— ports, and although Broad piece goods 70.S76 50,051 109,708 unimportant in extent, serve to indicate that there Handkerchiefs 17,198 7,810 1,332 Ribbons of silk only 27,833 23,196 31,546 is some Other articles of silk only exaggeration in the reports current in Eng74,821 88,513 87,848 Other articles mixed with other materials.:.. 36,693 30,177 63,753 land of a very deficient French harvest. In Europe Spirits, British 10,482 7,561 14,780 Wool... 37,242 the finest crop appears to be in 11,682 12,100 Russia, and as from the high' Woolen and Worsted Manufactures— Cloths of all kinds 354,893 687,077 792,232 prices ruling here, the English have, for the present, ceased Carpets and druggets 269,619 631,091 205,415 Shawls, rugs, &c to 21,686 39,501 60,580 anticipate large supplies from this port. Much attention Worsted stuffs of wool only, and of wool mixed with other material is naturally directed to the s... 1,953,600 2,421 201 3,011,041 crop in Russia and on the Dan¬ ube. In September, I860, the SHIPPING. import of wheat into Great With regard to shipping, the Britain and Ireland w~as only 1,192,064 following are the particulars, cvvts., against 2,108,so far as this 966 cw*ts. last year, and 2,665,799 cwts. in 1864. country is concerned: The prin Number. Tonnage. age cipal import was from Russia, viz.: 6S7,431 cvvts., and from American vessels entered inwards in September, 1864 62,083 62 do do do do do I860 34 34,838 do Prussia, viz.: 229,233 cvvts. From France only 15,327 cwts do do do do 1866.. 28 31,989 do do in nine months ending Sepfc 30, 1864 3S3,023 349 were do imported, and from the United States only 42,260, cwts do do do do do 1865 229 247,790 do do do do do do 1866 342 356,834 The import of flour was confined to 103,965 cwts., viz. : 21, American vessels cleared in September, 1864 35,172 35 do do 1865, 46 48,702 843 cwts. from the Ilanse : do do Towns, 29,666 cwts. from France do do 1S66. 31 34,072 do do in nine months ending Sept. 30,1864 326 353,516 13,847 cwts. United States, 11,054 British North America do do ' do do do do I860 25S 261,466 do do do do do do 1866 413 and 27,605 cwts. from other countries. The 410,771 Vessels of all flags eutered from American ports in 149 following figures 111,176 Sep., 1864 do do do do 55 1865 show the imports of wheat, flour and Indian corn into Great 55,943 do do do do 1866 107 91,991 ports ; - ‘ . .. * ' r 3 =• Britain in nine months: WHEAT. 1864. _ From Russia Prussia Denmark cwts 2,825,463 3,616,145 629,498 223,558 Schleswig, Holstein, & Lauenburg Mecklenburg . - 389,497 147,223 1.037,672 486,770 10,0b3 366,860 3,127,739 573,82$ 659,424 3,320,351 357,313 854,212 292,392 786, S65 3,036,560 173,971 1,75 ,149 214,721 K9,18S 124,276 203,075 3,108,406 206,898 26,822 196,412 3,741,613 KATES OF EXCHANGE AT AT Total cwts 248,293 1,508,393 1,631,103 336,655 87,454 . 3,S11,S93 PROVISIONS. Provisions of all kinds are selling at very high rates, and there are still no signs of an abatement, in the quotations. The arrivals of butter have increased, and enormous quanti¬ have been received at British ports. Lard, which during a great part of the year has sold at high prices, has been imported much more freely, and at latest date the quotations were lower. The imports of provisions into Great Britain in the nine months ending September 30, were ties of eggs as fol low's Amsterdam Antwerp. Hamburg Paris Bacon and hams, cwts Beef, salt, cwts Pork, salt, cwts. Butter, cwts Cheese, cwts Eggs, number Lard, cwts 1864. 1S65. 937,9*24 553,734 175,823 250,028 170,771 13 ',967 673,713 5*33,186 272,050,’ 560 165,373 747,748 572,740 1866. 561,309 152,594 149,120 787,232 520,780 360,247,440 219,868 RATE. short. 3 months. 25.40 @25.45 13. 8X@13. 9} ..! “ j “ 25.373s@25.45 Paris I short. 25.123i@25.22X Vienna 3 months 13.22X@13.30 Berlin 6.26 @ 6.26X St. Petersburg! “ 29X@ 29% Cadiz I “ 47X© 483£ Lisbon “ six© 61% Milan ! “ 27.40 @27.50 Genoa i “ 27.37X@27.50 27.40 @27.50 “ Naples • New York — Jamaica 1 Havana — Rio de Janeiro! — Buenos Ayres. I — ] Valparaiso.... Pernambuco.. Singapore Hong Kong... Ceylon 60 days. 4s. b}£d. 4s. b%d. 1 p. c. Bombay Sydney 826,Ml 462,580 1,136,472 84,770 1,269 74 1:33 111 899 669 1:35,631 119,345 935,689 759,723 1,073 T,127,931 30 EXCHANGE ON LONDON. LATEST TIME. Madras Calcutta : 918 409 LONDON, AND ON LONDON, NOV. 2. 12,043,628 ON- 1864. 1865 1866 LATEST DATES. EXCHANGE AT LONDON— flour. From Hanse Towns France United States British North America Other Countries 30,1864 fllonetarg antr dammerrial (Eugtisl) News. 1866. 2,428,300 17,723,333 i’ateat 16,721,363 1865. 346.203 14,030 388,010 8,789 2,437,302 13,674,439 4,047,717 7,100,042 824,S06 Total... Indian corn... 5,297,827 404,615 197,024 405,676 357,602 481,073 377,646 Turkey, Wallachia, and Moldavia.. Egypt 1S66. 5,083,641 3,757,907 466,392 465,647 Hanse Towns France United States British North America Other Countries 1S65. do do in nine months ending Sept. do do do j do do do ; do do Cleared in Sep ember, 1864, do do 1865 do do 1866 Cleared in nine months ending Sept. 30,1S64. .. do ao^ do do 1865.... do do do do 1866.... dis. 1*11X<*@1 11X lsllXd©! 11X Is llXd@l 11*6 1 p. c. dis. davs. [From date. TIME. Nov. 2. short. RATE. 11.78X© - 25.20 44 'n 44 8 mo’s. Nov. 2. 3 mo’s. Nov. 2. 3 mo’s. Oct. 31. Oct. 10. Oct. 7. Oct. 9. Sept. 27. Sept. 17. Oct. 15. Oct. 2. Aug. 28. Sept. 23. Oct. 31. Oct. 27. Oct. 29. j Sep. 24. 60 days 44 @25.22 X 13.5X@ — 25.21X 25.00 31 @ - S3X 160X 2X p. c. cprem. days 27X@days. 24X@25 49X@44X@— 25X@6 mo’s. ls. 4X(L@— “ Is. 5X(L@i—44 2X@3 p. c. disc no 60 44 44 44 44 44 44 30 days. 2s. OX'c?. 2s. 0%d. 2s. 0%d. 2X P- c. preir. our own Correspondent.] London, Saturday, Nov. 3, I860. DuriDg the earlier days of the week the public mind was somewhat by the decline in the Paris exchange to a point at which shipments of gold could be made to France at less expense than the EXPORTS OF BRITISH AND IRISH PRODUCE AND MANUFACTURES. purchase and transmission of bills. It was from this cause that the Annexed was the declared value of the exports of Directors of the Bank of England, although that establishment has leading articles to this country, during the nine months gained increased strength, determined to adhere to the recent minimum ending Sept. 30, compared with the two previous years : of 4$ per cent, a circumstance which has created some surprise, owing to the favorable nature of the present bank return. 1864. 1865. 1866. Yesterday, how¬ £294,919 £304; 293 £709,145 Beer and ale. ever, the position of affairs materially improved ; the Paris exchange, 36,373 32,061 52,707 Coals 105,376 85,716 70,982 which was in most quarters expected to become more uufavorable to Cotton Manufactures— Piece goods. 1,556,2^5 1,323,546 2,588,665 that country, indicated that the demand for remittance to that quarter 104,649 173,935 270,806 lad fallen off, and when it became known that such was the case the 330,282 299,597 579,359 72-4,176 595,866 978,056 sum of £100,000 in bar gold, which had been held by the bullion bro¬ Hardwares and CutleryKnives, forks, &c 100,309 97,699 234,832 kers, to send to Paris in the event of the Paris exchange being more ad¬ Anvils, vices, &c 61,476 72,846 75,799 verse, was taken to the Bank of England. This circumstance produced 230,728 199,759 M3,288 Linen Manufactures— a favorable impression in most quarters, and although there is still a Piece goods. 2,052,699 2,131,809 3,117,288 Thread great waut of activity in all departments, the changes in prices are in 161,392 103,256 183,170 Metals— a favorable direction. In the Stock Exchange, Consols, although quiet, Iron—Pig, 296,428,920 93.294 unsettled .. fl 206,134 673,236 97,510 124,682 518,061 418,867 iave the appearance of steadiness, and, as regards commerce, cotton ;'■;'}/U'i1"':', -rt '■? Of-V:!'* :.v' ■-'?. ^py^gDiber AT, }886,] .R cdBtinuesto give way in price, whilst a decided check has been given 1 per upward movement in the value of wheat, both of which circum¬ cities:cent. * Annexed; are the quotations at the leading continental -1' ” •* t *" stances are favorable to our •' money market There is, however, great cau¬ Bank v-v ' Open Pink Open tion being displayed in all rate,' market. quarters; hence, but little business is doing, and rate: market. # e. $ c. Paris >fc. comparatively few transactions are now recorded in articles of food and AtVienna 3 3 Turin 6 A: >6 -5# Brussels drink, which are not required for immediate wants. The 8 Berlin great losses sus¬ 4#bills4# ” 5 3#*dtrr tained by speculators and investors in new adv— Madrid...... Fr*nkfo*t 8 -- ’ companies have so crippled the 4 4 Amsterdam Hamburg. : * A# 5 position of many of the most forward of such 5 St. adventurers, that Petersburg........ 7 8®9 On Tuesday the not only they but the foreign exchanges were flat, and unfavorable to this public in general almost wholly refrain from run¬ country, yesterday, however, the tone of the market ning the slightest risk in similar engagements. Nevertheless, was although satisfactory. decidedly more there is abundance of idle ' money, the consol market does not improve, The consol market and it must even be admitted that the state of that market for the during the week has been rather flak The amount last of business transacted is small, and -fortnight has been one of slight depression. This, although no important deeiure'has however, may be taken accounted for in part place, prices have occasionally shown by the facts we stated last week, and also in some signs of weakness. This was more .measure, by the circumstance that a especially the case in the early part of the week. The portion of the investing public is market, however, closes with a very quiet but disposed to purchase the shares of old-established tolerably steady appearance. An¬ banking, insurance, nexed are the .and similar highest and lowest prices each day undertakings, which yield double the rate of interest allowed during the week end¬ on the national ing to-day: ; % debts. Indian securities have also been more freely Week ending Nov. 3 dealt in, owing to the fact that the rate of interest on Monday. Tue?day.| government stocks Wed’day(Thu'day. Friday. (ttyurdy and Indian Consols for money. railways is permanently five per cent. 89#©# S9#©# i89#©# |Eo iday. 89#©# Commercially, the two leading features of the week are a decline of In American securities the pribcipal change is an advance of 1 per per lb. in the value of cotton, and a decided check to the upward ceDt in Erie Railway sharee. The aggregate business done in .movement in the Amer¬ price of wheat. The latter is a most important cir ican securities is but moderate. The fluctuations in emsoatance to ourselves, and prices have'been amongst those who asserted that our own trifling, and, with the above exceptions, no material change has taken crop was so sadly deficient, whilst France would require from seven to place. United States Five twenty bonds close eight million quarters from foreign countries, has to-day at 68$ td!68f, created some little Atlantic and Great Western debentures 64$ to 66$, do. surprise. But the fact is, that our own crop, Consolidated although deficient from Mortgage bonds 40 to 41, Erie Railway shares former years, is not, as I have 51$ to 52$, and Illinois frequently stated in my letters, greatly Centrals 77 to 78. The following table shows the highest and lowest below an average, and I still maintain the opinion that a similar remark prices of American securi.ies each day during the "Week ending this applies to France. An average crop in France would be sufficiept to evening: meet the wants of the HIGHEST PRICES OF AMERICAN population for twelve months; but such is not SECURITIES. the case here, for even with a good crop, we are compelled to make ex¬ For to the ■ •- X • • . **■. ..- .. ** „ *... - . . : . : • ; > , > tensive purchases at foreign ports week to meet the enormous It appears, however, that we are not supplies from France, for during the present week progress. -of about 2,600 sacks of flour from French ports. afloat to this country are * consumption in yet wholly deprived we ending November 3. Mon. Tues. United States 5-20’s, 6 per cent, 1882.. do do cent 6 percent Virginia 5 per have received do do * 6S#j 1881 68% 71 50 44 steadily increasing, trade; millers wants, and could some are not tfleet sales of any concession in price. For week ending November 3. 70 70 41 50# 69 67 77 69 62# 101 50 >44 i i . - 50 ; 44 70 70# 70# 41 1 ,4 41 61# k 61# 70 ►> 80 - 67 77 , ’ TO 81 07 77 a>; 69 67# H 62# 67# 101 < 101 34# 82# 34# 75 75 75 93 77 75 75 92# 77# 93 , • i 70 - 101 82# ■68# T71 ' 69 80 67 77 69 80 Sat 68# / • 82# 31# 75 *v . * 75 75 93 . -77# .... Mon. Tues. Wed. V United States 5-20^’s in¬ 68# 39# 50# 40 i:: .*lir. 68# 39# 50# 77# mortgage bonds Erie shares, 100 dollars, all paid Illinois Central, UK) dollars, all paid.... Fri. -1 68# Atlantic & Great Western consolidated magnitude, unless holders made are not 50# Fri. • 70 70 41 f.r meet their actual At the present moment, factors 71 50 43 --T. LOWEST PRICES OF AMERICAN SECURITIES. arrivals of produce at the American has produced a most cautious feeling buying oDly to 60 44 : ... lake ports are in the wheat 68# 71 The supplies of wheat Atlanticand Great Western,New York section, 1st mortgage, 1880 70 steadily, if not rapidly, increasing, and although Pennsylvania section, lstm, 1877.. 70 our do importations, considering that wheat ha9 advanced about 12s cons’tedmort. b’ds, 1895. 40# per Erie shares, 100 dollars, all paid quarter, are not on an extensive scale, yet we are 50# do Convertible bonds, 6 per cent receiving fair supplies Illinois 69 from the Baltic and Black Sea Central, 6 per cent, 1875 80 ports. This is more especially the case do 7 per cent, 1875 67 with the former, and is to be do accounted for by the $100 shares, all paid.. 77# high prices current Marietta and Cincinnati, 7 per cent 69 here, and the approaching close of navigation in that New York quarter. The Panama Central, 100 dollar shares... 62# latest advices from Russia are Rail, 7 per cent, 1872, 2d mort. 101 confirmatory of the assertion that the Pennsylvania R.lt. 2d mort., 6 p. c 82# crop of wheat in that country is an excellent ..dP $50 shares one, and there now seems Philadelphia and Erie, 1st mortgage, 34# to be but little doubt of our receiving large supplies from Russian ports, 1881, (gua. by Peuu. Railroad Co) 75 do with option to be greater probably than in any former year. paid in During the present week Philadelphia 75 we have Canada 0 per cent imported more freely from Spanish ports, rather a 93 considera¬ do 5 per cent ble quantity of flour 77 having been received. These facts, combined with the circumstance that the Wed. Thur. Sat. . 68# Holiday. 63# 40# 51# 51# ..Sff yield, but as an impression begins to prevail that wheat has 77 77 1 77 * 77 seen its The following table shows the course highest point, it seems extremely probable that our own of the market for United farmers State • will thrash out more freely, and be more disposed to realize. Such a Five-twenty bonds on the Continent during the week ending Nov. 1: state of thinge is almost Oct. 26. Oct. 27. Oct. 29. alway s the case iu this country. Farmers de¬ Amsterdam Oct. 30. - Oct. Nov. 1. 72 1-16 72 9-16 73 cline to forward 72 U-16 72# 72 11-16 produce to market to any considerable extent in a Frankfort 72# 73# 73# 73# Berlin 73# 73# : 73# ’ 73# rising market: but when prices begin to give 74# 74# 73# 73# way, the markets of the Hamburg 66# 66# 66# 66#. 67 67 kirgdom are abundantly supplied, and, in most At Frankfort ihe cases, prices experience position of affairs has materially a rapid and improved, and considerable fall. there is considerable activity in the demand for American The mercantile demand for securities, at accommodation is comparatively trifling. firm prices. The supply of capital The affairs of Overend, seeking employment in the discount market i9 Gurney & Co. were to have been brought on large, aud the quotations in the open market are from in the law courts $ to f per cent, to-day, but the matter has been beneath those ruling at the Bank of postponed until England. Nevertheless, the Bank Thursday next. acquires a fair share of the discount business, even on their basis The following statement shows the of 4$ extent of certain branches of trade per cent. During the la9t few days, owing to the fact that to day is the between Great Britain and Canada, wholly, however, as regards the 8d of the month, and the bills maturing to-morrow having to be met to¬ exports of British and Irish produce and manufactures : day, there has been a more active demand for 1884. ' 1865. 1886. accommodation, and al Apparel and slops £159.989; £145,3C0 £183,788 though bills are done at 3$ and Sf, the more current minimum Cotton piecs goods i clined to • " . * „ - ' . doors is 4 per cent been returned to-day. Not out of. more than Annexed are paper is concerned: Bank minimum Open market rates: 30.* 60days’ tills.. an average amount of bills has the present rates, so far &9 the best — 8#@-4 Per Cent. 3 months’ bills...... 4 @ — 6 & 4 months’ trade bills.... 4#« 6— 6 & 4,months’ bank bills...,., 4 •. •. . ©.6 I he rate at Paris is somewhat easier. large decrease—about £700,000—in the There is, however, a further supply of bullion held by the Bank of France.. At Berlin the rate has been reduced i, and at Madrid Haberdashery and millinery Hardwares and Cutlery— 552,8h5 33.557 876,198 91,673 59,125 605,901 Knives, forks, &C... -. • 554,904 804,895 3 8,576 7 Anvils, vices, &c 5 Mann&ctures of German silver. Per Cent. 4#@ 723,476 Earthenware and porcelain 10,201 25,055 14,664 17,776 10,622 158,861 Metals— 116,157 162,068 • Iron—Bar, &c I Railroad, &c n —.. Hoops, sheets, and boiler plates.... Wrought Tinplates.. 93.150 20£ ,948 — Salt....... W oolen and worsted Manufactures— Cloths of all kinds Carpets and druggets........;. Worsted stuffs. 673,238 — 45,i43 20,571 410,041 269,619 860,046 418,86* 32.916 58,857 ,190,326 18S,849 194.061 • ............ 124,682 ; 100,^97 69,835 49,741 245,101 $ 26,287 25,044 - 823,838 206,416! 802,615 ' ; 602,418 681,091 401,876 £122,800* Daring the present week, the arrivals of gold have been viz: £13,500 by the Bremen ; £10,000 by the City of New York ; £10, 000 by the Teutonia; and £4,500 by the City of Boston from York ; £2,900 by the Pera from Alexandria ; and £81,900 by the Shan¬ non from the West Indies. The silver market is flat, but in the mar- New ; ket for gold there has been a bullion are subjoined The prices of fair degree of activity. : - OOLD. peroz. Bar Gold do . Fine do Reflnable standard, last price do do do do do Spanish Doubloons Doubloons... United States Gold Coin do South American per oz. last price 77s. 9d. 77s. 9d. 77s. lid. 7os. Od. to 75s. 6d. 74s. 6d. 76s. 2%d. Bar Silver.;. do containing 5 grs. Fine Cake Silver .... I Mexican Dollars Five franc pieces I — Quicksilver £7 per bottle; 5%d. ll%d. ll%d. l%d. discount 3 per cent. is firmer ; and fine bars have per onnce. The return of d. 4s. gold. @To-day the silver market 1 5s. 5s. 5s. 4s. do bullion movements for the nine realised 61d. months ending Sep¬ that the total import of gold and silver into the Uni¬ Kingdom in that period was £28,126,262, against £14,421,018 last tember 30, shows year, and £21,637,479 in 1864. The exports were £18,513,972, £9,in 1S66, 1865, 1864 respectively. For the 908,015, and £18,405,062 present year, the cess imports, as compared with the exports, The The latest shares... Sat. 10. 89% 89% 69 77 62 69 77 52 Mon. 12. Tues. 13. Wed. 14. 90 89% mi 70 69% 69% 78 78 77% 61 52 52 (15th) advices from Frankfort quote Thur. 15. 90 70% 78 51% United States Five- twenties at 74f. 1804. week our Liverpool Cotton market has been heavy week, and each day has shown a loss of the 9th to the 15th only 47,000 bales are bales, at 14$@14£. has improved considerably. Between the 9th and 12th Mixed Western Corn advanced from 35s. to 38s. per qr. of American flour has been moderately active at 29@30s. per 480 lbs. The Breadstuffs Market bbi. lor Extra New York State brands. The Provision Market has been dull. 2,241,154 On the 9th (the latest report THE WEEK. 1866. 1865. 1864. $361,686 999,193 $1,851,683 $2,015,405 8,394,741 3,359,733, $5,375,128 $3,208,784 . $1,360,879 $5,246,424 187,910,781 166,247,957 259,368,2:16 155,042,725 $158,251,509 $189,271,660 $171,623,095 $261,614,660 of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry reported Since January 1 In NEW YORK FOR . $967,630 .... report 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 Nov. 12 : EXPORTS FROM HRXV YORK FOR THE 1 Qp.q $2,311,932 for the week 149,012,435 Since January .\. $151,324,307 1 WEEK. 1866. 1865. Iftfvi $1,874,605 185,985,696 $2,954,821 $6,127,156 139,400,176 161,362,447 $164,317,268 detailed, $187,860,301 $145,527,332 commercial department will be found the official statement of the imports and exports for the week. The value of exports from this port to different countries In the of (exclusive past week, and since July 1, is shown in the foliow- specie) for the table: mg To Cubs. July 1,1866 $1,612,285 $28,437,753 3,166,218 Hayti 39,979 1,857,429 Other W. I 15,400 Holland & Belg. 3,795,959 Mexico 219,303 Germany ... New Granada... To Great Britain... France... .:.... Spain. Other S. Europe East Indies China 199,583 775,528 2,893,156 6,750 1,257,671 9,650 107,909 16,000 90,476 92,040 1,373,583 July 1. $3,336,639 $236,638 25,814 423,160 2,780,429 692,094 1,740,717 297,586 366,842 1,297,749 1,271,707 517,225 201,021 80,934 161,161 . Other N.Europe Since This week. Since This week. Venezuela Br. Guiana 59,295 31,906 Brazil OtherS. A. ports All other ports. 2,100,813 following will show the exports of specie ending Nov. 10 1866 : from the port of New Tort for the week Nov. Gold bars 10—S.S. Louisiana, $150,500 Liv’l— Eng. silver & cop’r 2,185 10—S.S. City of Paris, Liv. American gold 10,000 Mexican gold 60,000 Am. and Eng. gold «. 15,844 Gold bars 61,000 “ “ 136,347 California gold bars 10—S.S. Deutschland, Bremen- For Havre— American gold .... French gold For London— Gold bars Mexican dollars... Total for the week Previously reported , 199,200 4,000 339,774 18,000 $1,037,850 55,585,777 $56,623,627 1,1866 Same time in 1S65 $25,481,618 1863 1862 500 500 Foreign silver Foreign gold & ail. 7—S.S. Hecla, Liv’l— Total since Jan. and dull throughout the price with small sales. From reported a9 sold, at prices, for middling uplands, ranging from 14$@14, the latter the closing price on Thursday evening. The sales of the previous week aggregated 76,000 The Previously “ following statement: Erie Railway Total for the The Cable. English Consols and American securities the daily telegraph reports, have been as shown in Consols for money.... U. S. 6-20’s, 1862 Illinois Central shares. Drygoods General merchandise Br.N A Colonies closing quotations for Fri. 9. 1863. Australia Easllah Market Reports—Per the show an ex¬ of ten millions sterling. at London, as per FOREIGN IMPORTS AT Previously reported SILVER. ted [November 17,1866. THE CHRONICLE 618 40,953,852 39,690,402 50,613,812 3,299,337 41,808,743 , 1861 1860..................•••••« 1859 65,776,700 Same time In 1858 1857 1856 1855 $23,835,114 34,257,992 33,387,376 26,492,161 85,215,667 1854..'. 21,788,085 23,255,910 1853 1852 California.—The steamship Henry Chauncey, from Aspinwall, Nov. 1, arrived at this port on Friday, Nov. 9. The follow¬ ing is her specie list: Treasure from FROM SAN Panama Railroad Co. Duncan, Sherman & Co J. & W. .. .... Seligman & Co...... FRANCISCO. $20,688 Wells, Fargo & Co 35,000 63,500 61,500 Order 76,669 50,000 Total from California.... $555,776 received) Prime Mess Pork was quoted at 77@78s. per bbl. Lard, by Eugene Kelly & Co Lees & Waller $243,419 t$e same report, was 6@9d. per cwt. lower, and declining. FROM ASPINWALL. / American Tallow is inactive. Cartwright & Harrison $230 | Hoadley, Eno & Co $1,046 Petroleum has been irregular. Prime Pennsylvania Refined on the 205 i Lanman & Kent 2,311 | Total from Aspinwall $3,792 9th closed at 18@19J., on the 12th at 20@21d., and on the 13th at 19@ Ribon & Munoz Total from both sources. $559,568 20dn showing a variation of 2d. per gal, or 10 per cent., in a few daysAmerican Rosin is higher. Turpentine is quoted at 42s. per cental; The receipts of treasure from California since January 1, 1S66, have beeu as follows : Liverpool Linseed Oil, 40s. 6d. per cwt The Manchester Market for wools and yarns is reported heavy and Date. Steamship. At date. To date. Date. Steamship. At date. To date: Jan. 12.New York ..$685,610 $685,6ie oune 9.New York.. 949,906115,527.984 lower. e92,365 16,420,346 Jan.l9.H.Chauncey 799,706 1,486,314 June20.Arizona Feb. 1.Atlantic.... 944,878 2,430,198 July 2.N. Light..‘..1,617,899 18,038.242 Feb. 9.New York..1,449,074 3,879,266 July 9.New York..1,429,S33 19,468,077 2,051,456 21,519,536 Feb.21 .H.Channceyl,209.048 5,088,319 July 21. Arizona COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. Mar. 6.Costa Rica..1.469,286 6,557,602 July 31. n.Chaunceyl,055,481 23,175,019 Mar.12.New York.. 1,425,553 7,983,155 Aug.21.Nor. Light.3,091,601 26,266,615 1,386,058 27,652,6.6 Import^ and Exports for tub Wrf.k.—The imports this week Mar.23.Arizona.... 389,837 8,372,992 A ug.31 .Arizona Mar.31.H.Chauncey 673,615 9,046,607 Sept. 9.H. Chaun’y. 1,669,359 29,322,034 show a slight increase in dry goods, and a very large increase in gene¬ Apr. 9.New York.. 729,862 9,776,460 Septl9.New York. .1,215,073 30,537,107 Oct. 1 .Arizona 1,109,537 31,646.647 ral merchandise, the total being 15,246,424, against $3,947,056 last Apr. 20. Arizona .... 809,459 10,585,901 Oct. 12.H. Chaun’y.1,135,093 32,781.740 May 1.Costa Rica..1,318,271 11,904,199 Oct. 20.Oc’n Queen.1,428,703 34,210,444 week, and $5,557,777 the previous week. The exports are $2,954,- May 9.New York...1,072.820 12,977,019 Oct. 31. Arizona 1,228,869 35,439,313 821 this week, against $3,093,780 last week, and $3,043,864 the pre¬ May 21.Arizona....1,276,505 14,253,524 Nov. 9.HChauncey 555,776 35,995,089 May 31. Costa Rica. $324,552 14,578,077 vious week. The exports of cotton the past week were 5,138 bales, The Tea Crop of China.— At Canton the settlements of the fort .... against 9,012 bales last week. Included in the exports were 15,548 bbls. corn meal, 7,603 bush, wheat, 32,371 bush, oats, 181,174 bush barley, 3,779 bush, peas, 3,968 bush, corn, 829 pkge. candles, 1,781 tons coal, 748 bales hay, 21 bales hops, 105 bbls. spirits turpentine, 656 bbls. rosin, 26 bbls. tar, 42 galls, whale oil, 16,827 galls. sperm oil, 3,816 galls, linseed oil, 2,755 galls, lard oil, 755,150 bbls. wheat flour, 1,206 galls, petroleum, 1,145 bbls. pork, 681 bbls. beef, 104,875 lbs. cutmeats, 63,064 lbs. butter, 1,165,889 lbs. cheese, 445,390 lbe. lard, 10 bbl9. rice, 146,764 lbs. tallow, 832 hhds. tobacco, 643 other pkgs. crude tobacco 819,079 lbs. manufactured tobacco, 7,417 lbs. whalebone. The following are the imports at New York for week ending (for dry-goods) Nov. 9, and for the week ending (for general merchan¬ dise) Nov. 10: night include 800 boxes, 400 *-clie9t9 Canton packed Congous at 23,427 taels. At Among the demand for Congou for the American prices fjllyll.OO per picul; settlements at $19 to $23 per picul for about 6,000 pkgs, Oolongs have been purchased to a considerable extent for the American market, settlements amounting to some 45,000 pkgs ; the proportion of fine teas is greater than was ever known, before—the total amount of business to date was as follows: Congou. Oolong & Ankoi. Pe.or Pekoe. 54,327 Settlements 21,377: 350 Stocks 5,395 13,681 Foochow.—Settlements have continued of Oolongs for America at previous rates. The sales of the fortnight have been ot Congou market forced up 14,122 chests, Soochong 6,409 chests, Oolongs 24 to 84 for good to finest. Arrivals and stocks 12,387 chests at Tls. follows: are as November 17, 1866.] 185-63209 THE CHRONICLE. Arrivals. Stocks.— , 1866-67. 1865-66. 1866-67. 1865-66. 432,600 ch. 365,700 ch. 75,800 ch. 33,100 ch. 31,800 “ 29,900 46,000 “ 8,000 “ 114,900 \ ch. 98,100 *ch. 65,400 J ch. 28,500 i ch. 2,460 980 2,600 700 83,300 boxes. 91,800 bxs. 7,400 bxs. 7,100 . Congou Souchong Ooolong Flowery Pekoe Scented Teas. , , Shanghai, Sept. 8.—The total settlements with re-shipments of black teas had been since June 1st 196,900 chests, against 126,800 last year, the stock being 31,000 chests. Of green teas only about 10,000 pack¬ ages had arrived, and eagerness was shown by American buyers to purchase, the result of which has been the settlements of two chops me dium Tychow. At Taels 34 to 36£ and three chops of fine Teenkai at Taels 43 to 44£ proportion. The make and quality are very good. At Yokohama prices showed «n upward tendency and a rise of about $1.00 picul. Settlements for the American market have been about 4,000 piculs at $30 to $38 for medium to fine. The following table, from theCircular of Messrs. Olyphant it Co.,wil per show the exports of tea from Britain for eight years China to United States and Great to past; To the United States Black teas, Green, Japan, Ves’ls. lbs. .lbs. lbs. < 52 50 48 59 40 67 42 US 186:1-64 1864-65 1SG5-66 We take 12,211,034 13,495,069 19,485,220 15,043,161 11,303,398 11,139,121 8,702,889 11,5:36,S35 19,001,757 17,869,270 12,774,278 /—To G. Brit’n—, 977,611 2,1*1,807 1,612,755 7,592,215 sels. 31,712,799 31,729,645 28,322,360 29,499,654 20,794,063 25,507,042 17,474,129 31,903,283 251,104 427,445 Ves- lbs. 365,306 6,586.836 14,029,048 8,513,054 12,186,114 7,058,4S5 , Total, 93 Total, lbs. 65,817,069 85,: 94,789 90,417,531 128 136 158 210 166 162 177 101,4550,121 121,180,118 111,736,160 121,933,413 115,184,753 to the card of Mr. A. C. Gra¬ pleasure in calling attention ham, in the columns of Bankers’ and Brokers’ advertisements, on the 2d page of this issue. Mr. Graham was lately president of a bank in New Orleans, and, among other branches of business, proposes to give par¬ ticular attention to Southern bills on Southern cities. on London and Paris, and also bills Messrs. notice Schuyler, Skaats & Bro., bankers and stock brokers, advertise of removal to 19 Broad street and 57 Exchange Place. <ye Bankers’ <&a?ette. DIVIDENDS. We give in oar Bulletin from day to day lists of bonds, &c., lost, and dividends declared. These tables will be continued daily, and on Saturday morning such as have been published through t.he week in the Bulletin will be collected and published in the Chronicle. Below will found those pubname of oompanv. BOOKS CLOSED. o’t. p. WHEN. WIIKRE. Si ate of NY 5 Nov. 10. Railroads* Pennsylvania Railroad Co.. 4 ;... ar AT THE BOARDS. The following shows and Open Boards the description and number of shares sold at the Regu¬ conjointly on each day and for the week ending on Friday. Sat. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri’y. Week. Bank Shares Railroad shares, viz.: Central of New Jersey 40 56 50 100 Chicago & Alton Chic., Burl’gton & Quincy Chicago & Great Eastern. Chicago & Northwestern. 12,064 Chicago, R. Isl. & Pacific. 5,700 Cleveland, Col. & Ciuciu. 8 Cleveland & Pittsburg.... 6,400 Cleveland and Toledo 6,000 Del., Lackawanna & West Erie Railway 13,700 Hannibal & St. Joseph... * Hudson River Illinois Central • • • 100 1.400 Indianapolis & Cin Michigan Central Michigan Southern Milwaukee & St. Paul Morris & Essex New York Central New York & New flaven. Norwich & Worcester Ohio & Mississippi ($100) 42 • • • 300 • 1,940 • 2S,100 4,200 25,000 4,500 35 10 5,000 5,000 • • St. Louis, Alton & T. H.. The 2L630 100 18,200 17,480 300 300 500 625 100 365 Sat, .. 300 200 / 17,500 127,964 3,400 41,700 7,300 14,800 4,500 173 7,500 6,900 54,300 33,292 300 1,300 1,300 1,000 550 200 1,500 13,000 1,000 10,600 1,400 3,430 4,864 2,445 5 3,150 6,000 2,425 2,600 4,916 300 200 300 300 3,100 1,0 7 99,210 1,850 102 20 12 17,679 80 210 20 2,100 2,000 7,600 8.450 9,400 18,800 2,600 2,700 33,950 9,600 12,400 1,000 1,800 13,400 5,625 425 2,684 65,620 ¥ 3,200 3,340 9,900 14,475 27,790 62,906 100 400 200 2,200 1,000 1.700 1,700 1,100 6.500 110 200 200 340 400 120 100 200 895 600 200 1,100 600 5u0 600 400 2,400 2,600 6,050 5,350 200 200 200 100 600 850 300 100 100 100 200 2.500 I,400 1,600 1,300 - m . Mariposa 750 800 200 300 300 200 2,000 500 200 25 700 - • • • . • % • 500 ■ 25 • 600 75 600 600 1,900 4,800 350 250 400 300 200 830 1,300 1,680 1,500 2,200 1,900 700 400 1,120 1,100 1,550 1,200 200 800 100 2J0 Quicksilver Rutland Marble Smith & Parmtlee Gold.. Spruce Hill Coal Union Navigation W estem Union Telegraph Russian.. Wilkesbarre Coal Wyoming Valley Coal.... * • • • 888 30 650 .... • • 600 . 4,100 • . 1,100 Pacific Mail “ - 9 Boston Water Power..... Brunswick City Land Butler Coal Canton Central Coal Citizens’ Gas. Cumberland Coal Delaware & Hud. Canal.. “ » • • 2,445 300 100 200 . 855 100 200 . 2,962 2,911 3,223 5 100 100 950 1,400 200 .. 400 8,900 ' 675 II,700 6,210 8,070 2,7C0 300 ,800 200 200 • • • • 2,441 100 100 299,236 165,050 150,914 223,170 245,400 454,600 292,580 365,030 290,988 338 305 343,038 332,301 219,824 320,535 255,433 383,250 272,258 284,317 412,667 444,222 840,876 676,793 664,266 629,293 675,339 540,359 638,683 Boards, daily, last week, Wed. Thnr. $5,000 $6,000 $100,000 124,500 263,800 35,000 Fri. Week. 2,500 154,500 i6*ouo 127,'500 135,000 32,200 .... Virginia 6’s,... City bonds, viz.: Brooklyn 6’s.. N. Y. City 6’s.. 128,600 15,500 9,000 .. 55,000 1,600 i4i666 1,000 11,000 40,000 .... 15,666 27,000 3.000 51,500 • 191,W0 6,600 15,000 • 25,000 30,666 79,000 3,000 4,000 10,900 .... amount of each day: 172,000 19,000 10,900 .... Governments, State i on Mon. 8,100 28,000 • 30,666 20,COO .... Sat. • 2,000 15,000 $235,000 17,000 5,000 .... 00,000 . 5,000 .... .... 32,000 10,000 .... i',ooo 52,000 ie State&Cityb’ds . 5,000 Tnes. Wed. Thnr. Fri. Week. $166,500 $245,000 $42,500 $285,000 $373,800 $ 1,347,800 128,600 15,500 127.000 135,000 32,200 446,400 126,000l 131,COO 4S,000 101,900 77,000 511,900 91,000 29,500 38,000 14,600 131,000 356,100 $322,600 420,500 255,500 Governments Bonds. Notes. January $4,827,200 3,846,500 3,931,300 .. February March :.... April 5,798,300 8,002,700 June 10,476,250 ... August 10,987.850 ... September 6,451,300 and for the weeks Sept. 7 Sept. 14 Sept. 21 Sept. 28 Oct. Oct. O’t. Oct. Nov. Nov. Nov. 400 The volume of transactions in shares at the two Boards, comparati 14,870 • 435 1,750 300 > $3,340,100 2,591,900 3,006,700 3,739,650 2,258,250 2,485,250 2,198,750 2.577,00ft 2.425,350 536,500 614,000 State, &c., Railroad Bonds. Bonds. $952,900 $3,085,500 1,692,100 1,691,500 2,903,600 1,679,500 781.240 1,236,600 1,614,000 1,633,000 1,986,990 2,984,000 , 838,700 781,900 515,700 455,500 993,000 879,200 Total amount. $12,155,709 9,822,000 10,622,840 12,056,150 12,279,450 12,078,750 14,765,500 16,544,750 12,739,850 ending .. on Friday—, $2,354,200 $1,002,751 7:30,900 251,500 1,174,800 1,254,300 432,750 ’ 5 12 19 26 2 9 16 1,681,400 2,849, IKK) 308,500 480,700 1,208,550 1,981,000 1,762.000 2,369,100 1,347,800 $514,500 546,000 791,000 1,061,500 768,0( 0 814,500 549,500 488,700 650,300 807,600 S 476,300 403,500 820,000 511,900 446,400 $197,700 179,500 207,500 259,500 239,200 119,500 256,MX) 439,500 350,500 538,000 355,100 $4,069,105 2,912,400 2,424,800 3,008,050 2,997,100 4,264,300 4.691,860 3,385,500 3,166,300 4,334,700 2,663,200 1 6.700 Miscellaneous shares, viz.: Adams Express American Coal Ashburton Coal Atlantic Mail Tues. $15,500 121,000 230,000 45,500 107,208 133,403 189,497 198,822 386,276 284,213 at the two $ Friday, P. M., Nov. 16. 200 400 540,359 37,290 103,630 .... State bonds, viz.: California 7’s.. 1,000 Connecticut 6’s Louisiana 6’s.. Missouri 6’s... 27.000 N.Y. State 6’s.. N. Y. State 7’s. N. Carolina 6’s. Ohio 6’s Tennessee 6’s.. 200 600 100 300 275 559 Mon. . July 9,300 600 50 810 219,824 111,864 80,016 ...204,080 126,591 H.S. 6’s, 1881 $500 U.S 6’s (5-20’s). *197,000 U.S6’s (old) U.S 5’s (10-403) 37,000 U.SS’s (old) U. S 7-30 notes. 8,100 112 15,600 1,400 83,044 92,761 69,044 383,250 320,535 .638,683 43,494 33,564 42,726 Government, State, &c., bonds sold given in the following statement: are 15 367 200 250 • 1,250 Toledo, Wabash <fcWest’n 10,500 7,100 75,107 111,858 114,822 136,995 117,423 92,478 278, &50 482,930 Sept. 7 268,910 395,501 Sept. 14 22 ...150,864 238,680 389,544 Sept. 21 .119,437 165,500 284,937 Sept. 28 July 6 (4 days)113.413 110.300 223,713 Oct. 5 July 202,529 227,640 436,169 Oct. 12. July 20....167.471 260.300 427,771 Oct. 19 July 27....121.265 185,552 306.817! Oct. 26 3.... 225,075 204,156 429,234 Nov. 2. August August 165,587 134,603 300,189 Nov. 9... August 17....161.581 110,316 271,897 Nov. 16 Jane June June May.. 120 250 25 Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic. Reading 10,100 3,792 45,700 63,609 38,500 60,136 75,300 weakly since the 25th of May are shown in the following statement: Week ending Regular Open Both |Wcek ending Regular Both Open Friday. Board. Board. Boards! Friday. Board.’ Board. Boards May 25.... 228,080 454,381 682,461 August £4.... 171,227 126,910 298,137 June 1 (5 days) .228,873 380,306 609,179 Aug. 31 (5 days)110,S44 112,465 223 309 June 8 536 21,900 23,400 16,600 week. -Both Boards—, Last Prev’s week. week. The transactions in shares 35 • • 11 • 100 69,550 78,700 68,100 54,000 Prev’s week. 72,000 255,433 Total of week. 28 200 • 500 200 263 41 200 6,620 128 30,544 Last The totals of each class of securities sold in the first nine months of the year are shown in the statement which follows: Philadelphia. STOCK 40,900 38,478 , BUSINESS 37,344 29,152 49,323 Total of week.. At Bank. Nov. 30. ..... weeks, is shown by -Open Board—. Prev’s week. 24,207 39,858 45,272 58,295 Wednesday Thursday Friday ' same Last WG6k. Saturday Monday Tuesday and the total for the /—Reg. Board. Railroad Bonds ttflnlf National Bank each day of the two last weeks, the following statement: U. S. Bonds U.S. Notes PAYABLE. BaTZ 1120395..: 619 The Money Market.—The tendency toward a higher rate of during the present week. The last bauk statement showed no important increase in loans, with a decrease of over three millions in legal tenders, and confirmed the view stated in our last report, that the banks were sendiug currency South and to the interior. During the past week this movement has not assumed any important volume k. but the tendency has been sufficient to give confidence to the banks in their e0ory,o procure a higher rate of interest. The condition of commercial affairs has a tendency to inspire a somewhat unusual caution among the banks in discounting paper. interest noted in In some our branches of respecting credits. last has been continued manufacturing and trade there is an uneasiness Large accommodation is asked in order to en¬ able manufacturers to carry stocks of goods at high prices. On the other hand, merchants in the interior, finding their collections to come in slowly, are asking for an extension of their obligations to New York houses, and failures are occurring under circumstances which, in the present unsound condition of affairs, naturally excite a degree of uneasiness and apprehension. At the same time, a heavy fall in te price of stocks during the week, with the fe 620 ^November 17,1S66. THE QHRONIGLE. tained of the former stock at both boards has of the latter 99.2V0 shares.’In by someTthat it may develop into a panicky rush to realise, produced a degree of caution in making advances upon stocks toother than well-known firm3. aggregating 127,964 shares, and Michigan Southern the transactions 65,620 i Reading, 62,966 ; Cleveland and Pittsburg, 54,- amount to Under this combination of unfa¬ vorable 300 and Rock Island, 41,700. a week are influences, the money market shows, at the close of the week, somewhat unsettled and nervous feeling. On call loans, the rate ranges at 5^3 per Governments. cent, on stock collaterals, aud 4@.i per cent, on The total transactions for the 638,683 shares against 540,359 for the previous week. After the last session this ^afternoon the market weak and was prices unsettled and lower. The following are the closing quotations of to-day, compared with reported active; although there is an un¬ . usually large amount of paper offering for sale. Produce and dry those of the six preceding weeks; Oct. 5. Oct. 12. Oct. 19. Oct. 26. Nov. 2. Nov. 9. Nov. 16. goods commission paper is subjected to a more than usually close Cumberland Coal 68 61 5-* 63* 67* 69* 56 61 66* 64* 65* 65* 68* scrntiny. Prime names are current at 6@7 per cent. guicksilver. anton Co 68 67 66* 54* 65* The following are the quotations for loan9 of various classes : 31 30* 80* Mariposa pref 29* 31* 29* 2b* New York Central 116 120 Discounts cannot be - • — .... Per cent. 6 <a 6 6 an 7 Call loans Loans on bonds & mort.. Prime endorsed bills, 3 Per cent. Good endorsed bills, 3 & 4 months, Erie... Hudson River.... Mich. Southern.. Michigan Central 6 <& 6*g9 <&12 United States Securities—Government securities have been Reading — Clev. and Pit tab. Clev. and Toledo. Northwestern.... 89* 1-2* 42* •73* 107* 108* 119* 83* 116* 114 6 7 8 months do single names. Lower grades 118* 83* 122* 9* 122* 116* 89* 116* 90* — 90* 117* 93* 127* 46* 75* 108* 109* . 119* 118* 86* 84 125 85 125* 117 117 93* 116* 115 92* 120 78 123* 113* 85* .... 116* 92* 91* 111* 94 120 91* 120* 68* 80* 111* 111* 126* 61* tations at London and Frankfort. The decline in railroad stocks has 67* 80* Rock Island...... 108* 109* Fort Wayne 109* 109* 127 128 ' Illinois Central 128 125* The number and character of shares sold at the also tended to 113 92* 119* 67* 79* no* 1(9* 124* 87* 1 ’4 62 boards heavy and weak. The decline in gold has tended to depreciate the price of gold bearing bonds, a tendency which on Five-twenties of 1862, however, has been partia ly counteracted by an advance in quo¬ “ preferred 76 .. . 74* 1(6* 106* 122 regular and open conjointly on each day of the week ending to-day are shown a change in the relative value of the two classes of securities. This change in the following statement: Mon. Tucs. Wed. Sat. Thurs. Week* Fri. in relative values, however, has rather diminished the disposition to 42 Bank 263 23 85 128 536 80 65,899 98,631 102,747 126,706 106,077 78,252 563.312 buy national securities, than produced a effort to realize upon them, Railroad Coal 1,275 1,900 -2,200 3,750 5,000 1,900 16,025 and hence the transactions at the Stock Exchange amount to only Mining 3,100 8,500 22.770 7,700 3,600 2,820 ' 1,100 2,350 1,930 2,2S0 1,455 3,350 12,465 Steamship $1,347:800, against $2,369,000 for last week. Some of the finan¬ Imorovement 700 700 600 1,260 2,800 7,350 1,300 918 egraph 2,745 2,911 2,641 15,305 2,967 3,223 cial institutions who have invested their large surplus funds in this 895 25 110 640 1-0 200 100 Express 25 class of securities, appear to consider that they have reached their Gas highest price, and are beginning to realize upon them, with a view At Regular Board 24,207 39,858 45,272 68,2 6 49,323 88,478 255,433 At Open Board... 54,000 383,250 69,550 78,700 68,i00 40,900 72,00t> to buying them in at ultimately lower prices. The decline oo the j 14,822 Total of week... leading Government securities during the week has been as follows : Previous week.... 75.107 111,853 69,044 136,995 117,423 92,478 638,683 103,630 111,864 80,010 f40,359 83,044 92,761 bring down the price of governments, through • United States 6’s, 1881 coupons .. United Sia es 5-20's, 1SH2 coup... United Mates 6-20’s, 1854 United Stated 5-20’s, 1805 “ United States 6-:0’e, ls65, N. iss. % | United States 10-40’s, N. iss * * I United States 7-30’s 1st series..1* * ! United States 7-50’s 2 l series. % % 1 United States 7-©0’a 3d series.... X ... . The following are the . ... . 1% | closing prices of leading securities, com¬ pared witL preceding weeks: S. 6’s, 1881 coup S. 5-20’s, 1862 coupons. S. 5-20’s, 1864 “ 8. 5-20’s, 1865 U S. 5-20’s, 1865, N. iss... 8 10-40’s, 3 7-30’s 1st series S. 7-30’s 2d Series S 7-80’s 3rd series Railroad and .. Oct. 19. Oct. 26. Nov. 2. Nov. 9. Nov. IP. 113* 113* 114* 114* 1H* 113* 115* I14*X.C.U0* no* 109* 1" *x.c.l07* no* no* 107 107* 111 111 X.C .107* lio* 107 101* 110 108* no* 108* 108* 99* 99* 99* 100* 100* 100* 107 106* 106* 1"7* 107* 106* 106 106 106* 105* 105* 105* 106* 106* 105* 105* 105* 105* 112* 112X - . . e .... .... _ Miscellaneous Stocks.—This class of securi .... .... .... . . . . The total number of shares sold in the five last weeks date was as Nov. 16. Regular Board Open Board The weeks, Nov. 2. shown in the 629,293 664,266 Regular Board for the Nov. 9: $1,347,800 Bonds. Railroad, &c. Bunds 299,236 865,030 same following comparative statement: Nov 16. U. 9. Bonds U. S. Notes State & City Oct. 19. 290,983 338,305 675,239 255,433 ;-i83,250 Oct. 96. 843,038 832,301 Nov. 9. 255,4:33 383,250 638,683 640,359 transactions in bonds at the are ending at follows: Both Boards...... Oct. 12 U. U. U. U. U. U. U* U. U. . 446,400 511,900 Nov. 2. $2,369,100 607,600 $1,762,000 650,800 403,500 350,500 820,000 538,000 353,100 Oct. 26 » Oct. 19. $1,981,000 -488,700 476,300 459,500 $2,677,300 1,208,550 649,500 , 256,500 Total $2,063,200 $4,334,700 $3,166,300 $3,385,500 $4,691,850 For the details of the above table the reader is referred to the experienced a somewhat severe decline during the week first article of this department. The Gold Market.—The increased supply of gold resulting Wealthy combinations have been formed for the purpose of break ing down prices, and with that view have thrown heavy blocks of from the payment of the November coupons is gradually producing shares upon the market. The brokers previously committed to the its effect upon the premium. The large supply makes it difficult for opposite side were probably little disposed to oppose the movement; cliques to manipulate the market, and the premium is left very much for the difficulty of further forcing up prices had warned them to to take its natural course ; which appears to be downward. State¬ sell out their own stocks, and they are less disposed to protect their ments made in Washington dispatches that the Secretary of the customers, for whom they are carrying large amounts of stock, than Treasury purposes providing for the resumption of specie payments to encourage a movement which would at least increase the amount at an early day, though not generally credited in the precise form of transactions. As usual, the outside public have been the princi¬ in which they are given, have yet produced an idea that the Secre¬ pal losers by the decline,.and the brokers are waiting until prices tary may possibly be boarding his gold with a view to that object have “ touched bottom ” as the opportunity for their taking in a at a period sufficiently near to affect the present premium. The fresh supply of stock on their own account. The present unsettled price has fluctuated between 146$ and 142 and closes at the letter figure. feeling proves how little real confidence has beeu felt in the value of The following have been the highest and lowest quotations for stocks. This afternoon, it was evident that the decline had gone to an extent which bordered upon producing a panicky rush to sell. gold on each of the last six days: Lowest. Highest. Lowest. Highest. Few had the courage to buy for higher prices, and it was apparent Nov. 10 14. 146* Nov. 14... 146* 144& 14J* 144* Nov. 15. 144* 148* 143?$ that a large portion of the purchases were made to cover •« short ” Nov. 12. Nov. 18 14 »* 143* 145* Nov. 16. 142* ties have contracts. The readiness with which shorts " have been covered has “ • The transactions for last week at the Custom House and the disappointed the combination, who had hoped to draw out a Sub-Treasury short ” interest upon which they could run up prices, a^l leaves them the choice between retiring from their undertaking or still further bearing down the maiket until it is in a sufficiently oversold condition to suit their purposes. The decliue upon some of the leading shares, composing to-day’s closing figures with those of last Friday, is as follows : New York Central 7% Erie 7 Beadng.. 3% 6 Michigan Southern “ Central Cleveland and Pitt burg The 2 6* Cleveland and Toledo Northwestern Preferred Rock Island Fort Wayne Illinois Central 5# 5* 5* " ; 8* 3* 8* principal activity has been in Western and Erie, the sales were as follows : Custom House. Receipts. $306,682 84 329,028 12 400,723 28 859,059 69 Nov. Sab-Treasury Payments. $6^)66,914 83 Receipts. $5,691,474 47 17,209,812 60 16,627,042 15 717.740 99 4.529.894 07 1,166,910 89 2,339,510 01 1,931,776 86 2,068,886 31 2,806.667 66 2,866,712 14 Total $2,0)5,292 21 $28,749,895 73 Balance in Sub-Treasury morning of Nov. 6— •••••• •• — $34,167,947 16 86,889,718 25 830,358 35 329,440 03 10 Deduct payments $120,657,665 40 \ during the week.... 28,749,895 ^ Balance on Saturday evening Increase during the week....;........ — *.- Total amount of Gold Certificates issued, * • , \ $91,807,769 67 o,41o»v&l 4* $4,170,000. included November io the 17, 1866.] receipts of customs THE were in Gold Certificates. CHRONICLE $204,000 in gold, and $1,851,292 The following table shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury since July 7 : Weeks Ending Bept 1.... . IS 8.... 44 15... 22.... 44 44 29.... Oct. 6.... 4 13.... % 44 20.... l& 27.../ Nov. 44 3.... 10 ... Custom House. Sub-Treasury Changes in Payments. Receipts. Balances. $3,199,168 $47,807,365 $34,094,678 $82,294,512 3,22 *,265 16,820,266 19,0^9,718 84,563,995 3.105,157 19,047.272 5.630,903 25,233,192 7.766,499 7,912,486 8,470,783 2,39t.270 2,876,717 2,266,334 2,546,361 2,629,828 2,460,886 21.568,121 12,453,160 ' 10,212,269 13,6S1,534 13,703,774 IS,575,927 20,133,229 Inc. Inc. 96.067.649 101.290,653 100,784,026 86,389,713 34,167,947 91,807,769 34,527,533 2,=j55,292 87,048,843 93,857,100 87,842,831 90,238.601 19,223,924 19,0S2,535 2,262 774 Balances. Dec. $13,712,686 Inc. 2,269,452 Inc. 2.520,848 Iuc. 6,772,256 Dec. 6,014,268 28,749,895 2,445,769 5,769,0=48 6,232,985 Inc. Dec. Dec. Inc. 506,608 14,394.303 5,418,051 Foreign Exchange.—The demand for foreign bills has tinued dull throughout the week, with no observable change the late moderate rate of con- from supply. The importers are remitting less than usual at this period of the year, the conclusion being that they are having their acceptances renewed, with a view of remitting with a lower premium on gold. The following are the.closing quotations for the several classes of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks : Oct. 26. London Comtn’l. do do ©109)4 10!!*© 110)4 5.17)* @5.15 5.134* @5.12)4 5.21)4 @5.20 5.21 )4@5.20 86)4© Paris, long do short Antwerp Swiss Hamburg .... .... Amsterdam Frankfort.'. 41 41 Bremen © Berlin .... @ 78)4© 72)4© Nov. 16. 107)4© 108)4 107)4© 108)4 109 © 109)4 10>)4© 109)4 19834© 109)4 110 @110*4 110)*© 110)4 109)4© 110 5.16)4@5.15 5.16)4@5.13)4 5.17)4@5.16)4 5.12)4@ 5.13)4@5.12)4 5.13)*® 5.20 @5.17)4 5.20 @5.16)4 5.22)*@5.!S24 5.20 @5.17)4 5.20 ©5.16)* 5.22)4@5.18)* 36)£@ — 36)4© 36X 36)6© 36)* 41 @ 41X 41)4© — 41%© X 41 © 41)4 4114© _ 41)6® X 79 © — 79 © 79)4 79)4© 79)4 73 @ 73)4 72)4© 72)4 72)6® 72)4 109 shrt Nov. 9. . 107*4© lOS# bkra’£/j£ do Nov. 2. 108 @103)4 .... .... New York City Banks.—The following statement shows the condition of the Associated Banks of the City of New York tor the week ending with the commencement of business on Nov. 10, 1866 : Manhattan........ Merchants’ Mechanics’ Specie. 6,377,625 4.508,424 10,021,618 c,L 1,220 City Tradesmen’s Fulton ; Chemical Merck’ts Exchange National Butch. & Drovers.. Mech’s & Traders.. Greenwich. Leather Manufact’s Seventh Ward State of N. York... American Exc’gc.. Commerce Broadway Ocean Mercantile Pacilic.... Chatham People’s 5,530,030 3,-63,287 2,77t, 336 . . Atlantic Imp. & Traders... . Mech. Bank’g As’n Grocers’ North River East River Manuf. & Merch’ts Fourth National... Central Second National... Ninth National.... First National Third National.... N. Y. Exchange... Tenth National -,.. Dry Dock Ball’s Head Croton National... 19,026 18,--'25 453.948 498.415 241,048 175,000 5,342 172.857 175.948 9.868 56,905 482.293 12,573 261,722 128,052 615,750 130,888 7,117 3,382.870 676.627 524.994 854,983 1.598,802 2,459,075 216,780 41S.196 473,305 257,003 901,363 929,245 3,007,169 928,207 4,360,539 „ 1,670,916 2,653,989 7.288,711 1,887,044 197,350 1,696.000 158,958 24.608 1,190,683 352,654 500,000 6,157,862 1,357,827 1,747,000 160.922 • 2,510,710 2,666,172 4,493 504,800 1,814,545 2,413.225 75S.468 757,101 897,700 11,660 1,353,088 612 958 3,650,300 3,846.900 1,245.800 750.415 211,927 9,302 2,358.814 3,195,233 19,871 85,096 25,637 265, 00 1.0:38,435 1,734,983 1,365,245 5, 07,449 19,748,904 131.291 77,904 2.745 227 ' 51.042 32,190 5.15 ,316 48,124 4.131,485 2,795,544 1,279,142 1,9:38 900 1.597,509 5,969,023 162,089 65.608 . 15.S90,182. 474,180 1,3:38,584 1,4K, 185 1.629,615 9',002 5 5,151 1,000.000 14,317 6,146 307,483 84,300 23,8i7 4,731 20.307 11,927 3,046.096 1,669,7:34 17,931,008 13,890,727 3,*:22,5l7 6,801,193 2,813,584 3,803,596 1,021,900 2,595,200 134,755 111,*.34 104,9*0 1,643,920 180,173 115.907 48,654 100,809 17,606 7,306 4,669 1,240,003 553,862 7,111 7,775 495.609 958 413 538,229 27^,015 801,6S0 469.742 490,49 i 162,000 617.000 856,779 219,413 469,0* 0 310,219 1,302.461 6,202,891 692.754 474.927 2:36,607 647,413 241,097 1,343,434 18,640.119 274.877 3,543.020 1,633,150 14,059,680 3,770,714 £29,172 945,235 447,278 8,051,063 3,369,759 796,284 2,191,8-6 1,514,380 3,207,465 1,017.713 790,018 322,450 1,417.300 679,800 263.528 912,200 11,270 22,697 • • • • 230,548 1,423,179 591,828 22,000 189,133 Totals $275,698,288 $13,145,381 $30,968,940 $226,325,317 $71,512,495 Clearings for the week ending NdV. 3, 1866 $761,934,453 18 Clearings lor rhe week ending Nov. 10,1866 776,604.339 37 Balances f->rthe week ending Nov. 3, 1866..,.. 27,423,82 * 74 Balances for the week ending Nov. l‘>, 1866 .............. 27,492,576 05 The deviations from the returns of the previous week are as fol¬ . . . .. 6.203,693 5,576,002 7.371,487 Specie Circulation, The several weeks ? 29,302,358 Clearlmre. 90.194,254 90.773,232 90,428.189 591,403.135 567.299,212 605,290,424 87,826.021 575,724,324 85,330,679 829.081,759 *3,189,422 770 359,908 78,625,469 824,721,983 228,484.370 226,858.897 30.176.908 Aggregate $92,622,808 $5845,864,052 30.415,240 225,033,853 30.243,437 223,840.572 78,064,925 80,466,207 224,841,695 74,990.842 18,145,381 30,963,040 226,325,317 71,512,485 .7,843,239 9,1-6.623 762,261,041 761.934,453 776,604,889 con¬ compared with the previous weeks : a Capital stock Oct. 27. Nov. 5. $15,142,150 v Loan3 Circulation The variations from follows: the $15,142,150 50,655.176 53.199,217 824.18 statement of Increase of Loans $544,041 Decrease of Specie 6,726 Increase of Legal Tender Notes 301,830 4847,458 24,369,566 24,671,396 41,335,162 43,923,737 9,648,665 *.... Nov. 12. $15,142,150 60,973,584 799,652 24.140.637 Specie Legal Tenders Deposits 44,217,308 9,66o,040 9,659,086 last week have been Decrease of Deposits. Increase of Circulation... as $167,854 ... 5,954 The following comparison shows the condition of the Philadel¬ phia Banks at stated periods : Date. Legal Tenders. Sept. 1... 24,010,254 24.134,918 24.5*8,358 Sept. 8... Sept. 15 Sept. 22 Sept. 29 Oct. 6.... Oct. 13..., Ocr. 20... Oct. 27... Nov. 3 Nov. 10... Boston Banks.—The 802,922 793,395 769,272 770,656 60,973,584 50.655,176 791,013 799.652 824.1S4 £4,199,217 Deposits. 41,162,627 41,604,903 41,093.120 42,836.971 43,(>93,875 43,800.423 43.152,028 9,601,273 9,598,497 9,631,86:3 9,6:19,176 9,631,493 9,648.655 758,024 51.474.948 24,3(59,566 24,671,396 i Circulation. 9,589 574 9.108,410 0,1505,817 806.SI5 82(5.345 49,889.051 50,787.371 61.037,507 51,242,282 51.316,490 24,011,480 23,377.073 23.031,130 24,140,6^7 .. Specie. 59,320,(508 24.073,963 . Loans. 50,095,890 24.906 925 .. 847,458 43.345.800 43.953.737 9 659.086 44,385.16*3 9,065,040 44,217,808 footings of the weekly statement of the Boston Banks are given below. A large increase in loans is shown, a detailed comparison would be without, significance, from the absence from the statement of the returns of one of the banks. The following are the footings, as compared with the two pre¬ vious statements: but Nov. 12 /. .w Due from other banks Dun to other banks Deposits $4! ,900,000 95,381,355 16,118.012 15,138,693 Specie. Legal tender notes Oct. 29. $41,900,000 95,7 20,044 15,515,184 Loans Nov. 5. $11,900,000 97,537,998 J48,*-92 19,140,829 Capital 15,047.004 44.117,030 24.511.200 1 5 Circulation 44,954,478 24,402,311 323,319 (National) Circulation (State) The following are 250.516 433,369 19,880,S05 10,654,336 10,3468*32 14,*97.8-24 44.694,161 24,443,519 332,453 33J.375 the comparative totals for a series of weeks past : - Circulation.--—* Legal Specie. Tenders. Stare. Deposits. Nat'onal. $95,387,803 $264,863 $-22,071,251 $39,S5H,550 $24,240,925 $3^4.773 Loans. Sept. 3.. 10.. 17 94.S7S.709 9i,7SS,268 Nov. 12 21,580.730 2-',303,416 39,149,497 38.357.208 93,825,673 93,67(5.838 91,708,912 95,039,305 95,4(54.225 95.381,855 95,720.044 Oct. 3 4,201 328,830 816,771 27 7,8’6 20.977.951 24.295,8*5 *<4.34\328 40.014,189 24.344.545 21,«)37,SS0 42.095.214 250,638 20,012,639 19,601,819 43,098.520 210.417 24,238, "47 24,329.124 219,302 19.700,205 44,303.573 250,516 19,654,316 432,369 19,889.005 443,892 19,140,8*9 41,094.104 98,537,993 43,330,226 44.117.030 24,339.751 ‘-'4.459,405 24.443,519 24,511,2:0 44,954,478 24,402,311 35(5,075 351.401 336.465 343.408 340,977 £37,(556 S3 .172 832,453 330,275 828,319 Natmnal Banks.—The statement to the effect that the issue of National Bank circulation has reached its limit proves to have been inaccurate. National Bank circulation was issued during the week ending Nov. 10 to the amount of §731,250, making the total to date §296,C86 104. The Government holds securities as follows : For circulating notes..i $330,358,150 For deposits of public moneys in designated depo Lories.... 39.438. £50 Total... $379 297,110 The following is a statemeut of the progress of circulation for several weeks past: Date. B’ks. Capital. Circulation. Date. B’ks. Capital. Circulation Mav 5. 1,650 $271,262,165 Aug. 11.. 1,653 *87.048.950 May 12.. 1,650 May 19.. 1,650 May 26.. 1,659$414,921,179 June 2.. 1,650 .June 9.. .June 16.. .June 23.. June 30.. 1.650 1,653 1.653 1.653 July 7.. 1,653 July 11.. 1,654 July 21.. 1,655 Ang. 4.. 1,656 .. 272 878,895 274,653.195 “ ' > ..... Foreign Banking.—The of Aug. 18.. 1,656 Aug. 25 .‘1,658 276.540,510 Sept. 1.. 1,658 277,379.660 j Sept 8.. 1.659 278.905.675 Sept 15.. 1,659 280.263.890 | Sept 22. 1,(59 281.234,460 , Sept 29. 1.659 282,55-5,440 Oct. 13. 3,659 283.027,605 Oct. 20.. 1,659 284,566,675 Oct. 27.. 1,659 $2S6,894,545 . ‘ Nov. 3.. 1.659 Nov. 10.. 1,659 288,403,775 289.021 .< 85 289,510.820 291,179,045 291.8 1,315 292.214,720 293.032 103 29».072,069 294,377,304 294 636,689 300.000,000 296,086,104 following is the statement of the Bank England for the week ending Oct. 31, 1866 : ISSUE DEPARTMENT. Notes issued. £30,762,885 Government debt........ Other securities Gold coin and bullion.... £30,762,885 lows: Loans Lepal Tenders. Philadelphia Ba\k&.—The following statement shows the dition of the Philadelphia Banks Nov. 12, as 934,507 1,512,478 1,096, It 6 270.000 Oct. 13 276,44:3,219 Oct. 20 279.135,796 Oct. 27... 274,725.456 Nov. 3 271,790,4.35 Nov. 10.. 275,608,288 1.167.782 283,500 1,100 2 836,780 . 6.. 274.210.161 514.902 8,046,174 10,346,082 6,636.035 Cirenla"— Specie. tion. Deposits. Sept. 1 $265,399,607 $6,381,600 $37,807,834 $225,191,282 Sept. 8.. 268.941,668 7,455,910 23,506,2^8 225.107,991 Sept.15.. 270.806,504 7,357.369 29.360,371 224,814.647 Sept,22.. 272,177,166 7,602,611 28.770.381 224,394.663 Sept.29.. 269.807,383 7,643,960 29.213,950 223,336,785 Oct. ;■* Loans. 833.479 321,418 392,805 48,243 20,762 101,484 87,920 5,396,500 • 1.876,791 1,800,633 1,192,299 900,621 12,tK34 5.416,8*9 2,138,766 1,308,607 Market 6t. Nicholas Shoe and Leather.. Corn Exchange ... Continental Commonwealth Oriental Marine 685*483 4,464,028 5,295,699 5,060,973 3,356,086 10,402,867 4,194,450 2,345.707 1,977,086 2,478,838 5.690,252 3,024,938 982,318 1,804,014 1,661,931 3,093,715 3,331.912 l,o78,239 4,873,274 2,133,420 1,343,318 2,577.128 1,715,358 10,915,993 ; 295,000 87.307 1.797,000 Citizens’ 2.505 987.949 5,930,785 900,000 799,079 2,890,251 Nassau 447,166 41.038 2,797,599 Irving Metropolitan 551,307 195,351 21,870 21,533 3,894 261,065 41,346 356,353 588,598 563,206 99,013 2,439,119 1,901,012 3,763,032 3,650,9:18 1,225,188 4,790,605 11,722,514 24,357.158 7,411,798 3,405,435 3,759,555 3,441.235 North America Hanover 670,351 1,134,879 35,988 121,796 312,639 1.798,864 Republic........... 12,784 445,013 2,930,645 3,002,293 2.553,010 Legal deposits. Tonders. $3,273,143 $3,472,7:34 $761,265 352,802 603,5 3 274,949 19li, 094 1,441,846 . Net tion. $8,124,877 $3,337,847 6,211,582 .*. amount of Circula¬ 7,114,816 Union America Phenix Park —-Average Loans and discounts. Banks. New York. 621 £11.015.100 3 984.900 15,762,883 £30,762,885 BANKING DEPARTMENT. Ic., 13,907,853 Deposits ...,....Ino. $1,483,622 tlnc.. 3,958.763 Legal Tenders.., Dec. 3,478,347 Inc, * 5U5$78 compare *s follows with the return* of previous Proprietors’ capital .£14,553.000 Gov. Securities, (including » Rest...., 3,226.411 dead weight annuity).. £12,1^5.839 Public deposits. 8,921.153 Other securities 20,078,858 Other deposits 17,859.47> Notes..... 6,952,430 Seven day and other bills. 625,8*3 Gold and silver coin ....*. 960,711 - -- ,,,.. ^40,185,858 340,1$,858 [November 17, 1866. THE CHRONICLE 622 SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. REPORTED OFFICIALLY ON EACH DAY OF THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, (RZPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE AND STOCKS 1 | American Gold Coin (£?»'</ Tues. f Satur. Mon. SECURITIES. I_tH Ee • Muirs, Eri* eli STOCKS AND SECURITIES. Central of New 1 S' j 1 1 Chicago and Northwestern do do preferred p Joliet and State 118%|LS ' 100 do do -! 90 Louisiana 6s Michigan 6s do 7s, War Loan, 1878 Minnesota 8s Missouri 6s do 6s, (Hannibal and St. Joseph do 6s, (Pacific RIi.) New York 7s, 1870 do 68,1867-77. do 5s, 1868-76 do "7s, State Bounty Bonds North Carolina 6s do 6s. (new)— Ohio Cs, 1870-75 do 6s, 1881-86 Rhode Island 6s Tennessee 6s 1868 do 6s 1890 do 6s, (new) 61 100 | I I — 99 ! — 1 1 J ! ! — = 100 1 1 69 | : —- 66 66 j1158 e ! I i 3% — 3% 71% 72 125 70% 30 [ 86% — 68 69 — — — — — Williamsburg 50! I1 II 60 100 7% 8% 31% 54 31% 7 — 54% 100 57 — I 1 CO *\ S3 83 ’ 100 — —— Express.—Adams 100! Quartz Hill Quicksilver Rutland Marble Smith and Parmelee / — : 25 100; I00J j 79 • 78 77% 75% 77 75% 500; 100 100 100 — 100 14 25 10f> 53 100 23% 50 Copper... 15 13% 14 29 29% 29% 52% 51% 25 JO j do do ! 45 . 51% 49% 48 preferred.... 50 % 99 72% 72 00% d Alton, Sinking Fund do do 1st mortgage Income do do do consolidated 72 92% Interest Extension 1st mortgage do . S9 89 81 85 S5% 102 94% 94 94% 93 77 103 103% Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking Fund ; do do 2d mort. 99 94% do 2d mortgage, 1868. Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869 2d mortgage, (S. F.), do 3d mortgage, 1875 do do convertible, 1867 Illinois Central 7s, 1875 Lackawanna and Western Bonds 94% 94% ..v. Great Western, 1st mortgage do do 2d mortgage i Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage i Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1809-72 do Consolidated and Sinking Fund 72 72 99 1885 Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72 do do 8s, new, 1882 Michigan Southern, Sinking Fond do do 2d mortgage, 7s do do Goshen Line, 1868 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort.?.. Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage do do Morris and Essex, New York Central do do do do do do do do Ohio and — — , Minnesota Copper New Jersey Consolidated 100 50 86 97 93 93 94 2d mortgage Mississippi and Missouri, Land Grants — 100! Wells, Fargo & Co... Ifinirig.—Mariposa Gold Mariposa preferred * 43 70 ' 1001 100; Ty'ust.—Farmers1 Loan and Trust New York Life and Tru t Union Trust United States Trust American Merchants Union United States 113% <114% 54% I McGregor Western, 1st mortgage Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage 52% 100 IO0 100 51% 51% 50% 50% 50% 50 93% 97% Western Uuion,Russian Extension.100 96% 97 114 108 97% Steamsh ip.—Allan tic Mail 1 <>0; 111% 111% 243 110 242 243 240 Pacific Mail 100 .145 243% 113 Union Navigation 100' Nicaragua 70% 100 do 4th mortgage, 1880 do 5th mortgage, 18S8 Galena and Chicago, extended do do 2d mortgage — 100 New York 1 runsd.—Central American 58% 100 Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868 do 2d mortgage, 1879 do 3d mortgage, 1883 8% 50 United States Western Union 73 Chicago. R. I.-and Pacific, 7 percent do 1 — 20 Telegraph.—a meri can 85 123% 124 122 122% ! j Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, let mortilOO 50 Jersey City and Hoboken 20% i i 100 72 20 1 j 67% 50 50 100 100 25 ; 50% i 100 100 10 Cary do ! Cleveland and Pittsburg, 2d mortgage do do 3d mortgage, conv.. do * do 4th mortgage 67 — 100 City 122 116% .16 135% 114 45 50 45% 47 Chicago and Rock Island, 1st mortgage I 68 Uarlem Brunswick Canton 50 100 preferred. 100 92 do do do do : 100 100 Metropolitan 100 Chicago, Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent... Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund.... 99 ! 50 21% 100 5% Manhattan 123 S9 97 do do ! Wyoming Valley -Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn) 89 1877... Chicago 70% j j Wilkesbarre 56 100 Atlantic and Great Western, 1st mort Buffalo New York and Erie, 1st mort., Central r N w Jersey, 1st mortgage 71% 71% 70% 71% 71% 71% j 71% 1 6s 5s Susquehanna Pennsylvania Schuylkill 1 Spring Mountain Spruce Hill 78% 83% Railroad Ronds: 6s, Water Loan 6s, Public Park Loan 6s, Improvement Stock.... Lehigh 54% 78% 83% 1st avenue. do i Hampshire and Bald more 54 79 84 54 100 Stonington Toledo, Wabash and Western • Cumberland Delaware and Hudson 85 50 Louis, Alton and Terre Haute Sixth 61% 81% pref.. .100 2d pref... 100 do do do do do do Second avenue 61% 61^4 1 ..! Consolidation Gas. St. '100% 62 01) ; 02 Butler Central ^ | S7% 87 10G) 62 ; Miscellaneous Sliares Coal.—American * ) .100 100 81% 100 125% i.,.100 124% 124 : Reading A x| j Jersey City 6s, Water Loan New York 7s do do 1 113 60 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago 1 87 j 87 ico%! —| —i j Brooklyn 6s do do do 86% 59% ! 85 coupon Municipal J 89% RR.)... 74% 69 60 58% Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 61% 61 71% 71% 71 do do 100 74% 73 preferred Morris and Essex 100 85 New Jersey 100 U2% UC% 116% 112 100 117 New York Central 7 116% 117% 117% New York and New Haven .100 New Haven and Hartford .100 1U 100 Norwich and Worcester 31% 34% 34% 33% 32 Ohio and Mississippi Certificates do do do preferred.... Panama 100 109 109% 108% 107% 306% 1800-62 -65-70 Kentucky 0s, 1868-72 74% 106% 106% 100 Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien Illinois Canal Bonds, 1860 do Registered, 1860 do 6s, coupon, ’79, after do do do 1877 do 1879 do do War Loan do Indiana ns, War Loan do 5s 75 107 50 McGregor Western 100 Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred 100 do 2d preferred do 100 113% 113% •13% 113% Michigan Central 100 84% 81% Michigan So. and N. Indiana 100 90% 90% 87% 85 do do guaranteed...100 Georgia 6s. do “ (new) 7s Virginia 6s, ; Long Island i California 7s... Connecticut 6s. 51% 52% 52 !]60 50 Chicago 52% 50% 77)4. 16% jll3 50 Indianapolis and Cincinnati " 35 92 100 83% Erie ' do preferred Hannibal and St. Joseph do do preferred Harlem do preferred Hudson River Illinois Central ... 108 88% 88% 87% 91% 90 50 119% 117% 116% 115% 112% 114 Delaware, Lackawanna and Western il00>h _ 100 50 108 113 100; 109X1108% 10734 113 113 Cleveland and Pittsburg Cleveland and Toledo — . 100! 79 Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati * 110 100|113% 100113 100; —100 j 100 56)4 330 108 113 131 130 100; do do preferred Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago and Milwaukee — — 100|130 Jersey Chicago and Alton United States 6s, 1867 registered. do do 6s, 1868 coupon. do do 6s, 1868... registered. 114% 114 114%;113% do do 6s, 1881 coupon. 114% 114% do do 6s, 18S1 registered. 1110% 1C9% 110% no%; do do —-107 do do 6s, 5-20a registered. 107%ilU7% do do 6s, 5-20s (2d issue) coupor '107% 107% i 1107* do do 6s, 5.20s do registered r-» o ^7 101% 107% 107% 107% 107 % do do ; :07% 101% do do 6s, 5.20s. do 110 109% 109% 109% 109%;1QS% do 5.20s (new issue) do do do 6s, Oregon War, 1881 do. do do (i yearly). 6s,. do. do do 5s; 1871 coxqwn. do do 5s, 1871 registered. do do 5s, 1S74 coupon do do 5s, 1874 registered. 100)4 100% do do 5s, 10-40s coupon. 100% 100% '100%; 100% j do do 5s, 10-40s registered. do do 6s, Union Pacific R. R.. .(cur.). i07%!:07% 106* do do 7-30s Treas. Notes....1st series. I* 0~% 107% | ....2d series.{105%il06%'l '5%1105%T05% 105% do do do do do 3d series. \ 105% ;105% j 105% 105% do do do do do .... Wed. lhure.1 Railroad Stocks * 144% 144% 144% 1 Mou. iTuea. 1 National 1 ituur NOVEMBER 16.) 52 13% 29 13% 2S% 51% 51 1st mortgage 6s, 1883 96% 9t 6s, 1887 7s, 1876 78, convertible, 1876 7s, 1865-76 94 106% Mississippi, 1st mortgage. Peninsula, 1st mortgage... ; 104% Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort.. 98% 98 do do do 2d mort... do do do • 3d mort... St. Louis, Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort .. 100 85 do do do 2d, pref.... do do do 2d, income., 93 92% Toledo and Wabash, 1st mortgage, extended. 92% 79% 79 do do 2d mortgage 43% Mariposa (G <>1<J) 1 st mortgage 98 S3 ' November 17, 623 THE CHRONICLE 1866.] <&l)e Commercial Article* from New York. Exports of Leading ®imes. w lOaO^HQOrj a a g a ” > CO C» 05 — I . OQ HHOOrtH *< — EPITOME. COMMERCIAL s Friday Night, General trade is in a most There is depressed condition. general want of confidence in prices, and an unsatisfactory accumulation of many articles of merchandise. Cotton has materially declined. Breadstuff's have been without material variation. Groceries of all kinds have been dull and droop¬ OS § ^isiiipsr' O <3 £■< ^ ^ ® tj o Ph extremely depressed in hog products. Mess Pork closed this aflernoon at $22 75 per bbl. Bacon and Lard are tending strongly downward. The heavy de¬ cline that has taken place in hog products is the result of many circumstances having no direct relation to supply and demand. The high prices that have ruled have stimulated cured during the extreme hot weather, and gives indications of imperfect quality. A wide differ¬ ence threatens to rule between the prices of meats of the packing of 1866 and those for the season of 1867. Beef and other products of neat cattle have a downward tendency, but s ■c Provisions have been packing—much was be qoted. Petroleum has been active, and, with more marked decline can favorable S' CO < ef CO S no S~n o . cd cr =3 CO *7. x OO ■ q • • ■ g <i :t* : o a 2 « dreadstufts— 15,000 4,964 :§! -Ci : 1 3 • -V :& N .*® os 1(5 0 0 03 — X tCl n soci ?•* • • . Barley 4,550 517.313 2,948,622*2,383,845 • 'rl Grass seed... 5,352 Flaxseed 203 Beans 250 Peas... 10,748 C. meal,bbls. 8-M) C. meal.bags. 3,224 Buckwheat & B.W. flour, bg 950 131,034 63,744 44.965 173,805 189,156 +253,485 245,038 78,784 837 97,629 8®::::-:::: Beef, pkgs. .. Lard, pkgs... Lard, kegs... Rice, pkgs. 630,940 Starch Stearine. Cotton, bales 18,832 537.936 16,370 Copper, bbls... 88 Copper, plates. 6,270 Spelter, slabs.. 102 Dnedfruit,pkgs 1,530 16.600 Sugar, bhds & bbls Grease, pkgs... 253 6,263 Tallow, pkgs.. 2,804 Hemp, bales... 110 Hides, No 21,860 330,998 Tobacco, pkgs. 17,838 24,430 Tobacco, hhas. Hops, bales..*, 539 Leather, sides 50,4072,046,7001,890,600i Whiskey, bbls. Wool, bales.... Lead, pigs 6,530 Dressed Hogs, Molasses, bbds & bbls No 836 14,967 Naval Stores— Rice, rough, Crude trp,bbl bush 60 28,257 34,135 51,859 16,097 Spirits tnrp. 1,832 .. . .. * Including barley malt. 636,472 3,a50 144,385 5,071 112,840 55,600 S',452 95,584 1,532 236 37 200 183 * • • -i-n • • • • O eo O JQ iO50*S*t-C* X ® C*n • n x m rT 00 • •crecco • • . « * Oft. • • C* n w :g :®gg ;0 • rr n • • CO X • ' *n •n n CO 05 <J* • GO © I© ® CO • C» n eo‘i-T CO. *coc” • CO OO ■ Tf ^ ^ . © • o . O ■« • . • *-o in so . .socOrff i«Ol- ’ 'at . • . .1- . • o .0» . * ' * ‘ * COO ■ ■ at ■ 05 CO • • 05 CX) ^ 'cT -cv»Q»j»o!Cnjai.3into -S —comoTf C5— 0*00 — • • CO ■ • eo o* r 1-1 CO rH • • i-t 05< • • C- • ret-1-1-10od ’2x3 TTO.SS —■ 05. r-J. —» ■ t- o. 00 m r 1—I c— 1—t ’0505 * c .c . 0* 5“ < • • 05 ■ 05 ‘rtifn . t- 05 05 05 X rr rf • rH • . 0*r-tlO OO .root • O —"t 1-1 •CO :8 : : : : mo HWp eocot^ • i-t QO-T Ss « Tt ■ • 1-1 ■ •-£ 'i-T • os * .oS5®?OlT^i-tt-OOi—lOC3f-C •OCO*'<1— lniOCjTJi 0*X> SO CO rH ot CO i-i_c-^o* c* o*_o«_eo 1.0 CO Tf H -03^5 35 50 0* •o'i'xooa 'COi-liHO® o .o • O in ■■H • H • t-T -eo so 05 -h O* 1—IO • • .0»0000*-H-r-COinC05»lr^-;CO J-fc-COOTl^QO^CO^SJ^: 05tM t— O • — .co ai m i i-l at eo . n< . • oo • • • • '& : .Tfoot-22 ooooei 5*oot- • mrTCO eo • S e* ■ -00O5X • 2* oo^o co u1 .xcseo •creo • • -tT • • ■1-100 X 05 0 o*oo> • -cj tt m • • co., • o 05 co i-IO 1-t ■aTr-T 'as s i-l G o • • »oo • • O • • >XO ’ .05 * 15*00* * c* wo ■ c5e*oS ■ 3 • • • . ’ ■CH • •• tt at ■ 05 05 O o 0©*X ■ • m —Ii-t -COO .Ttt -o Cr • "2* r- i-t ■ • • ’i-< -1-1 ■ x jrP oo t— X ■ • -x • oo ci t3 c5 Pi 1 05 1 o v-H ■ CO £3 d i-l • o • (M ’ co vV X1-1 < • t— ■ :G0’“I< ■00 •CO Pi m CC C 5} !®*o5x r :8 : owo i rr 05 L- ■ • • • *3 ■ ■005 c5t^«*c5 •§§ co t— ao 1 CO 05 at 8 «5 Pi O A •u O 3 o w . 581,725 565,225 96,890 hi ® >* a as o a 8 :g : :i I ® If 05 nr-— • 05 If icrs* • ■ ■at • 05 n "ni- • co * * • •! ■ 03 85,245 93,095 • os® <U -n 05 t— O.CO ^ « —J* t- -cot- • *550 • Ot 00 ■ • ’cfx * n • id itjj ■ O ' t- • :3 • con*mo .3*05 05 0 .®lOVV 05t-o50 • crr-®*3 •VOnV t- • ’ at n :S : : co3* TT X •n 1 at • co w * 7,381 • ef tfl d A 213,080 • .05 n :S88g"' • ©rc*10.0* id ' i-7 co” - osneo *«**.* id 8 at 2,400 eo '10,482 •VO 3 : 7,480 • mo . .g* S* • :S5 •05 ;,CO ' — X CO « gi V* • . *vT ©tcico — 30 8 3,967 5,163 5,455 185 4,157 153,760 492 60,676 3,947 80,481 62,140 1,548 115,026 125,960 81,769 +2 d oooixr- 8 3 o *0050 gT $s 'ng - ^ W OQ IB s mio T-t BX33X OB CO OD 00 B m’SS ® ou 00 OB H DSP as A ^•^^.AAAA a^i* ® S—AAAA Peg g : © < 00 AAtlAA’Ti. OAAAA&A 05 OB © 05 (P bDT3 gtp6flfcflMtqd8oggs,1gR-£3.«' : —nnn .n S • •p : th • . 1 • . S3 ■ • . •Ss : ® — + Including bags reduced to barrels. following table shows the exports of leading articles of com¬ of New York since July 1, 1866, the principal ports of destination, and the total since January 1, and for the same period in 1865. The export of each article to the several ports and the total export for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amoQqt In the last number of the Chronicle from that here g^iyep : n • 22>oi-t • n at • • . S &: The merce .eo at • a 346,172 118,975 435 42,154 11,956 120 2,737 92,632 2,808 100 4,130 5,175 Cat meats... .»lflWMJ*X|iH • HH m 7,525 390,444 CO< • O ‘rjT © W 16, since Batter, pkgs. 13,550 Cheese.. 33,510 toi 2< a Provisions— 440.631 • • r-4 • Irt • ® *•§ § n • • 55 at ,0 115 ’iO a* i ■ i-l | • *co #cc25 fi CO • v- • "afrJ * ‘ CO o »x • CO -meo CO n •O; 11 > Flour, bbls.. 99,764 2,263,674 2,987,515 Wheat, bash.342,625 3,617,562 6,952,420 pkgs Oats 285.769 6,854,963 8,429,020 iOil, lard.. Corn 291,786 20,559.12413,073,765jOil, Petroleum. 27,439 933,658 464,755 870 Rye.... 61,026 759,068 500,130 Peanuts, bags. 11,545 Malt • • § was made.] This Since Same week. Jan.l. time’65 Rosin Tar Pitch Oil cake, • • g .©3 Receipts of Domestic {Produce for the Week, and since January 1. 14 -a* CO t- a A-shes, pkgs... eo •at -S' ’m S3 Since Same Jan. l-time’65 ■ CO t- t- > — C“ u* tT lO OO — This • • CO .H < — at 03 as week. C* — :Tr- m .00C* CO > J=> as record • m «3 no : • •© -5 Qg SJ iO 0005rtl0®»0 30 -O' lO 00 CCtJI CO t- n o ® . -8 h, [Of the items left blank in 1865 : ‘Os rl • » ^ © *2 :3S&S5S?S88S81 :$ at IT • g d foreign news, a brisk business has been done in the past few 8 days. Sperm Oil is depressed by the report of the short time in the British manufacturing towns. Lard Oil is also drooping. Other oils are quite dull. East India Goods have been less active, and metals have a downward tendency. H Naval Stores have slightly declined, and there is nothing of moment doing. Hides have become quite dull, with prices o tending downward, notwithstanding the stock offering for H sale is quite reduced. Leather is lower. Fish and fruit are 51 declining. Tallow has slightly declined. Hops are quiet. Whisky is more steady, as the Government is endeavoring to check the production of “Contraband Rum.” Wool has g «o * g 3 sold a little more freely, but at low prices. 2^2 In Freights we notice several charters for petroleum to Europe ; tobacco to the Mediterranean ; large shipments of S cotton and barley by the regular steam and sail packets to Q Great Britain, and two or three charters for barley. The receipts of domestic produce for the week ending Nov. Jan. 1, and for the same time in 1865, have teen as follows: n r* ss 3 s j5*i£©» o a — , CO n ®* ^ ;g|liSliS§liill?S§e jilt! §tfss —§1 gglllsligSI: San xl ing. *3 n. n CO — - w Not. 16. ^ T-4 ‘ * _ :83Si * h i 65 s’ gig J 2 Ph ®— i* ® I 0,0 from the port V ta li .© ' SS 4 © a S M ■sis t — —3 d © ao u *£ © Od © H tn * O © " « -I o C-O 2 -.43x3 © h d © ©!> o.eS o -.03 ** Jp © O © o3 \x& Ob’1® © 3l h. ® goc^^«n«o J h. at . o ^ -*-1 d 1 . gGOpnlh OB A O _ 2 oo o* loo. >aS& Jjfl ajJS^P'd don.e W+ale 621 THE CHRONICLE. r [November 17, ,v■fi'i * **A> HA. Tmportsor jj€*xtms Article*. low prices of cotton goods. It avails nothing to say that the foreign imports of certain leading year’s yield of cotton will be -deficient, when eveiy day the week ending Nov. 9, since Jan- proves that manufactures sufficient to consume the current 1, 1866, and for the corresponding period in 1865: supply cannot be sold at prices that will pay cost*. Hence, [The quantify is given in packages when not otherwise specified.] we have reduced consumption in all quarters. Thsv sales of’ For Since Same For Same Since the week amount to about 8,000 bales. the Jan. 1. time time the Jan. 1, The following table tbowa the articles of commerce at th e port for ; week. 98 Huttons Coal; tons 14,304 636,944 25,696 .. 801 Bark, Pernv Bleap’wd’rs 1,098 Brimst, tns. • • • • • • 48,221 21,004 14,810 1.018 • • Cochineal... Cr Tartar Gambler.... • • • • 8 ... Gums, Crude Gum, Arabic 1,094 24,093 12,475 3.898 2,894 7,431 662 85 12 Indigo 14 ... 8.779 35 253 4 ... Oil, Olive... 86,054 738 Opium Soda, bi-carb 3,348 336 Soda, sal:... Soda, ash... 1,809 122,035 84,004 34,657 53 100 Flax Furs Gunny cloth 4,328 97,444 3 Hemp, bales.. Hides, Ac. 1,448 89 217 658 Bristles Hideftfdres’d India rubber.. Jvory. ........ Jewelry, Ac. Jewelry 9,932 761 Cassia 2,186 18 1,023 2,500 3,805 212,393 119,262 89 5,085 Watches.... Metals, Ac. Cutlery...-. ... 35,170 Mahogany. 212,622 39 Exports of Cotton from New York the past week amount 5,138 bales, of which 4,322 were to Liverpool, 124 to Glasgow, and 692 to Bremen, as follows: to To Liverpool per steamers: City of Paris, 649; Louisiana, of Manchester, 587; Heels, 1,lib. total bales To Glasgow per steamer: Caledonia, 124. Total bales To Bremen per steamer: Deutschland, 602 1,976; City 4,322 124 692 Below we give our table showing the exports of Cotton from New York, and their direction for each of the last fowr weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September 1, 1866; and in the last column the total for the same pesiodi of the previous year : Exports of Cotton (bales) from New Work state Sept. 1,1866 WEEK ENDING EXTORTED TO Oct. i 23. Liverpool ; Oct. 30. 4,658 — Other British Ports 4,242 • .... Total to Gt. Britain.. 60.613 165.025 141,901 115,033 1,419 88 87 36 Good Middling • Nov. 6. . . 8,073 • .... 83,602 30.353 Logwood 2,478 68 818 Middling 169,416 229,161 136,919 Ginger 558 Pepper 809 Saltpetre 77.208 Woods. 138,943 Fustic 687 17 131,929 461.600 Florida. Mobile. &Texnin 29 30 30 ' 81 31 SV 32 38 84 83* 84 35 Upland. $ lb 29 30 32 33 Ordinary Good Ordinary Low Middling .... 23,905 Spices, Ac. 21,408 .... 4,222 .... 2,231 N. etfeans* 1865. " 9,253 4,333 24,340 1,208 . Hair 1868. 11.931 181.043 Iron,RRb’rs 205,768 Lead, pigs.. 17,244 884,521 162.592 J>igs.. Spelter, lbs.492,287 9,012,65*9 1,608,102 Steel 13,417 9,348 166,658 Tin, bxs.... 25,567 T19,715 538.318 Tin slabs,lbe221,076 6,225,489 5,363,084 4,421 388 16,106 Rags 39,526 27,121 8,008 Sugar, hhds, tes A bbls.. 3,309 361,283 2,030 271,429 029 [Sugar,bxs Abg 2,644 349,225 860,294 610 2.703 Tea 7 660,149 581,284 19.543 844 25,780 4,722j Tobacco 631 3,416 ! Waste 13,393 10,319 5.769 Wittes <fec 3,661 Champ, bkts 2,294 103,057 56,958 353.329 86,259 3,550 2,333 Wines 29,176 Wool, bates... 627 54,037 62,737 736 Articles reported by value. 66,910 Cigars #4.436 $1,208,899 $724,3SS 3.021 11.589!Corks 149,126 * 25,983 21,948 Fancy goods.. S3 299 3,7K5,k-26 2,603.076 10,269 Fish 27,645 723,674 637,103 4,819 Fruits, Ac. Lemons 983 3,551 460,535 25,762 2,553 Oranges 1,469 289,205 310,938 Nuts 47,110 816,390 61,994 898,07$ Raisins 36,471 837,820 060,776 1,172 Hides,undrsd.102,150 5,752,589 4,173,557 5,132 Rice.. 16,163 711,763 988,682 1,976 .... week. 402 Hardware... 8,241 281,848 5,154 610,076 29,414 406,104 437 Cotton, bales. Drugs. Ac. Madder. Oils, ess 1865. 5,375 7,519 Cocoa,.bags... Coffee, bags 2866. i 4,242 8,073 74 4,653 : . prev. year. 4.322 124 43,(08 97,510^ 4,446 43,146 106^87S: Nov. . 13. 143 199 100 Other French ports Same time Total to date. 3,863 1,199 0 oat*--* »7Ui7 1,199 ?,939* .... ' Total French COTTON. Bremen and Hanover Fmdat, P. M., Nov. 16, 1866. The receipts of. Cotton the past week at all the ports amount to 56,736 bales, against 48,335 bales the previous week, making the total receipts since September 1, this year, 266,103 bales, against 471,360 bales for the same period in 1865. The exports from all the ports for this week show a decrease again, the total reaching only 11,251 bales, of which 10,435 bales were to Liverpool, 124 bales to Glasgow, and 692 bales to Bremen, as follows : 1$4 4,323 591 5,519 .... 10,435 124 New York Boston New Orleans bales. Total this week Total. 692 _ 5.138 594 5,519 .... . . 692 * 11,251 199 615 1 5 133 Hamburg Other ports .... .... .... Total to N. Europe.. .... 133 • • • — 692 589 533 2,276 203 .... 692 740 • 2,200 ,,,, 2,936 Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar.... Total .... • .... 4,886 1 • ♦ .... .... ... .... Spain, etc Grand Total ... 2,865 795 All others .... 9.012 4,316 .... 795 5.188 48,076 .... f... 106.67 Receipts of cotton at this port for the week ending last (Friday) evening: This week. —Exported this week to , Liverpool. Glasgow. Bremen. 74 100 Since This Sfnee week. Sept. R. Bales. Bales:- Sept. 1. Bales. Bales. 4,149 80,640 1,550 4,924 7,817 Norfolk, Baltimore, Ac.. 3,028 931 Florida 27,323 165 Texas Savannah Mobile From South Carolina..... North Carolina 4,400 From New Orleans 1,574 Foreign 1,581 1,296 Per Railroad 1,732 Total for the week 14.15U 6,252! 12,398 7,216 61 IS; 832 foreign exports from the United States since Total since Sept. 1 112,346 The following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬ September 1 now amount to 91,174 bales, against 215,062 bales last year. Below we give our usual table of the delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Septem¬ movement of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1, showing ber 1: .—Boston.-PhiJad’phia.-^ .—Baltimore. since Last Last Since* Since Last at a glance the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.: week. Sep. 1. week. Sep. 1. week. Sep. 1. The total Receipts and Exports of Coiton (bales) since Sept. 1, and StoeUs at |>Htes mentioned. EXPORTED SINCE SEPT. 1 TO— m’nts SINCE SEPT. ■ * 1. Great France Other Britain TO STOCK, NORTH. Total. PORTS. for’gn. Orleans 4,359 Texas Savannah 438 Savannah, Nov. 9... Texas, Nov. 2 New York, Nov. 16* Florida, Nov. £+ N. Carolina, Nov. 16 20,999 6,293 2,065 « • • • 1,640 43,146 ■ 1 ■ — ■■■ — * ■! ■ : ■■■ 1 ■■■ ■ .... • « • • 1,199 3,731 • . • • • .... .... .—:—;—:—;—, 1 .... 10,784 ■ • • 31,252 6,293 2,665 • . .... 73 7K) — • .... 266,103 - • .... 987 . .... • . . • 1,811 Total..: .... • . • ,,, Other pHs, Nov. 16* ■—... 1 * . • , Virginia, Nov. 16... . ..... j 7,755 11,994 . 668 9,585 • • • • 1,640 48,076 • ■ $95,000 2,201 .... • 67,981 137,661 16,180 39,477 23,247 7,409 33,238 14,880 2,843 10,159 7,755 • 11,994 .... 189 • • • • ... 261 1,248 1,841 $50,000 4,660 91,174 157,280 Jc5 4,67te 1 Mobile, Nov. 9 Charleston, Nov. 9.. 114,997 41,970 26,853 43,171 8,780 6,541 2,201 During the week the influences adverse to prices which specified in our last have continued in full force, and resulted in a further decline of about 4 cts. per lb. The Speculative demand, which it was prophesied would check were 35c., has not exhibited itself, and the market at our quotations. The circumstance which depressing prices most effectually, and against which re¬ the decline at closes heavy is ports of short crops, &c., are powerless, is the dulness and * The receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee, Kentucky, Ac., not otherwise enumerated. + These are the receipts at all the porta of Florida to November 9, except Apalachicola, which X Estimated. are only to October 15. ’734 Total receipts • • • 290 207 8,536 2,524 36 South Carolina North Carolina Virginia New York, Ac*. Tennessee, Kentucky, Ac... ♦ 2,717 1,017 2,117 .... 2,314 1,709 .... 935 '697 189 81 *i89 151 43 166 331 1,920 971 7^m 2,439 1,841 bales 9,746 35,709 2U63 11,373 206 . N. Orleans, Nov. 9.. 10,927 • Mobile. Florida SHIP- REC’D PORTS. Receipts from— New „ 734 6,327 Reshipments. from Boston during the week have been 594 were to Liverpool, per steamer China. There have been no exports from Baltimore or Philadelphia.The Crop.-—The weather during the week has continued very favorable for plantation purposes, although we hear of severe frosts through the northern cotton-growing stites, which have destroyed all hope of maturing the later growth of the plant in those sections. A more hopeful feel¬ ing, however, is exhibited all through the South, and higher estimates of the yield are now made, since a much larger portion of the crop is being saved than was anticipated. flhe receipts now amount to about fifty thousand bales a week, and as there is very little export movement the stocks are, increasing, the total at the ports being 354,675 bales.. Stocka The exports bales, all of which at the interior towns are as Town*, Augusta A Hamb. (Ga.) Oct. %. Macon, (Ga.) Oct 27 Column ’8, (Ga.) Oct 27 * Montgomery, (Ala.) Oct. 28,... follows: Towns. 1866. 7,278 Memphis, (Tenn.) Oct. 31 7,300 Columbia, (S. C.) Sept. 1 6,226 8,829 Total., 1866. 29:287 t. 60 49,480 *:_ ■' f’ >• - ■ v* • ■ 4 * ■’ November •Tu 17,1868:] THE Savannah, Nov. 10.—The receipts for the week ending Nov. 9 were *7,514 bales, against 8,169 bulas last week. The shipments this week were 6,958 bales, of which 3,722 were to New York, 1,831 were to Bos¬ Providence* 761 to Philadelphia, and 961 to Baltimore. give the receipts, shipments, prices, <fec., for a series of weeks : decline of £d to ^d, Egvptian Id to l^d, and lb. The fol.owing are the prices current : we Receipts. Shipm’s. Sept 7 “ “ “ Stock. 14 21 1,782 1,543 1,433 3,950 28 1,799 3.623 5 3,274 3.726 Oct. “ 12 “ 19 •* 26 38 36 36 36 3-5 3,296 5,509 5,346 4,154 9 . 4.156 4.644 3,505 Nov. 2 “ 5,205 9,560 14,224 14,880 6,953 Price Mid. 30 @31 30 @31 31 @31* 34 @>54* @39 @37 @37 @.. prices fully however, the decline in New York made the market dull, and it closed on Friday about cents lower. Sales for the week 2,052. Charleston, Nov. 10—The receipts for the week ending Nov. 9 amount to 5,096 bales, against 4,667 bales last week. Shipments for this week amount to 4,135 bales, against 5,854 bales last week, of which 2,034 were to New York, 936 to Boston, and 1,165 to Baltimore. The receipts, sales, and exports for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week since Sep. 7. were as follows : Date. Rec’te. 4S0 £eDt. 7.. ** 14.. “ 21.. “ 28.. Oct. 5.. “ 12.. •“ 19.. “ 26.. /-Freight for Upl’d-^ Price of Sales. merits. Stock. mid. 355 794 5,105 30 @31 690 1,653 2,872 31 @32 645 3,176 2,330 33 @— 2.285 34 @ — 1,088 1,361 3,148 38 @39 1,500 1,076 Ship- 1,089 950 1,431 2,096 To Liver- * To New pool. YM— *@*@*@*@*@*@*@— YM— Price York. gold. *@- 114©146 *@- 1J40147 *©— 145©143 YM— 143@145 *@- 145@143 *@- 14S@150 Y®— 14H@148 Y®— 147@149 1 @- 146@148 2,663 1,153 3,851 2,620 35 @36 2,9-<6 1,177 2,666 2,603 39 @40 5,395 2,086 1,599 6,401 36 @Nov. 2.. 4,667 2,191 5,854 5,651 36 @36* “ 9.. 5,096 3,472 4,135 1 @- 147@149 7,4 9 36 ©86* *©The market has been active and steady through the week, but close dull under nntavorable advices from Liverpool, and about ^ cent lower on the low grades. New Orleans Nov. 10.—The mail returns for the week ending Nov. 9 show the receipts to be 25,662 bales, against 22,019 bales fast week. The shipments f >r the last week were 16,145 bales, of which 5.519 were ' Sea Island., 23 d Liverpool, 5,038 to New York, and 5,588 to Boston. Stock on hand Nov. 9 was 137.561 bales. The receipts, sales, and export? for a series of weeks, and the stock, price of middli g rates of freight to Liverpool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week since Sept. 7, were as follows: to Date. Rec’ps. Sales. Exp. Stock. Seat. 7... 1,547 2.013 “ 14.... 21.... 28.:.. Oct. 5.... “ 6.880 4,<>32 9,605 84 @35 91,804 9-16@* 85© 36 2,613 10,960 3,311 91,628 36@37 4,163 12,660 4,612 92.008 37@3S 7.5H6 9,410 17J09 S3,839 40@12,662 10,400 3; 103 93.398 40@16,560 14„000 11,731 99,991 38@39 21,500 16,550 10,443 112,521 37@3S 22,019 19,500 8,592 126,215 87®38 25,662 17,850 16,145 137,561 nominal. 12.... “ 19.... 26.... Nov. 2 Nov. 9.... * 3,620 To Liver- To New York.* pool. 9-16@* *@ Y® Y® 1@ 9-l(>@* 9-16@£s 1@ 1@ %«!>— Ys®~ 9-10@^ 9-16@* 1@ 1@ 9-16 a 1@ *'@9-16 1@ — Price cold. 144 ©— 144 @— 143 @143}$ 142*@143 147*@147 14S>j@149 — — — — — — 147*@14S 148 @148}$ 147*@148 140*@147 — — — — By etean. During the first three days of the week the market was active, at an lb., but since there has been very little anima¬ tion, and prices, under the unfavorable advices from Liverpool, have de¬ clined, but close nominal at say 32£@3>£ for good ordinary and 34*(3) 85£ for low middling—sterling exchange 158^@159. Galveston, Nov. 3.—We have received one week’s later statement by mail from Galveston. The receipts for week ending Nov. 2 were 2,119 bales, against 1,663 last week, and the shipments were 71 bale?, all of which was shipped to New Orleans. Below we give the receipts, sales, and shipments for a seres of weeks, and the stock, price of middling, rates of freight to Liveipool and New York, and price of gold at the close of each week : advauce of ^@1 cent, per Freights. , Price -Receipts--, Date. Sept. A it 7... 14,.. 21. it . 28... Oct. » 5... 12. . tt 19 1,419 26... 1,663 2... 2,119 .. it Nov. * . 18 0. 145 37 120 308 690 746 18 5. 3,272 Exp. 1,860 2,539 2,667 3,214 169 39 162 6 3,928 1,195 3.561 8 5,524 1,494 5,778 71 1,5:58 Stock. 5.919 , To Liver- To New mid.* York.t pool. *@9-16 -@5,789 20@21 *@9-16 1 ®Y 5,870 20@21 *@9-16 1 @* 1 ®Y 5,S26 nominal. * 6,427 24@25 *@9-16 1 @* 6,181 23@24 *@9-16 1 ®Y 1 &.Y 7,592 *@... 26@27 Y® 8,111 26@.. 1 10,159 25@.. 20@21 • New Orleans. 15* Price gold. 140@143 141@143 143@145 ioo@ — 145@148 145@148 Middling— Sea Island.. Upland .. .. Mobile Orleans .. .. 1S63. 1S64. d. d. 39 41 23 23 , x 20* 20* , , .. •- • 22* 20* -’0* , 23 • t •• . 28* 28* 20* 20* 20* 23* 23* The available and 1863. 18f>4. d. d. Pernambuco. 29 22 18 Egvptian — 28 Broach 21 13 Dhollerah... 21 13 1865, Middling— is* 14* . . 15* 9* 9* 14* . immediately prospective u. 15 11 20* . 35 15 15.G6. d. as 6uj under; 1865. Stock at “ Liverpool "bales. London..... Havre “ 1866. 665.160 £23,070 S9,225 100,798 24.982 143.651 60,000 £32,355 26,113 108,07T 9,726 705,745 1.047,413 .7 American cotton afloat Indian “ Afloat to Havre .... Total 2<',OQO The exports of cotton from Liverpool, Hull and other outports from January 1 to this date have been 793,722 bales, against 580,018 biles last year. For the present year they have comprised 191,901 bales American, 99,579 Brazil, 17,458 Egyptian, 7,654 West Indian, 472,516 East Indian, and 4,614 bales China produce. Last year in the ^ame period, the exports of American Cotton were confine! to 41,916 bales. The annexed statement shows the sales and imports of cotton for the week and since January. 1, as well as the stocks of each description at the date the latest return was made up : SALES, ETC., OF ALT- DESCRIPTIONS. Total Total Same Ex- Specula- this this period Trade. port. tion. week year. i860. American....hales. 12,740 1,530 1,070 15,340 1,140,750 290.420 Brazilian 2,-MO 2,140 4,650 328.590 299,970 .... 220 Egyptian 3,020 3,210 171,120 455.250 West Indian 75* 750 80,680 93,340 East Indian 16,920 8,360 5S50 31,130 1,376,7801.738,070 China and Japan.. 30 90 240 10,610 280,990 210 Average weekly sales. 1866. 18,410 1665. 4 420 5,630 3,800 3,420 7.190 1,490 17.550 1,770 17,260 120 3.510 .... Total. 36,150 12,2S0 6,920 55,350 3,108,530 3,158,040 46,620 87,950 —Stocks— -ImportsTo this To this date date 1865. 1866. This week. American Egyptian West Indian East Indian China and Japan day. 1865. 1S65. 459,369 199,730 5!),500 64,140 26,750 143.722 43,110 20,680 411,328 10,790 113,828 18,310 1,095,744 361,040 163,440 5.901) 125,871 14,850 31,023 9,796 • 334,068 3,412 1,467.513 943,566 11,032 125,859 Total Same date 1865. 7,702 1,058,044 273,890 4,357 373,2 0 2H8 971 1,089 157,233 363,922 81,726 96.S55 3,151 Brazilian. This Total 10,711 3,148,748 2 073,063 2,539,708 665,160 Dec. 31. 36 004 144,759 4,971 323,070 370,275 London, Nov. 8.—The cotton trade at this port has continued very a. further decline of Jd to $d per lb has taken place m prices. The following particulars relate to East India, Chiua and Japan Cotton : quiet, and 1864. Imports, Jan. 1 to Nov. 1.. Deliveries same period. Stock, Nov. 1 hales. 1865. 1866. 274,005 211,617 96,886 .. 162,939 232,780 3 ,225 304,403 23$,476 100,798 Havre, Nov. 1.—The demand for cotton during the present week has been rather ISew Orleans has sold at 167f. 60c. to 185f. the 50 quiet. kilog?. IMI'ORTS AND FROM DELIVERIES IMPORTS , American., bales. 16,<>87 Brazilian 22,193 Indian 164,402 Total, , % DELIVER! F 9 , 26, STOCKS AND TO OCTOBER 28. OCTOBER 1866. 1865. 1 JANUARY TRICES 159.051 2,103 46,570 160,0-16 394 22.015 885,999 216,682 61.9 8 24,9S2 14.774 23,153 195,729 187,966 - 496,103 229,326 252,787 New Orleans... Mobile 182 175 192 385 210 200 Georgia 162. 170 - 143,6511865. Low. Vcrv ord. Ord. Goodord. Middling Very low. 180 67.202 17,471 56,411 " 1S66- -CURRENT TRICES . 1866.' 1865. including other kinds.. STOCKS- , , 1866. 1865. Very Low 275 273 270 230 to 245 225 .... .... 195 .... TOBACCO. 1 ' Friday, P. M., Nov. 16. receipts of the n^w tobacco crop the past week a* the ports have continued very light, while the foreign European and Indian Cotton Markets.— Our own correspondent in London, writing under the date of November 3, gives the following full exports remain about the same, the total for the week being review of these markets: * 2,094 hhds.,319 cases, 111 tierces, 146 bales, 157 boxes, 298 Livebpool, Nov. 8.—With the exception of S6a Island, American pkgs., etc., as may be seen in the following: and willing to pay about 1 cent. Sales have been 635 bales, a further decline from fair trade and export demand, but as The different Smyrna produce, the value of cotton shows last we^k. There has been a qualities have been freely offered for sale, the business done has been on more favorable terms to the buyer. The prospect of a steady fall in the value of thh staple has checked any exteneive speculative inquiry. The total sales of the week amount to 55,350 bales, compris¬ ing 6,950 bales on speculation, 12,280 bales for export, and 36,150 bales to the trade. As compared with last week, Brazil cotton shows a most For latest news respecting the Liverpool cotton market see Telegraph des¬ patches at the close of our London letter in a pwviofl* part Qt tWl CaiPtmiejAif $ Fi*4*91AL CiWOWCM * u of the prices of middling qualities of cot¬ 1865. 1866. d. d. 26 35 The market has not been active during the week, buyers being un. the price demanded, although there has been a decli ue of 56 COMPARATIVE PRICES OP COTTON. 142©.. 141@143 . 23 Good Fair. 42 25 35 23 ^ 16* 16* 17* 17* 1** 12*@13* 70 50 22 36 21 19 12*@13* t Per steamer. S. ecie. SO Mid. fine. good fair. 32*@13* 35 12* @13* 15 -FreightsPrice Mid. to $d p6r Good and Fair and 26 17 15 fir 35* S3* @31 Thursday considerable activity, with to the close of last week. During the last two days, up Ordinary and middling. Annexed is a comparison ton for a series of years: The market has shown until East Indian 1866.- ton, 208 to Below 625^ CHRONICLE. Stems—^ Manfd. lbs. , Hhds. Case. Tierc. Bale. 559 255 111 69 Exported from New York Baltimore Boston New Orleans Portland 30 6 ,— .. we give • . • • 8 . Total this week 2,694 Total laBt week. 3,326 Below 3 53 2,099 319 916 our • • • • mm • . • • .... Ill .... , ■ . m m m a .... 146 332 , t , Pkg. 293 • • • 157 77 mm • • Box. • • • • • c . . • • » . . .... 293 • ••• 319,079 .... 5 .... 157 67 bales. hhds. 12 216 9 12 167 • • • • • » mm • • • • • .... £25 115 819,079 57,324 usual table showing the total exports of Tobaooo from all tho ports mm November l, I860 v ' i j 626 THE CHRONICLE. Export* of Tobacco from the United States since Novem¬ ber 1, 1866* Tcp. & From Hhds. Cases. Bales, 1,365 1,053 391 3 2,099 t, New York Baltimore Boston 30 111 ... 9 53 ... - Liverpool .177 . Glasgow Total since Nov. 1.. 4,173 1,123 468 111 225 530 ... 348,331 179 Ill* .. 3,217 50,199 25 223 ... ... 228 20 ... Melbourne Mexico Havti 6S5 TOBACCO FROM NEW YORK. Stems, Mfd. hales, hhds. lbs 6 London... 321 Hamburg. New Orleans Other porta case0, Bremen 172 Philadelphia OF Stems, Mfd. hhds. Strips, pkgs. hhds. bis. maul’d. 216 179 333 343.331 crus. EXPORTS Lbs. Bxs. & /—Stems—\ [November 17, 1866. ... 248,383 813 -49 hhds.cases, bals. hhds. lbs. Argentine Republic. Total for week The market for leaf tobacco has been quite active the past week—the sales amounting to about 1,200 hhds.—of which the bulk was for export. Prices may be called a fraction * 293* French W. Indies... Brit. West Indies... British N. Am. Col. 1 9 12,149 559 111 tierces, 293 pkgs. and 69 bales. Maryland.—The 4,818 51 *69 +228 255 319,079 +12 of these were bales. exports the past week from Baltimore have been lower, the range being 4c. to 23c., the bulk of the business 2,099 hhds. leaf, 3 cases and 9 hhd-i. of stems ; the receipts of Virginia being at 5@16e. for common to good. The sales of the week tobacco have been 2,066 pkgs., 100 hhds., 28 boxes and 10 cases ; the embrace about 550 hhds to-day, mainly for the Mediterranean inspections of Maryland 522 hhds., of Ohio 275 hhds., of Virginia 1 hhd, and Kentucky 6 hhds., as follows : at 5^@15c., as in qualities. Seed leaf has been less active and drooping. The principal RECEIPTS AND INSPECTIONS AT BALTIMORE. transactions are: 102 cases Pennsylvania, 44c.; 50 cases Week IneDection8.— ^-Receipts from Virginia—, bxs. Mary’d. Ohio. Virg. Ke’ky. Total ending, hhds. pkgs. Ohio, 8c.; 90 cases Ohio, 8c.; 70 cases Ohio, 5 3 8c.; 41 Nov. 8 32 658 658 cases new Connecticut, “10 100 522 28 10 275 1 5 803 2,066 10-|e. In foreign tobacco the only transaction of moment is 210 T’l si’ce Nov 1 100 28 42 1 5 275 2,066 1,180 1,461 bales Yara at $1.02 per lb. Below we give the exports for the week from Baltimore : , cases. .... • Manufactured has been rather sumption—about 45,000 more active for home lbs. Virginia con¬ brightvvork, being taken early in the week at 35@60e., in bond. The stocks of Kentucky Tobacco in this market have been pretty well culled, and lienee but little of desirable quality is left. Of the new crop, Kentucky, Tennessee Missouri, Vir¬ ginia and North Carolina, 135,000 hhds. may be gathered of fair quality, containing an abmulance of all kinds, excepting only sufficient heavy shipping, of which no superabundance can be anticipated. Consequently, with this exception, the tendency of prices is downward. Seed Leaf.—One of these occurrences, frequent in large markets,'namely, the throwing of 2,000 cases of common grades of Western tobacco on our market—besides, the failure of one of our shipping houses, has operated like a damper upon trade. The decline in gold, and the general unfavorable aspect of ours, as well as all the European mar¬ kets, have tended to bring the market down fully one cent, for all inferior grades. The crops of tobacco of the year 18G5—having been generally of a poor quality—have likewise tended to lower prices. The crop of the Connecticut Valley being mostly untouched, may be brought forward at any time for sale, which, if it takes place, will probably unsettle values. The crop of 1866, it is conceded on all hands, is of a fair average quantity, and of good quality, and will be in the market at an early period. What we have left of Connecticut tobacco of the crop of 1864 will be barely sufficient for our home con¬ sumption, hence this branch of trade cannot suffer much under the general d ulness. EXPORTS FROM BALTIMORE. Hhds. To Havre Bremen West Indies St's, hhds 2,099 9 3 703 10 Total for week Cases. 3 3 1,386 9 During the past week Maryland leaf has been in only moderate de¬ We note small receipts of new crop ground leaves, but the quality very inferior. The crop of this description will also prove small. Sales are made at $3 50(34. Very little doing in Ohio or Kentucky leaf; we have only to report 50 hhds. of former. Prices of all descrip>. tions without quotable change. The stock in warehouse is about 26,500 hogsheads. In manufactured tobacco we have no change to note. receipts are light, most of the Virginii factories haviug stopped work, and with light stork and good demand prices are steadily maintained at onr mand. quotations. Virginia.— At Richmond, last week, the breiks were 2S0 hhds.. 10 tierces and 46 boxes. The market npt so brisk as u°uil Sound to baccos of all grades, however, are in good demand. On the 14 til inst. a better demand, at lull prices. We quote, per 100 lbs.: Lugs, light weights, $3 50(35 ; Good Shipping Lugs, good weights, §6 50(38 60@10; Good Sweet Working, good weights, $10(3 12 do; Common Shipping Leaf, $11(315 ; Good, $15(320; Fins Extra Shipping and Twisting, $18(3)22 ; Fine Manufacturing, $23(3)28 ; Extra Manufacturing, $30(3)45 ; Common Fancy Wrappers, old, $50(3)75 ; Goo i old. $100(3)175; Fine Extra, $180(3)200. th re was Common Kentucky.—Louisville dates of the loth, report the market un¬ changed, and rather inanimate, owiDg to the light supplies arid inferior quality of the offerings. Prices, however, are sustained, with sales at including reviews, with 12 re¬ $3 10(3)3 90 ; 8 at Prices ranged as follows: 25 hhds. the four auction warehouses of 75 hhds., jections. $5@> 90; 4 at $6(3)4 80; 3 at $7 10(37 50; 4 at $9@9 15; 5 at $10(310 75; 6 at $11 (311 £5 1 1 at $12 ; 3 aft $13 ; 1 at $14 ; 3 at $15(315 25 ; 3 at $16(316 25, and l of good leaf at $30 ; 1 box at $ 17 75. KENTUCKY LEAF (HHDS.). Missouri.—St. Louis dates of the 14th report a better attendance at Ivy. Light H’vv West Ky. Light Il’vy West. ^ Pflrtnr’in ot e ui. market, the breaks being much larger than usual, and the better quali¬ &Ci’ksv’ic. Leaf. & Cl’ksv’lc. Common Lnqs. Good Leaf 11c ©12>^ 15 @17e 4c© 4Xc. © ties seemed to be in more, favor, but there wa3 little or no change in Good do 5 © 5X 5c @ 7c. Fine do 13 ©15 18 ©20 prices. Sales of 73 hhds., consisting of 6 hh Is. at $2 50(32 95; 30 Common Leaf. 6 @ IX 16 ©IS 21 ©22 vm to* Selections. hhds. at $3(34 90; 14 hhds. at $5(37 90; 22 hhds. at $8 10(317 50, Medium do 8 ©10 11 ©14 and l l.hd. at $25 ; also 5 boxes at $2 20(32 40 per 100 lbs. SEED LEAF (BOXES). One hhd. was Conn.—Prime wrappers N. Y. State.—Fillers passed, and bids on 52 hhds. were rejected. 45 ©60c 4*f© 6c Average “ 30 ©45c Ohio.—Good running lots. 7^©10c The following is from our London correspondent : Com. “ to b’d’rs 16 @25c 5 © 7c Average “ Fillers.. London. Nov 3—There is very little business passing in any kind of 10 ©12c Fillers 3 © 5c N. Y. State.—Wrappery lots. 12 @20c r nn.—Kunninglots 6 @12c tobacco. Western strips chiefly command attention, and in these a fair Fillei s 3 © 5c Running “ 7X©12c number of sales have been concluded at full prices, principally, however, manufactured. in old imports. The recent arrivals have not given satisfaction to the cst. & City. Virginia. West. & City. Virginia. trade. The imports, last mouth, were 461 hhds.; the deliveries, 905 -Tax pa’d.-Tax paid.—-—, Black work.- 5s, 10s, X and X lbs.— hhds., against 8u4 hhds. last year ; and the stock of all kinds is 24,632 Navy X lbs. and lbs.— Gcmmon. Common 30 © 40 30c© 40c 30c@ 40c hhds.. against 21,940 hhds. last year : 17,230 hhds. in 1864; 17,929 hhds. 3<i © 40 Medium 45 @ 55 Good and fine 60 © 72 45 @ 55 60 © 70 in 1863 ; 22,266 hhd3. in 1862, and 27,764 hhds in 1861. Annexed are Good and fine 60 © 72 In bond 60 © 70 Black.—Common. 23c© 25c 20c© 22c the prices current .* Bright work.- -X lbs. and lbs.— $4 1 0(34 <*0; 3 at $S 10@3 90; 4 at * . — — . ., . . . .... .... .... , Common. 35 © 45 Medium.. 50 © 60 Good and fine 75 ©1.00 .... 35 © 45 50 © 60 75 ©1.15 G’d & fine 27 © 30 25 © 30 25 © 35 50 © 80 Bright.—Common 25 © 35 G'd & fine 50 © 75 FOREIGN. Havana.—Fillers—Common. Good..... “ Fine 75© 80 80® 95 95©1 10 Havana.—Wrappers Yara From New Orleans. Ohio, &c NEW 8 191 .... 1,379 are 3,804 the exports For " NOVEMBER 1. ,—Previously-^ pkgs. hhds. 462 7,083 144 . . , 312 Nov. 1, Nov. 1, $ ft $ lb 1866. 1865. $ fl> $ B> 16d©18d 1,232 761 9 1,838 8,168 common do G’d 6tout rich Snuff r Leaf 13d©15d Short to middling.. 8d@12d S’rt & scrappy, new 61 d@ 7d 9d©14d Leaf—good to fine.. 10d©12d Ordinary to mid.... 5d© 8d Stemmed, fine old 7d©12d Stout rich Yorks for Snuff Cavendish Middling do 1866. /—T’l sin. Nov 1—, hhds. pkgs. 660 184 9,449 359 8 . 15 443 Nov. 1, 1S65. Fine spin’rs, scarce.' Good mid. do For fine Shag & part York this week and since SINCE /—This week—n hhds. pkgs. 204 2,363 40 47 Other Total TORK 1,423 .... 2,281 Ord. short and part faded . lld@13d —d©—d 10d@13d 6d© 8d —d©—d —d@—d 6d@12d 6d©14d N’head,part heated ) do good >12d©16d 18d©30d do fine ) MARYLAND. Nov. 1,186G. Nov. 1, 1868.\ $ lb 24 of tobacco from New York ... Stript leaf, or Lux' fine Spinning.... 12d@14d 18d< ^20d Ordinary to mid.... 9d©lld 14di 116d 2,140 11,972 KENTUCKY. t Nov. 1, 1866. Spinning The receipts of tobacco at New Nov. 1, have been as follows: AT 1 50©3 00 80@1 05 VIRGINIA. $ B> Fine Yellow.. The 9d to lOd following figures Yellow are . -Nov. 1, 18(56. # ft 8d to 84d Br’n to Colory 5*d to 7d official, and 9how the imports into, and ex¬ ports from, and consumption of the IJuited month? ending September 30: KipgcJoPi duiing the nine ''NX 1864. lbs. 1866. lKd descriptions, lbs. 4,038,326 3,448,’722 Stemmed.. 32,084,184 29,154,282 Unstem’d. 1,718,621 4,863,864 Manufd .. f0,986,374 Total.-., .—Consumption. -Exported. - -Imported. 1864. 627 THE CHRONICLE. November 17,1866.] 1865. lbs. 670,154 9,743,664 2,648,243 84,381,525 13,062,061 1864. lbs. 9.750.519 250,085 11,715,815 1,033,273 . 1865. lbs. . 8,902,867 18,096,873 568,249 19,494,064 From 608,679 New .. Total BEEADSTUPFS. * New York, Nov. 16, 1866. To about do 3,367,916 5,300 63,012 800 same 2,397 8,338 period, 1865. do 1864. „ Wheat. Rye 5,300 Flour. 800 York, to Nov. 9, 1866 Other ports, to latest dates.. 29,005,600 13,028,6T3 £8,415,641 1,929,301 73,259 239,459 368,358 1.110,730 CONTINENT. THE TO 19,455 30,043 230J34 , 22,613 . . 25,848 68,012 128,295 , 13,965 interruption of canal navigation, and the receptiou of firmer accounts from the British markets, have checked the ceipts at the following lake ports for the week ending Nov. 10 : Oats. Corn. Flour. WTheat. Barley. downward tendency of prices. The break in the canal occurred bush. bush. bush. bbls. bush. 160,062 389,870 475,717 518,S7i 04,251 ;ibout one hundren miles east of Buffalo, on Sunday last; and Chicago 2,634 • Milwaukee 7,639 7,520 20,904 577,082s it expected that navigation will be resumed to-night. 8,947 60,444 127,* 36 24,371 3!,791 The Toledo 5,102 6,390 12,772 20,373 36,579 weather continues favorable, and it is thought that navigation, Detroit 176,745 Totals. 530.S16 446,572 when resumed, may be continued as late as. the first week of 146,1*5 1,148,117 367,699 153,897 Weekly The Previous week.... December. Flour has arrived freely by rail, and the stock in store is es¬ timated at about 250,000 bbls. Prices have rather weakened, was some Nov. 5. The Nov. 5. following are Wheat, Western, mon to com¬ 10 50©I3 50 good Double Extra Western and St. Louis 14 00@17 00 Southern supers 12 40@14 35 Southern, fancy and ex. 14 50©17 00 Canada, common to choice extra , Rye Flour, fine and super¬ fine Corn meal, Jersey Brandywine and 6 85© 8 25 6 00© 6 40 AT RECEIPTS 231,710 86,858 519,8901 ,000,973 875,766 507,140 161,451 318,568 107,31*2 198,973 28.224 2 20© 2 55 2 5*>@ 2 90 3 05© 3 15 3 15© 3 40 Cora, Western Mixed.... 1 29@ 1 31 Western Yellow Corres’ding time,’65. Western White Oats, Western cargoes... Barley 1 3m 1 50 Peas, Canada... 2,078,700 Bailey, bush Oats, bush Rye bush . — 2,240,145 238,525 2,987,515 258,485 118,630 3,935 428,685 6,952,420 488,075 38,870 155,285 250,640 13,073,765 500,130 2,383,845 161,740 FROM bbls. 416 8,429,020 YORK NEW Rye, Oats, bush. bush. 6,502,680 bush. Corn, bush. Flour, C. meal, Wheat, 335,179 82,371 7,503 183,937 311 500 54,828 133,754 25,704 3 968 895 6,120 1,200 .*. 50,’920 17,456 100,144 39,38S 7,503 3,968 82,371 15,548 1,206 5,300 6,656,920 353,505 337,226 67,177 194,550 325,844 204,500 10,748,617 1,098,693 since Jan. 1/66.. 820,701 132,534 same time 1865..1,174,965 106,206 1,822,570 155,496 3,154,449 69,831 since July 1 We* t In»lie«, this week. since July 1 Total Export, this week “since July 1 “ Malt .. generally fine, and there To-day’s was quite unimportant, but as there was no disposition to force sales, prices remain the same as on this day week. Indian corn met a fair consumptive demand at 33s. Liverpool, Nov. 3.—The weather has been 3d. per qr. for mixed. AND FROM IRELAND 1, 1866. SEPT. Flour, New York New Orleans To date. Nov. 9, 1866 Nov. Wheat, Corn, bbls. bush. bush. 27,574 * 87,664 2,204,784 2,1866 3,345 Philadelphia. Baltimore Boston 8an Francisco Other ports Total 52s. 6d. | ___ 42s. 4d. f per Average price of wheat do last year’s Last week’s deliveries from farmers Corresponding week last jrear. 68,951 “ IMPORT WEEK. THIS 37', 048 .... 19 I. corn, qrs. 19.150 qr-. 1,220 , F bbls. GRAIN 23.953 INTO THE UNITED KINGDOM. qrs. 261,262 837,890 159,872 451,604 Same time last year • . . « 425,159 cwt. qrs. 109,652 297,987 313,504 278,854 GROCERIES, Friday, P. M., Nov. The grocery 16. been decline in gold trade, like most other branches, has rather quiet during the entire wefk. The has unsettled the market and prevented any general activity. articles, The decline 2,241,832 the lower gold rates. to-day has quite unsettled trade. QEA. Teas have been inactive from the unsettled state of the gold market, and but few transactions have taken place. Ho’ders declining to re¬ duce prices, the reported sales of the week from first hands amouut to only about 1,900 half chests. On Tuesday about 3.000 half chests were offered at auction, only 1,000. of which were disposed of. Prices were held quite firmly. The market closes quiet at our quotations. Hong Kong, Sept. 11, IS 0.—The operations of the past fortnight have been on an average scale at the several ports. Buyers show an eagerness to obtain new greens, which are beginning to make their ap¬ pearance. Activity continues in advanced about $1.00 per picul. ’ The to the the Japan market, and prices have following table shows the shipments of tea from United States : Junel <-Iu August—> Total J’e Chal’gc, Bella, 1 to Aig. July 31. 25th. 25th. 31,' ’66. to lbs. lbs. lbs. 56,000 Oolong & Ningyong. 84,600 21,600 .... Twaukay Hyson Skin Hyson Young Hyson Imperial Gunpowder Japans The following * ..1 8,239 34,951 33,489 .... 5.000 661,085 34,700 lbs. China and Japan Same time 1865. lbs. Same time 1864. lbs. Same time 1863. lbs. 30,476 2T6 30,200 Congou & Souchong. Ponchong 72,200 72,470 Grand total .... 516,168 Oth. grain, FI. & ml. I. corn, qrs, | Sept. 1, 1866, to Sept. 30, 1S66... 11,607 37,599 71,209 20 3,048 0,569 Wheat, | 1/00 10,107 .... 199,S28 192,516 09,645 OF sacks. 20 4,803 428 IMPORT qr* 78,359 qrs.. - Wheat. ... EXPORTS OF BREAD3TUFFS TO GREAT BR TAIN 371,000 is every prospect for the wheat sowing being favorably completed. market wras very thinly attended ; the business in wheat and flour *" From 8,620,800 7S2,100 453,100 while others have declined to meet NEW YORK. 3,405,095 “ 3,193,300 9,440,009 525,500 970,400 13,415.61 0 Flour, bbls 1866, May 1. 261,400 4,378,800 22,546,000 4,059,400 8,330,500 940,400 May 1. 704,200 7,378,206 15,142,600 April 30. opened, : Special influences have caused a dullness in some © ... 2 00© 3 00 .. 716 455 8,264,965 6,384,755 follows 1865, IS64, 9,035,500 Canal 72 1 00© 1 35 19,834,030 “ 1,407,16S r 70© 197,880 2,826 38,539 3,695 1,267,842 425,740 ing the 7th of Nov. in the years indicated, have been as 1 30© 1 45 70 68© Rye 191,270 42,290 378,945 bbls. 937,750 701,536 60,200 Receipts at Tide-’Water.—The deliveries at tide-water by the New York State canals, from the commencement ot navigation to and includ¬ 1 So© 1 32 1 32© 1 33 Cora, bush Rye, bush EXPORTS 1,220.462 966,348 29,331 13,619 Same time 104,845 2,375 “ 620,253 $2 10© 2 60 FJour, bbls “ 320,720 Total afloat Previous week Spring -1865. -1866.For the w’k. Since Jan. 1. For the w’k. S’e Jan. 1. “ 519,890 9,900 Nov. 12. The movement in breadstuff's at this market has been as follows: Gt, Britain, this week.. “ since July 1 Br. N, A. Col. this week 927,85' 1,648 Chicago White beans FOREIGN 1,137,980 i 82,482 46,462 Malt Barley, &c., bush.... Oats, bush 9,400 18,824 : Jersey and State Corn meal, bbls Wheat, bush 121,460 259,260 171,510 309,570 1,078,700 57,400 71.700 per bushel Milwaukee Club Red Winter Amber do White 10 50@12 50 Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 11 50©12 25 Extra 210,820 822,100 the closing quotations Flour, Superfine.. $ bbl $9 25©10 50 Extra State 488,650 439,220 Total bushels 5,886,100 6,221,800 271,700 251,100 Rye, bush........ 514,470 FOREIGN Nov. 12. 117,885 77,469 28,358 623,510 GRAIN IN STORE. 604,200 703,900 Barlej', bush 2,711,100 2,812,900 Malt, bush 1,425,900 1,597,200 Wheat, bush Corn, bush Oats, bush 4,210 4,950 Tot’l, Buffalo 14 d. Oswego, 9days. Great Britain to the extent of about 300,000 bush., mostly Canada at $1 10@;1 12, in bond, ck s ing very firm. Peas and Beans are nearly nominal. STOCKS OF 103,605 9,570 4,420 5 F’m about the average quantity for renewal of speculation early in has been taken for ' Rye. bash. 401,062 3:31,588 1,141,936 680,312 166,055 re¬ Nov. the the week, with some advance, a portion of which has since been lost; but, on the whole, higher figures rule than a week ago. The stock slowly increases, and it is now estimated that, under moderately favorable circumstances, the quantity in store and afloat on the close of navigation will be about one million five hundred thousand (1,500,000) bushels. Corn has fluctuated widely, selling, in the past forty eight hours, as high as $1 34, and as low as $1 28 per 56 lbs., for Western mixed in store, closing as below. The receipts con¬ tinue on a very reduced scale, yet the stock slightly increases. The demand from all quarters is quite moderate, and it will be seen that the foreigu export has almost ceased. Rye and Oats have been in steady request, but close heavy. Barley The season. following shows the Lake Ports.—The Nov. 12 somewhat unsettled. Wheat has arrived in at 63,551 180,708 118,533 Corrtsp’g week 65 Eastward Movement by Canal.—The following will show about what there was afloat last Saturday on canals destined for tide-water : From Buffalo, Oats. * Barley. Wheat. Cora. Flour. Rye. week ending owing to the desire of speculators to realize the previous ad¬ vance. But the demand has been quite moderate, and they have not been willing to accept the low prices bid. The close is Receipts -a .... .... 200,670 106,200 53,166 627,480 15,584 188,111 35,833 28,660 34,878 62,933 753,743 98,487 28,185 3,000 228,416 201,892 55,845 341,920 8,239 34,951 1,617,410 33,489 5,000 695,785 264,623 338,584 262.851 35.251 256,256 3,387,055 1,963,723 1,990,853 United States ; At Wbanq- 899,840 158,970 56,000 1,114,810 vessel ewere loading for the .... 250.768 1,657,759 62& * THE CHRONICLE. poa, Rnnymede and Royal Minstrel; at Foochow, Queensland and Adeiia Carleton ; at Shanghai, Lota ; at Yokohama, Eliza Hands, Van¬ da, Recife, Lorton and Benefactor. * . COFFEE. Coffee has been inactive and lower, from the favorable reports from the new crop. The sales have been about 16,000 bags, chiefly during the early part of the week, the market closing very quiet. The imports of the week have been only 267 bags from Manila per ship Swallow. The receipts and stock? of coffee AT NEW follows are as YORK. OF RIO : IN THE SEVERAL FORTS. Rc’il this Stock in week, fi't h inds Rio java;...*::... Ceylon bngs “ .*... “ “ Singapore Maracaibo Jamaica Other Baltimore Savannah 5,230 Laguayra “ St.4 Domingo.. 14 Mobile New Orleans 9,838 “ 4,500 1,000 267 sold gold gold gold .gold ... do good do fair do ordinary ... do fair to g. cafgi*es . iMelado 6 Hav’a, Box. D. S Nos. 7 do making the stock of bag3 on hand larger than last week The receipts for the week, and stocks on hand, are ns follows to 9 do 10 to 12 do $ gall* 1,049 33 93 534 Brazil, Manila 17 151 ... 313 10.® V'i 11*® m 50 ® » • Layer 58 .... • 27,555 * - . - 16S 133 .... • • ••• , , . *cask 8 7.5 ® Dates 21 Almonds, Languedoc do do do Sardines do boxes. Boston 4,0)0 j 44 The following and Matanzas: 6 j9 | Baltimore 51,389 / 433,467 at Havana Total export , week. Since Jan. 1 15,014 1,.'84,781 rtocks. boxes. 130,501 1,408,120 70,6.*8 168,030 1,238,160 148,226 to notice. In Matanzas offers are lower but 1,454 .. . .... .... Milcuvadoes.—Little holders firm; fine refining is quoted at 7£ rs. Exports since Jan. I at Havana and Matanzis follows: —1866.— Exports Stock, to U. S. !,3u8 65,755 and stocks on hand s Total oxp'ts. Stock, Si,337 46G | Exports to U. S. j 33,622 -1861.Total exp’ts. Provence Shelled ^9 box $ hf. box 1,356 - Receipts and stocks are as follows : Hhds. Punch's.* IVcos. casks. Cnba. Porto Rico Other West Indies.. New Orle ns o< ” ’“i i35 !!.*! "87 Bbla. "23 hhds. bbls. *2,600 60 li»6 100 Total Last week 135 23 87 227 91 284 Includes puncheons, tierces, &c., reduced to 1SS 39 *5,100 *5,(00 100 ■ hhds. FRUIT. Fruits are less achve,and with the decline in gold prices tend down¬ ward, although wi liout any decided change. Dried Fruits aie very quiet but eteady. SPICES. are firmly held. very quiet, with on’y a jobbing trade, although prices are Tea. /—Dutv pa d^-Duty ’ aid —> Hyson, Common to fair 80 @1 1*5 do do Ex f. to fin’st do 1-5® 95 Snporior to fine ...1 15 @1 85 Uncol. Japan. Coin.to fair. 90 do @ ?5 Ex fine to finest ...1 40 @l 65 do Sup’r to line.! 00 ®l 05 Y’g Hyson, Com. to fair s5 @1 10 do Ex f. to flnesU 10 @1 20 do Super, to fine. .1 15 ®1 40 Oolong, Common to fair. 85® 9J do Ex tine toflnest.l 45 @1 15 do Superior to fine.. .1 (.0 ® l ‘6 Gnnp. & Imp., Com. to fairt 00 ®l 15 do Ex tine to finest .:t 40 ®l 75 do Sup. to fine.I 25 ®l .*0 |puo & Copg,. Com. to fair To ® 80 do do Ex. f, to finest. I 65 @1 9‘> do Sup’r to fin®. 90 05 H.8k. 4fcTwMtay,o, to fair. 60® T11 40 ' ■ ... ... 4o 19 ® .. Apples $ 5) Blackberries 10 ® 12 ® 28 © 50 ® *5 14 ® 16 50 ® 55 Black Raspberries Pared Peaches Unpealed do Cherries, pitted, .. IP* 19 ® 20 18 ® 12 ® 18 8 ® 18 new.... Spice*. (gold) 41;® VI ® 92 @ 44 23 92® 93 | Pepper ' I Pimento, Cloves (gold) Jamaica.(gold) 21 J® 20® 274® (gold) 21* 23 GOODS TRADE. Wednesday of worthy of notice. 4p to flftp 7* $0 buyers were tinued decline in the also, and took done on raw Wednesday a material had* $5 3# a depressing effect general break in Jobbers prices place, since which time there has been more business by the Jobbers, and some commission merchants have pressed their goods upon the market at very low rates. With the unfavorable condition of the market holders do not wish to retain goods longer. The Wool Market has also continued depressed and with the very mild autumn there has been an unusually light call for woolen manufac-. tures. Stocks of all goods have been accumulating notwith¬ standing the light production of the mills. The decline in gold and absence of demand for foreign goods has caused a stagnation in that department also, and altogether the break in prices has because quite general. The following table shows the export of domestic cottons and dry goods from New York and from Boston: Stock. 65,565 • SriOES box Dathn Fruit— .. .. or. Filberts, Sicily Walnuts, .. Sicily, Soft Shell To MOLASSES. Molasses has been less active from a scarcity of low grades suitable for distilling purposes. Better qualities have been in fair demand, and pi ices are well sustained. 3 he receipts of molasses hnve been about the same in hogsheads, but less in other packages than last week. The total stock is made 400 hogsheads less than l ist week. * Brazil Nuts N. York.—, /—Boston—, Domes- Drv Domes D y tics. G'ds. tics. G’ds. pkgs. cases, pkgs. ca'es $ /— 1S65 Total exp'ts. 77,003 1,453 2,500 14 will show the receipt?, exports and stocks 895 1804 boxes. New Orleans Rcc’d this /—Expts to U S.-^ week. week. Since Jnn. 1. 226 8,562 1 392,441 Y*ar. 1866... 1865 62,983 gold $ fi> Few in the market, and in the absence of demand Clayed sugar—There Jobbers were not disposed to add to their stocks. The con¬ New York U. S. 79 b'igs. .Smyrna Friday, P. M., Nov. 16,1S86. Havana, Nov. 10.—The Weekly llepvrt states : buyers in the market for sugars ranging from No. 10 to No. 13, but as offers do not exceed 7, generally 7* rs, per arroba for No. 12, whilst holders are still pretending higher rates, it is difficult to effect sales. The market closes heavy at 7| rs. for current qualities, and 7| rs. for superior, basis No. 12-11. Shipments to the United States for the psst week have been S.562 boxes, against 8,487 the previous week ; and to New York 4,000 boxes, against 4,510 the previous week. Shipments are as follows : to 50 ® 62 ® 68 The Dry Goods trade remained quiet up to this week w ith little or no variation 73, £39 50,023 are some Experts Clayed Sardines ® 88 ® 89 bl ® ® 26 4^ ® 50 ® 88 @ 41) THE DRY Includes puncheons, tierces, casks, and barrels reduced to .hhds. are as 5 15,298 4,485 47,34S .. do ew.$ box 4 25 ®4 3> Bunch ®» l'1 Currants lb 1?*® 14} Citron, Leghorn 3 *® :<4) Prunes, Turkish 16 ® 2 * 15.29S 313 , .. English islands . Nutmegs, No. 1....(gold) .... .... - White coffee, A Yellow coffee -• • 126 ® i*4 ® 16} ® 16* ® 15* 134® 1 * .. .... .... Total receipts. 1,533 Last Week. 712 Stocks on hand.... 45,330• v* .... Fruit, Mace .... d© 13 to 15 12 ® 13 do 16 to 18 13|® 14* do 19 to 20 15 ® 15* whito D*a .. 8 ® do do do do Granulated Crushed and powdered ®1 *5 t... 61 ® 75 . Boxes. do do do do Loaf Molasses. New Orleans Porto Rico Cuba Muscovado Cassia, in mat6_.gold ^!b Ginger, race and African : 174® 19 16}® IT Domingo... Sugar ... do do SUGAR. Laguayra.. 8t. <{9 lb 10*® 13* com. refining 10> fair to good do 10?® i"J fair to good grocery... n-@ 1 I pr. to choice do u ® 12? centrifugal '•m Wi do do do do do fava. mat* *r»d bags ....gold 25}® 96 Native Ceylon 19 ® 21 Maracaibo 17}® 20 1st HI® l*t® 18 »7 ® !7> 17jtg> 18» Porto Rico Cuba, Inf to Raisins, Seedless. 7,403 Sugars declined^early in the week from the lower price of gold, and etfll tend downwards. The business has been comparatively light; the sales reaching only about 3,5C0 hhds. Cuba aud 2,000 boxes Havana. Refined are quiet. The importations of Sugar for the week, ns shown in the table below, have been larger in hogsheads both from Cuba and other Islands, and much less in Havana boxes, there are also 15.29S bag« of Manila sugar, Other West Indies IP @ 5,000 110 “ s Coflfee. Eio, prim©, duty paid 20,858 Philadelphia 1.894 2,380 “ .... New York 20,-58 4,531 - Rec’d S’ckin for w’k. fi’t hands [November IT, 18^ Liverpool. Loudon r Br. VV. Indies.. To Africa St. Pierre pkgs. pkgs. ca’cs cases, 7 6 ... 52 Tuba Hayti Mexico New Granada.. Brazil /—N. York.-^ /-Boston—, Dome6- Dry Dome?- Dry tics. G’ds tics. G'ds. 29 23 161 5 10 Miq. Total this w’k. 44 since Jan. 1. Same time’65 44 “ . 213 161 ’60.79,176 Brown Sheetings and Shirtings have been in fur the past two days, but at altogether nominal 31 S,63t more 4,566 238 . 32.276 active request quotation?. Jobbers are selling goods considerably below the quotations of Agents. Stand¬ ards are quoted by agents at 22(5)22* cent. These quotations are nbove the market and no goods can be sold except at much lower rates. Indian Head A 22 ct?, Indian Head B are held at IS, doE 30, Nashua X X 22, do fine D 21,Waltham F 2$. Wachusetts 4-4 23. Atlantic A‘2*2}, A H and P FI 22. do A V heavy shirtings 19, do fine shirting 23, Massachu¬ setts A 20, do B 2*2, Medford 21, Newmarket Mfg. Co 33 inch 21, do heavy do 23, Appletun A 22, Medford 21, Warren 22 for A and 20 fur C, Pocassett Canoe 27, do K 20, do H 14*, Tigers 14^, Phoenix Cotton Manuf. Co., 39 inch 25, World wide 86-inch 15, Eagle 3 4 inch 12*, Grafton 28 inch 144, do 30 inch 15<, Shetucket B 27-inch 16, Ap¬ pleton B 40 inch 22, do D 20$, do W 48-inch 84, do Shirtings N 80-inch 19 Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are inactive in agent3* hands, and eDtirely nominal in quotations, except for a few leading which are scarce and held above the market. York Mills are makes quoted at 45 cents, Wamsutta 4«*} and Lonsdale 33, O J Rathbun 7-8 21, So¬ cial Mill Co. N. Y., 4 4 29, do C 7-8 18, Washington 7 8 16, Hallowell £ 14, Canoe 27 inchGrafionl 2, f 15. do 7-8 16, Methuen £ 13}, Aubuinville 29. Aquidnecks 4-4 204-4, do 7-8 19, White Rock 36 inch 84^. Drills are in more demand but j bbe»s are selling goods below these quotations. Laconia, Pepperil’, India, Amoskeag, Massachusetts, Boott, Tremont, Suffdk and Stark standards,each 25cents for b own ; Augusta and Gianiteville each 2kcents ; Stark H 21c, and .Massachusetts fine 20c. Boott bleached 25c. ; Massachusetts 20c. for heavy and 21c. for fine do. Canton Flannels are Globe A A 26, Co¬ very quiet for all makes. lumbia 26, Mount Vernon 25. Nashua A 27, Young Emeries- 24, Clay 22, Excelsior 22, Eagle 22, Falls 26. Goass? Jsass in more vvquest and ui&teri&Uy in '•C'-y..\r'v' • £29 &OYe©ter 17,1866.] jees Indian Orchard sell at 16 cents. Canoe R»ver 15, Hallowell 15, Uncas -15, Newmarket colored 17, and Silver Lake brown 20. Stripes and Checks are without movement and quotations are nomi¬ nal Hamilton Stripes are quoted at 31 cents, Willow Brook Checks. 22$, Wauregan 3x3 23, do 6x3 24, Albany 3x3 14$, do 6x3 15$, Louisi¬ ana plaids 22$, Ringgold fast plaids 20$, Simpson’s Chambrays 22, Philadelphia 16,Taylor 22. Ticks have met with only a very light demand, and excepting for some particular heavy makes, prices are nominal. Arnoskeag AC A are quoted at 62$- cents. Willow Brook Ticks 45, Farmer’s and Miners 47$, Albany 15, American 20, Glen Allen 3 4 13, Chattanooga f 16, Concord 4-4 22, Pacific Extra $ 30. Pacific 4-4 40c, Willow Grove 80 Sacondale f 13, West Branch 17, do £ 19, Windsor $ 21, Henry Clay _ 8-4 19, Suwanee 4-4 23. Denims and Cottonadk8 are in slightly better request, but at un¬ Ashton Glenn brown sell at 20 cents, do blue 21, Homestead brown 21, do blue 22, Peabody blue 17$, Woodland 16 Burliogton 14$, Madison brown 19, Providence blue 19, Charter Oak 81, Albany 17, and Wauregao 21, Yantic*21, Arlington 25. changed prices. Print Cli ths are dull and lower and with the there are no sales and prices are still undetermined. ' decline in cotton Prints are in very light request, and jobbers are selling below the present quotations of agents. Quotations are nominal. Large lines of goods would be sold at low figures. Arnolds were last 9old at 16ic. Merrimack W 21, D 19, Garners 20, Amoskeasr pink 20, do purple 20, do shirting 19, do dark 19,Swiss ruby 20, Dutchess B 17, Lo¬ well dark 18, light 18, Naumkeag 16$, York Mourning 17$, Spring Val¬ ley 18$, Wameutta dark 16, light 16, Dusters 16, Hamilton purple 20, do Chocolates 19, Sprague’s fancy styles 26$. Double purples 26$, Shirtings 26$, Solid colors 19, Canaries 19, do Chintz 19, Orange polkas 20, Indigo black and green 20, do green and yellow 21, do blue, green and yellow 20, Madder rubies 19, Shirting 21$. pink frocks 21, Purple do 20, Staple style light colors 19$, do dark colors 20, German plaids 19$, Fancy style light colors 19$. Columbia, full madders 16$, Concord mad¬ ders 17, do purples 18, do pinks 1.8, do plain shades 18. Glen Cove fulmadders 18$, Wauregan fancies 18, do rubie9 19, do pinks 19, do pur, pies 19. Jaconets are dull and nominal. White Rock, high colors 20, do plain 21 ■ Lonsdale 20, Warren 21$, and Slaters 22 for high colors, and 20 cents for plain. Ginghams are only moderately called for. Glasgow are quoted at 26 Roanoke 19, and Lancaster 27. Cambrics and Sili>eas are in better request, but prices are still nominal. Saratoga lo$, Milton Mills 12$ Haltowell 14$, Pacific 14, and Adriatic 14. Moosun de Laines are lower. A considerable line of these goods were thrown upon the market on Wednesday at a reduction of 2 cents from last week, causing a general stampede in prices for all other makes. The price of these goods is 25 cents in jobbers hands, agents quote higher. Linseys are in <fe Go's 85$, C. S. Co’s 80, Saxony slightly better request. Miners Flannels 45, Stillman & Co’s 32, Black Hawk 32$, Saco 40, S. C. Carr <fc Mills, all wool, 40$, Wool Filling 32, Laurel Dale, 31$, White Rock 82$. Flannels in fair request for the times, but not active. Prices are essentially the same. Piain scarlet and orange range from 32$ $60, plain white 3i@75, scarlet, blue and mixed twilled 87$@65, 4-4 Shaker 66@95, Gilbert’s 4-4 white standard flannels 85 for No. 3, and 77$ for No. 4, Gilbert’s opera 72$. Carpets are steady although stocks are somewhat increased. Lowell Co’s Ingrain bring $1 60 for superfine, $l 75 for extra super, and $2 15 for three ply. Hartford Co’s -M 6!) for medium superfine; $1 75 for superfine, $2 12$ for Imperial three-ply and Si 25 for extra three-ply; Brussels $2 55 for S fr: $2 65 for 4 fr. and $2 76 for 5 fr ; twilled Venetian $1 25 per square yard and fine do SI 15. Ci.oths are dull except for a few prime, leading makes. Slater’s black cloths range from S3 50@?4 50; do Moskowas S5 25 ; Cotton warp cloths are quoted at S2 for No. 1, $1 90 for No. 2, and §1 80 for No. 3 ; 6-4 Leicester ladies’ cloths SI 95 and 6-4 Winona sackings . are II 45. Cassimeres Foreign Goods Satinets inactive, except for a few makes of fine are are dull and inactive. The auction sales have been poorly attended uutil yesterday, and prices have materially de¬ clined, although large lines of goods have been sold, Manchester Cotton Yarn and Goods Market, etc.—Our respondent in Loudon writes — as own cor¬ follows respecting this and other flatness at Liverpool, the d maud both for yarns and goods is very inactive, aud prices are decidedly lower. There i9 much less business doing, and it is rather difficult to quote the precise fall. The unsettled state of affairs appli- s equally to yarns and cloth, the demand fir both articles being extreme¬ ly limited. Short time appears to be generally exteuded through the cotton districts. In some neighbourhoods, the working of looms has to three and four days a week. In the neighbourhood of ■■■■ X ■ The importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending Nov. corresponding weeks of 1864 and 1865,have been ue f«# Hows: ENTERED POB CONSUMPTION FOR THE WEEK ENDING Total 1238 WITHDRAWN AND 16, 1866. 1866. Value. Pkgs. Pkga. 551 462 139 883 £619,451 346 $391,780 ;i4d,015 140;394 129,692 182,713 2,831 $842,594 MARKET DURING 429,335 290 242,555 \ 323,552 94,915 1,170 303 4,751 $1,709,808 , THROWN Value “ 1,558 1,435 $253,725 WAREHOUSE FROM NOVEMBER -1865.- ■1864. Value. Pkgs. Manufactures of wool.. __455 $101,364 do cotton.. 32 9,614 do 65 silk... 30,226 do flax.... 590 94,640 Miscellaneous dry gooas. 17,881 96 INTO THE THE SAME PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... 509 91 do cotton.. do '■ silk 41 do flax 321 Miscellaneous dry goods. 367 114 130 38 124 109 $202,704 23,558 45,820 73,841 • .... - .6,044 517 150 $43,963 <35,631 60,658 33,246 > $351,967 81 363 8947 4,751 Total thrown upon mak’t 2,507 $005,692 $177,864 1,709,809 515 253,725 $225,299 ^^771 > 4,361 Total 1,329 Add ent’d forconsumpt’nl,238 106,349 102,833 33,375 $815,176 842,£94 5,053 2,361 ’ 7/419 $1*857,770 6,266 *1,887,672 ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE SAMS PERIOD. Manufactures of wool... do cotton.. silk do flax do Miscellaneous dry goods. 148 .... Total Add ent’d for 18,839 ' 1893 1,642 19 1,503 4,751 $606,912 .1,709,808 1,311 $535,122 2,361/ 842,594 6, -59 $2,310,720 8,672 $1,877,716 451 $369,476 2,880 419 156 103 688 45 $215,895 1*7,761 144,423 112,784. 6,049 3,841 14,638 13,377 $115,751 253,725 consumpt’n 1,238 Total entered at the port 532 407 99 $65,056 51 5 45 ' • $178,006 66,046 125,' 25 158,347 17,098 . IMPORTS (.OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND SPECIE) AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE 9, 1866. is given in packages wnen not otherwise specified.} [The quantity Pkga Value. Pkgs. Value. Pkgs. Value. 2,852 67,202 Figs 466 Paper China, Glass <& E. WEEK ENDING NOVEMBER ' ware— China ,.667 35,088 Earth’nw’e.2,710 106,356 Glass 13,910 29,671 Glassware.. .669 20,204 Glass plate... 152 22,006 Drugs, <fcc.— 2,920 8,674 929 260 16,156 Barytes ....1,123 9,717 Blea Powderl098 19,610 Camphor.... Ill 4,090 136 Chalk 2,575 100 8 11 834 arabic..55 'do Indigo 8,175 1,111 do linseed..768 77,050 do olive ....253 955 4 2,159 PrusslS 1,247 24,247 2,031 2,242 bich. 16 1,137 Phosphorus... 50 2,354 Keg antimony 65 3,262 336 2,763 do do Soda,bicarb3,348 13,686 do do sal Watches 18 28,141 Leather, Hides, &c.— Bristles 39 Boots & shoes.2 8,404 319 Hides, dress¬ 217 101,170 ed.... Hides, undress¬ 102,150 Leather,patent. 1 619 ed 757 4,234 Potash, chlo..60 1,697 5 4,256 5,533 ..35 Persian berries.. Paints 91 Optical Rum,.., 142 253 8 3,550 49,204 Champagne, baskets...2,294 22,499 Whiskey Wines 14,859 Metals, <fcc.— 234 Brass goods. . ess Musical. 20 1,111 ash....1,809 65,850 Sponges 19 ' 1,491 Sugar of Lead .60 3,432 Bronzes Chains & .... 8,269 4,199 99 1,043 1,785 Buttons 98 -29,499 Burr stones..... 2,326 Clay,....., ; 2,738 Cheese 65 8,169 Cigars i 4,430 Coal, tons. .7,679 20,284 Corks 8,021 Clocks 47 6,601 Cocoa, bgs... 437 0,298 Coffee,bgs.25,698 481,260 Emery. 257 3,006 Fancy goods:... 88,299 Feathers.. 9,089 Flax 58 3,579 Fish .-27,045 Furniture...... 5 287 Grindstones.... 647 Marble mantels. 2,935 Molasses. ..3,805 108,85* .. Gunny ctothl*08 81,929 Hair 8 Haircloth... .17 206 3,401 3,726 Ind. rubber.. 6581 3,283 an. 8,546 41,860 1,081 47,559 16,191 Honey........16' lb .96 Oil Guns 87 Hard ware.... 402 10,703 51,621 Machinery... 193 * 18,297 paintings.88 0,70* Perfumery... .40^ 6,914 11,488 Pipes.,.. Paper lang’g.106 Provisions—. Iron, hoop, 118 6,712 1,800 27,853 Rags ,.388 Lead.pigs .17,244 58,005 Metal goods ..41 12,244 1,334 Nails.... .....23 15 10,715 ware... 18 17t 3.51', Needles Old metal 8,131 1,711 87,116 180,587 37,718 21,664 355 21,685 725 .. * 2£57 1 ■ * . Rope • Salt ,420 7,258 16,163 Rice Iron, pig, . - 4,132 L’gnum vitae... r 2,443 1,419 Mahogany Hemp...... 1,448 50.019 Plated Per Brazil wood 159 89 tons -12,856 .1 Copper Cutlery tons ...142 Willow Other 10,203 Miscellaneous— Alabaster. 914 25 Baskets 14,233 Boxes14 Porter...... .422 162 Oils, 5SG Gin.... 12,841 .... 86,471 559 945 1,027 Lie paste....330 Madder 14 Oils 241 Manganese. Plums... Raisins Sauces and 7,830 • Leeches........0 6 l,07u 1,545 Liquors, Wines, <fcc.~ 815 7,897 6,405 Ale 231 10 14,812 Brandy 12 6 30 Iodine pot Lac dye 1,469 »‘runes Jewelry. &c.— 838 Jewelry 17 105,287 Aluminous cake. Bark Peru’n .801 Cochineal Cudbear Cutch Oranges 452 Alum Arsenic Other 47,110 Woods— 2.795 preserves 1,345 Instruments— Mathematical. .4 492 Alkali .......130 Acids ..13 Ammonia sal... 8 Anoline Albumen ; r Aloes Chickory 983 Lemons Nuts caps 17 Bumby, more than 5,000 looms are said to be lying idle. 289 Senna Saddlery 7 9(348 Wool and "Woolen Goods —Cape and Australian wool has com¬ Safflower 1,860 Steel 60 bxs.,.25,567 manded rather more attention, and prices rule firm. The wool trade, 'Vermillion 150 4,413 Tin, slabs..3,289Whiting 173 Tiu in fact, is in a healthy state. The next public sales will probably be -221,076 Yellow ochre6U0 2,347 commenced on the 18th of October, and during their progress, about Soda caustic.681 17,021 Spelter...492,237 .* Other 6.653 Wire 60JH)0 bales of colonial wool will be brought forward. For woolen Zinc 353,156 Furs, &c— goods there is a moderate inquiry, with but little change in prices. Furs 100 50;686 Spices— Hats, goods 10 : '877P Cloves Bhangbai Silk Report.—Shang ia Sept 3^—At the closing of the ‘ • Pimento.. fast mat) it waB reported that as high as Tls. 625 had been paid for Fruits, <sc.— 297 Stationery, &©.— Bananas........ Citron 0,855 - Uooks...... 1**4 Veft superior chop No. 3 Taatlee, upon which the Chinese dealers imCurrants........ £85i,j Engravings,, 44 nudiately advanced their demands, and the best chops are now held for V ’ 16.1866, and the Opium Manchester, Oct SI.—Owing to the existing ■»—" ' IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF NEW YORE. Oil, cod markets: been reduced inferiority of recent arrivals would lead to the supposition must be nearly q^thausted. The Japan steamer arrived here on the 1st iost., bringing 464 biles. The present steamer has 900 bales engaged, and is expected to take nearly the whole of the settlements for the fort¬ night Settlements for the past foroight, 1.700 bales. Stocks, 4,600 to 5.000 bales* Tot l settlements since 1st January, Chinas, 18,376. 19,500 bales; Japans. 6,124. 19,500 bales. Comparative Stock on September 3d.—1868, 4,000 to 5,000 bale9 ; 1865, 2,500 balet> ; 1864, 6,000 bales. . . .. the Gums, crude.662 and goods for immediate consumption, and prices are wholly nominal. American Linen is steady at fonner quotations, 12@16 cents for crash and 20(3)21 for huckabuck. very Tfa. 640* Jmt front the tone of the market it would not appesartbat toy such advance will be obtained, even if present rates are maintained. Pi ices continue flrci in the country, for any thing like good silk, which 113,799 .13,155 ; 1,857 Statuary Sago *. Seeds Linseed.... 2,500 5,925 6 495 13,830 Soap. .227 1,807 Sugur, hhds, tes and bbls.. 3,309 165,542 Sug;ir, boxes \ '■ - • and bags.2,644 Trees & plants.". Tea ...610 Twine.....,.! 7 toys 121,210 8,875 13,^23 1,259 ....244 18,628 844 25,-63 Waste .631 31,424 Wool, bales. .527 88,696 Tobacco Other.... ..... /•; 1,673 - 31,107 *,*07 Total*...,,! 1^*94,741 630 THE CHRONICLE. PRICES CURRENT. esr In addition to the duties noted a discriminating doty of in per below, cent, ad val. is levied on all imports under flags that, hare no reciprocal treaties with the United States. pf" On all goods, and wares, mer¬ chandise, of the growth nr 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 in 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: 2* cents 39 ft. 01209ft and upward^ft 9$© ' Ashes—Duty: 15 39 cent ad val. Pot, 1st sort... $ 1U0 ft 75 ©.0 CO ©It '0 Beeswax—Dnty,20 $ cent ad val. American yellow.39 ft 41 © 42 Pearl, 1st » sort Bones—Duty: on JbCio Grande shin 39 invoice 10 39 ct. ton3i 00 ©3 j 00 Bread.—Duty, 30 ^ cent ad val. Pilot I $ ft © 6} .. Navy © © o* Crackers 7 14 Breadstuf f»—Sec special report. Bricks. .. Common bard, .per Croton M.13 01 ©13 50 iS 00 ©2) CO Philadelphia Fronts.. 6> UJ ©«o 00 Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair l 9 1b. Amer’n,gray &wh. $ft 75 ©3 00 Cheese.—Duty: 4 Batter and Butter— Firkins.... Half tlrkin lubs... Welsh tabs, prime. Welsh tubs, second quali y North Ponnsylvan a — Firkins Western he erve—Fir- rate Potash, Citric Acid, 0; Caustic Soda, ]*; 10; Copperas, *; Cream Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents 39 ft; Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20 39 cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, 1 cent 39 ft; Extract Logwood, Flowers Benzola and Gamboge, 10 $ cent.; Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per ft; Gum Myrrh, Gum Senegal, Gum Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 $ cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬ limed Iodine, *5; Ipecac and Jalap, 50: Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil Anis, Oil Lemon, and Oil Orange, 50 cents; Oil Cassia and Oil Berga¬ mot, $1 39 ft; Oil Peppermint, 50 ^ cent ad val.; Opium, $2 50; Oxalic Acid, 4 cents 39 ft; Phosphorus, 20 39 cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬ low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50 cents $ ft: Quicksilver, 15 39 cent ad val.; Sal JSratus, 1* cents $ ft; Sal Soda, * cent $ ; Sarsaparilla and Senna, 2n $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac, 10; soda Ash, £; Sugar Lead, 20 cents $ ft; Sulph. Quinine, 45 cent ad val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 39 oz.; Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents 39 ft; Sal Ammoniac, 2u; Blue Vit¬ riol, 26 $ cent ad val.; Etherial Pre¬ parations and Extracts, $ l f) ft; all others quoted below, Acid, Citric free. (gold) ^9 gall* Alcohol Aloes, Cape. Aloes, Socotrine cents. N.YState—Fresh pa:ls Brimstone, $6; Boll Brimstone, $10 39 ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and 15 cent ad val.; Crude Camphor, 30; Refined Camphor, 40 cents $1 lb.; Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.; Cardamoms and Oantharides, 50 cents # ft ; Caster Oil, $1 $ £Mon; Chlo¬ 32 Alum © Annato, fair to prime. Antimony, Regulus of Argols, Crude 34 35 is ((h 8o © Argols, Refined Arsenic, Powdered.... .... 33 ki is States — Fir¬ 27 © 35 kins, yeil w 29 © £1 Berries, Persian Bi Carb. Soda, New¬ 24 27 Firkins, md qual ty © Cheese— Factory Dailies do Weht 16 Bleaching Powder Borax, Refined 17) Brimston 14 Farm Dairies do do Westt-r i Common 16 © 10 © Candles—Duty, tallow, 2*; ceti and wax 14 sperma¬ stearine and ada¬ c; mantine, 5 cents $ 1b • Sperm, patent,. ..39 ft Refined sperm, city... 50 © *<> © Stearic 30 © 31 Adamantine x*2j© 23* Cement—Rosendale.^bl .. © 75 Chains—Duty, 2* cents ^ ft. " One inch & upward^ ft SJ© 9 Coal—Duty, bituminous, $1 25 39 ton of 28 bushels ft to SO the bushel; other than bituminous, 40 cents gJ 28 bushels of 80 1b $ bushel. Liverpool Orrel. 39 ton of 2,240 1b Liverp’l House Canuel Anthracite ©14 50 ©H 00 8 50 © 9 50 .. Cocoa—Duty, 5 cents $ ft. Caracas (in bond)(gold) $ ft .. 15 Copper—Duty, pig, bar, and ingot, 2*; old copper 2 cents $ lb ; manu¬ factured, 35 $ cent ad val.; sheathing copper and yellow metal, in sheets 42 inches long and 14 inches wide, weighing 14 © 34 oz. '< square foot, 3 cents 39 ft. 43 Sheathing, new.. 39 ft © Si Sheathing, yellow © Bolts... 43 © Braziers’ 43 © Baltimore *.U © Detroit 29{© Portage Lake 29 © Cordage—Duty, tarred, 3; untarred Manila, 2$ other uniarred, 3* cents 39 ft.J Manila, 39 ft Tarred Russia Tarred American Bolt Rope, Russia 23 © .. © ** © .. © 24 _ . 19 24 Corks—Duty, 50 39 cent ad val. Regular, quarts39 gross 55 50 12 @ © © 70 70 40 Cotton—See special report. Drags and Dyes—Duty, Alcohol, 2 50 p-r gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ ft ; Alum, 60 cents 39 100 ft; Argols, 6 cents 39 1b; Arsenic and Assafcedati, 20; Antimony, Crude and Regulus, 10; Arrowroot, 80 39 cent ad val.; BalsamCopnivl, 20; Balsam Tolu, 30; Balsam Peru, 50 cents $ ft; Calisaya Bark, 8019 cent ad val.: B1 Carb. Soda, U; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents « ft; Bleaching Powder, 80 cents $ 100ft; Beined Borax, 10 cents 39 lb; Crude 43 11 22 ;■. Brimston-, © ** 7*@ am. 4) 5|@ 6 © © © Sul¬ i.de, (in (gold) « bond) 80 00 75 Camphor, lu-finedT.... Cantharido Carbonate = in bulk Ammonia, 19 © Cardamoms, Malabar.. 3 0o @ 3 25 Castor Oil t lases $ gal 2 75 © 2 b‘2* Chamomile F ow’sfft 50© 60 Chlorate Potash (gold) ">-8 @ 3i raustic Soda.... Cochineal, Hon (gold)- Cochineal,VIexic’n(g’d) Copperas, American... Cream Tarar, pr.(gold) Cubebs, East India Cutch Flowers,Benzoin. $ l'j © u 97 @ 1 00 85 © £5 2© 29 © 4: © 16 @ i6* 41 11© oz. 30 © 'if Gamboge Ginseng, South&West, Gum Arabic, Picked.. Gum Arabic, Sorts... Gum Benzoin ..(gold) Gum Kowrie Gem Gedda Gum Damar Gnm Myrrh,East India Gum, Myrrh, Turkey. Gum Senegal ...(gold) . Licorice, Paste, Sicily. Spanish 8 © 55© .. 65 28 40 © Tragacanth, Sorts 80 © Tragacanth, w. flakey (g Id) 60 © Hyd. Potash, Fr. and Eng. (gold) 8 S5 © Iodine, Resublimed... 6 50 © Ipecacuanna, Brazil... 4 25 © lalap 2 40 @ Lar Dye. 25 @ Licorice Paste,Calabria 60 . © 2 00 £5 © 1 1<> 70 © 80 *2 © 45 © 55 82 © 87 © 27 © 33 Gum Gum Licorice Paste 2* 29* © Logwood 90 8 f0 55 42 25 41 © 24© Solid., 84 © Licorice Paste, Greek. 30 © Madder, Dutch.. (gold) 8)© do, French, EXF.F.do 7 Manna, large flake 2 0 » © Nutgalls Blue Aleppo Oil Anise Oil Cassia Oil Bergamot Oil Lemon. (gold) Oil Peppermint, pure. Opium, Turkey.(gold) Oxalic Acid Phosphorus Prnssiate Potash Quicksilver Rhubarb,China.(gold) Salaratus SalAm’n ac, Ref (gold) 8al Soda, Newcast iwcaatle... “ 8enna, Alexandria.. Senna, East India 40 © 33 @ 24 © 18 © 50 © . Seneca Root. Shell Lac Soda Ash (8n$c.)(sr4ld) . 45 cents or 30 80 4?*@ 8f@ 30 © Sugar L’d, W’t(go d).. Sulp Quinine, Am 39 oz 2 50 © Sulphate Morphine.... 7 4‘> © Tart’c Acid..(g’ld)$ft 5?*@ 50 @ Verdigris, dry„ ex dry 12 @ Vitriol, Blue .. at 20 and 39 ft, .. 83 .> . • . • • • • ters • 53* 53 . do 15 ordinary Gins, per saw... 41 89 © I; 21 Carpe 1 tor’s "Adzes,.... Cotton © © 1?*@ Hardware— Axes—Cast stee\ best biaud [.er d< z 76 @ 1 10 40 88 Buenos Ayres, mixed Hog,Western, unwash. 1n 24 © $5 less £0 * Narrow Wrought Butts List 5 % dis. Cast Butt<*—Fast Joint. List l(j iv. “ Loose Joint.. List. Hinge s^rcusht, Door B Us, Cast Bbl... List25«?adv L st 2<> % ria. List 40 % <iis. Door L c s and Latches List 7* £ dis.* Door Knobs—Mineral. list 7* % d<s. " ... Carriage and Tire Bolts @ ©67 50 - .. © 39 ft 40 Hair—Duty free. KioGrande,mixed39 ft © ©81 (JO ©23 CO © © 70 cents $ cent ad val.; over 20 cents $ cents I? ft and 20 39 centad val. Biasting(A) $ 25ft keg @ 5 00 Shipping and Mining.. @ 5 50 Rifle 7 50 © Sporting, in 1 ft canis¬ Pore lain New List20&7* % dis . Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val. Prime Western...^ ft 95 @ 1 (0 Tennessee ft. 6 .. . .. less 39 ft, 10 n © 85© Dye Woods—Duty free. Camwood..(gold)$)t’n Fustic, Cuba :29 0" Fustic, Savanilla(gold)22 50 Fustic, Maracaibo do.38 00 Logwood, Cam .(gold).25 CO Logwood, Jamaica Limawood (gold) 20 5:4 Duck—Duty, 30 $ oent od val. Ravens, Light.. 39 pee 16 00 ©18 0) Ravens, Heavy 20 00 © Scotch, G’ck, No. 1 39y Cotton, No. 1 39 y. Gunpowder—Duty, valued Padlocks Locks—Cabinet, Eagle 75 “ Fish—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings, $1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50 Trunt Li-t7*^d:s. 5 jfailv List (0 % dis. Li 135 % dis. Stacks and Dies Screw Wrenches—Coe’s Patent List 20 % di*. do Tcft’s List 55@6o % dis Sin ths’ Vis s $ ft 24 @ Old List 25 jfa iv. Framing Chisels 1 inner 00 insets. List 40 «faJv* 1*0 do handled, in sets... Lbt 40 jfarty Augur Bitts List 20 % dis! P boi t Augurs,per dz.NewList IO5C dli Ring do List 10 % dis! Cut Tacks List 6t &10 % dfo Cut Brads List 55 % dis* h ivets Iron List 26&8O % dis! Screws American.. .List 10A2*j6dis do English “ List2u*d:s! Shovels and Spades... List 5 % dis. Horse Shoes 7*@ s Planes List 30@**5 frdv 39 bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬ ed, or Dried, in smaller pkgs.than bar¬ rels, 50 cents $ 100 ft. Dry Cod $ cwt. 7 25 © S 25 Pickled Scale... $ bbl © 6 5u Pickled Cod 39 bbl. 7 25 © Mackerel, No. 1, Mass shore 20 (0 ©22 00 Mackerel, No.l,Halifax © Mackerel, No. 1, Bay ©19 00 Mackerel, No. 2, Bay. .17 f0 ©IS 00 Mackerel, No. 2, Ha ax 17 00 © 7 50 Mac’el,No.3,Mass. l’ge ©14 60 Mackerel, No. 8, H’fhxl4 25 ©14 50 Mackerel, No. 8, Mass. © Salmon, Pickled, No.1.41 00 © Herring, Scaled^ box. @ 50 Herring, No. 1 85 © Hay—North River, in bales39 100 fts Herring, pickled$bbl. 6 00 © 7 50 for shipping @ 1 10 Flax—Duty: $15 39 ton. Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila, Jersey ft © $25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; 8nnn Fruits—See special report. and Sisal, $15 ton; and Tampico, 1 cent 39 ft. ' ’ Furs—Du^y, 10 $ cent. Airier.Dressed.39 ton 880 f0@890 0» Beaver,Dark... ^ 1b, 1 00 © 5 00 do Undressed do Pale ‘.90 0<;@80.i <0 1 50 @ 2 00 Russia, Clean '. 375 00@885 Oo Bear, Black .39 skin 5 00 ©i t 00 Jute. do brown 3 00 © 8 00 (g°ld) 100 00@136 00 Manila..39 lb..(gold) 11 © Badger 50 © 1 00 m Sisal Cat, Wild 50 © (gold) 8 © 75 do House 10 © 20 Hide*—Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬ Fisher, 5 00 © 6 00 ed and Skins 10 39 cent ad val. Fox, Silver .10 oe ©50 00 Dry Hides— do Cross 3 00 © 5 00 Rucnos Ayres39 ftg’d 19 © 22 do Red I 00 © 8 (0 Montevideo do do Grey 1**@ 19 50 © 75 Rio Grande do is © Lynx 2 i-O © 4 00 Orinoco do 18 @ Marten, Dark 5 00 ©20 00 California gold do pale is*© 2 < 0 © 5 00 16 © California, Mex. do iti Mink, <iark 300©600 Porto Cabello do Musk rat, 12*@ 14 10 © 40 VeraCruz do 14*@ 15 Ottor 5 00 © 8 00 Tampico do !4*@ 15 Opossum 15 © 80 Texas do 11 © 12 Raccoon 30 © 75 , .... .. . . ... .... .. .. .. .... 4.® phur Camphor, .... Roll 1 lor >. Sarsaparilla, Hond Sarsaparilla, Mex . . 35 © $ .(gold). 42 00 © $ Brimston 8* © 2 25 @ 2 75 31 Gambier .. 46 © 60 Crude ton Extract ..(gold) © Guayaquil do ...(gold) lr © Coffee.—See spec al r port. 45 874 .. Epsom Salts © Maracaibo do Mineral Phial. 1. castle 15© © 14 © 17* 38 .. Peru....(gold) 2 Bi Chromate Potash... 14 ra S7*@ 8«@ 1 f*@ © Western .. 25 © 80 © Assnfoetida Balsam Copaivi Balsam Tolu Balsam 32 51 @ 4 f5 2j © 26 75 © 85 4 «i@ es © 90 @ 12* 22 © 23 ft 55 41 42 40 45 © © .. .. "[November 17, 1866. 40 8* 45 © 3 75 Oh 4 50 © 5 75 © . . 5 80 2 95 © 3 25 5 00 © 5 50 7 00 © 41 © @ 1 00 42*© 95 © 8 00 © 8 50 .. Wet Salted Hides— C4la«*s—Duty, Cylinder or Window Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches, 2* cents $ square foot; larger and not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $ square foot; larger and not over 24 x39 inches 6 cents $ square foot; above that, and not exceeding 24x60 inches, 20 centa $ square foot; all above that, 40 cents 39 square foot: on unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and Common Window, not exceeding lOx 15 inches square, 1*; over that, and not over 16x24, 2; over that, and not over 24x30 .2* ; all over that, 8 cents $ ft* American Window—1st,2d, Sd, and 4th qualities. (Subject to a discount of 25@3039 cent.) 8x10. .39 50 ft 7 25 © 5 50 10x15 7 75 © 6 00 12x18 9 25 © 6 60 16x24 9 60 © 7 00 20x30 11 75 © 7 50 24x30 14 50 © 9 00 24x36 16 00 ©10 00 30x44 17 00 ©II 00 32x18 18 00 ©12 00 32x56 20 00 ©18 00 9. Above. 24 00 ©15 00 6x 8 8x l lx 12x19 18x22 20x31 24x31 25x36 80x46 32x50 . to to to to to to to to to to Eng'ish and French Window—1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th qualit es. (Single Thick)—Discount 25 ©30 39cent. 6x 8 to SxlO.3950 feet 7 75 © 6 00 8x11 11x14 12x19 20x31 2lx31 24x36 80x45 82x50 to 10x15 to 12x18. to 16x24 to 24x30 to 24x86 to 30x44. to32x48. to 32x56 .. 8 9 10 15 16 18 20 24 25 © 6 50 75 © 7 00 50 © 7 50 50 ©12 00 50 ©18 00 00 ©15 00 50 ©16 00 00 @18 00 Groceries—See special report. Gunny Bags-Duty, valued at 10 cents or less, 39 square yard, 3; over 10, 4 cents $ ft Calcutta, light & h’y % 25J© £6 .... © 20 10) 8*© Gunny Cloth—Duty, valued at 10 cents or less 39 square yard, 3; over 10,4 cents 39 ft. 3f Calcutta, standard, y’d 80 © 80* Bue Ayres.39 Rio Grande ftg’d. .... California ...... *. do do ** © 11 © ** ,Western Coutry sl’ter trim. «fc cured. do do City Upper Leather Stock— B. A. & Rio Gr. Kip 39 ft cash. Sierra Leone.... do Gambia & Bissau do © © 12*@ . H 9, 13* © 14 14 28 © 29 © 19 © «0 89 2 1 11 Honey—Duty, 20 cents 39 gallon. Cuba (duty paid) (gold) # gall. 85 © 87* Hops—Duty: 5 cents 39 ft. Crop of 1866 do, of 1865 $ ft Foreign «‘0 © 30 © 50 © 70 5) 65 Horns—Duty, 10 39 cent, ad val. Ox, Rio Grande... C 14 00© Ox, Buenos Ayres.... 12 00© 14 00 India ad val. Rubber—Duty, 10 39 cent Para, Fine 39 1b Para, Medinm Para, Coarse 92* @ 70 @ 60 © 05 Indigro—Duty free. Bengal ( old) <pft (gold) Oude Madras 00 © 1 65 75 @ 1 85 (gold) 65 © 90 65 © 1 10 "...(gold) 80 © 1 16 (gold) Caraccas 70 © (gold) 90 Iron—Duty,Bars, 1 to 1* cents 39 Railroad, 70 cents 39 160 ft; Boiler and Plate, 1* cents 39 ; Sheet, Band, Hoop, and Scroll, 1* to If cents 39 8>; Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3 cents 39 ftPig, Scotch,No 1. $ ton 53 00© 55 00 Pig, American, No. 1.. 5> 00© 51 (JO Manila Guatemala Bar, Swedes, assorted sizes (In gold) 95 00@!00 00 ir—Store Pbioes—* Bar Swedes, assorted sizes '. @170 00 Bar,English and Amer¬ ican, Refined 130 00© do do do CommonllO 00© November 17, .....150 00@200 Ovals and Half Round 145 00@155 Band @150 .1% 00@tC5 Horse 8hoe... Rods, 5-8@3-16 inch.. I ’5 00@ld0 Rod........$ Sheet, Russia Sheet, Single, Double 00 00 00 Cake—Duty: 20 cent ad val. City thin obl’g, in bbls. $ ton.56 00 ©51 00 in bags.54 00 @55 09 do West, thin obl’g, do 53 00 @54 00 85 00© 90 00 Galena ^ 100 lb Spanish.........(cold) and whale or other fish (for¬ eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent ad val. .. cent ad val. • , Oak, Slaughter, do do do do do do do light . middle heavy. light Cropped.... do do middle bellies .... .... . Califor., light. do middle. do heavy. Orino., etc. l’t. do middle do heavy. do & B. A, © 22 @ >8 © 85 © 38 © dam’gdall w’g’s do poor do Slaugh.in rough Oak, Slangh.in rou.,l’t do do Lead, red, American, do white, American, 45 Maple and Birch 85 00 © 40 00 ... refined, 40 jents $ 100 00 ©120 00 Black Walnut V iVi. extia. .. do pipe, heavy do pipe, light, ! do pipe, culls . do hhd., extra, do hhd., heavy do hhd., light, do hhd., culls . do bbl., extra . do bbl., heavy, do bbl., light.. do bbl., culls.. Red oak, hhd.,h’vy. do hhd., light.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . , . „ HEADING —White @150 00 oak, hhd Mahogany, ©300 00 ©250 00 @200 Ofl @180 Od @250 00 @200 00 @I2> 00 @100 00 @175 00 @140 00 @110 00 @ 60 00 @130 OC © 90 00 Hose- Cedar wood—Duty free. Domincrotches. $ ft.. Mahogany, St. go, do > St. Domingo, ordinary logs Port-au-Platt, do crotches Port-au-Platt, do logs Nuevitas do do do do .... Mansanilla .. Mexican Honduras (American wood).. Cedar, Nuevitas do Mansanilla do do Mexican Florida. $ c. ft. Rosewood, R. Jan $ ft do Bahia 50 25 @ 7 @ 30 © JO 12 © 12 © 12 @ If) lu • 0 @ 20 16 14 l4 12 1<» 10 £0 @ © @ @ © 1 5 © 4 © H Q0 8 6 Molasses.—See special report. Nalls—Duty: cut 14; brought horse shoe 2 cents $ lb. 24; Cut,4d.@6ud.$ iOulb 7 00 © 7 25 © 8 50 Clinch Horse shoe, fd(Sd)$ 8) « 32© Copper Yellow metal Zinc 50 @ 32 @ @ .. .. 20 Stores—Duty: spirits of turpentine 39cents $ gallon; crude Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, and tar, 20 Naval cent ad val. Turpent’e, * f..$280ft .... © .... bbl 8 40 @ 4 25 Pitch 6 25 © 5 60 Rosin, common...... 5 25 © .... do strained an iNo.2...5 60 © 7 00 Tar, America..... cents 7 cents 11 © Hi© ad val. ton..!00 00 ©2lu 00 52 .... (gold) (gold) .. @ 21* Plates,char. I.C.%* boxlt 25 @15 60 I. C. C'»ke 25 @13 7 , do .10 Terne Charcoal 14 25 @15 90 do ... do Terne Cuke.... 10 ft ; Salt—.Duty: sack, 24 cents $ 100 100 ft. bulk, 18 oents Turks Islands $1 bush. 5> @ 56 © Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 2 00 @ .... do nn",Ashton’6(*’d) 2 50 © do fine, Worthingt’s @ Onondaga.com.fine bis. 2 50 @ 2 Ml do do 210 ft bgs. 1 90 © 2 09 do do ip bush. 42 © 45 Solar coarse 50 © 52 Fine screened 4S @ 60 do $ pkg. .. © S 25 240 ft bgs. 2 £5 © 3 00 Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2£ cents; refined and partially refined, 3 cents; soda, 1 cent $ ft. © 17 gold © 9j 4© Seeds—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp, 4 cent ^ lb; canary, $i $ bushel of 60 ft; and grass seeds, JO $ cent .. 14 © 16 8 75 bus 4 25 © 5 00 ODary Linseed, Am.clean$ tee © .. do Am. rough $ bus 8 10 @ 8 25 Timothy,reaped $ bus 8 2» @ do Calcutta .. .gold 2 63 © — 4 Lugs and Com Leaf.. a edium f.o Go d l ine to Seed a 15 Select Leaf. & Conn. <fe Conn. <fc Pe- n. & Penn. & Penn. & lonn @ © @ 32,10, and 10 $ cent ad val¬ ; over 82,12 cents # ft, and 1 $ cent ad valorem; on cent ad val. the skin, 20 Extra, © & 47 & 80 © 80 © 20 © 80 © 20 © 8n © 27 © 82 © 18 © © 22 © 40 © 42 © 25 © 15 © 8» © 20 © 22 © 85 © pulled California, unwashed... common... pulled do Texas 10s and 12s—Best 22 Peruvian, unwashed... S. Amer. Mestiza, unw.. do common,unw. Entre Rios, washed .... do unwashed.... 3. American Cordova 10 8 (1 »• v.t) © lo nominal. 90 75 80 ?U . 48 :.0 Ex.fine, .. do do do fts g — .... tteedand tlavana,per M55 do ... Clea:* Havana, do Connecticut Seed. 25 New York Seed, Conn. do - do Common Cigars.. 111 @ 8J > © © © © © 82 :8 , . 4.4 80 © © , . 86 30 26 00 @80 00 ©... 00 @45 00 20 00 @30 00 do ’8 00 @25 00 ..,,13 '.U @2o 00 Whalebone—Duty: foreign fish2i* p. c. ad val. s South Sea $ ft 1 37 © 1 4 > North west coast : @ .. Ochotak @ 1 65 Polar © .... ery, .. Wines and Liquors—Liquors —Duty: Brandy, first Smyrna,unwashed do .... washed 46 45 80 25 40 25 25 45 jfiiiic—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 fl 1«*0 ft?.; sneels 24 cents $ ft. Sheet #lb 13© 14 I'reig-litsTo Liverpool: Cotton....... $|ft Flour $ bbl. Petroleum d* s. d s. .. @ .. @1 .* 6 @4 . ton 16 00 @ Oil..... ‘ @20 ‘6 4 Corn, b’k& bags^ bus. .. @ 4 Wheat, bulk and bags .. @ Beef $ tee. ' .. © 2 6 Pork .. .....$} bbl. @1 9 Heavy goods... Heavy goods. ..$ ton 17 6© . Oil @25 bbl. © 1 Flour . © 4 Petroleum © 8 Beef <8 tee. © 2 Pork $ bbl. © Wheat $1 bush. © Corn To Glasgow (by Steam) : @ 1 Flour $ bbl. .. 9 .. 8 3 .. .. 6 - Cft .. Medium Wrapper u>. i) 3 2|@ ‘■-'8 © 25 @ 20 10 n:a & N.Y.. Cigars (domestic), 90 &5 70 30 12 t»U Fine.... Medium. Common Best Vir- Common @ @ © © © @ SO bright Penn, African, unwashed .... do washed Mexican, unwashed.... 24 To London : .. do Kine do fts (Virginia")—Ex.fine, do do Donskoi, washed — 80 26 . Medium M ®s —Best. do Medium.. do do Common.. do fts (Western) — bright 4 ■ l>5 6 © Vir- S. Y girda 9 ,,,, ... Persian 4 do Navy 5 2i » »-*4@ . N.Y., R. lots. olio, Killers. On o, Wrap . Oil o, R. lots.. i uba, assort (duty pd; Manufactured yin bond)— do do do 104 58 50 57 50 40 40 25 45 32 83 80 84 28 © 50 45 50 Superfine No. 1, pulled do 67 58 © 58 Amer., Sax. fleece $ 1b do full bl’d Merino, do 4 and 4 Merino.. . 5 N Y.. Fillers. .Y.. Wrap Foreign. Hrvana,Wrap.(d’ty pd) Havana, ass. (duty p’d) Havana, fill, (duty p’d) Yarn, assurt.(du y p'd) • $ft 75 @li 00 orem 24.and than 24, 7 cents: ouer .. 00 @14 00 54 @ u 00 .. 23$ 214 Tobacco—Duty: leaf35cents $} ft; and manufactured, 50 cents $ ft. Cigars $ I per pound and 50 per cent 'ad valorem. @ 2 40 © 2 50 Provisions—Duty: beef and pork, ; 1 ct: lams, bacon, and lard, 2 ts $ ft. Beef, plainmess$ bbl..12 50 ©1» f.o do extra mess. 18 00 @23 « 0 Pork, mess, new 24 00 @ do mess, Old © do prime, do 21 t0 @ 12]@ 14 Lard, $ft 15 Bams, 13 @ 3houlders, 12 @ 18 Rice—Duty: cleaned 24 cents $ lb.; paddy 10 oents, and uncleaned 2 cents ^ ft 1\$ 10 9 © onl—Duty: costing 12 cents or les $ lb, i cents ft: over 12 and not more English .... Crude Nitrate soda 23 @ yl © $ ft (gold) $ ct off list* W not over Tin—Duty: pig,bars,and block,15 $ cent ad val. Plate and sheets and terne plates, 25 per cent al \ a‘. Banca Straits # ct off list $ ct off list Telegraph, No. 7 to 11 Plain $ ft Teas.—See special report Paris—Duty: lump,free; calcined, 20 $ cent a(* val. Blue Nova Scotia^ tor ..,,'© 4 50 White Nova Scotia © 4 70 Refined, pure val. No. Oto 18 ......10*5 No. 19 to 26 .... 25 &5 5 No. 27 to 86 .... 80 Valparaiso, unwashed.. ‘.'2$@ 51 @ Cadiz Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered $2 to $3 5 %) 100 ft, and 15 9 cent ad 2i 174 12$ 13 .\ I8J© . Tallow—Duty : 1 cent $ ft. American, pri me, coun¬ try andcity^ft... 12© Plaster ad val. Clover 2£ cents; 1'>J@ Sicily 27 © nitrate valued and not above 11, 3 cts English, spring gallon. 36 @ F.F f lb or under, at 7 .over .. Carolina ....• $ 100 ft 13 East India,dressed.... 9 75© 1 10 75© 1 10 Hherry d» do 1 15© 1 75 Malaga, sweet . • o do* dry.... do 1 10© 1 50 Claret, in hhds. do 8 3 00@150 00 2 25© 30 00 do Ao in cases Champagne.... do 11 00© 25 00 . 9 $ bbl. 4 50 @ 4 00© do do Madeira do Marseilles ut American, spring 8© 1 15© do Sherry n @ V.. Steel—Duty: bars and ingots, .... $ ft. >6 16 15 bars, and English, cast, $ ft 1 50 © Calcined, eastern $ bbl Calcined, city mills Corn Whisky ( nb nd) 41© Wines—Port(gold) 2 00© 85© Burgundy Port, do l?i ® do Whisky—S. & Ir. D'm’c—N.E. Rum.cur. Bourbon Whisky.cur. 2 40© Sumac—Duty: 10 $7 cent in bond Residuum .. Spices.—See special report 12 Vaptha, refined do domeHtiu ilo 3 50 8© 10 Refined, free pipe, oak, White 19 ft. .. St. Croix HI 10 © 10© Crude,40@47grav.$gal. STAVES— do d* Gin-Differ, brands do Rnm—Jamaica .. 11 @ plates, $1 50 # 100 fts Plates.foreign # ft gold v @23 00 15© 49 Petroleum—Duty: crude, 20 cents; 00 © 90 00 ad val. ?s, Chalk, block $ ton Chrome yellow... $ ft 60 00 © 65 00 .. do do J. Romieux.... Other Rochelle, €0| 624 © © © .. , Seignette. do Arzac Selgnette do 60 •I© • do do Alex. 60 41 5< @ <0 © Chagres ...gold Puerto Cab .gold Jastile 8 7ft @ 4 00 Vermilion.Chinese^ft 1 45 @ I ?0 1 10 @ 1 15 do Trieste do Cal. & Eng 1 35 © 1 50 do .American.... 30 @ 40 red (N.C.l^cwt 3 25 @ S 50 Carmine,citymade#ftl6 00 ©20 00 China clay...... ^ *on29 00 @32 lO LbL 5 00 © ... Chalk Laths, Eastern.$ M 4 7o © Poplar and Whi e wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 © 65 0J Oak and Ash... cent 12 do- gr’d in oil.ip ft Paris wh., No.l^lOOft .... ...gold Honduras..gold Sisal gold Para gold Vera Cruz .gold «'•*.. ... do A. Selgnette . Hiv. Pellevoisin .. . do do do do L^gcr freres ... do Other br’ds Cog. do Pellevoisin freres do .. - 5 00© 10 00 5 10© 10 50 5 004* 10 00 5 20© 10 OD Pfnet, Castil.&Co.do do $ ft; over 11 cents, 34 cents ^ ft and 10 $ cent ad val. (Store prices.) 10 @ 10 @ do 100 ft Madras,eac cash 20© 10 50 (gold) 5 20© 10 50 &Cordo 5 15© 10 50 Martell (gold) 5 Renault & Co.. J. Vassal A Co., Jules Robin.... Marrotte & Co. United V. Prop, Vine Grow. Co. Soap—'Duty: 1 cent $ ft, and 25 <{p $ iOU ft 2 50 © gr’.i in oil.? ft 8panish brown, dry .. gold Payta German Ochro, yellow, French, dry Matamoras.gold $1 cent ad vaL Hennessy Otard, Dup. 16 © © 144© do white, American, No. 1,in oil 38 00 © 83 00 80 00 ©100 00 Cherry B’ds & Plank 80 white, American, dry Zinc, white, American, dry, No. 1 40 00 © .r0 00 So 00 © 82 00 Merch. .. puie, 83 $ M It 22 00 © 2> 00 White Pine Box Boards Clear Pine in oil pure, do and Cedar, free. Southern Pine White Pine Box B’ds 56 @ J. & F. a- ad val; red Lumber, Woods, Staves,etc. —Duty : Lumber, 20 $ cent ad val.; Staves, 10 cent ad val.; Rosewood Spruce, East. 6> ft ; Spanish brown 25 $ cent China clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian and vermilion 2ft $ c nt ad val.; white chalk, $10 $ ton. 13 12} © Litharge, Araer.. .$ft 13 124© ad val. .. © 1 70 © 2 00 Lime—Duty: 10 $ cent Rookland, com. $ bbl. do heavy .... Paints—Duty: on white lead, red lead, and litharge, dry or ground in oil, 3 cents ft; Paru white and whiting, 1 cent $ ft; dry ochres, 56 centf 100 ft: oxidesofzinc, 1| cents $ ft ; ochre, ground in oil, $150 100 2> 36 mid. do do do and heavy © ... 33 30 .... @ @ Bolivar .. Cape cash Deer, San Juan$ ftgold unbleach. 2 90 @ I CC @ 1 70 distilled .' l 00 1 10 Paraffine, 28 — 30 gr.. 43 Kerosene ..(free). .. cash.$ ft.—, 40 84 © 45 4J @ 46 4 1 @ 50 45 © 53 5(J @ 21 1* © 83 32. @ 85 34 @ Si 37 © 82 @ :v?4 85 34 © 87 36 © 30 @ 31$ 32 @ 32 3i © . Heml’k, B. A.,&c..l’t. do middle. do do heavy do do do do do do do do do do Lard oil Red oil, city Straits 30 Leather—Duty: sole 35, upper 2 6» @ Sperm,crude © 574© © 41 © @ © 55 © 40 @ VeraCruz .gold do do do do do do do Olive, quarts per case © 6 50 do in casks.$ gall.. 1 78 © 1 80 Palm $ lb ....‘ @ 11 Linseed, city...$ gall. 1 4^ @ 1 47 Whale 1 30 © 1 35 do refined winter.. J 40 © .... (gul l) 6 75 © 7 00 English......... (gold) 6 75 © T HI Bar net ©10 75 Pipe and Sheet'. ...net ..©1125 German Brandy— 45 44 55 60 55 44 40 © 88 © Tampico. ..gold do do do do do do sperm ©6 75 .. lon and 25 Skins—Doty: 10 $ cent ad val. Goat,Curacoa$! ft gold do Buenos A... go’d @ .. 111© 10 50 @11 DO © .... Medium ao China thrown fluid, 50 cents $ gallon; palm, seal, and cocoa nut 10 $ cent ad val.; lb; Pipe and Sheet, gallon^ other liquors, $2.50. Wn»*8— Duty: value net over 50 centsJB gal¬ lon 20 cents $ gallon and 25 y cent ad valorem; over 5»: and not over 100, 50 cents $ gallon and 25 $ cent ad valorem; over $1 $ gallon, $1 $ gal¬ lb. ao .medium,Nc.3@* 9 ?0 @10 00 Canton,re-reel.No 1@2 9 00 @ 9 f0 Japan, superior 11 5u ©i3 50 Oils-* Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and rape seed, 28 cents; olive and salad oil, in bottles or flasks, $1: burning Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val. East India, Prime flft 8 #© 3 '5 East Ind , Billiard Ball 8 50© 4 50 African, W. C., Prime 8 25© 3 00 African, Scrivel.,W.C. 2 00© 2 50 Lead.—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 lb; Old Lead, 1$ cents 21 cents $1 ft. 681 Silk—Duty: free. 35 $ cent. Tsatlees, No. 1 ©3.$ft 12 50 ©18 00 Iiivsaains, aaperior, No. 1 ©2 10 50 @12 (0 Oil 55 0 @ American do * - 121 All thrown silk. Pile and Extra (230lbs.) 9 00 ©10 CO Spirits turp., Am. $ g. 74© 76 9$@ 12j Oakum—Duty fr.,$ lb S Gt@ and Treble Rails, Eng. (g’d) $ ton «*•** Shot—Duty: 2f cents $ Drop and Buck... ft 8 00 © 8 CO No. 1 da do 00 00 160 00@2*0 00 ft 10© 11 23 © 24 Nail »$ • - THE CHRONICLE. 1&66J Scroll Hoop "** A * proof, $3 per Wheat $ bush. Corn, bulk and bags.. Petroleum (sa 1)$ bbl. Heavy goods.. $ ton. 20 .. Beef. Pork 6 0 ©30 0 @5 © 8 9 To Havre : Cotton .. .. $ tee. bbl. 84 0 @25 • Oil 9 4 © © © 4 .. ... . $ $ 1© ^ ft Hops 0 A . 1 * & © 00 pork.. $ bbl. g’d8.$? ton iO tO @ Wheat, In shipper’s © bags ....$ bush. @ Flour # l)b Beef and Measurem. .. - Petroleum Lard, tallow, out m t etc.... V Ashes, pot and pearl .. © |@ 8 © 10 m THE CHRONICLE. 17,1 •set t Haiituatj ittonitor. as compared with those of the previous month, show the result: ' following • Railroad Earnings tor October.—The gross undermentioned railroads for the month of earnings of the October, 1865 October and 1866, comparatively, and the difference (increase or decrease) between following statement: 1865. Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien Milwaukee and St. Paul Mississippi 347,085 Inc.. Inc.. Inc.. Dec.-< Dec. Dec. Inc.. Dec. 1,210,654 422,124 1,480.261 639,195 111,444 493,640 500,404 286,133 416,138 375,534 92,724 $3,lu8,623 and Western Union Western... Total (16 roads) These results 2,947 24,356 24,461 20,559 52,618 Dec. Dec. $8,294,082 Inc.. ratio 116,533 110,303 Doc. Inc.. Inc.. $185,159 same earnings of the years same are' showu in the Railroads. and 1865. Atlantic and Great Western.. Chicago and Alton Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago nnd Northwestern $4,385,704 3,295,348 891,346 6,065,181 2,900,404 .. Chicago, Rock Is. and Pacific Erie (including Buffalo Division) ... 13,338.454 Illinois Central Marietta and Cincinnati Michigan Central Michigan Southern Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien 6,020,233 Mississippi Pittsburg. Ft. Wayne & Chicago Toledo, WabaBh and Western .. Western Union 3,069,631 1,047,S41 7,380,635 2,788,272 12,124,983 Dec. Inc.. Inc.. Dec. Dec. Dec. Inc.. Dec. Dec. 5,329,710 1,002,919 3,436,797 3,887,275 1,640,691 2,077,944 2,805,782 6.2"8,179 3,075,404 684,320 589,78J Total (16 roads) The aggregate $63,025,565 $61,249,911 156,49 112,132 Dec. Inc.. Dec. Dec. Inc.. Inc.. 290,351 978,558 757,359 94,537 Dec. earnings of these sixteen railroads in $1,776,654 September, are indicated above. The principal loosing roads so far, have Erie, the Illinois Central, and the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and interest being necessary to consummate the project. It is proposed to form a new corporation and issue $6,000,000 of new mortgage bonds, viz.: $2 000,000 for construction, and $4,000,000 for the 628,915 1,213,471 690,523 38,708 291,211 92,676 8,277 60,785 $884 990 Mississippi Railroad.—The holders of certificates had a meeting on Thursday, Nov. 1, when a plan of reorganization was presented and accepted by a large number of certificate holders, three-fourths in Difference. $296,824 225,717 Inc.. 964,211 3,728,008 3,979,851 1,648,968 2,017,159 8,096,133 7,186,737 2,313,045 Milwaukee and St. Paul Ohio uud $4,682,528 Inc. 17.42 of the trustees of this property : 1866. $1,230,594 4.45 . Chicago. Ohio roads for the first ten months of the following table as been the 60,531 7,579 ♦Estimated. The Difference. $185,459 699, **61 exceedingly favorable. They show that October mootl^ of the current year, the aggregate earnings having increased over the earnings of September 17.42 per cent., and over those of October, 1835, 2.28 per cent. The net aggre¬ gate result of the ten months shows a falling off from last year to the amount of $1,776,654. or 2.82 per cent. This deficit, however, may yet be made good before the close of the year, and certainly will be if the earnings of the next two months increase in the same 5,051 Inc.. Inc. Dec lias been the best $45,630 10,871 13,005 236,768 53,859 100,"56 2,394 Dec. 126.997 7,762,949 $8,108,623 . . Increase in October do do percent.. Differ’ce. Dec. 320,000* 741,968 436,065 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne & Chic.. Toledo, Wabash $541,491 366,265 1,53", 817 641,589 116,495 490,093 524,760 310,594 1395,579 372,618 858,501 Michigan Central Michigan Southern Ohio and I860. $537,121 357,956 113,992 923,836 1886. $8,294,082 7,068,488 $345,674 ....... September the two years are exhibited in the Railroads. Atlintic and Great Western Chicago and Alton Chicago and Great Eastern Chicago and Northwestern Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific.. Erie (including Buffalo Division) Illinois Central Marietta and Cincinnati 1865. purpose of up at takiag maturity the existing mortgage debt. For the preferred an 1 common certificates, new stock is to be issued at par, and dividends at 7 per cent, are to be paid, first to the preferred, and uext to the common stock, then both to share alike any surplus over 7 per eeut. This plan is eminently liberal, sacrificing no class of creditors or holders of certificates, and is one that will, without doubt, be car. ried out at an early day. Western Pennsylvania Railroad.—The extension of this road (rom Freeport to Alleghany City, in length about 28 miles, is now in running order, its formal opening having taken place on the 13th ult. COMPARATIVE MONTHLY Chicago and Alton. 1854. t 1865. (257 m.) $100,991 154,418 195.803 162,723 178,786 258,480 1203,090 833,432. ..May.. 868,273. .June. 835,985 328,870. .July 381,559. ..Aug.. 409,250 401,280 857,956 807,919 818,549. ...Sep. 347,085. .Oct... .Nov., 236,824 ..Dee.. . . 8,840,091 Erie 1864. 270,389. .April. 322,277 855,270 2234,257 312,165 854,554 320,879 307.803 252,015 2,770,484 1866. (280 m.) (280 m.) $280,503 $210,171. .Jan.. 275,232 207,913 .Feb.. 299,063 304,885. ..Mar.. . 994,317 1,105,864 1,301,0J5 1,222,568 1.224,909 1,234,217 1,070.434. ..Mar... 1,153,2.15. .April.. 1,333,461 1,101,6*3. May 1,177,372 1,243.142. .June... 1,202,180 1,203,462. j uly... 1,33',046 »,290,3 0. ..Aug 1.336.615 1,411.347 ..•»ep— . .. . .. 1,439.261 ..Oct— (524 m.) $256,600 304,445 333,454 330,651 207,126 315,258 27S,891 858,862 402,219 407,107 448,934 411,806 4,12),153 (521 m.) $303,996 306,361 413,974 305,180 851, -.89 387.095 801.613 418,575 486,808 524.760 496,072 351,799 4,826,722 (463 m.) $290,676 . 457,227 '1(41,297 588,066 625,751 532,911 606,640 625,547 075,810 7U1,8 49 691,556 914,082 (468 m.) 857,583 733.866 637.1S6 646,995 584,523 712 493 795.983 858,500 712,362 680.963 8,189,002 940,707 923,886 749,191 546,609 1 18647 (930 771.) $523,566 523,744 . . . . 1,210,654 ...Oct.. . .Nov.. ..Dec,. ..Year.. — 1864. 1865. (708 m.) $327,900 (708 m.) 416,588 459,762 423,797 406.373 510.100 423,573 586,96-4 799,236 661,391 $571,536 528,972 616,665 516,003 460,573 617,6S2 578,403 747,409 739,736 641,589 6,329,447 7,181,208 — 89,901 72,389 83,993 73,697 91,809 1864. (524 m.) $314,598283,177. ran. .Feb.. Mar._ .. 412,393. - 409,427. ’April. . 426,493. ..May.. 392.641. .June. 338,499. ..July.. 880,432. Aug*. 429.(91. ...Sep.. . 500,404 ...Oct... .Nov.. ..Dec.. . ^Year — 115,135 88,221 140,418 186,747 212,209 139,547 113,399 168,218 178,526 149,099 117,013 1,711,281 1864. (468 m.) 474,733... Feb... 654,890... Mar... 606,078.. April.. 672,628... May.. 644/73. .June.. 534,828. July- 641,843..Aug- 661.608. Sept 742.00C ..Oct Nov Dec . . . .. — .. — .. $102,749 (234 77i.) .Year,.. 150.9S9. ...Sep.. 286,133. ...Oct... .Nov.. .Dec..v 26M72 June ... .Year., (210 m.) $100,872 147,485 160.497 157,786 149,855 155,730 144,942 218,236 234,194 203,785 202,966 1204,726 164,710 .. \ear.. 1,402,106 im. (210 m.) (210 m.) $170,078 153,903 202,771 169,299 177,625 173,7-22 162,570 218,236 260,459 222,924 208,098 162,694 2,0*4,072,290,695 . June.. 166,015 July.. 222,953 .Aug... _.>ept... . — — 95.843 127,010 156,338 139,6? 3 244,1*4 375,534 Dec-... 265,154 . — „ 220.209 — .Year^ 139,171 165,753 123,987 .Oct „Nor.... . — $144,084 132,896 167.301.. April.. 1G7,"99 1865. (242 m.) $79,735 192,138... Mar... 168,099...Mar... ..Dec.... 221,570 2,050,823 2,512,315 Michigan Central. 1664. 144,001 138 733 194.5D (271,798 i 374.5:34 S 379,981 ,8 $252,435 278,848 348.802 838,276 271,553 265.780 263,244 346.781 82,722. .April.. 95,664. ..May... 106,315. .June.. 96,'23. ..July.. 106,410. ..Aug... 108 388 .. Sep... .Nov... ..Dec... ..Year.. 375,534 f361,610 1247,028 2,986,678 413,501 460,661 490,693 447,669 3,970,946 $210,329 . 122,621. .Feb. 124,175. ..Mar.. 121,904. .April. 245,511. ..May.. 242,560. .June. 209,199 ..July. 260,466 809,261 269,443 . 224,957 223.242 268,176 802,596 332,400 278,006 346.243 275,950 188.223. ..Aug.. 275,906. ...Sep.. 416,138. ...Oct.. .;NoT.. ..Dec... ..Year.. 8,311,070 (140 m.) $226,059...Jan... $30,840 194,167...Feb... 256, <07.. Mar... 1(566. (340 m.) (340 m.) $259,223 $267,541 239,139 246,109 818,914 326,286 271,527 277,423 290,916 288,130 304,463 349,285 844,700 850,348 *672,618 412,558 284,319 8,793,005 1866. (157 m.) $43,716 37,488 87,265 82,378 83,972 42 038 270,300. April.. 41,450 325 48,359 63,862 68,118 50,303 49,903 6C,C65 82,147 316,433.. May... 9L..June.. 804.917 July.. 396,248 A u«r... . Sept.... . — i- ..Dec ..Year.. . 253,924 247,262 805,454 278,701 — 63,180 ’ ; . 54,94* 42195 587,078 1866. (177 m) 45,102 86,006 39,299 48,388 86,9 3 102,686 85,503 59,862 75,677 56.871 — 498,649 Mississippi. 1865. 1864. 771.1 436,065.. Oct ..Npv...,. 429,160 western Union. «— I860. 349417 265,796 837,168 843,736 365,196 835, *5-2 324,986 859,665 4,504,546 1864. (340 m.) m. 328.869 *—Hhio Si $131,707. .Jan.. (484 279,137 344,228 337,240 401,456 865,663 829,105 , 406,510 376,470 . 1866. (285 $308,324 $282,488 408,445 410.802 150,148. ...Oct... — 1803. (285 m.) (285 m.) .Jan.M 84,264. .Feb... 82,910. ..Mar... — 223.846 220,138 201,169 .Year.. & W( jstern.—» (242 m.) $17S,119... Jan... 155,893... Feb... 212,171 248,292 220,0-2 . 2,535,00! r-Toledo, \ Vab. 1866. ..Sept... ..Oct.... ..Nov... 1866. 106,269 203,018 237,562 251,9 6 241,370 8 -0,841 395,579 346,717 171,125 221,638 193,135 129,227 . 214,533 (234 m.) 86,52S 95,905 196,254 173.75 215,784 198,0* 245,627 195,15 226,(147 189,4243,417 ‘ 243,413 217,9 264,637 & St. Paul.-^ $9S,181 46,474 64,993 83,702 131,643 120,970 941,662 86,4 2 170,795. .July.. 116,224. ..Aug.. 1,9S5,571 .July... 1865. $51,965 84,897. Feb.. 72,135. .Mar.. 103,082. April. 267,488. ..May.. 193,919 .Aug... (234 m.) (234 m.) (204 771. $178,557 $168‘7, 180,140 151,9! £22,411 167, (X 203,514 210,314 ..June.. 18G6# 1,224,056 1864. (234 in.) 223,020 1865. 116,146 105,7r»7 116.495 -Milwaukee 1866. $121,776. ..Jan-. 110,664 115,J84 125,252 1,038,165 .Nov... ..Dec... $93,183 74,233 70,740 106,689 146,943 224,833 2L7,159 170,555 810,594 226,840 104,60) 93,078 90,576 96,908 95,453 . r-St. L.t Alton & T. Haute,—. I860. . (234 77i.) 1865. 107,525 94,375 -Mil. and Prairie du Chien.-^ 1866. — 74.409 467,115. ..July.. 5S6,074. ..Aug... 551,021 ..Sep... 639,195. ...Oct.... . (251 in.) $96,672 87,791 93,703 78,607 76,248 $77,010 507,830. ..May 560,025. .June.. —, 1865. (251 m.) . — April.. .Mar... 1866. (204 in.) 170,879 202,857 .March. ----- 1864. (70S m.) $582,828. ..Jan.... 512,027. ..Feb. 616,822. ..Mar... 400,773. .April.. — .leb Pittsburg. 1865. (204 m.) $139,414 .Jan 3,095,470 ,3,313,514 Marietta and Cincinnati.- 1866. c 1864. 777. . 243,173 224,980 271,140 331,494 324,865 336,617 321,037 . 1866. 246,331 183,385 289,403 257,230 196,580 197,886 234,612 264,605 821,838 290.642 244,121 2)4,i.2 806,231 810,443 389,489 396,060 307,623 <122 124 270,073 H — *01,779 S — 185,013 198,679 . and 1 QiUl (23S $305,364 $241,395 243,160 518,736 .April. 735,0'2 ..May.. 922,892 .June.. 77 -,990. ..July 778,284 ..Aug.. 989,053 ...Sep.. . 1865. (228 m.) $158,735 175,482 . . 1 (228 771.) ..Jan.. .Feb.. ..Mar.. . 405,634 7,960,981 603,402 $6-:>0,144 $555,488... J an... 673,504 729,759 716,373 563,401 702,692 767,508 643,887 518,088 r-Plttsb., Ft. W.,& Chicago.-* 1864. 1855. 669,605 585,623 747 942 Year. 1,429,765 1865. 480,710 519,306 499,296 468,358 657,141 Mich. So A N. Indiana.1864. 565,145 4S2.104 ..Nov... ..Dec 13,429,643 15,434,775 . .. 1,256,567 1,458,455 1.433.615 1,522,472 $273,875 317,839 390,355 421,363 466,830 (S60 m.) $541,005 > 186G. (657 m.) (657 m.) (797 m.) $984,837 $1,001,007 $1,187,188. Jan 934,133 947,146 983,855. ..Feb... 1,114,508 1,099,507 1,072,293 1,041,975 (800 771.) ..Year.. 6,114,566 — Railway. 1865. EARNINGS OF PRINCIPAL RAILROADS. Chicago Sc Northwestern Chicago and Bock Island. 1864. 1865. QUA** 1S66. ^-Cleveland .. 6u,ows 92*715 61,770 87,830 100,8j8 84,462 — — - THE CHRONICLE 17,1866.] November 633 RAILROAD, CANAL, AND MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. Stock Companies. Marked thus (*) are leased and have fixed incomes. roads, Railroad. Alton and St Louis* Atlantic & Great Western do I out- j standing. I Dividend. Periods. 50 Catawissa* do preferred Central of New Jersey Cheshire (preferred) 50 .100 100 Chicago and Alton 100 do preferred —100 Chicago Burlington aud Quincy.100 Chicago and Great Eastern 100 Chicago, Iowa and Nebraska*.. .100 Chicago and Milwaukee* 100 Chicago and Northwestern 100 do „ 1,150.000 2,200,00 Feb. & Aug 10,685,940 Quarterly. 2,085,925 Jan. and Juiy 1,783,200 Mar and Sep 2,425,400 Mar and Sep. 10,193,010 May & Nov. 4,390,000 1,000,000 Jan and 2,250,000 13,160,927 pref. .100 12,994,719 do New York and New Haven 100 New York and Harlem 50 : do nreferred 50 New York Provmence & BostonlOO Ninth Avenue 100 Northern of New Hampshire.. .100! Northern Central 50 North Pennsylvania 50 Norwich and Worcester 100 Oct.. .1% 100 2,494,900 100 13,188,902 April and Oct Oct...4 Washington Branch*... 100 1,050,000 April and Oct Oct...5 Bellefontaine Line 100 4,434,250 Feb. and Aug Feb.. 3 997,112 Belvidere, Delaware 100 600,000 Quarterly. :)cY.V.i% Berkshire* —100 250,000 June & Dec. June.2% Blossburg and Corning* 50 Boston, Hartford and Erie 100 8,500,000 Boston and Lowell 500 1,830,000 Jan. and July •July. .4 Boston and Maine 100 4,076,974 Jan. and July July. .5 Boston and Providence 100 3,160,000 Jan. and July July. .5 145% Boston and Worcester 100 4,500,000 Jan. andJuly July..5 Br adway & 7th Avenue 1 0 2,100,000 Jan. and July July. .5 492.150 Brooklyn Central 100 10 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. .3% Brooklyn City 360,000 Brooklyn City and Newtown.. .100 850,000 Jan. andJuly July. ,3>£ Buffalo, New York, and Erie*.. 100 Buffalo and State Line 100 2,200,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug. .5 Camden and Amboy 100 4.988,180 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 5 135% 378,455 Camden and Atlantic 50 do do 682,600 preferred.. 50 681,665 Jan. andJuly July .3% 60 Cape Cod Atlantic & St. Lawrence* Baltimore and Ohio 55% Oct... 2% 129% Sep... 5 Nov. 5 140 57 130 H3 132 51 % 51% 74% 63.3% 74% Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific.100 6,500.000 April and Oct Oct.. .5 106% 1U7 Cincinnati and Chicago Air LinelOO 1,106,125 Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton.100 3,000,000 Apr and Oct. Oct...5 470,000 Cincinnati,Hamilton & Chicago.100 Cincinnati and Zanesville 100 2,000,000 Cleveland, Columbus, & Cincin.100 6,000,000 Feb.and Aug Aug. .4 11?. 113% Cleveland & Mahoning* 50 1,036,000 May & Nov. Nov..4 Cleveland, Painesville & Ashta.100 5,000,000 Jan. and July July. .5 Cleveland and Pittsburg 50 5,403,910 Jan. and July Jan. ’65 5 88% 88% :i4 Cleveland and Toledo 50 4,841,600 April and Oct Oct.. .8 114% Columbus & Indianapolis Cent.100 Quarterly. Oct... 2% Columbns and Xenia*. 50 1,490,800 Jan. and July July. .5 DO Concord 50 1.500,000 viay aud Nov Nov 4 Concord and Portsmouth 100 350,000 Jan.and July July..3% 500,000 Coney Island and Brooklyn.... .100 Connecticut and Passumpsic.. 100 392,900 do do pref. 100 1,255,200 Jan. and July July. .3 Connecticut River 100 1,591,100 Jan. and July July. .4 |111% 112 Covington and Lexington 100 1,582,169 Dayton and Michigan 100 2,384,931 Delaware* 50 406,132 Jan. and July Jan.. .3 Delaware, Lacka., & Western 50 10,247,060 Jan. and July July. .5 I ••• 155 Des Moines Valley 100 1,550,050 Detroit and Milwaukee 100 952,350 do do pref. ....100 1,500,000 Dubuque and Sioux City 100 1,751,577 Mar 7s.. do do pref. 100 1,982,180 March Eastern, (Mass) 100 3,155.000 Jan.and July July. .4 I .... 112 Eighth Avenue, N. Y* 100 1,000,000 Quarterly. July. Elmira, Jefferson, & CanandagualOO 500,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2% I Elmira and Williamsport * 500,000 Jan. andJuly 50 57% do do pref... 50 500,000 Jan. and July July. .3%! 86 79 Erie 100 16,570,100 Feb. & Aug. Feb..4 79% do preferred 84% 100 8,535.700 Feb. & Aug. Feb..3% 84 Erie and Northeast* 50 600,000 Feb. & Aug. Aug..5 115 100 3, M0,000 Jan. and July July. .3 Fitchburg Forty-sec'd St. & Grand St. F’y.100 750,000 April and Oct Apr 5 Hannibal and St. Joseph 54% 56 100 1,900,000 do 66 do pref.. .100 5,253,83f Hartford and New Haven 100 3,000,000 Quarterly. Oct... 3 100 Housatonic 820,000 do preferred 100 1,180,000 May and Nov Nov. .4 l24 * 124% Hudson River 100 6,563,250 April and Oct Oct.. .4 Huntingdon and Broad Top *... 50 494,380 do do pref. 50 190,750 Jan. and juiy July..3%j Illinois Central 100 23,374,400 Feb.and Aug Aug..5 22% 127% Indianapolis and Cincinnati.... 50 1,689,900 Mar. & Sep. Sep .4 89% Indianapolis and Madison 100 412,000 Jan. and July July. .3 do do pref.. 100 407,900 Jan.and July July..4 Vermont and Canada* .100 Vermont and Massachusetts... .100 . Warren* Western (Mass) Western Union (Wis. & Worcester and Nashua .. Delaware Division Delaware and Hudson Delaware and Raritan do do pref. 50 50 50 6,632,250 Lehigh Valley Little Miami— Little Schuylkill* Long .-. 50 50 50 Island Louisville and Frankfort 50 Louisville and Nashville 100 Louisville.New Albany & Chic.100 Macon and Western 100 McGregor Western*. 100 Maine Central 100 Marietta and Cincinnati 50 do do 1st pref. 50 do do 2d pref.. 50, Manchester and Lawrence 100 Michigvu Central 100 i,141*650 Jan. and 317,050 January July July..5} Jan...2 June.3 158 115 159 :i» 50 1,025.000 Feb. and Ang Aug..5 Union West Branch and 50 2,7S7.000 Susqnehanna.100 1,100,000 Jan. and July Jan.. .5 Wyoming Valley 50 750,000 Quarterly. Sept. .4 Miscellaneous. Coal.—American 25 50 lOft .100 100 Ashburton Consolidation Central Cumberland Pennsylvania Spring Mountain Spruce Hill 50 50 lo .; wilkesbarre lftft 100 Gas.—Brooklyn Citizens (Brooklyn)... Harlem Jersey City & 114% Manhattan 25 2ft 50 H,boken.... 2ft 2.000,000 Feb.and Aug Aug.... .100 50 50 4,000,000 1,000,000 May and Nov May 750.000 Williamsburg. Improvement.—Canton 100.(16} pit) 4,500,000 Boston Water Power Brunswick City 100 1,000.000 5 300,000 100 12,000,000 Cary (Boston) Telegraph.—American 150 2,800,000 100 New York 112 1,500,000 Feb.aud Aug Aug..3% 67 69 2,000,000 6,000,000 55% 2,000,000 Tan. and July Jan.. .5 68% 5,(XX),(XXI 3,200,(XX Quarterly. Oct... 5 155 1,250,000 Jan. andJuly Jan..10 1,000, CKX Jan. aud July Jan...5 68% 69 2,175,(XX' Apr. and Oci l.-AMl IHH Feb. and Aug Ang..... 1,000,000 Jan. and July July. .4 644,000 1,000,00(1 50 4,000,000 Jan. and july July. .5 Metropolitan 76 2,800,000 June and Dec June .4 25 1,575,903 June 25 8,223,595 ...... 50 1.633.350 Feb. and 100 10,000,000 Feb. aud 100 2,528,240 Feb.and Wyoming Valley Oct.. .i% I Quarterly. I Oct... 2% |! 34 4,518,900 do 123 preferred 100 1,175,000 Feb. and Aug Aug..5 Schuylkill Navigation (consol.). 50 1,908,207 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 6$. 64% £5 do preferred. 50 2,888,805 Feb. aud Ausr Aug..6 72% Susquehanna and Tide-Water.. 50 2,051,000' 30% • 516,573 Feb. and Aug Aug. ..2 8,572,400 Jan. and July July. .5 2,646,100 Jan. and July July. .2 j 72 1,852,715 Quarterly. Aug. .2 ( 55% 1,109,594 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2 5,527,871 Feb. and Aug Aug. .3% 2,800,000 1,500,000 Apr and Oct I April.3 105 795.360 Aug Aug. .3 Aug Aug..8 Aug Aug. 10 50 5,104.050 May and Nov May. .5 Lehigh Navigation 500,000 Lexington and Frankfort 75 Morris (consolidated) * Quarterly. Oct...3 117 63 2,S60,000 Jan. and July July.'.l% 1,40S,300 Jan. and July July.. 3 100 5,627,700 Jan. and July July. .5 146% 148* Ill.) Chesapeake and Ohio .... Jeffersonville ;... 50 1,997,309 Joliet and Chicago* 100 1,500,000 Kennebec and Portland (new).. 100 Lackawanna and Bloomsburg.. 50 835,000 May. 5 July..4 July. .4 50 Canal. Chesapeake and Delaware .. * . Wrightsville,York& Gettysb’g* 50 .. * 5,000.000 Irregular 5,085,050 Jan. and July 1,500,000 Jan. and July 1,50S.000 Quarterly. . July|July. .5 June & Dec.lJu. p'd. Bid. Aak Last . 133 108% 109 113 131 Periods. FRIDAY 110 3,068,400 May and Nov May3A4j Quarterly. Oct...2 76 3,150,150 2,83S,600 Jan. and July July. .5 76 Ogdensburg & L. Champlain.. .100 3,077,000 do 103 preferred. 100! 356,400 Apr. and Oct Oct. .4 Ohio and Mississippi 31% 31% 100 19,822,85 do Jan .7 82 preferred.. 100 2,960,500 Januarv. Old Colony and Newport.. ^.. .100 3,609,600 Jan. and July July..4 106% Oswego and Syracuse 5ft 482.400 Feb. and Aug Aug..4 Panama (aud Steamship) 100 7,00ft000 Quarterly, Oct...6 265 270 Pennsylvania 50 20,(XX).tXX) May and Nov Nov. .4 111% 113% 218,100 Philadelphia and BaltimoreCehtlOO Jan. andJuly Jan...3 63 * Philadelphia and Erie* 50 5,069,450 Philadelphia and Reading 114% I 50 20,240,073 Jan.and Ju'y July..5 126 Phila., Germant’n, & Norrist’n* 50 1,476,300 Apr. and Oct Oct. ..5 Phila., Wilmington & Baltimore 50 8,973,300 Quarterly. Oct...5 314 Pittsburg and Connellsville 50 1,774,623 Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne & ChicagOlOO 9,312,442 Quarterly. Oct... 2% 107% 107% Portland^ Saco, & Portsmouth. 100 1,500,000 June and Dec June.3 Providence and Worcester 100 1,71X1,000 Jan. and July July. .4 Raritan and Delaware Bay.... .100 2,360,700 Rensselaer & Saratoga consol*. 100 800, (XX) April and Oct Oct.'. .4% Saratoga and Whitehall .!C0 500, (XX) April and Oct Oct. .3 Troy, Salem & Rutland 100 800,000 April and Oct Oct.. .3 Rome, Watertown & Ogdensb’glOO 1,991,900 Jan. and July July. .5 Rutland and Burlington 100 2,233,370 St. Louis, Alton, &'TerreHautel00 2.300,000 do do prcf.100 1,700,000 Annually. May. .7 St. Louis, Jacksonville & Chic* 100 Sandusky, and Cincinnati 100 2,989,09ft do 73 do 393,073 Feb. and Aug Aug. .3 pref.100 Saudusky, Mansfield & NewarklOO 802,571 Saratoga and Hudson ltiver.... 100 1,020,000 Schuylkill Valley* 570,050 Jan. and July July.. 2% 50 Second Avenue (N. Y.). 100 650,000 Apr. and Oct Sliamokin Valley & Pottsville*. 50 869,45ft Feb. and Aug Aug.. 2 Sixth Avenue (N. Y.) 125 750,CKX 100 Quarterly South Carolina 100 5,S19,275 Syracuse, Binghamton & N. Y.100 1,200,130 Terre Haute & Indianapolis.... 50 1,929,150 Jan. and July July. .6 Third Avenue (N. Y.) 217 100 1,170,000 Quarterly. Toledo, Peoria, and Warsaw.. .100 1,71X1,000 do do let pref.100 1,700,000 do do 2d pref.100 1,000,000 48 Toledo, Wabash and Western.. 50 2.442.350 do do preferred. 50 984,700 May and Nov Nov. 3% Tioga.* 100 125,000 Jan. and July July.. 3% 100 Troy and Boston 607,111 Troy and Greenbiteh* 100 274,400 June and Dec Dec. .3% Utica and Black River .100 811,660 Jan. and July Jan. .4 60 July. .2% Sep.. .5 Dividend. Companies.^ ; | Stock Marked thus (*) are leased roads,! outand have fixed incomes. standing. Lastp’d. Bid. Ask 153,000' Quarterly. r100 50 11,522,150 i 50 1,919,000 preferred PRIDAY. Jan. and July July. .5 j uly 20 53% 54% 32 33 United States 100 3,000,000 Jan. andJuly July. 1,447,060 Western Union 2,029,778 100 28,450,000 50% 50% Quarterly. Western Union, Russ. Ex..100 10,000,000 97 41 6,586,135 Mar. and Sep Sep..3$ Quarterly. 100 10,000,000 75% 76% 4,051,744 Mar.and Sep Sep..3s Express.—Adams Quai terly. Aug 3., American 1,000,000 May and Nov Nov. .4 500 3,000,00ft 114% 115 81% Quarterly. Aug. 3.. Merchants’Union 6,9*2,866 Jan. and July July. 5 113 113)4 100 20,000,000 Michigan Southern and N. Ind.,100 9.381.800 Feb. and Aug Aug. .3%) 85% 88% United States. .100 6,000,000 Quaiteriy. Aug.3... 80 85 do do 187 guaran.100 1,089,700 Feb. and Aug Aug. .6 Wells, Fargo & Co 100 10,000,000 Milwaukee and Prairie Du ChienlOO 3,014,000 Ttansit.—Central American 23 100 4,000,000 do do lstpref.100 3,082,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 4 300 1,000,000 .Nicaragua . do do 2d pref. 100 1,014,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. .3%' ion 100 'Steamship.—Atlantic Mail 10ft 8,000,000 Quarterly. Milwaukee and St. Paul 100 1,000,000 Pacific Mail I 69% 58% 100 7,000,000 Quarterly. Sep.. .5 240% 2 0 do Union Navigation 100 2,400,000 Feb. and Aug Aug. 3% 70% 71 preferred 108 100 2,000,000 Mar and Sep. Sep.. 10 111% Mine Hill & SGhuylkill Haven.. 50 3,708,200 Jan. and Trust.—Farmers’ Loan <fc Trust. 25 1,000,000 Jan. and July July..4 128 July July. .4 1116 118 Morris and Essex 50 3,000,000 Feb. and Ang Aug3%*. 100 1,000,000 Feb. and Ane Aug..... New York Life & Trust Nashua and Lowell 100 Union Trust 300 1,000,000 Jan. and July July .4 600,009 May and Nov Nov. .4 1125 !105‘’ Naugatuck loo 1,100,000 Feb. and Aug Aug.. 7 United States Trust 300 1,000,000 Jan. add July July 5 New Bedford and Taunton 100 500,000 June and Dec June.4 Mining.—Mariposa Gold 100 5,097,600 13% Wow Haven, N. Lond., & Ston .100 738,538 29 Mariposa Gold Preferred.. .100 5,774,40« New Haven and Northampton.. 100 1,010,000 25 1,000,000 Quartz Hill Gold New Jersey 50 4.395.800 Feb. and Ang 4ug. .5 1130 6 i" 52% Quicksilver .100 10,000,000 Jan. and July Jan.. 5 New London Northern 100 700 000 Mar and Sep. Rutland Marble 25 3,000,000 May andNpv. Nov 5 I8epf.. 4 few York and Boston Air Line, 1QC 788,047 25 2,500,000 Saginaw I. S. & M Tew York Cantrtl ,i00, 24,691,000 jrefc.and4TwjAu£..3 {smith <feParmelee Gold., 29 2,500.000 111% I , . .. . . r m THE CHRONICLE [November 17,1866. RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS INTEREST, DESCRIPTION. J Amount N. B.—■The of name placed aft r the outstand¬ Company shews the total ing. ~ j 1,000,000 7 Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.) do Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. do do Y.)\ I 800,000 Mortoage (S. F.) of 1834 do do do do do do do “ 700,000 j 1,225,000 i do Belvidere Delaware ($2,193.000): 1st Mort. (guar. C. and A 2d Mort. do 3d Mort. do 433,000 589,500 150,000 6 Mortage.............:.;;;.; ^ 3^,0001 Sinking Fund Bonds Boston and Lowdl ($400,000): .j Mortgage Bonds Buffalo, N. Y. and Erie ($2,395,000) 1st Mortgage 2d Mortgage :j Buffalo and state Line ($ 1,200,000): 1st Mortgage Erie and Northeast Camden and Amboy ($19,264,463): Dollar Loaus Dollar Loan Consoldated ($5,000,000) Loan Camden and Atlantic ($933,000): 1st Mortgage 2d do Catawlssa ($141,000): 1st mortgage | 101 ; Sep'1890 93 | Feb. & Aug 1885 'May & Nov. 1863 96 89 87 90 89 ! Quarterly. 1915 84 SiX Augjl885 |Feb. & 6,000,000 1,250,000 Mortgage May & Nov 475,000 850,000 7 & D vidend Bonds 8 |1875 do Cleveland and Toledo July! 1835 103 2,081.009 7 ! Jan. & 300,000 7 ! do * 1886 Dayton and Michigan ($3,732,43(0: Mortgage do do Toledo Depot, Bonds Delaware ($500,600) : l«t Mortgage, guaranteed Lacka. dk Western ($3,491,500): 1st Mortgage, sinking fand Sd do .*.... Laakawanna and Western ■ $ M Valley i ($*,088,000) SOBOIlHIIIH lit* till j 800,000 ! J’ne & Dec. 1876 i j 270,500 i Mortgage Bonds : 283,000 8 ; Ap’l 500,001 Jan. A 104 900.000 .wyw g do July 1875 100 • •»* Jan. & July do April & Oct 1888 1893 72 75 1881 1883 Jan. & do 1876 1876 July 1877 Aug 1869 1869 do J’ne & Dec. 1885 May & Nov 1870 April & Oct 1875 Feb. & May & Nov. 1875 do 1867 Feb. «fe Aug 102X104 io4”i;;; 99' 1875 105 106 1875 1890 do do 600,000 364,000 ana Cine. 500,000 500,000 Jan. & July 1882 800,000 Jan. & July 1874 800,000 230,000 250,000 April & Oct do do 1870 1861 1862 July 1866 903,000 1,000,000 Jan. & May & Nov. July 1872 1869 May & Nov. 1873 1,300,000 ' .... May & Nov 1883 960,000 225,000 July May & Nov. 1870 1890 1,804,000 300,56c Feb. & Aug 1883 do 1883 2,362,800 300,000 Feb. & Ang May & Nov. 1892 1888 Jan. 1885 1,092.900 314,100 Feb. &Aug. ‘90-’90 June & Dec. ’70-’71 Feb. 68 Apr. & Oct. 74->75 399,000 S7 &Aug. 1874 18- 1,234,000 May & Nov. 2.242.500 4.253.500 Feb. & 1882 110 4 Indiana($8,537,175) 1885 1877 do Feb. & Aug 1868 97 855,000 >,253,500 6"'1,000 Ang 59-72 April & Oct May & Nov. 402,000 Jan. & 4,600,000 do 97 96 July 1891 Jan. & 1,500,000 July 1893 April & Oct 1803 93* 94 79 < Mortgage, ....... lit Mortgage, linking fand &July 681,000 ( do Jan. & 98 April & Oct 1877 1,000,000 ($4,733,800) do . do Morris and Essex: ^ 1873 1870 500.000 1st Land Grant 2d April & Oct July 1866 do 1,465,000 do Mississippi and Missouri River 10Q May & Nov. 1881 187,000 Mortgage, Eastern Division... do Jan. & 640,(MX) Mortgage do Jan. & ($1,362,284) 1st Mortgage, sinking fund 2d do Goshen Air Line Bonds Milwaukee dk Pt'alrie du Chien; 1st Mortgage, sinking fnnd Milwaukee and St. Paul : 1st Mortgage 100e w 0 7 July - . Sinking F'nd do 18— J*U, dk July; 1875 M>h * Rep l881 Jan, dk July 1871 ... !Jan. & July 1870 lApril & Oct 1868 Jan. & Mortgage, (interest ceased) Mich. S. dk N. 2d 1,500,00» 600,000 i 80 $1,1*'0.000 Loan Bonds i 186 93 70 $400,000 Loan Bonds 1st Mortgage (P.& K.RR.) Bonds.. & Oct. 1904 do 98X. 99 & July 1870 do 1st Mortgage Maine Central: 95 78 Jan. & July 1867 do 11881 2,622,000 642,00 169,50 <102 : do ) Bonds.. Mem] his A Charles'on: Mortgage bonds. Michigan Central, ($7,463,489) Dollar, convertible 96X: M’ch & Sep 1878 250,000 100 100 Aug 1883 Joliet andN. Indiana ($800,000): 1st mortgage Kennebec and Portland ($1,280,000): 1st Mortgage 2d do 3d do La Crosse dk Milwaukee ($1,903.000): 2d i 100 Mortgage McGregor Western: 95 93 ;June & Dec M’ch & Sep 1879 1883 1880 1888 1875 6,837,000 2,896,500 2,563,000 .. 1,129,000 7 M’ch & Sep! 1873 do ; 1875 1,619,500 7 1,103,124 6 Jan. & July 1892 convertible Sep 8,890,000 110,000 1,907,000 192,000 523,000 . Bonds Louisville and Nashville ($3,297.000): 1st Mortgage 1st Memphis Branch Mortgage Marietta d: Cincinnati ($3,688,385): 1st Mortgage, Scioto and Hocking Valley mort 900.000 7 :Feb. & Aug 1880 do 1874 500,000 7 Sunbury and Erie Bonds Cleveland dk Pittsburg ($3,880,848): 2d Mortgage M’ch & do Feb. & Mortgage Extension Ang;1873 do ; & July 1873 July 1883 Long Island ($932,(X)0): 244.200 7 1 M’ch & Sep i 1864 648.200 |jan. 500,000 500,000 sinking fund Little Schuylkill ($960,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund Jan. & July 1890 'Feb. 7 S3 1888 191,000 Lehigh Valley ($1,477,000): 1st Mortgage ($1,400,000): 1st Mortgage May & Nov; 1893 : jAp’l & Oct 1,037,500 1,000,000 Little Miami 1885 1,300,000 ! 7 do ($2,746,2801; Sinking Fund Mortgage Mortgage Bonds of 1866 Con iccticut River ($250,000) : In Mortgage ' Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($250,000): 1st Mortgage umberlani Valley ($270,500): 1st 2d 1st 2d 1880 5C0,000| io 94 Jan. & July! 1870 do 1896 1.397.000 7 Jan. & 72X Joliet and Chicago ($500,000): 1st Mortgage, sinking fund July 1898 1885 1872 1874 Aug July Jeffersonville ($621,000): jjan. & do July Jan. & Feb. & Jan. & 1st Mortgage Indianapolis <fc Madison ($640,000): 1st Mortgage 110 72 ; 927,000 Mortgage Indianapolis ^ 3,600,000 756,000 2,000,000 484,000 Cle .,Pain. <k Ashtabula ($1,500,000): Jan. & July 1883 I do 11883 M’ch & 1863 1S94 Indiana Central ($1,254,500) : 100 1,250.000 New Bonds Cincinnati <£ Zanesville ($1,300,000) : 1st Mortgage /. Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($475,000): 1st Mortgage Cleveland dk Mahoning ($1,752,400): 1st Mortgage 1st 2d 8d Nov.! 1877 2,000,000 7 Mortgage (C. & It. I) do (new) Cine., Ham. & Dayton ($1,629,000): do 2d July do 700,000 1st Mortgage 2d do Illinois Central ($13,231,000) : 1st Mortgage, convertible do let Sterling Julyj'75-’80 5,600,000 7 ' Ap’l & Oct 1895 1st 1st 3,437,750 633,600 Huntingdon dk Broad 7bp($l,436,082): 2d till 1S7C 1,000,000 1,350,000 Mortgage do 2d do 3d do Convertible 1870 1S75 July 1893 Jan. & 927,000 6 1st Mortgage 2d do sinking fund Housalonic ($191,000) : 1st Mortgage • Hudson River ($7,762,840):_ 1st 1st jAp 1 & Oct. 1883 680,000 Chicago, Bock Island cfc P ciftc: 3d 4th Jan. & 3,169;000 Mortgage couv. j May & 356.000 Mortgage ($927,000): Redemption bonds 2.400,000 1,100,000 Interest Bonds 2d 3d 95 96X 1876 1,963,000 7 Feb. & Ang 1882 1,086,000 7 May & Nov. 1875 ........ Illinois and Southern Iowa 519,000 incouvert.. do Hartf., Prov. dk FtshkUl ($1,936,940): Aug! 1890 May & Nov' 1890 M’ch & Sep: 1865 600,000 1st Mortgage (consolidated! Chicago cft Northwest. ($12,020,483): Preferred Sinking Fund 2d 1st Ang 149,000 rj ; Jan. (ind. in C. dk N. W.): sinking fund New Dollar Bonds Feb. & Jan. & Feb. & 'April & Oct Hartford dk New Haven ($927,000): 1st Chicago and Milwaukee ($2,000,000): Consol. S. F. Bonds, Extension Bonds May*& Nov. ($149,600): Harrisburg & Lancaster ($700,000): 1,500,000 Chicago and Gl. Eastern ($5,000,000): 1st 99 7,336,000 Bonds, (dated Sept. 20,1860! 1st 99 1864 (May & Nov. 1876 Mortgage July 1879 i Feb. & Aug 7 1S75 do 926,500 3,816,582 Great Western, 111. ($2,350,000): 1st Mortgage West. Division do do East. 2nd do do do Hannibal & St. Joseph ($7,177,600): Land Grant Mortgage Convertible Bonds Feb. & Aug 1882 7 800,000 Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,406): Trust Mortgage (S. F.) convert May & Nov. 4,44',600 convertible do Gal. dk Chic. U. 1st Mortgage, 2d do Grand Junction Ap’l & Oct.; 1866 Jan. & July 1870 7 Ask’d 'O s 3,000,000 4,000,000 6,000,000 convertible Mortgage jl865 1SS9 do do do do do Sterling convertible Aug 1866 2.000,000 7 ; J’ne & Dec. 1877 330,000 7 May & Nov'1872 450,000 800,000 income do 6 ! Jan. & 909,000 600,000 of Cal.: (8,836,000) do 400,000 141,000 Mortgage Bonds Chicago and Alton ($3,619,000): 1st Mortgage (Skg Fund), pref do do do Mortgage Erie and Northeast ! Convertible Ronds Cheshire ($600,000): 1st 2d 1870 490,000 7 Jan. & July 1873 493,000 7 | Ap’l & Oct. 1879 E. Div 2d do Central Pacific Julyj’70-’79 1,700.000 6 |Feb. & Aug; 1883 887,000 6 May & Nov. 1889 4,209,400 6 i J’ne & Dec. 1893 Mortgage VV. Div do 200,000 400,000 7 1st Mortgage Central of New Jersey ($1,509,000): 1st Mortgage 2d do Central Ohio ($3,673,000): 1st 1st Feb. & 7 6 6 ! 500,000 100 ;May& Nov., 1871 Boston, Cone. dk Montreal ($1,050,000): 1st 1st 2d 3d 4 th 5th J’ne & Dec.! 1867 M’ch & Sep| 1885 Feb. & Aug11877 1,000,000 500,(KK) Blossburg and Corning ($150,000): Mortgage Bonds ' 11895 Oct.! 1885 Ap’l <fe Jan. & do g. Payable. . JaApJuOcll867 2,500,000 Mortgage Mortgage, convertible $2,500,000 do 1,000,000 Detroit, Monroe db Toledo ($734,000): 1st Mortgage 734,000 Dubuque and Sioux City ($900,000): 1st Mortgage, 1st section. 300,000 1st do 2d section 600,000 Eastern, Mass. ($1,798,600) : Mortgage, convertible 420,000 do do 739,200 East Pennsylvania ($598,000): Sinking Fund Bonds : 598,000 Elmira dk Williamsport ($1,570,000): 1st Mortgage 1,000,000 Erie Railway ($22,370,982): Jan. & July 1875 do 11880 tidlefontaine ($1,745,000): 1st 2d ing. 1st Ap’l & Oct J1866 May & Nov.! 1873 1,000,000 1,128,500 1855..... 1S50 1S53 outstand¬ o Railroad : Detroit and Milwaukee ($3,500,000): I Ap’l <fe Oct. j 18-4 988,000 484,000 Sterling Bonds . 1,014,000 :j Baltimore and Ohio ($10,112,584): placed after the Company shows the total Funded Debt. do 1882 do 11879 do 11881 do |1876 Jan. & July! 1883 j 13,858,000 Dollar Bonds name of w Ap’l & Oct. 1877 1,000,000 Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio)\ 4,000,000 do do )j 4.000.000 Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex; 2,000,000 Consolidated Bonds Atlantic dk SL Lawrence ($1,472,000) < sums FRIDAY. *3.2 Amount B.—The 2d $2,500,000 do SA s £ A INTEREST. DESCRIPTION. N. J’ne & Dec.! 1S06 Atlantic dk Gt. Western ($30,000,000):! 1st 2d 1st 2d 1st 2d 1st TJ *3 ; Payable. i Mortgage ("old coupons) ist es ® as Funded Debt. Railroad: Alexandria and Fredericksburg : FRIDAY* ~ 33 o sums BOND LIST. .... , 8,612,000 695,000 $.500,000 Slay * Nov. 1877 1888 do of. Ml 9 • f t t f THE CHRONICLE. 17,1866] November ,M5 zsa± tt± RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued). ... j Description. FRIDAY 3". S'— interest. Amount Description. 5 placed after the name of'outstandCompany show the total Funded! ing. The sums 'U 0 & Debt. 'O Payable. s Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks) Sink. Fund B’ds (assumed debts).. Bonds of August, 1859, convert.... Bonds of 18(35 Neio York and Harlem ($0,098,045); 1st General Mortgage Consolidated Mortgage 3d Mortgage N Icork and New Haven ($'.*,000,000) ; 6 0 0 0 1,898,000 7 004,000, 7 ($5,211,244) ; 7 j ; ($<\000,000). North Pennsylvania ($3, iU5,7S5); Mortgage Bonds Chattel Mortgage Lorth- Western Virginia : 99 j ;April & Oct! do • do do I! II J875 93 j ••• ! 90 Octj 1,500,000 1,000,000 500,000j 600,000 ; Jan. «fe Julvl 1S74 Feb. &. Aug 1S70 7 |Mch & Sept 6 ($575,( 00); | do 1st ;1C2 Philadd., Oermant. & Norristown: Convertible Loan Philadelphia & Reading ($6,900,663): Sterling Bonds of 1830 do do do Dollar Bonds of 1849 do do 1861 do do 1843-4-8-9 Sterling Bonds of 1843. Dollar .' Lebanon Valley Bonds, convertible Philadelphia ana Trenton ($200,000) Bonds, convertible Mortgage Mortgage Loan Pittsburg and Connellsville: 1st Mort. (Turtle Cr. Div.) P'b'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500) 1st Mortgage mortgage. .. Mortgage do Mortgage Raritan and Delaware Bay: lit Mortgage, sinking fund do Convertible Bonds Reading and Columbia: 1st Mortgage Rtr.sselaer <£ Saratoga consolidated; ltd Mort. Rensselaer & Saratoga 1st Mort. Saratoga & Whitt hall.... 1st Mort. Troy, S. & Rut. (guar.) . R. Water, and Ogdens. ($1,00 ,90S) ; . IstMortgage (Potsdam «fc Watert.) do 5 AVatertown & Rome) RuUandand Burlington ($3,257,472) IstMortgage 2d do .... ? . Sacramento Valley: IstMortgage ft JM*?Mton cfe'r,’^.'($6,700,000); SS jjan. 516,000 6 iScmiau’ally & Aug do do & Sept ... ’ ' 73' 1867 550,600 -Tan. <fc July May & Nov. 600,000 I 40 1875 399,300 654,90S 3? 1883 1876 Feb. & 11^#;119 Jan. & Aug 103# July 1873 April & Oct 1878 April & Oct WTl 1875 do 590,000 200,000 Jan. & .uly i do 1890 May & Nov. July 1870 1871 1877 » ... Cent.) : 175,000 1890 2,356,509 Jan. & July 1886 2.000,000 JaAp Ju Oc 1870 1890 1885 800,000 Tan. & July 1878 Mortgage, sinking fund of Pen nsylvania: 041,000 Mch & Sept 1870 | 1st 752,900 * Tuterest'Bonds 96# ... do do 4,375,000 1,699,500 Mortgage Erie 93*1 Mortgage Bonds j Loan of 1871. j! ion of 1884 i . 161,0008 6 j Leldgh Navigation : ($3,081,434). ! Monongahtlu Navigation: Mortgage Bonds Jod. & July do 1865 1808 i Sept 1870 414.15Si 6 Mch & 2,667,276 0 do 93 1S84 182,000 6 Jan. & July 1876 104# 93 989 72# 800,000 800,000 Dec Sept 7 jFeb. & Aug 7 j do Jan, <fe July 1875 Feb. <fc Aug 1881 8,3Q0,QQC Semi au’ally 1804 1870 Mch & Jan. & July May & Nov. 1872 18S2 1870 84 85 1,luO,000 325,000 •Jau. & July do do 1S0j 1878 j 67 1864 I 63 2,500,000 May & Nov. 1883 450,000 Jan. & 1878 j 750,000 Jan. & July 1st Mortgage 1,764,330 do 3 9S0,670 Improvement 586,500 1.000.000 Maryland Loan Coupon Bonds Priority Bonds, Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage. IstMortgage.... Wyoming Valley: 1st Mortgage ^.. Sept July Bonds (guir. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.) and Covington Bridge ; 1st Jan. & 1,500,000 2,000,000 600,000 Jan. & 600 00* do IstMortgage Pennsylvania Coal: Mortgage Quicksilver Mining ; IstMortgage 9d Ho Western Union lit Mortgage Julyj 1684 July ! 18— Jan. & Feb. & Aug 1871 50ft,00f Tuna & Dec July 1873 1879 Ittay 6 Hoy. IbfT April & Oci Mississippi (Roch /.) Bridge: 1st July 1886 Jan. A 1,000,000 Mortgage Bone's ilanposa Mining: 1st Mortgage.. 122# 123# 95 j 1878 Itligcellaiieoiiif: American Dock & Impiovement: 2d 400,000 829,00(1 May & Nov. West Branch and Susquehanna: 1874 1880 1863 1863 690,000 2d Cincinnati do April & Oct 1876 Schuylkill Navigation: j Susquehanna and Tide- Water: 1879 7 & 7 Mch & 750,000 Mortgage Bonds New York: Pennsylvania 1st M ortgage (North Branch).... 1S88 1888 1876 500,000 1,800,000 937,500 July Jan. & 95# ; 90 1890 1880 jjun. i Delaware and Hudson: 1881 1S81 7 1 7 j d> June & Dec* 1861 Jan. & .. ! 1863 1867 do 850,000 Preferred Bonds.. '1 Delaware Division : 400,000 7 'May & Nov. 1890 340,000 Sep. Jan. & July 2,000,000 1,135,000 77 77 • * 188* 1885 1875 1882 Apr. & Oct. May & Nov. 4.319.520 1st Mortgage Bonds Chesapeake and Ohio: Maryland Loan Sterling Bonds, guaranteed 1,438,000 8 Jan. & July 1S75 & Sept do Jan. & July Mar. & 91# 92 1865 1874 25,000 600.000 92# 1912 189* 1,000,000 7 Mch 250,000 140,000 7 | 7 ! 800,000 7 Mch 1875 1875 91 3Loir is. 1912 5,100,000 7 j do 2,000,000 7 [April & Oct 1912 200,000 7 Jan. & July 1881 'Feb. 1870 Canal i 7 1866 Feb. & Aug; 1865 do 18S4 900,000 2,500,000 CJw.sapeake and Delaware : 400,000 6 ;Feb. & Aug 1SS9 5.200,000J July! ; 1st Mortgage .; 2d do Guaranteed (Baltimore) Bonds 07# 93# 1884 & July ($3,500,000) Mortgage York (f- Cumberland (North. 1868 7 Racine and Mississippi (W. Union); 2d |May & Nov. 6 1,000.000 7 500,000 7 Quincy a)id Toledo; 1st Mortgage 1st do do do 1880 18-30 1880 1886 „ Pittsburg and Steubenville : let 2d do • Jan. & 500,000 180,000 .. 1st 1,521,000 0 i 970,800 0 504,000 ‘ 00,000 Sept 650,000 200,000 Dollar Bonds. Western Maryland; 1st Mortgage 1st do , guaranteed... 1805 408,000' 5 Jan. & July 1807 1880 182,400 5 | do 2,850,000 6 April & Oct 1870 106,000 0 [Jan. *fc July 1871 200,000 . Philadd\\ timing. & Baltlmoi'e : 2d do 3d do Akron Branch.: 1st j April & Oct Mch & 300,000 300,000 Sterling (£899,900) Bonds 575,000 7 Jan. & July! 1S76 183,000j 6 Jan. & July 60,000 .. | 1871 1,391,000. 7 June & Dec! 1894 do 2d (no interest).. Vermont and Massachusetts > 1st Mortgnge j Vtim. Cen. & Verm. <£ Can. Bonds Warren ($600,000) : 1st Mortgage (guaranteed) Westchester & Philadelphia ($962,300) 1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon ... do 2d , registered Western (Mass.) (6,209,520): | 1875 1877 1881 1901 1867 do do do Vermont Central 1884 June & Dec j : Troy Union ($(>80,000): Mortgage Bonds 1872 4,980,000 6 'Jan. & July 1880 2,021,000 6 [April & Oct I 1875 Philadelphia and Erie ($13,000,000); 1st Mortgage (Sunbury & Erie).... 1,000,0001 7 j April & Oct 1st do 5,000,000, 6 'April & Oct (general) 2d do 4,000,000 6 (general) let 1875 1875 May & Nov. (Toledo and Wabash).:.. 1,000,000 do 2d do (Wabash and Western).. 1,500,000*7 do Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. & w.) 152,355! 7 Jan. & July Equipment bonds > 600,000; 7 Troy and Boston ($1,452,000): 2d - I do 7 ;Feb & Aug. Jaly 1,180,000 1st Mortgage, convertible }87^ I Jan. & April & Oct 1876 1,400,000 Mortgage 1st Mortgage 2d do 3d do Convertible 6 Jan. & July; do i 1873 o do ; 1885 H do 1885 0 2,283,840 1st I Toledo Wabash and Wed ($6,653,868); | 1st Mort. (Toledo & Wabash) | 1st do (extended) 93 120 !8S7 7 Jan. & July 200,000 ■jj IstMortgage i j Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw 1st Mortgage jj &Jnlyl 1830 300,000,10 April & 1 €2 Jan. & July 1866 Various. 08-74 2.000,000 1,070,000 Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191): |j 1896 |Jan. & July 2,500,000 j 0 ‘Jan. 1,029,000 1st „ 86 700,000 i 7 Feb. & Aug 1872 |; Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1874 j April & Oct 7 Peninsula (Chic. & N. TF.); 2d do 2d do , sterling Phila. and Balt. Central 1st Mortgage 84 77 [April & Oct. 500,000; 7 |; Terre Haute & Indianapolis($G0.0001: • | 1886 102 iFeb. & Angl’ra-’TC 6 340,000 203.600j 1,290,000j H Staten Island: •jj IstMortgage. "0i 98’ 1,500,000; 6 ;Jan. & July bred. 2,500,000 6 pan. & July 1885 ~ T'“ D- T ’ 1,150,000 Mortgage Pennsylvania ($10,750,124) 1st Mortgage 3 • • '70-'80j cfo 5 1,000,000, 7 Feb. Aug 1900 May & Nov 3875 do 1j Sandusky, Man&eld and Newark: |l IstMortgage 91 j: Secernd Avenue: ••j! 1st Mortgage Ogdensburg and L. Cham. ($1.49 4,COO); 1st Mortgage 1,494,000; 7 'April & Oct 1809 101 Ohio and Mississippi ($3,650,000); 1st Mortgage 2,900,000! 7 Jan. & July 1S72 \ 1874 ! 2d do 750,000 7 | " ( W.D.) do Oswego & Rome ($350,000). 3o0,00C! 7 jMay & Nov 1916 ! IstMortgage (guar by R. W. & O.) Oswego and Syracuse ($311,500); 1st Mortgage 225,000 7 !Jan. & July I Pacific, (S. W Branch); 1,139,000 6 JJan. & July '72-’87| Mortgage, guar, by Mo Panama: 1st Mortgage sterling 410,000 April & Oct 1870 ! do •o 1894 1894 7-!M!iy&Nov, 8C0,0C0 7 Jan. & July •*[! 2d • j 1808 1,600,000! 7 100,000! 300,000, Mortgage (guar, by Baltimore). do (guar, by B. & O. RR.) do ( do do do ) do (not guaranteed) Norwich and Worcester ($5S0,000); General Mortgage Steamboat Mortgage !S65 3,000,000 7 May & Nov.! l,000,OGCj 7 :Fcb. & Aug! 1893 149,400 Plain Bonds North Missouri: 1st General Mortgage 1,700,000 7 7 \ fan dusky. Layton and Cincinnati: : 1st Mortgage (extended) j . 2d i 2d do Si. Paul & Paiific of Minn ; ! 1st Mortgage (tax fr- e) • 232,CdO' G ! i Mortgage 1st 2d * E& do 2,S00,000 income....... • 1,000,,(.00 7 N. Y.fProt. and Boston ($232,000) ; do jMay & Nov 1SS3 94 |June & Dec 1687 i'O ‘May & Nov. 1883 87 87 1SS3 ; do | Shamokin I7, d; PottsviUe ($791,597) ; IstMortgage Feb. & Aug 1870 100# 107 1S76 South Carolina: ! do 1870 do V"' i! Sterling Loan Domestic Bonds. ! 0,917,598 2,925.000 105,000! 603,000, .... Mortgage preferred "St. Louis, Jacksonville tfe Chicago: ; 1 st Mortgage 1869 July! 1,088. :,C06 6 Mortgage Bonds Mortgage Bonds 2d 3d 3d 2d ! | Jan. & July 140,000 6 Jan. & ($ 14,627,448); Mortgage Sinking Fund Northern New Hampshire ($151,400) 2d 485,000 6 Fob. & Aug 1873 Premium Sinking Fund Bonds Bonds of October, 1803 (renewal).. Real Estate Bonds 1st 1876 July j 0 j'Tan. & Jul) $500,000 7 Mortgage New Jersey ($805,000); Fei ry Bonds of 1S53 ... . New London Northern ($140,000)); let General Mortgage Northern Central State Loans e Payable. Debt 450,000; 7 [M’chA; Sep 1861 l£CS 2u0,00C ($650,000); N. Haven <fc Northampton 1st 7 IJan. & 30O,fH)O ... .. New York Central T3 eums placed after the name ofWtetandCompany shows the total Funded ing. Railroad.: New Haven <k N. London ($760,000); 1st Mortgage 1st FRIDAY Amount The an Railroad: Naugatuck ($300,000) ; 1st Mortgage (convertible) do 1 JU interest. 600,000 Telegiviphr convertible..♦,,., 12,000,000 7 -8 July 1881 i [November 17, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. 636 INSURANCE STOCK LIST. PETROLEUM STOCK LIST. Marked thus (*) Hammond par Hamil tonMcClintock Ivanhoe par 10 5; 10; Bradley Oil 2! Brooklyn New York & Newark. 10 5! . Oceanic Pit Hole Creek 10 10 10; 251 Rynd Farm ’so 10 i / 10 Second National 10! Shade River, 5j Union 10' United Pe’tl’m F’ms— 2 United States 10 5 30 10 Venango (N. Y.) Empire City 5 Excelsior First National Germania Great Republic G’t Western Consol 5 5 5 23 20 5 75 Bid.! Askd 200.000 25 25 17 300,000 200,000 Bid.; Askd 100 100 Clinton Columbia* Lafayette (Alb’y).lOO Corn Exchange... 50 Croton 100 5 00 Albany & Boston... ....25% Algomah 3 Allouez 1% American 1 i 17 ! Amygdaloid Anita Arnold Atlas Aztec 1 2 4% ) ... 13% 11 50 Bohemian Boston Caledonia Canada Central 17%; 2% 87% 12 00 70: 1 0>! 43 00 4 25 5 00 — .. — 5 4 Copper Creek. .— 1 .... 2% 3% 1 .... Davidson Dev n Dorchester. 1 j 1% 1% 3% Dudley 5 62 1% .... 10 Everett . . . . . j .... 1 .. Evergreen 12 75 ... 4 25 30 15 1ft Oft .. .10% Princeton. Providence i 6% , .. St. Louis j St. Mary’s ..5% ... 5 Salem %i ... 2 'Seneca 1 ! 7 00 2 Sharon %! ..••! ! Sheldon & Columbian.21 17% 18 63 18 75 j .. .! South Pewabic 1 1% j 2 2'i 2 00 2% 1 00 1 50 South Side Star i 1% .. 11% 50( .... — S3 3 00 'uperior 8 ! • o; Toltic .2' ! % / 5 I 2 75 3 00 Tremont 1% ! Victoria I >%' 19 39 00 42 00 Vulcan 6 | I 10 Washington 1 li *25 13 66 West Minnesota....!.. 2%j 33 s% French Creek. 50 03 . ! 6 38 6 50 1 8 25 8 50 .12 3 1 ... • • .. i . . . .. . .... .... .... .... .. * .... Hanover Hilton Hope .... Hudson Hulbert Humboldt .... Hungarian Huron Indiana Isle Royale* Keweenaw Knowlton * 1 i ....! 5 ..i . 1 4 25 8 Winona 3 Winthrop 4% 25. 2 00 Capital $1,000,001, in 20,009 shares. t Capital $500,009, in 100,000 shares. Capital $200,000, In 20.00 * shares. Capitil of Lake Superior comninies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares. GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST. Companies. Companies. Albin par Hiawatha H bbard IT Oman — Alpine 10 American Flag Atlantic & Pacific Bates & Baxter Benton Bob Tail Boscobel Silver Bullion Consolidated. 10 — Burroughs. in Church union Col. G.& S. Ore separating Consolidated Colorado... — 8 Consolidated Gregory... 100 11 05’U 25 5 75! 5 Corydon Crozier 50| Downieville 1 20! 25 Eagle 10 Echla First National —1 Fall River —I .. — — • — Gilpin 50 —; —I Gunnell 95 20 I0i 06 00 23 30 11 50 70 2< 10 :»« 10 Keystone Silver Kip & Buell — G. & 8. Ore separating.. Gold Hill par 40 L iCrosse 5 — ... Bid. Askd 1! >;>e — 50 60 Liberty Liebig 19 50 i Mill C-cek Montana Montauk.. New York 50 .. J 25 I 10 Nye 891 11, Oak Hi 1 Ohio & Colorado G.&S. 15 40 Ophir Pacific. 50 bO 55 ... People’s G. & S. of Cal. Quartz Hill 001 Rocky Mountain Smith & Parmelee Texas Vanderburg Vasquez 50 2 00 12 1 18 45 7 00 3 00 5 00 .... 20 10 25 10 50 15 25 75; 77 ..J 25 Bid. Askd Copakelron par 5 Foster Iron Lake Superior Iron Bucks County Lead Denbo Lead ' Manhan Lead Phenix Lead Redwood Lead ' . .. .. . .. 100 5 4 f t .... t » Bid. Askd Tudor Lead par — Saqrinaw. L.8.AM..*.. 25 Wallkill Lead — Wallace Nickel .. ... — ... — .. — ... .... mr" e_ 25 Long Island Peat .... 1 70 — Rutland Marble * 2 65 — Russell File Savon de Terre 5 — 4 75 10 1 3 30 3 8ft 10 03 95 80 Ang ’66...5 Seg. ’66...5 Aug. ’65. .4 Dec. ’60...5 Ang. ’66. .5 Aug. ’66; .5 July’64 . 1.50 .4 July’66.10 Aug. 5 p. s. Aug. ’66 5 July’04.3% July ’66 .5 Aug. ’i»6. 5 duly’66 ..5 167' . . . . .. . 245,984 March and Sep 159,721 Jan. and July, do 279,864 do 161.252 200,010 150,000 40 280,000 50 150,000 300,000 150,000 200,000 100 25 Long Island (B’kly) .50 lot’ Sep. ’66.. .4 July ’66 5 July ’65 .5 July ’66 ..5 July ’66 ..5 July ’65 .4 July ’66. .4 . do do do do Jan. ’66. .5 1,182,779 Julv ’66 ..5 do 704,303 do 282,35 July’66 ..5 197.633 do July’66 ..5 150,135 do July ’66 ..5 do 211,178 July ‘66 4 do 1,322,469 July’66...5 do 228.644 July’65 .10 do 1,192,303 July ’65 ..5 do Julv ’66 .5 150,646 do 216,184 July ’66..8 do 235,518 July’66 ..6 311.976 do July ’65.. 6 244,066 Jan. and July. July ’66.. 6 222,199 Feb. and Aug. Ang.’66...5 1,175,665 Jan. and July, July’66 ..6 do 601,701 July’66 ..5 346,426 129.644 260,264 1,000,000 500,000 200,000 200,000 150,000 200,000 eio.ooc 200,000 . Metropolitan * t... 100 1,000,000 Montauk (B’lyn). ..50 150,000 Nassau (B’klyn)... 50 150,000 National 7% 200,000 New Amsterdam.. 25 300,000 N. Y. Equitable 3 35 j 210,000 N.Y.Fire and Mar. 100' 200,000' Niagara 50 1,000,000 North American*. 50 500,000 North River 25 350,000 385,489 April and Oct. Apr. ’66..4 Pacific do 25 July ’66 ..5 200,000 229,729 Park do 100 200,000 194,317 July’66 ..5 Peter Cooper do 150,000 173,691 July’66 ..5 20 People’s 20 150,000 154,206 Feb. and Aug. Aug. 66..4 Phoenix t Br’klyn. 50 1,000,000 998,687 Jan. and July, Jan ’66. .6 Reliet. do 50 July ’65. .5 200,000 188,170 do Republic* July’66.3% 100 300,000 457.252 do Resolute* 100! 200,000 208,969 Jnly’66.3% Rutgers’ 25 200,000 206,909 Feb. and Ang. Ang. ’66. .5 do 3t. Mark’s... 25 150,000 150,580 Aug. ’66..5 St. Nicholas! 25 150,000 138.902 Jan. and July. Aug. ’66 .5 50 1,000,000 1,277,564 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66.3% Security *!... Standard 50 200,000 230.903 Jan. and July, July ’66 .5 db Star 100 July ’66 ..5 200,000 217,843 Sterling * 100 200,000 177,915 Stnyvesanr 25 200,000 208,049 Feb. and Ang. Feb. ’66..4 Tradesmen’s., 25 150,000 142,830 Jan. and July, July ‘66.. 5 do United States 26 July ’66. .5 250,000 350,412 569,623 Feb. and Ang. AuiL ’66. .5 Washington 50 400,000 Washington *!. ...ion 287,400 681,689 F°b. and Aug. Aug.’66...2 Williamsburg City.50 150,000 151,539 Jan. and July, July ’66 ..5 do Yonkers & N. Y.. 100 500,000 550,301 July’66 ..5 . 90% ...l ... . 105 115% „ ADVERTISEMENTS. TERMS FOR ADYER1 DING. The rate for advertising in the Chronicle is 15 cents a line for each insertion A discount on this rate will be made when the advertisement is continued for three months or more. ' INDEX TO A DVERTISEMENTS. Steamsl&lp Companies IP Insurance. Commercial Cards. 640 Cordage 0-PANIE8. Jan. 65. ..5 , Knickerbocker Lorillard* 25 Manhattan 100 Market* 100 Meehan’ & Trade’. 25 Mechanics (B’klyn) .50 Mercantile 100 Mercantile Mut’i*+100 Merchants’ 50 J uly ’66... July ’66. 4 268,893 April and Oct. Oct. ’65...5 500,000 1,199,978 Jan. and July. July’66 ..7 400,000 36 ,970 March and Sep Mar. ’64..5 200,000 168,32 Jan. and July. July"*64 ..5 300,000 361,705 April and Oct. Oct. *66..5 200,000 212,141 Jan. and July July’66 .7 do 200,000 258,054 July’66...5 150,000 140,324 Feb. and Aug. 204,000 230,3 2 Jan. and July J July’66 .5 J »ly *66.3% do 149,024 150,000 do 150,000 156,063 July’65 .5 do July ’66. .5 200,000 215,079 150,000 149,755 May and Nov. May 6 Feb. and Aug. Aug ’66 200,000 229,309 5 Jan. and July. July ’66 .5 500,000 592,394 200,000 195,875 Jan. and July. July’65 ..5 1,000,000 3,177,437 Jan. and July. July’66.3% 200,000 228,12-" Feb. and Ang. Aug ’66..5 186,176 April and Oct. Apr. ’65..5 200,000 200,000 172,318 Jan. and July, July ’66 3% do 150,000 163,860 July *66 . .4 do 400,000 July’66 - .5 410,295 do 300,000 253,214 July’66 ..5 do July ’66 ..5 200,000 207,345 do July ’66 2,000,000 2,485,017 J uly ’65 do 152,057 200,000 do 300,000 July ‘66 349.521 do 201,216 July ’65 200,000 do 1- 8,824 200,000 July ’65 Feb. and Aug. Feb.’65 ..5 150,000 138,166 do Aug.’66.3% 1,000,000! 1.024,762 do 200,000 j 195,571 Aug. ’66..5 Co‘ty(Bklyn)20 Lamar Lenox Sale. paid. 250,000 Commission Merchants MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST. t OMPANIES. 30 200,000 Lafayette (B’kljO.. 45 75 46 00 1ft Ridge lOOj 25 Kind’s . i Import’ & Traders. 50 hidcmuity 100! Jefferson • • Quincy! 50 100 Irving ' — 50 100 50 Howard Humboldt International .. Portage Lake St. Clair 9% .. „ ..15 ( 5% 50 CO 51 00 ' .... Hope | 5%! 4 00 3% 30 25 *. Rockland ....J — Hoftman Home . .. ..50 .. Resolute 5% Excelsior Harmony (F.&M.)t 50 .... Pontiac ! j! rv Pittsburg & Boston. .... .... ... ..11 ! Phoenix 20% ! -.11% .. ... JO ... * 4 .. Ogima ! Pennsylvania * Pethericlt 1 15 ! Pewabic 2 40 1 Naumkeag 1 ! • .. .. ; ..! 2 00 . 18% 15 25 15 50 ..:10 oo 5%; 2 j .. 1 lu Native | . | 1% .... ...j 1 0% , 30 Firemen’s 17 Firemen’s Fund. 10 Firemens Trust.. 10 Fulton 25 Gallatin • 50 Gebhard 100 Germania 50 50 Globe Great Western*!. .100 Greenwich 25 50 Grocers’ Guardian — Hamilton 15 50 Hanover . .. 8 50 Exchange j New Jersey Consol New York.. i North Cliff I North w estern 50 Norwich 24% 44 25; 44 Copper Harbor. ; Excelsior 1 %! 5 Merrimac Mesnard Milton 12 00 Minnesota I National i 40 10O Empire City 4% 5% 4%' Medora Mendotat ! — Bay State — 2 . Eagle 0 Lake Superior Madison Mandan Manhattan Mass 11 1 par 500,000 200,000 400,000 (N.Y.). .100 • paid 3 150,000 300,000 210,000 250,000 70 Commercial 50 Commonwealth... 100 Continental * 100 Companies. 153,000 100 20 Central Park Citizens’ Commerce Commerce COPPER MINING STOCK LIST. Companies. 25 Bowery Broadway Brooklyn Bid. Las Last Periods. 223.775 Jan. and July. 205.976 Jan. and July. 440,603 Jan. and July. 213,590 Jan. and July. 501,543 Jan. and July. 253,232 Feb. and Aug. 324,456 March and Sep 200.362 May and Nov. 181,052 Feb. and Aug. 320, ill June and Dec. 248,392 Feb. and Aug. do 241.521 123,577 Jan. and July do 378,440 314,787 Feb. and Aug. do 231,793 391,913 Jan. and July, do 212,594 440,870 Feb. and Ang. 244,296 Jan. and. July. 25 $300,000 200,000 5(.' Americau* 50 200,000 200,000 American Exch’c. .100 Arctic 50 500,000 A 250,000 300,000 Atlantic (Br’klyn)'. .50 Baltic 25 200,000 Adriatic ^tna City 10 ... I dividend. Assets Beckman 1 - Cherry Run Petrol’m— % Cherry Run epei ial 6 Clinton Oil 5 • 100 4 00 5! • Bj Buchanan Farm Central 25 5! 5 10 Brevoort..,. 15 Mountain Oil. 10 Bliven — 2! 101 Bergen Coal and Oil 20 31,1865. Capital. write Marine Risks. Allen Wright Bemis Heights Bennehoff Run Adventure AStna Dec. are participating, and (t) Bid. A6kd Companies. Companies. 639 Cotton Duck Drugs 639 639 Dry Goods 640 Guauo 639 Express Company Holiday Goods Metals Pens (Giliott’s) Railroad Iroq Stationers Tobacco broker ... V. 639 639 639 639 Fire..... Life Marine and Inland 637 637 Navigation Financial. Bankers and Brokers in N.Y Bankers and Brokers— South “ “ “ “ Miscellaneous Financial 6*9 Bonds, Dividends, Ac 639 639 R-.pt West miscellaneous. Hardware... * 637 610 609 609 609 638 638 639 639 Lawyer (Natchitoches, La.)639 November Bankers and Brokers. Insurance. Insurance. METROPOLITAN INSURANCE CO., NO. 103 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. $1,000,000 Cash Capital... Assets Nov. 1, 1865, over 1,600,000 Security Insurance Co., No. 119 Cargo or Freight; also in Gold. The Assured = All losses equitably adjusted and promptly Scrip Dividend declared Jan. 10,1855, FIFTY PER CENT. paid. JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, President, ROBERT M. C. GRAHAM, Vice President, JAMES LORIMER GRAHAM, Jr., 2d V. P. HgNUT H- Portbk, Secretary. . , A. F. Collections made for Dealers . * <- Queen Fire Ins. Comp’y OF LIVERPOOL AND LONDON. Capital - £2,000,000 Sfg. Capital - £19885,220 Stg. Paid up Capital Sc Surplus ----$1,392,115 Authorized Subscribed United States Branch. No. 117 Broad¬ way, (INSURANCE BUILDING8,) ADLARD, Manager. WILLIAM H. ROSS, Secretary. This Company insures against Marine Risks on Vessels, Freight, and Cargo; also, against Inland Navigation Risks. ' The Mutual Life Insu- our Correspondents. Collections made in all parts and Canadas. WILLIAM A. of the United State WHEELOCK, President. WILLIAM H. SANFORD, Cashier. Tenth National Bank. ...$1,000,000* J. H. . Tradesmens’ The NATIONAL McCURDY, Vice-President. tI9AAC ABBATT, f J0HN M STUART. BANK. YORK. BROADWAY, NEW $ 1,0*10,000 400,000 CAPITAL Actuary, SHEPPARD HOMANS. Sec’y, ROSS, President. Stout, Cashier. 291 cecM*-aries ecre anes, Bank¬ Designated Depository of the Government. ers’ and Dealers’ Accounts solicited. $16,000,000 00 FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President. R. A. Isaac H. Walker, favorable to D. L. premium in gold. Vice-Pres t descriptions of Government Bonds^ City and Country accounts received on terms mos Has for sale all YORK. RANCE COMPANY OF NEW CASH ASSETS, Sept. 1st, 1866, over EDWARD P. ANTHONY, $3,000,000. Capital No. 240 BROADWAY. Premiums paid in gold will be entitled to a return MOSES H. GRINNELL, Pres’t. 318 BROADWAY. Capital $2,71C,424 32 DIVIDEND THIRTY PER CENT. Central National Bank, N. Y. GEORGE 49 WALL STREET. beat terms. on . COMPANY. - All the Government Loans for sale. HASTINGS, President. Sun Mutual Insurance - STREET, N. E. COR. PINE STREET. Ballard, Secretary. Frank W. Special Fund of $200,000, deposited in the Insur¬ ance Department at Albany. ASSETS, Dec. 31,1865 NASSAU FIRE AND INLAND INSURANCE. against loss or damage by receive twenty-five percent of the net profits, without incurring any liability, or, in lieu thereof, at their option, a liberal discount upon the premium. $5,000,000 ($1,000,000.) in Gold, Losses will be paid If Premiums are paid Capital BROADWAY, Capital, One Million Dollars, Cash This Company insures at customary rates of pre¬ mium against all Marine and Inland Navigation Risks Fire. National* Bank. Fourth Marine & Fire Insurance. ' on 63T THE CHRONICLE. 17,1866.] SURPLUS ' RICHARD BERRY, President. ANTHONY HALSEY", Cashier. * ' The Mercantile Mutual insurance: Niagara Fire Insurance company. COMPANY. OFFICE No. 35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. $1,366,699 Assets, Jan. 1st, 1866 ORGANIZED APRIL, 1844. Company has paid to its Customers, up to the present time, Losses amounting to over The C. $1,000,000 270,353 SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1865 Losses equitably adjusted and promptly paid. Chartered 1850. Cash Dividends paid in 15 years, 253 per cent. ^ JONATHAN D. STEELE, President. NOTMAN, Secretary. Stocks, Bonds and Governments bought and told exclusively on Commission. Wilson, Callaway & Co., BANKERS AND COMMISSION past nine years the cash dividends paid to Stockholders, made from ONE-THIRD of the net profits, have amounted in the aggregate to For the One Hundred and ' Twenty-one and a half per cent. ^ Instead of issuing & scrip dividend to No. 44 Broad Germania Fire Ins. dealers, based NO. 175 CASH maining at the close of the year, will be divided to SURPLUS, Jan. 1st, 1866 pool. ' Co., BROADWAY, N. cash abatement or discount from the current rates, when premiums are paid, as the general experience o underwriters will warrant, and the nett profits re¬ make Insurance on and Transportation Risks, on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Merchandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight. r' Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Currency, at the Office in New York, or in Sterling, at the Office of ltathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liver¬ MERCHANTS, Street, N. Y. Secnrities, 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 made on Cot¬ ton, Tobacco, &c., consigned to ourselves or to our correspondents, Messrs. J. K. GILLIAT & CO., or COLIN CAMPBELL & SON, of Liverpool Government <&thejpgfij)£ipl§ that all classes of risks are equally profitaDle, this Company will hereafter make such the stockholders. This Company continues to Marine and Inland Navigation & Commission MERCHANTS, 38 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. CASH CAPITAL, P. LOWELL, GREEN Sc CO. Bankers NO. 12 WALL STREET. EIGHTEEN MILLIONS OF DOLLARS. £ $500,000 0 CAPITAL, (ohn 205,989 83 $705,989 83 TOTAL ASSETS RUDOLPH GARRIGUE, President. Bryan &. Co.*, BANKERS AND BROKERS, NO. 35 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds, and Gold Bought and Sold on Commission. sr, JOHN E. KAHL, Secretary. Orders Promptly Executed. TRUSTEES. Aaron L. Reid, Ellwood Walter, D. Colden Murray, E. Haydock White, N. L. McCready, Daniel T. Willets, L. Edgerton, Henry R. Kunhardt. John S. Williams, William Nelson, Jr., Charles Dimon, A. William Heye, Harold Dollner, Paul N. Spofford. ELLWOOD WALTER, President CHAS. NEWCOMB, Vice-Prest Joseph Walker, James Freeland, Samuel Willets, Robert L. Taylor, William T. Frost, William Watt, Henry Eyre, Cornelius Grinnell, E. E. Morgan, Her. A. Schleicher, Joseph Slagg, Jas. D.Fish, Geo. W. Hennings, Francis Hathaway, C. J Drspard, Secretary. COMPANY, 45 WALL STREET. January 1st 1866. Cash capital $400,000 00 Gross Assets Total Liabilities $556,303 98 Surplus.. 156,303 98 24,550 00 BENJ. S. WALCOTT, President, J. Rbmsbn Lane, Secretary. Hope Fire Insurance STOCK COIIMISSION Son, HOUSE, NO. 17 WILLIAM STREET. Company, OFFICE, NO. 92 BROADWAY. Government Secnrities, Railways, Petroleum, Mining, Insurance Stocks and Scrip Miscellaneous shares of al descriptions,,bought and sold at tho different Stock Boards. Cash Capital- - - - Assets, March 9, 1806 Total Liabilities Losses Paid lit 1865 - - - Collections made In aM the States and Canadas. 26,850 00 - - $200,000 OO - 252,55 * 22 - 201,588 14 This Company Insures against Loss or Fire on as favorable terms as any othor Damage by responsible Company. Hanover Fire Insurance No. B. C. Morris & For the more thorough protection of all—both. Broker and “Principal onr business will be con¬ ducted entirely on the basis of Certified Checks;, given or received unless certified. fully enable us to carry out this principle, although starting with a sufficient capital, all parties giving orders for stocks, of whatever description or amount, will be required to cover same with proba¬ none ONLY FIRST CLASS RISKS SOLICITED. Board of Directors: HENRY M. TABER, JOSEPH EOULKE, STEP. CAMBRELENG, THEODORE W. RILEY, JACOB REESE, JNO. W. MERSEREAU, D. LYDIG SUYDAM, WILLIAM REM SEN. HENRY’S. THOS. P. CUMMINGS, ROBERT SCHELL, WILLIAM H. TERRY, FRED. SCHUCHARDT. JOSEPH GRAFTON, L. B WARD, JOSEPH BRITTON, AMOS ROBBINS, LEVERICH. JACOB REESE, President. CHAS. D. HARTSHORNE, Secretary. To lwre ble amount at time of leaving order. Receipts such deposits given until stocks are delivered. No Stocks purchased or sold lor on “Option.’* w Out-of-town orders solicited, and those complying: th above req dremeilts will receive special ana prompt attention. Quotations can he had daily upon application, will be furnished if desired. os 638 THE CHRONICLE. FIRST MORTGAGE OF BONDS Heath & THE RANKERS, CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILROAD CO. OF Interest at the rate gSemi-Annually, . on DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, AND gold, railroad & mining stock brokers I 3 Broad Street, New York. Deposits received, subject to Check, and Interest CALIFORNIA. of Six per Cent, per annum, payable the First days of January and July. allowed. A. HAWLEY HEATH. T. W. B. HUGHES. Member of N.Y. Stock Ex. * i Principal and Interest payable in U. S. Gold Coin in the Drake City of New York. HI Amount of Issue, $7,336,000. The Bonds liave Brothers, STOCK BROKERS AND BANKERS, NO. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Buy and Se'l on Commission Government Securi¬ ties, Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds, Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petro¬ leum and Mining Stocks. Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to In Coupon Bonds of $l,C00 each. Thirty Years to and run, gage, constituting an absolute prior lien on are secured by that portion or the a First Mort¬ Road, Equip¬ ments, Franchises, and Entire Property of the Central Facliic Railroad Company, located in the Stats of California, and extending* from Sacramento City to the California State Line, forming a part of the GREAT PACIFIC RAIliBOAD Hughes, ROUTE, adopted and aided by the UNITED Draft. Dividends and Int rest collected and Invest¬ ments made. Orders Promptly Executed. REMOVAL. STATES GOVERN¬ MENT. The amount of these limited by law to the aid the construction of cured is declared to that First Schuyler Skaats & Bros., Mortgage Bonds to be issued per of United States Bonds allowed and issued amount to the Road, and the Mortgage by which they are seby Act of Congress to constitute a lien prior and superior & of the United States Cover ement. 19 Broad Street Sc 57 Exchange Place. Schuyler Skaats, Bartholomew Skaats. FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS OF 1HB (in amount equal to this First Mort¬ gage) ia economically and judiciously applied to the construction und equipment of the road, together with nearly $7,000,000, received from Stock Subscriptions and other sources. The First Mortgage therefore amounts to but about 35 per cent, of the actual cost and value of the Property which it covers. The road is now completed, equipped and running from Sacramento City to Alta, a distance of 73 miles, and the earnings for the three months ending August 1st, Were as follows, viz.: May, 1866 ST. PAUL AND PACiFfC RAILROAD COMPANY’ of Minnesota. Interest at S^ven per c«-ih , semi¬ annually, lirst January and Julv. free fr<»m Gov¬ ernment Tax, in the City of New Yor.f. Principal / payable in 1892. The road runs through one rf the best portions of tliH State, and has been completed to St. C oud, c editv miles, at an ex<en*e of over $3,000,000. THESE BONDS ARE ONLYr $10,U00 PER MILE. Government Bonds at the hi-he-t market.price wilt be receive;! i?i payment. For particulars apply to TURNER BROTHERS, Banker*. Corner Nassau and Pine Sts., New York. . Chicago, Rock Island, AND $65,115 83 * July M Pacific 67,429 78 85,000 00 I N FIRST G OX D. The earnings are steadily increasing, and are estimated at over $100,000 in gold for the month of August—the official report for that month not having been California State Line—156 miles from Sacramento City—during the summer ever offered. in grading beyond the point to bought and paid for sufficient to lay the track the entire distance to the State line. The Road has been completed and equipped thus far without the sale of a single dollar of its First Mortgage Bonds, and they are now offered to the public for the first time, after the earnings of the Road have reached the sum of $100,000 per month in Gold, only about twenty-five percent, of which is required for operating offered at 95 per cent, and accrued interest from July 1st, in Currency. Orders may be forwarded to us direct, or through the principal Banks and Bankers in all parts of the country. Remittances may be made in draffs on New York, or in Legal Tender Notes, National Bank Notes, or other funds current in this city, and the Bonds will be forwarded to any address by Express, free of charge. Inquiries for further par¬ ticulars, by mail or otherwise, will receive punctual attention. are Fisk & Hatch, Bankers, No. 5 Nassau ii Street, N. Y. B.—All kinds of Government Securities received at the full market exchange fer the above Bonds. 51 ■ SEVEN price in PER WALL H ■■ PER >" I .1.1 I . . CENTft MORT¬ ,.*r GAGE BONDS '' ; of 1867, when its earnings must be very large, as the entire trade of Nevada, and a large proportion of that of Utfh, Idaho, and Montana must pass over its line. It has been shown by reliable statistics that in 1863 over $13,000,000 in Gold was paid for freighting goods from California to Nevada alone. This part of the Great Pacific Railroad Route is destined to be one of the most profitable lines of railroad ir. the "world, and its First Mortgage Bonds are among the best secured and most desirable investments Over $1,000,000 has already been expended which the road is now running, and the iron is MORTGAGE SEVEN CENT. BONDS. Clark, Dodge & Go., The construction of the road is going vigorously forward—24 miles additional being nearly ready for the cars—and it will probably be in full operation to the Railroad, TWENTY-FIVE YEARS TO RUN, For Sale by received at this date. expenses. The Bonds BROKERS, Have removed to a The aid received from the Government June BANKERS A: STOCK mile, is OF THE North Missouri road Rail¬ Company. We offer for sale the Seven Per Cent. First Mort gage Bonds of the North Missouri Railroad Com Coupons paya¬ July 1, in each pauy, having thirty years to run. ble in New York on January 1 and year. Before accepting the agency for sale of these made careful inquiry into the condition and prospects of the road, which was examined by Mr. vVm. Milnor Roberts and others, on our behalf, and their highly satisfactory report enables us to re commend the bonds as first-class securities, and safe and judicious investment. The proceeds of these bonds ($6,000,000 in all)wi-, be used in extending a road, already conmleted 170 miles into North Missouri, to the Iowa State line, where it is to connect with the railroads of Iowa, and also westward to the junction with the Pacific Railroad (at Leavenworth) and other railroads lead¬ ing np the Missouri River, so that the mortgage of $5,000,000 will cover a complete and well-stocked road of 389 miles in length, costing at least $10,000,000, with a net annual revenue after the first year of over $1,500,000, or a sum nearly four times be bonds, we yond the amount needed to pay the interest DODds, the income of the road of course on these increasing every year. The KailroEd connects the great City of St. Louis with its 200,000 inhabitants, not only with tbe rich est portions of Missouri, but with the States ot Kan and Iowa and the great Pacific Railroads. The first 500,000 have been sold at 80 centsJand the remainder are now offered at >*5 cents. * At this rate sas they yield nearly 8# per cent, income, and add 20 cent, to principal at maturity. Any farther, inquiries will be answered a on per office. ^ JAY, COOKE & CO , [November!?, 1866. THE CHRONICLE. Steamship and Express Co’s. Steam National Steamship an! Express Oa.’s. Steamship Jeremiah M. Ward well, Company, (of the late firm of Neilson Wardwell & Co.) Importer and Dealer in Hardware, (LIMITED.) .. Drafts issued for any amount, payable at any Bank in Great Britain or on the Continent. For Freight and Cabin Passage apply at The Office of the COMPANY, 57 BROADWAY. And lor Steerage Tickets, at the Passage Office of the Company, 27 Broadway, and 275 Pearl street, near FOR ST. THOMAS Sailing These fine steamers sail on schedule Files of this Paper Bound to Order. STATIONERY, ENGRAVING, PRINTING,. &C., &C time, arriv¬ Cooper & Albert H. GARRISON & ALLEN, Agents, No. 5 Bowling Green. NEW-ZEA- Commercial Garda. ROYAL MAIL COMPANY. W. H. Schieffelin & Co. Nicolay, STOCK AUCTIONEER, , or passage, > , Sheridan, 26 EXCHANGE PLACE, ^ Corner of William St A Buenos Ayres. information, of freights given il required. BLANK BOOKS, Spanish Main. Arrivo at Para, Brazil, 8th; Pernambuco, -15th ; Bah a, 17th; and Rio de Janeiro, 20th. Connecting thence by semi-monthly steamers to Montevideo and LANII AND AUSTR A U AN OPENING OF STEAM COMMUNICATION BE TWEEN NEW YORK AND AUSTRALASIA Best of references West Indies and For further Merchant, STREET, NEW YORK. entrusted to him will receive prompt at¬ Consignments of Cotton, Wocl, Hides, &€., solicited. ing at St. Thomas 29th, and making connection with steamships of the French, Spanis \ West India, and Royal Mail Companies, to and from all ports of the HURST, Manager. PANAMA, All orders tention. the 22d of every month. on North America, Capt. L. F. Timmerman...Oct. 22. South America, ( apt. E. L. Tinklepaugli Nov. 22. Guiding Star, Capt. W. C. Berry Dec. 22. Commission 45 CLIFF STATES MAIL STEAMERS. Apply to W. J. and AND BRAZIL.—REGULAR UNITED Fulton. . Miscellaneous. Atlantic Mail Navigation Co. STEAMERS WEEKLY TO LIVER¬ POOL) CALLING AT QUEENSTOWN. Leaving Pier No. 47, North River, as follows: SCOTLAND — —Sails Saturday, Sept. 22 “ Saturday, Sept. 29 ENGLAND .... ERIN “ Saturday, Oet. 6 HELVETIA (Ogilvie)... “ Saturday, Oct. 13 Cabin passage, $100; Steerage, $30. Steerage passage tickets, to bring parties from Liverpool or Queenstown, for $35 in currency. Through passage to Paris, Antwerp, Hamburg, Bremen, &c., at low rates. 639i< BANKER AND BROKER, NO. 43 PINE STREET, NEW YORK, (Established 15 years.) Government Securities, Gold, City, County and State Bonds, Insurance, Bank, Railroad, Gas-light. Telegraph, Express, Mining and Petroleum Stocks and Bonds, &c., &c., bought and sjld at all the Stock Boards, at Private Sale and Public Auction, on commission. VIA PANAMA. of the above Company will be com¬ menced from Panama to Wellington, New-Zealand, on the 24th June, by the Steamship KAKALA, fol¬ lowed by the KAIKOURA on the 24th July. Passengers and Canterbury, D RU G S eteamers. " ' ' of passengers and goods from Ncav York, at through fares and rates to aU the principal ports in the Aus¬ FANCY GOODS, PERFUMERY, opening voyages of the Company’s ships, in conjunction with those of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, will be as follows: OUTWARD. ETC., ETC, William N. Clakk, Jn, S. No. 12 OLD SLIP, cor. WATER ST. NEW YORK. Cotton. TIME. Wellington to Panama, 28 days. States Mail, All Widths with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama for SAN FRANCISCO, touching at ACAPULCO. NOVEMBER: A LARGE STOCK THEODORE and 21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento. Departures of let and 21st connect at Panama with steamers for South Pacific ports: 1st and 11th for Central American Ports. Those of 1st touch at Man¬ 59 Broad Baggage checked through. POLHEMUS Street) An experienced Surgeon on board. Medicines and attendance free. For passage tickets or further information, apply at the v and Company’s ticket office, ihe wharf, foot of street, North River, New York. K. HOLMAN, Agent. S. on Bankers,, Merchants* and others should send by the HARNDEN EXPRESS, 65 Broadway. as they have unsurpassed facilities for the rapid and ■afe forwarding of v v Gold, Silver, Jewelry, and Merchandise of every description. Also for the collection of notes, drafts, and bills, biR* accompanying goods, Ac. Campbell & Strong, New Orleans. James A. Robinson, ERICSSON <fc CO., Steam DEALERS, 4 orner of Beaver. 102 FRONT J. Engines, Jobbing. 164 Duane St., Cor. Hudson, New York. Holiday Goods USE, M)W READY. STREET, NEW YORK. Metals, THOS. ENGINES, Mills, Pumps, Cotton Gins, Hoisters, and General MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE FOR EXPORT AND DOMESTIC CALORIC PORTABLE AND STATIONARY Henry Lawrence & Sons, POPE, fl2 John Street. Anthracite and Charcoal Pig Irons, Ingot Copper, Spelter, Tin, Antimony, &c., Old and New Railroad Iron, Bloom Irons, Car Wheel Pig Irons. Railroad Iron, SIXTY-SIXTd AMERICAN AND FOREIGN, ANNUAL DISPLAY OF Fancy Goods, Rich Bohemian Glass, Chins, Bronzes, Clocks. Ber in Iron, Terra Cotta nnd Cabinet w»ire, Mnokers Requisites, Morocco Bugs, Port mounaies,: pa and Carved Wood Articles, Toilet Articles, and ST. GERMAIN the STUDY LAMP. - Also, Toys and Games, comprising all that is novel and suitable for Holiday Presents, aud of as large a variety as can be found in the city, at HI NR 1C H S 9 Late . One hundred pounds attended to. Refers by permission to—Lonis Dnpleix, Natchi¬ toches. La.; Hon. John L. Lewis, M nuen, La.; ALWAYS ON HAND. MANUFACTURERS AND zanillo. allowed each adult. , Weights, ' 1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City. 11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis Law, Particular atu ntion paid to the Collection of Claims and all other business entru-ted to his care. Cla ms Duck, : Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad, Myers, against the Un.ted States Government promptly Wellington to New York, 42 days. LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬ ER, FOOL' :>f Canal street, at 12 o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and list of every month (except when those dates fall on line for Business, NATCHITOCHES, LA. Tobacco, Note and Exchange Broker. (Aspinwall) July 12. Arriving at New York J nly 20. And Carrying the United H.‘ C. Thackston, From Colon, California, onr Counsellor and Attorney at ' To Lane, New York. supply everything in William A. Gellatly. Schieffelin, E. THROUGH LINE We Professional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders prompt attention. William H. July 21. Arriving at Sydney Julv 29. PACIFIC MAIL STEAMSHIP COMPANY’S Loutrel, receive Jo8ErnH Westerfield. From Panama, June 24. From Wellington, N. Z., From Sydney or Melbourne, 8 days additional. The service will be continued monthly in unison with the foregoing dates. Particulars of fares and freight on application to Pacific Mail Steamship Company, office No. 59 Wall St., New York, or 1 CHAS. W. WEST, Agent, No. 23 William St., New York. WM. G. SEALY, Agent, Panama. New York, May 23, I860. BY MANUFACTURERS. 45 Maiden New York. FromvNew York, June 11. TIME. From New York to Wellington, 40 days. From Panama to Wellington. 28 days. To Sydney or Melbourne, 8 days additional. HOMEWARD. From Sydney, 31st May or June 1. From Wellington, N. z., June 8. SOLICITED STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND BLANK-BOOK 170 & 172 WILLIAM ST. The * CUSTOM Francis & , INDIGO, CORKS, SPONGES, tralasian Colonies. . YOUR . Arrangements are in progress for the conveyance en CO., importers and jobbers of Sydney, Melbourne, and other parts of New-Zealand and Australia, by the Company’s Inter-Colonial large variety of Securities, always hand lor sale, at the lowest rates for Investments. SCHIEFFELIN BROTHERS A goods will he forwarded from Wel¬ lington to Auckland, Otago, Nelson, A SUCCESSORS TO The service 150 , WERCKMEISTERS’, Broadway, (up stairs) New York. ’ FOR Steam and Street JOSEPH Roads, GILLGTT’S OF THE OLD STANDARD FOR SALE BY S. W. HOPKINS Sc JOSEPH Co., 69 & 71 Or Descriptive GILLOTT, Name and DesigWARRANTED. Dating Number NEW SERIES, 2,000 tons No. 1 Peruvian Guano. 1,200 tons Brmces Concentrated Fertilizer. 2,500 tons Swan Island Guano. 600 tons Coarse Ground pure Bones. For sale in lots as wanted, by ■ — GEO. E. WHITE CO , 150 Promt St. PENS, QUALITY. TRADE MARK: Broadway. GUANO. STEEL 700 io GOOD AND CHEAP, from No. No. 761. JOSEPH TRADE MARK: GILLOTT, BIRMINGHAM. For sale With Designating Numbers. by JOSEPH GILLOTT Sc SONS, No. 91 John st., New-York HENRI OWEN, Sole Agent. * V4 s „ . Oiled Silk, Imitation Oiled . . ORDERS TAKEN FOR THE Silk. and durability. appearance the most Willis, Misses’, Gents’, White ■ NEW YORK. P. Oldershaw, CLOAK TRIM- DAVID WALLACE, C. H. HARNEY, „ of NOVELTIES JUST RECEIVED. McANDRbW & WANN J. M. Cummings & Co., IN 58 BROAD SPINNERS, Ofler for LINEN THREADS, 40 and 42 ' Reference, SAM LB. MERCHANTS, CHAMBERS STREET, NEW RYE Successors to FACTORS, COTTON AND ■ 4 General Commission E.-Thorburn, C. 20 OLD AGENTS FOR 109 WALL American STREET, NSW YORK. Consignments of Cotton and all other South¬ Prodncts Solicited. Merchants, SLIP, NEW YORK. SHIPPING AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, E.R.Mudge,Sawyer&Co. Morris, BREWER & CALDWELL, Distilleries. Kentucky. YORK. Mills at Patterson, N. J. B. C. MORRIS. JR. CALDWELL. WHISKIES, from their own and other first-class SHOE THREADS, MACHINE THREAD*, ETC. Bankers, N. Y. Caldwell & STREET, NEW YORK, sale, IN BOND, fine BOURBON and and Provisions, BROADWAY and 53 NEW ST., N. Y Tilford & Bodley, and' COMMISSION Co., Va. COMMISSION MERCHANT DISTILLERS Barbour Brothers, of Petersburg, Bostwick, J. A. C. S. BODLEY, S. L. M. BARLOW, York. McIlwaine & Cotton, Produce of the trade to his samples FLAX THREAD Street, New Martin & Tannahill, of Petersburg, Va. References : STEWART BROWN, MERCHANTS MERCHANDISE GENERALLY. No. 79 Front ACCOUNTANT, 62 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK, Books Examined. Accounts Adjusted. MANUFACTURER OF Co., PRODUCE AND PURCHASE FOR THE SALE OF OF MINGS, Invites the attention French Cloth Gloves, Ac., Ac., Peckham Yarns P. McIlwaine COMMISSION YORK, Franklin Street, . OF THE CELEBRATED A LINE Julius Garelly, LADIES’ DRESS AND & Hose. DUANE STREET, NEW IMPORTER AND NlisseO English Merino and Ladies’ Goods, Linens, &c., Ac*, . STREET, NO. 47 BROAD Tannahill, ALSO, Irish and Scotch 95 Consignments COMMISSION MERCHANTS, and Boys’ Mixed. Good*, Dress ( STREET, NEW YORK. Underwear, Merino and all Woo*, in White and And Fancy , Commission Merchants, , Staple, No. 101 FACTORS Sawyer, Wallace & Co., STREET, invite the attention of the trade to their 84 LEONARD Ladies’, Late Cash. Bk. Tenn. Cash Advances made on stock of MERCHANTS, * r* ;■ *, Ky. B. H. Wisdom, AND STREET, NEW YORK. Would COMMISSION AND ;, - COTTON & TOBACCO 40 BROAD Benton York.; Slaughter & Co., Norton, General 97 FRANKLIN invented. Lindsay, Chittick & Co., - York. SCRIBE, PARIS, NO. 7 RUE • 160 & 162 T. J. Slaughter, Late of St. Louis, Mo. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, economical collar ever British AT Lane, Lamson & Co., Beversible Paper Collars, IMPORTERS Ex. Norton, Late of Paducah, NEW PATTERNS Reade Street, New No. 20 Agents for the sale of the Patent Tannahill. Mcllwaine & Co., New Elizabeth, New Jersey, finish, and as real silk, which it equals in costs but half as much Baltimore; md^ , PLACE), Refer by permission to Messrs.^ * - - * V . Jacob Heald & Co., Lord &, Robinson,. Baltimore. AT "Imitation" has a very euperior Our (Offices, for the present, 63 'EXCHANG £ TOWNSEND, H. WISNER HANDKERCHIEFS, COTTON Lynchburg, ya., ■-* COMMISSION -MERCHANTS, For the sale of produce and purchase of merchandise generally. of and Manufacturers SILK AND . MANUFACTURED BY CHINA SILKS, EUROPEAN AND Wilson, Soni &;'Cq,,: ' Oilcloths, Importers of ■. Commercial Cards. > Late of BROADWAY, No. 363 « Albro’s Pearce & Co., S. H. f Commercial Cards, * Commercial Cards. MV [^November 17, 1886. THE CHRONICLE. "V 640 Industrial Agency. ern WASHINGTON MILLS, A. BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO., CHICO “EE MANUF. MILTON Nos* 43 A 45 Merrill, Jr., auspices, Industrial & Plant¬ ing Interests of the South, Established nnder Southern to build up the Formerly of Mississippi. CO., VICTORY MANUF. Will remove about October P. SUCCESSOR TO CO., MILLS, 1st to new store WHITE STREET. Goodman & , Merrill, GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANT 30 NEW STREET & 38 BROAD STREET, With corporate powers and privileges more exten¬ sive than those of the CREDITS FONCIE ft AND MOBILIER of France, will, through branches ted at all loca¬ important points in the United States and NEW YORK CITY. ' Europe, conduct its business DOUBLED AT A DWIGHT, Advances made on consignments bacco, and ot- er produce. MANUFACTURERS OF ot Cotton, To¬ Machinery and Agricultural Implements * Umbrellas & Parasols, description Southern mission. supplied. Real Estate Bought and Sold Departments: of every 1st.—-Produce and Factorage. Com¬ on under the following (Banking and Loans. REFERENCES: • ^ t : 49 MURRAY ST., NEW YORK. Tracy, Irwin Sc Co., ' . IMPO NO. 400 BROADWAY, 'i L* S AND JOBBERS or Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, 2d.--( Trust and Savings. Messrs. Duncan, Sherman & Co., New York. U. A. Murdock, Esq., New York. W. K Dixon, Esq., Pres. Hoffman Ins. Co., N.Y. Dr. W. N. Mercer, New Orleans. George S. Mandeville, Esq., New Orleans. Messrs. Crane, Breed & Co., Cincinnati.' ' * A. E. Addison, Esq., Virginia. [ Collection and Adjustment of Accounts. 3d . ’ 4th Esq., South Carolina. Hon. W. B. Ogden, Chicago. Ogden, Fleetwood & Co, Chicago. D. B. Molloy, Esq., Memphis. Messrs. Porter, Fairfax & Co., Louisville. Ky. Geo. S. Cameron, # •* GOODS, AND HOSIERY and WHITE GOODS. non. Milton W. Mead Brown, mo Due. A. P. MERRILL, Jb., 86 New Street, New YotH 6ity. —Immigration, Labor and Lands. 6th.—Railroads, Mines, and Manufactures. CENTRAL OFFICES: , Addison, Esq., Baltimore. Insurance. 6th.—Transportation. including a superb stock of DRESS - T 40 & 42 Broadway, New York. Prospectus and Circulars will be mailed upon cation to Central Office. appli¬