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APPENDIX.
to gold from other sources. But for the same period the receipts of jewellers' bars, etc., at the Philadelphia mint exceeded all the fine bars made by that institution by some $1,351,143, or $193,020 per annum; and the opera­tions of these two establishments are so intimately con­nected that they should be considered together. De­ducting this excess leaves only $1,500,000 per annum to be charged against the current annual produce. The business has greatly increased within the past few years, but I am satisfied that the average of these seven years is considerably above that of the whole period under con­sideration. In this city, where the gold thus employed is obtained entirely from the private refinery, it has not, until within a year or two past, exceeded $25,000 per an­num. But it has now increased to from $120,000 to $150,000.
I should explain, perhaps, that in the statement of gold parted from silver at the mints I have added to the amount as shown by the director's summary statement the amount credited at the Carson mint to " Nevada," as nearly the whole amount so credited evidently came from Comstock bullion.
By deducting from the aggregate deposits, as stated in this summary, the deposits prior to 1848 ($12,808,771) and the unparted bars made at the other assay offices and not redeposited at New York or Philadelphia, we have as the whole amount of domestic gold deposited at the mints and New York Assay Office since 1848, $1,179,824781.